Stamppot (English: Mash pot) is a traditional Dutch dish made from a combination of potatoes mashed with one or several other vegetables or fruits.
These vegetable pairings traditionally include sauerkraut, endive, kale, spinach, turnip greens, or carrot and onion (the combination of the latter two is known as hutspot in the Netherlands and as wortelstoemp in Belgium). Leafy greens such as endive may be left raw and added to the potatoes only at the mashing stage. Some regional varieties of stamppot are made with fruit and potatoes, such as blauwe bliksem (blue lightning), made with pears, and...
Fun fact, did you know carrots used to be not of an orange colour?
During the 16th centory to create more patriotic feelings against the Spanish oppression farmers started cultivating carrots in memory of William of Orange. These became so popular that it is now the commonly accepted colour for them.
> The use of the same name for plants of a different genus or species is one of the lasting ambiguities inherited from the ancients, who were more apt to lump vegetables together according to how they were used, as in the case of the Roman propensity for treating carrots, parsnips, and parsley root as "pastinaca".
@davidism: thanks for cleaning up stackoverflow.com/questions/42294321/… a little. I do note that in pure SQLAlchemy the OP would have gotten an exception when they tried to use func.count() on a table object; I suspect that the Flask-SQLAlchemy wrapper there caused different behaviour.
@MartijnPieters I get an error with db.func.count(User) in Flask-SQLAlchemy, not sure how they didn't get it. The thing they're counting is a model, not a table, which behaves the same in both.
db = SQLAlchemy(app)
class User(db.Model):
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
f = db.func.count(User)
# sqlalchemy.exc.ArgumentError: Object <class '__main__.User'> is not legal as a SQL literal value
Hello people. I would like to ask an off-topic question (if I may): when you read a non-technical book (let us say Do Not Make Me Think). Do you read an other book in parallel or do you wait until finish that book first then start a new one? (I know it is personal question, but I just want to see how other developers behave). Thank you and have a nice day (I will read your answers if any, but I will not comment you back)
I am using spring boot to create restful api for our java project. But there is a little bit of python code too which I need to expose via an API. Any suggestions?? It needs to be simple as there will be only a couple of functionalites that I need to expose and the python code isn't more than a few lines so I don't want to spend lot of time with this
@AnttiHaapala it would be a bit an overkill for me to buy for the last three years. It's less than 2000 tweets. I ended up entering the search term and hold down PgDown until it reached the first post. It produced a 13 MB html file which I could scrape in R and produce a small report.
The search isn't exhaustive at the best of times. Even if you're analysing live from the streaming API it's still only a sample (method of sampling unclear) from the whole firehose. It's mega dollar to get access to the full firehose.
I suppose, if you're pullling a week at a time and only expecting a few thousand tweets then 180 requests every 15 minutes might be fine, though - I was dealing with millions when i did my PhD so trying to thread tweets from a while ago was exceedingly slow...
@Withnail the live api provides for a full tweet sample, which is known, it is milliseconds 657 - 666 of each second of tweets; and the full firehose is expensive but one can have a contract for cheaper (still expensive) with gnip to get filtered view on live streams...
@QueueOverflow: welcome to the room! Please read the room rules linked in the top right, particularly the section on asking questions. (As always, you'll probably have better luck on the main site -- more eyes.)
>>> print(chr(887))
Í·
>>> print(chr(888))
͸
>>> import unicodedata
>>> unicodedata.name(chr(887))
'GREEK SMALL LETTER PAMPHYLIAN DIGAMMA'
>>> unicodedata.name(chr(888))
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: no such name
I used the magic chcp 65001 command beforehand, which is why I'm not getting UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode character '\u0377' in position 1: character maps to <undefined>
Kevin'd on a day I'm not even working so I don't have that as an excuse. OTOH even though it's cooled down a lot it's still warm enough to justify doing a bunch of errands so I should probably face the world at some point today..
From marxin's output, I assume that repr(chr(887)) really doesn't have a "\u" escape code, on sane OSes with good Unicode support.
On Windows, it's another matter. I try to do >>> chr(887) and Python says "Ok, I'll go and fetch a "Í·" for you... Oops, you haven't got one. \u0377 will just have to do."
Then when I do x = repr(chr(887)), Python says "Ok, I'll take a "Í·" and put it inside some tick marks." And only afterwards, when I do print(x), does Python say "oops, you haven't got that character. '\u0377' will just have to do"
I feel like this gives an interesting peek into the system Python uses to send characters to stdout. In particular, the character sequence generated by repr isn't necessarily identical to the characters finally sent to your console. There must be at least some intermediary processing going on.
It's only thanks to this pants-on-head OS that we were able to move aside the curtain to glimpse the man pulling the levers.
The mystery is solved (kinda) but I am troubled. I used to think that repr could infallibly escape all escape sequences back into ordinary slashes and letters, but this is a clear counterexample (albeit one that's environment-dependent)
In an Abstract Base Class, is defining __init__ with the @abstractmethod decorator an anit-pattern? I have often seen IDEs complaining if I do not call super inside the __init__ method of a derived class. I want to know if these two things go well together, and if it is okay to omit the call to super in derived class, while keeping the abstractmethod in the base class.
I need to differentiate $$f(x)=e^7+\ln(4).$$
I know that $\dfrac d{dx}e^x = e^x$ and $\dfrac d{dx}\ln(x) = \dfrac {1}{x}$. I recently learned this, but I get stuck when it comes to solving this problem using real numbers. Can someone guide me with an example?
@ani.bose abstract methods don't enforce anything regarding the method signatures... it just prevents a class being init'd that doesn't implement all of them...
Every now and then I really want to break out the "I'm going to stop you there, I'm actually the maintainer." But this unimpressed face hides a lot of restraint.
But really, the only way that expression will every be false is if something is somehow equal to both 1 and 2. You could write a custom class that could do that, but... don't
In propositional logic and boolean algebra, De Morgan's laws are a pair of transformation rules that are both valid rules of inference. They are named after Augustus De Morgan, a 19th-century British mathematician. The rules allow the expression of conjunctions and disjunctions purely in terms of each other via negation.
The rules can be expressed in English as:
the negation of a conjunction is the disjunction of the negations; and
the negation of a disjunction is the conjunction of the negations;
or
the complement of the union of two sets is the same as the intersection of their complements...
elif direction == "S" and x - 1 >= 0 and y + 1 < 5:
if board[x][y] != "2" or board[x][y] !="1" : # check if the spot is empty for a ship
board[x][y] = "2"
if board[x][y + 1] != "2":
board[x][y + 1] = "2"
twoship = 2
playershiplist.append([x, y + 1])
break
>>> a = "0"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
>>> a = "1"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
>>> a = "2"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
>>> a = "3"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
I've always been disappointed that my family's Scottish accent didn't make it to my generation. My attempts to live in other countries where my accent would be the exotic one didn't turn out the way I was hoping.
I'm secretly ashamed that I can't produce even a poor quality South Jersey accent. I can't get properly immersed because my town is so close to the state line.
I don't have a strong accent association with OR. MT was to the south of me growing up so I know more about them and WA. Do you distinguish between "cot" and "caught"? "Wash" or "warsh"? "toe-tally" or "tyoetally"?
Let's see if I understand. (?==) matches, but does not consume, an equals sign. Then [a-zA-Z0-9.-]+ matches one or more letters/digits/dots/hyphens. But isn't this a contradiction? Those two together would only match a character that is both an equals sign and a letter/digit/dot/hyphen at the same time.