I literally found it because I was writing about the dangers of copy and paste coding within academia (of which this is a problem) in my proposal and it came up as a hit - sigh I sometimes forget how much marketing that blog is
@PaulMcG One way I've handled that (on paper, not in a coding language) is to use a superscript letter on the ±, so that ± signs with the same superscript have the same parity. It's kind of analogous to a ± b being equivalent to a + ((-1)^n)×b, where n may be odd or even.
@LinkBerest-GoodbyeSE Oh wow, they just skimmed over the license part. "Whether these clones are good or bad is up for debate." But likely to be a licence violation? Yes. I now remember why I don't read them any more...
They cover the "dangers" at the very end but its just bad and I know junior devs and students will just go "oh, its good to copy and paste" and forget the (buried) rest of the message
And of course it's perfectly possible to screw up by misusing code that isn't buggy. A classic case is when Samsung cargo-culted stuff from SO written by our Code-Apprentice:
@roganjosh They also know how to cargo-cult code from SO. Just ask Code-Apprentice, or read about it on https://www.xda-developers.com/samsung-bixby-baseball-card-tracking-app-galaxy-s8/
After my first 2 years of teaching data engineering, I learned to add a bit to my introductory lecture entitled: "don't just copy my example code to try and solve the assignment given using it - it will always need to be altered". And including a bit that explains "altered" doesn't mean "change variable names"
In this case because the students don't know/do the math and just assume their results are still correct (more than the standard "do your work" issue) simply because they got a number as a result and not an error (the number is the error never occurs to them).
Copying code from the Net can save time. But it doesn't mean that you don't need to spend the time required to understand how that code actually works.
I must confess that I've sometimes used code that I don't fully understand. But I only run it on my own machine, I wouldn't risk it in code I expect other people to use.
@LinkBerest-GoodbyeSE who-dy what now? That's a pretty bold statement
I can accept that confidence intervals don't answer everything but saying "you're wrong" on the back of 95% confidence seems... iffy. I bet there's some fun examples to back it up?
@roganjosh It's suppose to be a tongue in cheek title (the slide explains confidence intervals and expected ranges within assignments). But its also completely true of all my assignments (none should give .05 so if you get that, in my known datasets, your math has an error)
and specifically there's a bit of example code I do that if run completely unaltered on the assignment dataset will give .05% (it doesn't run anything the first function in the example code checks that it is the file and just returns that)
Anyone know how to fix incorrect string value when inserting into sql with pymysql? I looked it up and said use utf8mb4 charset, which i started doing, but i still get the same error
@roganjosh I'm cleaning up the repository now (and currently making proposals because we have to submit some "if I have to do online only next year" proposals quick) so I don't have a copy handy but I'll message you when I put it back up. (it will be on this group's repository and is one of the public ones in case I forget)
@ROODAY text encoding is a good way to confuse me. I'm not sure I'm confident to explore the issue with what's shared. Can you give me a specific traceback in a dpaste/pastebin please?
I would naively expect that a database engine takes care of encoding when its input is a python 3 string (but as you may have noticed I only have naive impressions about databases)
Hmm i ended up fixing this by modifying the schema.sql i was using to specify utf8mb4 explicitly for all the text columns, then dropping tables and resourcing the schema. Now the import script works!
^^ Here is a bad example of an 'ASCII hammer' Q&A: Python non-ascii characters, the question statement is way too full of SQL-handling syntax, and most answers are not generic.
For that particular question, I wanna call a close vote on it, possibly even a delv vote, because it's really bad. At the same time, I don't want to disrupt history
@roganjosh Yeah. I'm not praising it, but I'm saying even bad malformed questions based on misunderstandings have some small educational value, and in particular we can add links on them to better questions.
Alright, this is weird, but I think it's simple solution
There is a symlink from python3 to python3.7
user11006952
Does `settings.py` have special meaning/convention in Python? I was following the [docs](https://pypi.org/project/python-dotenv/) of python-dotenv and mentioned settings.py right off the bat.
Googling shows Django has settings.py but python-dotenv has a separate section on Django.
You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'Taken VARCHAR(16),
Time Started VARCHAR(16),
Time Finish' at line 3.
Got another gold spending question. Like last time, each turn your gold is set to 10 and you're presented with 5 random items. The difference is that now buying an item costs 2 gold, rerolling (getting another 5 random items) also costs 2 gold, and you can sell items for 1 gold.
Again, the question is how to spend your last 2 gold if there are no items you want to buy. I constantly see people spend 2 gold to reroll, but wouldn't it be better to buy a random item and wait for the free reroll at the start of your next turn?
Oh, and of course the items you own persist between turns. So the idea is that you sell the garbage item for 1 gold next turn, thus essentially having achieved the same number of rerolls but having 1 more gold at your disposal
Well the way I see it there are two possibilities: 1. you spend your 2 gold rerolling, which gives you a new set of items which you can choose to keep for 0 gold, i.e. the benefit of the original problem. 2. you buy an item to sell in the next round, in which case you don't have a free reroll which you can choose to keep, but you get 1 gold. Question is how much it's worth to you to know what you'll start with in the next round.
:49429305
Error: 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near ') VALUES ('test1','today','too late','1','a','c','e','g','i','k')' at line 12.
@Kevin Well as you know, you can if you define a custom subclass of that type, then override __repr__ on it. Surely there's a canonical for that? If it gets asked so often? Is there a better Q&A than this one for int?
user11006952
@wim Thanks. It's not a special python file but it seems like it is common that people use a "settings.py" to store their "settings/configuration constants"