"string.letters The concatenation of the strings lowercase and uppercase described below. The specific value is locale-dependent, and will be updated when locale.setlocale() is called."
It's a little tricky for them to deflect with "but that might break backwards compatibility" because the behavior is already locale-dependent anyway. Programs that expect non-capitals first justly deserve to burst into flames.
Semi-related: Today I was briefly concerned that my Visual Studio project had deleted all the rows in my million row database table, when I noticed that select * from WIDGETS where NAME != '' returned zero rows, and select * from WIDGETS where NAME = '' returned zero rows.
Then I did select * from WIDGETS and got a million rows. I still don't know what I'm doing wrong.
I'm specifically laying the blame on Visual Studio because every time I do something with one of its "wizards" instead of typing regular text into a regular file, it makes half a dozen changes to config files in my local project and the global assembly cache and the web server and the WOPR missile defense network
That question about why Python and Ruby allows for function overwriting... why wouldn't you want to be able to write over your functions if you choose too :\
@MooingRawr I'd say defining the same function twice is possibly a sign that you've made a bad design decision and/or a typo, so it's reasonable for some languages to disallow it.
However in Python, We're All Adults Here so if you want to shoot yourself in the foot, you are welcome to it
I understand fully well why it could seem like a bad practice, but on the other hand, I second your second comment... Freedom to do whatever you want even if it's a bad idea.
On another irrelevant note. My office is thinking to phase out "cubical decks" for the new hip "kinetic decks" that can life and turn into a standing desk. On the downside, not as much privacy... Does anyone else work in a non cubical environment? and thoughts on it?
@MooingRawr Depends on why you want to switch to those desks in the first place and what kind of environment makes sense for the kind of work you're doing
I wonder if people work more efficiently in an open space vs private space... google doesn't come with a clear cut answer, but raise a few good points to each sides
@MarcusS not my call. I don't know why we are switching to open office... We are moving to a new location and they decided to swap to open style, instead of keeping the current cubical layout. We have about 50+ employee in this office, so it's going to be rather interesting to see how it turns out.... but then again I didn't see the layout of the new office. Maybe it's team based room with these desks, so each team is section off from other teams, but you are open within your own team.
Like you said, I think a mix of both would be perfect, maybe a bit on the expensive side. I wonder how much productivity will be affected based on these changes.
Are you going to fill the list right after it? If so how? It all depends on what you are doing. If you are just creating a list and then filling it, perhaps you would want to use a list comprehension. If you are creating a list, to fill based on other factors like thread returns and what not, then i don't think either matters. Both are accepted and it's a opinionated answer on which is "better" Moinuddin gives a good answer
@MooingRawr Open office is fun, but sometimes when you are stuck with some bug which is hard to debug, you look for silent place around you. But that is hard to find :(
I still think this question is personal opinions and there's no real "better" answer. Both has their pros and cons :\ just gotta pick one that you like...