I just had a look at a rational number class I wrote in Python 1.4 back in 1998... it's not pretty. Eg, it uses type instead of isinstance and the now-obsolete dunder method __coerce__. And my source uses tabs for indentation...
TestingYard$ python3 Wikip.py "ಠ_ಠ"
Look of disapproval[13] The Unicode character ಠ is from the Kannada alphabet and can be called differently in HTML notation: ಠ and ಠ (for Unicode)
How can I loop through data like this in python? I think it's json but json.loads isn't handling it as expected (day 1 of python coding, go easy) pastebin.com/6Sc8snra
@Silver89 I assume that you've programmed in one or more other languages before. If so you should check out the official Python tutorial. It's aimed at people with previous programing experience (preferably in C or one of its relatives), and it doesn't take that long to work through. Also see sopython.com/wiki/What_tutorial_should_I_read%3F
Does it count as "spotted" if I blindly pasted it into a python file and ran it and got SyntaxError: Non-ASCII character '\x92' in file C:\python\test.py on line 1, but no encoding declared; see http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0263.html for details before I noticed anything was wrong?
@Silver89 My condolences. :) Python will seem a bit strange at first, but once you've learned to organize things in the Python way, I'm sure you will appreciate it.
@RobertGrant Understood. OTOH, do we really want ex-PHP programmers going straight into Python? Shouldn't they go through some sort of detox clinic first? :)
OTOH there's nothing stopping me from using that terminology in here, other than the possibility that no one will understand it. But when have I let a little thing like "comprehensibility" stop me?
On a vaguely related note, what's up with those questions with strange data structures, eg lists of single-item dicts? I guess that it's an attempt at making a list with named fields, but it seems ugly and inefficient to me.
Aw, OP didn't like my technically correct but slow solution, because it's slow... I guess I can't blame him. I wouldn't want to incur a performance hit on every single attribute access, either.
This answer dealt with the OP's stated problem correctly, but totally ignored the old Why do my Tkinter widgets get stored as None? problem that infests the OP's code. But he fixed his answer pretty quickly after I commented. :)
@AndrasDeak I understood what you meant. To be more proper you would say something like "Hope you all get well soon". Something like that. When you say "All of you get well". It's like you are demanding we all get well.
Hey @inspectorG4dget: Here's a song you may enjoy. The late great Aussie vocalist & teacher Kerrie Biddell performing the Tony King song Is that Jazz on daytime TV 20 years ago.
@PM2Ring: good find. That's almost a perfect example of a guy who's genuinely trying to learn and Shaw's crazy pacing has put him in a frustrating situation.
This has been bothering me for a little while, and I can't for the life of me remember the answer. So say I have two variables: name = "Matt"; url = "mattdmo.com". I can put them in a list: l = [name, url]. I can print() the list, and see the strings. However, if I change one of the variables: name = "MattDMo", the list still contains the original strings. Is there a way to make a list of object identifiers, so as the object reference changes the list updates?
@PM2Ring There's a single thing I don't understand regarding LPTHW: why do people want to learn Python the hard way, and why do they complain if it's difficult?
after all, it's not titled "Learn python in a straightforward way"
@Ffisegydd right. I want the list to contain name and url, not "Matt" and "mattdmo.com". So if name changes, the list changes. Is that just because I'm using strings and not lists or dicts or something?
@AndrasDeak My guess: people expect it to be some kind of boot-camp style of teaching. And they want that because they respond well to that kind of environment. Zed has the sergeant-major persona down pat, but his boot-camp is not very well-organized, so people don't emerge from it with the skills they expect. He works them hard, but they don't get the rewards they expect from getting pushed hard like that.
"foo" creates a string object, the literal does; when you modify that string into something else, e.g. by slicing it, you are creating a new string object.
@Ffisegydd The assignment does not create the new string; the assignment just changes what the name references. The new string exists before the assignment.
Everyone knows that you have to put forward effort to learn something. Zed wants you to think you'll only put forward that effort if you're using his book.
