Starred messages here are generally interesting / funny stuff, rather than used in a similar way to rep on the main site.
I'm guessing you're new here, so just letting you know that chat's a bit different to the main site. This room's rules are linked at the top right of the screen. There's a wide range of different styles in the different chat rooms (apologies if you already know all this)
There is a different namespace for each module, function, and class. There is no difference between the names of functions and other variables, all things are objects in Python, and names can refer to any object.
When used as an actual decorator @my_decorator, then there's some syntactic sugar making it look like it does, but it's still the same behind the scenes.
@DanielEngel eval is just for expressions. For single or multiple statements you need exec. But beware of using either of those on unsanitized user input, it's a security risk. And often there are better ways to do what you want.
@PM2Ring also: there is this "can eval be made safe"
that has even more of those loopholes
@DanielEngel stackoverflow.com/questions/35804961/… you cannot make eval or exec safe easily at all, so don't use it to run code given by an untrusted user, ever.
@AnttiHaapala I did upvote that answer, but it was quite a while ago. And since then, I have linked to it a few times, so I guess I helped you get that badge. :)
@AnttiHaapala It is rather long, but I think it needs to be, to cover all of that stuff. If you condense it too much it'll become too abstract and only Python experts will be able to read it, and that info deserves to be accessible to a wide audience.
@davidism While I generally agree that we should wait 10 minutes before posting cv-pls links on bad questions I don't think that should apply to dupes. On bad questions we should give the OP time to clarify or otherwise improve their question, but dupes should be closed ASAP to prevent answers being posted.
Of course, sometimes it's actually desirable to give a specific answer to a dupe when the dupe target isn't a close match to the new question. FWIW, in cases like that I've even seen Martijn post an answer and then dupe-hammer.
OTOH, SOPython isn't SOCVR, and closing questions shouldn't be a dominant focus here: we should let the general Python tag regulars deal with the bulk of close-voting.
But we do have our collection of canonical questions, and above-average skill in finding good dupe targets, and so I think the room members ought to help deal with dupes when we can. Of course, we as individuals can certainly do that without involving the room, but I feel that using the room to coordinate dupe closing is a worthwhile activity.
@JonClements Thanks, Jon. I had forgotten about that page.
FWIW, I think we should amend that page to include something like "We strongly recommend that if a bad question could be improved by the OP that comments requesting such improvements be made before you close-vote". I'm not saying that everyone who CVs such questions needs to comment, but there should be at least one comment to let clueless newbs know what's wrong with the question and what they need to do. Otherwise, the ten minute waiting time is fairly meaningless.
@AndrasDeak No, close-voting is only temporarily anonymous: the "culprits" names are all given in the "On Hold / Closed" banner. Each close-voter doesn't need to comment, but it's generally helpful if someone does when the question has the potential for improvement. But if it's a simple toolreq, then there's no need for a comment, since the "On Hold" banner provides the necessary info.
Similarly, an auto-comment is generated when you close-vote a dupe, so a separate comment is (generally) not required. But sometimes I do make a separate comment on dupes before I CV, to check with the OP if they think my dupe target is a good match for their question.
@AndrasDeak I like to give the answer to simple typo or "braino" questions in a comment. And I sometimes give a suggestion or 2 on tool req questions. OTOH, there is a school of thought that providing any info to tool reqs only encourages such questions
@MarkoMackic You need 3k to vote to close / re-open any question, but you can vote on your own questions with 250. See stackoverflow.com/help/privileges
I just had fun with a groupby question. I guess it's borderline "gimme teh codez", but at least the OP did post some code, and described clearly how his (naive) algorithm would work. stackoverflow.com/questions/36371997/…
In C there was a question "I want to write a disassembler. How do I decode the opcodes?"
this was preceded 30 minutes earlier by another question by the very same user where they asked "what are those numbers in the disassembler output", and was told that they're the opcodes.
@MarkoMackic The ugly syntax is the price you pay for having more control over what the CPU is actually doing. Of course, that extra power isn't much good if you don't know what you're actually doing. :) Although I still love C, I rarely use it these days because Python is so much more fun. I must admit that writing anything non-trivial in assembler is not easy, OTOH, no other language gives you the same sense of total control.
The last time I wrote any assembler was on the Amiga; I've never learned Intel assembler. It was a M68k implementation of Eric Jensen's algorithm for computing large numbers of digits of e: I posted a Python version here.
I know, anyways in most cases, the high level languages compile just well for what basic user needs about program performance
But if you look, if you do programming language from ground up, and build it based on performance of low level, the app that's written in it, couldn't be less efficient then rewriting it in lower level..
Is Java efficiency of well written code equal to c ?
It depends. Java has to do more "housekeeping" than C, due to the overhead of OOP. OTOH, in a non-trivial program it's not easy to do efficient memory management yourself, and it may be more efficient to let the language handle it for you.
Depending on what you mean by efficiency (you should say), the fight is probably more between C and whatever JVM you choose, rather than C and Java. The Sun hotspot compiler is meant to do some pretty awesome stuff to get Java within an order of magnitude or two of C, but, yeah. That's the runtime, not the Java syntax.
Also, C code is compiled to machine code, but Java is compiled to byte code, which is then compiled to machine code with the JIT compiler at runtime, which has a bit of overhead. But I really don't know much about Java, so please feel free to correct me. :)
There were really smart people optimizing the JVM. I've seen it beat comparable C (admittedly in toy cases, but the fact it happened at all is impressive.)
My understanding is that C/C++ produces native code to run on a particular machine architecture. Conversely, languages like Java and C# run on top of a virtual machine which abstracts away the native architecture. Logically it would seem impossible for Java or C# to match the speed of C++ becau...
@MarkoMackic A C compiler always compiles to a specific architecture. But that doesn't necessarily mean that the compiled code can take advantage of everything the target architecture offers.
I don't know, and I've made mistake, JIT queries the machine..
@PM2Ring of course it doesn't mean :)
@RobertGrant agreed with that
But I have never met someone who optimizes his code to run faster for microseconds, I mean, when you're coding, you care about performance as much as you need it, but you never try to make it the fastest it can be ( then you'd write it in assembly ) because it takes a lot lot more time, and it really is rearly so much needed.
So, someone from QA is moving to R&D after proving herself. She needs to learn how to code, programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/96504/… would frustrate her for 6 months before she can start producing code. What would you recommend? (She needs to work on C# code).
@Ffisegydd: not sure yet! Haven't even decided whether I want to stay in Large Canadian Province or move back to Western Canadian Province. I've basically planned for a few months of indecision.. but it already feels like all this tension is slowly releasing. :-)
I did think about doing some international travel. If I find a new position relatively soon and can negotiate a non-immediate start, I'll definitely go somewhere. Otherwise I think I'll put off any trips until the situation is more stable.
I never really know what to recommend for beginners, because when I try to learn a new language there's a lot of material I already have in hand for comparison and contrasts, and so the things that confuse me aren't going to be the same things as would confuse someone starting out. (Depending on the language, there might not even be fewer things which confuse me, only different ones..)
wine
Usage: wine PROGRAM [ARGUMENTS...] Run the specified program
wine --help Display this help and exit
wine --version Output version information and exit
wanted to search for a picture “rabbit/bunny with hammer” but the only things I found which were close are Bugs Bunny with a hammer, and a female Thor cosplayer with bunny ears.
If cwd is not None, the function changes the working directory to cwd before executing the child. In particular, the function looks for executable (or for the first item in args) relative to cwd if the executable path is a relative path.