OK, I like Greek mythology a lot, and read a lot about Greek myths in my youth. I even thought that the story of Hades and Persephone and the pomegranate seed was common knowledge
I once read a story where an owner hit the pet until it would perform tricks :\ but I guess it's just one case out of many...
Most of them are like what Andras says... I remember seeing a post about how a dog would blow bubbles and it's owner would laugh. Guess the dog just did it cause it makes us happy.
@DSM bonus biological trivia: they don't mature throughout their life span. They become fertile in a juvenile state, but they never fully develop into adults (which probably means stuff like them never losing their gills)
Hello everyone , Could anyone please have a look at github.com/zvodd/Youtube-Watch-History-Scraper and tell me where I am supposed to save "Youtube_cookies.json" as I havnet really cloned anything from here
Yes I am following readme.md and it mentioned to install dependencies using "pip install scrapy lxml sqlalchemy" and then I installed the extension "editThisCookie" . After which the instruction just mentioned to save "youtube_cookie.json" in "this directory" .
When I put the object in the try block, the behaviour is different. x gets "cleaned up" (x.__del__ is called). When it is in any other context, it appears it does not get cleaned up.
Perhaps it takes some resource, such as a temporary file. Cleanup means to release that resource (e.g. delete the temporary file). Temporary file is just one example. A resource could be anything.
@Brandin you're going to have to stop being so abstract if you want any further help. See the help center on MCVE, as well as the meta post on XY problems.
I am not very familiar with Python syntax, and was wondering if anyone can explain to me how the variable match is taking on a string found inside the for expression in this function:
def find_project(project_name):
projects = get_projects()
try:
match, = (proj for proj i...
Anyway, it doesn't matter in this case because Google is terrible at searching for words containing punctuation. I mean, it can usually find them, but it sticks everything under the same umbrella sometimes. As if no punctuation is there.
... so I tried to write something that could serve as a canonical answer (somewhat tricky, as the Q has "beginner" written all over it, and there was a fair bit to explain). Anyone think I missed something important?
For example, Qapla and Qa'pla return the same top result and the same bolded results, but the counted number of "results" are different. It's clear Google is just serving up a bunch of crap in response to such queries.
I had a poke around the docs. They call it sequence unpacking, iterable unpacking and multiple assignment, and they don't really explain it well anywhere IMO.
J. Wellington Wimpy, generally referred to as Wimpy, is one of the characters in the long-running comic strip Popeye, created by E. C. Segar in 1934 and originally called Thimble Theatre, and in the Popeye cartoons based upon the strip. Wimpy was one of the dominant characters in the newspaper strip, but when Popeye was adapted as an animated cartoon series by Fleischer Studios, Wimpy became a minor character; Dave Fleischer said that the character in the Segar strip was "too intellectual" to be used in film cartoons. Wimpy did appear in Robert Altman's 1980 live-action musical film Popeye, played...
Wimpy is the brand name of a multinational chain of fast food restaurants that is currently headquartered in Johannesburg, South Africa.
== History ==
=== Origins in the United States ===
Originally called Wimpy Grills, the Wimpy brand was created in 1934 by Edward Gold when he opened his first location in Bloomington, Indiana. The name was inspired by the character of J. Wellington Wimpy from the Popeye cartoons created by E. C. Segar. Although the Wimpy name is most closely identified with the city of Chicago, Gold did not open his first Chicago area location until 2 years later in 19...
@ZeroPiraeus oh, thanks. feel free to edit my content directly next time.
to play devils advocate, unit test doesn't necessarily force high quality code
you can have correct code, passing all unit tests, that is bad quality
IMO, it's writing the tests at the same time as writing the code that forces high quality code. because in order for things to be testable, they need to be written in a way that has nicely decoupled components.
I think of TDD as the name suggests: test-driven development. I imagine that this entails first having a very well-defined specification to develop against (which might happen to be something else that is a good thing when engineering software), in order to come up with adequate tests a priori, which then you can use during subsequent development to realize the original specification
Being an inorganized, haphazard-code generating layman, I would find it much harder to come up with proper tests before doing the actual implementation