Scenario: OP makes the comment and does not accept. A passing reader notices the situation and thinks "poor guy, he didn't get his accept points. I will upvote to compensate". Then another passing reader does the same. The answerer now has 20 points rather than the 15 he would have ordinarily gotten.
When you find yourself wishing you could use "variable variables", that is a strong indication that you should be using a list or a dictionary instead.
@PM2Ring Ah. Yeah...I think original answerer didn't like that there was a lingering -1 there, so they removed it. Still not giving an upvote to that answer. Plus...I think that question should be dupe hammered, don't you think?
@DanielEngel Sure, if Z is a dictionary. That would store the result of kind_of_object() with the key of "eggs". You should really read a tutorial, dictionaries get covered pretty early into a good one.
The only time I ever manually hack with globals() is for convenience when I'm working interactively. I'd never do it in production. (Well, maybe not never, but I've never done so yet.)
That reminds me of the journalist who wrote an entire article about Linux Torvaldus having "a hacking history in cybercrime".... The level of cluelessness was unbearable.
Out of curiosity, was the gmail thing a real prank gone wrong or are the stories about it a prank? (Note that it's past 12:00 in my time zone and so by tradition no one can prank me any more.)
@Ilja best of course of action is to let OP engage with as much data as they can provide. You are doing it right for now. Once you start over involving and trying to figure out what they are trying to do you end up with a ridiculously long comment thread and then the chat window pops up...and you might be in it for the long haul.
Unless of course you want to do this....then, hey...go ahead. :)
@Ilja My take on the 2 3 thing is to actually specify what works in one and not the other if the user does not specify what version they are using. Considering how widely used 2 still is...I think it is good practice to make your answer more complete specifying that
Im amazed we interviewed someone here ... said person works currently at a very well known company that starts with a g ... the individual "self graded" themselves on python at an 8 ... but then could not write a function that takes a list of strings and returns true if their name is in the list ...
Yeah, there are a lot of mistakes there. There's the fundamental problem where the program never goes back to previous tests, but there's also stuff like calling a string as a function, forgotten method call parentheses, that one weird break on the last loop, half the tests are outright wrong, firstch and lastch are only assigned in a loop that might not run and never reassigned when a new username is provided, etc.
my_name in a_list == perfect answer ... but loops are ok too :/ this is the equivelent of asking an english major to list the vowels in the alphabet ...
if I'm in an interview, I think i would just solve the problem immediately with whatever comes to mind first....then through discussion when I know I have solved it, I can start optimizing to make it look prettier and work faster. Because at the beginning you are nervous to not make mistakes and
if you start saying to yourself "OH SHOOT WHAT WAS THAT AWESOME FUNCTIONAL WAY TO DO THIS TO MAKE THIS A KICKASS ANSWER"....you might freeze and end up being that guy who could not simply do if thing not in that
Any idea what a good canonical dupe target for mixed tabs and spaces problems would look like? The symptoms can vary quite heavily, but the answer is always essentially identical.
But that question is unclear. Assuming they are actually an enthusiast or professional, which is what the site caters towards, what problem are they actually having?
None, because either of those two types of people would have read the tutorial.
Not just that. But looking specifically in the context of almost any computer language. How do you access data in a list or array? By index. This is something fundamental to almost any programming language that supports this.
QuestionC does raise a point. If we just look at it as a question. Without thinking about what the question contains. Is it answerable? yes. Does it have a dupe? no (maybe it does...I still can't find a good one)
@JoranBeasley The simpler these questions, the more confusing I find them, because I start to doubt myself and think it may be a trick question or there's some sort of caveat...
I had the same when I first read about FizzBuzz; the solution is so blindingly obvious that I really had to stop and think to make sure there wasn't some sort of trick here...
I prefaced it with "This is NOT a trick question, just do your best to answer, dont worry, we are not trying to trick you with crazy edge cases or anything"
I suppose testing whether people know about the in operator is a good way for a first screening when it comes to Python knowledge, as that's Python construct that not every language has...
@Carpetsmoker yeah although we usually want to see them also do it as a loop ... its just a sanity check ... we have some (a little bit) harder follow ups, but its hard to find people who can get past the sanity check