@wim The question is how to escape curly braces in a format string. The duplicate provides the answer. If the asker had seen that question and its answers, they wouldn't have had to ask the question. That's a duplicate.
I realize you don't like it when I close duplicate questions, but banishing the helpful duplicate target to the linked questions list is doing a disservice to visitors.
I mean, your answer specifically links to that duplicate and says "it's the same trick." Anyone searching for the SyntaxError flavor of this problem would find that question (ideally), see the duplicate, and have their answer.
Providing an answer tailored specifically to f-strings is fine. The syntax for those is parsed differently and it's not a given that they needed to have the same escaping rules.
I don't understand why you think that's a disservice? Closing someone's question saying "your problem is vaguely related to this 6 years old post, go and dig around in there" is a disservice - it's so rare that new users write a coherent and clear question that we should encourage them, not slam a door in their face.
@wim It may not be a given, but it is true. If you're linking to it, stating that the solution is the same, and reproducing that solution, it is a duplicate. The age of the question is immaterial.
The original error message for forgetting the parenthesis when printing in Python 3 was a generic SyntaxError, but a later version added a more specific "parenthesis missing in call to print." The problem is the same, the solution is the same, and such questions would be duplicates even with a different error message.
The linked questions are a lot less visible than a duplicate target. And I'm eager to hammer stuff because it reduces fragmentation, making SO easier to navigate - I don't think I'm too eager (no idea what the appropriate level is for eagerness to close duplicates).
The problem with excessive Zeal is when you get cursed with that damage reflection in the middle of your Zeal hits. Doing your best to fight back the forces of evil, and then there's the red swirly above your head and you can't cancel your Zeal and your next two swats kill you.
Hey all, Im looking for any kind of direction. Coding my project in python but technically has nothing to do with python, wanted to get that out of the way before the wolves come after me. I am working on mRemoteNG and creating a tool to generate the XML for the config file but cannot find out what the hashed value in the root XML line is pointing too. Just looking to have a direction to look in.
I posted a link on the reddit page for some help but havent heard anything
In today's episode of WTF, I present stackoverflow.com/questions/42522759/… In isolation, the code is pretty weird. But when you read what the OP expects it to do... I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such code.
The above code works, and is an example of what the code should do.
But in the non-MCVE code, the CustomException doesn't properly bubble up to main()
The code within the exception block is run (can see it in the logs and events db), but the finally clause in main() isn't triggered, and it just loops back into a() again.
It's behaving as if the raise statement isn't in the code
(I can appreciate that there's probably not much anyone can actually do to help me, since I don't actually have an MCVE of the problem)
But I've been banging my head against a wall for a couple of days, and wondering what I can do to figure out why CustomException isn't causing the program to exit.
It's on an embedded device, so I can't use an IDE like PyCharm to step through and debug the flow
@wim I'm with @MarcusS Extracting 8 bit RGB values from an integer is essentially a byte-oriented operation, so I feel that bitwise operations are perfectly appropriate, and I find them more readable than the equivalent non-bitwise arithmetic for that task.
True, bitwise stuff in Python can be a little weird compared to doing it in C, mostly because Python uses unlimited precision integers and it doesn't have a native unsigned integer type, but there are ways to deal with those quirks.
However, I agree that using bitwise stuff for a task that's not inherently bit or byte oriented is probably not a good idea, whether you're writing Python or C. OTOH, I do tend to use 1<<n rather than 2**n because it's significantly faster, but that mostly occurs in a situation where I'm doing bit-twiddling anyway, so it is appropriate to the problem domain.
FWIW, corvid's question about RGB extraction which prompted that discussion was probably coming from JavaScript, so a divmod solution wouldn't work for him.
@IntrepidBrit Weird. My brain isn't fully working ATM, but does it make a difference if you put an except clause or two into main()?
Does it make a difference if you get rid of the finally clause in the a function?
@IntrepidBrit Not sure. I'm pretty vague about the inner mechanics of that stuff. I guess that some important information is getting clobbered somewhere. Maybe Martijn can explain it, but I think even he'll need a MCVE. FWIW, this behaves as expected and sets a 1 return code in the shell:
cbg! need little help! mydict[words[0]].append(words[2]) is my current dict which created a list of values, I want to create a list of tuples instead. This doesn't work: mydict2[words[0]].append((words[1],words[2]))
@PM2Ring Basically, had a return in the finally statement which means the code returns instead of letting the exception bubble up So my MCVE wasn't actually as accurate as it should have been
@AnttiHaapala I don't know how much of a market there really was for that, and the limited supply is giving people a chance to reevaluate whether they need one.
Ponderance: when should we move a question from chat into the main site? I know when we should move a discussion from the site to chat, but not the other way around
@IntrepidBrit We don't often do that, unless the OP came here needing help to massage their question into a form suitable for the main site. Or they're a HV and we just want to get rid of them. :)
@Grimlock As Intrepid said, your question is a bit confusing. If mydict2[words[0]] is an actual list then mydict2[words[0]].append((words[1],words[2])) will append a tuple to it. We really need to see a MCVE, otherwise we can only guess at the true cause of your problem. If you can illustrate your problem in under a dozen or so lines it's fine to post it here (with proper indentation), otherwise put it on dpaste, pastebin, gist, etc.
Sure, I'll do it once I'm back to home, but for now, I'll try to explain it in a simpler way. I want a dict which returns "list of tuples" for a key. For eg. mydict[3] = [(1,2), (5,7)]. If it isnt sufficient, I'll post with more details.
