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12/25 |
2011/12/23-2012/2/6 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:54272 Activity:nil |
12/23 In Python, why is it that '好'=='\xe5\xa5\xbd' but u'好'!='\xe5\xa5\xbd' ? I'm really baffled. What is the encoding of '\xe5\xa5\xbd'? \_ '好' means '\xe5\xa5\xbd', which is just a string of bytes; it has length 3. Python doesn't know what encoding it's in. u'好' means u'\u597d', which is a string of Unicode characters; it has length 1, and Python recognizes it as a single Chinese character. However, it doesn't have any particular encoding! You have to encode it as a byte string before you can output it, and you can choose whatever encoding you want. u'好'.encode('utf-8') returns '\xe5\xa5\xbd'. See http://docs.python.org/howto/unicode.html \_ wow thanks. I always thought unicode == utf-8, boy I was so wrong. This is all very confusing. \_ dear dumbass: http://www.stereoplex.com/blog/python-unicode-and-unicodedecodeerror http://docs.python.org/library/codecs.html http://stackoverflow.com/questions/643694/utf-8-vs-unicode \_ If all you've used is UTF-8, you'd have no reason to suspect there are other Unicode encodings (and really, if UTF-8 had been designed first, there probably wouldn't be). Not knowing about them doesn't make you dumb. |
2011/8/3-27 [Computer/SW/Languages/C_Cplusplus, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:54156 Activity:nil |
8/3 http://vedantk.tumblr.com/post/8424437797/sicp-is-under-attack \_ http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~bh/61a.html \_ this is sad \_ "An Update SICP will not be abandoned at Berkeley." |
2011/4/16-7/13 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:54086 Activity:nil |
4/16 Whoa, I just heard that MIT discontinued 6.001 (classic scheme) to 6.01. In fact, 6.00, 6.01 and 6.02 all use Python. What the hell? What has the world become? It's a sad sad day. SICP forever! \_ old story, they've ditched that shitty book and lang for a while. \_ I used to think scheme was cool, then I saw Ka Ping Yee's "Beautiful Code" class aka 61a in python, and converted. \_ "SICP Forever" means you weren't listening when UCB CS said "we are trying to teach you computer science independent of implementation, since implementation fads come and go." \_ Well played. \_ I know someone who was there for the first year they offered it. They made it optional, and the curriculum really sucked when they were just getting started, or so I hear. Shame to see it go, but I hope they've improved it since. Python can be a really beautiful language, albeit nowhere near as elegantly minimal and pure as Scheme - which IMO made it easier to teach/learn. --toulouse Clearly MIT disagrees with you. _/ \_ Since 61a is a shallow copy of 6.001 -to the extent that harvey made us watch a lecture of the MIT class during our lecture- when will Cal start using python as well? \_ Makes sense, Sergei and Larry need python and java, not scheme. \_ Glad to see MIT is keeping up with the times, this is why it is the NUMBER ONE CS school in the WORLD. "It showed some f'n adaptability." |
2011/3/31-4/20 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:54070 Activity:nil |
3/20 Has anyone here had success in using python 3.0? Any gotchas to worry about? I've got an entire set of apps in python 2.x and am wondering if it's worth it to upgrade? |
2009/4/4-12 [Academia/Berkeley/Classes, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:52797 Activity:nil |
4/3 Anyone have any ideas on where to get a MIPS parser? I need one for a class project, but it's not the point of the project, so there's no problem with using a pre-existing library. I haven't found one though. It seems simple enough that I could just get away with python's split(). (Language is also irrelevant, so I was going to go with python or ruby, but anything is fine.) \_ I assume you're steven and doing this for CS150. If you do it in python I can help. --toulouse \_ I assume you're steven and doing this for CS150. If you do it in python I can help. --toulouse \_ Nope, not steven in CS150, jrleek in a UC Davis grad class. I hacked out a simple lexer in python on the plane back from Korea last night before I ran out of batteries, but I would like something better if you know of it. I'll email you. -jrleek \_ Assuming who people are on motd is inadvisable... ;) |
12/25 |
2008/12/4-10 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:52167 Activity:low |
12/4 FORTRAN, er, Python 3.0 / 3000 is out: http://www.python.org/download/releases/3.0 \_ As someone who tried out Python and disliked it, is there a reason I should take a look at it again? \_ Not really. Why'd you dislike Python? I love it. \_ The whitespace was a killer, other syntax a bit clunky, regular expression syntax was hideous. Once I found Ruby, I never looked back. The problems with Ruby are: 1) threading and 2) performance. That's what they're dealing with in the next release. current release. \_ Passing around "self" alot and usage of convention in class syntax shows that the OOP was added as an afterthought no matter what guido says. Also they are going to keep that GIL forever which hurts their multithreaded performance. Maybe jython will fix that but i'm not hopeful. \_ Ugh, not this again, there was a lengthy argument on the Python mailing list on this. It's not that self was *added*, but that an explicit self disambiguates variable resolution. I happen to agree, and this is one of the reasons I'm so fond of Python. It's a matter of personal preference. I have little to say on the GIL since I either don't do parallel with Python, or use processes to do it. --t Python mailing list on this. It's not that self was *added*, but that an explicit self disambiguates variable resolution. I happen to agree, and this is one of the reasons I'm so fond of Python. It's a matter of personal preference. I have little to say on the GIL since I either don't do parallel with Python, or use processes to