likewise I know English, Dutch and German so reading Norwegian is actually not so bad
the oddest thing is that Norwegian shares a lot of words with my dialect, while Dutch uses different words (which are usually the same words the Englsh use)
The UI is even a little nicer than the one that BigCorp Kevin wrote. In v1, changing sorting was based on a keyboard shortcut and there was no onscreen indication of what the current sorting method was.
Now there's a "sorting by..." label on the top bar. Clicking it changes what it sorts by.
I'm trying to find the normal vector of each point on a bezier curve. I think I can get that if I know the derivative of the curve, which this page describes. But I'm not sure I understand the meaning of this equation. I don't know what the curly brackets signify.
Maybe they mean the same thing as regular parentheses. The equation following that one seems to support this.
I think it's because my first implementation uses the linear time C(u) algorithm listed as the top equation on that page, and my second implementation uses the O(2^N) recursive algorithm.
The former makes heavy use of factorials so maybe it's more prone to floating point error
Could you tell me why it's "Python pandas"? Nobody says "Python numpy" or anything, but I see this pattern everywhere, and I've never been able to figure out where it's coming from.
I don't think it's ignorance because a lot of beginners use the phrase, so it must be coming from somewhere, like a tutorial or a reference or something. But I've never been able to track it down, and it's an ongoing mystery.
@DSM feel free to edit to simply "pandas" or whatever is correct. it may be somewhat obscurer than it needs to be that way, i suppose (since those who have never heard of it will have no idea what it is), but no real harm
@Frank: it actually makes some sense in this context, I admit. My puzzle is that you see "python pandas" in question titles, as if it's a specific name, but you don't see that for almost any other common Python library (esp. those on the science stack).
oh, maybe it's because it's used by people who need to do stats stuff and aren't very programming-literate. or maybe it's just not established enough yet to be taken as known
I don't know what I think about that. On the one hand, I like the idea of the mothership not choosing favourites. On the other, there's no point in pretending that numpy isn't the canonical array library (just as an example). Why shouldn't there be a reference to it?
user559633
I use numpy in 0 of my projects.
user559633
If the mothership has a stdlib way of doing a thing, it should list that in the documentation and try to remain as unbiased/self-contained as possible. SO/wikis/pypi are reasonable locations to expect preferences and marketing
That people can do a lot in Python never using numpy is a good argument for python.org not to redirect to numpy.org. Don't think "the language pages shouldn't acknowledge the ecosystem" follows.
user559633
@DSM It's not disregarding the ecosystem, it's just not giving it equal weight to the fantastic stdlib.
user559633
pypi.python.org is already a nod-to and hosting of the ecosystem
I'm not going to die on this hill because I really don't care :-), but you think one line "is recommended for a higher-level http client interface" is "equal weight"?
user559633
@DSM Pet peeve, so yeah, I don't care that much, but saying "See also: this other thing is recommended" on line two, with a yellow background as a call out is a pretty strong recommendation for most users.
ask a question, I answer it... then they say they already tried my solution and proceed to post what they tried which is nothing like my solution at all (other than both solutions use a dictionary)
@tristan: well, yeah. But equal weight it's not, and IF we stipulate that it's okay for python.org to reference the ecosystem, it makes sense to put the link on that page. So granted that (which as I said I'm still undecided about), it sounds like we're literally arguing about the colour choices and whether they're too bold.
user559633
Fair enough. A fallback position is that I'm for saying "here's the stdlib way, it's pretty good, and you'll learn about how the thing works" before a suggestion referencing the ecosystem/3rd party convenience/newbie-oriented alternatives
Sure, yes, so is lxml and cython and ipython and boto is pretty much a necessity for a lot of people, as it pyyaml, and epdb is pretty good, as is protobuf, then there's also wheel, don't forget about celery, django is popular, so you gotta include that....
@BhargavRao Yeah I saw that. it seems like it's a thing stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/… but in small proportions. I'll leave the Julia guys to edit the tag wiki if they feel strongly baout it
I've probably answered some I shouldn't have. Officially I think it depends on whether or not the typo is likely to be common and/or results in an error message which is likely to be generic.
@Jonathan No promises, you can make a pastebin and if I happen to take a look at it I can give you some pointers. But it might only be later tonight if things aren't too busy at home.
@dsm I'm just doing some small projects to try and improve on my skills. I'm not trying to release any software or anything. Thanks for the info though
They have their own customs, just like SO. If you do wind up posting code there, read through their "how to ask a question" pages and look at some upvoted questions / downvoted questions for examples of what to do/what to avoid. You can get really useful feedback from them, but you have to put in the work to get good responses.
@idjaw Slightly off-topic...but I'm planning on going to Montreal and don't have any idea where I should go. I figured you might be the one to talk to for a local's perspective? :p
I find that happens a lot when over confidence takes over testing before answering. I've jumped the gun a few times, but I've corrected myself fairly quickly when an alarm was raised on a mistake I've made. Keeping it there just because the "green checkmark" is there is just poor form.
@MartijnPieters That is true. But editing is still there as an option. Granted, maybe they haven't seen the message yet. But does an OP get notified of all activity in a question? (I've never really posted a question). Maybe they might change their tune and do the right thing.
it's really misleading when the checkmark is wrong. I know through my quick browsing of SO when I'm looking for an answer, I always get directed to the checkmarks....but with my recent contributions I've been realizing that I really need to read more than just the accepted the answer, because of situations like this. =/