@corvid My pleasure! Chantel is excellent, but a lot of the YouTube clips have crap sound (usually the drums are too loud). The sound's great in the Bluesmoose Radio clips, but her playing's not quite as powerful as it is in "real" gigs. Here's one of my faves from a few years ago: A New Day Yesterday
@JRichardSnape I did say that I transported the code from the comments. I guess comments should be treated as if they were volatile, but how often are such comments deleted? I was more concerned with the fact the code in comments is virtually unreadable. I don't normally like transcribing such code, as I recently mentioned on Meta SO.
@PM2Ring I concur with all you've said, including the Meta SO comment. I know you put "code transported" in the edit summary, but I'd put it in the post too - otherwise the first couple of lines look strange out of context. But as I say, personal style...
@corvid Ok, I can see the similarity in the voice, although Chantel's voice isn't (yet) as powerful as Eivør's; OTOH I think Chantel's is a little sweeter (which isn't necessarily a good thing for rock music :) ).
I think people have complained about the fact that "This question has been asked before and already has an answer" strictly rules out using it as a close reason for an exact duplicate of an unanswered question before, to no avail with the Powers That Be.
@DSM Unlike other closed questions, dupe questions are ok, as they can act as multiple portals, but the whole point of closing dupes is to stop answers to essentially the same question being scattered all over the place. But that logic doesn't really apply if there are no answers yet.
I have no objection if someone says "look, convention is we're just going to close exact duplicates of unanswered questions by the same author using a custom close reason". But agreement on such a convention doesn't exist right now.
The power to truthfully say that any abilities they have in a room aren't the result of election by thousands of people who have never visited the room.
@DSM I agree there ought to be a standard reason to close such carbon-copy dupes, it seems a bit silly to have to use a custom reason. FWIW, when I see such questions, I usually put a comment on the more recent one linking back to the earlier one, and often I'll put a return link on the old one as well.
@Ffisegydd Ten ROs, ten rings. It all fits! Now, who are the nine mortal men doomed to die, and who's the Dark Lord on his dark throne / In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie?
@WayneConrad So for example instead of saying my_dict.iteritems() and having to change that to my_dict.items() for Python 3, Six lets you call a single method and Six works out what the real method name should be based on your runtime.
@WayneConrad it's nice for people in your situation, because you can start writing 3-compatible code and it'll still work with 2
And if you want to stop using it, and you're happily running on 3.x, at least you'll be able to see the places you need to change, as they'll all be Six method calls
"Why not addition? Multiplication is more powerful, and, anyway, “five” has already been snatched away by the (admittedly now moribund) Zope Five project."
@Ffisegydd looks a nice library. My current problem is more prosaic - just wrangling the fact that the electricity industry operates on a strange 5 season model where winter is all the time the UK is on BST and I want to label my dataset with those seasons from datetimes. I can do it - ugly, but it's prob a 1-shot job
@RobertGrant A very good language, powerful tools, good development environments, single binaries (which can even include template files). Powerful stdlib, has a reflection library should you feel the need. The only thing absent is a good debugger.
So, I have a question. I'm using the smtplib import, and when I run my email script, it prints out "email successfully sent to [email address]". This is fine and dandy except I get no email. The connection login returns (235, '2.7.0 Authentication successful'), there seems to be no exception thrown, but it doesn't look like the email was sent out. x = sendmail() returns {} but I'm not sure if that's normal or not. Any tips?
If all else fails, I suggest sending to a recipient on an entirely different host, just to be sure they're not "helpfully" removing incoming emails without telling you.
And yet the docs say "If you want something like privateness, put an underscore at the front of the name", so there must be a number of people that do want pseudoprivacy. Making it not entirely weird.
I use "private" methods as documentation, to communicate which parts of an object are intended for the caller to use, and which are considered "hands off" implementation details.
@GamesBrainiac yeah I'm not surprised. Python's nowhere near php or perl on the left hand side of the scale of "don't design at all ----------------------------> just design forever", but it's definitely got some interesting historical challenges :)
Hmph. I change my solution so it checks Ace as a 1 as well as as an...Ace, so I pick up on low straights, and my solution's percentage drops from 98 to 14
Possibly because my debugging prints are still in there. Possibly because codeeval sucks. Who knows?
@Kevin (or anybody that knows) why doesn't Python throw an error when the email headers "to" doesn't match the "recipiants" parameter of the sendmail function?
@RobertGrant i always wrote scripts for myself to automate something. However if i want to give this web app that will be run on localhost, to someone else just a plain user
@RobertGrant basically package it somehow and send
i know i can py2exe, but will that work for Flask web app?
having a brain fart right now -- trying to get a list of files across a number of different IPs that satisfy a certain grep. Went to do it with [s for s in systems_list if subprocess.check_output(r'grep MYPATTERN file_template.format(s.IP)')] but due to connectivity issues, subprocess.check_output will occasionally fail and throw a subprocess.CalledProcessError which craps out the list comp.
I could do it with an accumulator and a for loop with try: if: subprocess.check_output(...): accum.append(s) and except subprocess.CalledProcessError: pass, but that seems icky.
If you have a function that throws an exception, and you need to implement some logic to handle the exception, I'm not sure why it's icky to pull that out.
bleh because it's a one-and-done list I need generated. I was hoping there was some logic like dict.get(key, default) for subprocess that I didn't know about.
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My only suggestion is to add "This has no serious issues that I can articulate, but it annoys the living &#@*&# out of me and I want to tell someone – Tim Post
Urf. There's a user who answers a lot of questions, but seems to have invented his own private dialect for how to explain things, and regularly assumes that anyone questioning him is doing so because he doesn't understand..
@iCodez: true enough! Though I'm crotchety enough to think the words my generation created are better than the newfangled words kids these days are dreaming up..
I sometimes make up my own meaning for words that others say. People have no idea why I'm always smiling. It's because they think they're talking about a database, and I think they're talking about underwear.
I'm thinking of a new topic to write about, and all I can think of is metaclasses. Trouble is, they're so well covered that I'd probably bore the hell out of people.
Yeah, just throwing ideas around. I'm not saying metaclasses are bad, I'm just going with your statement that sometimes there's a more straightforward way.
@iCodez Agreed, but there are plenty of guys out there who are going to use a metaclass just because its "cool". (I remember such a time myself). Its like taking an antibiotic when you should've just taken a paracetamol.
Sometimes I see questions that are like 5 years old that ask for tools or libraries or something. They are certainly off-topic today, but they might not have been back then (I don't know, I wasn't around). Is it appropriate to cv for off-topic?
I dunno, giving old questions a pass because the rules were different at the time gives new bad users a shield for their questions. "But that question over there is similar to mine and it's been open for years, why are you being so unfair?" they'll say
I just stumbled upon a question from 2009 (that's what I mean by 'old'), and it's this one for reference.
I think we can all agree that by Today's standards this question would be closed (with a couple of valid reasons to choose from).
However, things were different back then - well from what I...
Reminds me of the comic that's like "they say that you eat eight spiders over the course of your lifetime. But they're wrong. It's way more. Spiders love dark damp enclosures" and each additional panel shows more and more spiders streaming towards this guy's face as he sleeps.