Looking at Copy and Pasting Images in Python and trying to think of a tactful way to say "you do know how to use return, don't you?"
Although I'm guessing the answer is "no", based on the fact that their program asks both "What is the name of your image file?" and "What is the image file name again?". Seems like OP doesn't know how to pass data between functions.
It's hard to gauge when you can say "you should probably read the tutorial" without making them mad
("when has the possibility of angering OP ever been an obstacle for us?" says the peanut gallery)
If it's a multi-line tuple, it's convenient to have a trailing comma, so when you add a new element you only need to insert the new line, without changing any previous lines
I believe this is the primary reason that trailing commas are legal syntax in the first place.
When you change
t = (
"qux",
"foo"
)
to
t = (
"qux",
"foo",
"bar"
)
the diff looks like
-"foo"
+"foo",
+"bar"
But if you change
t = (
"qux",
"foo",
)
to
t = (
"qux",
"foo",
"bar",
)
The diff looks like
+"bar",
anecdote: on my home machine, the "end" key is broken, so going to the end of the previous line to add a comma is in fact more work than it already being there and adding a comma to the end of my new line.
I acknowledge that this is not typical.
@MorganThrapp Reminds me of this infamous perl script, which is in the shape of a camel.
[Errno 4] Interrupted system call happened in pika consumers when I run "sudo kill -USR2 <process_id>". Why? USR2 should only be handled by my signal handler functions.
Yeah, that's how I feel about ASM. I'd like to get to the point where I can at least read it, because I run into inline ASM in our legacy code base semi-frequently, but writing it just seems tedious.
You could probably get to a particular skill level where it no longer seems tedious, but if you can only learn by doing fun projects, that's a chicken and egg problem
For me it was like, TI-83+ BASIC -> hey I heard my programs could be faster if I wrote them in asm, woah this is really complicated nevermind -> C++ ...
HP graphing calculators had a really neat programming language. It was all stack-based compared to the TI language. I always really liked it and wished more things used stack based programming.
I'm going to be pretty mad if the OP of Maze Solver Stopping in the Process replies to my comment with "oh, when I said that was the expected output I just mashed random keys, lol"
"I just meant, my actual output is a lot shorter than I expected it to be"
The flames from the side of my face will be mighty.
@davidism I'm reading that as "if Flask sessions are client side, does that mean you can't access session data on the server side?"
Well, I added an answer that's at least better than the one liner they accepted.
@Kevin at least with Flask, the client can't actually modify the session cookie since it's cryptographically signed. You can add other cookies though, or change the session implementation.
This maze problem is unfortunately quite tricky, and I don't think there's any quick fix that could be done to OP's code. I wonder if tile completion puzzles are NP-hard...
specially since he wants to find a solution that hits all tiles, he'll have to do a check for each path that the solution matches the amount of blank tiles present
Oh, they are NP hard if it's a general graph problem, and I assume it's the same even if you restrict it to graphs that connect neighbors in a lattice grid
Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast episode #69, brought to you by The Lake Erie Soda Water Company. Your host is Joel Spolsky, joined by First Deputy of Community And So Forth Jay Hanlon and Lord High King of Nerds David Fullerton. Fortunately, the beer arrived shortly after the podcast began, so this one should be pretty good.
Yeah, start on the K and touch all non-wall cells exactly once
(Actually it's not perfectly isomorphic to Deadly Rooms of Death, because that game has the additional stipulation that you finish the path by leaving the room. It doesn't count as a win if you collapse all the tiles and strand yourself on the final one)
Are Eulerian Paths isomorphic to Hamiltonian Paths? The latter doesn't necessarily need to traverse every edge, just every vertex. Or can you do something fancy with duals to turn one into another?
I think there are people on soundcloud who aim to make their living off music. And its certainly used by some audio manufacturers to demo sounds of their gear.
I actually have never checked out bandcamp. Is it good?
I have used the bandcamp app to listen to exactly one album. Whenever one song ends, I have to press the power button on the side of my phone to make it move to the next song
The bandcamp app is absolute crap. I have this problem where it will look like it's going to load a song, not load it, then not play anything until you force stop the app.
