@Ajit honestly I don't like this use of a parameter that's just a flag, I would return true in the else block of the exception handling instead of introducing this parameter
"Don't ask for answers to your recent Stack Overflow questions. Those who can answer are already watching the queue on the main site." "If your question is eligible for a bounty (>= 48 hours old) and hasn't received a useful response, then you may link to it."
So my current understanding of the situation is this: The reason why you're in favor of keeping the python-2.7 tag is because it makes the question easier to discover for people who also use python 2. Okay. But wouldn't it be better to have all the answers - python 3 as well as python 2 - in the same place?
How far would you take it? Two categories, python-2 and python-3? Or should we take it further and also separate python-2.7 from python-2.x and python-3.4 from python-3.5?
@Aran-Fey ... regardless of whether or not they should there are still a ton of python2 projects in active developement (often huge codebases... with lots of contributors(the huge codebase makes switching to python3 less than trivial))
@JoranBeasley Well, I'm not saying that the OP isn't allowed to ask for python 2 solutions. I'm just saying that the preference for python 2 solutions shouldn't be expressed through the question's tags.
The whole point of SO is that posts are supposed to be useful to a broad audience. The python version the OP happens to be using shouldn't have a big influence on which answers can or can't be posted.
a python3 answer probably wont work for pyton2 (and vice versa)
I woul.d like to think most people are capable of figuring out the nuances and fixing it themselves .... but that has not been borne out by evidence
to follow that argument to its logical end then , shoudl any language be used or should we only be discussing ways to tackle a problem (IE i could take a c or javascript solution and implement it in python no problem)
Nah, that'd be silly. The differences between those languages are far too big.
But as far as python2 vs python3 is concerned, I guess it depends on the question. Some things will have the same solution in both versions, others won't
Usually, when I answer, I check the version tag (if it's there) and then post a solution accordingly. And I think others do the same. So, IMO the version specific tag is pretty important for both, the answers as well as users seeking solutions.
We're getting sidetracked though. This isn't about answers, it's about tags
The tag description literally says "Do not use this tag simply to convey the version of Python you're using, unless the question concerns an issue specific to Python 2.7. Use the more generic [python] tag."
Last time I checked, flattening a list of numbers (at least I think that's what that OP wanted) wasn't a question specifically about python 2.7
So either the tag should be removed, or the tag description should be updated
most users dont have the ability to know that they need different print versions... so how would they know ... all they can do is mention the version they use
I guess that's a question for meta :P until then, (again IMO) the best possible way to edit such tags is to keep the version specific tag and add the version agnostic tag.
Hey guys can anyone help me out? I'm trying to understand how to open a file, but with a code that would open on a different computer, without me having to keep changing directory names
It's generally quite hard to open files on someone else's computer.
It sounds like you already have code that does this, but you find it inconvenient, because you have to change directories a lot to use it. Can you share that code, so we have a better idea of what you're trying to do?
Perhaps you could keep a configuration file in your project, separate from your program, that defines computer-specific properties, such as the document directory.
user9693188
@AndrasDeak Please leave poor @BOi alone. I am TheOneWhoMade and plan on leaving you guys alone.
I'd be inclined to use the relative path approach if you ever intend to move the project anywhere else on your computer. I like to keep my source-controlled projects in c:\programming\github. If I tried to run your project with the getlogin approach, it wouldn't be able to find c:\\users\\Kevin\\Documents\\Github, because that's not where my github directory is.
@Kevin Same, but pep8 suggests using \ if parantheses can't be used, which is what happens here.
well, the actual one is def sort_by(self, group: str, reverse: bool=False, manipulate: bool=False) -> list: in a class - I can't really get it shorter. I really tried to, too.
Well depends on whether you interpret "if parentheses can't be used" as "if you can't add more parentheses to make it work", or "if you can't add more parentheses, or make use of existing parentheses, to make it work". You already have parens, they're mandatory in every function definition.
Assuming the 80 character rule largely exists for the benefit of people still using monochrome text-mode monitors from last century;
And assuming that category of people is probably still using Python 2.6, at best;
Then if you're using type annotations, that category of people can't run your code, so you shouldn't care if they can't read it, and you should ignore the 80 character rule.
People with modern monitors that tile their screens with narrow vertical windows of 80 characters, are encouraged to get acquainted with the maximize button
*shrug* idunno either, it was just an idea. I know that Firefox for example loads the page from cache and doesn't do a complete reload, so it's possible (albeit not probable) that it makes some kind of difference
@Kevin I couldn't put parantheseses anywhere around the -> ret_type: part and have it be valid, which is the problem in this case. Oh well, more fodder for my 100-char-per-line-pls lobbying.
I think Kevin(non-MG)'s point was that the "split inside parens" rule can be applied to your case, even though the overfull part is not inside parentheses, i.e. #2 is pepeighty
Meh, 11th degree polynomial not "that" special (actually the rounding wouldn't ever be required as a 11-degree polynomial can always fit exactly through 11 points).
eeh, just found a post where a high-rep user posted a shorter answer than mine with no additional info 45 minutes later, and somehow they ended up getting a 100 rep bounty for it :|
"print(value, ..., sep=' ', end='\\n', file=sys.stdout, flush=False)\n\nPrints the values to a stream, or to sys.stdout by default.\nOptional keyword arguments:\nfile: a file-like object (stream); defaults to the current sys.stdout.\nsep: string inserted between values, default a space.\nend: string appended after the last value, default a newline.\nflush: whether to forcibly flush the stream."
@KevinMGranger I think most people just don't care enough to even consider the possibility that something better than regular ol' tabs might exist :/
I'm still evaluating my options - I optimistically thought that if I edited the tags and cast the first dupe vote, surely another gold badger would come along and hammer it. So far, it hasn't worked out that way. But I'll keep trying for a little longer before I start asking for retags