You can always come back and muck with the commits later
also the nice thing about git is cloning is fast, so what I will (well, used to, when I had a terrible comprehension of git) do is do something like git clone good-repo backup-repo
and then try not to break things too hard in the good repo
user559633
and if you're paying for github, don't hesitate to push to a dev branch, even if you think it's garbage data ;)
Hey Fizzy, did you look at that ML question I linked yesterday? chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/6?m=31532005#31532005 I'm assuming you know something about that topic, I certainly don't. :) OTOH, I guess there's no pressing need to close it, since it's not attracting answers.
The question is almost a year old. The reason I mentioned it is that it was found the other day by the SOCVR dupe-finding bot, Queen Bee. And i guess Queen Bee found it because of the recent "possible dupe" comment.
What Fizzy said. If callback_check_url is defined inside the class (and isn't a classmethod) but doesn't have a self arg you must be defining it inside a method, so you can just reference the method's self arg.
So I'm using RabbitMQ and need to pass it a callback function definition with the above structure, so that when a messages arrive from the broker it is processed appropriately
Now, the behaviour I'm wanting to implement will differ with respect to the type of class
The "hacky" solution I thought of would be to have two classes that have different (but similar) callbacks, but would have a lot of code duplication
I try to make a post to this api.sell_limit_order(url) { 'datetime': datetime, 'id': string, 'type': string, 'price': decimal,'amount': decimal } with api.sell_limit_order(url)[price=num, amount= 10] but gave this error
anyone know Bangor or Sheffield, how they are as student cities, connections, and Bangor, Sheffield Hallam universities, how are they? (I can read Google, but looking for information for a friend)
But this morning it seems fine (so I must've made a mistake somewhere last night). So I think I'm going to need to delve a bit deeper on how self is handled "lower down" in the python internals
I can just do self.callback_check_url and it doesn't choke on it. But I also don't understand how pika doesn't get self confused with the ch (channel) parameter
What is the difference between the following class methods?
Is it that one is static and the other is not?
class Test(object):
def method_one(self):
print "Called method_one"
def method_two():
print "Called method_two"
a_test = Test()
a_test.method_one()
a_test.method_two()
@Antti as a former resident (ages 10-33), it's an excellent student city. Your friend should check out the Walkley / Crookesmoor part of town for accommodation.
Transport links are very good ... as good as anywhere else that far north for London except maybe Manchester, and a wide variety of nearby places (including the best countryside in England within half an hour, if you like that kind of thing).
@ZeroPiraeus In the mid-1970s, Jarvis's dad, the late Mac Cocker, was a DJ on Sydney's youth-oriented government radio station 2JJ (which is now a nationally-networked station, 2JJJ). Mac had a big influence on the musical tastes of a lot of young Sydney people, exposing us to music we'd never heard before.
I was a fairly devoted listener to JJ / JJJ for years. But eventually it got to the stage where they were just playing way too much rap, and I have a fairly low tolerance for rap. Besides, I like a lot of jazz & blues, and I wasn't getting much of that on the Jays.
Nothing much to say , question says it all. Internet have very mixed review about above question.
I am looking for REST only framework (No browser web-html involve)
@PradeepJaiswar Please do not link your fresh SO questions here. Give them at least a day or two on the main site before bringing them here. Please read the SO chat room rules.
Flask is simplest, Django Rest Framework comes with a lot of batteries. If you need them, go with DRF. If you don't, go with Flask, start small and you can add in later.
@PradeepJaiswar However, in this case, that question isn't actually suitable for SO, since it's asking for a recommendation for a tool. You should have just asked here instead.
I have an application divided as
FrontEnd - (AngularJS)
Backend Rest API (looking for python Rest Framework here)
Database ( Mongo/Mysql/DynamoDB/Hbase etc...)
For backend Rest API, after some online study came across few options as
Django (django-rest-framework or django-tastypie)
Flask...
I'm not really in a position to say, academically ... I know there are league tables around. It's a large and modern university, and what I've seen of its out-of-classroom facilities are good.
I know nothing at all of Bangor, but I'd imagine it's going to be a lot smaller. Different people thrive in different environments; I don't know whether your friend feels they'd thrive better in a large (maybe more diverse) student community or a smaller one (which might feel more like being part of a family).
Hallam is one of two universities in Sheffield – the University of Sheffield is a traditional red-brick university, and at least as big as Sheffield Hallam. So there are a lot of students in Sheffield.
Both campuses in Sheffield are spread around the city (mostly but not entirely in the centre). I think individual departments are usually concentrated together.
I mean, right now, the next time I build an API, I'll do it in Flask. DRF was a useful introduction to it - I feel like there's a big gap to jump between the 20% of stuff you need to know to do 80% of the things, and then that last bit.
I actually quite like Pyramid. The docs are weird, though; they give the impression of thoroughness and then it's hard to find what you need when something unexpected happens.
It's not like Django + TastyPie just because it uses OO. If you are building a service with two or three endpoints, that combo is overkill. “You wanted a banana but what you got was a gorilla holding the banana and the entire jungle.”
@AnttiHaapala Honestly, although I do like Pyramid, if someone is coming in here asking for direction rather than investigating for themselves, it's not the right choice. The bigger communities around Flask and Django make them more appropriate.