Friends , how to show the individual strings (eg: askar--kls@lop.dom to askar and kls@lop.com) in this program with open('testfile', 'r+') as f: print f.readlines()[-5:] with open('testfile', 'a+') as f: f.write('aksar--kls@lop.dom\n')
@Anes also, indentation is somewhat important to the python code, now I cannot know whether the second with statement is around the first with statement.
I won't kick you, but I am very mad at you if you make davidism kick you again, because I get an audible bell. Then I come here to see who called me, only to find out that it was you being kicked out of the room again.
I still think it's stupidity if you can agree. There are many here that aren't native English speakers, and me and davidism talked about that yesterday, and we agreed it's not for a kick. But surely I'll try not to mistake often.
I wanted to know say you creating something like skype in python. You have a remote server for forwarding connections. What architecture would be ideal? Would you create a new thread for every communication?
There is a room owner in the Python chat room who kicks members out of chat for fairly trivial reasons.
The last one I witnessed was him kicking a member out for not using correct punctuation, a user had put an extra space character between a word and a question mark. Apparently he was "warne...
I'm not sure what to do with this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/36049072/… The OP self-hammered to my proposed dupe target. But then we realised his code has two problems: 1) not assigning the return of .replace, and 2) using eval instead of exec.
The 1st problem is covered by my dupe target, the 2nd problem is covered by the link to Antti's excellent answer. But now, 2 weeks later, the OP wants the question to be re-opened. My feeling is that it should just be left as it is.
I see that Anes is still writing incoherent questions, and not indenting his code, even after I warned him about both of those things yesterday. :sigh:
Can help someone help in what an architecture of voip app in python should be at the remote server? Say you have multiple voice over connections on the same server.
Obviously, English isn't Anes' first language, and I realise that things relating to etiquette can be tricky when they don't work the same in your mother tongue. But I wish he'd try a bit harder to make requests rather than demands.
Also, an UI exception occurred on attempt to show above message:
java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: Could not initialize class sun.awt.X11GraphicsEnvironment
@AnttiHaapala 13 is also a prime number, you can't divide it by anything, and 13/3 is infinite. The nice thing about 12 months is that 12 can be divided by 2, 3, and 4
Which is probably even more annoying than the current system
@Carpetsmoker Sure. But I think that's a reasonable price to pay for uniform month sizes. FWIW, in solar-lunar calendars (those that attempt to be in sync both with the seasons and the phases of the Moon) you get 13 months in a leap year and 12 months in a regular year.
I just answered that "RO power abuse" meta post, but apparently "don't step on a RO's toes, then complain on meta" is an unpopular opinion. I was wondering what you python guys think about my point of view (link)
@Cerbrus I don't like how it seems to imply that a room owner can apparently demand anything − no matter how silly − and us mere mortals have to obey every whim
Besides, consider trying to type English (in the context of a chatroom) and not capitalizing I, or adding a space before all punctuation. That would be hard for you and me, because we're so used to doing it different. In some languages it's very common to use a space before punctuation.
And it's not like there's an "official English", established by a committee. There are only style guides, conventions, and preferences. Adding a space is as good English as any other style guide.
@Carpetsmoker It’s not a rule, but it’s common sense to avoid additional provocation if you are in a situation where a person has shown certain behavior. Imagine you are in a bar, and there is some guy Bob hitting another guy Chuck because Chuck insulted Bob’s mother. You now don’t go to Bob and say “it’s not right to hit Chuck because of this, because your mom is fat like a whale”.
Which is probably a very natural and common thing to do for Wim, as it is for millions of people. Randomly trying to write in a different style is hard because muscle memory etc.
Personally, while I agree with davidism that it's nice to use correct punctuation, capitalisation, grammar, and spelling, even in Chat, I also think that he can be overly strict about it, and that kicking someone for it is excessive. However, when someone does it repeatedly just to provoke him, then that does deserve a kicking.
@kayess Please consider that there are multiple ROs here, and if one (or more) of the ROs gets out of line we have our own lines of communication to address that.
@PM2Ring So if a room owner is provoked every time someone says a particular word, for example interviewer or MacBeth, or uses words a room owner doesn't like because they're too tinny, then these people "deserve a kicking" as they don't follow the room owner's "rules"?
