Billy Joel springs to mind as one artist - I have everything he's ever done, even some old cassette tapes and vinyl - but I'm not a fan of the stuff that made him "pop" - his earlier works were better and some of his later stuff wasn't bad at all - don't know if that makes me odd or anything but still...
you're welcome I guess: the turnstiles album had a good few tracks... also see youtube.com/…
ugh... I see that chat bug still hasn't been fixed...
I've seen a lot of life and I'm damn sick of livin' it I keep hopin' that you will pass my way And someday if your dreams are leavin' you I'll still believe in you
Though I'm living and I'm singing And although my hands still play Soon enough it will all be over 'cause Tomorrow is today
As a youth I liked Smash Mouth's first album, which demonstrated quite a bit more range than what you'd expect from them if you only heard the songs of theirs that play on the radio.
I haven't listened to that CD in 10+ years though so I can't say for sure if current me would have the same assessment of teenage me
When grew up, my father very much liked a folk musician named John Prine. We would listen to his tape a lot on road trips. Enough that I learned the words to most of his songs, even though they weren't necessarily child-appropriate.
So, I grew up more or less knowing all the words to Sam Stone, a song about heroin addiction and "the hole in daddy's arm where all the money goes". I figured the hole was a metaphor for something.
TMBG has my undying respect for errata-ing "the sun is a mass of incandescent gas" to "the sun is a miasma of incandescent plasma" like ten years after the fact.
@QuestionC John Prine is a genius with lyrics. I especially love Angel from Montgomery. But yes, he can be very depressing. I think the first song I heard of his was Sam Stone.
XY problem revealed: I'm trying to see if I can validate my second comment in Making a raw_input() update its string by writing a threaded solution where a child thread calls raw_input and I shut down the prompt in N seconds by deleting the thread.
I wrote a tiny proof of concept but it didn't work and now I have no time and must go home.
Oh yeah. The festival that I went to a couple years in a row was put on in collaboration with him, so he would come out and play a song or two with a bunch of different artists who played the fest.
@JGreenwell fill a dictionary with key:value pairs as the 'first_name'{story_size: minutes_spent} and continue to increase the minutes_spent value each time as it loops through the data.
I've tried, Counter(), and defaultdict() and apparently butchered both into the ground
if it gets to that level of complication I would usually point someone to either making a class or pandas (depending on data size and other methods which need to be performed)
The above example should handle both of the cases you've given as examples, which are only nested two levels. If you need arbitrary depth, you should have said so. :-)
How easy it is to convert that into a frame depends entirely on the format. Sometimes all you need is read_json; other times you'll have to walk the data structure manually to generate something Python is happy with.
Correct. And it sets the value by calling the object which is passed to the defaultdict, so whatever you pass to defaultdict has to give you the object you want if you call it.
I'm using subprocess to run an command, but the comand has a path, if the path has any space the command don't run, so I need to add the quotes to avoid any error