is there a way to assign the same string to multiple %s placeholders, when we don't know how many placeholders we will have in the string? Example -
sent='in this other things we have foo case of a foo(+) in the town'
gs1='foo'
string_regex=r"((?:(?<=^)|(?<=[\W_]))(((?=.*\b%s\b)(?=.*\bother\ things\b))|(%s\ mutation))(?=[\W_]|$)"
mo=re.search(string_regex %gs1,sent,re.I)
Here the regex has two '%s's, so I need to write %(gs1,gs1). But in case I don't know how many placeholders there are, can I do something? (other than counting the number of %s beforehand and using that number)
@Rawing but my string is a regex, and it already uses {} for specifying the number of times an entity repeats, like (([\w]+\s*){0,3}). Therefore, I think the new format may mess with that
But doing the following gives this error - sre_constants.error: missing ), unterminated subpattern at position 0
sent='in this other things we have foo case of a foo(+) in the town'
gs1='foo'
string_regex=r"((?:(?<=^)|(?<=[\W_]))(((?=.*\b{0}\b)(?=.*\bother\ things\b))|({0}\ mutation))(?=[\W_]|$)"
mo=re.search(string_regex.format(gs1) ,sent,re.I)
I'm using pandas to read csv and need Diff column to be of type int64, so I do d1=pd.read_csv("MY.csv",dtype={'Diff':'int64'}) but get OverflowError: Overflow
Has anyone actually tried to filter a date in Django like mydate__month__gte in the admin? Surprisingly their changelists marks then as an error and returns a e=1.
@lapinkoira if you're going to be running the code for a long time then I think all(v > -1 for v in c1.values()) is slightly faster — new_to_coding22 mins ago
@IljaEverilä I tested it myself with time but it was not much faster, if he was running the program for 5 minutes I think it would only be a few seconds faster — new_to_coding6 mins ago
I knew you seemed familiar, but I couldn’t find any logs from the past, so I wasn’t sure if you’re the same person I remembered – but I guess you are xD
I heard David Attenborough call them "ci-cah-duhs" but the next time I pronounced it like that my friends looked at me like I was a British nature documentary host, so maye that's not the correct localization
Why am I getting an unboundlocal error in python? quotes a tutorial saying "If a function needs to bind or rebind some global variables (not a good practice!), the first statement of the function’s body must be: global identifiers." and this is not strictly true and I'm trying to decide if that's a hill I want to die on
def f():
x = 23
global y
y = 42
This is perfectly cromulent code*, despite what Python In A Nutshell would have you believe
(*insofar as any usage of the global statement can be cromulent)
Hmm, PIAN is penned by our very own Holden, isn't it? Perhaps I could offer him cat pictures in exchange for a revision in the next version.
Now that I remember that the author is someone I like, permit me to backpedal a few feet. In principle I agree with the sentiment that global statements should be at the top of the function. But it's a convention not enforced by the interpreter (at least, not the CPython one). So "must" is a tad strong.
Re the question: in this context I suspect must might be a little strong, and we should have used should - clearly it's not an interpreter-imposed rule
Devil's advocate: in some circumstances I might prefer the global statement to immediately precede the first use of that name, ex:
def f():
global y
#one thousand lines of code not involving y go here
y = 42
#another thousand lines of code
def g():
#one thousand lines of code not involving y go here
global y
y = 42
#another thousand lines of code
You might prefer g over f, so when reading the code you have all the context relating to y on one page.
However, this is a contrived example. If your functions are considerably longer than a page, you're probably shooting yourself in the foot in more ways than one anyway.
Rearrange those deck chairs on the Titanic a little more, why don't you
Interestingly, foo = 1 followed by nonlocal foodoesn't work, so you can probably guess that the language devs regret doing it that way for global, and doubly regret not being able to change it due to compatibility obligations
Slipped on a banana peel and fell on your keyboard in such a way that it entered https://docs.python.org/3/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-nonlocal-statement into your browser's address bar by complete happenstance
@idjaw I don't know if our Five Guys are the same, but our Five Guys is okie at best.... :\ Oh well Maybe one day I will visit your city and taste what you guys have to offer. My friend goes on and on about how smoked meat there is the best in Canada.
