There isn't one because there's no python 4, and GVR has said there won't be some huge transition from 3 to 4 like 2 to 3. So I wouldn't worry about it.
If you mean "3.0 through the next breaking change", the EOL is "when hell freezes over". If you mean 3.9, it's… I think when 4.2 comes out? I forget how far back support goes, but anyway, 4.2 is basically just "3.12".
And if they stick to the current release cycle plan, you could work out exactly when that is.
Actually, according to the April Fool's press release, Python 3 and Perl 6 will be merged once Parrot 1.0 and Perl 6 are complete. Which is probably farther in the future than hell freezing over.
I thought according to Larry, Perl 6 is still "in development", and he expects that there will never be an implementation that fulfills all of the apocalypses?
There was a proposal to use 3.10 instead of 4.0 to avoid confusing anyone, but Guido ruled that would be equally confusing in a different direction, and also confuse code as well as humans.
The last time a language broke a long-standing, well-implemented dynamic type system was Objective C 4.0. Not that my enthusiasm for the language wasn't already waning at that point, but after 4.0 came out, I began avoiding it whenever possible.
Using antigravity to implement flying cars is missing the point. It's like using Python's first-class functions to implement Ruby's crappy two-kinded functions-and-closures-as-separate-things.
antigravity has been in the stdlib for years now, and it successfully increases the amount of levity in your coding session. What else would you need it to do?
Why do you want to fly cars if there's no gravity? I don't expect my personal submersible to sink cars. Unless I torpedo a bridge while there are cars on it, but you know what I mean.
@Simon Nah, I just call a Lyft. And in the future, Uber and Lyft won't be using flying cars, nor self-flying cars. It'll be the exact opposite—friendly people with antigrav belts just swoop down and pick you up and carry you to your destination like eagles carrying hobbits.
@AndrasDeak I feel like that cycle is continued by low rep users who don't understand the code but are more likely to upvote high rep users than low rep users.
None of the answers actually tell you how to convert the negative number to a positive, they just tell you how to discard your negative number and rebind the name with its absolute value. To actually answer the question, you have to at least hack the PyLong, and possibly hack the Platonic realm of numbers.
@Aran-Fey shrugs If it's been asked a million times, why didn't you close it as dupe instead of "problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error"?
The question which explicitly asks "If possible, not using external modules would be great." but where wim still figured out a way to import numpy to apply a minus sign :p
After the other guy (I can't see deleted) got 4 in quick succession. After they were done hammering him clearly they moved on to yours and just downvoted blindly
Infinitesimals don't make much difference. In hyperreals or even surreals, you can negate infinitesimals just as easily as finite numbers, and it's just as impossible to get the smallest positive infinitesimal as the smallest positive real.
@AshishNitinPatil same problem: the series 1/n tends to 0 and has a lower bound of 0, but you can't tell me the smallest value in the series, since 0 is not included in the series and any larger (i.e. positive) real number has a smaller one in between itself and 0
I suppose you could define something akin to the projective reals, adding two points adjacent to zero rather than one point at infinity, and you could probably come up with a sensible way to do metrics on that number system, in which case the problem would be answerable… but I can't imagine any use for that number system or that metric space.
p = e − 1023 means someone read the standard back in the 80s, spent hours puzzling through the what the p means when the standard carefully defined a whole bunch of pieces and then used completely different never-defined ones instead, and will never forget what they figured out.
Yeah, p = e - 1023 makes sense once you understand it: there's an 11-bit exponent field; you interpret those bits as an unsigned int 11 called e, then subtract 2^10-1 from it to get the actual exponent called p. The only problem is that they define e as a bias-1023 int, not an unsigned int, and don't define p, and that definition of e isn't part of the interchange formats anyway.
So even after you've figured it out through experimentation, you still can't understand how the spec is trying to define it.
Of course if you real the IBM or Intel docs instead of the standard, it makes a lot more sense. And probably even more so if you read something like the Wikipedia article, but that didn't exist in the 80s.
My citation for that is the memory of everyone who was alive in the 80s. When we wanted an encyclopedia, we had to use one that was 50 years out of date and printed in Middle English, and we had to walk to the library to get it, through the snow, and it was uphill, in both directions, and we had shoes made of cardboard, and when you got there you couldn't actually touch the books, you had to file a request for the librarian to turn to the page you wanted and wait three weeks.
That's if you were lucky and lived in a town with a library. Where I came from, we didn't have libraries. Or towns. We just lived in a hole in middle of the desert. And we were happy to have that hole. Not like spoiled kids today.
If you don't INITCOMMONCONTROLSEX, the COMMONCONTROL will never initiate it either, and you'll both end up disappointed.
@wim It readily turns up in a search for IEEE-754 pdf on dozens of sites, many of them owned by people who worked on the committee or companies that were part of it, but I've still been chastised on multiple cites for linking to them because it's a "pirate link".
The Encarta website is gone, and searching for it on microsoft.com turns up nothing, even via Wayback… but according to Wikipedia, Encarta existed from 1993 to 2009.
Of course. But the next startup you work for is sure to go public and make you a zillionaire so you can retire, so why do you even care if the boom lasts?
What actually is Worldbuilding all about? How do I explain a unicorn discharging powerful electricity at a distance?. I just have a weird image of someone throwing the book down shouting "Preposterous!" until you explain that it is, in fact, electricity being conducted down the webs of trained jumping spiders.
The biggest change isn't the expensive stuff getting more expensive, it's the cheap stuff and cheap neighborhoods no longer being cheap. North Beach and the Marina still look like North Beach and the Marina, but in the Mission, when I cross Capp St., nobody tries to sell me crack anymore. Not that I want any crack, but it was nice to be asked.
Your first comment has actually explained it to me really succinctly. I've just been getting more and more confused at what its purpose is on the network, but I guess it just allows some people to get distracted
I never understood why fantasy writers want to call it "electricity". Not only does that invite readers to ask for a scientific explanation you don't want to provide, it also makes no sense for a medieval or classical world, where they didn't even have the concept of electricity, and would probably interpret the word as something to do with throwing amber gems at you.
People nowadays expect to give some sort of sciencey-sounding handwave explanations to basic workings in the universe, which in my opinion usually makes it worse
but less-scientific people might have different mileage
I do kind of like Gary Gygax's solution: if there's electrical magic, there must be a (quasi-)elemental plane of electricity. That's just so bonkers that you can suspend disbelief and just roll the dice and have fun.
And then of course he had to fill in the whole grid: lightning is actually the combination of… air and positive energy, I think? I forget.
Some great Gygax physics about the lightning plane: invisibility doesn't work there, because an electrical halo forms around any material object or creature not native to the plane. Because of course it does.
Longer story: plasma is just a soup of charged ions and electrons, once an electrically neutral gas has been ionized (i.e. some or all of the electrons has been torn off the nucleus)
Dad died last year when my family couldn't remember his blood type in time for paramedics to save him. As he died, he kept insisting for us to "be positive," but it's hard without him.
Sparks are a soup of charged ions and electrons, when something creates a high enough electric field that breaks down the molecules in air, creating a plasma. The ensuing soup of charged particles conduct electricity well, which is why a lightning bolt can carry its huge charge from the cloud to the ground or vice versa
when I first heard about a fourth state of matter and I asked what a plasma was, I was told it's what's inside a fluorescent lamp, and I found that example somewhat unsatisfying, considering how it's always sealed behind opaque glass
I really have to go to bed, and on a point like this (this might be even more powerful at keeping me awake than the likes I no longer get on my FB posts)