For some reason lxml won't install from pip on this new system I am using. I got this error when using xml.etree.ElementTree.fromstring()
Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/etree/ElementTree.py", line 1300, in XML parser.feed(text) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/etree/ElementTree.py", line 1642, in feed self._raiseerror(v) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/etree/ElementTree.py", line 1506, in _raiseerror raise err xml.etree.ElementTree.ParseError: not well-formed (invalid token): line 16, column 6
how to easily generate all possible combinations of a list say [2, 1] should generate [0, 0], [0, 1], [1, 0], [1, 1], [2, 0], [2, 1] where the numbers in the list represent the max number
I got a lot of points for just giving code to someone asking "how do I do <thing>" with no accompanying description of what he tried. This positive reinforcement is going to make me do bad things.
Like answer more questions of that type.
OTOH, how can sharing goofy one-liners with the world ever be bad.
But if I just give people teh codes, how will I receive perverse enjoyment by withholding answers from people that haven't proven that they've earned my favor?
Er, I mean, how will they ever learn on their own?
Basically, you have to have personally been to Africa, or be granted admittance to a king's high class menagerie, to accurately draw a lion.
Another blunder: the sun is much too large to fit in a lion's mouth. No excuse there, since it's reasonable to assume every artist has seen the sun at some point.
Hey I need help, I need to pick a first language to teach kids (right now we use JS and we can't keep using it) and I want Python. The problem is it's not as easy to get a real "thing" out in Python for new programmers - JS is easy to make UI and games in the browser in, Java has Android and languages like PHP have websites (with all due respect, PHP is easier but not simpler than Python for that).
Python has * and ** for positional and named variables. KevinScript will have all that, plus*** for transcendent variables and **** for imaginary variables.
I'm strongly ambivalent, personally, but I can thank the change for disrupting the prior accepted answer for mine which is currently making up 10% of my rep.
I'll be honest, she's so paranoid about me smelling them I can't remember the last time she did. Until I finished writing that last sentence. But it was still cute and we were having a good time together... :D
> Having a Gitter chat that anyone can join worries me that 1) no one will use it, or (worse) 2) Some well-meaning soul who wants to help will use it, and no one else will.
You know, we waste more time telling people not to ask to ask. But it does indicate that they haven't read the rules. Maybe we could make the rules list shorter.
@JonClements it's simple enough, put this in the description: "Chat rules: 1) Be nice. 2) Ask for help on Stackoverflow, wait to ask here. 3) Don't ask to ask. 4) Use dpaste for code samples over 12 lines long. 5) Don't star for thanks."
Okay.... through it as an issue, then the rest of the site team get to see it instead of it getting lost in chat... then it might get merged for the next release etc...
There is no special room. Further inquiry into the nature and location of said room may result in being taken to the other special room, which also does not exist.
@JonClements when do you sleep? While I was in India I would see you in this chat room most of the time I logged in. Now when I am in the US which has an almost 12 hr time difference with India, I see you all the time!!
So part of my job is to administer the price book database for a retail chain. It would seem to follow that if you're a category manager and your vendors are going to do a huge reset and bring in a hundred brand new items, you should probably want those items to get to your price book team ASAP
apparently not.
got an email from a category manager on Monday. "Oh yeah, new beer items hit stores today. I need all these items in right away."