Cabbage Peaches and Pears, Potato. Banana? It'd like to present a Python library that combines many Python functions into one. Melon, melon, watermelon. Please asparagus improve this library here. Avocado? Melon.
The issue with attempted panacea modules like yours is that they will never be able to cover enough use cases to be sufficiently useful. I would stick to doing one thing, and doing it right
Not to say I don't commend what you are trying to do.
cabbage - this raises an AssertionError, what am I missing?
from typing import NamedTuple
class Location(NamedTuple):
row: int = 0
col: int = 0
if __name__ == '__main__':
p0 = Location()
assert isinstance(p0, NamedTuple)
@ReblochonMasque In typing.py there's 'NamedTuple', # Not really a type., but can't find a good explanation from the docs. Long story short, the meta machinery results in an mro that's based on tuple.
There's of course the description "Typed version of namedtuple" and named tuples state that "Returns a new tuple subclass named typename."
Thank you @IljaEverilä - yes, I suspect something like what you said.. namedtuple and now typing.NamedTuple are a constant source of frustration, and, dare I say, disappointment.
>>> class Employee(NamedTuple):
... name: str
... id: int
...
>>> issubclass(Employee, NamedTuple)
False
Ah, I see Ilja's 2nd link is to an answer by Wim from that time period. Oh well, I should've checked the links before attempting to wrestle with the flaky Chat named search function. :)
It's an unfortunate wart. I guess it's semi-tolerable because Python coders generally use duck typing & try to avoid explicit isinstance checks. And now we have datatypes. But still...
No worries. I couldn't remember Chebyshev distance, I found it via the Moore neighbourhood page.
@AndrasDeak Ok. Still seems weird though that the system permits it, and that an OP would VTC their own question. But that OP has a track record for weird. ;) My guess is that he has some deep-seated misconceptions which cause him to misinterpret stuff he reads so that it fits with his wonky worldview.
@MartijnPieters would it be deemed acceptable for me to place a bounty on an old question I recently wrote a canonical answer to, to draw attention to it?
@ReblochonMasque I recently wrote an answer for How to deal with SettingWithCopyWarning in pandas. I see so many posts by users who get the warning, happen upon the post, read the answers, and still don't understand why/how the problem occurs and how to best solve it.
The hope is that the number of questions being asked, re-asked, and answered with the same rehashing can reduce if my answer helps users understand the problem better.
@coldspeed sure, but be prepared for some members of the community to react with downvotes, as some members of the community see drawing attention to a question because you answered it as 'cheating' somehow.
@wim I'm not sure I follow. Martijn said it was not a problem, and unless Martijn is wrong, then people clearly have negative perceptions about posting bounties on questions you have answered.
it is just like the issue of hammering using your own question as dupe; regardless of how justified it is, if there is a conflict of interest, people are going to make a sour face about it
fwiw, I don't think there's anything wrong with your bounty, personally. But other people are free to disagree, and it's arrogant to immediately label them as misconceived. People just disagree sometimes, and that's OK.
And I think you misrepresent what Martijn said. He actually said you can probably expect downvotes, which is quite the opposite of "not a problem" and more like "some people will have a problem with that".
perhaps "misconceived" was not the right choice of word use. I am trying to say that there is a lack of consensus in the community regarding this matter, so opening a meta post to clear up the confusion would really help.
what is right and what is not, different people have different views so having the community discuss it is all I was suggesting
> You may vote to delete answers in the following cases:
The answer is extremely low quality: There is little to no scope for improvement The answer doesn't attempt to answer the question; it may be a comment or a separate question altogether.
I wonder if "based on guesswork and provably completely wrong" counts as "extremely low quality"
but there's always scope for improvement by rewriting the answer...
@wim question's been edited, now it's more or less an elaborate "why can't I reuse a consumed iterator" dupe (with the exception that files can be rewound)