"There are either too many possible answers, or good answers would be too long for this format. " Neither of those seem applicable here. Since the OP's deleted it, it doesn't matter much now, but still.
It's 10 characters. A paragraph or two of explanation (I've already spent more time on this metasubject than it would have taken), and a few links to direct the user to know what phrases to search for more info, would have sufficed. Unclear, maybe, but too broad is just silly.
I'm confused by imp.load_module. Docs imply that you can get a package with just the name argument, but in actuality (that is, in a 2.7.5 console) it insists all four arguments are required and file cannot be None (contrary to what the docs say)
then, if I do imp.load_module('frobnitz', *imp.find_module('this')), the name argument seems irrelevant as it doesn't affect anything
> The file argument is an open file, and pathname is the corresponding file name; these can be None and '', respectively, when the module is a package or not being loaded from a file.
Okay, here's a thought about the SO set-up. Say I write a good answer, everyone's happy with it and it gets upvoted by the masses. 5 years later, things have moved on and the answer is no longer correct/could be more correct. Someone else fires a more accurate answer for posterity's sake.
Is it fair that the original poster (me, in this hypothetical case) is penalised because time has marched on and loses the points?
Random debugging of the day: export to Word unsuccessful for a text table because a font named Monospace in Word is not actually a monospace font. Conversion to Courier New completely successful.
Good point. On the underlying question, this is one of those cases where I tend to say "you know what, if you're the only one using your code, use eval and get on with your day."
Incidentally I have added the target question as an entry in the common questions page, under "UnboundLocalError: local variable ‘…’ referenced before assignment". If anyone has any other good targets, please add them.
I think you may be overreading that. "** I did write the mainloop() for the GUI, so it should update by itself...?" could simply mean "I put root.mainloop() in, so shouldn't that handle the updating?"
I'd actually settle for a CVE here. I'll debug non-minimal Tkinter if the problem isn't some huge structural thing.
I'm happy to find the needle of "whoops you did self.x = Entry(root).pack()" in the haystack of three hundred lines of menu item configuration or whatever
What's the exchange rate with quatloos? I'll bet against you. Not because I have any special knowledge, just because there are way more ways you can be wrong than right.
This kind of reasoning is consistent with a particular mental model that many people form about GUIs
A Fun Buck is approximately equal in worth to a Chuck-E-Cheese token.
If you can get your hands on empirical data about the average token yield of a single afternoon at C.E.C.'s, then you can establish a Fun Buck / dollar conversion.
Not sure how you get to quatloos from there, though.
Maybe I just loved that line more than other people.
> Marge: What happened to you, Homer? And what have you done to the car? Homer: Nothing. Marge: I don't think it had broken axles before. Homer: Before, before! You're living in the past, Marge! Quit living in the past!
I used a wand of wonder with that characteristic and changed the lead monster in a horde chasing me down a narrow hallway into a unmoving floating eye. It was quite useful.
The game is a lot more fun when you just dive, as long as you have the right resists/immunities. You level up faster and get better stuff sooner. I'm trying to teach myself to go ahead down a level when I get a lame level feeling.
When I first started, I would grind on the first level up to almost level 10.
> Crows are widespread and live around the world. In fact, the only places crows do not live have extreme cold. These include the North Pole, southern South America, and Antarctica.
The other day I was dealing with a machine learning task that required to extract several types of feature matrices. I save this feature matrices as numpy arrays in disk in order to later use them in some estimator (this was a classification task). After all, when I wanted to use all the features...
I'm wondering (since it just happened to me), is it possible to "cancel" ("undo", "delete", whatever) a flag I just raised if I misclicked it, so the mods won't waste time?
I looked everywhere, but I can't find such a feature.
Is someone around who can either close or flag stackoverflow.com/questions/30582332/…. I'm reviewing a late answer and have no flags myself left. The comments in the OP indicate that the poster determined that his error wasn't confined to his OP "happens when he runs other things than tweepy" and the late answer is trying to start the thread again.