@Two-BitAlchemist "what would happen if someone who understood and correctly used Docs.SO wanted to take the initiative and add examples for something they wrote" -- you were asking for documenting your library. From what we've seen so far, using SOD correctly and documenting your library correctly don't mix. You can exemplify the use of your library in many simple ways, and SOD is the right place, and indeed nobody cares who the author is. I mean, you don't even need any rep or tag score for contributing to Docs (do you?). — Andras Deak1 min ago
granted, one needs some rep in a tag to propose it so if it is a total new library tag - it likely won't work (but known, smaller open source could just get some friends and rocket on)
yeah: With at least 1 positively scored answer intag
@AndrasDeak sigh this is going to actually happen, isn't it. People are going to start using SOD to "document" their own projects, and then realise too late that anyone can ruin their documentation, they can't do anything about it, and SE doesn't give a fuck.
I mean, considering that near nothing has changed since going public, with all the fires burning. Maybe not fires, it's all down to smoking embers by now:P
My rant is that I spent years learning how to code and now that I actually want to implement said code I spend 80 percent of the time messing around with the GUI or webpage or whatever
Python is a widely used high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language. Its design philosophy emphasizes code readability, and its syntax allows programmers to express concepts in fewer lines of code than possible in languages such as C++ or Java. The language provides constructs intended to enable clear programs on both a small and large scale.
Python supports multiple programming paradigms, including object-oriented, imperative and functional programming or procedural styles. It features a dynamic type system and automatic memory management and has a large and comprehensive...
I'm kinda shocked at Shog9's "structure doesn't matter" argument. Having spent a year with a language whose documentation's terribleness is largely due to its lack of structure, and come back to Python's wonderful because structured documentation, I find it hard to understand how he could have come to that conclusion.
And for the record I browse good documentation all. the. goddamned. time.
The Special Operations Executive (SOE) was a British World War II organisation. Following Cabinet approval, it was officially formed by Minister of Economic Warfare Hugh Dalton on 22 July 1940, to conduct espionage, sabotage and reconnaissance in occupied Europe (and later, in occupied Southeast Asia also) against the Axis powers, and to aid local resistance movements.
It was initially also involved in the formation of the Auxiliary Units, a top secret "stay-behind" resistance organisation which would have been activated in the event of a German invasion of Britain.
Few people were aware of SOE...
The topics coming up are ridiculous. The official documentation is very clear on the PEP8 style-guide....yet, there is a request to document it here on SO?
yeah, no rep for flagging bad docs and +2 for deleting is it
but +50 for adding '+=' on the second day to addition topic
worse to me is the fact that one of the requested topics is from someone who came here and didn't like that we pointed him to the docs (I want to forecast and plot a timeseries without understanding how broad a topic that is)
Disclaimer: I don't know German internal affairs to tell if AfD are neonazis; I can just imagine the same thing going on with our own resident far-right-wing assholes, who are neonazis masquerading as persons
I got a reply, but I don't get what they're saying. But as I can't respond with anything constructive, I'll just pass:
@AndrasDeak I feel like you and some others are answering this like it's a Stack Overflow question, rather than a Meta Stack Overflow question. I'm not asking about whether it's good practice to document using Docs. SO, exclusively or otherwise. I'm asking about community rules and preferences around using the tool if you are the author of the package in question. In Q&A, the rules are slightly different; I want to clarify the same with regards to Docs. That is all. — Two-Bit Alchemist6 mins ago
I don't really get their point about me answering as if it was not a meta question...
but it doesn't matter much, I already said what I wanted to:)
Hehe, one thing occured to me
If Trump becomes president, I'll be able to say that the pope is more enlightened and accepting than the president of the USA.
Yeah, I might be missing some perspective. I just assumed that the president should be a modern guy, and popes traditionally conservative and backward. But yeah, that's probably not the case at all.
I kind of have a soft spot for the logging module, though. We weren't allowed to use log4net or anything 3rd party libs in my first job, so I basically just ported the crux of python's logging module so we could have some sane logging.
@JGreenwell We were just insane. It was kind of a, "If it's beyond our firewall it Must Not Be Used". No reason behind it, e.g. "Oh this library is unsupported". We just didn't. They're finally allowing uh... what's that .NET pip-quivalent?
nuget!
lol. I'm quite happy at the amount of effort I had to go through to remind myself what that's called ;)
I think they're actually turning their internal packages into NuGet packages, too, now
not being to be able to use NuGet would have meant the last company I used C# for wouldn't have been able to function very well (wonder if there is standard support for SQLite now)
I started watching it when I was 17-18, when me and my brother started paying for cable ourselves, before that buying VHS of anime (and BBC) was the only way we got to watch anything outside of network TV
@davidism: FYI it turns out my new shop has many Flask fans. The various teams use it for most in-house webapps from simple file servers to data presentations -- I was reviewing one which was flask+angular the other day and I'm working on a flask+aurelia one myself. You know you've made it when people are trying to figure out how to namedrop you. ;-)
I'll probably kick myself for not figuring out this myself, but I am trying to reraise an exception with the original traceback. I know how to do that, but I'm thinking there must be some way to avoid the fugly syntax:
raise error[0], error[1], error[2]
where error is defined earlier as
error = sys.exc_info()
I get a syntax error for raise(*error)
is there a way to get something like that so I don't have to hardcode the three elements?
python2.7
getting something which works even in 2.6 would be wonderful (don't ask ...)
the full scope is error = None; for arg in arguments: do try: process(arg) except ValueError: if not error: error = sys.exc_info() and I want the first error when the loop is done
plain raise works fine for getting the last one, but that's not what I want
Dude, seriously. Tristan, Wayne and PM2Ring all told you yesterday to read the room rules. Either you've not done that or you're not paying attention to them.
Particularly the bits about asking a question and pasting bunches of code into the room. sopython.com/chatroom
@Bio do know the pasting of that code resulted in a flag being raised. That can get you suspended from chat for a while. If you don't want that, be respectful to the room rules. If you don't care, good luck.
Ok... maybe don't respect the rules like you said, but i think it is better to help people who asking about python than talking about subject that they have no relation with python like Poutine.. Sorry to say this. But I remark that you never help people.You are here for joke.. not for Python. Anyway thank you for your "'help".
> Ok... maybe don't respect the rules like you said, [...]
STOP THERE
step 0. is respecting the rules
If you don't do that, there's nothing to discuss. End of discussion.
Respecting the rules is the only thing you can do in advance to show that you care for our time, donated free for your help. If you can't even be bothered to do that, we can't be bothered to help you.
@Bio We’re here to have fun, yes, that’s absolutely true. A lot of us are here to have nice conversations. That does limit our content to Python, absolutely not. That being said, we all happily help people with their problems if they ask the question properly and if they actually respect our rules and help us figure out the problem together. Just like on SO, we’re not here to do your job, so we won’t do your homework for you.
“I remark that you never help people.” – This simply shows that you have no idea what’s going on here, so you disqualified yourself there completely.
Any serious programmer will tend to cringe at code they wrote six months ago or more. But you can't live your life applying today's learning to yesterday's (working but ugly) code.
@holdenweb If n is divisible by each element of a set of positive integers then n must be divisible by the least common multiple of the set.
WTF, I just posted a LCM answer to that question, with working code and a Wikipedia link. Then a minute later, someone else posts a 3 line answer mentioning the LCM with a wrong value for the LCM, and instantly gets an upvote. :(
@Ffisegydd Some of the high schools here start next week and I know they have added a programming class (w/Python and C# - don't know order their teaching) which is great - but I'm already cringing thinking about the questions