Hmm, what shell/IDE is the OP of Unable to create a tensor using torch.Tensor using? I have a suspicion that it's performing some sly introspection on the object which is somehow messing up its state
I'm thinking of asking them to run their code from a no-frills command line, but I don't want to get the reply "I am using a no-frills command line, you fool, this is what no-frills command lines look like in Linux (version Obsequious Octopus)"
It amuses me that, during a demonstration of IPython's potential unreliability, we can't reliably show how unreliable it is. I think that proves it's unreliable, and try not to worry about the paradox.
It only prints the output to stdout, but MATLAB has a very different type system, none of the useful stuff like lists or dicts. Everything* is a numeric array
you can do a proper system() call if you want the return value as a char array
@raymondh I am very upset. This feature looks violating design principles of Python (simplicity, explicitness, readability for casual users), it makes Python syntax more complex, but doesn't solve any problem.
Extrapolating from what I think you're trying to say: the problem is not fellow devs who do things slightly different; the problem is a language feature that offers little value at the cost of making it very easy to write unreadable code. Python's been notorious for making it easy to write readable code, especially when following best practices.
once it's on the devs to not use a feature to write unreadable code there's a problem
one could say that list comps can be similarly abused to force one-liners, but there's a huge benefit from having list comps which outweighs this risk
while that's true as well, and a valid counterpoint to having this new thing, it acutally wasn't what i am getting at
In short, people do weird things in python all the time, like short circuiting functions with exceptions simply because handling optional return statements is cumbersome and looks ugly
other languages offer things like the elvis operator, which gives a certain credibility to their claim that it should be doable/is a good idea
scoped assignments allows writing 'only use the output of that function in case this condition is met' without temp vars or calling the function multiple times
which gives me leverage to banish things like short circuiting from codereviews
and here is where I lead back to my initial statement of 'assignment expressions solve the problem of other devs than me existing'
And are you saying you have a single use case for it with that "return conditionally" thing? Because I'm not even sure what you mean by that. Could you show me what you mean, please?
quick question that I don't think warrents a posted question. Why can python classes, initialized as a super class, call functions from there children? Also, is it bad practice to do so?
I don't really understand what you're asking. You only ever have an instance of your child class, I believe. Do you have an example of what you have in mind?
class interface:
def __init__(self):
print("initialized interfacing component \n ALWAYS END QUESTIONS WITH A QUESTION MARK!!")
print(self)
self.test()
self.inputLoop()
pass
Parent classes can call methods of child classes in every programming language. It's just that in some languages you have to write a corresponding abstract method in the parent class, but in python you don't
doesn't matter. Javascript habit, but doesn't matter for my question. I was actually like "wait, that doesn't make sense" before I found this weird thing lik 10 minutes ago
@DavidKamer If I understand correctly then no, in python self is just a common name for the first argument of instance methods, which always refers to the class instance
@DavidKamer if you're saying that this makes your parent class abstract in a way since instances of the parent class don't have an instance method called test then yes.
@AndrasDeak pretty much. It just feels and seems wrong because now the class doesn't even really need to be it's own class considering it isn't reusable unless I have multiple implementations of the subclass planned. It feels like an OOP and functional nono all in one
The only complication is the abstractmethod decorator and the dummy test in your parent. And you get the benefit of not just seeing an AttributeError when you forget to implement it in your child class, or when you try to instantiate the abstract class.
@AndrasDeak extra work? Because I'll have to review a file that basically just creates a template and also reimplement each function if I want to use the class
@AndrasDeak good point. I'm feeling reassured though that this isn't necessarily a plebeian mistake like doing something in JavaScript like this would be considered lol. Python people are really the nicest lol
Man, gotta love working with ctypes and Windows functions. The Microsoft documentation for one of parameters of this function I just looked up is literally just "TBD" (to be determined?)
> An error may occur if the hMod parameter is NULL and the dwThreadId parameter is zero or specifies the identifier of a thread created by another process.
I still don't know what value to pass, but at least I know what not to pass :D
So where can I find documentation of all the methods supported by the Python bytes class? Google is not helping much.
For instance, I'd like to know everything about bytes.decode().
Oh, I finally found that particular one here docs.python.org/3.1/library/… but I guess I'm still interested in knowing if there is a comprehensive list somewhere. I'm far more used to the Ruby documentation.
I have to agree that the documentation for the standard types is terrible. A lot of the documentation is actually in the tutorial for some reason, and a lot of it doesn't even have link anchors
Yeah, I guess they just listed the bytes and bytearray functions together because they are all the same. For some reason I kept finding some different section of the documentation that introduced those classes but didn't actually define the method.
Attempting to rotate a cloud of points, each having x,y,z, around a center point. Trying to figure out the math for this. Can anyone point me in the right direction to accomplish this.
@user1914034 "the bounty was about to finish in just few hours." Really? That's why you had to change your name to get that? I like this excuse. I wasn't in the favour of suspending your account but now I think that must be done after reading this comment and the comment + down-vote you left on the other answer, it looks like you have no remorse and I hope the mods apply proper punishment here. — Programmer9 hours ago
in general you have 3 Euler angles that define an arbitrary rotation around the origin en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_angles (probably equivalent to using pitch/roll/yaw)
so first you need to think about how your rotation is defined, then think about representing that
if you only want to say "<this> vector should go into <that> vector" (for a given vector), you can use Rodrigues'