@RenaeLider the point to enums is that the system can help you insure that you don't reuse constant values within a single set of enumeration constants. In a statically typed language, they can also be used to insure that you only use the correct type of constant within a given context.
Im really just killing time until mad max finishes downloading in steam ... (I took tomorrow off just so I could play video games :P ... heh the wife is visiting her parents with the baby and the teenager has first day of school == WINNING)
or sudo apt-get remove python followed by sudo apt-get install python2.7
@davidism I agree I thought it was phenomenal :P
one of the best of the year imho (maybe the best... unless GoG counts as this year that was awesome)
ok Im gonna go find something to do for the next hour other than just staring at the download bar .... its been a looooooooong time since ive had a video game day ... I hope its as good as my nostalgia thinks it will be
this weekend I finished all my weeks worth of work (I wrote a kivy application) ... so maybe one day will turn into 2
but realistically I have like 10000 items on my backlog of other shit to do for work ...
@cyclic we're not really aws support. We can't psychically debug your system. It sounds like it's messed up, I would advise asking Amazon for direct help.
every year right when school starts theres alot of people that try to SO their homework ... I try and give answers that teachers should ask about if they are teaching an intro programming class
for example see the -3 voted question that someone jsut asked :P ... if thats for school I hope the teacher asks him what the code is doing
first we use a generater for part one so we only have to iterate once ... all part one does is find all the "Key af..67" strings and extract the part after key
then you run it though binascii.unhexlify to turn it into a bytestring "\xaf..\x67"
then you just unpack it into unsigned bytes using struct unpack and the "B" unsigned byte code * the length of the string
this one im not really sure if its a homework or not ... but if they engage and want to learn then I try and help ... if not im sure it will come back to bite them later
dont use wamp server at all ... turn it off ... or you will need to write a wsgi file for your app ... you can just serve it with app.run() really ... (its better than apache/2) ... or better yet use gunicorn ... but you will need to look that up yourself
but if they let you I would just use app.run that will be the easiest for you by far ... a much better solution is using gunicorn + ngninx .. but that is so far beyond the scope of this chatroom...
it doesnt ... wsgi sucks basically
but you can serve it there are lots of tutorials ... use google "flask + wsgi"
I recommend digital ocean as you can just use app.run there ... what? dont use windows host ... thats like the worst possible choice you could make ... but you can still do app.run (probably depending on host rules) ... and now im done
oh god .... ASP.net ... just jump off a bridge now and get it over with
app.run should still work fine ... yeah I thought my game was done downloading ... but 15 minutes still .... Im basically saying I have probably given you all the help I can for now :/
An important piece of advice: Before you ask a single question in this room, or in general, I'd suggest you google it first. You could easily answer what an MCVE is through using your own initiative and searching for it.
The fact that you can't take the time to do that, in my opinion, shows that you don't care enough about the other people here and just want free help. That won't stand.
list2=['water resistant','water','red strap','digital and analog','analog','men', 'stainless steel']
string="men"
if all(string!=word for word in list2):
...: print "yes"
yes
string!=list2[5]
False
Why is it printing "yes"
As per the documentation Return True if all elements of the iterable are true (or if the iterable is empty)
>>> list2=['water resistant','water','red strap','digital and analog','analog','men', 'stain
less steel']
>>> string="men"
>>> all(string!=word for word in list2)
False
I am using python 2.7 it is returning a generator item
And still prints "yes"
Am I understanding all function wrong
all(string!=word for word in list2)
<generator object <genexpr> at 0x06BD5CD8>
list(all(string!=word for word in list2))
[True, True, True, True, True, False, True]
Yeah it shows that when I type it in cmd <built-in function all> but why is it showing even after refreshing the session have close and reopen canopy :( to see if it changes
@VigneshKalai it looks highly suspicious that you would come to us with debugging problems that used the exact same code (even down to the same list elements) as a question that you were looking at.
