In the computer science field of artificial intelligence, a genetic algorithm (GA) is a search heuristic that mimics the process of natural selection. This heuristic (also sometimes called a metaheuristic) is routinely used to generate useful solutions to optimization and search problems. Genetic algorithms belong to the larger class of evolutionary algorithms (EA), which generate solutions to optimization problems using techniques inspired by natural evolution, such as inheritance, mutation, selection, and crossover.
Genetic algorithms find application in bioinformatics, phylogenetics...
Your first version works fine, the continue was unnecessary:
>>> numbers = 2, 3, 4, 237, 5, 6
>>> for n in numbers:
... if n % 2 == 0:
... print n
... if n == 237:
... break
...
2
4
The keyword, continue, aborts completion of the current iteration of the loop and continues the n...
Hey, I'm in the 90th percentile on SO!
I hit it Monday
Woot
95th %ile would be the next milestone I suppose
I suppose I should calculate it...
3571 is the 90th percentile mark now
95th percentile is 6621 rep
Not sure if it's worth it, but I might hit it now that I'm aiming for badges.
We'll have to see how it goes...
Although I'm in the 99th percentile of total users. Probably good enough.
help please write data horizontally in csv-file.
the following code writes this:
import csv
with open('some.csv', 'w', newline='') as f:
writer = csv.writer(f)
writer.writerows('jgjh')
but I need so
I want to cast data like [1,2,'a','He said "what do you mean?"'] to a csv-formatted string.
Normally one would use csv.writer() for this, because it handles all the crazy edge cases (comma escaping, quote mark escaping, CSV dialects, etc.) The catch is that csv.writer() expects to output to a f...
hmm, I don't see that as a dup. That question is about writing csv to a string (not file) while the previous question is about writing it to a file and the issue is different
Why does saying X = classname(A, B) produce no errors when a method of X is called. Like X.method_of_classnames(C)
But entering into an eval statement:
classname.method_of_classname(C) produces an error saying self is not defined.
I essentially made two calls. One was where a call was made to a method of a class assigned or instantiated(?) to a variable. And that worked fine. The second was where I simply made a call using the classname without assigning it to anything, and produced an error
Might it be because 'self' isn't referring to any object when I simply make a call using the classname? \
@Owatch in the first case you're calling a method on an instance and on the second you're calling it on a class... Calling it on the instance is basically classname.method(class_instance, C) while the instance call has an implicit self there...
class methods normally (unless a classmethod or staticmethod) normally have an instance associated with them... when in your class you call self.something() that's equivalent to classname.something(self)
This is sometimes used to call a method of one class on an object of a different class. In wxPython it is often used to call the constructor of a widgets base class.
So within a class called: "Bob", there is an method "Name". Calling "Name" within "Bob" won't look for "Name" within "Bob", but will look to see if "Name" exists somewhere else inside in the global scope of the program. However, calling "self.Name" will refer to it's own method "Name" within "Bob".\
@Fenikso You're saying I can use Jon's example just above to do something and be able to refer to which object I want to do that job.
@JonClements That is helpful! But I do realize I could have just done F.send as well.
It is all the same. The first one is the most idiomatic in wxPython. But it is easy to mess when you change the parent class and forget to change the call.
And do you even need .__init__? Is that not automatically called if no method is specified? Or is that only the first time the instance is created. In which case you do need to specify?
I'm just still a little muddled with your examples using super. You created a class called MainWindow above, right. Then you defined the constructor, which then called super whilst referring to MainWindow. But MainWindow was just created. It doesn't have a parent at all to refer to.
I think it would have been more confusing, had I not known what wxPython was. But it is fine and is not confusing, at least for what was explained. How wxPython widgets work, and what they usually are trying to get from their Base Classes isn't clear to me yet.
But I don't think I need to know just yet!
I'm going to go and fix the Alpha issue with my thumbnail.
I'm trying to make my first facebook tab app with django.
I did some resarch and found out that fandjago is the best.
So I'm using it , but when I try to require users to authorize I use the decorator
facebook_authorization_required
see : https://fandjango.readthedocs.org/en/latest/usage/au...
@jon Now it says; The server could not verify that you are authorized to access the URL requested. You either supplied the wrong credentials (e.g. a bad password), or your browser doesn't understand how to supply the credentials required.
@Aशwini Yup, you're authenticated but not authorised :)
@Ffisegydd err nope, I believe we're planning to extend the markdown to allow putting tags on posts/entries, but we're not planning to keep wiki entries for the tags themselves
@Ffisegydd it was just what I was using for a test for linking to and also syntax highlighting and just seeing how well a copy/paste from an SO post looked