In [2]: %timeit x.int_to_bytes_python3()
The slowest run took 6.86 times longer than the fastest. This could mean that an intermediate result is being cached
1000000 loops, best of 3: 987 ns per loop
In [3]: %timeit x.int_to_bytes_slice()
The slowest run took 4.56 times longer than the fastest. This could mean that an intermediate result is being cached
100000 loops, best of 3: 2.23 µs per loop
timeit int_to_bytes_native(ts)
The slowest run took 11.60 times longer than the fastest. This could mean that an intermediate result is being cached.
1000000 loops, best of 3: 775 ns per loop
moral is we should just define the entire function in the if PY2 block
I have read that 'module' object has no attribute 'thread' is received as an AttributeError when coincidently you call your file threading.py. However, this is not my case. What can be the problem?
The Year 2038 problem is an issue for computing and data storage situations in which time values are stored or calculated as a signed 32-bit integer, and this number is interpreted as the number of seconds since 00:00:00 UTC on 1 January 1970 ("the epoch"). Such implementations cannot encode times after 03:14:07 UTC on 19 January 2038 (21 years from now), a problem similar to but not entirely analogous to the "Y2K problem" (also known as the "Millennium Bug"), in which 2-digit values representing the number of years since 1900 could not encode the year 2000 or later. Most 32-bit Unix-like systems...
hmm, I thought inlining the objects would make it faster, but it seems to behave slower
def pack(num, _to_int64=to_int64, _lstrip=bytes.lstrip):
return _lstrip(_to_int64(num), b'\x00)
this is getting into the realm of "too silly" though
In [1]: timeit pack_old(ts)
1000000 loops, best of 3: 363 ns per loop
In [2]: timeit pack(ts)
1000000 loops, best of 3: 398 ns per loop
:sigh: Two answers to the same question, both recommending recursion instead of a simple while loop. stackoverflow.com/questions/36532887/… Why does this crop up so often? It seems to be rather popular in codes for games, and I guess that could just be confirmation bias, but I suspect that there's some crappy book / tutorial that recommends this. OTOH, I guess people could simply be discovering this "clever" recursive solution independently.
@RobertGrant LOL. :) FWIW, I saw that question just before I logged off last night, while I was on my Android, so I didn't have time / patience to comment. And I guess neither of those guys have seen my comments yet, so I'll give them a bit more time to change their answers.
@ThiefMaster That's pretty weird code. They're doing that dumb string stuff, but they've also got that fancy get_number function that returns a lambda that they're using in map. I get the feeling that they don't really know what they're doing and that lambda / map stuff is just cargo-cult coding.
Mondays... Answering the same old "why aren't I seeing the data I thought I should see" questions ower and ower, when the answer is: your collector is misconfigured, you don't have that data.
How the hell did this get onto the HNQ list? math.stackexchange.com/questions/1735126/… How can someone have even a glimmer of interest in geometry and not realize that a triangle with sides a + b = c is degenerate?
My colleagues know I've got a fair chunk of rep but have yet to deduce that "Hey, Fizzy could help to re-open our terrible closed questions!" is a thing.
@khajvah seriously, that's a red herring. If you don't want to use a site in the way that's intended, for whatever reason then you don't use it. Any other consideration is basically meaningless and weasel-wording your way into thinking parasitical behaviour is legitimate.
@RobertGrant If the website publisher decides to block adblock users, I will not use the website but he is letting me block them and execute whatever I like. I don't see a problem.
@khajvah Because you're putting the onus on them to keep track of that, and that's obviously wrong.
Making every content producer continue in an arms race with every ad blocker is dumb, unless you (again) want to just have an easy get-out to carry on leeching free content.
You're getting basic stuff wrong here. You're basically saying a shop should be stolen from unless it a) has a sign up saying stealing is wrong, and b) doesn't catch you.
Making every content producer continue in an arms race with every ad blocker is dumb, unless you (again) want to just have an easy get-out to carry on leeching free content.
Yeah same. I've never clicked on an ad and bought something, but they have brought things to my attention (consciously, and undoubtedly unconsciously too)
I have no problem with ads showing relevant ads to something I might actually like or something near me instead of some store in china selling lipstick.
@khajvah what are you talking about? "I want people to drive Porsches, whether they steal them from me or buy them from me" is the equivalent attitude.
You can easily tell a website that doesn't want to serve you ads: they don't have any.