« first day (136 days earlier)      last day (5041 days later) » 

04:15
Hey Rob
 
11 hours later…
15:20
Hey,guys!!! New to python web programming. Suggest some interesting topics to ponder upon. !!
Is someone there??
16:11
Hey user601163 ;-)
Aw, too late :-/
@MikeSteder though L[-1::-1] is the same as L[::-1]
@ThomasEdleson: Right :-)
I would argue that L[-1::-1] is more explicit but L[::-1] is more elegant.
I don't know about that
it's subjective based on what your idea of how the defaults for slicing should be
personally I'd rather seen reversed(L) than either of those
reversed returns an iterator, right?
depends on what it's applied to, for lists it returns an iterator that depends on the source list
list(reversed(L))
at least I think it depends on a __reversed__ special method, maybe I'm confused with something else
16:26
yeah, to use reversed either the object provides __reversed__ or supports the iterator protocol (__len__ and __getitem__ with integer keys)
that's not the current iterator protocol, but the old, nearly obsolete one
Excuse me, that's a thinko. I meant "sequence" protocol.
Hi
I have written a python code, can someone give me feedback on the code
import os
import sys
import fileinput

inputFile = sys.argv[1]

class Tree(object):
def __init__(self):
self.left = None
self.right = None
self.parent = None
self.data = None

def tree_print(self,level = 0):
if(self != None):
for i in range(level):
sys.stdout.write(" ")
print self.data
if(self.left is not None):
self.left.tree_print(level+1)
if(self.right is not None):
self.right.tree_print(level+1)

def lca(self,other):
path = []
temp = self
while(temp is not None):
path.append(temp)
temp = temp.parent
its looking very bad here
16:49
Hmm, not sure how to format that better... Do you have a specific question or problem with this code?
class Tree(object):
def __init__(self):
self.left = None
Nope, that's no better :-/
@Bala what's the question?
 
2 hours later…
Rob
Rob
19:16
I'm curious about a line (error**2).sum() in someone else's code, where type(error) always seems to be numpy.float64... does anyone have any idea what the point is / where the documentation is for numpy.float64.sum()?
The closest I can find is the non-implemented numpy.generic.sum() -- although that might be what I'm looking at, as the sum() call doesn't seem to have any affect on output; does Python throw an exception when a non-implemented function is called?
 
2 hours later…
20:58
@Rob, regarding python throwing exceptions on non-implemented functions: It depends on how that function is implemented in the Abstract Base Class. Some folks will define that abc as an empty function (the body would just be "pass" or a docstring). If you want an subclasses to be forced to define that method you'll want to decorate that method with @abc.abstractmethod.
@Rob, Have you tried looking at error in the debugger?
@Rob, on the line above the line you're curious about insert: import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
Rob
Rob
@Mike, thanks, I'll try that when I get home
21:17
@Rob, cool. Good luck.
 
3 hours later…
23:53
hi
my first stackoverflow chat session ;)
Hello Yonatan
what's up?
Hi Mike...so so been struggling with something for a while and really need help, but help has been hard to come by :(
are you familiar with asyncore and/ or twisted?

« first day (136 days earlier)      last day (5041 days later) »