@snowblind I'm not familiar with how Office macros work, but if the files that you want to analyse are really huge, and you can easily distinguish between macro lines and non-macro lines, then it makes sense to read them line by line. Otherwise, just read the whole thing into a string & split that string into a list of lines.
@snowblind Well in the case of office macros, to scan variable values properly you'd have to write a complete parser for the entire office macro language. On the other hand, scanning the file directly is as simple as file_contents = file.read().
But reading the file is the easy part. The hard part is analysing what the macro's doing. You'll only be able to find the malware if they haven't tried hard to hide it.
Yeah if you're doing anything more sophisticated than if exact_regular_expression_that_you_know_what_it_is_ahead_of_time in file_contents: then it's going to be quite tricky
I'd say this would take... eighty hours of work, if you already know what you're doing.
Provided you're writing absolutely everything from the ground up. You could cut it down to forty if there's a ready-made office macro parsing library out there somewhere
Why do some people use str.index without handling the ValueError when the substring isn't found? It's not like the docs don't mention it. stackoverflow.com/a/41894632/4014959
I hate downvoting competing answers, it doesn't seem very sportsman-like. But when they're just plain wrong, and the authors don't respond to comments, I kind of feel obliged to... stackoverflow.com/questions/41888800/…
[1j ** n for n in range(4)] will get you the four axis-aligned unit vectors on the complex plane. Is there a similar arithmetic way to get the six axis-aligned unit vectors of a 3d space?
I vaguely feel as though cross products would help here...
My goal here is not at all well defined yet, even to me, but I guess I'm looking for a "logical" ordering of the axis-aligned unit vectors. In two dimensions, the primary candidate is (+x, +y, -x, -y) because that's the order you transverse them when you trace a unit circle, but that approach doesn't generalize to higher dimensions. Can't trace a sphere.
I like -z, -y, -x, x, y, z. But yeah, in some ways 3D is a bit messy. Hamilton spent years trying to find a good analogue of complex numbers for 3D work. Eventually he realised it was easier to jump to 4 dimensions, and thus quaternions were born.
What I'd really like is a function f such that the sequence (i, f(i), f(f(i)), ... <f applied to i N times>) evaluates to an infinitely repeating sequence of axis-aligned unit vectors, given that i is one of the unit vectors.
The one that "spent years trying to find a good analogue of complex numbers for 3D work [and] realised it was easier to jump to 4 dimensions, and thus quaternions were born"
The United States ten-dollar bill ($10) is a current denomination of U.S. currency. The obverse of the bill features the portrait of Alexander Hamilton, who served as the first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury. The reverse features the U.S. Treasury Building. All $10 bills issued today are Federal Reserve Notes.
As of December 2013, the average life of a $10 bill is 4.5 years, or about 54 months, before it is replaced due to wear. Ten-dollar bills are delivered by Federal Reserve Banks in yellow straps.
The source of the portrait on the $10 bill is John Trumbull’s 1805 painting of Hamilton that belongs...
@PM2Ring I suspected you mean him, but I would've thought that the go-to Hamilton in a CS-y place is the cycle-y Hamilton, so I resisted the temptation to guess in the face of ambiguity:)
@Kevin the one thing that I love about euro banknotes is that they do not feature any faces of any corrupt politicians, nor do they showcase any national monuments
Charles Howard Hinton (1853, United Kingdom – 30 April 1907, Washington D.C., United States) was a British mathematician and writer of science fiction works titled Scientific Romances. He was interested in higher dimensions, particularly the fourth dimension. He is known for coining the word "tesseract" and for his work on methods of visualising the geometry of higher dimensions.
== Life ==
Hinton taught at Cheltenham College while he studied at Balliol College, Oxford, where he obtained his B.A. in 1877. From 1880 to 1886, he taught at Uppingham School in Rutland, where Howard Candler, a friend...
I recall reading about some country's / countries' currency which had pictures of bridges on them, and one (or several?) of the bridges did not actually exist in real life, so they built one.
I had a look at his book which purported to train you to get an intuitive grasp of 4D geometry, but I didn't go so far as to build a set of Hinton cubes. Allegedly, some people who attempted his method went a bit strange... although I guess you could say that Hinton himself was more than a little strange. :)
We got rid of paper money years ago. Our banknotes are printed on polymer. They're pretty, and more durable, but they don't fold well. But if they get creased you can sit them under a book for a day or two and they go nice & flat again.
Paper used for banknotes generally has a high cloth fibre content for the flexibility, but yeah, US banknotes definitely have a more cloth-y feel than the old Aussie ones did. They could survive washing, if they were in a pocket, but I don't think they did too well loose in the washing machine.
Vietnam's banknotes are really awful :D I hate polymer banknotes
one thing that amazed me when I went to hongkong was I went to one ATM and withdrew money, then went to another and withdrew some more cash... then compared the banknotes and they weren't nothing alike
Americans need money that 1) won't get soggy in a washing machine, 2) won't liquefy in a microwave, and 3) won't fuse to your flesh during a catastrophic fireworks accident.
I feel there is some small irony in me sharing an image of a post that contains an image, so I can convey how poorly-suited images are for converying information.
@MarcusS Dragon dance, Lion dance, going to crowd in a mall trying to soak in the festival, and stuffing myself with food. Then repeating it for the next day.
