now that it's closed, should i delete my answer? not sure on what the custom is for that (posted it so that some point fiend didn't just copy/paste my comment into an answer for dem internet points)
My oldest friend moved three states away and clearly wants to try to bond with his hometown chums by playing Overwatch, but my computer does not meet the technical specs for even the lowest graphical settings.
I wonder if I can convince him to buy me a new one.
user559633
depends why he moved, i suppose. e.g. if i move to venice because "the supercar laws are far more relaxed there", then it's a reasonable ask vs. if i moved to newark because i couldn't afford rent anywhere else
As @vaultah pointed out I would need the question to be backed by python SO community. I do not have the prerequisite reputation required to post. Then can somebody tell the community about this question and see if they can back it? I think this pretty constructive and maybe accepted by community. Thanks in advance — Abhinav Garg2 mins ago
Speaking of NJ being stereotypically awful. The TV show Steven Universe takes place in an alternate universe where, among other things, all the names of the states are different. PA is called "Keystone" and the characters live in "Delmarva"*. At one point, they travel north, and one character remarks "what is this awful place?" I immediately knew a New Jersey joke was about to occur, but wondered how they could do it with a fantastical alternate name. But they ended up just calling it "Jersey"
So it seems that NJ is some kind of nexus of terribleness, a constant axis about which the multiverse rotates.
where are the general breaking points for python version IE... 2.7 and 3 are defiantly different now I assume as far as backward compatibility that 3.5 is not really the same as 3... so the conclusion I am coming or seeing is every time the "X.Y" Y version changes you better really go back and look what your doing? Would this be a proper assumption?
Yeah I am just making sure that I have things setup right since I had a whole bunch of code cross referencing libs between 2.7 to 3.5 and I kinda made a whole mess
@PM2Ring I have no issues with OP's intentions (well, it is a bit presumptuous to assume that their blatantly off-topic question should be kept as an exception), but that shouldn't affect the post's score at all
well thats good to hear because these day I only run linux, Microsoft can pull there heads from there... and I like apple but I don't have 2gs every-time I want a decent machine.
@Scribbles @MorganThrapp ^ "in Boolean contexts, a time object is considered to be true if and only if, after converting it to minutes and subtracting utcoffset() (or 0 if that’s None), the result is non-zero."
"Before Python 3.5, a datetime.time object was considered to be false if it represented midnight in UTC. This behavior was considered obscure and error-prone and has been removed in Python 3.5. See issue 13936 for full details."
@MorganThrapp how'd you answer this guy: "There is no plan, other than the BDFL asking for a survey of what is happening with code that relies on this in the real world. FTR I'm completely against this change. I see no reason to change something that's been in use for maybe nine years and does what it's documented to do, based on somebody's expectations, failure to read the documents and buggy code..."
"... To me it would be a nail in the coffin of Python's very conservative, and to me extremely proper, view of maintaining backward compatibility"
@AnttiHaapala Can you verify if the change I suggested looks okay, w.r.t pty? I read about that, after having that discussion with you. So, I have a feeling that the solution might be shaky.
Trying to put text over a progress bar in tkinter. I've tried using Label and Canvas using create text. Both of these solutions render a default background. Afaik, you can't set them to have a transparent background. Which of course looks yucky with the progress bar disappearing behind the label. Anyone ever done something like this before?
On balance though it's probably good that the community cycles. People can burn out after too long reading gruesomely awful questions, but there are always newbies to take up the slack.
@user2290820 Quite an unclear post there. And exactly what Fizzy mentioned, Don't link your newly posted questions here. See 3rd point here github.com/sopython/sopython-site/issues/…
hrmph. I can't think of a good way to do this. I have an array and a pointer to a "current" element. I want to get 5 elements, where I get the current, two to the right, and two to the left. But if it is at the beginning or end, just get the current and 4 to the left/right
> A policeman sees a drunk man searching for something under a streetlight and asks what the drunk has lost. He says he lost his keys and they both look under the streetlight together. After a few minutes the policeman asks if he is sure he lost them here, and the drunk replies, no, and that he lost them in the park. The policeman asks why he is searching here, and the drunk replies, "this is where the light is."
"the ground by this lamppost is well lit, so I'll look for my keys here" = "this room about python is well-populated, so I'll ask my Travis CI question here"
One day a student came to Moon and said: “I understand how to make a better garbage collector. We must keep a reference count of the pointers to each cons.”
Moon patiently told the student the following story:
“One day a student came to Moon and said: ‘I understand how to make a better garbage collector...
If I'm honest, the lamppost parable doesn't apply perfectly here because it is conceivable that one of us would know something about this Travis guy, whereas the keys won't be under the lamppost under any circumstances.
Other than circumstances like "an eagle picks up the keys, then drops them near the lamppost"
Likewise, a convenience store clerk might know a small amount about financial planning, but it's still not advisable to ask him about it.
Someone else's keys might. To my astonishment I opened up someone else's locker at the gym with my combination a few weeks ago. (Admittedly I realized later it was more likely that he'd forgotten to actually close the lock and I didn't notice because I wasn't paying attention.)
user559633
lol same, but i had to tow the car and sell it for parts before realizing that i had walked up to a honda and not a volkswagen
Bah, Phys Rev B submission page is sooo helpful. "EPS format preferred", it says. Preferred. I go and upload a few pdfs, check their autogenerated version, "conversion successful", yay! But the generated pdf only contains the first 2 pages, their conversion silently croaked on the first figure:P
Hi. Anyone knows how to create a decorator, labeled, "@Required", telling the developers that this function is truly required when subclassing a class/object?
Abstract base classes already do what you want. abstractmethod has nothing to do with letting you call the method with super; you can do that anyway. Instead, any methods decorated with abstractmethod must be overridden for a subclass to be instantiable:
>>> class Foo(object):
... __metaclas...
@Scribbles you might want to improve that question, it's not informative at all as to what you're trying to do or what problem you're having. Remove all narration as well, it's irrelevant.
Also, I can't reproduce your issue. I just created a database, installed mysqlclient, opened a connection with both it and sqlalchemy, and had no problem executing a query.
> Currently, MySQLdb only runs on Python 2 and development has been stopped. mysqlclient is fork of MySQLdb and provides Python 3 support as well as some bugfixes.
"Giving me a problem" is not a valid problem description.