It's going to be hard to write a regex that can distinguish names from other kinds of words. "Pawan Sharma" and "Hello World" are both collections of words separated by spaces, but only one is a name... And even that is a matter of opinion
So my new earbuds are so noise canceling I can't hear when someone is standing next to me greeting me, they end up usually having to tap me on the shoulder or wave a hand, while I'm to focus on my work. I feel like I should get a different pair :(
@Kevin Jokes on you, I'm sure someone will name their child Hello World.
If North West can be a name anything can be a name!
@MooingRawr Actually, DELETE STUDENTS would be more likely to succeed, since it would not require DDL privs, just delete privs - and are tables named with plural or singular?
Has anyone updated Django urls.py to 1.9+? The problem I'm facing is that I need to add app_name as well but it's not clear to me where some apps come from. E.g. I have include('social.apps.django_app.urls', namespace='social'), what would the app_name be - django_apps?
does the python import system have a well-defined order when it comes to module vs package? Like, if I have a foo.py module and a foo package in the same folder, which one will import foo import?
I should point out that I'm getting `RemovedInDjango20Warning: Specifying a namespace in django.conf.urls.include() without providing an app_name is deprecated. Set the app_name attribute in the included module, or pass a 2-tuple containin g the list of patterns and app_name instead.` when running the tests.
Now you are making sense Pawan, if you know the file layout, you don't need regex, just parse it line by line and since you know the file layout you know what you are reading. unless some lines can have multiple lines
@AndrasDeak Probably easier/quicker to just iterate over the lines and looking for line.startswith('Name:') or whatever than writing a parser with pyparsing. The format looks pretty rigid.
I read somewhere that if you need to compare high floating point numbers you should convert it to a string and then compare the string values.... which got me to thinking general math solutions
@Kevin Sometimes they do, for example when the Ninja answers a question and we start a conversation on the origin of the Ninja.
IF you are referring the conversation to be on topic of said question then I would agree.
If you were making your question vague to prompt my current statement and last one, well then well played
Maybe there's a game of Chinese Whispers going on here, and what was really meant was "floats can't exactly represent numbers of arbitrarily large sizes, so for languages that don't have unlimited precision numbers, it may make sense to store huge number data in strings, even though this makes even simple arithmetic difficult, since you have no other choice"
But Python has native unlimited precision integers, and it has the fractions module, and it has the decimal module... We're good on that front.
@MooingRawr Not sure what you mean by that. No math is required to compare two large floats; you merely need to do large_float_a > large_float_b
Or maybe you're saying "I want to compare large floats and see if they are approximately equal, but I'm worried that the usual approach of abs(a-b) < epsilon will fail because subtraction might work funny for really big numbers"
Which... Might be a valid concern, actually. I don't know enough about float arithmetic logic to be sure either way
Machine epsilon gives an upper bound on the relative error due to rounding in floating point arithmetic. This value characterizes computer arithmetic in the field of numerical analysis, and by extension in the subject of computational science. The quantity is also called macheps or unit roundoff, and it has the symbols Greek epsilon
ϵ
{\displaystyle \epsilon }
or bold Roman u, respectively.
== Values for standard hardware floating point arithmetics ==
The following values of machine epsilon apply to standard floating point formats:
== Formal de...
@AndrasDeak: The in in a for-in is part of the for loop syntax. The in in if thing in other_thing is the in operator. Two very different usages of the keyword, with different interaction with precedence and different rules for what can go on either side.
interesting idea for an interview question in python: "how would you make an immutable class in python?" (would generate good discussion I'd hope! hah)