"Sure, you get to interpret the requirements as you see fit, but don't you think that your interpretation should remain consistent within your answer unless you point out that you're doing otherwise?". Ok, you got me there.
And humid enough that it fogged up my car's instrument panel, which I don't think has ever happened before. I had the window rolled down, but still
Dashboard? Whatever you call the part that shows you how much gas you have and how fast you're going, as distinct from the place that has the buttons for the radio and air conditioning.
We had a bit of freezing rain here in Indiana this weekend but nothing to crazy. I wish I could have that weather @Kevin is having. Or even better I want davidism's weather. Im sure its nice out there
It's warm but rainy. I haven't seen the sun in three days.
Maybe that's why I cleaned my bathroom.
"Clearly the sun has exploded", says the animal hindbrain. "Get your affairs in order before the Earth freezes, so alien archaeologists don't laugh at your messy living quarters"
Why the animal hindbrain has evolved to have a response to a total extinction event, I'm not sure. Natural selection makes odd choices sometimes.
And we know that modern archaeologists actually found invaluable cultural insights from Pompeiian graffiti, so maybe I should just leave everything as-is.
If I were to write a history book this would be the cover picture. It will for sure get kids interested in what else lies within the pages of my book haha
@Kevin I think of "dashboard" as the entire panel at the front of the car, especially the "shelf" where you put your sunglasses and then they slide off when you brake too hard.
"instrument panel" seems to describe the area with the odometer, etc. Not sure if there is a better name for just that section.
I took a college course on state machines, which included a couple of days coverage of "formal" regexes (i.e. nothing but character groups, pipe, and star). Then I read Python's re documentation like three times.
They used it in my course every once in awhile but never really explained it all. All I can remember from my classes is the power of regex inside of Vi. My prof could do so many cool things with it all.
It's just like any other programming language where if you look uncomprehendingly at all the semicolons and curly brackets and think "golly I could never put all this together myself" then it will be a self-fulfilling prophecy
Question on this regex stuff. Why is this different output? I would assume group(0) would getting the first element from the tuple returned by groups()?
The docs say that groups "Return[s] a tuple containing all the subgroups of the match, from 1 up to however many groups are in the pattern". So it skips group #0.
>>> categories = [1, 2, "", 0, [], 6]
>>> for category in categories:
... if category:
... print("passed:", category)
... else:
... print("Did not pass:", category)
...
passed: 1
passed: 2
Did not pass:
Did not pass: 0
Did not pass: []
passed: 6
Terrible thing is I am developing an API for Python, I started learning about 6 hours ago. Our Python guy backstabbed me by resigning. Though I am happy, I am learning something new, I think the new python recruit we will have will go through pain I created.
@rupinderjeet: Having resigned myself from positions in the past I don't think that resigning is necessarily backstabbing, but I'm glad you get to enjoy learning Python. :-)
I just got two identical emails, one a forward of the other, with a lot of autogenerated boilerplate and inside them "MediumCanadianCity: No Updates / LargeCanadianCity: No Updates". Thanks, guys!
I don't know if "late answer with no additional info" might be grounds for a flag, especially if it's probably not plagiarism since the solution is somewhat straightforward
I find it odd that this answer continued to accumulate upvotes even after I mentioned that it doesn't calculate the correct answer. stackoverflow.com/a/48752998/4014959 But I can't complain, since I won the accept. :)
@ZackTarr I don't like calling .group etc directly on the result returned by re.search. It's fine if you can guarantee that there will always be a match, but if there isn't a match you get none instead of a Match object, and then your .group call will fail since None (obviously) doesn't have a .group method. So do something like
m = re.search("plan(.*)", query,re.DOTALL)
if m:
from_to_plan = m.group(1)
else:
# Oops! no match
@wim Neat! OTOH, for lists this small, the Numpy overheads probably outweigh the Numpy speed advantage.
As for itertools, your general disdain for that module is well-known. ;)
@wim Rightio. I have nothing against Numpy, but it's not a standard module, so if the OP hasn't specified Numpy then they should be given code that doesn't use Numpy. Of course, there's nothing wrong with showing how to do it with Numpy, when appropriate.
This one's a little more vague advice, but: when composing a multiline output, my preference is to put them all into a list and print them all at once with print("\n".join(lines)) rather than manually iterating through them and printing "\n" + whatever and having special logic to avoid printing an extra newline at the beginning or end etc etc etc... It's just easier IMO
It's not completely trivial to integrate that into your code since you have to sprinkle in froms and wheres too, but think about it anyway
@MooingRawr Not as far as I know, apart from that 1 rep newbie who was whining about people not doing his homework for him, but he obviously doesn't have the power to downvote.
OTOH, I guess it's possible that there's some answer I commented on that got downvoted by someone else, and the answerer assumed it was me doing the downvoting.
THe loss of a measly 2 points doesn't really worry me, it's just a minor annoyance when a decent answer gets a downvote it doesn't deserve.
Unrelated: I wonder what kind of sleazy PR horror we'll get on 2018.07.31, the 10th anniversary of SO (at least judging by the registration date of Jeff and Joel)
hey guys i created some python code, but my functions seems to be pretty complex and I am looking for a way to write this better, is somebody willing to help me on that ? :) As well posted my code into question but got no answer :(
@ThomasJohnson we generally don't want users posting their recent questions here. Maybe give it a few days, and if it doesn't gain traction feel free to post your question here. Also we don't really encourage asking the same question here from the site since it will split up answers, and what not. :\
Hi Kevin, yes code works well, I am just thinking couz i read somewhere that having very complex functions is not very good so I tried to split this up, but not sure if i did it right way and code is like that more readable ... problem is that my python experience is very limited so maybe it seems like very beginner type of question to most of people I am working with python for like few weeks ... I tried to post this on code review as well, but some folks just edited it but nobody replied
i have nested loop of 3 level in my function but somehow I am not able to split it, so not sure if I should just leave it like that or do something with it