Apparently links are now underlined. While I'm personally not a big fan of this, this seems to be a design decision.
However, code in links is underlined as well. This makes it rather hard to read.
Use this command or use this_command
Use [`this command`](https://stackoverflow.com/) or
u...
it doesn't look nice, granted, but it makes the site more accessible to people with partial color blindness, I think, so I don't really know if I want to complain
@JGreenwell did you see this implementation of the fibonacci sequence in Haskell?
fib@(0:tfib) = 0:1: zipWith (+) fib tfib
I think this is the same in Python:
from itertools import tee
def fib():
yield 0
yield 1
# tee required, else with two fib()'s algorithm becomes quadratic
f, tf = tee(fib())
next(tf)
for a, b in zip(f, tf):
yield a + b
[f for _, f in zip(range(999), fib())]
because even more reasonable and supported feature requests have historically been ignored by the powers that be, because we're so community except they don't give a yam
Just seems a little unfair because it was a new user that did the work in finding the dupe, I just converted it to a close and their contribution is lost
Denying rep would be a tough one, some dupes do not translate cleanly (like, easy to miss with reasonable searches) but I don't think it's a bad idea to reward low-rep users for finding dupes
then there's the puppy's request for the room owner kickban feature, probably the first real feature implemented that I've seen in the list of questions sorted by votes (that was in 2014)
The focus really does seem to have gone more wonky than normal recently
I'm not sure my minor niggle would be much more difficult to solve than all the UI changes. Now the upvote button on comments is irritating me, plus the perfectly valid criticism of underlining links
I can only imagine it would take an extra query to link the flag to the close votes - the flagged dupe is already in the suggested dupe list when you go to close
Not giving low-rep users any recognition for dupe-flagging is a little unkind to newbies, IMO. ;) OTOH, being mentioned in the dupe-close box is a dubious privilege, since the OP may not be happy that you've helped to close their question. And rep-farmers have just lost an opportunity to score upvotes, so they aren't happy either.
mmm, that's an interesting perspective. But does that imply that the purpose of naming people in the close box is to give the OP someone to argue with?
It makes sense with hammerings, but not so much when it's just 5 normal close votes
I actually like when my name appears on a "on hold" or "closed" box due to flagging as I did vote something and like to stand by my decisions (whereas if I flag but it is closed due to close-votes I just get a hard to find helpful notice in my profile)
Note, if they did dup finding like editing (can only suggest and give rep only up to 2k) then I would easily be at 2k by now but I'm not in it for the rep
I think dupe hunting deserves more reward than suggesting an edit. And the rewards should be given to all dupe hunters, since we want to give rep-farmers an incentive to dupe-hunt instead of answering obvious dupes.
Question for regulars: Do we have anything linking to "how do I post long bits of code in chat/SO?" - besides the link to dpaste on the chatroom tab
@PM2Ring I agree, just last night there was a duplicate which was FGITW answered by 4 people (including 2 1k+ users) and then when downvotes and dup flagged started complaining in the comments about it
Of course, we don't want to reward people who post bad dupe suggestions, but I think the usual dupe close-voting process can handle that. Or maybe that would need to be expanded a little so we can give up & down votes to the the various suggestions, and with the people who found the dupe target(s) that are finally selected getting the most reward. But I guess we don't want to make it too complicated. ;)
Last week I remember 1 dup target which I sorta didn't agree with (was okay just thought there could be a better one, had three targets, and that just required comment and discussion to fix). I saw more than 50, I swear 10 of them were the same question
yeah, I've seen that too (heck, I do it sometimes when I see a question that is at least well-written but I don't complain when downvoted and try to remember to delete answers which just repeat the dup)
@AndyK Thanks, I didn't think I was missing a link anywhere but wanted to check
Also, if I added Visual Studios to best Python IDEs would I be hanged at dawn or just firing squad? (seriously, using it now and its actually good)
@PM2Ring more importantly, that user is fooled by the rep # and volume of answers as a proxy for authority. And whomever else comes along and reads that and is swayed to think the same.
That's unusual. If you were indexing a list with a string, I'd expect TypeError. If you were indexing a dict with a string and the string wasn't a key in the dict, I'd expect KeyError. It's curious that you're getting a ValueError.
Oh, interesting. The way Firefox renders that json data, there's no way to tell whether any particular level is a list or a dictionary that just happens to use only digits in their keys.
Lesson: examine the data in a format that eliminates any possibility of ambiguity. Like json.dump()ing it to a local file and reading it with a text editor.
I suspect it'll be easier for cyc to give an example of what he's looking for rather than for us to guess what 'convert a string to its "url version"' means, given that apparently we can't even agree on which direction he wants to go. ;-)
Rule of thumb: 99.999% of the time, you don't need to use exec for anything. If you're thinking "how can I tell whether I'm in the 0.001%?", you aren't.
