It's as much noise as it is a symptom of the system not deprecating information as gracefully as it should. Work is on the drawing board to better identify (and allow for the community to elect) "Canonical" questions which can take precedence in searches, tag wikis, and other places. We've also g...
Canonical system in the works. I hope they do it differently from their usual methodology...
Hi everyone, I'm using the library extract_msg to extract some infos about emails. Now, I want to save the attachments, but it doesnt work. I'm using that extract_msg.Message(f).attachments
@Mez13 I was wondering about submitting a PR to make these keywords explicitly keyword-only. That would give an error next time. But python 2 doesn't support them.
I thought we could get around the keyword-only argument limitation by using a *dummy rather than an empty * in the signature, but that's also something that doesn't work on pythoff.
@PM2Ring Hey just seen this. When adding two classes, I'm basically just merging some dictionaries together.. atm we aren't taking many operations but the solution does need to scale so it's useful to know if this in inefficient.
> As with any community, we have our own set of rules and etiquette. Please be considerate and take the time to read and follow them. If you are disruptive, users may not want to interact with you in the future. Room owners will use their moderation tools to keep the room on track.
everyone is welcome to contribute to the room in a way that isn't intentionally annoying or disruptive
people being accidentally annoying are warned first :P
Mega Were-Troll vs. Giant Help Vampire. I mean, I am a bit of a fan of Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus. It's the logical sequel that never lives up to the first movie
@roganjosh and it's a franchise, Mega Shark Versus Crocosaurus , Mega Shark Versus Mecha Shark, all names sure to bring crowds to the box office And it's made by an American company
I have a good friend who loves bad movies. You know, there are movies that are so bad that they are good. He likes the movies that are so bad they are bad all over again.
@JonClements It's far more nuanced than to stoop to that (also, if it is a line, it really wouldn't be a stand-out moment with all the other garbage going on)
Like Godzilla swimming past the Nimitz class aircraft carriers to get to a nuclear weapon hundreds of miles away. Apparently the nuclear powered boat right next to him was unappealing
In a fission bomb ("atomic bomb") it's enough to put the critical mass in one place, remove separation. A fusion bomb ("hydrogen bomb") needs high pressure to initiate fusion, for which I think a fission bomb is used as a compression mechanism...
Yes, I'm pretty sure the fusion is triggered by a fission stage but something has to be stopping a fission bomb just spontaneously exploding and I thought that required compression
> On the day of the accident, Slotin's screwdriver slipped outward a fraction of an inch while he was lowering the top reflector, allowing the reflector to fall into place around the core. Instantly there was a flash of blue light and a wave of heat across Slotin's skin; the core had become supercritical, releasing an intense burst of neutron radiation estimated to have lasted about a half second.[6] Slotin quickly twisted his wrist, flipping the top shell to the floor.
@roganjosh physical separation
@DeveshKumarSingh sure it is. My countryman Edward Teller was a huge fan. He and Ulam worked a lot on it.
@DeveshKumarSingh fusion is at work. In terms of the power industry, we still haven't properly contained it to have a net output of power. But for explosives, fusion is the second stage
@roganjosh Ohh yes, you are right, fusion is achieved but is not contained to be used in power industry, you are right, hence nuclear power plants only do fission I think
I'll have to catch back up on fusion power actually. I've not seen anything about it for years and I don't think it's come up once in Brexit, but I though the UK and France had a collaboration on a pretty big experimental rig. Maybe I imagined it. At one point it was talked about quite a bit, so it's telling if it's not a consideration now
@DeveshKumarSingh Fusion bomb has definitely be achieved, and probably all nuclear weapons since the late 50's are now fusion H-bombs. The early bombs dropped on Japan were fission bombs. You may be thinking about fusion reactors, which have not yet been made practical or economically viable - the mainstay of nuclear reactors today are all fission based.
@JonClements Carnivore/Echelon trigger words galore here, so yeah, probly
It's a mega project though, so the lag is huge. When they send probes into space, the GC/MS tech, for example, is just totally outdated by the time it arrives, but you can iterate probes pretty quickly. I imagine just to get people round the table with money for fusion plants takes years in itself
Actually, Concrete 14.0 probably is a thing, and if "API" for concrete involves mixing/pouring/curing processes, then newer mixes probably do have new "API"s.
@roganjosh you've reminded me I was listening to some old radioshow the other night and they were talking about various bits and bobs and someone was talking about how washing powder/tablets (whatever), basically make the water in the machine a bit more "wet" or something...
For example, if you splash water on a woolen jumper, you will see that it tends to form drops and very slowly penetrates the fabric. If you lower surface tension then the water will spread more easily
Surfactants you can see in action in your own kitchen. Pour boiling water into a used frying pan. You'll see the oil forming small droplets all over the surface. Drop a blob of washing up liquid in the middle of the pan
@JonClements Yes. It comes with a very serious warning from me: there are a lot of series, he also does Hell's Kitchen and you basically can't run out of viewing material. Before you know it, we'll have fusion power before you break out of the cycle
additionally, you can hook it up in Continuous Integration via say Jenkins to run all your code through pylint before you merge your code, so bad coding style doesn't escape