A similar thing occurs in tuples IIRC. You can make a tuple of lists which is immutable but then modify the list because it is mutable. So it's still the same tuple (as it is the same collection of objects with reference X) but the list has changed.
In [31]: a = [1,2,3]
In [32]: b = [4,5,6]
In [33]: c = [a, b]
In [34]: a.append(10)
In [35]: a
Out[35]: [1, 2, 3, 10]
In [36]: c
Out[36]: [[1, 2, 3, 10], [4, 5, 6]]
Right. So, getting back to my original problem, is there any way (besides a custom class) of making a container that contains the identifier and whatever object it happens to be pointing to at the time? I'm guessing not.
@MattDMo You guess correctly. Python doesn't have pointers. In fact, it doesn't even have variables in the sense of a named region of RAM that you store stuff in. It has objects and names.
@poke: in my defence I don't think I had even read the question before one of you guys linked it, and I can't remember if I read the comment before the question or not. But as soon as I see AttributeErrors, I think "typo", "wrong object", "shadowing", in roughly that order.
Eh actually maybe not. I was hoping you could get some decent speed from a cluster, kinda like the plucky-little-pi-that-could.
Apparently this is not the case, they're really, really slow.
> So how does it perform? Well, I loaded it up with slightly over 300 Mbytes of text data and ran wordcount across 3 non-overclocked worker nodes. It took 23 minutes. The same data running on my Macbook Air (SSD disk) in psuedo-mode took 1 minute 19 seconds.
I don't think all "I have working code but it's ugly, is there a better way?"-questions are necessarily "code review" questions, as such. i.e. this one is okay (but a duplicate).
I can imagine "would be better on SO than codereview" applying for a question where OP has functional code, but is riddled with 'workarounds' that are symptomatic of PEBCAK
In which case the root problem is in OP's understanding of language concepts, rather than the code
Unrelated. I've seen two posts today that could have been dupe-closed using my "put text anywhere you want" canonical post. If only I had actually written it. #regret
Though I think the case when someone has working code full of WTFs and they're looking to improve it even though they don't understand programming... is probably more rare than getting struck by lightning, in a tornado, and winning the lottery at the same time
We occasionally get questions like this one where OP asks "how do I go up a line on the console?" or "how do I overwrite text I've already written?" or "how do I put a character at position (5,10) on the console?".
@WayneWerner I dunno, that sounds like me when I first started programming. I had a vague idea of what I needed to do, but not enough where I wasn't taking the toy plastic hammer that I found and using it to pound in screws, staples, pipe fittings, etc. I knew there were other tools, but all of them made my brain hurt, so I just stuck with the plastic hammer. I don't think it's that uncommon.
I am very slowly putting together an authoritative Q&A post that seeks to answer all of these questions simultaneously, in a way that is applicable to any platform.
I have code for all the [todo - insert X code here] bits, but they all just write "Hello, world" five spaces from the left and ten spaces from the top.
Which isn't really something that OPs specifically want to do? I'd like something actually useful.
OTOH if I spend an extra dozen lines writing something flashy, maybe readers will think "ugh I just need the most basic code possible for changing the position of the cursor, you are just bogging me down with a demo that prints a flashing "EAT AT JOE'S sign""
Also there's a little problem that these all position the cursor absolutely in reference to the upper-left corner of the screen, when a sizable portion of OPs actually need relative positioning. Ex "I want to go up two lines from where I am now".
For approaches like ctypes, that would require another fifty lines of code. For approaches like ANSI escape sequences, it's flat-out impossible.
I expect the majority of OPs would be happy to have just absolute positioning, and would be willing to refactor their existing code to use it instead of holding out for a relative approach. But then I could hardly call my post "authoritative" then.
Oh, here it is. "ESC[#A moves cursor up # lines". Admittedly, I only researched that approach for like two minutes.
Ok, this is good. So it's only ctypes that's a nightmare.
I'm willing to have exactly one code sample that's horrible. It will act as a duck that makes the user think "well I'll just use one of the sane approaches, then"