Not Sudoku, though. I've done enough of them for one lifetime, thankyouverymuch
There is an employment crisis at the bottom of the ocean. An increase in nautical safety regulations over the last two centuries has reduced the quantity of damned souls in Davy Jones' Locker, causing a shortage of skilled workers.
As such, there won't be much competition when you apply for a captain position, but you'll have to swab your own poop deck.
You may want to pivot into the Great Old Ones industry. We're experiencing a boom of mad cultists that wish to bring about the End Of All Things, so there's a lot of demand for tentacle face beings.
It's difficult enough to read in English. Took me a couple decades to discover that "squamous" isn't something that H.P. just made up to describe indescribable monsters.
or at least it's nearly identical to a word here in italian (so i think derives from latin) that means made of squames. like the skin of fishes or scales.
> In anatomy, squamous epithelium (from Latin squama, "scale") is an epithelium characterised by its most superficial layer consisting of flat, scale-like cells called squamous epithelial cells.
> "Why don't you guys just use IRC, man?" We're trying to build a system better and easier to use than IRC, that is native to modern web browsers. Will we support XMPP? We're not sure yet. In the meantime, there is a nascent community project to create an IRC interface to our chat.
Last updated 3 years ago. Stable, or dead? You decide.
yet another stupid question: say you have a dictionary of grades, for example, and in that dictionary is student objects (with generic things like name, grade, blah)... how do you reference a grade in the dictionary then an attribute of the object?
gradeDict=collections.OrderedDict([('A',[]), ('B', []), ('C', []), ('D', []), ('F', [])])
for key, value in students.iteritems():
for obj in value:
gradeDict[obj.GRADE].append(obj)
print rating['A'].NAME
I have a list of strings and another list of tokens whose elements I have to search in the previous list. Suppose an element in list1 is 'there is the damaged car' and in list2 is 'the'. now `'the' in ''there is the damaged car''` always returns `true` but it should not as 'the' is not on the string!
Although it doesn't work unless my working directory is github-get:
c:\>"github-get/parser.py"
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\github-get\parser.py", line 1, in <module>
with open("config.json") as file:
IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'config.json'
Yes, it's astounding. The few other languages I've tried to do web connectivity in, requires your ip address, one hundred configuration options with mutually exclusive settings, PO box, mother's maiden name...
@JonClements just hit the "you can perform this action again in 3 seconds" limit migrating dateutil to python-dateutil. I think I'll take that as a hint to leave the rest of the cleanup to someone else :-)