By convention, sure. Because we like things to be one-to-one, otherwise things get messy and break. If I graph x^0.5, I could most completely graph https://www.desmos.com/calculator/essw68z2bs ...at least in my opinion? Because both -2 and 2 squared equal 4
@wim it's a "reasonable definition" but fortunately there are more reasonable ones, including the status quo
Infinities make sense as limits, just as you said. But then inf*0 should only be made sense of in terms of limits. But as I showed, the product of a series that tends to inf and one that tends to 0 can tend to any of {0,inf,arbitrary real number}. So there's no unique proper value to assign to a generic "inf*0". If you want numeric result, NaN is the only sane choice.
So @wim what if your inf*0 is instead inf/inf? Which inf is infer?
this can arise depending on precedence/grouping
@toonarmycaptain no, not "everything breaks". It's just that by definitions functions can have at most one value (but not necessarily 1-1: negative values don't have a real sqrt for instance)
so why are you showing me a graph of not-a-function when we're talking about the function sqrt(x)?
@AndrasDeak Isn't x = y^2 is a valid function? What I graphed is simply the function of x = y^2 rewritten with respect to x, right? x = y^2 shows all of the y values that when squared give you a particular x value.
Infinities make sense as limits, just as you said. But then inf*0 should only be made sense of in terms of limits. But as I showed, the product of a series that tends to inf and one that tends to 0 can tend to any of {0,inf,arbitrary real number}. So there's no unique proper value to assign to a generic "inf*0". If you want numeric result, NaN is the only sane choice.
@toonarmycaptain x-> "number y for which y^2 is x" is not a function: for every x you get two values, but a function in the mathematical sense maps every input to at most one output
I'm trying to add a post-install task to Python distutils as described in How to extend distutils with a simple post install script?. The task is supposed to execute a Python script in the installed lib directory. This script generates additional Python modules the installed package requires.
My...
@MorganThrapp: adorable animals are a weakness of mine. I sometimes use "look at cat pictures" in meetings as an example of what I'll spend my days doing if certain tasks I'm waiting on aren't done. My colleagues only think I'm joking..
I am putting this in the config management repo, but it's also nice to have pip do it automatically for local dev and jenkins not to have to be orchestrated too
I know how to do it with that. But I don't want local dev to have to run ansible / salt / puppet
wim, I don't put post install at that level usually. We usually use whatever orchestration even locally. The one thing we do differentiate with local is we will bring up fake services, ant what not to bring up things faster just for local dev
One of our newer projects @wim will use docker-compose yaml files that differ based on what environment they are deployed own. So they bring up the appropriate container when in that environment. With those compose files you can put in your post install commands too
well, for whatever DockerFile it will end up using, the commands will be there
ugh...I hate finding bad typos after the edit timer runs out.....
You can be both. Do a split model like GitLab et al, or a pay-for-support model like Red Hat. I'm not sure how well either of them would work for Docker, though. THey've gotten stuck in a weird place
Wanting to be able to sort heterogeneous containers isn't a crazy thing to want, but in retrospect we should have just had some kind of helper key function to provide a "sane-enough-for-everyday-work" ordering.
I view it as "multiple pretty good reasons, with at least one really good reason" but not one big "it's really important that we break compat for this"
3 feels like it encourages mixin-style classes more than true multiple inheritance, which I think is a good thing. But if you used multiple inheritance heavily I can understand the annoyance there
I'm probably in the minority about this, but I think it's stupid how the new-style MRO in combination with super() can make you accidentally call functions you've never seen before
class A:
def f(self):
print("I'm doing something useful")
class B(A):
def f(self):
super().f()
class C(A):
def f(self):
raise Oops
class D(B,C):pass
B().f() # works
D().f() # doesn't work