in fact, pycharm is now rendering md and rst files, which is rather cool; I was hoping to print them from there, but it doesn't seem to have this capability.
@thefourtheye yah, I can't believe that people are standing there just taking video of it. Of course, it's difficult to find a safe place to go if you don't know anyone outside of the city and don't have any money to travel.
> The above is basically a long-winded way to get to the somewhat painful personal admission that hey, I need to change some of my behavior, and I want to apologize to the people that my personal behavior hurt and possibly drove away from kernel development entirely.
how can I create groups and give the group permissions while applying migrations? I dont' want to manually create group and apply permission everytime I install the script on a new server.
@smci Regarding your recommendation to split my super question into a bunch of smaller ones: I don't really see the point in doing that. If people have problems figuring out how to do specific things with super, they'll post questions about that anyway. I wanted to created a complete guide to using super because I'm pretty sure lots of people don't even know how many different factors play a role in the correct usage of super.
I don't see how I could narrow the scope of the question without defeating the point of the question
@Aran-Fey But given several people object it's too broad/ vote-to-close. Someone (presumably Martijn) now has a delete vote on it. Even on a pragmatic basis, you don't think when the answer gets to three screens long, it's severely sacrificing clarity and legibility? I appreciate you put all the effort into this, it seems a shame for that not to be utilized.
@Aran-Fey "If people have problems figuring out how to do specific things with super, they'll post questions about that anyway." But now we could immediately close as dupe, as long as we have good canonicals. The confusion has tapered off now almost everyone is on 3.x. By now we should be simply picking which target to close into
@smci There are many very good examples that contradict your theory there. Long and well-written answers tend to me way more useful than those that just scratch some part and ignore the rest for the purpose of being “concise”. It’s all about structure and how well an answer is written.
@Aran-Fey Yes both the question's pretty unclear, and suffers further from not having an MCVE (so it's unclear which answers are wrong). But I don't think the OP wants to intersect nested dictionaries; only the keys of the (non-nested) dictionaries index[term1], index[term2] Anyway you can edit an MCVE in, already.
@poke How will the close/delete-war on this one resolve itself? Isn't it kind of nuclear that someone voted to delete it?
@AndrasDeak No I didn't. I took care to spell his name.
I wasn’t here when your discussion started, so I don’t know what question you are actually referring to. I’m just saying that long answers aren’t a bad thing at all.
@AndrasDeak Noone suggested that. But you sure seem to be making a wrong comment. Who is "they"? Noone here has since you mentioned the spelling on May 16
@smci People in here talk to each other very often about questions without adding extra context that would help others to understand. This is very common when you know you both are looking at the same question right now (for example because you saw them engaging in a comment)
Hi. I've got a {string:number} dictionary. I want to turn it into a array sorted by the number-value. I found out, in Python 3 there is no comparator (cmp) argument sor sorted(), so how do I go about this?
> 6. A line drawn with a pen or other writing implement, particularly:
(chiefly Britain) (Britain, typography) The slash, /. (Unicode, typography) The formal name of the individual horizontal strikethroughs (as in A̶ and A̵). (linguistics) A line of a Chinese, Japanese or Korean character.
"strikes" is conventionally used in the context of "things which incur a penalty once you accumulate a predetermined number of them" but that number is usually 3 rather than 10
Tally marks, also called hash marks, are a unary numeral system. They are a form of numeral used for counting. They are most useful in counting or tallying ongoing results, such as the score in a game or sport, as no intermediate results need to be erased or discarded.
However, because of the length of large numbers, tallies are not commonly used for static text. Notched sticks, known as tally sticks, were also historically used for this purpose.
== Early history ==
Counting aids other than body parts appear in the Upper Paleolithic. The oldest tally sticks date to between 35,000 and 25,000 years...
Important question though: In what direction do you make the 5th stroke?
It's hard for me to have conversations about this kind of personal style, because the instant anyone describes their own process, I forget what mine is
Ok, I just tried... The zeroes were clockwise from the bottom. Not sure if this means I share your zero style, or if the bias-reducing effect didn't reduce the bias enough.
There was a talk at the last PyCon in Cleveland and I can't remember the speakers name, but it was about writing your every day bash shenanigans in Python instead
funny I was at that talk too haha. I just can't remember the name
Every time I read the wikipedia article for the Axiom of Choice, I come away with no understanding of why it even has an article, because of course you can select one item each from a collection of non-empty sets, that's as obvious as two following one
But every time I get a little farther into the article before I give up, so maybe I will reach enlightenment on the day I reach the "see also" section
If there's a meta joke in there, it's not intentional
This time I got up to the Examples section. "then, because X is infinite, our choice procedure will never come to an end" Sounds a lot like the argument people put forth for "1 != 0.999...".
