Hmm doing a refactor I just realized why I intuitively preferred passing arguments by order and not by name. Now when refactoring an argument name, I have to track down all the usages of it. Especially if they are not in only one project
yeah, the lambda alternative in the link you posted is just not doing it for me, it works, but I usually use map for default functions, which defeats the purpose here
How would I type hint a "1-dimensional number" (or in other words, a number that supports < and >)? numbers.Number doesn't support ordering, and decimal.Decimal isn't a numbers.Real.
I mean, just looking at github issues where a lot of people get stuck into not-yet-supported features, or bugs because of type hinting, I'm pretty sure you're not doing it wrong, so I don't think it's your fault
it's the expected consequence of nailing a new type system onto something not designed for it. See also: Java generics. More broadly, see the entirety of C++ "design"
I feel like it's not so much that it's not designed for it that's the problem, it's that people who add features or plan on adding features don't take into account the future part/consequences
(although Java didn't actually turn out that badly, it's just that the wildcard system confuses people who want to use types without actually understanding any type theory)
if you add support for something and it break one thing, or you plan on implementing x,y,z but then forget to do it, it's not the fault of the language then
anyway, I think we need a general canonical for running sum/max/etc. (i.e., accumulator in a loop) algorithms
I see wjandrea tried to respond there. The problem is that an OP like this certainly thinks that "can't find a way to make the numbers add up" is as specific as problems get
peps.python.org/pep-3141/#numeric-classes indicates that the Number class has no abstract methods. So the only thing we can say about numbers for sure is: a number is an object.
I'm a bit surprised that Number doesn't at least declare __add__. I don't know of any kind of number that can't be added to other numbers of the same kind.
that reminds me, unary encoding is a thing too. Many people implement it in their own way though, some use binary, other use a specific byte/char repeated the same number of times as their decimal representation, etc
The AOC room is basically all python because it's run as part of our community. I don't think they'd mind other languages but wim was a regular here for many years and it's usually his initiative
want to still be able to change and use the variable to_modify without having to use self on it, etc
I'm aware this is the recommended thing to do (and also probably default) but again, I'm just playing around, so don't mind if there a solution (even if it's non-recommended)
@Aran-Fey explosions could be considered an extreme form of decoration. People will certainly say "I can definitely see you've done something with this place"
@Aran-Fey hmm, I just tested on 3.8 but receive an AttributeError: 'function' object has no attribute 'builtins' error. (this is with the pastebin's code, unaltered).