class Student:
def __init__(self, name, grade):
self.name = name
self.grade = grade
def __cmp__(self, other):
#ordering is done by grade.
return cmp(self.grade, other.grade)
a = Student("Fred", 75)
b = Student("Barney", 80)
print a < b
<w:commentRangeStart w:id="0"/> ,in this xml tag (which is within a w:p) which is the best function to store the id value? Objectify looks a bit confusing..
Many years ago, I wouldn't have felt the need to write the following sentence - "To save your system parameters, press the “SAVE” button - and to cancel any changes press the “CANCEL” button."
Sure, human babies can learn language even without an instruction guide, but they have a lot of instant feedback. ex. parents responding positively when they make meaningful noises.
@Ffisegydd v2.0 committed! => I tried to add everything which was relevant (already in there) however I stayed at the strict 80 columns rule (just to make you happy) :P
@hochl I liked what they tried to do with it. I think it should have ran simultaneously with Atlantis, as they wanted it to. But noo, TV channel bosses got in the way....
@SusanSweedyk What are you trying to achieve, printing the first 32bits of a float value from memory as an integer? Makes little sense to me... or is that a trick question :)
It's a nice location. ten minutes from the city, an hour from the beach. There's not much going on in my actual area, but it's adjacent to many interesting things.
Last weekend I purchased the old-school DOS game Commander Keen. I guess I'm spoiled by modern systems, because I found it unnerving to play a game with no background music, and few sound effects.
I was quite annoyed by the control scheme: ctrl to jump, and ctrl+alt to fire your laser.
Fun fact: pressing ctrl-alt-right on my laptop causes the screen to rotate 90 degrees. This happens even if your keypresses are being intercepted by DosBox.
I'm going to put asside mentions of scope, because it's really not very relevant.
According to PEP 343,
with EXPR as VAR:
BLOCK
translates to
mgr = (EXPR)
exit = type(mgr).__exit__ # Not calling it yet
value = type(mgr).__enter__(mgr)
exc = True
try:
try:
VAR = value # Only...
class Fred:
def __enter__(self):
print "starting 'with' block!"
def __exit__(self, *args):
print "ending 'with' block!"
with Fred() as foo:
print "Hello, I am inside a 'with' block!"
print "Goodbye, the 'with' block is over!"
#result:
#starting 'with' block!
#Hello, I am inside a 'with' block!
#ending 'with' block!
#Goodbye, the 'with' block is over!
for p in lxml_tree.xpath('.//w:p', namespaces={'w':w}):
paracount+=1
In the above expression , I want to increase paracount with paragraphs i.e 1 st paragraph will have paracount=1 and 2nd will have 2 and so on.. but this actually increases paracount with every element in a paragraph.. how could i work through this??
@corvid open() is just an expression. The result of that expression (the return value of the open() call) is an object that implements the context manager protocol.
@MartijnPieters So much variety... I worry that I'd be meeting with the Emperor and accidentally say "thanks bro" instead of "My lowly self grovels in appreciation" or whatever.
@DSM Tell me about it. I went to a Japanese school to help teach English for a once off guest session. I brought some of the teachers and head-teacher some Scottish Shortbread. I came back with a beautifully painted watercolour picture painted by the Headmaster's mother.
I think the Canadian habit of using beer as the unit of exchange for favours works well in practice, because we accept roughly the same amount of beer independent of the difficulty of the favour. Since it's understood by all parties, everyone's usually satisfied.
And the chain of reciprocal gift-giving of ever increasing magnitude, eventually lead to a gift-based world economy, ushering in a golden age of mankind...
"Moral of the story: be careful with shortbread." -> "While the wrapping paper industry laughs maniacally from their impenetrable oppression palaces." -> "No English teachers please, it's for the good of society"
btw is there a SO posting that explains which implementation for cmp is best? I couldn't Google it. Else I might convert my earlier style question into a real SO question.
@Veedrac basically it boils down to this problem... BUT ... I'd like to know which is the `ideal python solution'. I settled with return cmp(a, b) in my code now because it reuses the standard library.
Any subjective Python question magically becomes objective if you can get a quote from Guido Van Rossum that confirms that "this is the one true way to do it"
"What would guide you in deciding to use a list comprehension instead?" I'm not introspective enough to answer this question. I don't know why I decide anything.
Maybe there's a little goblin in my head pulling levers.
I think most NorthAm types of the right age can probably rattle off a half-dozen or so eight-ball answers even if they never owned one. "Signs point to yes" is immediately recognizable as a reference.