You could access the API every N minutes and display the latest result to your user. There won't be any delay, but your data won't be always up-to-date
Here are two pages, test.php and servertest.php.
test.php
<script src="scripts/jq.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script>
$(function() {
$.ajax({url:"testserver.php",
success:function() {
alert("Success");
},
error:function()...
@Wally you could add the API call to a queue and have a process pick it up when available. Then have your website direct your user to a holding page or something and then when the request is finished, they can click to get the results.
I don't know how to do this at all, I just recall davidism saying something along these lines to someone once.
cbg I just had a hell of a time getting here. I got the "Loading Python\nJust a second..." screen and it just sat there. For ages. Multiple times. After an hour or so I suspected there might be a server problem. But eventually, I "tunneled" in via the transcripts page.
@MartijnPieters I fail to see how such an op would be even remotely considered Pythonic. And that's not even taking into consideration your points about max() handling multiple args and a key function.
@PM2Ring agreed; the use of max() for two variables also smacks of inefficient code (determining the maximum each iteration rather than collect the values in a sequence or iterable, and determining the max just once).
I must say I have some trouble understanding why this question has been closed as opinion based if it has such an explainable, logical answer? (inefficiency and complexity of code in the case said function were implemented)
@Jivan Perhaps because it'd be rude to tell the OP "If you think that pile of dogshit is Pythonic, you don't have an f'ing clue what Pythonic means". :)
yeah, to sum this up, closing questions as "opinion based" is rather an opinion-based decision, I guess :) - joke apart, I guess @PM2Ring's point made a huge difference - because some questions are far more opinion-based and not closed because they ask something fairly interesting - which was not really the case here
btw such questions can be spotted by the amount of comments they generate (around 20 for the question itself and 6 or 7 for one single answer, basically consisting in "you are wrong", "no I'm right")
after a several-days run of 200+rep each with answers that I consider quite good, nothing worth reading has seemed to be making its way out of my brain for 2 days. My answers get bashed or down voted systematically and I think they deserve it. I think there are like, steps with slopes and plateaus in one's path towards being a useful SO contributor.
it's funny because it really feels like a game in the sense that the more you progress, the harder it seems to find something relevant to ask / to answer - perhaps partly because you loose interest in "basic" questions such as "how to print a string in python, plz help me" and the likes
Or you see a question that looks potentially worth answering, but when you open it you see that it's already got a bunch of so-so answers that really ought to be corrected, but it's hard to summon up the energy & enthusiasm to do so...
@rajasimon yes or even better print(" ".join(str.split()))
@PM2Ring true, I'd also say that when attempting to take part of the debate in non-trivial questions, one would rather be confident in his sayings, because the smallest approximation is usually sanctioned pretty quickly, the amount of users being so huge that even the most specific questions generally find some people fully competent in the concerned field
And you do have to tread very carefully when responding to advanced questions! It can be easy to get small details wrong. Or even worse, to lose points because the OP & others don't understand your answer, even though it's right. IIRC, Martijn gets bitten by that regularly. :)
Things aren't so ruthless on Unix & Linux: If you write a mostly good answer but leave out some minor detail, it's not unusual to get someone like Stéphane Chazelas editing your answer & then upvoting it. :)
what I've found an invaluable (correct word to mean very very profitable?) practice is to pick 2 or 3 "best users" on stack exchange sites (like Stéphane Chazelas @PM2Ring) and browse their "best answers" in descending order, reading them one by one - i did that on programmers.stackexchange.com and learned a lot this way
curiously, this applies less on SO because a lot of "best answers" (in score) are very old answers to questions like "how to instantiate a class in python" or similar, from 2008
Yes, "invaluable" is the correct word. And I agree, that's a great strategy. You learn to write good answers by reading other good answers. And you learn to write good code by reading other good code.
Just a quick meta-question: If I imported a comment discussion into Chat can I then delete (some of) the original comments, or does that delete them from the Chat, too?
Do you mean creating a chat room based on a post when it says "Would you like to move this discussion to a chatroom?"? I don't think deleting the comments will delete them in chat.
I'm having a doubt on this github.com/simplegeo/python-oauth2/issues/165 but the project is not active. Can anyone knows or tell me some idea then i will look into it .. thanks ....
I was going to leave a comment for this guy: stackoverflow.com/questions/27764986/stripping-by-python telling him to use datetime to manipulate time intervals rather than manhandling them with string functions. But I guess it might be a bit overwhelming for his skill level. And besides, it can be a little tricky doing time arithmetic when you've only got time values and not full date & time info.
@Ffisegydd I just formatted Rep:Answer ratio code with my newly installed PEP8 formatter output (I had to tweak the URL string a little bit) and included @AshwiniChaudhary in it. Please check, if it is okay.
hey all - I am having a hard time searching for this but i would like to take a numpy array with integer entries and turn it into a 1/0 array. 1 if the entry is non-zero, 0 if it 0. is there a builtin function for this?