What the yam? I really don't like this statement: "compile is a lower level version of exec and eval". I guess that's good grounds for down-voting... even though he does go on to say "It does not execute or evaluate your statements or expressions, but returns a code object that can do it. "
@PM2Ring yeah, well how about the 33 times upvoted gem "expression is something while statement is do something" :D
compile(string, '', 'single') is like the exec mode, but it will ignore everything except for the first statement. Note that an if/else statement with its results is considered a single statement.
@AnttiHaapala I didn't even know about 'single' mode (or I'd forgotten); but I was immediately suspicious about "if/else statement with its results is considered a single statement."
@Kevin we should create a movie db, based on "smart tags" instead of actors, or titles, etc. For example yesterday I realised what I want to search for is "hidden world", "parallel world" and/or "alternate world" which will bring me results like Matrix or HP or 13th floor, etc.
sadly enough, my search did not bring me any meaningful results in any engine
So the program must find the player with the highest score in each level.
I have a text file called playerScores.txt which has the name, the score, and the level every line, Example in format: Player:Level:Score
Starplayer,1,19
The program must find the highest scorer for each level, so for leve...
what I have in mind, is to check the score for a level. If the current line has a score above one that was seen earlier, then update the dict with the new player name and score
If you find a question that is out of date; or the answers to a question are out of date, you have a few things you can do:
Leave a comment on the accepted answer or the question stated that this solution no longer works.
Keep searching. Quite possibly someone else has noticed this and has post...
sadly none of those works. No one reads comments, mine is always in the "see more"
I'm enjoying your exec crusade, @antti. Amazing how many people will argue about something where they are wrong and can prove themselves wrong with one line of code in an interpreter.
i am close to solving my assignment imho, but my code is garbage on many levels, smarter to just start from scratch, or finish it, make it work, and then use it as a template to write a slicker code ?
@Jon Clements, with the help here i was able to finish that part of the module , now i am in the next one but have a comparable assignment of cleaning data and then reading it in
not gonna lie, i have never seen someone giving me answers that smug than from that udacity coach
@StephanKetterer That's a matter of philosophical approach. I tend to get it working then refine. I have a colleague who recodes things multiple times as he develops. I would tend to think that I get things done quicker, but I'm biased. Also, maybe their code is nicer to read, I will grudgingly admit
its just.. my thought was, since i am so shaky in coding.. it might be good to finish it first, otherwise i will be stuck at the same roadblocks than i am now, just with a better code
I tend to be in the middle. If I find my cluttered code is starting to cause me problems, then I've found that refactoring mid-way through can save more time in the future. Depends how much you're intending to maintain it.
cbg @IntrepidBrit. Level headed response - I guess I did present the extremes. I think once you've coded for a while, you do start to detect the "smell" of clutter and think - refactoring will save me time here. But that's not something you can easily do when your new to either programming or even sometimes a language
As you say - how much it will be maintained is a big consideration.
and no, you cannot use replace like that; replace takes a string to replace; and you cannot really remove like that because you can remove the wrong string (not in this case though), and
Antti showed me that before, and he quoted me something that worked perfectly, execept i had one whitespace after the string, and since i dont wanna get in the habit of asking for stuff and blindly using it, i thought if i dont understand it yet, i try to write it with my means
but maybe i should just take that as a sign to look into regex
Yes - it's probably worth looking into them. @antti has hinted at something else you need to consider - the error case where parantheses are unmatched. It may not be a problem in your case. I would say get it working on well-behaved input first and then (if you need) consider the nasty cases
i am told to have a specific field , containing a list, i did that, so when i print it out, it gets printed out in the form [element], now in the output i have to match, there are no [], anyone has any idea how that is possible? dont i just get [] simply because i have a list
I may be wrong, but I don't think that [] is meant to represent the lack of empty lists in the output, but rather that no square brackets are shown around lists with members - IDK - @StephanKetterer you might want to clarify
Here's a thought for your brackets problem if you really can't get your head around regex. Initialise a bracket_counter variable to zero and a result variable to an empty string. Go through your input string character by character and if you find a ( add one to the counter. If and only if your counter is 0, add the character to your result. If the character is ), take one away from your counter. This has the bonus that the end value of counter can alert you to (some of the) bad inputs
Note - that's not an efficient method - I am definitely not recommending it over using regex and other string functions if you can get your head around them
One really horrible way, but it purely uses string methods
text = 'this (is something) and this is (something else)'
def my_replace(text):
while True:
try:
opening = text.index('(')
closing = text.index(')', opening)
yield text[:opening]
text = text[closing + 1:]
except ValueError:
return
result = ''.join(my_replace(text))
@StephanKetterer Well, there's two things. If the order of fields matters, you need to fix that up because yours are output in a different order to the graders. Also - in synonyms you have the list brackets around "None". They may specifically want you to remove the brackets in the case where the list contains a single None value or is empty. You need a second example where there are some synonyms to work out exactly what they want there.
