I got to see an ASIMO demo on a visit to Tokyo once, at the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation - the hall was packed with onlookers. The more recent Boston Dynamics videos are amazing/frightening.
I had Spot as my icon on Slack, and was going to change it here, but it creeps me out.
Spot is the new utility robot from Boston Dynamics. It is a basic platform with wide mobility (stairs, uneven terrain, etc.), that can take a number of add-ons and extensions (arms, grippers, sensor/actuators, cameras) for specific industrial or commercial applications. I just saw a video of one in blue that was in use in a police station.
Not familiar with sympy, but I have used Unicode identifiers in this way in just plain old python. It may just be your "\psi" notation. If sympy accepts a LaTeX-type symbol, maybe you can just do psi = Function(r"\psi"). The 'r' tells Python to leave the backslash as-is, and not use it as an escape for the next character. Often used in regular expressions, but I could see it useful with LaTeX markup.
@AndrasDeak: I think I might be x-ying...and I've been told before that you know a thing or two about quantum mechanics, so maybe before going to far I should state I'm trying to get schrodingers equation into sympy... (I'm trying to sanity check my maths, like I was doing a few weeks ago last time we spoke)
they even have an older version of sympy on it, so I am guessing its just for those who want to know how sympy looks, advanced users pretty sure have their own env
It's very off-topic, and I'm about to go to bed. You're welcome to start a new room and we can discuss there when I'll have the time (probably tomorrow)
reddit.com/r/learnpython/comments/ms46zz/… reddit never ceases to amaze me, OP tells they are proficient but has only recently learnt itertools the whole ML DL people just skip stdlib I guess
I often find myself constantly repackaging exceptions, and most often in retrospect. Not because the exceptions are "bad" but to at the top level better a better exception handling interface for the end user, apart from a generic string a more clear description: also on "how and why it probably happened", "and I think you should do xyz first".
I'm only just realizing how gross the hack of adding a __new__ method to a class really is. It's literally impossible to implement it correctly
You have to decide whether or not you should forward the arguments to super().__new__, and that logic is... well, the best you can do is make an educated guess
user13727121
@Aran-Fey Tryna understand this solution, works wonder. So these two variables list_, and value, the given number of the mentioned variables is set that way to match the number of values given in zip(), right?
user13727121
I tried to use customers, sales, thread_sold = map(list, zip(*transaction_details)) but because of the specific number of values I want, obviously it didn't work
I don't really understand the question (The number of what matches the number of what?), but the zip essentially associates a list with each value in sales_detail. It yields (customers, 'Edith Mcbride'), (sales, '$1.21'), etc
If you want a one-liner, use customers, sales, thread_sold, _ = zip(*transaction_details)
@Aran-Fey As in, list_ points to the tuples of values (customers, sales, thread_sold) and value points to values in sales_detail. I kept thinking there were 4 values inside the zip() function when there's only 2, sorry about that D:
I am looking for a shortcut to move the cursor to the beginning of next line with VS Code. Is there such a shortcut? Please kindly ping me if you answer this question. THank you !