@JonClements I like the way it starts with a goal the course won't fulfil Want to sleep with supermodels in 2015? Learn the fundamentals of asking out unattractive women: drunk ones, ugly ones & More!
@DSM quick one (somewhat related to our discussion yesterday): am I correct in thinking that if you aggregate using 'mean' it will use the normal pandas mean (which skips nans). Regarding this answer.
Word question of the day: I've just read that "eavestrough" is a Canadianism, when I thought it was just a common word. Do the non-Canadians here use it?
And yes, that does create an ambiguity between the kind of gutter that goes along the edge of your house's roof, and the kind of gutter that runs between a sidewalk and a street.
No, down in the dumps is being sad. Down in the gutters is when you've lost everything and are drinking cheap alcohol out of paper backs and sleeping, well, in gutters, and on park benches.
Counter-top is a Magic: The Gathering deck archetype, characterized by its frequent use of counterspells and the card Sensei's Divining Top. Generally considered a miserable experience to play against.
Now that I think about it, the archetype name may have been specifically chosen to be a kind of pun on the word "counter-top", even though there's no real parallel in meaning.
MTG has a long history of deck names that have nothing to do with the deck. There are a good half dozen popular tournament strategies named after breakfast cereals for no reason.
Okay, how about this: something like a pencil, and shaped just like an ordinary pencil, but it writes different colours and you use it for sketching in school. It's not the waxy similar tool that children use. What do you call it?
"Unlike graphite and charcoal pencils, colored pencils’ cores are wax-based..." Woah, really? I thought it was, like, charcoal plus food coloring or something, I don't know.
When you're ordering a hot dog or hamburger or something, and there are many options for condiments and additions, and you want them all to be added, how do you express that desire?
What level of profanity is "wanker"? Like, PG-13? If it ever appeared in a Harry Potter film, then a good percentage of Americans will now be familiar with it.
@Zero: there's a bit of a distinction between EI (employment insurance) and "welfare" (income assistance), with the latter usually associated with "dole".
"I was on the blower to me old man the other day. He was saying how he'd had a barney with his mate George after having a knees up down the Crown." -> "I was speaking with my Father on the phone. He explained that he'd had an argument with his friend George after a party at the Crown public house"
Most terms aren't too hard to decipher using context clues. It's the contextless ones that are difficult. Like when someone comes up to you in class and says "have you got a spare rubber?"
@JonClements Not personally. I was just thinking of a bit on the Late Show where Emma Watson relayed that exact anecdote. I guess she was studying in America at the time?
"I was dossing around having a cuppa down t' caff t' other day. Waited donkey's years for the waitress to serve up, she was right cack-handed, faffing around. Anyway, this gobby git walks in, he goes "Cor Blimey! Did you see the kerfuffle across the road? Some Taff numpty is proper legless, been on the piss all day. Don't worry though, the old bill have sorted him out."
I'll leave the translation of that as an exercise for the reader.
A Canadian basketball podcast had a recurring "wanker of the week" routine, and when they became an NBA TV show they switched it to "worst of the week".
My primary concern with stifling speech of that type, is that in a hundred thousand years, every word imaginable will be in the "forbidden" pile due to the ever-running euphemism treadmill.
We have to overcome a number of apocalypse scenarios before we can get to "our word supply runs out", but that doesn't make it any less valid a concern!!!
@Kevin Some will most likely fall back out of the pile, you leather-jerkin, crystal-button, knot-pated, agate-ring, puke-stocking, caddis-garter, smooth-tongue, Spanish pouch.
Interesting fact: in certain parts of Yorkshire calling someone "cock" is considered a term of endearment. Example sentence "Hey up cock how is thee doing?"
But yes. Humanity's only hope is that euphemism recycling happens faster than the euphemism treadmill. It's hard to say whether that's the case, since we're living right at the birth of the age of political correctness. Ask again in a hundred years.
It's taken me the entire day, visiting several people and filling in several forms, to get one department in the university to transfer money to another department just so the second department can print my thesis out. Bureaucracy...
I guess if things really get dire we can just reset language and culture all together with some well placed cognitohazard devices, a la Fine Structure.
@Ffisegydd Johannesburg city planning department wouldn't let a piece of land be rezoned because the tenant, Johannesburg city, hadn't paid itself for its water and power
@Ffisegydd I know because my wife was the architect trying to get the rezoning pushed through
oh my god I just realized why it's not working... self._traverse_aux was supposed to be self._levelorder_aux, I feel so stupid... Thanks for your help! — Joey Zhang55 secs ago
I have a ASCII string = "abcdefghijk". I want to write this to a binary file in binary format using python.
I tried following:
str = "abcdefghijk"
fp = file("test.bin", "wb")
hexStr = "".join( (("\\x%s") % (x.encode("hex"))) for x in str)
fp.write(hexStr)
fp.close()
However, when I open the ...
What do you mean by "it"? Python? No, no promises. If you mean that CPython interns some small integers, yes, but that's entirely an accident and could change tomorrow.
has anyone seen behaviour other than what I described above in CPython? I understand it is implementation specific and should never be relied upon.
yeah ok
thats what I was getting at
is that small string interning does work like that (although there is no future guarantee of it continuing to work that way, and should certainly never be relied upon)
it was mostly trying to convince a user that 'a' is exactly equivelent to '\x61'
I just thrashed out 2**10, '010b' - and then was thinking ummm.... randint's inclusive isn't it?... was checking the docs... as was also thinking I recall seeing getrandbits or similar at some point :)
(so was getting there!)
That's my weekly upvotes just there, so I can not bother to answer for a while now :)
Notre Dame 69, Northeastern 65, even though that's a 3-seed versus a 14-seed and so ND should have won by fifteen. If I'm grouchier than normal over the next while, it's because I've caught the Madness.
@DSM umm... is "go lunch" a euphemism coupled with "decompress" (meaning unzip!?) - and yeah no, not sure I like where my mind's leading me here... I'll stop now...
Trying to decide whether to flag this as not an answer. It's effectively "wow that sounds hard, here's a link to a tutorial on something sort of related"