Hey @AnttiHaapala My comment about that guy's C code is correct, isn't it? stackoverflow.com/questions/56390930/… I haven't done any C in a while, but I doubt I'd mess up something that basic...
@PM2Ring you're wrong. Each {} in C opens a new scope and each named object naturally has its lifetime determined by the scope of its identifier. The scope is recreated every time { is reached and destroyed when } is reached. Additionally, while, for and if start a new scope, too, but you can declare variables only in for.
the for statement is outside { }, so every time the control expressions are evaluated, the block must have been exited.
unfortunately :( search does not distinguish between on-hold and outright closed. Also could not find a way to filter questions at least x days old (x = time it takes for on-hold -> closed)
I want to add elements to empty places.
Example this list:
AList=[
(0, "asd"),
(3, "asd"),
(5, "asd"),
]
I want this to be:
AList=[
(0, "asd"),
(1, "asd"),
(2, "asd"),
(3, "asd"),
(4, "asd"),
(5, "asd"),
]
Can anyone help me? Thanks...
@AnttiHaapala Gone. And I gave the sftp question a reopen
@Jason I don't know Pandas, but that description of your data seems rather unclear to me. And you've made several typos. It's a Good Idea when asking for help to make things as clear as possible, and to take care that you don't make typos, so that people can easily see what your real problem is.
@AnttiHaapala aah I answered this one, my bad. Should I delete my answer or let it be? Also this one is locked by meta since the question was vandalized a lot of times by the OP
My new favourite: bird call descriptions in English
> A softer whistle goes like trüü(t). These whistles are also used in duets between mates in winter and neighbours in the breeding season. Various contact calls have been described as chlie(p), gihrrr, kwä or wuut.
If I may ask - Yesterday we discussed how inefficient it is to concatenate to a string within a for loop. Is there a better way to build up a string to be returned in a function that saves more time than the massive concatenation?
Because I'm creating an encryption algorithm that should be able to iterate over arbitrary-length bytes objects without time-scaling exponentially.
Might be better to implement a dedicated Encryptor object though: Call encryptor.encrypt(chunk) and get an encrypted piece of data returned. Then do that until all of the input data has been processed. That way you don't have to have the entire input file in memory
ok that is another question though , if iam using flask-login do i need to login-in the user to session as well ? i thought the library does that by itself
So, for your original question, I'm pretty sure the answer is yes, you need to query the user in SQLAlchemy
I have no particular flask-login knowledge, but it'd be pretty insane for it to expose exactly what you'd need to do this, and for it to do it in the correct level of transaction
Not explicitly because that's what the @login_required decorator does for you
@RobertGrant That's something I'm not really familiar with, but I have in the back of my mind that it's more suited for API calls rather than web browsing?
Their response was because you started talking about sessions and sqlalchemy. Sqlalchemy also has sessions. This isn't the first time you've come with vague questions
sqlalchemy stores the credentials that allow a user to log in (username and password), flask-login handles the user session in Flask so that it can remember that the user logged in
If I might make an observation; in the last dialogue we had, you started constantly changing your mind and throwing new terms out in response to what I was saying. I can fully appreciate any of us not knowing an answer immediately (I learn yam loads from here) but it can derail your own thinking. You don't have to answer us in like 30 seconds. Take your time and ask clarification if needed
If it's not work pressure then my view is that you're covering too many different parts at once
You're going to have half-baked understanding about all the different components and the more you pile in, the more confusing it will get. An alternative would be to get the app stable and decide to dedicate 1 day to retro-fitting logins to that app and understanding the library.
i basically push myself to get to the end goal i want and whenever i'm stuck i stop till figure out a solution , during my researches and asking you guys here i learn way more than i need so i don't get stuck that often anymore
it maybe not the best way to do it but i like it because its fun for me
I was working with a guy from CS over there. Somewhere along the way they decided to build a giant chemical lab entirely out of wood, sponsored by GSK just over the road from your building.
@AndrasDeak It wasn't even complete when it went up, I think it was an electrical issue. But it's by-far the biggest fire I've seen first-hand, you could feel the sheer heat from a good 500ft away
@RobertGrant Was The Bodega going then, in the city centre?
<hand waves> It's all fine. The logical decision was just to clear the site and build an exact replica :P I need to go see whether they did actually do that in the end
haha, can't say I've done it myself but I'll make an effort when I go to visit
Actually, it's said mate's birthday in 9 days so I think I'll try go down to see him. I'll send you a picture of the hot chocolate if I manage to make it :)
I'm curious to see how it has changed. They had some really cool bars open but they became... weird
Like The Boiler Room. The front of it was a boiler warehouse. You spoke to the guy on the counter and then had to go through into a toilet. The back wall of the toilet opened up to a bar.
Which was fine, until they decided that you could not have more than 6 people at a time, and it was table service, which took ~30 mins for a drink because of the license. So they tried different gimmicks but they ended up just being annoying places. Last I went, there were a few more of these popping up
I'm not sure how good their tech industry is there these days, I'll have to look a bit more because I'm feeling a bit nostalgic. Was this a conference hosted external to the uni?
Hmm, some numpy-specific meta-help please. I've answered one of the next questions, please don't vote on it just because I'm linking it here. There's a meh new question that asks about comparing two dicts of arrays. I found a single dupe and I answered it. The problem is that the target is a bit vague/chameleony and its answers seem to answer a bit different question.
I'm starting to wonder if I should post my answer on the newer meh question and dupe the older one to it (rather than the other way around), or perhaps they should not be dupes at all (but then the older one should be rewritten liberally).
the problem is that the old vague question ranks pretty high in both google and ddg and I can't seem to find other dupes, which is why I posted my answer there
If anyone has any feedback about the dupe thing I'd love to hear it, thanks
Objective opinion, you have given the most practical answer there, so I would say it was dupe-worthy. I think your action was correct. I'm not sure what hpaulj just posted, but I'm not the downvoter on it
I may have worded the last one along the lines of "you should know better"
but if it is a dupe then the existing answers are quite lacking, even the 13-vote one :/ An earlier form of the question asked about asserting array equality, I think...
ah, what do you know, np.testing.assert_equal actually checks for the exact equality case. So it does answer the original "assert that do dicts of arrays are equal"
it's not that bad then, and it is a dupe :) thanks
Just a suggestion, but since you've opened with a text-heavy answer and there's a 13-upvote answer above yours, it might be worth opening with a TL;DR-type thing showing that failing as an opener. If I'm desperately skimming, I might not catch the importance of the text in your answer, while I'm sure plenty of people see that answer failing when they try to apply it
Does anyone know why Django still supports is_ajax but Flask deprecated is_xhr a major version ago?
Is the Django version unstable or is the Flask version lacking? I've only just found that it's a thing in Django so I'm curious about the potential pitfalls
My guess is that is_ajax can't work with, say, JSON data and is pretty fallible in Django?
nm, looks like XMLHttpRequest hangs around for mostly historical reasons so I guess the Django method is kept for back-compatibility