My brother would sit at the opposite end of the hallway and stare at the cat, who would eventually get worked up enough to run over. Then he'd move to the other side of the hall and repeat.
Well. The python script I had written was actually called time.py. Now that I've renamed it, the error is gone and the script only runs once anymore. Thanks. — user27656541 min ago
Hi guys, just want to pop in and ask a question real quick. How would i go about consecutively slicing a string? say i had this string, "123456789" and i wanted to turn it into 3 separate strings, "123" "456" "789". any help is greatly appreciated. ill keep looking in the mean time.
Cabbage. I've done a git clone of pyftpdlib, which is the source of a package. When I try to run one of the demo scripts, python3 bin/python3 demo/basic_ftpd.py, I get the error ImportError: No module named 'pyftpdlib'. Is there a way to run this script that will let it find the module from its source, without having to install the package?
My question is related to Ruby's ftpd, in a way. Because the tests for Ruby's ftpd use ftps, I've been a contributor to the ruby gem for ftps clients. That gem's tests use a public ftps server that is no longer available. I want to change its tests to use pyftpdlib instead, so no public ftp server would be needed.
@BhargavRao Indeed it does. I can't have the client gem's tests use Ruby ftpd, because Ruby ftpd's test use that same client gem. That's just... incestuous. And a great way for bugs to hide.
@Ffisegydd I tried setting PYTHON_PATH, giving the path of the package's top-level __init__.py file, but that didn't work: PYTHON_PATH="/home/wayne/lab/pyftpdlib/pyftpdlib" python3 demo/basic_ftpd.py
No, no, I don't want to clean up after that. It's alright :) I think I'll just install the package--not sure why I got so fixated on running it from source.
Oh, I know who downvoted my answer :'( I think its a rage downvote. It irritates so much when you spend considerable amount of time on an answer and still get downvoted. Sighs
@BhargavRao Nah, the guy who deleted his answer only downvoted me. Earlier he has upvoted my answer, but then when he deleted his answer, he just downvoted mine.
Assuming uniformly random (1-bit) inputs, the AND function output probability distribution is 75% 0 and 25% 1. Conversely, OR is 25% 0 and 75% 1.
The XOR function is 50% 0 and 50% 1, therefore it is good for combining uniform probability distributions.
This can be seen by writing out truth tabl...
Whenever you face a problem like this, try to express the result of the function with the same function.
In your case, you can get the result by adding the first number with the result of calling the same function with rest of the elements in the list.
For example,
listSum([1, 3, 4, 5, 6]) = 1...
In spite of its handy bit-mixing properties, XOR is not a good way to combine hashes due to its commutativity. Consider what would happen if you stored the permutations of {1, 2, …, 10} in a hash table of 10-tuples.
A much better choice is m * H(A) + H(B), where m is a large odd number.
Credit:...
I wanted to test if a key exists in a dictionary before updating the value for the key.
I wrote the following code:
if 'key1' in dict.keys():
print "blah"
else:
print "boo"
I think this is not the best way to accomplish this task. Is there a better way to test for a key in the dictionary?
I'm absolutely calm, don't mistake this for anger.
I am telling you it's starting to get ridiculous. I'm telling you you're abusing the good will of the people here. I'm telling you that people are starting to get fed up.
And seeing as I'm here - if anyone has experience of using TypeHints in Python, do you find it's lack of runtime checking an actual problem, or does the static analysis pick up all the potential problems?
One of the problems with type hints is that it requires you to anticipate every way a function could be used. Which means you get into weird situations where you have to define ABCs for everything. Or figure out how to represent "this type of value, or None". Or a bunch of other corner cases.
I've never run into a problem with the lack of type checking either.
Yeah maybe. The simple case seems too limited to me, while real cases seem to get too verbose or complicated. Easier to just embrace duck typing and not worry about type validation.
Ok, can't solve on phone right now. A guess is that you have a header file missing. Have only used cython with 32 bit python, but doubt that's the issue unless it specifically says something about it in docs
If no one swings in, make a ful site question and I'll have a look if I get a chance (national holiday weekend here in UK, so no guarantees)
Ah, just saw end of that trace. You're using MinGW. It's probably something nasty where gcc can't "see" libpython34 library from within MinGW for some reason. Try googling the exact error text from "undefined" to end of a single line
Oh, and with that you appear to have flown from the room.
Well, rhubarb to all who are about, time for me to hit the hay
Isn't quit() just the same as sys.exit(0) which is the the same as exit(0), which all call the cleanup handlers? It's only os._exit() that basically quits without any memory deallocation?
I may very well be wrong, but that was my understanding. They were just different builtins that call the same function.