Bikramjeet Singh

 Python Ouroboros - The Rotating Knives

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Aug 12, 2020 13:31
Hey guys, I've posted a question browser automation here but haven't gotten any answers yet. Could somebody please advise? stackoverflow.com/q/63377219/7338544
 

Python

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Jun 30, 2019 18:16
I got it, please ignore
Jun 30, 2019 18:11
P.S. counter_open and counter_close are dicts
Jun 30, 2019 18:11
Hey guys, in a program I'm writing there is:
return counter_open['['] == counter_close[']']

when I run the prog, it gives KeyError: '['

Looks like it's not identifying '[' as a string. How to make it a string?
Jun 9, 2019 18:55
@AndrasDeak, Oops! yep, list not array
Jun 9, 2019 18:54
Thanks @ParitoshSingh, I got it!
Jun 9, 2019 18:15
Hello guys, quick question:
I have this array: [(1, 3), (3, 1), (2, 2), (2, 2), (2, 2), (2, 2)]
I need unique pairs: [(1, 3), (2, 2)]
set() returns: [(1, 3), (3, 1), (2, 2)]
Any suggestions?
Jun 4, 2019 16:23
err...your solution is convoluted enough for me already Kevin. Please allow me some time to go though it and understand what happened!

Aran, I know it's a stupid assignment but...Counter?? You see it's not the assignment, it's me. :)
Jun 4, 2019 16:10
Hey guys, I need some help troubleshooting my anagram function:
https://pastebin.com/2sk4vZsS

I need both for loops to begin from the beginning after break but that's not happening. Any suggestions?
Feb 22, 2019 15:23
Thanks a lot @Kevin and @piRSquared for suggestions on this.
Feb 22, 2019 15:22
I see it now, ":" before "param" is basically a reST format.
Feb 22, 2019 15:16
To be more specific, why not:
param set1: a string

and why:
:param set1: a string
Feb 22, 2019 15:15
Now in this, is ":" before "param" valid? And what does it denote?
Feb 22, 2019 15:15
example:
def union(set1, set2):
'''
:param set1: a string
:param set2: a string
:return: a string containing
'''
Feb 22, 2019 15:14
Hey guys, a quick question. Pycharm pything IDE recently started showing following doctring format:
Feb 21, 2019 21:56
You are great.
Feb 21, 2019 21:55
Thanks a lot, and @Aran-Fey too.
Feb 21, 2019 21:55
@AlexanderReynolds I got it! It should have just been: "elif guessed_letter in lettersGuessed"
Feb 21, 2019 21:11
Please gimme a moment, I'm going through the code once more based on your suggestions.
Feb 21, 2019 21:06
I tried troubleshooting it for hours but I'm not getting it how that's possible when it's passing all tests (considering by default that the letter to be guessed is within 8 character length)
Feb 21, 2019 21:05
But it outputs: Oops! That letter is not in my word: _
Feb 21, 2019 21:05
When the user enters the "x" the second time it must output:
Oops! You've already guessed that letter: _
Feb 21, 2019 21:03
If you compare, when the user incorrectly enters "x" the second time, you will see the difference in output.
Feb 21, 2019 21:02
No No...please wait
Feb 21, 2019 21:02
But the output I'm getting is:
Welcome to the game, Hangman!
I am thinking of a word that is 1 letters long.
-------------
You have 8 guesses left
Available Letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
Please guess a letter: x
Oops! That letter is not in my word: _
-------------
You have 7 guesses left
Available Letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz
Please guess a letter: z
Oops! That letter is not in my word: _
-------------
You have 6 guesses left
Available Letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwy
Please guess a letter: x
Feb 21, 2019 21:01
Desired output is:
Welcome to the game Hangman!
I am thinking of a word that is 1 letters long
-----------
You have 8 guesses left
Available Letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
Please guess a letter: x
Oops! That letter is not in my word: _
-----------
You have 7 guesses left
Available Letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz
Please guess a letter: z
Oops! That letter is not in my word: _
-----------
You have 6 guesses left
Available Letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwy
Please guess a letter: x
Oops! You've already guessed that letter: _
Feb 21, 2019 21:00
Which as you see in my hangman(secretWord) function, I'm explicitly passing this letter for testing purpose.
Feb 21, 2019 20:59
to be continued....please wait....
Feb 21, 2019 20:59
Here's the problem: suppose computer randomly selects a single letter say, 'y'.
Feb 21, 2019 20:58
Yes, I'm typing it out, just a moment. Here's the code for your reference: pastebin.com/te3MUcVE
Feb 21, 2019 20:57
Hey guys, I'm stuck in a problem which I have almost solved. It's a basic Hangman program which is passing all tests except one.
Feb 16, 2019 22:28
Wo! That's cool. Thanks, Andras.
Feb 16, 2019 22:25
Here: https://pastebin.com/VT3VNYx2
I'm not getting the role of (x) on result.append(L[i](x))
Feb 16, 2019 22:24
Hey guys, I need some help understanding a piece of python code.
Feb 8, 2019 21:08
That's a very mindful way of spending your free time. I really like to imagine how efficient a programmer you can become by doing so.
Feb 8, 2019 21:06
Wo! I really can't remember what I was doing when I was a kid but I think I am having your kid-moment now when I feel good to remember about a <=10 linesr.
Feb 8, 2019 21:01
Thank you so very much Paritosh, Paul and PM2Ring, I have copied and saved what you just said and I find it really encouraging. Right now, I dunno where I'm headed but I'll gonna continue my stroll anyways.
Feb 8, 2019 20:58
Okay, that's nice.
Feb 8, 2019 20:57
Yes, something I am doing already but what's helping the most is that Python Visualizer: Python Tutor
Feb 8, 2019 20:55
Thank for suggesting the correct word to me: frustrating. Like I said, going through those codes and their control flow and not remembering the last step I just remembered.
Feb 8, 2019 20:53
That does not mean I am losing interest, not at all.
Feb 8, 2019 20:53
I am finding these exercises very useless even when I can clearly see they are solving a mathematical problem right in front of me and when I am not that familiar with Python as a language.
Feb 8, 2019 20:51
PM2R, that's exactly what I believed I was doing and where this course and other course was going to enroll in would take me..
Feb 8, 2019 20:47
I see.
Feb 8, 2019 20:46
I understand but what worked for you?
Feb 8, 2019 20:46
And you learnt the most on the job?
Feb 8, 2019 20:44
I see. Okay, tell me Paritosh and Paul how did you break out of that phase when you were just learning Python and then went ahead to create something on your own no matter how complex or lame it was.
Feb 8, 2019 20:40
That's correct.
Feb 8, 2019 20:37
Here's one to find sq.root using bisection search. Problem being I am not able to handle that much control flow in my head to be able to get it smoothly: pastebin.com/MHxhJxNs
Feb 8, 2019 20:35
Looking at this code example, are you able to match it with anything similar being done in a real world python project?