well @DSM since my original library is written in C and I want to interface it with JavaScript, Python, Go, Java and C++ I had to use the Python C API here
SWIG has caused me a fair number of headaches, I'll admit, but it's also the only non-insane way I can keep my main work data library (in c++11) having both Python and Java wrappers. But I can easily see how in a given case it might make more sense to do it directly.
If there are only three you can write them horizontally, i.e. with open(a1) as fp1, open(a2,"w") as fp2:. If there are an arbitrary number you can use an ExitStack.
"I can't remember what it stands for, but I do know this: it's a half-specified, bug-ridden implementation of half of Common Lisp haha amirite?" looks hopeful
It might be more like an Office Space situation where I have three people that tell me what to do, and this guy is the scariest one so I put him at the top of the hierarchy.
Oh, I thought it didn't. I guess I stand corrected. I haven't used IE in forever and my initial google search didn't turn up anything about it supporting add-ons.
Does Github let you arrange your projects in any kind of directory structure? I'd like to put up all my dumb gifs in one "image rendering" category, but have all the code in different repositories.
Hey guys! Just a quick question if anyone has Django, PostgreSQL, VirtualEnv experience. I have read yesterday that's it's good to create virtual env for python project and install django there and should Postgres DB be in the same virtual env or?
get_html(url) would get html, this html I would like to send to a cacher and I want to extract urls and send those forth. How can I do this without having "side effects"
i.e. 1 "return"
or separately [urls, html] to another function, which would then spread them as messages, but at one point you break the "side effects" thing by sending in 2 different directions?
@jonrsharpe what was the problem with this question? Looks like a new user and a new programmer. If this wasn't an obvious homework assignment I don't find anything else wrong with the question other than needing to post what the text file looks like. I don't think we should have sent him packing.
jonrsharpe already solved the issue, as far as I'm concerned. If the OP needs additional help, he's got to explain what's wrong with the solutions in the dupe target
Just print up and professionally bind about 20 pages. The cover page reads: "Work Plan" with BigCorp's logo on top and the project name on bottom. The next page reads: "We plan to work."
@MorganThrapp In the margin of the project manager's draft of the best practice handbook is written "Thank God our programmers don't make mistakes!" with triple underlines for emphasis.
There are weirdnesses with local() because of the optimizations they do to make functions go faster (don't need to do a hash for local variables). So anybody using exec() inside a function and not explicitly specifying the context dicts is asking for trouble. Thus has it always been.
That reminds me. I keep meaning to spend some time going over my old comments to remove the ones which are out of date (and print out my favourites to put on my fridge.)
In half an hour I have a meeting with a difficult client who yesterday sprang on us the news that they'd really prefer to have the results of a not-yet-started eleven-week project (which was always a rather optimistic timeline) in four weeks, and preferably with a glimpse into the results in two. The fact the CEO didn't immediately laugh them off the stage is concerning me. :-/
@AnttiHaapala any idea on why there is no tp_descr_del or why tp_getset is not tp_getsetdel? I mean, how on earth would you "subscribe" to the PyObject_DelAttr?