Now there's a new one - a recent question posts its code not as an image, but as a youtube video.
Incidentally I always feel vaguely guilty when I post a comment telling OP how they should change their post, when I know full well that even adhering to all my suggestions will probably not improve the likelihood of them getting an answer
e.g. posting "please supply your code as text, not as a youtube video" when the problem involves curses and a raspberry pi library, which means the number of people that could reliably replicate the problem is approximately zero anyway
Certainly in the numpy and pandas tags we don't always add import numpy as np and import pandas as pd, esp. when the original post was already using them.
I think we'd have to mention the imports if they weren't used, though.
chain is a borderline case. Everybody who regularly does Python will recognize which stdlib module it's coming from but I wouldn't necessarily expect a beginner to. I'd probably add the import if the question wasn't already in an itertools context.
For example, if I want to borrow some networkx functionality because a problem has a graphy solution, I can't just do nx.whatever.
@AnttiHaapala I was using a list of lists of lists and that took me 16 hours to ran it. with pandas I cannot get all the data together, and it takes 7-8 hours to run it
@Wendy to move forward you'd have to come up with a proper MCVE: a small example that looks just like your problem. Few items along each dimension, complete with ordered stuff you're missing, complete with raggedness which breaks numpy. And an expected output or other requirement you want to do. It won't be quick nor easy, but you have to do this.
@connectyourcharger the question is: do you have all the legit hits? Because you can always ignore overnumerous empty hits
or look at it this way: if the title is empty and the url is https://www.youtube.comundefined [sic], you're not going to do anything with it anyway, so skip
@AndrasDeak Yes, but then there's still the possibility of nonconsecutive numbers. Ex. if the titles are "foo", "", and "bar", then the output is "1. foo" and "3. bar" when the desired output is "1. foo" and "2. bar"
The strength of coding is that the cost for screwing up is very minimal. As compared to, say, carpentry, where you lose out on a nice birdhouse and/or a thumb
F-string formatting only came in with Python 3.6, so it still seems new to those of us who've been writing Python for years. And because it's new, we're more likely to do little typos like that.
@wim Or get rid of the yield 0 and do yield a in the loop. Ifyou want to see fast recursive Fibonacci, check out my fast_fib. It's slower than the standard iteration for small numbers, but it's great for n>1000. And of course the cache makes it very fast if you need lots of big Fibonacci numbers.
@JGreenwell From the docs In user defined base classes, abstract methods should raise this exception when they require derived classes to override the method, or while the class is being developed to indicate that the real implementation still needs to be added.
@AndrasDeak I might be a bit new, but what is MCVE? the structure is very similar to what I posted stackoverflow.com/questions/51888101/… the only part is the length of parameters and Values that is longer and an uneven number. in the example I have 12,
@AndrasDeak but in my case is 19 to say a number so 19 has to be divided so all parts have equal number of lines (parameter and value), I just realized that if I take it as an even number I either will have to leave one group/part with more lines than the others or truncate a couple of lines (so that gets more complicated).
@AndrasDeak As I said before I can merge values and parameters easily as they both correspond in size (51K =51k) but not the part as they must be alternated every 200+ lines just like in the example in the post.
Wendy, you are familiar with your data, and the processes that you want to perform on it. We are not. And although we've written lots of code, and processed lots of data, it can be hard to understand someone else's problem when you just have an abstract partial description of it. So if you can give us an MCVE then we'll have something tangible we can play with and modify. And then we will be much more likely to understand what you're talking about. :)
I'm not sure that's the game-theoretically optimal choice because if I was chuckling at my monitor I'd prefer that everybody else pretend that they didn't notice so I can enjoy my cat memes in peace
WTH... I keep getting 'return' outside function error on this... Do I have a function here? Literally nothing is even indented here. What am I missing?
It's also a little strange to read an HTML table into a dataframe, then write that into a csv, then split that csv using string methods to get the values as a list of lists.
I'm using this inside some org-mode source block to pass to another source block later... I think I inadvertently mentally identified this as returning something to org-mode... clearly that's not what my "return" meant
Some languages let you use return to specify the exit code of the process when it terminates, so it's not too crazy to think that Python would do the same
Using org-babel for code stuff is a little unlike usual Python because of the preprocessing it does. Probably return did work originally, in a non-session environment.
> :return: Value to return (only when result-type is value, and not in session mode; not commonly used). Default is None; in non-session mode use return() to return a value.
> Also, in non-session mode, the python code block will be wrapped in a function, so to return a value (in :results value mode) you have to use a return statemen