Hmm, I went into "evil scientist" mode for a while and now I have the perfect weapon to end our next impromptu "who can write the worst code" competition
This code was working yesterday, and now it isn't. What's more, I can formally prove that it never should have worked. Who's been changing the underlying rules of logic and mathematics?
Well, whoever's doing it, quit it. You know that mad professionals aren't supposed to step on one another's toes like this. Unless you schedule a rivalry ahead of time and register it at mad town hall.
When I tear a hole in space time in order to quicken my apotheosis as a being of pure reason, I have the courtesy to restrict the effects to Skull Island, my base of operation.
You could have a long and fulfilling career without ever understanding a word of section 3.3.3 customizing class creation, so not questioning things is a valid strategy
The only time* I am remotely tempted to delve into its secrets is when I have to write about a dozen classes, all slightly different, and I think "if only there was a way I could... Customize the creation of these classes"
(* for actual useful practical purposes. I'll delve into any scary corner of the language if it's for an obfuscated code puzzle that has no tangible reward)
Ok, I will accept "I didn't want to spend money on the most recent Python course" as a valid reason to learn 2.7 in modern day times. Everyone who says "Idk, it was the first thing that turned up on google" is still on the hook.
People who say "this blogger of relatively good repute said that 2.7 was superior to 3.X" get a slap on the wrist, and that blogger gets bumped up the Enemy Of The State list
I learned Python the hard way in college, working on a project that needed to work on Mac and Windows while most of us were developing on arch. Plus we used wxWidgets for the UI and the documentation for the python version was down so we had to rely on the ruby documentation.
I had a couple algorithms that started looping infinitely (or near enough) after I switched to 3.X. My initial design assumed that if I divided an integer by 2 enough times, it would eventually equal 1. Not a great assumption to make any more.
I, too, run code to see if it raises any exceptions that need fixing. It doesn't always work, though, for example if your code loops forever instead of crashing.
Quick question: why is it that when I am saving a variable and its contents in a text file l, it automatically adds a blank line between lines? And how can I get rid of these blank lines?
"Debugging is difficult and a waste of time, especially when working with a language that lets you shoot yourself in the foot because calling gun.fire() before gun.aim() is unexpected behavior."
@AndrasDeak Even these days I basically never use the // operator. If I want truncated division, I probably also want the remainder, so divmod is my weapon of choice
@Kevin the lines are gone but the result is all under one single line and there are no whitespace characters however there are \r\n\r been added between each line.
Ok. In that case, try name = names.replace('\r', '').replace('\n\n', '')
What I think is happening is, your string has data like "line A goes here \n\r\n\r line B goes here". Calling .replace('\n\n', '') on this does nothing because there aren't any newlines next to one another in the string. But when you write to the file, it still renders a complete blank line between lines A and B.
That's what you wanted, right? If you want to get rid of all newlines, then you can just do name = names.replace('\r', '').replace('\n', ''). Then everything will be on one line guaranteed