@Grimlock Make sure the keys you use to access the dict are the same as what you use to create the dict items. Eg, if mydict = {"3": [(1,2), (5,7)]} then mydict[3] will raise KeyError.
Here's another nice cover by Canadian teenager Ayla: Santana's arrangement of Fleetwood Mac's Black Magic Woman, with a little Hendrix riff thrown in for good measure.
The problem with your question right now is that it just says: "While I won't describe X, here is Y which is not quite X and X is something else. So, what is the best way to do X" — Antti Haapala44 secs ago
I hate people who post a question and then they run away.
you need to (use a defaultdict or) set mydict1[words[0]] = [] first.
you can't mutate a non-existing list, but mydict1[words[0]].append(...) would try to do exactly that
(you can use mydict = collections.defaultdict(list) instead of a regular dict, which will automatically do this initialization with an empty list for you)
@Grimlock put something besides the link in your message please
I have zero information, but my educated guess is that it's hard to write anything for a browser without knowing something about front-end and web stuff
Rainy days are great because I can look out the window and appreciate how drenched I'm not getting.
Why do people generally not like rainy days? I understand why it would be a bummer if they had plans that are hindered by wet conditions, but it seems like people dislike rainy days even if they were going to sit inside all day anyway.
Is it, like, an opportunity cost thing? "Right now I plan to stay inside all day, but what if my friend calls me and says 'want to go play frisbee?'? Then I'll have to say 'no', which is a shame"
"There exist hypothetical circumstances in which an action I might take would be better served by dry weather than wet weather, and that makes me sad"
But then why aren't there people that are unhappy on sunny days because they can't go look at rainbows, and combat wildfires more easily?
@Kevin I like rainy days, I don't like when the Leafs lose because of stupid mistakes, like when 3 members on our team chase after one person leaving another wide open for an easy goal...
Rainy days are nice, it cools the Earth and it's so pretty and relaxing to listen to raindrops...
♫ As I was complaining about how hateful the rain was ♫ Even now I still remember what you said ♫ How, after the rain, the night sky is beautifully filled with stars ♫ Thinking of that, I could even come to like the rain ♫ [ ほうき星 ](youtube.com/watch?v=8nQm9RN9J7w)
I love rainy days unless they interfere with my plans. We've had a fair bit of rain here in recent days and it has been a little inconvenient, but I can't complain because we had several months with very little rain, and the whole district was getting very dry. And that's a bit scary when you're surrounded by trees and it's the middle of summer.
> Acid rain does not directly affect human health. The acid in the rainwater is too dilute to have direct adverse effects. However, the particulates responsible for acid rain (sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides) do have an adverse effect. Increased amounts of fine particulate matter in the air do contribute to heart and lung problems including asthma and bronchitis.
c = c + 1 # (6) What does this line mean <- In one sense, this is mock-worthy, but in another sense x = x + 1 as an equation is really only seen in a proof by contradiction, and it's just that we're so used to interpreting it as x := x + 1 that we don't feel the strangeness any more..
Certainly I agree that it's not immediately obvious what that does if you've never seen it before. My only objection to the question is, it should be simple to find out what it does without having to ask another human.
Asking the question in your head: good. Asking the question on SO: something has gone wrong.
In this specific OP's case I'm guessing the thing that went wrong was: he didn't do the class' assigned reading.
Ehh, I think it's just that he didn't remove the prof's questions. Which if you don't know enough Python to recognize an indentation error isn't necessarily unwise.
I think that today I'm going to keep a tally of "people who ask me about my forehead" and "people who realize independently" and "people who are curious but don't ask". :rolls_eyes:
@JatinLalwani maybe you have to read into tuning your 'C' value with cross validation.... sorry but your questions is quite broad, and I can't think of an answer that isn't a tutorial atm. :\
Thank you @MooingRawr for the reply. I can paste the details but don't think this is the place for that. And I cant even ask the question on the site because I have been blocked from asking becuase my last question didn't get good response.
You'll have to make do with PM's answer. Luckily as members of the "all caps first name ending with M" club, one can be used as a substitute for the other in most situations.
To non-Canadians in the room. We lost two really hilarious sports casters that went to Fox....apparently their humour wasn't appreciated (don't know the real reason)....so they are back. And it's glorious
I hate Fox, after 2015 playoff series for the Jays, and their broadcasters :( You can tell they were heavily favoring the American teams over the Jays. -Jays hit a homer- casters: and there's a homerun for the Jays. -opposition team hits a single- casters: IT'S A SINGLE RIGHT BACK UP. So strong, so good...
@AvinashRaj I can't reproduce your issue. Dropping all tables, deleting migrations, then generating a migration, generates a full migration. db.drop_all drops all SQLAlchemy-managed tables. Please edit your question to include a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example. — davidism5 mins ago
@davidsm now it works.. At Previous, alembic table wan't dropped.. — Avinash Raj26 secs ago
@DSM I don't either but at least be equal to both teams if you are going to go nuts. :\ I understand if it was a milestone for the player, be hype that's nice; well deserve. But if you go nuts for one team for no reason at least return the favor for the other side :\ It's also the reason why I can't stand watching the Bruins and their casters... "That hit was super clean... etc etc.."
@Tokencodingnewbie What's wrong with doing it the way I showed you the other day : let the function create a new board each time it's called. And if you want you can easily call it in a loop to make a list of boards, or a dict of boards. pastebin.com/89MFXSpr
I thought I remembered him asking about flask-migrate (I had thought I got involved in the question, but no activity there led me to believe that it must have been in chat)