do it. --t \_ Let me expand a little. There's nothing keeping them from making 'self' implicit *technically*; however, this was debated several times over for Python 3k and the consensus (not decree) was that Python is better with it than without. (not decree) was that Python is better with it than without. Also, if you want a multithreaded app, presumably you are targeting performance, or you'd be writing it with processes instead. At that point, why not use the Python API with C or something to do threads? (This is an honest question, not a hypothetical question.) I use Python for the speed of development and the clear (IMO) semantics. Besides, isn't Stackless Python what you're looking for? --t targeting performance, or you'd be writing it with processes instead. At that point, why not use the Python API with C or something to do threads? (This is an honest question, not a hypothetical question.) I use Python for the speed of development and the clear (IMO) semantics. Besides, isn't Stackless Python what you're looking for? --t \_ I always found regexp in Python to be insane. Is this better in Python 3? |
2008/7/28-8/5 [Computer/SW/Languages/Java, Computer/SW/Languages/Misc, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:50705 Activity:nil |
7/28 Python question: I have a Python helper script/class that I want to use interactively. The class needs a few path variables defined so that it runs on the correct files. I may want to use different files, so I certainly don't want to hard code them. There are also enough files that I don't want to pass them in as arguments. I thought I might be able to have a file that defines them and import it. so, file test_config.py defines "foo_path = 'blah'" >>> import test_config as foo_config >>> print foo_config.foo_path blah >>> foo_run() in the script file I have: print foo_config.foo_path I get: 'NameError: global name 'foo_config' is not defined' Why does my script file not get the 'global name' foo_config? \_ Is foo_run in a different module? Did you do something like 'import foo_run from foo_run_module'? I'm guessing it would work if you imported foo_config from within foo_run_module. \_ Yes, that works, but I would prefer to be able to interactively load different modules as foo_config. load |
2008/7/28-8/5 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python, Computer/SW/Languages/Functional, Computer/SW/Languages/OCAML] UID:50704 Activity:nil |
7/28 So, I'd like to try playing with a functional language. Any recommendations? \_ Haskel. Why would you start with anything else? \_ Haskell if you want a _functional_ language. Ocaml if you want to see what a proper language implementation looks like. LISP if you want old fogies to think you are cool. -- ilyas \_ Haskell. Why would you start with anything else? \_ I don't know. I've heard Erlang has been used more in industry. (Isn't Google using it for something?) I don't really know the differences. the differences. Sisal was for scientific computing, which is the area I work in. F# includes OOP (but I'd rather work in Linux.) \_ Are you learning this to learn or are you learning it to get industry experiance? If the second I'd say spend your time elsewhere. Haskell is one of those languages where once you start to understand how to actually use it this light will come on in your brain and suddenly you will never see programming in quite the same light. Erlang is cool, but has a lot less support library support/people out there messing with it, so actually trying to do anything with it is hard. OCaml is pretty damn cool as well, but really, if you want to wrap your head around pure functional programming, the language you should start with is Haskell. Oh, and you want this book: http://www.haskell.org/soe \_ Oh, and another thing. Haskell is also good because it makes it really hard to cheat and do things in a non functional manner. Its purity is its strength. \_ Ah, that's a good point. -op \_ Well, mostly I would just like to learn about functional programming to learn. But I generally like languages I learn to be useful for something as well, otherwise I never get to use it. For example, I like Ruby better than Python, and learned it to learn it. However, everything at work uses Python, so now I've forgotten most of the Ruby. Thanks for the book ref. \_ Really learning Haskell will make you a much better programmer, even if you never use it for anything. It really forces you to relearn a lot of things in ways you probably never even considered, and once you finish bashing your head against it and it starts making sense you will be a much stronger coder. |
2008/6/19-23 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:50298 Activity:nil |
6/19 Any reason why Python's random.randint() is 10X slower than random.random() (returns 0-1.0)? \_ Use the source, Luke. random() is basically a single operation implemented in C, whereas randint() is a non-negligible amount of Python code. \_ Thanks! Where can I find the source? \_ Umm, you're kidding, right? If not, here's a hint: Python is open source software. |
2008/4/29-5/5 [Computer/SW/Languages/Perl, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:49852 Activity:moderate |
