If you try using Surface.fill with a rect argument that goes outside its bounds and a BLEND flag, it'll crash.
C++ runtime probz.
BUT! If you give it something like mySurface.fill(whatever_rgba, (0,0,0,0), pygame.BLEND_RGBA_MULT) first, it's totally cool with anything you send it.
in big O notation, we have various exponent classes like N^2 up to N^100 and so on, and beyond that I'm told we have exponential complexity such as 2^N. my question is whether there is some function that exists between these two? Or is N^(largest number conceivable) sitting right before (smallest coefficient)^N?
I have two servers in my organization. One of which is read-only to me (Server A) and the other hosts our knowledge base (Server B). There is an XML file on Server A which is refreshed at an unknown interval. This file contains information on the status of various items. I want to be able to disp...
Sandboxing and Python don't play too well together, more's the pity. I think there used to be a sandboxing translation mode for PyPy, but I haven't been following it so I don't know if it's still a thing..
@Aaron: nope, consider exec("siht tropmi"[::-1]). Even if you ban exec you can still get it, e.g. getattr(__builtin__, "__imp" + "ort__")("this"), etc. It's just really, really hard to sandbox Python.
I second the idea to run everything in a container.
Of course since it's quite likely the students aren't actually malevolent, you might as well just jump into an instance and do everything the normal way. Even if somebody does try to do something dangerous, the worst that happens is you make a new container and grade the others.
we're limited to 50 code approvers on config, so today I coded up an algorithm that got every pre-existing code approver on a couple of files of importance to me, then used multisets to determine who to cull and who is required to approve from each project in an attempt to get decent coverage on as many projects as possible (and avoid having to approve crap myself.) I spent 4 or 5 hours on that today.
@AaronHall: the World Cup of Hockey is going on. When I commented, Canada was up 4-1 over Europe with about 1 minute to go. Statistically that means we were almost certain to win, but my sports superstitions outweigh my logic.
A few weeks ago I helped to debug a particular expensive problem we were having. Along the way I wound up creating a trivial (well, trivial for us) interactive dashboard in a Jupyter notebook. Unfortunately parts of it became popular, so now I have to give a talk tomorrow morning on how easy it is to start exploring data in the notebook and then create a standalone webapp from the very same code.
Moral of the story: never do anything, or people will think you know stuff.
And with that, it's rhubarb time. Eastern time good night for all!
the top of the Scandinavian peninsula from about the the border of Sweden and Finland to Northwest is additionally an area where there are Finnish influences... or Sámi
according to the legend, appeared from the heavens above the battlefield where Danes were slaying Estonian heathens in the area that now is known as the "Danetown" (Tallinn)
independent for exactly 29 hours and 37 minutes before the little green men from unidentified country start patrolling the streets, if you mean independent from Sweden and Finland
on first of January they celebrate the independence at noon, in the afternoon of Jan 2, there would be great anticipation about the results of the newly organized referendum...
Which by the way has a military base again. Because Sweden could tooottally take russia on if they decided to stop bullying us like a cat plays with a mouse..
it is not to say that Finns were particularly good, but the Soviet strategy was just plain bad and motivation 0, and the winter '40 wasn't exactly like the Soviet soldiers were used to as they were mostly from Ukraine and so.
so even the Russians were glad to make peace in 1940 because they were like "we got better use for our troops than trying to get this Finland that's really got nothing"
I read a book a few years ago ,written by Vo Nguyen Giap where he was saying that regardless of the size of the adversary, if the motivation of the adversary is 100%, you should better be very very careful in engaging a fight with its army
I will read a bit more about this battle
impressive, the ratio of fallen is almost 1 to 10 ... o_O
In Oulu, in 19th century they used to sing christmas songs in the name of Tsar Alexander II, Grand Duke of Finland ~"who took away the slavery/serfdom, and the tyrant and will defeat all hostile countries (= Poland and Sweden and such), so let all people of Finland rejoice as you've been relieved of your troubles"
"John Rambo was a finnish settler at Wiccaco in 1643 and Peter Rambo was another Finn living on Raccoon Creek.18 From this it would appear that the descendants of the original settlers in his day were all considered as Swedes. For that reason in historical accounts the Finns are seldom mentioned as distinct from the Swedes."
user6568562
I wouldn't mind seeing more Finnish women downtown
"For example, in certain 16th century documents, Gustav Vasa occasionally uses the phrases the cities of Sweden and Finland and the cities of Finland and the cities of Sweden, thus implying that the two entities are not identical."
