Do you always write fixtures in pytest? I keep seeing fixtures being used almost all the time. But for the tests I'm writing, naturally, I just don't see where I want to use it yet
I've written a fair number, mostly when I want to mock away a data source or disable all network access or something. But if your functions tend to depend only on their arguments and not implicitly on something else, you'll need them a lot less.
@DSM What Andras said. I knew that json.loads is fast, and that ast.literal_eval has a reputation for being slow due to its overheads, but I didn't realise that the difference is that large.
why was json.load the only one with 100000 loops while the other was 10000. What made it special to get 10 times more attention. /s But still, must be nice to get a response from Tim Peters.
I think only the Ninja has ever praised me, so I guess that would be on my wall :D
global warming doesn't kill winter in a year, and it doesn't lead to every single point on Earth getting warmier and warmer. But it does lead to gradually more erratic weather in Europe
for a definitive statement on whether it's global warming we'd need a Parallel Earth where everything is the same except no global warming (:P) and compare the two pairs of days :P