@poke and @AaronHall thanks so much, i really should frequent chat rooms more, cool! thought it was kinda like IRC where all members know each other, form a gang, talk to each other and don't reply to anyone else unless he begs so much for it.... but it's cool in here
@davidism I totally agree with you. But, I gotta make sure my script runs across all platforms (and most of my friends, who don't seem to understand the power of Linux, get addicted to Windows, just because they can play games in it) -_-
@DSM John Galt is an anarchist-libertarian-type from an Ayn Rand story nobody should ever read. His claim to fame is vanishing from a weird fictional America run by trains with mind-control powers and slowly abducting millionaires and bookies.
@Augusta: yeah, I was dropping the "who is John Galt?" question, and was insufferably pleased with myself that I managed to find a natural way to fit it into a conversation..
I actually managed to meet my numbers this month. Now comes the difficult job of not having much to do but having to look like I'm busy until Wednesday
Are post titles not supposed to name the language they're in, or does it matter? I've seen corrections over it, but I have yet to determine if anyone actually cares.
@poke: I think you misunderstood. The string "This is what actually happened here!" is inside the catching function in bing() and "Nothing happens here too!" is inside the catching function in __main__. If it does catch it in bing() (and it does), then why should it propagate into the catching function in __main__? That shouldn't happen, right?
@Waffle It’s because the EOFError is raised first, and only then the CTRL+C is interpreted, causing the KeyboardInterrupt—but at that time, bing() completed
@Augusta One reason that might not be immediately obvious is that SE puts the most popular tag into the title anyway for SOE purposes. See google.com/search?q=Why+is+[]+faster+than+list%3F for an example.
def bing():
try:
raw_input()
except EOFError:
print 'EOFError is caught'
print 'but this line is not printed'
try:
bing()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print 'the keyboard interrupt is faster'
@AaronHall When pressing CTRL+C, the EOFError seems to be raised first while raw_input is still waiting on the user input. Just after EOFError is caught, the CTRL+C seems to be interpreted in the input loop to raise a KeyboardInterrupt
The EOFError is still raised first, so a KeyboardInterrupt is never caught at the same point. And then after the EOFError is handled, the interrupt comes through. So that would happen one step later
@Joran As per above, it seems that EOFError is raised first before the CTRL+C is handled by the input loop. So after catching the EOFError, the interrupt comes making it caught in the next step
I used to hate this kind of Windows nonsense, but that doesn't make it any less irritating when you have to first understand it and then find a way to program around it
Does it make any difference if you put a pass statement (at the same level as the try) so that the function is returning from its main logic rather than dropping off the end of an error handler then dropping out the end of a function? Scraping the barrel for ideas here ...
@AaronHall As I said before, the intial exception thrown that stops raw_input is not a keyboard interrupt. If you remove the KeyboardInterrupt from the except in bing, you get the same result (on my machine).
@holdenweb It doesn’t make much sense though that IDLE catches no exception at all (although I can no longer reproduce that situation now…)
I’d argue that the less output a keyboard interrupt generates, the better it is, because usually, it should be a way to terminate your program gracefully.
So, I'm learning that applying layer after layer of weird hacks and makeshift corrections to a module continuously as the night goes on is a mistake for reason that my comments become less and less coherent as dawn approaches.
I have never heard the term unittest before; would it be appropriate to assume that the idea is to write the smallest section of code needed to try a particular block, leaving out the working bits elsewhere?
i'm trying to convert a command line program to a gui program in pyside and i'm having some issues with my functions, in the command line program i have a lot of functions and i know exactly how to call each of them after the previous one is executed
will it be good practice to merge all my small functions into one super function and call it at once?
I've kind of picked this up on my own and I have no idea what good data structure is supposed to look like, so I've guessed my way through it based on whim, presumption, and other peoples' examples, not in that order. My code is very probably a joke.
I need to get the ceiling value for a float. But it doesn't feel right to import math just for a single operation. Should I use something like val = int(val) + bool(val%1)? Is this question as stupid and petty as I feel it is?
(Also that code doesn't work with negatives but whatever. =_= )
Grim spectres of users departed, bound to this namespace by wrongs left unrighted, return to haunt these halls, sorrowfully decrying past injustices; * "Why was my question closed!!!?" *
@ZeroPiraeus Going through the conversation once more, you had suggested something that I've missed. It is [Ctrl-Z] and [RETURN] that offers the EOFError
So, I've coded pretty frequently for a few years now in a bunch of different languages, but have never taken an academic Computer Science class
I'm now taking one focused on Java—and learning about "garbage collectors" and pointers and all these things that were once magic
That being said: How does Python deal with its pointers? I assume that it has pointers, we, as people who write the code, just aren't required to explicitly deal with them