Hi, I'm thinking of writing a module that will hopefully make it's way to PyPI (it's my first time writing such a module). I'm definitely going to be using 3.x, but was wondering if there was any advice on minor version to target to reach a wide audience. Should I write it for the lowest version of 3.x that has all the features I need in, or should I write it for 3.6/3.7 being the latest version of python?
I'm not going to link it because it's full of profanity but it's hilarious. You can find it easy enough on youtube. One of the comments: "Your famed intelligence is nothing but a fart of god"
I prefer f strings for formatting, but can deal with the more standard .format. So would good advice be to write it and see which is the earliest version I can get it and it's depenencies to run on?
mm, I can only give my personal opinion on this but using features that deliberately restrict the audience for the sake of some syntactic convenience is not worth it.
python seriously needs a string method that strips a certain substring from the start/end. I don't want to know how many bugs my code has because I used some_string.rstrip(whatever) instead of if some_string.endswith(whatever): some_string = some_string[:-len(whatever)]
I'm working on a script for a card game and I'm implementing a Card.from_name method. If the card name ends with +, you get the upgraded version of the card returned. I coded it like this, and it was wrong:
is_upgrade = name.endswith('+')
name = name.rstrip('+')
The user enters Card.from_name('Axe Fighter++++++++++++') and my code is like "sure, that card exists"
Hello, is here anyone who can guide me to the right direction? I am using (or at least trying to use) docs.python.org/2/library/socketserver.html to have a TCP Server for Flash clients to communicate with Django. Is there a chance to get the requesting user identity, just like we do in consumers (websocket) with @channel_session_user_from_http ?
An OP earlier pinged Martijn out of the blue like "I'm sure you know this, please take a look at my question". I asked them to stop pinging people for attention, and they told me to stop trying to censor them. I don't get how you can even confuse common courtesy with censorship.
It's very possible I'm misunderstanding your intention, so check the output first :)
svm_x = svm_data[:][0] is a mix of numpy thinking and python, but not useful in either. svm_data[:] basically copies the list contents, and then you take the [0] index of that result.
nested lists can also bite you with shallow copies if you mutate them, so 1. watch out, 2. consider using numpy if you want to handle those nested lists as multidimensional arrays
I don't know any django (or web dev for that matter) but is it not possible to just get in there and print everything about self in the policy-file-request case? What are its attributes, anything where such info may hide
@CDoc certainly I look at that question and know I can't answer it. But is there a way to take it out of your specific problem and make it more general? You clearly know what you're doing but it might be making it too niche
@roganjosh I don't wanna play "smartass" but, is there anything more general than "all I need to know is which Django user is requesting the "policy-file-request""? :/
Looking for any guidance for months... and the only one who wrote a post about it in a random google-results' blog... has a buggy contact form hahahahaahha
I can't even contact the only person who talked about such a problem :P
Elon Musk was an illegal alcohol supplier in his parties. I have faith. :P
@AnttiHaapala mm, is a blanket "don't" warranted? I think there is something of a stigma around SQLite3 that might be a bit more extreme than how things play out. I'm curious why you say this?
Hi, I installed Python 3.7.0 from here and restarted my Windows computer. I earlier had Python 3.3.0 in my PC under C:/Python33 folder. Earlier when I launched python.exe it showed version 3.3.0, but even after the update, it is showing 3.3.0
I have even run Repair tool of the installation file and it ran successfully.
I'm not familiar with py3.7, but I think your file python.exe is the 3.3.
Try going into your terminal and, when you type something like "python", hit tab multiple times, it'll show you all the possibilities you've got. Maybe the correct alias for this python version is python37.exe. Who knows.
@3141 Sometime when you changes the environment variable, you need to restart your machine. Maybe, restart your machine. If it still doesn't work, print your path please and show us it.
When I type path into the cmd prompt it gives me the path I just posted. When I try to type python into the command it does not accept it as a function.
That gives them all. Also, I have a really big matrix (my matrix is bigger than your matrix). Also I want to roll my own algorithm in some more performant language :-)
I guess the underlying problem I have is the need to multiply a six dimensional tensor (~35 TB) by another tensor of the same size. Then do this a bunch of times. I need to somehow compress the initial tensor.
Really, trying to solve for A in Ax=b from known x & b pairs, where A is too big to form.
Anyways everything is going to be JS in a the next few months, so I'm just trying to flesh out the best way to do this inversion. My experience with conjugate gradient and friends (gmres), says its not possible as the system has too many elements...
Those python functions are nice but I'll need to roll my own because I can't actually form the matrix in memory. Looks like its doing some power iterations.
The reason I may seem agitated is because it really gets my goat when someone asks "how do I print something?" when they really mean "I want to create a picture with characters resembling Chinese calligraphy, also it has to support unicode complete with the 'barf with one eye closed' emoji to be introduced in 2020"