If you, as a company, show such disregard for your people that you're unwilling to accommodate something that makes your employee's like significantly better (at no expense to you) just because its different, I'd rather just straight up not work for you.
Yup, a different job offer. Last week, I got 3 job offers.... One was not a good fit, but there were 2 that were really close and it was a hard decision until one said "we don't allow dogs, not even service animals." so I said "OK, thanks for your consideration!"
So I went with the 3rd offer.
I'm gonna be a Senior Developer on a greenfield project, which is a little terrifying, but really exciting too!
@JGrindal I usually tell them I've made up my mind, and they'd have to offer [something patently ridiculous] to get me to reconsider. But this last time, two companies I turned down actually made the ridiculous offer. That's even more awkward.
Although for a different kind of person than us, I don't think any of this would be awkward at all, but rather an opportunity to boost their ego and/or salary with a bidding war.
A few years ago, I was working as a consultant. I spent 271 days traveling. I spent more time in China than in the US. It was hell on earth, and it pushed me past my breaking point. That year, though, I made more money than I made in the first 5 years of my career combined. At the end of the day I asked myself "was it worth it?" and the answer was a resounding "YAM no"
Yeah, Python's original OO design is definitely more Smalltalk-style than Simula-style, and some of the later features (metaclasses, hookable message send via __getattr__, descriptors, etc.) are directly lifted from Smalltalk. But I wouldn't call tacking Smalltalk onto a friendly scripting language hell. ObjC, on the other hand, sometimes feels like someone mixed up code from two different languages in your IDE.
I am trying to write an if condition, if the time is between 10:30 to 16:30. I can do time(10,30) <= now.time() <= time(16,30) but 10:30 and 16:30 are to be taken from a dictionary , which may or may not have a time. If there is no time this condition is always true. What would be an elegent way. mydict.get(time1,TRUE), mydict.get(teme2,TRUE). Basically i am trying to give a value which returns true if times were not given in mydict
In that case why not just if time1 not in mydict or ..., though that'll do the wrong thing anyway; now.time() might be over the upper limit, even if the lower limit is not given.
I want to write a function in Python that returns different fixed values based on the value of an input index.
In other languages I would use a switch or case statement, but Python does not appear to have a switch statement. What are the recommended Python solutions in this scenario?
what could be a good way to write case insensitive key search. basically mydict.get("key",0) to get value from any Key,KEY,keY (if none exist then return 0 as default value)
I want to gauge his opinion on using a memory store (such as Redis) for modelling a state machine simulation. I've read an article on someone using it but I'm unsure if it's a bit overkill.. I've looked at the State pattern but have a few concerns with it
I had asked a question yesterday on SO, after working on it and discussing with my friend, I found the answer. Can I put the answer to my own qus. on SO?
You can even accept your own answers 2 days after posting the question, but you won't get any rep for that. Still, it can signal that the problem is solved.
I'm currently running some tests with pytest and I'm curious if there is some way to see what logging output is generated by a unit test? I'm not having a lot of luck searching for this
perhaps related to my other issue, there's multiple places where there's a call to logging.config.fileConfig, am I right in thinking that this should be set up only once?
Right that's exactly what I've been doing. So I'm in the process of improving some code and making a library from it, I'm thinking that the call to fileConfig just goes in the top level __init__.py is this reasonable?
True, thanks. Unfortunately those don't do me any good, because I'm trying to show that these kinds of objects are considered truthy. Writing something like "Look, the truth value of True is True! That proves my point!" probably won't be very convincing :D
at this point you probably have "either you subclass object and it's implicitly truthy, or you override __bool__ in which case you're explicit, or you have a builtin-ish class with a definition in C"
@shuttle87 good find ---v
> By default, an object is considered true unless its class defines either a __bool__() method that returns False or a __len__() method that returns zero, when called with the object.
>>> (0).__bool__
<method-wrapper '__bool__' of int object at 0x55ba9c6dce60>
>>> (None).__bool__
<method-wrapper '__bool__' of NoneType object at 0x55ba9c6b36c0>
>>> (False).__bool__
<method-wrapper '__bool__' of bool object at 0x55ba9c6b27a0>
does anything not have a __bool__? Or are those wrappers just smoke and mirrors?
@JonClements I only learned about vars recently, and I use it in my own code now. But I feel like it's a rather unknown function, so I tend to use __dict__ instead of vars in SO answers.
There wasn't even an effort to disclose that they're asking about the same problem in two places in parallel. I already started helping with their question here (half of which was trivial to google), and I wanted to prevent others from doing so.
Don't hard-boiled noir detectives sometimes refer to handcuffs as cufflinks, in an ironic fashion? I assume lawyers and hard-boiled detectives spend a lot of time together, so they may have picked up on that too
How would one go about storing sensitive information on a DB but allowing the user to view them raw in the browser? Not talking passwords or personal data here (but still sensitive info)
@Sam Probably yes. I think most the the PHI that I work with in an EMR is actually un encrypted in the database. Im sure there is more security above that but Im not sure what it would be
@Droid now you need to show how you expect to call your function. Also describe how the function is supposed to work. How does it transform the input to the output? Then describe what part you are having difficulty with.
Sorry re read your first post which stated that. So yeah youll need to have a log in page before that. Then you can use a hash on the passwords and all that jazz.
i have problem, how can i do this update nested dict for each result, i have input dict {'AND': [{'OR': [{'AND': ['green', 'blue']}, {'AND': ['brown', 'blue']}, 'blue']}, {'NOT': 'red'}]} and i need the output of such an object paste.fedoraproject.org/paste/aNpwVfzyGLON8hDEYYj91g