@DavidGonzalez I've been active on stackoverflow for 5 years
during that time I've asked all questions that I've been able to formulate well and for which I didn't find the answer on stack overflow yet. There have been 8 of them.
the number of questions on stack overflow doesn't equal the number of problems I've met
Hey guys, in a multiprocessing.Manager(), what's the right way to assign a value to Manager().Value? I think I shouldn't use a simple assignment operator as it may overwrite the whole proxy, right?
REST API Design Question: Say my users can favourite things. I'd like to have a REST method where they can toggle their favourite status on an entity. So if they don't have a favourite status on it, it'll add it, if they do have it, it'll delete it. Would something like POST /entity/id/favourite be sensible for toggling, rather than having a POST and DELETE method for setting/unsetting?
Also, if that doesn't make sense at all, I'd appreciate a comment along those lines :P
On that note @joncle. The office no longer has a supply of rare whiskies. I'm not sure I can afford to replace them at this rate
@MartijnPieters I've not, but would be interested in starting a new habit, literally cannot be worse than Relentless that is my preferred drink poison.
@MartijnPieters Better be careful on passing out those invites ;) - I'm likely to be heading down to London more regularly now that the Thames catamaran project is entering a more interesting phase
I don't envy the creature. It clearly hates humans since birth, and now its loathing causes it to be carried around the world like a sack of potatoes to meet and entertain...humans. Oh the irony.
of course that ^ would work with any cat that becomes a celebrity, not just the grumpy one:P
@Ffisegydd why wouldn't you use UPDATE /entity/id/favourite? You can then use data such as value=val, where val is chosen from {true,false,toggle} to set or toggle the value
@MarlonAbeykoon Yes the value is in bytes because response.content is bytes and not characters. If you want characters use the response.text attribute. Of course this only makes sense if the body actually is text. If it's an image for instance, you'll get garbage or a decoding error when accessing the text attribute. — BlackJack33 mins ago
If everything but supervisor, carbon, graphite-web, moz*, python-gflags and thrift support py3, how are so many people stuck with python 2 due to "depending on a library that's not ported yet"?
I have a feeling that this is a bit like a Mott insulator: everyone could simultaneously switch to py3 fairly easily, but each project has to do the jump independently, and it's much harder if your nearest neighbours are still stuck. Or maybe emergent properties in solid state physics have nothing to do with software development.
I have pyQT application that have... @pointA.setter stuff... is that python or QT ? What does it mean ? Its not class but I'm finding it hard to find out what it is :c
@pointA.setter
def pointA(self, point):
self._pointA = point
self.updatePath()
@Dariusz Worry ye not. The decorator "simply" takes a function and returns another function. This allows you to "wrap" a computation - i.e. use the function as part of the value computed by the wrappings. Simple examples include a decorator to trace all calls of a function, and a decorator to cache results against arguments to avoid recomputations
@holdenweb mm black magic. I'm reading now about it. Sounds great but so far I have barely scratched the surface. Thanks for info holdenweb! Will be back in a bit with more... questions :- )
@Dariusz Don't expect to "get" decorators straight away. They can be a bit weird & confusing at first, but as you play with them they'll gradually make sense, and hopefully you'll eventually realise that they are actually fairly simple "syntactic sugar". :) The decorator in the example you posted above is rather special: it's used to create a setter method. Martijn has written an excellent answer on this topic: stackoverflow.com/a/17330273/4014959
Yeah, take your time reading it and play around with those examples to understand what is going on. Once you get it, you get it. :) I had a hard time with decorators until I just started messing around with them and breaking things and trying to figure out what was going on
Time to grind through traffic... grumble grumble temp rbrb
Now imagine @decorator(arg1, arg2) followed by def f. In that case, f is bound to decorator(arg1, arg2)(f) - in other words decorator(arg1, arg2) must return a decorator function!
Obv, you can make it as head-twisting as you like, but it's pretty simple in principle. As always, learn the principles and the practice should, if sensible, seem obvious
hehe...so this just got migrated from Code Review. I think I understand their frustration with SO questions being migrated to CR. stackoverflow.com/questions/39639683/…
so as far as I can see... Command Arg_A> FunctionA Arg_A> result > Command Arg_A> decoratorB - FunctionB Arg_A to Arg_B > FunctionA Arg_B > Result ?
decorator is like... kidnaper.. that kidnaps args send to function below him, redirrect it to another function and then sends the result data back to original function
@holdenweb That might be a bit too advanced for Dariusz at this stage. :) But yeah, I like to think of decorators that take params as decorator factories, with the params specifying the details of the actual decorator that will be used to do the decorating.