I need to use some sort of a delimiter to my serialized data I want to store, I decided to use the pipe character '|'. Problem is, if my text already contains | or some specially crafted string that might cause a problem.
There are plenty of ways to escape things, (and I'd love to hear your best suggestion) my foolproof method of testing is by having some sort of a function that brute forces until it finds a sequence of characters that do not appear in the text and uses them as the delimiter.
If I have an object K and I want to make a new NumPy.array filled with them, how could I assign K's type during array creation? I thought numpy.zeros(shape, type(K)); would work, it doesn't, since type(type(K)) is a type Object.
I don't really have the expertise to know the ramifications of mixing threads and processes. I may just have to wrap a thread in a new object to handle the button press
@GLaDOS I was going to suggest something like that-- just use multiples of your delimiter if they appear in the delimited text. Keep adding more until you arrive at a number that isn't used.
I didn't think it was the best idea, though, so I kept it to myself.
@AdamSmith The problem is basically that when you fork, all your IPC state is copied, but only the current thread is copied. Can be a huge problem. There are cheesy workarounds, but AFAIK the only thing guaranteed to work is to only have a single thread running at the time of the fork. So you can fork a process that handles forking other processes, and then start your threads, for example.
I'd recommend not doubling the delimiter, but using some predefined escape character (\ is a good one) (also putting a single backslash in a code block is pomegranate impossible)
My reasoning is that you're more likely to be searching for delimiters in the text than you are to be looking for non-delimiters, right? So the delimiters should have the least-common identity possible.
It's possible that I'm confused, but isn't it only possible for an escape character and a delimiter to become confused if you deliberately configure them that way?
for delimiter | where 'a', 'b' and 'c' should be a|b|c
the problem starts when the strings are 'a|a|', 'b', 'c'
they should become either a||a|||b|c or a|a|||b||c