4/29 Scaling your web app in the real world: http://teddziuba.com/2008/04/im-going-to-scale-my-foot-up-y.html \_ This article is crap. While yes, 99.9% of all websites don't need any serious scalability plans, if any of them become worth anything they will need to scale. If you write a web application without careing about scalability you are writing a webapp that can never be more than niche. Any developer should know where the next few scaling bottlenecks live in his application and have some basic plan for how to solve them when they become an issue. \_ I feel the same way about language Nazis. "Java is the best!" "No C is the best!" "Perl sucks it's not readable!" "Python rules!" Dumb asses blame the language and not the stupid programmers. \_ Different tools for different jobs. That said, I particularly like python. Its syntax is very clean. \_ I don't know python. I like Pascal the best, although I haven't used it in 18 years. \_ If you liked Pascal, you will love python, unless you get hung up on the fact that blocks in python are defined by indentation rather than by "begin/end" \_ Yeah, I like python, but that blocks by indentation thing drives me up the wall. Couldn't they at least make it optional? -!pp \_ My experience is that Ruby is a lot cleaner than Python, and doesn't have stupid syntactical whitespace. However, I have only used Perl for stuff at jobs etc due to familiarity. Python's object orientedness was less complete than Ruby's and I definitely don't like the indentation thing. \_ I struggled, trying to like Python. Then I found Ruby and it's the most fun I've had programming in a *long* time. The fact that regexes are as easy as Perl in Ruby was a big deal. \_ Ruby is whitespace sensitive. -- ilyas \_ Far less so than Python. \_ I am not a huge python fan, and I don't like python's whitespace indentation, but I found ruby's specific whitespace sensitivity far more confusing. -- ilyas \_ Interesting, I've never noticed a problem. \_ Perhaps this is because you are not used to programming with closures (blocks are the closest thing in ruby to closures). Ruby blocks have very odd whitespace requirements: (1..3).each {|x| puts x} works (1..3).each {|x| puts x} works (1..3).each {|x| puts x} does not work. -- ilyas \_ No, I use closures, just never have had to break across the line. \_ I write fairly hairy closures sometimes, and often my closure code is nested. I find this behavior completely bizarre and unintuitive. I can't even imagine why Ruby would insist on this. -- ilyas \_ I got yer hairy closure right here, pal. \_ This is funny, but not really applicable to real world scaling. I have been doing this stuff for 15 years and scaling is more of a system architecture and capacity planning issue than a developer issue. Of course, if your code is bad enough, no one can make it scale. \_ I disagree completely. I've taken courses on optimizing applications for performance and the best bang for the buck is almost always received by altering the code to run faster. Sure, things like high-speed interconnects to reduce latency can solve problems not easily solved by modifying code, but the majority of problems are developer issues that they (I would say unknowingly, but maybe because they don't care) foist upon the systems people. \_ Most cases of performance scaling problems I have encountered have been due to the volume of data being written to disk. These problems can be fixed by using the right RAID type, better use of filesystem caching, a better filesystem, or most often, simply by throwing more disks at the problem. These are not the kinds of issues I would expect a programmer to know or even care too much about. I haven't "taken courses" on it, but I have worked on numerous overloaded web and application sites in the Real World. \_ Sounds like you have haven't encountered a large variety of problems then. Often when a developer profiles his code he can find all sorts of bottlenecks. Often it seems easier to throw h/w at problems, but the biggest gains come from writing better code. For instance, don't write so much data to disk or be smarter about how you do it. You are correct that programmers don't know and care about these issues, but they should. They usually only care when they are forced to because their code doesn't meet requirements, because it compares unfavorably to competing code, or because the hardware solution has failed or is too costly to implement. \_ "In nearly every case the most serious bottleneck is an overloaded or slow disk." -Adrian Cockcroft Sun_Performance_And_Tuning (Ch 1, Paragraph 1) \_ You ever wondered why Google search is so fast? They have the world's largest RAM disk. They index and keep most of their search data ***IN MEMORY***. Last time I attended a talk I learned that they have more a shitload more RAM than many corporations have on disk. It is ridiculous. \_ Thanks for making my point. \_ Well no shit, but this is tangential. The question isn't "Is disk slower than RAM?". It question isn't "Is disk faster than RAM?". It is "Is there a way to do this such that it doesn't write to disk as much?" One example is when developers decide to write 6 million small files in one directory and the filesystem bogs down. Sure, you can buy a faster filesystem but that's correcting the symptom and not the problem. You don't need to buy $$$ hardware that probably still can't handle that particular issue if the code didn't do something so stupid. \_ I heard reiserfs is really good at storing lots of little files. \_ I heard reiserfs is really good at storing lots of little files. \_ unfortunately, it stores them in a dumpster in San Leandro. \- lexis/nexis was pretty fast at seearch +20 yrs go. the old bell labs people [who after all were working for a phone company] have lots of interesting stories about optimizations for various phone company applications. one of the main altavista people wrote some code to use a cache that was physically closer to a processing unit to avoid die-crossing latency [and had numbers to show the difference it made]. google is mostly read data and it's not authoritative but a cache/copy for much. contrast this with say ebay. for a somewhat interesting discussion of scaling look at randy shoup's presentation/talk on ebay scaling. [trivia: randy was a high school acquaintance of mine. i thought he was going to become a lawyer and i was mighty surprised he went into cs/ databases]. \_ Getting all your caches right is not really a developer responsibility, but I admit that it starts to cross disciplines. Most people are just sort of confused how it works, so in this case, the one eyed man is king. \_ Whose responsibility do you think it is if not the developer? If he doesn't have the knowledge