The total view count stands at ~1.85 billion, which is 6% of total SO views, moving to #6 (#questions and #views) from #7, thus overtaking php. Compared to last time (800,000), there has been a growth (in views) of 8%, which is the highest growth in the top 10 tags! The growth in views is staggering, mostly because the 2nd best growth (top 10 tags) is from javascript with a mere 0.9%!
Your right thats a bad word. backwards works better I suppose. They came out with their own spy ware which is being advertised as a VPN. It probably does the VPN piece but likely is keeping a log.
No worries. Was just sharing the article. The main point was that VPN's are typically for hiding on the internet and this one is likely not going to give you that.
Not sure why one would need a VPN through the site but I guess there may be some uses out of it. Likely its what wim said and they bought out the company and added its functionality to a spot on the site
it's pretty fundamental and if you don't have a firm grasp on the concept (along with how python names work), it will bite you when you expect it the least
Calling iter on a list returns a list_iterator instance. Does anyone know if this class is an implementation detail or if I can rely on it to exist? Also, is there a way to access it without having to do type(iter([]))?
Hmm, pickle instantiates it exactly like that. Guess I'll do the same.
@AndrasDeak Ive made it a long way without running into it. But yes I need to know it well so I can catch it in the future. Im sure its a hard "error" to find in many lines of code.
Is there a way to unpack an iterable and set missing values to None? Looking for a better way to write factory, args, state, values, items, *_ = tuple(redux) + (None, None, None)
@DSM uuuuh honestly I don't know, few centuries easily
there's a large temporal gap between first language fragments and stuff that's commonly taught in school
there's a fragment left from 1055 which is only legible if they tell you what it means
the oldest fully Hungarian piece of written text is late 12th century, and it's a bit better. The text is unreadable, but when it's transcribed to modern Hungarian it's sort of comprehensible
both words and grammar are very different
now I googled a bit and found some biblical texts from mid XVIth century, and while it's archaic both in wording and alphabet, it's comprehensible if one takes the time to read it
I seem to recall that during the reformation one of the aspects of the opposition between catholicism and the rest were that while the catholic church would only preach in Latin, the others started giving ceremonies and whatnot in Hungarian
unfortunately my history background is patchy to say the least
Shakespeare sounds like a mix of old-fashioned and very "poetic" but comprehensible sentences and words and word usages that simply have to be learned to most modern (English-speaking) ears. There are a fair number of false friends.
That one has almost no words in it which wouldn't be understood these days. "surfeit" is seldom used as a verb anymore, but I don't think anyone would be puzzled by it.
A famous example would be the title of his play"Much ado about nothing": the title has double(and possibly triple) meanings, Nothing would be pronounced "Noting", making the title "Much ado about noting"
Marcus Junius Brutus (the Younger) (; 85 BC – 23 October 42 BC), often referred to as Brutus, was a politician of the late Roman Republic. After being adopted by his uncle he used the name Quintus Servilius Caepio Brutus, but eventually returned to using his original name. He took a leading role in the assassination of Julius Caesar.
Brutus was close to General Julius Caesar, the leader of the Populis faction. However, Caesar's attempts to assume greater power for himself put him at greater odds with the Roman elite and members of the Senate. Brutus eventually came to oppose Caesar and fought on...
hey can anybody help me with this https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48774830/manipulating-values-in-tkinter-python I have been trying it out for too long with no luck
I'd name the gui gui.py. If you're worried that your users won't know which python script they're supposed to execute, you're doing it wrong anyway - all the scripts should be hidden away in a folder, and the users should only see that folder and a Your Program.py
cbg. From a 10-second glance at this does it look familiar in proper python exception handling? A question was raised today that happens to have the same nonsensical error in the library I had at work today and I've traced all of it back to this, which I'm not sure I've seen before
@AndrasDeak it almost looks obfuscated me tbh but I can't talk from a huge amount of experience. I don't see why the exception isn't just raised directly
From the exceptions.py there's not a whole lot that can be raised
And it just seems to be defaulting to ConnectionError when you input incorrect values. Then there's the random camelCase in doException which makes me wonder whether this is a bit of a hodgepodge approach
If you search for raise most of the raises use the actual exception types. The weird NotReallyException cases look more like this: github.com/riptideio/pymodbus/blob/…
if by "ConnectionError" you meant "ConnectionException", that's different from the class you originally linked, and it's raised manually (see e.g. github.com/riptideio/pymodbus/blob/… and async.py)
I'll have to wait until tomorrow now. But the issue still seems common to both problems: the library throws an exception based on "connection" and in both our cases, we can connect just fine. It doesn't actually end up including any real info on the issue.
"1) When a parameter is wrong - it raises connection error." from the OP. I wouldn't expect an SQL query, for example, to say that my connection was broken if I had a malformed query
But the assurance for me is that it is nonsense because I had a real hard time trying to understand how the exceptions mapped out across the library. Thanks for looking at it for me.