"See, because there's an infinite number of nines, you can never stop writing it, therefore it's an incoherent concept"
"obvious" is a slippery term in mathematics because children learn how to count on like day 1 of preschool, but it takes the Principa Mathematica 500 pages to define integers
Oh that's definitely a thing. My wife is a mosquito magnet. Mosquitoes used to love me, but only until we got together. Now any mosquito in a 500-meter radius will find her. But there was a new generation(/species?) of freshly hatched mosquitoes where we went, and they were so aggressive they even found me.
^ I second AD, mosquito LOVES me, idk if it's the ratio of fat to blood type content or what not, but if I walk out with family and friends, I tend to be the first casualty.
Hmm. Is there any well-known set that is provably non-empty, but no elements of that set are known? If such a thing existed, then I might concede that the axiom of choice is useful
@MooingRawr I'm somewhat skeptical towards broad categories such as blood type being relevant. Mosquitoes find prey based on visual, heat and olfactory cues depending on their distance to the target. We just probably smell more delicious.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrational_number#Irrational_powers comes close: "The set of all irrational number pairs (a,b) such that a^b is rational" was proven to be non-empty, but the proof was non-constructive, so no element was known to be in the set. Too bad that there's also a constructive proof later on.
@Kevin: the smallest prime number between x=10^(10^10) and 2*x. This set is provably non-empty (there's always a prime between x and 2x), but no one knows it. While that technically satisfies your request I don't think it's the kind of thing you wanted.
Even many constructivists allow for countable-length decision procedures.
Agreed. I also considered things like "primes whose decimal representation contains one hundred consecutive nines", but this somehow seems unsatisfying
(actually I don't know whether you can prove that there is such a prime, but let's assume you can)
There is definitely a prime such that its representation contains 100 consecutive nines.
For large enough n there's a prime between n^3 and (n+1)^3. Working with 10 nines for compactness:
In [199]: n = int('9'*(10+1)+'0')
In [200]: n
Out[200]: 999999999990
In [201]: n**3
Out[201]: 999999999970000000000299999999999000
In [202]: (n+1)**3
Out[202]: 999999999973000000000242999999999271
Add enough 0s to satisfy the 'sufficiently large' criterion I'm too lazy to look up the explicit details for, and we can guarantee there's a prime in there.
Ok, so some numbers with 100 nines can be cubed into another number with 100 nines. And it sounds like there are an infinite number of such numbers. But not all numbers with 100 nines have this property.
math.stackexchange.com/a/1119062/46020 suggests "the set of digits that appear infinitely many times in pi", which is more satisfying than "some huge prime with such-and-such quality" since you can't trivially write a program that eventually outputs a member of the set and then halts
I would have liked a set that contains an infinite number of elements, but "no more than ten" is fine too I guess
Okay, I looked up the details. :-) It's known to be true for n > exp(exp(15)), ~1.6e1419716. So for n=int('9'*(100+1) + '0'*1500000), there's definitely a prime with 100 consecutive 9s between n^3 and (n+1)^3.
So any proof that requires you to select an element out of a set would seemingly fall apart, because there are sets which you can't select elements from, because you don't know what elements are in the set. But the axiom of choice implies that selection is always possible, even if you're not sure how to do it.
This is useful because now you can prove things about collections of sets that would otherwise first require you to prove things about the digit distribution of pi, which is super hard.
And even if you do find all the infinite digits of pi, then you still have an infinite number of other super hard problems to solve. Furthermore, some of those super hard problems are undecideable, so you're doomed from the beginning.
In the* second episode, the plane lands safely at its intended destination: Fantasy Island. Then the show focuses on the protagonist's fantasy, "what if the plane had crashed?". And then everything else is the same
(*or rather, one second episode from among the infinite set of potential second episodes)
If I wrote a canonical post for "when is an appropriate time to use variable variables?", do you think people would use it as a dupe target for "how do I implement variable variables?" questions?
Or would people say "well, asking 'how do I do X?' and 'should I do X?' aren't really the same"
Maybe I'm overthinking it. Empirically, my standards for dupe targets are higher than average. My most successful canonical post mostly gets used as a target for questions that I don't consider to be exact duplicates. "why isn't my input loop working?" is not, strictly speaking, a duplicate of "here's a couple ways to write a functional input loop".
exec(f"{input()} = 23", globals()) is obviously insecure. But what about globals()[input("Enter a name.")] = 23? can that give arbitrary code execution to the user?
You can overshadow whichever builtin you want, but I don't see how that does anything worse than causing TypeError: 'int' object is not callable further down the line
@MartijnPieters I'd have to do some more research, but I think there's already been progress in ASGI servers and frameworks to handle async and sync routes in the same app.