then he needs to consult with someone who does, but he's the implementer. Too often the developer has no idea, doesn't ask anyone, and implements something stupid. \_ I guess I would have to say that it is a shared responsibility between the system architect and the developers. A lot of times developers don't know what is possible, especially what is possible at a reasonable price point. How big a RAM disk cache can you expect to have available for your application in a shared disk array? How would a developer hope to possibly know that? But far too often system administrator types don't share this kind of info, even if they do know it themselves. \_ I would argue that developers should know what they don't know - or at least consider these issues early (before they become a problem). Part of the problem is that people with systems knowledge often come into the project late in the development of it - too late to make major changes. We see this problem in spacecraft operations. The hardware guys build a shiny new spacecraft without consulting with the people who are going to fly it. They make "sound technical decisions" and h/w design decisions that are intended to save lots of money, but they have no knowledge (or, worse, just enough to hang themselves) about how to operate the h/w they build. This often ends up being a case of saving $$ on the h/w and spending $$$$ on the operations (or not being able to operate at all - or with greatly increased risk). The *good* h/w guys know who to involve early in the process and why, but they are a small minority even in large, experienced companies like Lockheed. With scaled systems it's rather the opposite. The s/w guys design and build a system without considering h/w (or the systems environment). \_ I had that exact problem at one place (millions of files in one directory). We talked about various ways to fix this and decided that switching from WAFL to VxFS was the best solution. In some ways this was just because the developers were too lazy to figure out how to use a database, but it worked. \_ Why not spread those millions of files over many directories? In itself that helps a lot and it's a simple fix. A database is another idea. Switching filesystems sounds pretty drastic to me. \_ It was already hashed, so what we really had was billions of files, millions in each directory. There is no magic bullet for dealing with that quantity of data. Millions of directories is not really a good solution either, for reasons that should be obvious. By the time I left the company, they had started work on what was essentially their own filesystem but I don't know what happened to that project. \_ What a disaster. This sounds like poor s/w design. \_ All that because the devs don't want to figure out how to use a db? \_ Yeah, well it was 1999 and good developers (or sysadmins) were hard to come by. The new filesystem I was referring to had a DB included. \_ You think they are easier to come by now? If anything, it seems to be getting worse as a lot of Microsoft-trained, Java-loving weenies have entered the field and very few hardcore assembler-loving PDP-11 weenies still exist. Over time it seems the average developer/sysadmin knows less and less about the details of the systems in favor of high-level constructs like WWW and GUI design. There's a place for both, of course, but I am horrified by what recent CS grads do not know. \- I disagree as well. Some simple problems are solved by throwing money at them ... say $20k - $100k problems. But at some point programmer time does become cheaper than cycles, space etc. And there are other cases where the best hardware cant do what brainpower can. Trivial example are new crypto attacks. Another case is reading 10gb traffic streams... you cant just naively throw hardware at the problem. It's combination of hardware [ASIC, FPGA other specialized network devices], OS/kernel/devce driver hackery, and application design. \_ Any network with 10gb of traffic on it that cannot be easily broken up is not scalable. \- what you control may affect your options. we want to do IDS on 10G. We cant tell say ESNet to tailor bandwidth provisioning around IDS. What we can ask for is $ for hardware as long as we're not being stupid about it. The "web application scaling" is a different problem than some other scaling issues ... something like the LHC has different scaling issues, for example. |
2007/9/27-10/2 [Computer/SW/Languages/C_Cplusplus, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:48202 Activity:moderate |
9/27 Ok so to do the equivalent of the following: bool ? a : b In Python, it is: (bool and [a] or [b])[0] Uh, kick ass? \_ 99 times out of 100 if you use the trinary operator you are doing the wrong thing. \_ 99 times out of 100 if you use the ternary operator you are doing the wrong thing. Oh and python should have "a if bool else b". \_ Python 2.5 adds the ternary operator with the syntax above. See: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0308 The and-or trick was the most recognizable way to do this prior to 2.5. See: http://www.diveintopython.org/power_of_introspection/and_or.html This also explains why you need to do the wonkiness with wrapping a and b into arrays and then extracting element 0. Curious, why does the pp feel that using the ternary operator is a bad idea? -dans \_ http://tinyurl.com/36zdbe (fogcreek.com) -!pp \_ Most of this discussion convinces me that the ternary operator is a good thing. Many of the posters seem to miss the forest for the trees wrt code readability. At this point, I don't 'parse' the ternary operator, I just think of it as a (slightly) higher-level construct and find it easier to read and understand. YMMV -dans \_ bad coders : ternary operator :: Dubya : U.S. presidency \_ bad coders : code :: Dubya : U.S. presidency "However, there is already controversy surrounding the grant. Explains Dean Clancy, "Ok, so we got all this deodorant and shaving equipment now. So-fricking-what? What