I have a question about pyramid. Is there a way I can create a subscriber inside subscribe.py and add an event handler for NewRequest event type in which I modify the http protocol to https?
Pacific Rim is an upcoming 2013 American science fiction monster film directed by Guillermo del Toro and written by del Toro and Travis Beacham. The film is set in a near future where soldiers pilot giant robots into battle against invading giant monsters who have risen from beneath the ocean.
The film was produced by Legendary Pictures and will be distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures. The film will be released in 3-D and IMAX 3D on July 12, 2013.
Plot
In the near future, giant monsters identified as "Kaiju" have risen from a crevasse in the Pacific Ocean, resulting in a war which takes ...
King of the Monsters is a series of video games created by SNK Corporation (the predecessor of the current SNK Playmore) for the Neo-Geo, featuring giant monsters reminiscent of kaiju and tokusatsu.
King of the Monsters
King of the Monsters is a fighting/wrestling game. It was released by SNK on July 1, 1991 in Japan (later released on the Virtual Console), with later ports for the Super NES and Sega Genesis by Takara. King of the Monsters was included as part of SNK Arcade Classics Vol. 1 which was released for the Wii, PlayStation 2 and PSP in 2008.
Gameplay
Players get to choose any ...
@MaxPower Also - file_paths (or file names) should ALWAYS be passed in their entirety, the fact that you append .txt to each file_path that you get is HORRIBLE
Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit. Simple is better than complex. Complex is better than complicated. Flat is better than nested. Sparse is better than dense. Readability counts. Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules. Although practicality beats purity. Errors should never pass silently. Unless explicitly silenced. In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess. There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it. Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch.
But actually I didn't name it, I just found it this morning
for me: regexes are also poetic — I really love them. They are pretty simple, yet so powerful! And it is also like ascii-art:) ..looked pretty scary for an outsider, even if every last character of it makes perfectly sense.
Me too.. once you got the taste of it, you want to use it everywhere.. I mean: in Sublime you can search/find and replace with regexes. And I'm really-really used to it, even if I want to search on a website, I just start typing the regex formulas before I realise — this is only a webbrowser:)
Hello! I would like to refresh a picture I'm displaying with pyqt4 every second, but the window changes to "not responding". Code: pastebin.com/PLRpuw8z
I have patterns like a W b W c W
where a,b,c .. are words [a-zA-Z]+
and W is any amount of words - zero or more
example: pattern a W b
could be a b, a b b b, a e f b ,etc but not ab, not af b, not a fb
one space there is required between a and b
two space around w is required if w is not empty
...
My favourite part is the new update: "W is a* what means ([a-zA-Z]+ )* - in my code above just .* (to simplify!), please understand what non-greedy means and what lookahead assertions is"
which means: we are the idiots, who can't understand what greedy and non-greedy means..
@MaxPower the problem is — I commented there — is that there is no yamming way to make a difference between two words, in a word-pattern, where the first is always there, and second can be more than once there or zero times
actually I'm not a developer, I'm a designer — who never learnt any programming paradigms or OOP or regexes, or threads, etc. But who always wanted to learn programming, but never could.. tried Javascript, Processing, AppleScript, RhinoScript and SassScript.. none of them worked for me
but more than half a year ago, I started learning python — and my life changed forever:)
that's why I love it.. it is so easy to catch up with, to understand all the details of programming
is it a good idea to initialize an instance of some class X in a python file1 and import that instance from file1 i am reading source code of some new project at my workplace and i am getting all kinds of questions like how long does the variable references stay in the namespace? Is the instance created every time we run the file1? Or does the instance persist? what happens on systems like servers ... where the system never shuts down .. does the name space is never gets cleared or is it coz of gb action
@InbarRose right, thats maybe because i am so confused :(
@InbarRose i am reading a source code of a project and what i see there is there is file 1 where they have created instances of class x and in file2 they have imported that instance
and looking at this i had all sorts of questions running in my mind i want to understand how long can one instance stay if it is initialized as a global instance like this
@PeterVaro I am just trying to understand the project :)
i am getting confused with the life of pyc file ... which will live as long as there is no change in the file, which takes for re-compilation or it is deleted
its is a big web application; but this current file1 is a service script now i also have a question .. is this good , are there any hidden traps in doing anything like this Because i havent seen anything like this before... my ideology has always been initialize when u need to but in this case ... even if i never need call file 1 .. file 1 would have created some instances :| But in the case
Sandy... "the life of a pyc file" that makes no sense... What do you mean "how long does the variable references stay in the namespace" ?? You are speaking as if in a foreign language. What is your experience with Programming? and Python in particular.
But you do not import the instance. you get a reference to it.
which means that any time you use "cache" it is like you are running it in its modules namespace.
imagine the following scenario...
A module which has a class which deals with READING from a large SQL database. This module has "DB = .... " where DB is an instance of this class.... So you can import from this module the reference "DB" and act on it.
This makes sense...
Here is where it gets interesting...
If ANOTHER module/script ALSO imports that database module and gets the DB reference. it will be the same object.
:) sure so the files are shared across processes? ok that means even the namespaces would be shared i am just trying to understand the internal working
and if the process/script has multple elements that all load from the same module the same instance, then they will all share that same instance. BUT - a different process will have its own
Like tabs in a browser.
All the tabs share the same browser, and so if you log into Facebook in one, in the others you are also logged in.
But if you open another browser- you won't be logged in
But if you do log in, then all those tabs will also share that login.
oh yes thank you soo much for that now i am just looking at that instance import and trying to check if i understood that as well
@InbarRose ok cool i will make a note of that point and check with the developers if there was any particular reason they wanted to make a common instance available across places
As we all know, there is list comprehension as [i for i in [1,2,3,4]] and dict comprehension as {i:j for i,j in {1:'a', 2:'b'}}, but (i for i in (1,2,3)) will end up with a generator, not a tuple comprehension, why is that?
My guess is that tuple is immutable, but this does not seem to be the a...
@mgilson which I don't really understand, why can't it be simple as that: for key:value in dictionary: # do something with key and value — why this syntax sugar is not in python..
List and Dict comprehensions exist to make it faster to create containers, instead of looping over the item and "appending" each value to a list... With a tuple, you never need a loop, since you can not create a tuple and append things to it.
@InbarRose -- I disagree. List, Dict and Set comprehensions exist to provide a clean and elegant syntax for creating a list, dictionary or set. The fact that they're faster is just a side-bonus.
True, but in this sense, the tuple is different in that it can not be assigned to - which means that it is important to note when you create a tuple as opposed to another container type
Ultimately, some are just more useful/general than others -- They're the ones that get comprehensions until we run out of ways to think of a clean syntax for new comprehensions
@InbarRose -- But I still fail to see how the immutability of a tuple means that they shouldn't have a comprehension syntax.
I was asking a question yesterday to @Cairnarvon i believe and i just wanted to get other peoples take on what method i should use
Basically, i am writing statistics from a linux box to a mysql database and i need a method to queue the data if the database loses connection (DDoS or something)
So then when the database connection is back up, i can run through the queues, writing to the database
no problem, there are other brokers that can do the same thing but rabbitmq is the one with the most bindings (i think). if you're using django you can hook it up with celery