@aIKid it's pretty easy, I installed tightvncserver on the Pi, configured it, so that it will startx and opens in 32bit color depth and 1024x768 resolution (matches the iPad) then I installed Mocha VNC on the iPad and created a Static IP address on my router for the WiFi dongle's MAC address of the Pi -- and BAMM it's done ;)
@aIKid The best part is I also enabled the SSH and the AppleFiletransferProtocol so I see the entire Pi as a mounted disc on my Mac and I use the ssh from a Terminal window
so I can use my good ol' texteditor to write Python files
Decorating __init__ with @classmethod is not the best idea, i think. What if you want to do another things with the instance variables? - BTW, i didn't downvote though — aIKid22 mins ago
That's because you are modifying self, which is the class instance, but you want to modify the class. You could modify the class's attribute by using A.foo = 1, but there's a better solution which won't require modification of code when the class name is changed: add the @classmethod decorator ar...
Read up more on the way things works... if you really wanted the ability to not hard code the class name, then you can use the instance self, and do type(self).whatever =
@Lattyware yes... hence my note about __new__... __init__ will always be called on an instance... which just happens to be whatever something along the line's __new__ decided...
Hence why __init__ can only ever be an instance method and not static/class
What is it with people finding answers on StackOverflow and assuming it's reasonable to just email you questions directly out of the blue?
"I am new learner and i did intersection of two circles and now find their intersection and union and rename A & B to circles i just want some hints if u can please"
just received that
that is verbatim, the whole email, by the way. Literally nothing else.
Does anyone want to help me brainstorm for a Very primitive console based Battleship game in python. I'm trying to develop it for my final. Being a very amateur programmer, I would like some advice and maybe tips or tricks on the code I already have. I have done a lot of research but none of the games seem to match the description of what I've been doing.
ok, i'm trying to deploy my django project with nginx and gunicorn. when i start nginx I get this error: dpaste.de/IkvN ..if i try to increase the worker_connections i have another error dpaste.de/nWmD
This is a really noob question but I haven't worked much with JS/JQuery aside from basic stuff so I'm confused on event.preventDefault(). I understand that it prevents the default event from occurring but where does the parameter come from? In my syntax highlighter it highlights 'event' as a parameter so it must be a keyword...but then I see examples where the parameter is just 'e' or 'evt', and nothing is being passed into the function call. How does that work?
Hey @samrap, this is the Python channel, so JS questions are kind of off topic here. Regardless, the event object is passed to the event handler as the first parameter. E.g. if you register your events using element.addEventListener('click', myHandler);, then myHandler will receive the event object as the first parameter.
The name itself is just a normal variable, so event or e or evt would all be valid names. It’s not a keyword.
Okay thanks and yea I don't plan on making JS questions here a regular thing, I just figured it was so basic that it wasnt worth asking on SO or joining a JS chat room to ask. Thanks!