@AndrasDeak I hope it's clear that you are just generalising things with that. If the disobedience isn't confronting with BTK/PTK it's completely legal. There are tons of sources to proove this: mek.oszk.hu/11400/11426/11426.pdf for one. But I guess we should really just move on from this subject. :p
As I've stated earlier, I'll state again: this whole issue has been blown out of proportion by both sides
@kayess doing something legal is not considered civil disobedience:P You have to defy some sort of legal imperative to show disobedience. But IANAL:PP, I could be wrong
@Carpetsmoker I did say that I thought davidism's initial response was excessive. But yes, if someone deliberately provokes any other participant then they deserve a kicking for being impolite.
1. Marko should've made a bigger effort to understand what's bugging davidism 2. davidism shouldn't have kicked Marko 3. wim shouldn't have antagonised davidism on purpose 4. wim shouldn't have tried to "solve" this issue on meta, because it's not about a solution, but about pitchforks
@PM2Ring So Davidism is wrong for insisting on punctuation, but he's also correct for banning people because they don't follow his "rules" on punctuation ...?
@Carpetsmoker Conversely, if someone is hyper-sensitive to stuff that's likely to occur in normal polite discourse, then they need to grow a thicker skin.
after this, everybody is just trying to conjure up a shitstorm as large as possible, without any foundation
I mean come on:
(As an aside, power plays like this are the main reason why I've been very reluctant to chat since the IRC days waaay back in the nineties. Apparently the situation hasn't changed at all in twenty years. You probably won't see me in an SO chat room anytime soon.) — Frédéric Hamidi16 mins ago
@Carpetsmoker He didn't ban anyone. He initially gave dustin a minimal "time out" kick. But dustin kept doing it, and that counts as deliberate provocation, as far as I'm concerned. Either that, or he's just too stupid to realise what he was doing. OTOH, wim was certainly being deliberately provocative.
Perhaps wim did that as an action of civil disobedience as a reaction to what he perceived as unfair treatment. I can relate to that. OTOH, this Chat room isn't a democracy: the ROs here are a bunch of (hopefully) benevolent dictators. :)
@PM2Ring Well, I find that a very strange reasoning… Room owner insisting on idiosyncratic "rules" is wrong, but not obeying these "rules" is provocative and kicking people for these same "rules" is okay… Anyway, lets move on to something else as this hardly seems like some sort of great problem, just a minor incident…
Maybe we should discuss this stuff at our next official room meeting. Everyone is welcome to attend and to express their opinions (in an orderly, respectful fashion) but of course ROs do have the final say.
Anyway, I think we've probably discussed this topic enough for the moment, and we should get back to talking about Python. Or calendars. :)
@Cerbrus, how are your punctuation skills in Mandarin or Russian ? — Jaco8 mins ago
Totally relevant xD
Once again, I'm not defending that first kick. The RO could've handled it better as well. But if you're fined by a cop and you disagree, you don't jump on the grass and tell the cop he's wrong, even if he is. You appeal it through official channels. In this case, a discussion with other ROs would've sufficed. — Cerbrus2 mins ago
@PM2Ring Hmm so could go ntfs for my external harddrive (2TB). When I used linux 8 years ago it could only read from ntfs, not write to. (Or well it could, but then it was unreadable by windows xp).
I think one can use wikipedia to check what is the contemporary writing standard for a foreign language. Paraphrasing Obi-Wan Kenobi, "Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia. You will never find a more wretched hive of Grammar Nazis and pedantry."
@paul23 Sure. FWIW, I'm currently using Puppy Linux to create a partition image of my Dad's dying Windows XP HD, and I'm saving the image file to an NTFS partition.
@paul23 Yeah, that was fun. But even back then you could do limited writes, eg if you didn't change the file length. :) Of course, that's rarely practical.
@Carpetsmoker Space widths are mostly used for typographic purposes, for example you would use a thinner space when separating a number and a unit than you would use for separating words. But space widths don’t matter that much.
On the topic of spaces, an old text-only fourm I used to frequent had no PM facility. So one of the regulars would encrypt snide comments in ASCII encoded as binary. At first he used single and double quotes as the bits, but when that became too obvious he switched to using \x20 and \xA0. The forum displayed each post in a HTML table, so the spaces got formatted out by the browser, but they were preserved in the HTML source.
More information: There a client frontend(desktop application) written in python. The client logins to the server which written in python(flask). Now the client start a voice room and other users can connect to it.
But port-forwarding is a problem and thus, I want to add an intermidate server with open-ports. What does an architecture in look like at the server end in this case?