I've posted lots of bugs and fixes and so on and nothing gets reacted on.
the PyPI still for example uses OpenID login for google which shouldn't even work... all python bugtracker mail goes to spam in Gmail because no one knows how to configure a mail server, the CPython development speed could be much more if the development process itself wasn't so horrible...
there are python coredevs who never have done any software at all :D
CPython is the only > 10 file software they've been working on... almost...
they close the pull requests on Github and say "go fscking write a patch to the bugtracker, then maybe you will become a coredev in 3 yrs then you can apply your patch"
do lists store elements in the same order they were added? and can we store info in te form of pairs? For example: ap.append((client,add)) ? And if I were to compare each pair with new incoming client and add values then how would I do that?
> If parseInt encounters a character that is not a numeral in the specified radix, it ignores it and all succeeding characters and returns the integer value parsed up to that point.
Yay :-) 2.5 upvotes in javascript was not good for nothing :D
I have a small doubt about flask. Can I just use the request global object without running into thread problems when there are multiple requests going on
So I started using pycharm to follow pep 8's conventions. I have class called Handlers which basically contains a bunch of static methods to connect to Gtk elements. It complains the class has no __init__ method, but the class really shouldn't have one. What is the best way to deal with such cases?
We have numerous python classes that do not seem to need __init__, initialising them empty is either perfectly acceptable or even preferable. PyLint seems to think this is a bad thing. Am I missing some insight into why having no __init__ is a Bad Smell? Or should I just suppress those warnings a...
I have the following error with pylint:
Pylint error W0232: class has no __init__ method
I understand what it means. I have to create the __init__ method.
The problem is that this class is inherited from parent class. I know that im able to create the __init__ method and just use super(myclass...
Oh....my....god... One guy lost his job offer because he weighed his offers on Quora. Guess what? One of the CEOs answered saying they are revoking the offer. Actual Q&A
openended question for all: what editor do you use and why? I use geany, and I'm wondering if there's a better one out there. I don't need anything super complex.
Also, I HATE IDEs that are project-based. Not sure why, they just annoy me when I'm just trying to test a simple python script.
@QuestionC, there is I think. The first one returs you a generator while the second one (with tuple) returns you a, well, tuple :). Thought the result is going to be the same
i'm showing all replies of a specific topic by using this code : GetReplies = Replies.query.filter_by(Topic_ID=questionid).all() and rendered it into ninja template by using : {% for i in GetReplies %}
{{i.Content}} {%endfor%}
i'm now trying to show the user who's associated with that reply
so in my py file it's like this : for i in GetReplies: GetUsernameofReply = Users.query.filter_by(ID=str(i.User_ID)).first()
in ninja when using {{GetUsernameofReply.Username}} it shows me only the same user for every reply
@odaialghamdi use a relationship to Users on your Replies model, then you can simply do i.user.username. If this does not make sense, then ask on the main site.
hey all thanks to all the help that I got from stackoverflow, I was able to come up with this script: github.com/localtracker/pyrobe .. thanks everyone, I literally learned basic python for networking in a few days