I'm torn about how this question should be dealt with, because it's an XY problem of "what does this code do?" and "how do I get a list of even numbers?". If you hammer, the first question goes unanswered; if you close as too broad, the second question goes unanswered.
Comment from OP indicates that he really just wants to test for evenness, so maybe that should be the tiebreaker. Close as a dupe of some even-tester Q.
As of a few minutes ago, if you have a gold tag-badge for a tag associated with a question that's been closed as a duplicate, you can edit the duplicate links to replace, add, remove or re-arrange them:
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@ThiefMaster I think you still rebase, but it's not as simple as just changing the name and email because then you get the different committer displayed still.
There's a way to actually overwrite the author and committer.
I'm also not sure about encouraging force push for new committers, because if I were to go in and push commits to their branch they might unwittingly overwrite my work.
I want to change the author of one specific commit in the history. It's not last commit.
I know about this question - How do I change the author of a commit in git?
But I am thinking about something, where I identify the commit by hash or short-hash.
@davidism I think he just forgot to add his email to github, not to set it in git
So no need to rewrite the commits - the rebase was just about fixing the commit msgs
and I think usually forcepushing feature branches as the owner should be fine - it's kind of rare for others to also add commits there (even though upstream maintainers can do it by default nowadays)
@ThiefMaster @davidism It was actually even dummer what I did, I had set my user.mail instead of .email!! In the road I ate the 'e' it was tasty, but I paid for it :P
It saddens me to think of all these terrible, terrible questions that I cannot downvote because I'm not familiar with the modules they use. On my honor, I swear I shall teach myself pandas/django/jinja/etc and bring these questions the score they rightfully deserve
nah, I can't do that if I don't have any knowledge of the module/framework they use. For all I know, the questions might be decent. I don't do half-baked downvotes
Also I remember almost choosing my UI design paper on 'Dark vs Light theme' where I wanted to write about the health benefits and their effects on our eyes, mental state, and other factors. But I ended up choosing another paper... now I kinda wish I wrote that paper.
If you're writing a program with an interactive prompt in the shell, then odds are pretty good that your computer is physically in the room with the person running the program. No point protecting against them rm'ing your hard drive when they can smash it with a literal hammer.
The only tricky one is assert with error message, where you have to remember that that's not a tuple, don't put parens around both parts to enable continuation.
Yeah I was surprised that assert didn't get changed to a function at the same time as print was. I suppose it's because the name assert shouldn't be rebound, and they wanted to preserve ability to remove assertions at compile time
If a line is long, that's a red flag that I should refactor. But sometimes on review I say "nope, it's perfectly understandable, just wide" and I leave it as is.
The most monitors I've seen in person was eight, at the options trading company I interned at
I installed Python on that workstation. It took ten minutes and the whole time I was wondering how many hundreds of dollars I was costing by spending an extra second deciding whether to uncheck "add shortcut to desktop"
Hopefully the labor-saving script I wrote for that guy made up for it.
IIRC we discussed ahead of time that I would install the thing, and that he would approach me when it was a convenient time for him. So it was probably during a lull in the action, assuming lulls are things that happen to the stock market.
Super Mario World, Earthbound, Star Fox 2 + 18 more games? Now you’re playing with super power! #SNESClassic launc… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/879369032947847168
Is this going to be like the NES classic where demand hugely outstrips supply and then they cancel production a month later because they succeeded at their goal of clearing out their inventory of last-generation hardware that had been collecting dust up to that point?
Oh no... it started to thunder and the sky got dark, I have to walk to get lunch.... Anyone know a counter rain dance ?
@KevinMGranger Was Star Fox 2 really that good ? I've never played any Star Fox games, closest has to be from kingdom hearts (if that does it any justice).
I don't know, since it never came out :P there were half-finished ROMs floating around and it was pretty nice. It had a movement-command-map like in Star Fox Command (but... it was good) and it had all-range-mode with a tranforming arwing like in Star Fox Zero
Can we bring back the system where wealthy Venetian merchants patronize you with sculpture commissions so they can show off how rich they are? Except with programming.
I want to write a Facebook but for dogs on behalf of the Pope