@MartijnPieters I was thinking: I have two options on value-assignment. The first one, is to duplicate the data in each widget, and each widget has to have output's, to deal with the modified value. This makes the code easy to read, to arrange, but this is less like the python language and most importantly very unefficient..
The second option is, to use a timeline to tell, when one widget is going to be called. In this case, the code would be harder to read, will be less intuitive for beginners, but will more like as python and will be as efficient as python itself
in this case, it doesn't matter, if a widget has an output or not, since it will effect the same object in a different time
@Kneel-Before-ZOD, the Octocat has five tentacles at a minimum. Assuming a snake and a tentacle have equivalent combat ability, octocat has the advantage
I was trying to integrate django-allauth and i tried to use custom user model. As stated here i created my model
class Client(AbstractBaseUser):
fname = models.CharField(max_length=50)
lname = models.CharField(max_length=50)
email = models.EmailField(max_length=150, unique=True, db_i...
I suspect he's doing something like, numbers = map(int, user_input), which will indeed turn "12345" into five numbers, when he wants it to be just one
Or even just for digit in user_input: numbers.append(int(digit))
Interesting math question: sorting a list of 2d points so that the distance between successive elements is minimized. I suspect this is a Hard problem to solve.
Ah, a commenter nailed it. It's the traveling salesman problem on a complete graph. That's NP hard then.
Yeah, I think. It's slightly restricted since distances are strictly euclidean, which the TSP doesn't require. But I don't think that changes its hardness much.
then you can get the shortest way started from one point
compared to all of them..
@MartijnPieters I came up with conclusion, that if I create a timeline (I already draw 6 pages in my notebook of the different looks-and-feels) then it is going to be 100% messy, too strict and absolutely equal to the textual version -- but in a wrong way. If it is textual, than type it, don't draw it, because text is more felxible for this...
I'm not sure that approach is optimal. Isn't it possible, that when the list is optimally sorted, the two points that are closest together won't be adjacent in the list?
Interesting that this question has pretty poor English, but thanks to a full SSCCEE and an example of the expected output, you can figure out exactly what he's asking.
This would be an A+ if only he had posted the actual output too.
Let's see, how do you omit the trailing newline/space for print in 2.7...
@Kevin Have you noticed that his examples are always in ascending order? That might be an interesting problem: split a string of digits into a minimally ascending string of numbers.
I tried to prod him in my first comment with "unless there are additional constraints you haven't told us", but he didn't seem to catch on.
I suspect that there are additional constraints, but he's struggling to convey them. That's why he's just giving more examples. He's hoping I can reverse engineer his requirements.
It'll be a home run if he replies to my second comment with, "the result can't be 101, 112, 1, 3, because the numbers must be in ascending order". But I'm not optimistic about that.