tuples? Yeah, commas define them, parentheses are required where it would otherwise be ambiguous what is tuple and what is another meaning for a comma.
hmm joran your method gave me this output. 00 b'31362c0d0a31372c0d0a31382c0d0a31392c0d0a32302c0d0a32312c0d0a32322c0d0a32332c0d0a32342c0d0a32352c0d0a32362c0d0a32372c0d0a32382c0d0a32392c0d0a33302c0d0a33312c0d0a302c0d0a312c0d0a322c0d0a332c0d0a342c0d0a352c0d0a362c0d0a372c0d0a382c0d0a392c0d0a31302c0d0a31312c0d0a31322c0d0a31332c0d0a31342c0d0a31352c0d0a' 00
@davidism I'm really interested in plugin-like sources, but I guess if I google hard enough it shouldn't be too difficult to figure it out. The include blueprints from a seperate plugins folder should be a good start...
@JoranBeasley - The commas define a tuple when they are not being used for something else in the language. For example, import os, sys does not make a tuple and neither does [1,2,3]. It is the same for how : makes a slice lst[1:2] and also makes dictionary items {1:2}. Python is just reusing a limited set of keyboard symbols.
I don't approve of moving "syntax error" into SyntaxError in edits. I've seen people write "syntax error" when really it's a NameError, and they think "syntax error" is "a problem with my code".
Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Users\Death_Dealer\Desktop\Data.py", line 4359, in <module> anim_1_write = (" 00 ".join(str(anim_1_hex) .split)) TypeError: can only join an iterable
hmm it print but still doesnt apply padding. : / b'31362c0d0a31372c0d0a31382c0d0a31392c0d0a32302c0d0a32312c0d0a32322c0d0a32332c0d0a32342c0d0a32352c0d0a32362c0d0a32372c0d0a32382c0d0a32392c0d0a33302c0d0a33312c0d0a302c0d0a312c0d0a322c0d0a332c0d0a342c0d0a352c0d0a362c0d0a372c0d0a382c0d0a392c0d0a31302c0d0a31312c0d0a31322c0d0a31332c0d0a31342c0d0a31352c0d0a'
This also teaches an important lesson about accepting help from strangers on the Internet: don't say "wow, thanks for all your help :-)" before you actually test the code to confirm that it does what you need ;-)
@joran im sorry but im not sure what you mean but i dont have spaces in my input. there are clearly three spaces in the example you wrote. and its fairly identical to my example question.
A multiple-choice question where the Nth answer is "none of the above" and the N+1th answer is "all of the above"... and "all of the above" is correct -__-
I am starting to question whether this site is truly "The ultimate place for testing what you have learned"
Working with a bytestring which looks like b'31362c0d0a31372c0d0a31382c0d0a31392` doesn't make much sense. That's a bytestring whose bytes are ascii hex representations, which suggests some deep confusion about the difference between bytestrings, strings, bytes, hex representations, and possibly a few other things.
im new XD i dont even know what a repr is, jesus. the supplyed answer's havnt given me the output i want so i asked some other questions here. go ahead and be annoyed and dislike me or whatever.
@Death_Dealer Understandable that you don't know about repr, but it's not necessary to know for the purposes of the exercise. We only wanted you to execute the code print(repr(open("my_file.txt").read(50))) and tell us what it says.
@Death_Dealer This has nothing to do with learning Python, but you might give a better impression if you tried to type more deliberately, such as capitalizing "I".
@JoranBeasley I never suggest that as the only reason, but when you have nothing else going for your basic questions, at least seeming to care enough to speak well helps.
@joran I cant stress enough how gratefull i am to you guys for helping me but im new t coding and this site. Gotta give a little lee way here, im learning the internel regulations of this site the hard way: /
> I can't stress enough how grateful I am to you guys for helping me, but I'm new to coding and this site. Have to give a little leeway here, I'm learning the internal regulations of this site the hard way.
@Joran: but it looks like the file itself is basically just a text list of numbers, not bytes, so I'm pretty sure the OP is confused about the goal here (whatever that be.)
@Death_Dealer I dont think you are going to be able to get this to work ... it seems like you are missing some pieces of the puzzle that makes minecraft animations work
One day, when I'm old and wise, I may understand why it makes sense to want to insert a null byte between the ascii digit "6" and a comma, and between that comma and a newline. That day is far from today.
Back in the early days of Minecraft, I published a hacked client that let you fly around the map. Worked pretty well until they closed the loophole a year later.
My killer feature was "airplane" style ascent/descent. You'd just move in whatever direction you looked. All my competitors had elevator style "hold X to move directly up" controls, which wasn't nearly as cinematic.
Ah, ive been decrypting this file type for some time now. My script can make a functional tp with custom animation in about 3 seconds. thanks to all the help stackoverflow has provided.
Ok, the jargon file defines "hack" as "1. n. Originally, a quick job that produces what is needed, but not well." which doesn't necessarily imply "fragile" the way my definition did.
I figured out a while ago that perfectionism is just an excuse for fear, hesitation, uncertainty, etc. but I have yet to internalize that discovery and Get More Things Done
this is actually the first script ive ever written if you guys could'nt tellXD its 9000 lines and climbing. i didnt know how to use for loops when i started. I will have to go back and clean stuff up. still runs almost instantaneously, without error^_^
I'm always really disappointed that I lost all my programming work from when I was a kid. All those Game Maker projects from middle school that I never finished. Somehow I lost the directory with everything in it.
I was pretty well organized from the start somehow, all my projects were under one folder, had a bunch of common scripts I would copy over, etc. No version control though, and my backups were to external hard drives.
52 upvotes and no one pointed out that 'print_function' in __future__ does not actually work... should be hasattr('print_function', __future__) — Antti Haapala48 secs ago
Initially, whenever the snake moved, it had to use pixel-getting to follow the body to the tail so it could remove a segment and add it to the head. So the longer your snake was, the slower the game ran.
@AdamSmith I see what you mean. i never thought of myself as "professional" or anything with my code. i literally was on codecademy learning my first bit of python like 2 months agoXD
Ya.. i dont use it anymore. i still struggle sometimes: / im getting better tho. ive been told by a friend of mine that codes that my stuff i clean so at least i got that going for me:)
@AnttiHaapala I'm actually partial to codecademy. I think it teaches a great breadth of knowledge. My only complaint is a lack of teaching on best practices and "How else could you approach this problem" thoughts.
@AnttiHaapala and (like most online programming courses) the stuff is out of date. Last I checked they don't have support for Python3 yet
as a beginner to coding, the site helped me get a grasp on what coding is. The only complaint i have was it cant apply the lessons to an applicable project. The application of the knowledge i obtained there was very difficult. @AnttiHaapala i didnt learn any 2.X syntax from there. everything i learned works flawlessly in IDLE.