It's unusual because I didn't have to for the first three songs or so, and now I have to do it every time.
I can't use my computer to listen to music because whenever I press the "build" button in Visual Studio, all audio slows to 1/4th of its original speed, and if I have Pandora open, it skips to the next song regardless of where in the track it was.
its actually not too bad all things considered. Especially when one is stuck on a train for one hour with no access to data, and one's kindle is broken ...
Hey guys! I need some help with an algorithm, how do i modify a LIS algorithm so that instead of having the condition a < b in a nlist, it has a a[0] < b[0]; a[1]<b[1] in a nlist of 2-sized arrays
class Vector:
def __init__(self, a, b):
self.a = a; self.b = b
def __lt__(self, other):
#todo: return True if this a is less than the other a and if this b is less than the other b
Anyone here familiar with AD authentication? I'm looking to use my domain joined PC credentials to authenticate against Office 365's SMTP. Any variation of "get local active directory credentials python" keeps bringing me to resources that describe how to authenticate against active directory..Not get the credentials to pass on to SMTP.
"How do i modify a [Longest Increasing Subsequence](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longest_increasing_subsequence) algorithm so that instead of having the condition a < b in a nlist, it has a a[0] < b[0]; a[1]<b[1] in a nlist of 2-sized arrays?
It's okay if your existing code for the algorithm is just a stub. What is important is that expressing it in code defines its parameters with enough specificity that anyone can understand it.
Anyone in this case meaning computers and programmers I suppose.
@MorganThrapp I'm using smtplib to connect up to O365. If I use smtplib.login(user, pass) I am able to send an email successfully. I don't want users to input a username and password to authenticate to O365 every time. These users are all domain joined PCs- so I'm trying to find a way to get those local credentials to pass to smtplib.
If no one is familiar with O365/Python/AD enough to help with this, it's no problem.
@MikhailTal Please post a link to it in here when you're done. I'd be interested in seeing the SO form of the problem. Maybe we can Triage it a bit so it doesn't get closed too.
How do i modify a Longest Increasing Subsequence Algorithm so that instead of having the condition a < b in a nlist, it has a
a[0] < b[0]; a [ 1 ] < b[ 1 ]
in a nlist of 2-sized arrays
Expexted input: 4 (Number of elements)
1 2 4 5 (a[ 0 ]s)
1 6 3 4 (a[ 1 ]s)
Output:
3 (Biggest...
Yup. Also, I fail to understand creating a new account for it, unless you're question banned on the main account, which I would hope would mean you would spend more time devising the question than that.
I still don't understand your question at all, Mikhail. According to the definition you give, you want to find elements of 2 lists, a and b where a[x] < b[x], but that's not at all what your input/output shows.
a[::2] is "every even-indexed element of a". a[1::2] is "every odd-indexed element of a". zip joins them pairwise, and list turns the resulting iterable into a list.
Given the popularity of transpilation (and the increased support for sourcemaps) the lack of engine implementation isn't as big of an issue as it would otherwise be.
@DSM the thing is, since the resolution isn't specced, what transpilers are doing is non-standard. So if tomorrow the spec does something different from what transpilers currently do (which is quite likely, as history suggests), stuff breaks :(
@AwalGarg: it's certainly suboptimal, but what a certain version of babel does today isn't going to change. It's a deeper issue than just library incompatibilities, I'll grant, but it's not a fundamentally different kind of headache.
@DSM yeah, agreed. Although since pretty much every other part of the es spec is extremely detailed and unambiguous, we aren't quite used to having compatibility issues between JS runtimes :P
as compared to... uhh... rendering contexts and browser APIs
Made the mistake of noticing that someone's attempt to implement Fisher-Yates was broken in several ways, and bringing this to the poster's attention.. should have known better.
So... pycharm unimportant-question: There is a "read-only" lock button on the status bar bottom right. I clicked it, then tried editing the file, and the read-only button restored and I was able to edit the file. Why is that button even there?