stole some ideas from other projects that are much bigger, so I simplified it into one file. Splitting out platform specific things into its own scripts probably make sense for those larger projects.
I only found out they had OS X support just recently too, and given FUSE does have an OS X equivalent (under a slightly different name) it made building this rather interesting, but to see it actually work was quite rewarding.
still no Windows support, but I think it's on their tracker still.
The power comes when changes are needed. Build all the tests, make sure they all pass, then change this one critical thing/refactor/whatever and see whether things still work the way they should - and when they do great, when they do not, even better because it shows the problems either in the change or the original concept, or whatever.
yeah. It really gives you the confidence you need in your code to know what each change brings to the overall system. It might seem slow at first, but it just makes things so much faster in the overall process.
I'm sticking my version string in an otherwise empty file called VERSION in the package for the package __init__.py and the repo's setup.py - sound ok?
Ah, so my __init__.py and my setup.py both find the VERSION file with a relative open - in __init__.py it's just open('VERSION') and in setup.py it's open('html/VERSION') Is this likely to be problematic?
If the working directory of the process is different, it won't work, will it?
Am trying to calculate the CPU usage of a single PYTHON program, i tried using "resource" library in windows and i was unable to achieve the desired result. I hope "resource" library will be working only in Linux.. Any suggestion to work in windows?
@idjaw I tried psutil too, its calculating the entire system usage data but i like to calculate particular python program details.. Can u help me out in this?
@idjawI tried psutil too, its calculating the entire system usage data but i like to calculate particular python program details.. Can u help me out in this?
This is like telling me you're trying to add floating-point numbers, and you're doing 0.2 + 0.1 but it's not right. You could tell me all day that you want 0.2 + 0.1, and Python will do that, but if you said you wanted 0.3, that would explain what you want and why you weren't getting the result you expected.
You still haven't told me what you expect nodes to be after nodes[1] = [4,1,2].
Obviously, the idea of what you think it should look like and the idea of what it would actually look like are different, as it works in your head but not in the interpreter. I need to see what it looks like in your head.
Don't describe it in English; show the literal list. Please.
Well, now you know about append(), and much more importantly, what people mean when they ask you what literal object you were expecting to get (especially with print(x)).
nodes[int(component[0])] = [int(item) for item in component[1:]] ,get object has no attribute error.. browsed stackoverflow..people said it was a parenthesis error in similar cases.. looked up how to read stuff into a dict, but it looks alright to me when i compare it to the tutorial
I am using Django ORM and PostgreSQL, but i can't take any rows by field numeric which must contains more than 10 digits.
In [1]: Person.objects.get(person_long=1234567890L) Out [1]: <Person:0x000000ccc000000>
In [2]: Person.objects.get(person_long=12345678901L) Out [2]: Error trackback His sql prints like that SELECT "person_id", "person_long" FROM Person WHERE "person_long" = NULL
Strange bug from the newest django, what i have installed on Windows.
I've never found a particularly good one - read it to see which it throws explicitly, and then think about which the wrong kinds of inputs would lead to (generally TypeError or ValueError).
If you're lucky the dev already did this and listed them in the docstring!
I've found to avoid going through complicated steps like that, a good IDE will allow you to go through the code quite nicely and you can work accordingly once you find out what exceptions will be raised on the method you are calling. This is a case where imo digging through the code would be more beneficial than trying to predict what the code might do.
Also, if a particular package is well unit tested, this information would be easily found in the unit tests, so you can handle accordingly as well.
If you are going to post a question to the exercise I gave to you, please translate it correctly. As @Kevin said: the exercise was to check if one of the rectangles completely contains the other rectangle. — Turing851 hour ago
That "just add commas!" answer reminded me of the Ned Batchelder article that Xavier linked earlier: nedbatchelder.com/blog/201207/…
From stackoverflow.com/questions/33543566/… "please can you either comment the code or explain it". I was so tempted to comment the code in the OP. :) They obviously didn't do much research - the top Google result for their question's title is the relevant Wikipedia article, complete with commented Python code.
Not sure. I assume github markup is similar to SO markup.
I could have static images linking to each animation, but that's not automatable and some animations don't have an "interesting" frame. I could downsample each animation to be smaller and use fewer frames, but that may blow out the fine detail of the line based ones, and make the fast-moving ones choppy. I could do some kind of asynchronous load carousel thingy, but only if I can execute arbitrary scripts on my page, which I don't think I can.
@TigerhawkT3 I assume you mean some kind of mp4 file. Depending on the player, looped stuff tends to glitch at the loop point, which can be somewhat distracting. Also, mp4 is crappy for line art, since it uses an extension to the same techniques that JPEG uses for compression.
No rasterized copy is going to have the same perfect quality and small size as the original vector animation. You'll have to choose between the bulky GIFs and compressed MP4s. =\
You could do (some of) your in real-time in JavaScript, rendering to a <canvas> element, like my Pendulums thing I posted the other week. Although then there are problems with browser differences: eg, I was showing the pendulums off to someone today on their Windows machine running some version of Chrome: the balls all came out in grey rather than in colour. :(
Another alternative is SVG, which has some native anim abilities, but it can also be animated via JavaScript. It looks great for vector stuff, but it can be glitchy when doing anims of bitmapped data in SVG, as I discovered a month or so ago.