C

C stands for Control.
Oct 20, 2017 17:05
I'm fond of scribbling things in the margins.
Oct 20, 2017 14:36
Why not? Books kick ass.
May 24, 2017 22:30
Does const qualifier matter for the signature in an arguments list, e.g. could void f(const size_t x) and void f(size_t x) really be two different functions?
May 6, 2017 18:45
@Gabriel It does not look like C.
Apr 3, 2017 19:42
return void
 

Python

Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom Code formatting guide: tinyu...
Oct 20, 2017 14:39
__init__
Oct 20, 2017 14:39
Learn how to use init.
Oct 20, 2017 14:36
Yes. That's probably what you want, so just do it.
Oct 20, 2017 14:35
What's wrong with self.Z = blah_blah_blah
Oct 20, 2017 14:32
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Just create Z in the constructor.
Jun 21, 2017 20:34
I thought copy was forbidden by Apple products.
May 6, 2017 12:58
@AndrasDeak Telling someone to google something is over-done. Use a link instead.
May 6, 2017 12:38
@AndrasDeak Sometimes the keywords are lacking. You need to know to look for the right terms. Phrases like "natural language processing" may as well be foreign language terms.
May 6, 2017 12:35
NLTK is meant for natural language processing. Use 'split' for exact cases. For example if you have an IP address in the format 1.2.3.4 and want to extract each number, use split('.').
May 6, 2017 12:33
@user1993 Look at sentence breaking/sentence disambiguation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_language_processing
May 6, 2017 12:05
@user1993 split('. ') will fail for sentences containing tokens like "U. S." or in general anything containing a period. Additionally, it's possible for a sentence to end with something other than a period and a space.
Apr 12, 2017 08:39
Right now your post is just "please solve my problem" - maybe someone will come by, but a lot of people will react badly to it .
Apr 12, 2017 08:39
Post the code on the site, not dropbox.
Apr 12, 2017 08:36
@Cro Running out of time?? It looks like you just posted the question.
Apr 3, 2017 23:36
def retry(n, callable):
	ret = None
	t = 0
	while t < n:
		t += 1
		try:
			ret = callable()
		except SomeError:
			if t < n:
				continue # Try again.
			raise # Tried n times already; give up.
		break
	return ret

## Example usage to try something up to 10 times:
#v = retry(10, lambda : doSomethingThatThrowsSomeError(123))
#print('v:',v)
Apr 3, 2017 23:36
I have a function that sometimes throws an exception, and I would like to automatically 'try again' to do this a number of times. The following is what I wrote. Is there a better way to do it? For example, it would be nice if I could generalize SomeError (right now the function only works if you know which exception will be thrown):
Apr 3, 2017 20:31
Stones!
Apr 3, 2017 20:05
AWS is lame. Real programmers use real servers.
Apr 3, 2017 19:58
If I distribute a python program called foo and that program runs for a long time, then the user wants to call that program, he will open task manager (or ps or whatever) and won't be able to find foo because it will be called 'python' (and he has a dozen other python programs running). What is the correct way to identify foo in this case?
 

C++ Questions and Answers

Solve problems and approach solutions. Just ask and lurkers wi...
Oct 20, 2017 13:15
Yes, some people like to make quite exaggerated claims for what undefined means. Perhaps it launched all missiles? Well, if your software is in charge of missiles, maybe it is not so bad to be that paranoid.
Oct 20, 2017 13:04
Well, yes, the compiler will likely produce something. But when it is undefined it means you can't really trust what it's going to do. If you're using Clang, for example, maybe the Clang folks will decide to do it differently for the next point release, or to issue an error message if you try to do that.
Oct 20, 2017 12:41
Good compilers will warn you if try to do something like the above. "Result may be undefined" or something similar.
Oct 20, 2017 12:40
Some people avoid using pre- and post-increment as part of a larger expression for this reason. Although a few limited idioms which use them are useful.
Apr 3, 2017 20:03
In fact I sometimes name my variables unnamed_something, so I happen to know that it is a valid name.
Apr 3, 2017 20:01
Not exactly, because unnamed_something is a valid name.
 

