Does anybody know if Django web server for development (runserver command) allows redirection? I want to redirect image files to some custom path. I didn't find any useful information about this at the moment :/
I think re module allows max 100 capture groups. The other day someone was doing pattern = ''.join(list_of_tuples) and got error of capture group size overflow.
Hi All, I need help. I have to write a script in python that will do following actions I have a xlsx/csv file in which there are 300 cities listed in one column 1. I have to make all pairs between them and also with help of google api I have to add their distance and travel time in the second column
my file is like this: SOURCE Agra Delhi Jaipur
and output be like SOURCE DESTINATION DISTANCE TIME_TRAVEL Agra Delhi 212 10 Agra Jaipur x dist. x time
You can read about it here: stackoverflow.com/a/2795112/4014959 Basically, if the string of 1's can be broken up into a whole number of equal-sized groups it will match, so only strings of 1's of prime length will fail to match.
@ShubhamSrivastava Your question is pretty broad. And I've never used the Google API. So try writing this and if you get stuck, you can ask for help here. But you'll have to ask a specific question, and post a mcve that focuses on your problem.
Not sure. At first I thought it was Vietnamese, but there aren't any accented letters.
Google translate detects it as Vietnamese. I guess the OP is using a computer without proper font / Unicode support for their language, which doesn't sound like fun. Or maybe they just don't know how to configure their editor / IDE.
i was having hashlib error so insatlled it with easy_install ..pip is not installing it
now em getting errors
from httplib import * File "/usr/lib/python2.7/httplib.py", line 80, in <module> import mimetools File "/usr/lib/python2.7/mimetools.py", line 6, in <module> import tempfile File "/usr/lib/python2.7/tempfile.py", line 35, in <module> from random import Random as _Random File "/usr/lib/python2.7/random.py", line 49, in <module> import hashlib as _hashlib File "build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/hashlib.py", line 115, in <module> """ TypeError: 'frozenset' object is not callable
anything i install with pip now em getting the same error
It sounds like you've damaged your system's Python installation. I suppose you could un-install it & re-install it with apt-get / synaptic, but I've never tried to do that, and it may not be safe to do so. Hopefully, someone else can give you some advice.
Here's some more arithmetic fun with regex: calculating sqrt(2).
import re
s = '1 1'
pat = re.compile(r'(\d+) (\d+)')
for _ in range(9):
s = pat.sub(r'\1\2\2 \1\2', s)
p, q = s.split()
r = len(p) / len(q)
print(r, r*r)
#output
1.5 2.25
1.4 1.9599999999999997
1.4166666666666667 2.0069444444444446
1.4137931034482758 1.998810939357907
1.4142857142857144 2.000204081632653
1.4142011834319526 1.999964987220335
1.4142156862745099 2.000006007304883
1.4142131979695431 1.9999989693112423
1.4142136248948696 2.0000001768382867
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/tempfile.py", line 35, in <module> from random import Random as _Random File "/usr/lib/python2.7/random.py", line 49, in <module> import hashlib as _hashlib File "build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/hashlib.py", line 115, in <module> """
@PM2Ring Does it really work that way? This question is just a dupe, many upvotes on Q and accepted A, but there's one delvote and I see a del link (not in the mood to try deleting it myself)
is there an additional filter that hinders a delvote going through in this case?
I think I ought to let Antti explain why he speaks Vietnamese...
I feel sorry for this guy, especially after I originally gave him a wrong test for his Unicode problem. But I don't know PyCharm, or Windows, so I don't know what to suggest. stackoverflow.com/questions/42083890/…
@Naveen Indeed. You don't have the rep yet to close-vote (or even to down-vote), But if you see questions that need to be closed you are welcome to mention them here with the [tag:cv-pls] tag, as long as you conform to the rules that Bhargav linked.
@AndrasDeak Strangely, many Windows users aren't happy with that suggestion. ;)
someone linked a question here few days back, question was so confusing, its like 2+2=fish ? it was funny to read the comments below on that question , those are all school kids? i guess
@Antti Hungarian-made electric bus, apparently it's normal for it to spew sooty smoke during operation, as the heating system runs with an oil stove. On an electric bus. *sigh*
A house we looked at when I was a kid had oil burning heating. Enormous tanks out the back, the previous owner thought it would be a good idea because the house was about 5m from one of the biggest refinieries in the UK
I still think the biggest change is 3000, with the ability to close-vote. Although I still remember how pleased I was when I finally had enough rep to post comments. :)
The reason this doesn’t work on Python 2 lies in its implementation of literal_eval. For some odd reasons, the only actual number evaluation literal_eval supports is addition and subtraction where the right operand is a complex number.
This was changed in Python 3 so that it supports any kind of...
Hey @poke You use PyCharm & Windows. Do you have any hints for this guy? I feel bad about the first dumb comment I posted... stackoverflow.com/questions/42083890/…
@AnttiHaapala I must admit it is nice. But it's only instant if the question is <= -3. Otherwise, there's still the 2 day wait.
I guess the ability to delete answers is nice too, although I rarely need to use it. A critical but diplomatic comment generally seems to do the trick of getting the author to self-delete. ;)
OP says system should not block the Python main thread. Meaning when the program finishes system should stay out of the way and keep the program running: stackoverflow.com/questions/42088120/… Different perspective! :D
@MYGz Maybe he needs to post a better example. That code only has a main thread. And if his file runs out of data the read will block until data becomes available. What does he expect it to do?
