Hmm what is the "cleanest" way to handle this: "an class whose instances constructed provided a unique key, there should be no two instances with the same key"? (Oh and the unique key can't be generated by the class itself).
I think about using a meta-class to intercept creation and throw when it tries to create a new instance with an already existing ID. - Are metaclasses the right tool for this job? Or am I trying to hammer a bolt?
@paul23 I am no expert at this bit but could you shove a call to a static method into the class's __init__() call, and have the static method take a default args set and the specified key and adds the key to the set if it doesn't exist, and return true to init (or false if the key is already in the set) and if the method returns false, throw an exception from __init__()
(There may be horrible things wrong with that, but it might be worth a proof of concept before doing metastuff?)
Well yes, I'm just wondering if metaclasses wouldn't make the code better: I'd move the list maintenance & checking then to a different "layer" - single responsibility idea etc.
My main argument is that a codec which "encoded" from bytes to text would be weird/out of place, because it goes against the opinions that Python 3 has about bytes and text
@paul23 naah, you'd have a registry - but then why would you have a single registry - that is usually an antipattern. An anttipattern would be to have a class represent the registry, then you can have multiple registries would you want to do that.
Well yes. But we don't know how unique these unique ids need to be. If they must be unique across runs of the program then UUIDs are the obvious choice, but if they only need to be unique within a single run of the program then a simple incrementing int should be adequate.
because I keep getting a '{"fault":{"faultstring":"Failed to resolve API Key variable request.queryparam.apikey","detail":{"errorcode":"steps.oauth.v2.FailedToResolveAPIKey"}}}' error
but nowhere in the documentation for GET requests does it say to enter an api key
hi, i m trying to convert a recursive function to a generator.
def print_in_order(self,node=DEFAULT):
if node == DEFAULT:
node = self.root
if node is None:
return
self.print_in_order(node.getLeft())
print node.getData()
self.print_in_order(node.getRight())
I turned this into a generator as follows
def in_order_traversal(self,node=DEFAULT):
"""
yield node in inorder traversal order
"""
if node == DEFAULT:
node = self.root
if node == None:
return
for x in self.post_order_traversal(node.getLeft()):
if x is not None:
yield x
yield node
for x in self.post_order_traversal(node.getRight()):
if x is not None:
yield x
however, when i tested this for a binary search tree the recursive function prints the nodes in ascending order, whereas the generator does not
Yamming opinionated 1-reppers who don't understand what SO is for and who claim that they're entitled to help from SO for their totally off-topic question... stackoverflow.com/questions/42782701/… 10k+ only
> Ok ok, i realise this question will get seriously under peoples skin but i am actually getting stressed from not finding an answer to this question...the answer will allow me to start/ embrace a language and learn it properly without always wondering where the greenest grass is...( have i learnt the wrong program?!!!)
That's the first paragraph of their original question
"Python is a fantastic language, with powerful frameworks that make it straight-forward to do what you want to achieve. So I strongly suggest you learn PHP."
I saw this movie about 12 years ago (2005) when I was about 8 years old but it probably came out way earlier than that since I saw it on local TV in West Africa. I remember there being a little boy who built a full-sized humanoid robot with wires/cables everywhere. I have a vague memory of this r...
I've only seen the first 3 original Star Wars movies. I saw the first Star Wars a few times at the cinema when it first came out, but I've only see The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi on TV / video, and even then I've always fallen asleep, so I've never seen either of them in full.
I was actually trying to think if any movies I've not actually seen applied, like the robot punching one. I forget what it's called, because I never saw it.
Yeah ! Racist comment right here. Did you ask him "have any information about lo". How to redirect a port from interface to lo. You haven't any idea about answer but judging. Mind your business kid ! @davidism — dsgdfg6 hours ago
First time I've been called racist for saying an answer wasn't useful.
I wonder what AM Turing would've thought of the Star Wars robots. For that matter, I wonder what Isaac Asimov would've thought. I know he wasn't pleased with HAL in 2001: A Space Odyssey. He was invited to the premiere, and loudly exclaimed in the theatre "They're breaking the First Law!"
I have recently stumbled upon this paper on arXiv:
Stopping GAN Violence: Generative Unadversarial Networks (mirror), which is a parody/joke paper.
Is it ok to upload joke papers to arXiv?
" The framework is both theoretically and electrically grounded in game theory, [...] Our work builds on a rich history of carefully argued position-papers, published as anonymous YouTube comments, which prove that the optimal solution to NoN violence is more GUNs."
@PM2Ring Suomi mainittu, torilla tavataan: "We now turn to the results of the experiment. Inspired by the Finnish education system, we do not test our models during the first formative epochs of development"
There was an old Western TV series called Have Gun – Will Travel. In the early days of the Net, various people adopted Have GNU, will travel as their sig, and you still see it from time to time.
I virtually told this OP that I'd upvote his question if he clarified it by adding some sample input & output, but he responded by saying "I'll do it next time."
You shouldn't use list as a variable name because that shadows the built-in list type; and calling a dict "list" is doubly-confusing. — PM 2Ring45 mins ago
Ok, my comment offering a "bribe" was made after he said he'd do better next time, but still...
@MooingRawr What's funny is that a roller ball mouse isn't much different than the original mouse. They just stuck a rubber ball in between the desk and the... well, whatever the feedback wheels are.
