@JeromeJ While I don’t necessarily completely agree with the actions taken here, I’d suggest you take a break from this room for a day, or at least a few hours, to let it all calm down. Then, you’re welcome to come back and talk with everybody. And for the future, it really helps if you are a bit more cooperative when people try to help you with your problems.
@poke Wise words. Thanks, I shall follow. While I'm still upset feeling like everything is solely put on my own back, I do not have my word. All have a wonderful night (UGT).
I've always viewed "ensuring the natural flow of conversation in the room" as a damn tricky responsibility of ROs. Message bandwidth of the room is limited - we can really only have ~2 conversations going on at once. So we don't necessarily want someone monopolizing attention for a long time. But then it's awkward if one says "why don't we talk about something else" and then no one talks about anything...
i have a very specific question, would in this day and age you still recommend books for learning programming for a beginner ? i understand that if you have a solid base, a book is very benefical, but isnt the problem with a book for a beginner, that he(me) gets stuck on stupid points and the book has no feedback ( like youtube videos or courses) ?
My experience with books is that even the more advanced once keep repeating basic things so it’s difficult to ever progress further. On the other hand, you can probably learn well from a book if you don’t have the basic knowledge.
I'm beginning to think that being frustrated and stuck is an unavoidable aspect of learning. I'm not sure if this is true, or if I'm just "pulling up the ladder" and saying "you have to suffer to get up to where I am, haha"
i did not mean browser, i meant poker where you have to act in like idk 20 seconds, but when you have like 9 tables at the same time , that time goes down obv,
@QuestionC That’s mostly subjective, but I prefer having the operators at the end to show that there is still more coming after that line. I think that’s also what PEP8 says.
When I implement equality testing for custom classes, I like to create a tuple method that converts all the attributes of the object into a single tuple. Then I can implement __eq__(self, other) as return isinstance(other, ClassName) and self.tuple() == other.tuple()
I've never thought about using xor on the type and content of an object in __hash__... I guess that substantially reduces collisions for dicts/sets containing heterogeneous data types.
Also, you might be confused here, that's a link to the question, not to Martijn's answer. It's just linking a popular question (which got that way because it was linked on /r/programming I think)
There are none, or at least anyone who's already interested is here.
If you want to know what happened in the room, you go to the transcript, the meeting transcripts, or you ask somebody. What's the benefit of Twitter to justify more overhead?
Hello fellow Pythonist'ers: Quick question, does anyone know of a library that can convert a simple text file that contains database schema (similar to to Haskell's Yesod framework) to sql?