stackoverflow.com/q/39157420/478656 has a string aabbccccaa, and I thought "I don't have enough problems, let me use regexes to find those runs of same-character". Hoping to get ['aa', 'bb', 'cccc', 'aa'] I tried '(\w)\1+'
That seems like it should work. regex101.com in Python mode seems like it should work. http://stackoverflow.com/a/6518277/478656 suggests (\w)\1 can work. I can make it work in another language. But I can't get it to work in Python.
not with findall, not with search or sub -> repl.it/CsNB
python 2 or 3, \w or . even one match
yet (\w)[^\1]+ does seem to backref match as I'd expect
ah
thanks for being my rubberduck, chatroom. r'' raw string
yeah, I heard the version "soviet large integrated circuits are the largest"
- Is that true that an American soldier's ration is twice as large as of a Soviet soldier? - That can't be true, since no soldier can eat two bags of turnip.
Etchmiadzin Cathedral (Armenian: Էջմիածնի Մայր տաճար, Ēǰmiatsni Mayr tačar) is the mother church of the Armenian Apostolic Church, located in the city of Vagharshapat (Etchmiadzin), Armenia. According to scholars it was the first cathedral (but not the first church) built in ancient Armenia, and is considered the oldest cathedral in the world.
The original church was built in the early fourth century—between 301 and 303 according to tradition—by Armenia's patron saint Gregory the Illuminator, following the adoption of Christianity as a state religion by King Tiridates III. It replaced a preexisting...
@AnttiHaapala Erm, I think you mean "win against" or "beat" rather than "win". Saying "I'd want to be able to win a Jehovah's Witness in a debate" makes it sound like the Jehovah's Witness is the winner's prize. :)
@AnttiHaapala Fair enough. :) I've noticed that your use of prepositions is often non-standard, but it's generally fairly easy to figure out what you're trying to say. I guess the virtual lack of noun cases in English must be a bit annoying, coming from Finnish with its strong case structure.
> Here is a way to do it "Pythonically" > words = [s[i:i+7] for i in range(len(s) - 7) if s[i:i+3].isupper() and s[i+3].islower() and s[i+4:i+7].isupper()]
Are you sure that Zero and Joncle aren't secret lovers, and it turns out Zero is actually a spy for PHP, unbeknownst to Joncle, and unbeknownst to Zero, Joncle is a secret spy for Ruby, both here to infiltrate the Python room, and it all came out (boom) last night?
@PM2 yeah I believe that was it, he re-added himself, then I removed him, then he added himself, then he removed me, then he added me, then he removed himself :P
@Rob close. You forgot about the coup and the hidden treasure.
My theory is that the reason why we don't see the photos of Zero and Joncle is that they both are underpant gnomes, and they've stopped being room owners now that they've finally figured out what the step 2 is.
I like that it gives organization. Before, we were kind of confused. We had all the features that needed to be implemented and didn't know where to begin
I've never used Jira, but from what you guys are saying it sounds like they originally had a useful piece of software but they modified it to do a whole lot more than it was originally intended to handle. That's a dodgy practice at the best of times, but when you just keep adding features without proper planning and without a clear view of the end result you end up building a big incoherent jumble that's unpleasant for the end users to learn and to work with.
@AnttiHaapala Oh dear. :) I used to work with a Vietnamese guy who grew up there during the Vietnam war. He'd been in Australia for over 20 years, but he was still really hard to understand, both because of his heavy accent, and the weird way he used grammar.
I've found myself editing and then looking back and thinking (oh, it still looks like broken English) :( My bar for acceptable has lowered (or, more positively, my tolerance has increased a lot).
@QuestionC It's a truism that no-one uses UML like it's designed. I'm involved in a project that uses a subset of UML. However, I'm not yet convinced it actually adds a lot.
@PM2Ring Speaking of Trey, have you seen any of Fishman's vacuum cleaner solos? youtube.com/watch?v=1v4dIZNXfsE It's one of stranger things I've heard, but he makes it work.
@JRichardSnape On one clip of BB jamming with Derek & Susan, BB's playfully flirting with Susan. Then while Derek's doing a solo, BB leans over to Susan and says "I can see why you married him". :)
I linked this clip a year or so ago, but it's so good it deserves repeating: Going Down. The interplay between Robert Randolph on pedal steel & Joe Bonamassa is pretty impressive.