@Katherina Colors seem good, although the mix of dark blue and green for the footer looks a bit odd; the buttons feel out of place; the font in the header and footer should be the same as in the body; the text in the footer is a bit too small; the text could overall have a bit more line height;
@psychoCoder Mureinik's wording in that answer is a little misleading. To repeat, Python doesn't have block-limited scope of variables.
user4433485
10:09
Thanks, @poke the buttons are too big indeed, about the font I don't know any font I could use I am still looking for one, as for the text in the footer I don't know if I will change it for something bigger. this is just a test and I don't know what the client will put there. @RobertGrant I couldn't agree more this is just a test banner, however I didn't know about the jpg thingy tnx:p
Sure, I thought it might be temporary, but it's worth knowing about :) if the image is more like a photo, use jpg. If it's more big blocks of colour, and/or needs transparency, use png
If you're not sure, just try saving as both and seeing which is smaller :)
Also I doubt Facebook will let you put their logo on a green background, but I could be wrong.
There is some leeway if it's a white f on an overall background colour (e.g. a dark grey footer), but if you're making a special green shape around it I think that's off limits.
I can't get to developer.facebook.com or whatever it is, as it's blocked, but it's easy enough to check
Question: occasionally a 1 rep user will ask how to delete their post. I tell them "It's on the same line as the share, edit, close, flag, protect, and revisions button just below your tags". But I suspect 1 rep users don't have all those buttons. Which buttons do they actually have?
@psychoCoder It can be misleading to try & apply terminology of other languages to Python, since variables in Python work differently to how they work in many other languages. In traditional languages a variable is a named location in RAM that the compiler / interpreter endows with a particular type. Python variables aren't like that: essentially, we have anonymous objects that can be bound to names.
I'd like to avoid using the term "variable" when talking about Python objects, but it's just too convenient, and I've been using the term for too many years to stop now. :)
Python specifically avoids the use of the term "variable" precisely because that leads to people saying things like "there's only one kind of value". Clearly you are so attached to the concept of a variable that you assume only variables can hold values, and hence "there's only one kind of value". In Python, we say "names are references to values," because it's far less misleading about the true state of affairs
"A clear terminology" for languages with static variables, perhaps, but I don't see why you want to force Python into that mould
What I mean, is whenever anyone is asking "is it by ref or by val" and insists that in Python it's neither, is purposely mixing up the terminology. Because, in terms where "by ref or by val" makes sense, there are variables, call frames etc.
Hi guys mb some on have a deal with this. How to represent that sql SELECT field1, COUNT(field1) FROM table GROUP BY field1 in Django ORM Didn't see Django chat so post here
I usually go with "it's pass-by-ref, but assignment doesn't propagate to higher frames because that's just not what name binding does", which, if not true, is at least approximately the same shape as the truth.
There are objects, which may be bound to a name. You may just create an object & use it without binding it to a name. Binding an object to a name is effectively associating the object to a key in some dictionary, although in some situations it may not be implemented that way for efficiency reasons. But generally you won't go far wrong in pretending that some_name = some_object puts some_object into a dict with some_name as its key.
Fair enough. But I'd rather think about things at a higher level than to be concerned with such implementation details. If I want to worry about that low-level stuff, I'll go back to C. Or assembler. :)
Just be careful who you say "you cannot pass a tuple or assign a tuple" to. I can imagine a newbie hearing that and thinking "ok, got it. x = (1,2) is illegal syntax and so is f((3,4))"
FWIW, the way variables work in PostScript is quite similar to the Python model, but in PS the fact that you're working with keys and dictionaries is much more explicit.
In linguistics, ordinal numbers are words representing position or rank in a sequential order. The order may be of size, importance, chronology, and so on. In English, they are adjectives such as 'third' and 'tertiary'.
They differ from cardinal numbers, which represent quantity.
Ordinal numbers may be written in English with numerals and letter suffixes: 1st, 2nd or 2d, 3rd or 3d, 4th, 11th, 21st, 101st, 477th, etc. In some countries, written dates omit the suffix, although it is nevertheless pronounced. For example: 5 November 1605 (pronounced "the fifth of November ... "); November 5, 1605,...