I wasn't meaning anything but standard. You can overwrite builtins such as print or open, you can mess with sys.modules to manually add packages you haven't installed, so, although I don't know how to do it, I see no reason why you couldn't mess with how True evaluates. But that's all I could think of.
Unless semantically, in the context of the code, while not False reads more clearly than while True, but again I can't think of a circumstance.
I can't think of a good reason to use while not False: either. Only silly reasons, like some weird code golf where you want the total code length to have a certain value. Or steganography, where you have a secret message encoded somehow in the source code.
In Python 2, you could assign any value you want to False or True. You can still change them in Python 3, but it's a bit trickier. For that matter, you can even change the value of literal integers!
@toonarmycaptain It appears you can theoretically modify True; import builtins; builtins.True = False. However, it raises a SyntaxError, so it's not possible. It's because True is both a python keyword and an inbuilt object, the former meaning it's impossible to do in py3
@JossieCalderon You know what, normally I'd say that's absurd, but if one needed to and never went back to change it, I absolutely believe it, having done similarly silly things when I only had a borked keyboard.
So can you mess with True. to mess with it's boolean evaluation?
Let me try to clarify the difference. Lets start by assigning a value of -1 to false, and +1 to true, and 0 to something "in between".
When someone says something is false, it has only a value of -1.
When someone says something is not true, it can have a value not only of -1, but also of 0. The...
But that doesn't work in Python because False == 0 and True != 0
@Legorooj Using the ctypes module. See this answer by abarnert: stackoverflow.com/a/49272080/4014959 which illustrates ways to hack various things like that.
Hey, before I sign off, I want to say I'm super proud of myself, as I figured out (with the help of St Ackoverflow, of course) how to patch a module imported inside a function, that won't exist during testing. patch sys.modules, and use unittest.mock.MagicMockto make a mock module xD
@toonarmycaptain that's a different approach to testing then I've used before... But I've never written code/a library that needs to run against a module.
@Legorooj I've got a user settings file in the application that gets created/modified at runtime, so it doesn't exist in testing. I'll probably switch it out for a json file loaded at runtime, but at the moment it's a .py file so I can from settings import my_app_settings. I wrote this a long time ago when I knew less than I know now.
You could also use it with any library that might not be present, say if your code uses a package installed at runtime (the example I saw used an azure something or other). Or maybe the dependency you're using is huge and you don't want to install it fresh for every test.
cv-pls near-total-dupe, other than polishing the regex and a df.pop() call. this The main issue was simply How to add multiple columns to pandas dataframe in one assignment, the left-hand side df['number','name'] = ... was meaningless
@smci I'll remember next time I break a rather expensive present
got a google home thingy sitting in its box... my brother thought it'd be nice as his house is massively automated... it's useful, but no way yet am I going to have one of 'em in my place
I'm quite (even being a yellow puppy) capable of using light switches and such
however, if "Okay Google, make a cup of tea appear on my desk" would actually deliver me a cuppa, I'd be all in :)
width= The width of the label. If the label displays text, the size is given in text units. If the label displays an image, the size is given in pixels (or screen units). If the size is set to 0, or omitted, it is calculated based on the label contents. (width/Width)
@JonClements I requested for an extension yesterday, but as its the weekends now, they're unlikely to respond on time. Given this, should I just extend it or should I just submit whatever I have now
@PrashinJeevaganth I'll give you some frank advice... if you're asking for an extension of an interview or something... they're just going to be immediately turned off. Unless you've got some feeling it might happen and they're that interested to accept delays - it's not going to happen.
@PrashinJeevaganth I personally when I've people do expect them to turn up on time and demonstrate skills... the first is just a matter of courtesy
the second is how it works out... but unless I was really, really, really wanting to see a candidate for a position, as soon as you say you want to delay or I can see you asking for help online etc... whatever... you're almost 100% aren't going to get that job
@JonClements Yes I agree it was a lot of miscommunication here. They did state in the email that they're recruiting on a rolling basis and I'm free to ask for extension. Will inform people when their slots are filled
@ChrisP What Aran-Fey said. .place is generally a pain, especially for complicated GUIs. Use the other layout methods, .pack or .grid, instead. And never mix layout methods inside a parent widget (window or frame).
@PrashinJeevaganth we don't do job advice here - this is my personal opinion, but be wary, if they're willing to do that - then it's something I'd be very cautious about
get yourself a decent CV and a show case if you can - this one sounds like one I'd never go for if I was you - but ultimately it's up to you to decide - personally, I wouldn't spend any more time on it
having said that, I can't remember the last time I actually get interviewed for a job vs being the interviewer
@PrashinJeevaganth I actually misread some set notation for one of my positions and so subsequently ended up answering the wrong question. Still got the position by talking through it. It was a week-long task, too, not some whiteboard interview
Again, the advice can only be personal and I absolve all liabilities; I'd submit what you have and explain that you underestimated the time required. Everyone underestimates delivery time. Even if you add 10% to your initial estimate, maybe you made your estimate based on the knowledge that you were going to build contingency in, in the first place, and.... <recursion limit reached>
@JonClements Paul Simon has posted a few songs on YouTube in the last couple of weeks. His voice is a bit croaky these days, but he still knows how to deliver a song. Also see Joan Baez & Carole King. And Norah Jones has been doing mini-concerts too.
