I know there is a process when it comes to Stack Overflow moderator elections, with votes, questions, and so on, ensuring a person that knows the rules well and has the qualifications for the job is elected. There are some requirements, like badges, and the elections last several days. For exampl...
Hey now. Anyone have an opinion on this proposed edit by anonymous? stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10335801 It is a much better answer, but the original answer was pretty much wrong. so, should the anon edit be approved or should the original answer stand, get down voted, and a new, different answer go up?
Ah, of course. The reason I have an int overflow in my database is because there's a phone number in the amount field. Because that makes sense. WHeeeeeeeeeeeeee.
Hahahaha, nah. I have too much nepotism going for me here. ;) My dad was the first employee and my direct supervisor.
This just means I get to go finish my Thanksgiving shopping before everyone gets out of work, which hopefully means I can get out of there in under an hour.
Although there may legitimately be ways to determine whether 23!!!! is greater than 5!!!!!. a > b implies a! > b! for positive integer values, so maybe you can cancel common factorial operations?
ofc if that's the only optimization you do to the program, it will still hang when you do x=1 y=23!!!!. Nothing to cancel so you still have a meganumber.
Maybe you can take advantage of the fact that (a < b) implies (a < b!) for all positive integer values of b
you can do recursive calls to compare after each factorial operation and only go deeper if the smaller number has more factorial operations than the bigger number
So the algorithm should be "reduce to zero factorials on one side, then evaluate factorials on the other side one at a time until you run out or until the base exceeds the no-factorial side"
"Because in the future I may make the mistake of putting mutable but hashable objects in a set, and I would like to know what kind of symptoms might appear so I can better diagnose the cause" would be a good reason to ask.
SS13 is an amazing idea that can be either a phenomenal experience with the right people or the most clusterfuckedy misadventure in people-not-getting-it this side of EVE Online.
You know, I completely understand why people say not to answer bad questions, but on the other side, I also feel like if you want to give your time to a thing that will inevitably be recalled, isn't it on you?
I feel like it's a user's prerogative to abide by or freeze out bad behaviour.
@Kevin Exactly! This is what I think is the best format for answering. If someone asks how to do a dumb thing and recognizes the dumbness of it, then to answer the question is appropriate.
@AnttiHaapala Nice. I wrote something quite similar, although I was lazy and used math.factorial instead of having two for loops. Possibly just a little slower than yours since I can't break as soon.
The best algorithm that is known is to express the factorial as a product of prime powers. One can quickly determine the primes as well as the right power for each prime using a sieve approach. Computing each power can be done efficiently using repeated squaring, and then the factors are multip...
>>> math.factorial(sys.maxint+1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
OverflowError: Python int too large to convert to C long
factorial(sys.maxint) works in the sense that it doesn't crash
Well for a custom object I have a custom __eq__ and __hash__ function, that is only dependent on an unique "name". Object of this class are then placed into a set.
Now I would like to search/find an element in the set:
class Resource:
def __init__(self, name, rest)
self.name = name
...
You could create a subclass of Resource that overrides __eq__ so that whenever an equality check passes, it stores a reference to the other guy in its attribute. So you do x = StalkerResource("test", object()); x in mySet; print x.capturedObject
Yeah it ought to work if you make capturedObject an attribute of Resource directly
@paul23 I think this problem doesn't come up much in practice because objects in sets ought to be immutable, and objects that compare equal ought to be interchangeable. As long as you maintain those constraints, you should never need to extract a reference from a set.
@Kevin hmm I'm just creating a large "set" of objects that represent resources. And I wish to find a resource by it's name which is supposed to be unique
Psychic debugging: did you forget self? Answer to direct question: yes. Replace the arguments with *args, **kwargs, i.e. def somemethod(*args, **kwargs): and then put print(args, kwargs) as the first line.
@mri3: that error message is hard to square with that method signature, but I don't know if kivy does any magic to change methods. Add in the debugging info and see what it's getting.
hello, is there a simple way to automatically install the needed modules for a python script on windows ? like a packaging tool that can wrap python and the modules if not installed ?
@mri3: no, that's saying you have empty kwargs. If you left self in the signature, that means that it's being called like remove_widget(something), where something is that weakproxy. So I don't understand how your error message can come from that function.