JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Apr 16, 2015 20:11
Any recommendations for front-end tools (i.e. JS/HTML/CSS libraries) for making a website similar to this one?
http://elitemodel.fr/
A client of mine wants something very similar, not sure the best toolset to start with.
(Basically a design-centric single page application, and in my case, completely static, because my client won't want to pay for/run a server doing any sort of real work. Probably will be hosted on bitballoon in the end)
 

Python

Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom Code formatting guide: tinyu...
Mar 27, 2015 03:55
This was essentially all I could find: legacy.python.org/workshops/2002-02/papers/14/index.htm
Mar 27, 2015 03:54
Just curious if anybody is familiar with any academic literature that shows that Python is a more clear / more usable programming language than other languages. Specifically Python vs. Perl and Python vs. Java
Mar 25, 2015 18:25
@ml_guy I don't have enough of a ML background to really help you, but looks like there is some literature on the subject: scholar.google.com/…
Mar 25, 2015 18:18
Hmm, tough. You only have the content of the tweets? Or do you have associated metadata?
Mar 25, 2015 18:16
@ml_guy you just mean labels for those age ranges?
Mar 23, 2015 20:58
@poke Thanks, wasn't thinking about how it would need to be recreated (but I see why it would need to).
Mar 23, 2015 20:51
cbg everyone.
Inside a class I have a function, foo, that uses a helper function, bar. Would it be more pythonic to define bar outside the class, in the class but outside foo, or inside of foo?
Mar 22, 2015 02:17
I want all the child loggers to be writing to the same rotating files but each child logger has its own prefix it appends to its messages
Mar 22, 2015 02:15
I'm just trying out the python logging library for the first time (python 2.6) and had a quick question. Is there a way to have child loggers use their own Formatters but use the handler of their parent?
Mar 22, 2015 02:14
Cabbage everyone
Jan 14, 2015 00:30
Rhubarb everyone, and thanks for the ideas @JonClements
Jan 13, 2015 23:19
What do you mean by that?
Jan 13, 2015 23:17
Unless TaskC declares its own deps class variable
Jan 13, 2015 23:17
Yeah, and with my model things get weird with inheritence. If TaskC extends TaskB and then modifies deps, it is then modifiying TaskB's deps also
Jan 13, 2015 23:12
There are a few additional complexities in the informal requirements, but that's the general idea
Jan 13, 2015 23:12
# user defines tasks
class TaskA(BaseTask):
  def action(self, depResults):
    #whatever

class TaskB(BaseTask):
  deps = [TaskA]
  def action(self, depResults):
    #whatever

runner = Runner()
# order of add_task calls does not matter
runner.add_task(TaskB)
runner.add_task(TaskA)
Jan 13, 2015 23:10
My initial idea was something like this:
Jan 13, 2015 23:06
The end user would define their tasks as classes and some might depend on others to be run first
Jan 13, 2015 23:06
Basically a simple task runner framework
Jan 13, 2015 23:03
Quick design question if anyone has a minute. Say I have classes A, B, and C. I want to provide a way for classes to "depend" on each other (relevant in my application). Would defining a class variable be a decent solution for this?

class C(object):
deps = [A]

for example. Python 2.6 unfortunately.
(Apologies for the bad code formatting above...)
Sep 7, 2014 05:33
Thanks for all the help @PeterVaro, rhubarb
Sep 7, 2014 05:33
Ha ha, I had no idea what that meant
Sep 7, 2014 05:31
Have to get some sleep now, it's 1:30am here :)
Sep 7, 2014 05:31
I'm looking forward to learning it more, always fun to learn a new language
Sep 7, 2014 05:29
It's great fun, although not always practical
Sep 7, 2014 05:29
Yep, in Ruby, there are lots of ways to do things, and may the most clever way win!
Sep 7, 2014 05:27
"There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch."
Sep 7, 2014 05:26
I have IDLE open right now actually
Sep 7, 2014 05:25
Yeah, the funny thing is, they really are quite similar it seems
Sep 7, 2014 05:24
Just kidding, they're both great
Sep 7, 2014 05:24
But is it better than Ruby? ;)
Sep 7, 2014 05:24
I think I'll like python, seems like a neat language
Sep 7, 2014 05:22
makes sense, just copies the reference
Sep 7, 2014 05:19
that's actually the first and second elements of the iterator
Sep 7, 2014 05:18
but since it's the same iterator
Sep 7, 2014 05:18
It pairs up the 'first' elements of each iterator
Sep 7, 2014 05:18
So zip just gets the two iterators as arguments
Sep 7, 2014 05:18
Oh I get it
Sep 7, 2014 05:15
I have no idea haha
Sep 7, 2014 05:15
Right, what does unpacking a tuple with two references to the same iterable do?
Sep 7, 2014 05:14
You could call it like that for example?
Sep 7, 2014 05:14
func(*(1,2))
Sep 7, 2014 05:12
(iter(ls),iter(ls))
Sep 7, 2014 05:12
Oh, so does that make it like
Sep 7, 2014 05:11
And don't know what the unary * operator does :)
Sep 7, 2014 05:10
But does the unary * or the infix * apply first then?
Sep 7, 2014 05:10
Tuple with one element that's an iterator: (iter(ls),)
Sep 7, 2014 05:09
Ha, I can't quite decode that one
Sep 7, 2014 05:06
I have to read more about iterables, haven't gotten to them in-depth at all yet