@JonClements Fair enough. She can still sing well. It won't be a disappointment. FWIW, she never thought of herself as a singer. She'd been a professional songwriter for over a decade before she was convinced to do Tapestry.
@JonClements Me too. Let me find you one of my favourites...
Gerald Goffin (February 11, 1939 – June 19, 2014) was an American lyricist. Collaborating initially with his first wife, Carole King, he co-wrote many international pop hits of the early and mid-1960s, including the US No.1 hits "Will You Love Me Tomorrow", "Take Good Care of My Baby", "The Loco-Motion", and "Go Away Little Girl". It was later said of Goffin that his gift was "to find words that expressed what many young people were feeling but were unable to articulate."After he and King divorced, Goffin wrote with other composers, including Barry Goldberg and Michael Masser, with whom he wrote...
Here's Carly doing the song which was her 1st hit in Australia. A Kris Kristofferson number, originally written for Rita Coolidge. I've Got To Have You, live at Grand Central Station, 1995.
@smci let's be mindful here that you're looking at a question from 2017 and that's 2 cv-pls for the same user. I don't think action is required for this particular question. As for the dupe one, I need to think about it a bit more before voting
Ok, for the second dupe call (I'm glad you raised the first that PM hammered) I think the function is doing too much lifting for it to be usefully duped @smci
@ChrisP not only that, but this will now be the 3rd time I'm going to remind you of the chat formatting guide for code in less than 24 hours. You've done again what we established yesterday doesn't work
@ChrisP you cannot mix code and general text. The guide shows everything else you need to know. And if you think I'm being a bit trivial about it for small snippets, be mindful that it gives me important meta-info about your willingness to follow suggestions from room members
@roganjosh you asked for the template that im using to trigger the request, im sorry but i don't know anything about python so i don't understand, basically, i just run the code via cmd and pass the url in the browser, so i don't know what template means in this case
@IsraelObanijesu on revisiting the question, I think you want something like this to get the parameters from your GET request and not set it up with <string:img>
Ugh, my terminology is going to be so crap here, apologies. I can only visualise the approach. You want your API to accept a named parameter like /imagelookup/?lookup_url= rather than just concatenating it to the URL
Does anyone here have experience with turtle graphics in jupyter notebook ? I'v tried it all, turtle.bye() , turtle.done() , exitonclick() .. everything and I always get some error in my notebook.
Sometimes I get an error every other time I run the program
@domocar1 Please see the room rules in regards to long blocks of code - please host them off-site and link to it here. Also, if you are posting code in future, please see the formatting guide
In my continuing efforts to provide a safe eval libary, I pushed out version 0.2.0 of plusminus this morning. Now including set expressions and operations. Please hammer on it at ptmcg.pythonanywhere.com/plusminus - don't be gentle.
It is module for taking user inputs and doing eval without the security risks of doing Python's eval().
That website is just a simple wrapper around a REPL, with some Javascripted buttons to make it easier to enter the Unicode operators.
Note - it is not a Python expression evaluator. It is an arithmetic and logical expression evaluator, and is not constrained to operators as defined in Python. For instance, you can do |4 - 12| and get 8, you can do 3! and get 6. Click on the Help, Examples, and Code buttons for more info.
Is there any way for the base class to call it's own method that has been overriden by the child class? Seems weird that the child class can still call it using super(), but base class cannot access it's own method using self.method.
Hello, I am having a strange issue with python re.split module, can someone please help. I am trying to split a url into 2 parts base url and path after base url. I have the following regex which seems to work:
https://regex101.com/r/1MebfR/1
on python I am doing the following: pattern = "^(.*\/\/.+?\/)" z = "https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d" re.split(pattern, z)
Result I am getting is: ['', 'https://www.google.com/', 'search?client=firefox-b-d']
I dont understand why it is creating 3 splits and why the first match is an empty string? any idea?
Because you're splitting on https://www.google.com. It's the same thing as doing 'ab'.split('a'); the result is ['', 'b'] because there's nothing before the "a" and a "b" after it
option 1: use urllib.parse.urlparse option 2: use re.match(r"(.*\/\/.+?\/)(.*)", z).groups()
Does anyone know how python supports arbitrary lengthed integers? I thought it's using C struct. But there isn't such this thing in C as I know by default.
@Aran-Fey Thanks for trying, its okay, your option 2 above seems like it does the job for now, I had to add a check before I can use .groups though, as it raises and error if no match found
@roganjosh, cv-plsthis one is needs details/clarity, also no MCVE. An apply calling three nested functions, doesn't show which triggered the error, doesn't show the input data. Btw, pandas has a native rank() function (and that's a one-liner) so this is all furthermore unnecessary. It's from 2017 and didn't get any answers, unlikely to now. So many reasons to close.
...That OP's code only appears to a do a lot, because they reinvent the pandas wheel and avoid using standard idioms. I've never seen a triply-nested apply function, ever.