I want to know is how we are going to get this stuff on the engineers. Whenever I ask an engineer in Soda, "Why do you smell like Rick Starr's underwear, only worse?", they always give me some story about being allergic to deodorant or not having enough time to shower. Like I always say, you can lead a mouse to a window but you can't always make the mouse click on the window." Telling bad coders to avoid the ternary operator is like giving deodorant to EECS students. It doesn't address the core problem. -dans \_ What about L&S CS? Are they allowed to bathe? \_ I'm not aware of there being any department strictures forbidding EECS students to bathe. I don't know if I'm typical of L&S CS students, but I managed to bathe more or less regularly (or date hot women who have a thing for, possibly stinky, geeks). I suppose there was that one semester Paolo took CS 150 and didn't leave the lab for a week, but I definitely think that's an outlier data point. -dans \_ dans is channeling tjb. \_ i miss tjb. can we get him back? \_ Seconded. The man's a national treasure. \_ I think we can all agree that paolo is an outlier data point. \_ Nah, I'm not going to try to freestyle. Though I am pretty white. -dans \_ I think we can all agree that paolo is an outlier data point. |
2007/8/2 [Computer/SW/Languages/Misc, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:47516 Activity:nil |
8/2 We're using python optparse to parse arguments to a python script that then calls another program. The usage is supposed to be: script [options] program [program_options] The program_options are supposed to be passed to the program directly, optparse should not try to parse them. Unfortunatly, it does, and crashes in a case I just found. Does anyone know how to get it to not parse anything after program? |
2006/12/14-16 [Computer/SW/Languages/Misc, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:45449 Activity:kinda low |
12/14 Does anyone know how to get python to return an exit status at the end of a script? The only way I seem to be able to get it to work is to use sys.exit(), otherwise I always get 0. Seems kinda lame to end all my scripts with sys.exit though. \_ Use sys.exit. See: http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=4829 -dans |
2006/10/6-7 [Computer/SW/Languages/Perl, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:44706 Activity:moderate |
10/5 Python experts, help. I'd like to do the following Perl regexp and reg substitution equivalent in Python, what's the best way? $line=~s/hello/world/i; if ($line=~/(foo\w+)/) { $myfoo = $1; } elsif ($line=~/(bar\w+)/) { $mybar = $1; } My limited Python knowledge says I must do the followings which seems really awkward: import re ... matchFoo = http://re.compile('(foo\w+)') matchBar = http://re.compile('(bar\w+)') m = matchFoo.match(line) if (m): myfoo = m.group(1) ... \_ I don't know Perl so I'm not sure what you are trying to do, maybe this link will be of some help: http://gnosis.cx/TPiP -scottyg \_ One of the reasons I gave up on Python and love Ruby is that Ruby has OO but maintains the nice regex syntax of Perl. \_ Its OO is also a lot cleaner and more consistent than Python's, and none of this indentation-is-important i-can't-paste-code bullshit \_ Yeah, those would be some more of the reasons. \_ I don't know python, but this would be the equivalent, AFAICT: import re line = re.sub(r'(?i)hello', 'world', line) m = re.search(r'foo\w+', line) if m: myfoo = m.group(0) else: m = re.search(r'bar\w+', line) if m: mybar = bm.group(0) --dbushong \_ Now I remember why I never learned python. |
2006/9/22-25 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:44502 Activity:nil |
9/22 Is there a good way in python to too select/poll a child process's stdout and stderr? Right now I use popen2.popen3, and then childout.readlines() and childerr.readlines(), but that messes up the ordering and such. Using the actual select mechanism seems a bit heavy handed. Is there something easier? \_ stdout and stderr aren't synchronized w/ each other, and due to buffering there's no guarantee that a stderr line emitted by a program between two stdout prints will actually arrive and be consumable at that moment \_ That's true, I'm not (or wasn't) expecting perfection. After some further tests, it seems it's impossible to even get them near where you might expect them. Oh well. \_ Can you redirect stderr to stdout before reading into your python program? |
2006/9/14-16 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python, Computer/SW/Languages/Perl, Computer/SW/Languages/C_Cplusplus] UID:44378 Activity:kinda low |
9/14 http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2006/09/14/basic I never knew C++ was a higher-level language than BASIC \_ It's salon. So what? \_ More specifically, it's David Brin, who writes decent hard sci-fi. Too bad he apparently didn't get a decent computer education either. \_ More specifically, it's David Brin, who writes decent hard sci-fi. Too bad he apparently didn't get a decent computer education either. [formatd] \_ Still doesn't bother me. He's a fiction writer, not a scientist. \_ A friend of mine was in a technology-related tv show with David Brin, and reports that he's pretty technically naive / clueless. I do like his books, though. - niloc \_ It doesn't bother you that he's saying "the problem with doing X w.r.t educating our children is that <incorrect fact>"? \_ Not at all. It's a slate article online, not an official publication from anyone who has anything to do with education. I give it the weight it deserves: zero. \_ I once read an article by a tech analyst which said the internet was invented in year 1991. \_ Wow that guy is a total idiot. Everyone knows it was the year 1991 when they invented the 1nt@rw3b!1. \_ Quick, someone tell that man about ruby/python/scheme/whathaveyou \_ He already discarded Perl as "too high level" He doesn't seem to understand that crappy != "low-level" \_ He mentions Python os well, and calls C++ "high-level." |