@WayneWerner I remember the days where I had to clean the ball...... but prior to that I didn't know the ball could fall out, and I was scared that I broke the mouse when I unscrewed the ball holder..... scary times :\
well if you don't include legos... then no, I thought electronic stuff were not meant to be open, and all I knew was it was important to the family and I shouldn't play with. :\ I didn't even knew I had to change the batteries out of my Mom's Gameboy... I remember the thing not turning on and me being upset. of course this was way back in the day and I could be miss remembering somethings :\
Eh. my mom calls these moments of mine, precious. Moments like when I got upset I couldn't beat the first stage of Mario, to when I finally beat it but finding out there was more to it and wanting to give up (which I did in the end, still to this day I've never beaten the full Mario without warps :\ )
I mostly agree with that. But, if you try to collect everything in Mario Sunshine, you soon realize that Mario Sunshine holds a dark secret of being a brutally difficult game.
@IntrepidBrit I guess it might have had some influence. But PTerry would've known about GNU anyway, having been active on Usenet in the days before the Web.
@IntrepidBrit I'm sure he was aware of the show, it was quite popular back in the day. But Pterry was an inveterate punster and could easily have arrived at The Smoking GNU independently.
I remember drawing a 5x5 grid for the NES Mega Man, oh good times.
Is there a universal law for 'everything you want coming out at the same time just to mess with you'? Maybe the universal law of attraction would apply?
It wasn't unusual for PTerry to have correlations in his stories that he wasn't consciously aware of until people commented on it. But that kind of thing happens when you're a creative person with a huge repertoire of material to draw upon.
while True: # Checks if valid move
start_0, start_1 = [int(x) for x in input('Type the start position: ').split(' ')]
end_0, end_1 = [int(x) for x in input('Type the end position: ').split(' ')]
try:
if self.grid[start_0][start_1] != 'o' and \
self.grid[end_0][end_1] == 'o' and \
(start_0, start_1) == (end_0 - 1, end_1 - 1) or \
(start_0, start_1) == (end_0 + 1, end_1 + 1) or \
(start_0, start_1) == (end_0 - 1, end_1 + 1) or \
@idjaw you have an android with degree of Master of Business Administrator?! Either AI has advanced quite a bit recently, or MBA requires even less than I'd have believed.
From PEP-0008 Maximum Line Length "The preferred way of wrapping long lines is by using Python's implied line continuation inside parentheses, brackets and braces. Long lines can be broken over multiple lines by wrapping expressions in parentheses. These should be used in preference to using a backslash for line continuation."
Annoyance of the day: Python refactoring libraries leave a lot to be desired. RedBaron has many frustrating bugs, and rope has a lot of nice features but doesn't support some very straightforward manipulations. I need to start a kickstarter to hire someone to combine the best of both. :-/
Many programmers are struggling during their office time due to critical bugs and doubts. If you provide online immediate assistance it will save lots of developers careers and life too.
This already exists. It is called Stack Overflow. — Oded ♦4 hours ago
Nier Automata update: I've finished Ending C and while I now have an explanation of what's going on, it makes no sense and I think it might be all lies.
It's freaking amazing though.
Still have two more endings I think, aside from the other 21.
I was only a little familiar with Drakengard 1 and Nier's stories, and it was fine. I'm sure I've missed a bunch of little references, but it's not required.
are integers in Python guaranteed to have just one instance? is a number, say, 8 going to be the only 8, so that "8 is some_function_that_returns_8()" returns always True?
Why does the following behave unexpectedly in Python?
>>> a = 256
>>> b = 256
>>> a is b
True # This is an expected result
>>> a = 257
>>> b = 257
>>> a is b
False # What happened here? Why is this False?
>>> 257 is 257
True # Yet the literal numbers compare properly...
@nbro the only guarantee is that if you use assignment then it is guaranteed to be the same instance, e.g. x = 8; y = x; print(x is y) - should be True always
I'm also not a fan of pre-igniting my car to warm or cool it down... something something bad for the environment that I drive already so try to do the little things.
I work for a location which has quite a few acres and around 2,000 employees. We recently built a new building, part of which was some nice landscaping, including a pond on the campus.
Well, now we have a problem with these on the campus:
In case you think they are pretty and cute, enough of ...
> @MichaelGrubey I guess I am much more interested in the process to approach others with getting rid of them. As a heartless bastard, I have no problem picking from the variety of methods to.. convince them to stop being around. Others, however, don't view them as nicer looking flying rats. – enderland♦ Jul 3 '13 at 15:41
They probably went and hung around the lake. All that poop :(
You basically have the choice - goose poop all over your shoes, or running/riding through the minefield.
Yeah, 5/day would be pretty easy. Not sure what's the best place to hit a bird to kill it, but I can imagine that shooting them even in their head wouldn't be much harder than shooting fish in a barrel
@WayneWerner google is a wonderful thing. It allows people to copy and paste and try to understand things even if it's not the proper way to approach this issue.
@RobertGrant Yeah... I guess maybe it was just an order of exposure for me - I didn't even know about glob until long after I knew about list and generator comprehensions
@RobertGrant Well, I just did that part so that you didn't have to do anything - just copy and paste the script and you'd have a working example that you could see the effects of. Otherwise you'd have to touch a lot of things.
feedback requested: OP gave his program that basically transpose a 2D list. Someone post an answer with a sentence along the lines of "Transposing isn't too hard, try this:" or something like that, which he posts a code that was incorrect (wrong output). I left a comment saying something along the lines of "This doesn't give desired output given by OP, before you say something isn't too hard maybe test your output". Answeree deleted his answer, and Tiger dup hammered the question.
I feel bad for leaving such a mean comment, was I wrong in this case to leave such a harsh comment or am I over thinking it?
@MooingRawr I don't have to use multiprocessing, but the code I want to spawn is not a standalone python script, so multiprocessing seems to be better approach
@davidism So, setting daemon = False should do the trick?