If you have a Widget class and a Sprocket class, both with a frob method with unique behavior, it would be quite tricky to erase both and write a single global frob
"But that doesn't give you any more power, it just makes it easier to organize complicated ideas" is a pretty dang common refrain for every language but assembly
@paul23: are you suggesting that the obvious way to do it is to have one function which branches on the type of the argument in some Julia-like dispatch fashion? Because if not, I'm not sure 1:13 applies..
And actually a physicist could explain to you that a turing machine is physically impossible to exist. It would violate one the most fundamental laws in the universe, entropy only increases.
There was some quote about "Python beginners think everything should be an object, intermediates thing everything should be functional, it's all dicts anyways. More experienced users just use the right tool for the job."
Maybe the universe that contains the turing machine also contains a great big source of ever-increasing entropy, so the total amount increases regardless of how ordered the machine becomes.
@davidism yet I'm constantly wondering. Especially when needing to "extend" already existing libraries. In C++ the approach is to use public methods unless you really have to use a member method, at which point you create a function containing (not inheriting) the super object.
In java however the standard approach is always inherit directly.
@davidism Well in numpy you can use basic matrix algebra using their arrays: A.dot(B) etc. But I would like some more advanced linear algebra that is not part of numpy/scipy
Got it. Bit of an inter-language terminology discrepancy, there, since by definition a method can't be global; if it's not defined inside a class block, it's not a method.
In Python, of course. Other languages can use whatever words they want.
On reflection, my own geometry class has dot_product and cross_product functions, when they could easily have been methods on the Point class. I don't recall if there was a particular reason for me choosing this design.
> DSM: Kevin just said "irrespective" in a conversation. (Backstory: friend uses the word 'irrespective' a lot, and friend admires Kevin's wit.) Friend: ... where is Kevin and can I meet him? I feel like he's already one of my friendships.
I think I may have preferred them since dot_product(a,b) more resembles the English language equivalent, "the dot product of a and b" than a.dot_product(b) does.
Well, dot_product returns an integer, so in that particular case chaining is unlikely. Point taken for cross_product, though, which does return a Point instance.
@QuestionC: the dot product is. The cross product works best in 3, although you can make a kind of analogue in 7 as well. And you can have an outer product in any number of dimensions.
@DSM I still remember dot product, but cross product was admittedly so rarely used, and so long ago I have no idea what it is. Wasn't it basically a 1-row version of some matrix op though?
In my (former) world (of recreational programming), dot product comes up a lot because you need to frequently find the projection of one vector onto another. Cross product... you can use it to find the equation of a plane for two vectors, but that's best I can think,
Well given the 6 common Kepler orbital elements:
Eccentricity $e$
Semimajor axis $a$
inclination $i$
Longitude of ascending node $\Omega$
Argument of periapsis $\omega$
True anomaly $\nu$
As can be seen in this image:
I am wondering how to calculate the actual position and speed vector ($\m...
I frequently pass by a co-working space on my ride home from work. Now that it gets dark early, the lights are on and I can see people (co-)working inside. It must be nice to be your own boss.
I wouldn't have to sit here through a droning, minimally-interactive web training, for one thing.
And I might have the opportunity to ever check out one of these pyluminati meetings, for another... which is I guess what brought it to mind. I'm sure all the best conversation happens during official meetings.
@Air Conversation flows quite differently during meetings, since our usual wandering style is not conducive to grinding through a predetermined list of topics.
I'm willing to believe that if you die in a very realistic simulation, then your brain goes "welp guess I'm dead then" and shuts off in real life. But I'm not willing to believe that thinking you got punched causes blood to materialize in your airway.
The best explanation I can come up with is "while thrashing around in the chair in response to being punched, Neo sustained some self-inflicted internal injury"
In which case the solution is merely to strap them down a lot tighter.
[Here we go.](http://filmsound.org/terminology/diegetic.htm) "Diegetic sound: Sound whose source is visible on the screen or whose source is implied to be present by the action of the film"
numpy's matrix dot product is about twice as fast as manually calculating the dot product. Even when I first have to create the numpy matrix from variables.
I just... I'm old and incapable of learning anymore. I don't want to learn the class viewer, I just want to be able to refactor my code so I can read it. =(
At least you don't have to learn a whole language and a framework for that language, to do very basic website setup. I'm still confused why I couldn't just do this all in python...
This is all just "I know how to program" stuff. In my heuristic, there's only a small handful of languages (Python, C, C++, assembly, HP Graphing calculator, and LOGO). Everything else is just dialects.
I learned a little lisp, but not enough to do anything besides some SICP stuff. I suspect if I really used it, it would just be some hybrid of Python and HP Graphing calculator.
Child care: easier than driving, marksmanship, and fishing.
I think I did a pretty good job in minimizing the number of "just wait until you have kids of your own" speeches I received as a youth, so I hope the karmic wheel spins in my favor.
According to the hot questions, Cîroc vodka doesn't seem to be kosher. This is a problem for our Jewish friends wanting to fully embrace the Cîroc lifestyle. :-/ #wedaft
Now this is a story all about how my life got flip-turned upside down, and I'd like to take the rest of eternity just sitting right here to tell you for the love of any and all things that could hypothetically and/or subjectively be considered "holy" (or equivalent analogue), fuck Excel
Hey guys, just tried to parse 81 XML nodes with minidom, the getElementsByTagName method needs about 300ms time for the 81 nodes, which are all like <Location Duration="0" Lat="54.32255" Long="101.3847" Name="Namehere" />
Does this seem about right?
Oh there are some more nodes (6400) in there btw which are not of the type Location
FWIW that does seem pretty slow to me. minidom is orders of magnitude slower than something like lxml, though, so I don't think I've ever used it in production.