2006/8/29-31 [Recreation/Media, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:44181 Activity:nil |
8/29 Halo meets Monty Python: http://tinyurl.com/fss3y (kotaku.com) |
2006/5/29-31 [Computer/SW/Unix, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:43216 Activity:nil |
5/29 What's the Python library for downloading a file via HTTP? I'm thinking of something along the lines of http.get(url). (simple) \_ >>import urllib >>page= urllib.urlopen('<DEAD>www.python.com').read<DEAD> -scottyg |
2006/4/16-17 [Computer/SW/Languages/C_Cplusplus, Computer/SW/Languages/Perl, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:42756 Activity:nil |
4/16 I'm very disappointed with os x: I made an application bundle around a python script: it executes fine but dropping a file on it doesn't work turns out finder passes a ProcessInfo object and you get that as argv[1] well, you get its UID- and that is the only arg you get so far the on;y way i have found to translate the UID into a process info, and thus to get the path of the file i dragged, is with cocoa i.e. c++ or objective c. doesn't seem to be any decent applescript way to do it, or i could just shell out to osascript i guess this explains why all the droplet hacks use a binary executable to call shell, perl, or python scripts this man-made creation troubles me |
2005/2/25-27 [Computer/SW/Languages/Perl, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:36415 Activity:low |
2/25 Any python guys on the motd? I'm trying to find a python equivalent to $/ (the perl input record separator) so that I can parse a file with odd record separators (ie, not \n). The data I got on google suggests that no such thing exists, but those posts were from 2003. Has support for this been added of late? \_ string.split('record_sep_char') I think. \_ Problem with this is having to read in data blocks from the file, because otherwise there's an implicit split on \n (which my records contain). \_is the file really big? f = open("/usr/dict/words") f.read().split('record_sep_char') I'm curious too if there's a better answer \_ I don't do much work in Python so I don't know if this will actually work, but my copy of Python in a Nutshell mentions the os module has an attribute linesep which is set to '\n' on Unix and '\r\n' on Windows. What happens if you try to set that attribute to your desired separator before sucking in your file? -dans |
2005/2/7-8 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:36085 Activity:nil |
2/7 What's the point of having os.getcwd() and os.path.abspath() in python? It seems that abspath() does everything getcwd() does and more. Is that not true? \_ Yes. Probably abspath calls getcwd and getcwd was implemented first. Probably just artifacts left over from language development, like deprecated crap in Java. |
2004/9/3-4 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:33345 Activity:low |
9/3 If you were to study 1 or 2 programming skills/standards/languages to improve your resume/marketability, what would they be? \_ Something which is not python. \_Why? Because it is easy to use and therefore won't impress? \_ Business degree. Thick rolodex. \_ (1) Database programming, (2) .Net \_ Linux device drivers \_ very funny \_ Visual India .NET |
2004/8/20-21 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:33048 Activity:very high |
8/20 Are python's built-in sequence types thread safe (when using python's threads)? Thanks. \_ Threads are never safe. Unroll all loops. Stop using switch/case and other ugly branching mechanisms. GOTO. You want GOTO. A properly written program with GOTO and LABEL statements is all you need. \_ But python doesn't have goto and label statements. What do I do now?! \_ GOTO :BASIC! \_ Pfffffffft. Kids these days with their symbolic identifiers and high level features like 'arrays' and 'variables.' Back when I was your age, all we had were punch cards and machine code. And we liked it! We loved it! \_ Pfffffffft. Kids these days with their symbolic identifiers and high level features like 'arrays' and 'variables.' Back when I was your age, all we had were punch cards and machine code. And we liked it! We loved it! \_ You had punch cards? I wish I had punch cards. Did they give you more than 1? \_ 1000101110101001? 10101011111011001! 11111000010111 10110 101010000 up hill both ways! \_ You had zeros and ones? And hills? You had hills? And directions? Vectors?!!! Whoa.... |
2004/7/10-12 [Computer/SW/Languages/Java, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:32208 Activity:high |
7/10 anyone figure out the google challenge? \_ what's that? \_ {first 10-digit prime found in consecutive digits e}.com \_ I got 7427466391 for phase 2. Did anyone else get this? Err, sorry, nevermind. I figured it out though. \_ http://tinyurl.com/2mxgn \_ it's kinda lame, actually. \_ Yes. They call that a challenge? |
2004/7/7-12 [Computer/SW/Languages/Misc, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:31205 Activity:high |
7/7 If you're interested in working at Lawrence Livermore National Lab, there are quite a few openings. The first opening I heard about today was for working on parallel file systems in Linux, a good OS hacking job. See it at: /csua/pub/jobs/LLNL. However, there are always a lot of jobs for scientific programmers (Familiariry with Math, Physics, and/or biology are big pluses). There's also some sys admin jobs and other miscelleous things. You can check out: http://csua.org/u/82x click "search by organization", and select \_ All I get is a PeopleSoft8 error page: "Webserver appears to be incorrectly configured." \_ It's a government facility. Someone will take a look at the logs next week and submit the "Form a committee to discuss error log issue" paperwork a week later. Quit yer bitichin', take your pension and stop stirring the water. You trying to get someone in trouble? \_ Works for me, but you could also go to ww.llnl.gov and click "Jobs" then click "advanced search" "Computation." Or search more generally. Or email me. -jrleek \_ thanks for the post. can you comment on the quality of life issues of living out there? I.e. rent, ease of getting around with or without a car, traffic, access to parks and such, how easy it is to get back to the bay area, etc.? Could one buy a decent home out there on a LLNL salary? \_ Do you have to be a genius to work there? \_ I think you're confusing LLNL with the apple store \- LLNL has a reputation of having a lot of politics ... although maybe a hacking job isnt especially affected. what do you think? --psb \_ The genius I met at apple store is positively retarded. \_ No, but it helps. Basically, LLNL is fully of self-modivated geniuses. If you want to get ahead and be self-motivated geniuses. If you want to get ahead and be really important, yeah, you should have both a PhD and a genius level intelect. To psb: Actually, yeah, the politics here can be pretty bad. Basically, you get a good income, great benifits, great job security, and you work with geninuses. The downside is you have to put up with some petty acedemic-style politics. I consider this a reasonable trade. -jrleek \_ 1. What is academic politics like? 2. Why does government job well? I thought government job pay sucks. \_ My pay is a little less than my friends who started work at the same time, but I work a lot less, and have a lot more flexibility. And oh man, THE BENIFITS are stellar. How would you like your retirement paycheck to be 100% of what you were making when you retired? That's pretty dang good. Acedemic politics are all the piss-posturing about Phds and worring about whether something is really RESEARCH or not that you see around Universities. You know, the stuff like what professors do where they get more worried about who's who and who has what education and went where than about who's doing a good job. It's not really that bad around here, but you see it sometimes. -jrleek \_ Ok, so maybe academic politics isn't worse than office cubicle politics. But you also need security clearance to work there, right? Do people get harrassed for having brown skin? \_ yes, you do, no they don't care that you're a heavy pot user and queer, no they don't care but you will care that they're all white and very conservative. \_ This post above me ^^^^ is a little unintelligible, but correct. Brown skin's not a problem, although not being a citizen is. Our biggest "minority" is easily Chinese, but yeah, this place is mostly white. It still feels wierd after leaving Berkeley to end up in a room where all the occupants are white. That's really just a function of the citizenship rule though really. Oh, and having been a druggie in the past isn't a problem, but currently being "a big pot user" might be a problem. Being a big booze drinker is a problem. -jrleek \_ it was intelligible. i simply chose to ignore common english syntax like psb does but no one calls him unintelligble. \_ are you insane? people call psb unintelligable all the time. \_ jrleek, are you elite and what do you do? \_ http://csua.com/?entry=12410 \_ I'm about as un-elite as they come, but here's what I do: http://www.llnl.gov/CASC/components/babel.html -jrleek \_ I hope you didn't pick the color scheme. \_ Why not SWIG (swig.sourceforge.net)? \_ obItWorksWithOcaml! -- ilyas \_ SWIG actually does provide pretty good functionality. It is currently well used at the lab. The main problem is that since it's not specifically designed for scientific programming, there are some features we really need that SWIG just doesn't have, and probably shouldn't add. \_ More on SWIG. Also, in SWIG all callers must be script languages. We want the whole call stack to be mixed languages. Python calls Java, which calls C, Which calls fortran, which calls Python. Completely impossible in SWIG. -jrleek \_ Uh... what's a 'script language' jrleek? \_ Oh sure, end your hiring freeze right after I get another job elsewhere. \_ I guess I wouldn't mind but is there a Ranch 99 nearby with Boba Tea hang out place filled with cute Asian chicks? That's more important than say, pay or housing. -chinese \_ Sorry, AFAIK the nearest Ranch 99 is in Albany and there are no Boba places. As they meantion below, open a restraunt and either serve good foor or cheap prices and you'll be packed constantly. As far as single h@t 4SI4N CH1X0R, I know one at church, and one at work. This being a nerd town, there are quite a few asian chicks, but they're already married to white guys. \_ can you comment on the quality of life issues of living out there? what is the housing situation? traffic? easy access to decent stores, easy access to parks? how long does it take to get back into the bay area? do you have to own a car to get around out there? \_ I live in the area but don't work at LLNL. Housing is much easier here than in SF,Oak,Berk,SJ,SC,Penninsula,etc. You have the choice of paying less to get the same size but newer than in those places or paying the same to get much more and newer. Traffic: not too bad but getting worse. Depends which direction you're going and when. Decent stores: Costco is nearby, every chain imaginable is near by, Berkeley is 25 minutes for the rest. I live 90 seconds walk from a nice park. It's 25 to Berk, 45 to SF. Yes, you must have a car but contrary to popular opinion, you aren't legally required to drive an SUV in the suburbs. The biggest problem here now is lack of restaurants. The food is ok \_ The other side of the hills may not be Berkeley or SF, but Walnut Creek offers many fine eating choices, and the kickin'-est ribs in the Bay Area are to be found in Lafayette. -elizp but there simply aren't enough. Come out here and open one and you'll be packed at every meal as long as you're not killing people. \_ yahoo maps gives a time for driving between llnl and berkeley that is exactly double what you claim. looking at the map, it looks to me like walnut creek is just as far away as berkeley...throw in traffic, and you've got a solid hour or more to get *anywhere*. \_ yeah plus it's hot as hell in the summer out there. and you're making your living suckling at the gubmint's teat! \_ what's the pay? \_ they pay decently but not great. if you spend your career there the pension more than makes up for it as well as the other perks and benes. \_ no Ranch 99, no Boba, no Chinese radio, only 1 foreign channel, forget it. -chinese \_ For 100, do you try harder? \_ You can listen to RTHK over the Internet if you have RealAudio. \_ um, parallel file system? It's called the RAID. Stop reimplementing things that have been done decades ago. \_ That's all Linux is, isn't it? |
