So the library is all the code. The API is the functions and their signatures that you can call to access that code. While the internals of a library may change, the API should stay the same.
@Nakkini don't worry, I'm just grumpy that D3 isn't doing what I want. It's not my room anyway, so I wouldn't pay too much attention to what I say about it :)
@AnttiHaapala well, I have other things to do than searching to unstar what i starred. May be if you give me some rössypottu i will have energy and will to unstar.
@ZeroPiraeus That is not nice to call me a troll. I asked a question about libraries and APIs, after that someone asked why I starred some messages and I answered to him in a funny but respectful way.
@JanDvorak notice we didn't immediately kick this user. They've been around for a couple weeks, and we finally caught on. If they had changed, we presumably wouldn't have noticed them.
are the dotts ... and ..filter opposites in intra-package imports ? like : from .... import mod and ..filter import mod, the former is (backward) and the latter is forward ?
Having looked at it, there's already one OS out there that has bizarrely cartoony icons centered at the bottom of a bland-looking screen, don't need another.
I don't like linux, I used kubuntu for one year, that when I was in high school. But that sucks, Firefox isn't good, graphics are poor, I mean it's design is all about picture over another picture, not hardcoded like Windows or Mac, that's a cheap way to deal with things
@AnttiHaapala, assume I'm in a package chain like this: dir0.dir1. dir2 in dir2's __init__.py file, I've written the following from .. import mod = ' from dir0 import mod? and 'from ..dir2 import mod' = from dir0.dir1.dir2 import mod` ?
hey guys. I've got multiple text files here that need replacing sensitive info inside them and producing a new file. For instance in "John:ID123:AHKWD" , I'd replace ID123 with something like ID999 . Is there a language that's more suitable than python to do this with?
If you're the guy from yesterday, no one thinks you're evil or a troll. You merely have a problem communicating your ideas clearly, which makes it painful to help you.
anyone who has experience with opencv (& numpy.ndarray)? I'm wondering how easy it is to integrate both. As I need to use scipy's convolve/statistics to make the image out of a 3d function. But then I wish to use opencv so I don't have to reinvent the wheel for glob detection. I wonder how fast this is, or should I just stick to numpy and implement my own versions of the algorithms?
Or actually not the speed, but I wonder if it normal to integrate both libraries like this.
Deafening silence. Guess I'll just have to try and see if they integrate well.
I'm afraid I'll have to write a library to integrate both libraries together. Seen that happening quite often and I don't have time for that (need to finish calculation of the results this week).