@WayneWerner If your city has a China Town, go there tomorrow/Sunday. Bonus points if your city has a mall that is mostly run by Asian people; go there if you want to experience a massive crowd, similar to boxing day
Let's skip the part of the conversation where someone links that "according to a cambridge study..." article that says people can read scrambled text, and the part where someone links the other article saying "actually that first article has no citations and it's unclear that any such study ever occurred", and the part where everyone puts in their two cents about whether they personally can read scrambled text because of their superior minds
I don't want to. My family wants too. I wish they would hurry up and produce VR camera for the consumers, so I can sit at home and just VR the experience instead.
Right, SO chat limits the number of characters in a msg, which is good. But if that limit was boundless, we can stack as many as we want. (?) assuming here (?) lol
guys, i want to do a check to make sure the length of a string is a multiple of 3. I dont want the actual answer of the sum, but simply for integer to be true and float to be false...
right now im working with if len(foo) % 3: do blah
but i need to make it only do blah if the answer is a whole number/integer. A decimal/float would be negative
some_integer / 3 evaluates to a whole number if and only if some_integer % 3 == 0
The modulus operator being equivalent (in this case) to "remainder after dividing". If the remainder after dividing some integer by 3 is zero, then some integer divided by three is a whole number.
Also note that since non-zero numbers are treated as true, you'll sometimes see if x % 3: as a shortcut for if x % 3 != 0:, and if not x % 3: as a shortcut for if x % 3 == 0.
No worries. Learning how Python's data model works can save a lot of confusion, especially if you're used to the data model used in more traditional languages. Most of the time you can pretend that Python has variables, but when it doesn't work it can be a bit bewildering if you try to understand it in terms of the "a variable is a box" model.
I don't care much for not x % 3 because I can't snap-judge whether it evaluates to (not x) % 3 or not (x % 3). If I spend five seconds thinking about it, I recall that not has very low precedence, but that's five more seconds than I'd like to spend. I recognize that this is a flaw in myself and not in the programming language.
There could very well be a NegaKevin out there who feels the same way about x % 3 == 0 because he can't remember the relative precedence of percent and double-equals.
@MooingRawr I'm conflicted, because I like explaining things to people but I don't like it when people don't understand the things I'm explaining to them.
I often use the if foo % 3: form, but I agree that it can be a little confusing. Generally you want to do the thing when foois divisible by 3, but writing that as if not foo % 3 seems to have the wrong logical sense. Even though I've been doing the equivalent thing in other languages for decades, I still have to pause and make sure I've got it the right way around.
You may be interested in the built-in function divmod, which returns the quotient and remainder, effectively doing the work of both "/" and "%" at the same time.
yeah, I don't think that works for files. Unless you did len(ifile.read()), which you shouldn't. Pretty sure you want ifile.seek(0, 2); if ifile.tell() and ifile.tell() % 3 != 0
@snowblind you can get the length of a file in bytes from an os.fstat call, thoughif you want the number of text characters it contains, however, I don't know how to do that without reading the contents of the file concerned
If "length of the text inside the file" describes what he is doing and not what he wants to do, then len(ifile) implies that ifile refers to the text inside the file and not the file itself.
I'm trying to install pyaudio in my Mac. I wrote pip install pyaudio in the terminal but I get the following error. I tried different things I found in SE answers but nothing helped.
It amuses me that DSM said "you'll sometimes see if x % 3: as a shortcut for if x % 3 != 0:" half an hour ago, and then nobody actually suggested that after snowblind informed us that he needed if len(ifile) % 3 != 0 rather than if len(ifile) % 3 == 0
@PM2Ring Yeah, but OPs tend to skim more abstract discussions like that. Sometimes you can only get their attention with direct pings containing full MCVEs.
Yesterday I listened to the Doom soundtrack when I was trying to do some particularly unpleasant debugging. Appropriate for matching one's "I want to kill this with fire" internal state.
I've got rather broad music tastes. I'm almost always listening to some kind of music. Most of the time when I'm coding I listen to something bluesy or jazzy that's not too complicated in the background so it doesn't interfere with my concentration. OTOH, when in crunch mode, I will listen to something more intense, eg Hendrix or Mahavishnu Orchestra.
Problem: I want to implement unary minus for my geometry.Point class, but I don't want to update it in the 5+ places I have it defined (home computer 2.7 directory, home computer 3.X directory, work computer 2.7 directory, work computer 3.X directory, at least one github project)
Things Every Hacker Once Knew is an interesting look at the last visible traces of now-dead technologies, answering questions like "why are consoles usually 80 characters wide?" and "What the heck do all the non-printable ASCII characters mean?"
> It's an online practice quiz that I was taking for python.The answer that marked was correct but when I tried the code myself with input as 2 the output was error.Hence the question and sorry for the bad quality of the image
@davidism @Kevin the array behaves like an ordinary 2d array. I need to extend the dimensions (100,99) to (100,100). reshape isn't working in this case as the number of elements in reshape must remain constant.
@Kevin it doesn't work here as the array is a reflection of another array and exists in a loop. It throws error: cannot resize this array: it does not own its data
two_to_one is a function that turns two-argument functions into one-argument functions. It does this by taking the single argument and supplying it twice to the original function.