2004/4/23 [Computer/SW/Languages/Misc, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:13352 Activity:nil |
4/23 What's a twink point? -newbie \_ run ~tom/bin/twink_warriors \_ sucky interface \_ /accounts/tom/pub/twinks \_ Wow, what's cmlee's claim to fame? \_ What is a "twinkish statement?" \_ "how many attachments can I send in a hotmail e-mail?" \_ Wow, so my above statement is recursive. Do I now have infinite twink points? Or is there a recursion limit like in Python? \_ I like this line: tom 1 1 \_ I earned one for a bug I introduced into my script. -tom \_ But naturally none for anything you have ever said. -- ilyas \_ boy, it looks like you spend a lot of time on this. Why not archive the offending statements as well. I'd love to see the particulars. \_ don't be a twink \_ You missed me! Either I'm not a twink, or I've managed to stay pretty anonynmous. |
2004/3/27-28 [Computer/SW/Languages/C_Cplusplus, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:12891 Activity:moderate |
3/27 Funny argument involving code, recursion, and a foxtrot comic: http://www.pantsfactory.org/?action=comments&linkid=1260 \_ somehow that thread neglects to provide a link to the 1.0.1 patch: \_ somehow that thread neglects to provide a link to the patch: http://homepage.mac.com/billamend/images/patch.gif |
2004/3/19-20 [Computer/SW/Languages/Java, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:12770 Activity:nil |
3/19 Can anyone provide a reference to the origin of the term "mixin" (in programming contexts)? Thanks. \_ http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?MixIn http://noframes.linuxjournal.com/lj-issues/issue84/4540.html |
2003/7/22-23 [Computer/SW/WWW/Server, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:29101 Activity:nil |
7/21 http://twistedmatrix.com/users/jh.twistd/python/moin.cgi/LiquidDemocracy Where Python, Democracy and the Tragedy Of The Commons all come together on the same page! I love this interweb thing! |
2003/5/6-7 [Computer/SW/Languages/C_Cplusplus, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:28355 Activity:low |
5/6 How difficult is it to write a python wrapper around a small C++ class? Any references would be appreciated, thank you. \_ Pretty easy. If you use the simplified wrapper and interface generator (http://www.swig.org you can use the same C++ code from python, guile, tcl, perl, etc. |
2001/7/28 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:21981 Activity:high |
7/27 PriceCostco's selling a 10 volume Monty Python Flying Circus for only $100. Is it worth it? \_ I actually bought it last christmas. I don't really regret it. \_ That's a good price. I think I paid $150 for my set. \_ Dunno, i'd pay $100 for the full set of The Young Ones, or Black Adder, or Red Dwarf. Python used to be funny, but about the only -paolo interestnig one left is "meaning of life." - paolo (who saw Eric - paolo Idle at the warfield last year and really didn't laugh much). -paolo \_ Uhm, I'm guessing that this paolo. Quite emphatic nowadays. \_ not that I didn't like python as a kid, I remember watching it on MTV a long time ago and really liking it. But lately, it's not been funny at all. -paolo \_ It's called growing up. I thoroughly recommend it to most sodans. \_ python was on tv?!? Damn don't tell that to lwall's #1 fan! |
2001/4/29-30 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:21140 Activity:high |
4/29 does anybody know which text wilensky uses in 188? does everyone just use the norvig book? thanks. \_ everyone uses russell&norvig \_ Russell and Norvig is the standard. AI textbook. |
2001/4/9-10 [Computer/SW/Languages/Perl, Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:20925 Activity:very high |
4/9 Does anyone here use the Python language on a regular basis? What do you use it for? What is your opinion of it as a language? \_ ML >> Perl >> Python. \_ Tcl >> ML >> ... >> PHP \_ I've seen Python, PHP, Perl, and TCL. 3 of 4 are crap. Got a link for ML? I can decide for myself. \_ http://cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/what/smlnj \_ Who is it that keeps putting ML into these Python comparisons? I seriously doubt anyone would consider ML where they were thinking of using either Perl or Python. Might as well put Prolog into these comparisons. \_ Ok! ML >> Prolog >> Perl >> Python. \_ Scheme >> ML >> Prolog >> Perl >> Python >> JavaScript \_ ML >> Scheme. Scheme doesn't have a type system. \_ so what? you making fun of it? it gets by just fine without one asshole. \_ Silly troll. I programmed lisp in the industry. I _know_ how bad runtime type errors are in lisp-like languages. Train harder. To answer the original poster's question, Python is a nice language. It's a poor-man's Smalltalk. There are some weird quirks to the language, but i would prefer it to Perl for all but the simplest tasks. |
2000/8/25 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:19095 Activity:nil |
8/25 What is the best site for a primer on python? \_ http://www.python.org |
1996/11/1 [Computer/SW/Languages/Python] UID:31976 Activity:nil |
11/1 Python 1.4 installed. What is Python? Check out the homepage at http://www.python.org a tutorial at http://www.python.org/doc/tut/tut.html and a new book that just came out: Internet Programming with Python. -- cmlee |
12/25 |