Oh. The kid with 220 just deleted their answer. I hope mine didn't intimidate them. It's slightly annoying that you can't comment on deleted answers to open questions.
@AndrasDeak I guess making the top bar sticky is ok, it's not very big, and it is kinda handy. And it's already semi-sticky in the mobile view: it becomes sticky if you've clicked on the inbox or rep widgets.
I refuse to acknowledge any handiness it might have
we have a home button and a scrollbar for a reason
people who don't use it find it way more intrusive than the people who would miss it if it wasn't there
especially since I don't like it:P
it's great to go on meta and pretend that the company cares about community feedback:D
The stickiness of the nav bar makes that +140% nav clicks less surprising. If you shove a bunch of buttons in someone's face, they're bound to start using them. That doesn't imply that it's necessarily a good thing to shove them into their face.
Well, yeah, that would be best. But SO isn't exactly known for customizable interfaces, is it?
I don't know any UI design thingies, nor front-end in general, so I could understand if it was too hard to maintain/design two versions of the page that works on all sorts of devices
although switching stickiness doesn't sound like rocket surgery
@AndrasDeak Not as such. And the current interface has a few flaws if you don't have a large screen size. I can't go bigger than 1024x768 on this old monitor. So all I see of the star board is half of the top line, unless I go full-screen.
@WayneWerner I used to follow what-if religiously, but for some reason I lost interest for a while, and then the thought of catching up on the main what-if site and the related forum threads got a bit intimidating.
That's a delta, isn't it? Usually means "difference between..."
Like "Δpos" means "difference between starting and ending position" aka distance
user6845426
Cheers guys. I'm just starting a project trying to make a neural network and some of the function equations look a bit daunting... Maybe I should refresh on my math first.
Oh. Do you only have the vertices? That's going to be a little tricky, and there generally won't be a unique solution, unless you can assume the poly is convex.
Maybe I could do something like this: create an undirected graph using the given vertices and edges. Detect all cycles of minimum length. Those cycles are isomorphic to the polyhedron's faces.
This only works for shapes whose faces all have the same number of edges, but luckily that applies to all platonic solids
And the minimal cycles trick will work for any convex poly, although all minimal cycles won't necessarily be the same size.
@Kevin Since we're doing regular polys, it'll be easy to find the centres of the faces (they're the means of the points comprising the face). And the normals through the face centres pass through the origin. So just make sure all your normals point away from the origin (or all point towards the origin, although it's more usual to make them point away).
@MarcusS Nah, just convex ones. But he only has the vertices, not the edges.
I came into the office today cause we need at least one person on the team in the office everyday... turns out the people who said they weren't coming in, came in... z z z
I usually use camelCase to refer to the style where the first letter is lowercase, and PascalCase to refer to the style where the first letter is capitalized. But I see PEP 8 doesn't share this distinction.
@PM2Ring Don't know, still feeling a little bit bad.. I have nausea now... Why it happened again....
@WayneWerner definitely disgusting feeling ever, you can trust me... I think I'm pushing a little bit hard myself about programming. Don't know, my learning process is a bit of problematic like that...
I'm not sure this warrants asking a question on main site (correct me if im wrong) but hopefully someone can help... I've written a reusable app for django - but whos responsibility is it to run the unit test since the app doesn't have a django configuration set up.. I presume its a mock consumer app? Docs aren't very helpful here
"It was really important for me to fit the 90% use case, instead of the 100% use case. Just because one person wants some feature added doesn't mean it should be there. "
@WayneWerner - Haha yes, theres not a single line of code in this particular case that has anything to do with django, but Pycharms handy little "run unit tests" won't do anything since its one of djangos TestCase's... I'll just hope my mock app can run it I think
Ah sure MCVE isn't a problem but it isn't a complete django app, just a reusable app (pip package essentially) so it doesn't have anything to stand on on its own.. I'll go flesh it out a bit before I bother to raise a question, thanks
I'd be interested in reading it once you're done - I don't use Pycharm, but it would be useful to have the knowledge stuck in the back of my mind somewhere.
Ah that might be what I have to do, Davidism. I'll try to remember to post a link to a question on here if I do make one. I can't imagine I'm the only person to ever come across this issue.. (Off to see what others do...)
If you were curious, django's own github just makes a separate py file that you need to run which seems to be the "goto" way
The hamburger button (also known as menu button, options button, and less frequently as hotdog button or pancake button) is a button typically placed in the top left or top right of a graphical user interface. It carries an icon consisting of three parallel horizontal lines (displayed as ☰) and is named for its resemblance to the layers in hamburgers, hotdogs, or pancakes.
Selecting (tapping or clicking) this button results in a menu being revealed (sliding out or popping up), which distinguishes it from a menu bar, which is always on display.
Use of this icon as a graphical shortcut originated...
This is a list of symbols found within all branches of mathematics to express a formula or to represent a constant.
When reading the list, it is important to recognize that a mathematical concept is independent of the symbol chosen to represent it. For many of the symbols below, the symbol is usually synonymous with the corresponding concept (ultimately an arbitrary choice made as a result of the cumulative history of mathematics), but in some situations a different convention may be used. For example, depending on context, the triple bar "≡" may represent congruence or a definition. Further, in...