@aIKid Nice answer. I always struggle with the line between "you have no idea how to do this; here's how to go figure it out" and "oh, fine, here's the code"
True fact: I have an emacs buffer called "stackoverflow_copypasta" open with 10-15 friendly requests for more information or encouragement to try it themselves, and I just copy in, edit if necessary, and paste
No more re-typing the same comments over and over!
This script adds a little 'auto' link next to all comments boxes. When you click the link, you see a popup with 6 configurable auto-comments, which you can easily click to insert.
This script was inspired by answers to this question on meta....
I'm trying to place a LabelFrame which displays a Label inside a Canvas however I receive this error:
TclError: can't use .28425672.27896648 in a window item of this canvas
Here's my code:
from Tkinter import LabelFrame, Label, Tk, Canvas
root = Tk()
canvas = Canvas(root)
canvas.pack()
...
Make the label_frame child of the canvas, and pack the label inside the frame. Then pass label_frame (instead of label) to create_window .
...
label_frame = LabelFrame(canvas, text="I'm a Label frame")
label = Label(label_frame, text="Hey I'm a Label")
label.pack()
canvas.create_window(10, 20, ...
STICKERS!!!
Where would I place stickers?
My laptop, top and bottom (it's too thin to put them on the sides)
Every door I see (because people couldn't help seeing them as they open the door)
My car (because I go a lot of places)
Other peoples' cars (because they might go a lot of places)
The b...
You can make a timer decorator:
Here is some example code:
from time import time
class Timer(object):
def __init__(self, func):
"""
Decorator that times a fucntion
@param func: Function being decorated
@type func: callable
"""
self.func = fu...
This is a little convoluted, but:
from pprint import pprint
from itertools import dropwhile, takewhile
with open('stuff') as f:
list1 = [line.split('#')[0].split() for line in f]
list2 = [[map(float, var) for var in takewhile(lambda x: len(x) != 1, list1)]] + \
[[map(float, ...
I've been messing with itertools a bit, so if you think I could have made it a bit more efficient, that that would be awesome.
I feel dropwhile, and takewhile in the same function is a little annoying
def split(nested_list, fun):
if len(nested_list) == 0:
return nested_list
else:
for i, var in enumerate(nested_list):
if fun(var):
return nested_list[:i] + split(nested_list[i+1:], fun)
with open('stuff') as f:
list1 = [line.split('#')[0].split() for line in f]
print split(list1, lambda x: len(x) == 1)
for some reason, I keep getting the error that I can't concatenate a nonetype
I'm trying to use python and mechanize to send sms from my mobile provider website.
The problem is that form has a captcha image. Using mechanize I can get the link to the image, but it's different all the time I access that link.
Is there any way to get exact picture from mechanize?
In Python 3.x, super() can be called without arguments:
class A(object):
def x(self):
print("Hey now")
class B(A):
def x(self):
super().x()
>>> B().x()
Hey now
In order to make this work, some compile-time magic is performed, one consequence of which is that the fol...
@GamesBrainiac the question comes directly from having read Armin's article ... googling didn't find me a response to his complaint, hence asking on SO.
Well, we have one or two big Python names lurking on SO now, so with a bit of luck someone like Tim Peters will pop up and explain the rationale in mind-blowing detail :-)
You have a couple of errors. First with the basic:
b=true
This needs to the True, otherwise, python will look for the true variable.
Secondly, i actually contains the value of the variable for that iteration (loop). For example:
>>> l = ['a', 'b', 'c']
>>> for i in l: print i
a
b
c
Because...
umm, sorry, but this scientific usage is totally new to me -- I mean, I can help you drawing on the screen or to an SVG file, but this is.. I have to learn everything about it, just as you do
and I have to tell you, it is not as well documented as it looks