Java

Dedicated to the discussion of the Java programming language a...
Oct 20, 2017 12:37
一杯のコーヒーとちょっと牛乳と人口甘味料をください。 Ippai no ko-hi- to chotto gyu-nyu- to jinko- kan'mi'ryo- o kudasai.
 

PHP

Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, ...
Jun 21, 2017 20:33
Don't whine that you don't use certain things. You must learn calculus, for example, but almost certainly won't use it "on the job."
Apr 12, 2017 08:30
Well, that's another question - if you want continue working but prepare for a clean departure as the opportunity arises.
Apr 12, 2017 08:30
Maybe so. Maybe the entire product is pointless. But that decision is a job for the business people. Yes, say it's pointless. But then your boss says "well, I'm in the mood to do something pointless" then you must say "okey dokey boss"
Apr 12, 2017 08:28
When I write code I can write whatever comments I damn well please. Of course, I have my own ways of stripping such comments if needed. I personally wouldn't use the PHP Protect tool. But if my boss says "you've got to obfsucate" then why not? Just do it.
Apr 12, 2017 08:26
No, a pile of crap of much larger than a piece of shit. It could also be a steaming pile, which is considered much worse. What causes software to be a steaming pile is mpt well-defined, however.
Apr 12, 2017 08:24
Just an example. You could write a comment like "// This code is a pile of crap" for your own development purposes but maybe you don't actually want your customer to see that you wrote that.
Apr 12, 2017 08:21
I'm sure the tool also does things like stripping comments. Suppose you write a comment "This is a secret". At minimum your secret message will not be readable by the end customer.
Apr 12, 2017 08:03
Trying to remove source code and rely on caches and so on sounds like a recipe for failure and things not working.
Apr 12, 2017 08:02
@brzuchal See here: phpprotect.info Just tell them that you will ship code with it "PHP Protected" and call it a day.
Apr 12, 2017 07:55
There are so-called obfuscation tools. If needed, you can run your code through an obfuscator before you ship it.
 

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
May 6, 2017 21:39
But for most applications users don't care how it's implemented; it just has to work.
May 6, 2017 21:38
Maybe it depends on your users too and what they expect. Personally I'm not a fan of all-JS apps. I use Google mail for example, the JS version as well as the HTML version. The JS one is fine but it is often too slow, so I switch to the HTML one. It's just fine.
May 6, 2017 21:34
Maybe it can; but should it? For "information retrieval" type systems probably the database + static web page + JS user interface model still will be working the best for quite a while. If you make a new Wikipedia type application for example, this is what makes sense. Why do you need JavaScript for Wikipedia? Only for UI enhancement.
May 6, 2017 21:29
It probably depends on your application. Take an application like Stackexchange, for example. Could it be rewritten to use React? Why would you want to, what would be the advantage? Serious Web applications are powered by servers that are scalable. Server side generation and "plain HTML and CSS" is still a huge part. Then sprinkle in some nice shiny JavaScript thingies to make it nicer to use, like topping on a cake. The cake is still the part that makes your belly full.
May 6, 2017 21:25
JavaScript has replaced the old Java web applet type things. Previously a chat room like this would be a Java web applet. Now it is a JavaScript thingy. Not much has really changed.
May 6, 2017 21:24
As another example, the chat application uses JavaScript, but what about the HTML? Anyway, the Stackexchange chat application probably doesn't qualify as a serious application; it doesn't hold a candle to IRC for example.
May 6, 2017 21:23
In serious applications JavaScript is used, but only for some small "bells and whistles" type-things. For example, on the Stackexchange application, when there is an update, the page shows you a notification at the top. A nice touch, to be sure, but obviously Stackexchange is not a success due to JavaScript.
May 6, 2017 21:16
JavaScript is a small part of Web development. Although you can make so-called "single page apps" (JS), most serious Web applications are not of this type.