Sometimes I wish python's syntax was more flexible. I'd love to define a <3 operator just to screw with people. It could call the __luvs__ method. I guess we would have to allow implementing </3 too: while it could default to the complement of <3, I'm sure there are objects which are in complicated.
#realtalk: I do wish we had more control over defining new ops, mostly for math purposes. I'd love to have a better way to distinguish between elementwise and structure-based operations.
Brosh Hashanah would be a good name for a marijuana dispensary in Israel
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@idjaw I mean, America (née Budweiser) isn't that bad. The upshot would be that a 5L mini keg would be cheap, but at $25, that's regular, better 6-pack territory
@tristan watching some tv....doing some light reading...slacking.
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I'm bad at JS, so it took me a bit to get the click to set focus on that specific element and have it work on hitting enter/leaving focus appropriately when switching from <div> to <input> and back to <div>
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@idjaw What are you watching? GF and I are finishing the latest season of Portlandia on netflix, but it's not every good, so we're both on laptops
@tristan Right now I'm finishing Fear the Walking Dead which is equally as disappointing as your Portlandia experience most likely...so I don't recommend it.
I'm also going to watch The Strain...which is OK...I just really can't stand the main protagonist
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Last time I "really" used it, jquery was the go-to and I just did form stuff and CSS.
if you are bleh about it...I really don't think you'll like it. The characters are unlikeable and the show moves forward only because of stupid decisions they make to add complexity to the show
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01:28
eh. TWD got tedious as their funding got cut and i've already read past it in the comic books, even though i haven't read them in 7 years
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@idjaw that nails it even in le originale.
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<--- we're over here [zombies] we need to be over here for some dumb reason ---->
@tristan Yeah. I've set myself up to not have to go that route. The one thing that irks me is that I have to deal with paying for a cable subcription to get TMN/HBO
a big chunk per month just for that
There is no other legitimate way in Canada to get GoT and the like unless you go through cable subscription.
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Yeah, GF and I wait and binge or see at a friend's house.
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And yeah, cable is super broken because of Disney/ESPN, Viacom control.
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Amusingly, netflix barely works in Russia, and GF and I try to stay within media fencing, even though it would be trivial/without-punishment to just pirate anything/everything
the general setup is to ask just under the legal defense amount because they're reasonably certain of the piracy
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e.g. modal "my wifi is insecure" defense mount is $10k; so media company will ask $5k on X strike; knowing with some certainty it's not a false positive, meant to recap loses on N pirates
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read the article. i wouldn't trust huffinglue post for anything, especially legal process information
A makefile is a file containing a set of directives used with the make build automation tool.
== Overview ==
Most often, the makefile directs make on how to compile and link a program. Using C/C++ as an example, when a C/C++ source file is changed, it must be recompiled. If a header file has changed, each C/C++ source file that includes the header file must be recompiled to be safe. Each compilation produces an object file corresponding to the source file. Finally, if any source file has been recompiled, all the object files, whether newly made or saved from previous compilations, must be linked...
since it was written for you you just need to run it
@idjaw haha, I read "copyright modernisation act" in the URL and thought "finally! Someone is doing something about the insane copyright laws!" ... But nope, it's the exact reverse. :-/ Could have expected that.
> -- Are you sure it's the multiprocessing part that fails? It seems fine to me. If you print res right after the .join(), is it really empty? [...] > -- @Andras: adding a "plot(res)" after the "if" containing the join I get: [...] > -- And if you print(res) **right after the join**, as I asked?
I guess questions asking for help hacking email accounts aren't technically off-topic, but I'm still not happy about them. stackoverflow.com/questions/39850066/…
Hello, is there away that I can make the number of times the program enter an else statement is the same of its if?
for i in range(5): truth_if = False truth_else= False for j in range(3): if i == j: print "Yes", i, j truth_if = True else: print "No", i, j # truth_else= True if truth_if: break
I know it is a silly problem but i am trying to see if I can enforce break somewhere in the code so that the program print 3 Yes and 3 No even though the logic of the code above is that the number of else accessed higher than of if @khajvah
“What are you using to generate the JSON?” – “I’m using JSON.NET!” – solution for JSON.NET – “No wait, I actually lied. You are so wrong about it, this is not a duplicate!!!” – Seriously? Anyway, see this question and also this question… it’s still a duplicate. — poke13 secs ago
@AnttiHaapala I read the short description and said "Huh?" Apparently it has something to do with superconductors. And future quantum computers, of course. Everything does.
I have quite a few* acquaintances for whom that is default mode.
* 1<n<10
I like @Andras' starred message. I just tried that moving the word order around and it's true (for the perms I tried) that other orders sound somehow unnatural.
That's hilarious, because those are not even mutually exclusive
The only thing that he could have said that is accurate is that Python is not directly compiled into machine code but is executed by the Python interpreter on that particular platform.
It's still compiled into bytecode, just like .NET and Java are, though.
> When you debug JavaScript eval code, if there are eval codes that have source maps that follow eval code that don't have source maps, the debugger crashes when it steps into eval code that does not have source maps.
I guess the original thought behind "scripting" was something like "to run commands from a script", as in a "shell script". Later languages such as Tcl and Perl were created as more advanced alternatives to shell scripts, which explains why they − and langauges like them such as Python − were commonly called "scripting languages" as well.
A scripting or script language is a programming language that supports scripts, programs written for a special run-time environment that automate the execution of tasks that could alternatively be executed one-by-one by a human operator. Scripting languages are often interpreted (rather than compiled). Primitives are usually the elementary tasks or API calls, and the language allows them to be combined into more complex programs. Environments that can be automated through scripting include software applications, web pages within a web browser, the shells of operating systems (OS), embedded systems...
Programming is flipping the eight on/off switches on the front of your mainframe in order to register a single machine code instruction at a time. Nothing else counts.
If you’re telling me, it’s not a programming language, then please show me a declarative programming language and tell me what the difference to SQL is.
I'll accept SQL as a programming language if you can make it output the lyrics to "99 bottles of beer on the wall" without having to hardcode each line
@poke I don't think I have any examples of a declarative programming language. But "turing complete" is what I think of when I think of a programming language. AFAIK, SQL can't enter an infinite loop, which is part of being turing complete