My point is, before you start talking about blockchains, you have a lot of basics to to learn first. Sometimes it is easier to learn a language when you can see an example in a field that you are interested in. I've not looked at this code, but I'll bet there are a number of Python features that are used in it that you would learn from by studying and figuring out what they do.
I understand that I have a lot of basics to learn first. I'm curious as to if my google spreadsheet has the appropriate courses for learning about blockchains?
concepts that I can apply towards veloping and understanding blockchains?
If you don't see why presenting a list of a few dozen names of courses and asking "will these help me to understand blockchains?" isn't a particularly useful question, then I'd really start with the basics.
I obviously don't want to waste your time, but being pointed in the right direction would help a lot. I do know that blockchain tech is composed of assymetric encryption, hash functions, merkle trees, key value databases, p2p protocols and proof of work concept
I obviously need a good foundation to start to understand these technologies, but wanted to know if the course list I put together is good enough or if I'm learning things that I don't need to?
Here's the thing, though: it wouldn't help a lot. The problems you're going to encounter aren't going to be the ones you expect, and that's an enormous amount of material in that list. By the time you got through a quarter of it, you'd be more than qualified enough to determine for yourself what you'll need to know.
Also, if blockchains really interest you, you can also grab a udemy course. There are a few courses up there now. And here is a basic one: udemy.com/the-basics-of-blockchain
I certainly don't want to discourage self-motivated learning, but I don't know how useful trying to work backward from a very specific goal will be. I second (third?) everyone's recommendations to concentrate on relearning the basics.
I know very little about blockchains, but a fair bit about general programming, so I'm confident that I could work with them without much trouble. Rather than narrowly focusing on your goal, concentrate on getting the skills which will make learning about blockchains easy, and incidentally will allow you to do other things even if you get bored by blockchains after making it through a few youtube videos.
@DSM When you mean 'Rather than narrowly focusing on your goal, concentrate on getting the skills which will make learning about blockchains easy'
Do you mean go down that list that I made, and once I get enough skills I can choose and pick what courses would best fit my skills for building blockchains?
You really seem to like your list. :-) First learn Python, or some other language, reasonably well, however you like. (I mean first here conceptually, not necessarily temporally -- if you want to immediately try applying basic Python to blockchain applications, I guess you can, although I think you'll find it very frustrating.) Once you understand basic data structures and algorithms, you'll be in a much better situation.
Right now you're trying to make decisions too far in the future, and no battle plan survives contact with the enemy, as they say.
LargeCanadianCity has two good Scottish pubs, both of which have an excellent selection, although wanting to keep both my spending and my waistline low means I can't go as often as I'd like. :-/
One year when my son was home from college, we did Father's Day on the back porch drinking Scotch and smoking cigars, and he let me bore him with tales from my youth
@MartijnPieters actually it is a list, but of regexes. I want to do a re.search for all of them separately and assure they all have a match. So do you suggest something like-
for i in range(len(regex_list)):
all(if re.search(regex[i]))
In [8]: regex_list = [re.compile('\d'), re.compile('[a-z]')]
In [9]: def f(s): return all(r.search(s) for r in regex_list)
In [10]: f('ab')
Out[10]: False
In [11]: f('a1')
Out[11]: True
@user1993 all(map(re.search, regex_list)) was just wrong in many ways
replying with "maybe we can help, but it's impossible to say without knowing your problem" is honestly more tiresome than answering the actual question
I've created some calculations in tkinter entry widgets. Now I just wanna clear everything out by clicking the clear button. but since the Entry widget in for loop I wonder how to use delete method to clear all the widget at once can you help me out?
entries = []
for _ in range(3):
# create entries
entries+= [ent, a, b, c, d, const, rat, disp]
then you can use a loop to clear them
def clear():
for entry in entries:
entry.delete(0, END)
@user1993 Because you usually use that index to get a value from the list. A for value in list loop does the same thing with less code
for i in range(len(list)): # 2 lines, 6 braces
value = list[i]
for value in list: # 1 line, 0 braces
for i, value in enumerate(list): # 1 line, 2 braces
@davidism: i have a test case for a flask-sqlalchemy 2.2 issue ("Can't find any foreign key relationships between"). wanna have a look later? still need to remove unneeded code but getting this solved would be great, since we are kind of stuck with 2.1 for now due to this
@IljaEverilä: It's caused by the tablename generation logic of flask-sqlalchemy 2.2 (before it worked perfectly fine, and it works fine with plain sqlalchemy too)
print(euro)` i want to grab the number that is in the last tag on this site: https://www.kraken.com/charts (top left) but the number is in a class called val mono but if i try that it doesnt give me the number, i noticed that the name of the div where it is in is called: last. can i only ask the Name tag instead of the …
@AndrasDeak just another fast question that has something to do with my last question: how can i float the euro? because when i try this i get this error: ValueError: could not convert string to float: '€2,071.810'
if I were you I'd grab the data-val field of the tag, because that seems to contain the same information in a proper numeric string (rather than a pretty one)
well, you know, Microsoft. They've come up with worse names. For example if your PC boots into the Advanced Startup Menu and you click the "Continue" button, guess what it does? That's right, it reboots.
I eventually replaced all the InStrs with String.Contains, which is a .NET standard collection method and therefore far less pants-on-head than any VB-specific idiom.
well that was just some pseudocode to get the idea across, obviously. Does it make more sense if I write it as min((comment for comment in comments if comment.time > time), key=operator.attrgetter('time'))?
I didn't think it was used for syntax highlighting in ipython at all. If you had to install it, it was probably to support the mathtext module in matplotlib.
on Windows basically you create a service (search python win32 api create windows service for a guide) that sleeps for a minute and checks if there are any jobs that should have been run since the last time it slept
note that you don't want to just run the jobs that are supposed to run now
because it's possible that your service died or something, so you want to make sure to run stuff that hasn't been in a while.
I haven't used celery, only RabbitMQ directly, but IIRC celery is basically a wrapper around some of the uglier bits of producing/consuming RabbitMQ messages.
How can I run a function in Python, at a given time?
For example:
run_it_at(func, '2012-07-17 15:50:00')
and it will run the function func at 2012-07-17 15:50:00.
I tried the sched.scheduler, but it didn't start my function.
import time as time_module
scheduler = sched.scheduler(time_module...
I am looking for an event scheduler like quartz in java for my python project .
Please suggest me some good scheduler in Python
My Requirements
1) Send an email or sms to the user after some interval
Thanks !