This is what is said in teh assigment @JRichardSnape if there is a value in 'synonym', it should be converted to an array (list) by stripping the "{}" characters and splitting the string on "|". Rest of the cleanup is up to you, eg removing "*" prefixes etc. If there is a singular synonym, the value should still be formatted in a list.
the last sentence to me means that i should have it as a sole element in a list like i have
@StephanKetterer I think they are interpreting the value 'None' as having no elements. Of course, you can have a list with a single element of NoneType. But I don't thing that's what they mean by a "singular synonym". So basically - if the value == None, output None, otherwise output a list - even if there's only one member e.g. for 'right' , 'synonym:[correct]'
cv-plsstackoverflow.com/questions/29892592/… : Code too horrible to fix. :) And the OP appears incapable of fixing the indentation errors, what to speak of the myriad syntax errors.
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@AnttiHaapala I don't know really - I just followed your link as I knew my box had silverlight. The documentation says "It runs IronPython 2.6.1", so I assume (assumption klaxon) that it really is running IronPython
@IntrepidBrit That should be ok then. I'm not a member of CR, but I'm pretty sure Martijn is. However, I've seen a few attempts at migration rejected by CR - they expect code that looks like the OP's made a reasonable effort. They hate "please turn my horrible spaghetti code into a properly-structured masterpiece" questions.
@StephanKetterer you probably want >= rather than == in your if - imagine a synonym field that looks like blue|cyan|azure|indigo - what will count of | be?
@JRichardSnape you are of course right , and your solution works on a lot more input than mine. the problem i have right now with my code is that my else does not work anymore, meaning if i get an input that is not NULL and does not have a "|" in it, i dont get returned a list with a single element. somehow i broke the code "
I copied it exactly as you wrote it and ran it. The else branch does give a one member list. Check your indenting (it's a bit over-done in the paste - maybe there is an error you inadvertently corrected in the cut/paste), input value and that you are properly returning the values if this is in a function in your bigger code
Also - check what .split('|') does with a string that doesn't contain a | character. Your logic is overly complex...
By the way - I'm not posting code because I'm trying to push you in the direction of investigation that will help you. I presume that is what you want?
@JRichardSnape oh i see, so i could have just used the split on any string, since when i split on the "|" it will do nothing on a string that does not contain it
also i guess when i use replace on a string, and i want to replace a char that is not in the string, then it will just do nothing but not produce an error either
@StephanKetterer s.replace(old, new) replaces all occurences of old by new. If there are no occurences of old it can replace them all by doing nothing. :) That might seem a bit odd by common-sense logic, but it's typical mathematician / programmer logic, so you better get used to it. :)
The difference between a good programer & a bad programmer is not that the good programmer never makes mistakes, it's that the good programmer notices their mistakes sooner & fixes them up... before they go on to make their next mistake. :)
thank you, honestly before i found that chat here i was close to giving up, because i posted on their forums , and i got one condescending comment after another, which baffled me, since those people get paid for it, so they should atleast strieve to be a bit useful
and @PM2Ring too. I make loads of mistakes. Gradually get faster at finding them and cleaning them up. I must warn you, the reward of that feeling of getting it right gets addictive...
We've got a rather nice biodome constructed deep under Olympus Mons. Construction was easy. The hard part is preventing them from devolving into a Thunderdome-like society.
@TimCastelijns Gratitude is good. And even better is when the newbies stick around and you can see the quality of their code (& questions) gradually improving as they learn from our answers.
@AnttiHaapala Speaking of which, when I logged in today I discovered that not only had I passed 5k in rep, I've also been awarded the Python silver badge. Yay!