I think the tricky part is writing the internal code with async def while still supporting traditional WSGI servers that don't know what to do with that.
There's apparently some experimental branch of urllib3 that's writing all the code with async def then translating it with a tool like 2to3.
I'm not sure what we'll be doing yet, exploring that is part of the whole process.
Not that I'm aware of. That's the official development blog, linked from Falcon Age's web page, and there's no obvious indication of there being a mirror anywhere else
I think we're in the middle of an era of game design, characterized by an attitude of "why doesn't this new triple-A game have [feature]? [groundbreaking game from ten years ago] had it ten years ago". Where [feature] is "mirrors that show realistic reflections" or "really good enemy AI" or "dynamic falcon claw positioning on a VR-controlled hand". The bottleneck for amazing features becomes increasingly more about developer ingenuity than computational resources.
The answer to "why no [feature]?" boils down to "because in the time frame allocated to us, we couldn't reverse-engineer how they did it ten years ago"
Dectupling the number of polygons that can be rendered per frame doesn't make your programming team any more likely to come up with an improvement to A* pathfinding.
Or has this always been the case, and I just don't know enough about older generations to see the pattern? Were people saying "How come Super Mario World doesn't have [feature], when Mario Bros 3 did?"?
I never really understood why people get upset when a game stops getting updates. There used to be a time when you bought a game and that's all you'd ever get. Nobody's mad that Ocarina of Time never got DLC.
Unless by "support" you mean "keep the multiplayer servers running". If a game becomes unplayable, that's a problem. Ideally the server software would be public. e.g. Minecraft.
Few reasons: We are in the era of internet and easy access to patch things and that includes easy to update so the current generation expects updates. 2/ Local games I understand no updates but most games are not local, and or requires an internet access (why? maybe to collect data or what not either way if you are forcing an Internet connection to play a single player game, I feel it's no longer "singleplayer", at least at heart. 3/It's easier to add to a game with DLC new maps and charge 75%
of the full game, similar to what Battlefield, CoD and Cities Skyline.
I think in our modern era, the gaming industry has adapted to new lower cost higher income compare to back then. Similar to how now most if not all free games have a loot box system.
And with that the players would expect the "standard" even if it may or may not be consumer friendly.
Closed-source centralized multiplayer servers is a problem. Call-home DRM is a problem. Releasing only half of a game is a problem. Requiring microtransactions for a playable experience is a problem. Purchasing a complete game at launch and expecting regular content patches indefinitely is entitlement.
Also, which ever company wants to get rich, just needs to play with the nostalgic feeling of the gamers that are entering the adulthood which now has disposable income, rather than bugging their parents for a game. Ie, split screen Halo or something idk.
Pokemon is an interesting example of "what happened to [feature]?", in particular "your pokemon follows you around in the overworld", which was present in HG/SS and vanished by the next* game
When I was a kid, my biggest problem was what do I need to do to convince my parents to buy me what I want, now it's do I want the Pikachu vs Eevee or Smash Ultimate version of the Switch :\
The usual excuse of "we can't replicate what the programmers of old did" doesn't work, because presumably they're the same programmers at the same company, with access to the old source code
I've spent several hours trawling every fix I can find but the PATH just seems to be wonky for GCC compiler because Anaconda itself is loading its own config file
I'm assuming I'm missing a trick but I'll be damned if I can find what it is
but I think Nintendo is more of, we know this works but we want to know what else works, so let's remove that feature for now and bring it back when the next thing we try fails. And if the next thing succeeds let's rinse and repeat the process.
I'm thinking of using scipy to do some voronoi diagrams. The documentation says it requires qhull. Do I need to install that separately? I don't want to bother if I have to install it separately. I would ordinarily run the function and see if it works, but it might take me upwards of twenty minutes to get the arguments right.
Oh, there's some sample code right here in the docs. Let's see... Runs on my machine.
Hmm, this voronoi function doesn't make it easy to identify the direction of the rays that comprise the borders of the infinite-volume regions of the graph
All it gives is the two vertices that all the points on the ray are equidistant to
Combine that with the starting vertex, and you narrow it down to two possible rays having 180-degree rotational symmetry with one another
Just as well since I think I ultimately want to plot on the surface of a torus, which can't possibly have infinite-volume regions
I don't know much about futures, but if executor.map is anything like ordinary map, then the output will be in the same order as the input was. This means you can't access the second result until the first result is ready. If you don't care about preserving order, then perhaps map isn't the appropriate tool.
I wonder if as_completed would be useful here? If I read this correctly, this iterator will return results as they are completed, which sounds like what you want.