hi ther - this is a "strange question"... :)
I WANT to get on a wiki spammers list for a test project i'm trying to do with some folks - how do i go about doing that?? :)
Hello, python newbie here.
I'm going through python and I was wondering what are the advantages of using the *args as a parameter over just passing a list as a parameter, besides aesthetics?
My aim is to list all elements of the array a whose values are greater than their index positions. I wrote a Haskell code like this.
[a|i<-[0..2],a<-[1..3],a!!i>i]
When tested on ghci prelude prompt, I get the following error message which I am unable to understand.
No instance for (Num [a]) arising from the literal 3 at <interactive>:1:20 Possible fix: add an instance declaration for (Num [a])
Is there a preferred (not ugly) way of outputting a list length as a string? Currently I am nesting function calls like so:
print "Length: %s" % str(len(self.listOfThings))
This seems like a hack solution, is there a more graceful way of achieving the same result?
Given a list:
l1: ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'a', 'b']
output: ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a'_1, 'a'_2, 'b'_1 ]
I created the following code to get the output. Its messyyy..
for index in range(len(l1)):
counter = 1
list_of_duplicates_for_item = [dup_index for dup_index, item in enumerate(l1) if item == l1[index] and l1.count(l1[index]) > 1]
for dup_index in list_of_duplicates_for_item[1:]:
l1[dup_index] = l1[dup_index] + '_' + str(counter)
counter = counter + 1
Is there a more pythonic way of doing this? I couldnt find anything on the web.
How can I go to an anchor tag on the page when the myDropDownList_SelectedIndexChanged() event fires?
I am using regular ASP.NET Forms.
Update: The following is valid for an ASP.NET Button. I would like to achieve the same functionality (going to #someAnchor) when I select an option from the Dropdown list.
<asp:Button ID="btnSubmit" runat="server" Text="Do IT" Width="186px" PostBackUrl="#myAnchor" CausesValidation="false" />
I'd like to list the items in a tuple in Python starting with the back and go to front.
Similar to:
foo_t = tuple(int(f) for f in foo)
print foo, foo_t[len(foo_t)-1] ...
I believe this should be possible without Try ...-4, except ...-3.
Thoughts? suggestions?
I have a controller that takes in a viewmodel and submitbutton
public ActionResult AddLocation(AddLocationViewModel viewModel, string submitButton)
My view is bound to the viewmodel. The viewmodel contains a list objects used to create an html table with checkboxes. Is there a way to access the selected "rows" through the viewmodel in my controller? So that I can iterate through and get the selected items?
Thanks
LDD
I'm writing a simple linear linked list implementation in PHP. This is basically just for practice... part of a Project Euler problem. I'm not sure if I should be using unset() to help in garbage collection in order to avoid memory leaks. Should I include an unset() for head and temp in the destructor of LLL?
I understand that I'll use unset() to delete nodes when I want, but is unset() necessary for general clean up at any point?
Is the memory map freed once the script terminates even if you don't use unset()?
I saw this SO question, but I'm still a little unclear. Is the answer that you simply don't have to use unset() to avoid any sort of memory leaks associated with creating references?
I'm using PHP 5.. btw.
Unsetting references in PHP
PHP references tutorial
Here is the code - I'm creating references when I create $temp and $this-head at certain points in the LLL class:
class Node
{
public $data;
public $next;
}
class LLL
{
// The first node
private $head;
public function __construct()
{
$this->head = NULL;
}
public function insertFirst($data)
{
if (!$this->head)
{
// Create the head
$this->head = new Node;
$temp =& $this->head;
$temp->data = $data;
$temp->next = NULL;
} else
{
// Add a node, and make it the new head.
$temp = new Node;
$temp->next = $this->head;
$temp->data = $data;
$this->head =& $temp;
}
}
public function showAll()
{
echo "The linear linked list:<br/> ";
if ($this->head)
{
$temp =& $this->head;
do
{
echo $temp->data . " ";
} while ($temp =& $temp->next);
} else
{
echo "is empty.";
}
echo "<br/>";
}
}
Thanks!
Hi,
I have a Silverlight web app which uses ASP.net Website administration tool for user authentication. Now is there any way by which I can get the list of all registered users in Silverlight?
Is there a faster way to do this in python?
[f for f in list_1 if not f in list_2]
list_1 and list_2 both consist of about 120.000 strings. It takes about 4 minutes to generate the new list.
hello mates i am trying to store value from dropdown list to an integer but i am getting an exception Input string was not in a correct format.
int experienceYears = Convert.ToInt32("DropDownList1.SelectedValue");
please help.
Usually when I'm typing a Java import statement in Eclipse or otherwise referencing a class via the packages that it is in, Eclipse shows a context menu with a list of all classes within that package. There have been several times, however, that it would only shows subpackages within a package and would not show classes within that package.
Does anyone know why this is? It sounds like a setting/preference was changed, but I never knowingly changed anything related to this.
The amount of records to be displayed in drop-down combo boxes affect the performance of internet applications. What are the current best practices to solve this problem? Are paginated drop-downs the only solution? What is considered a large list? 100 or 1000?
I am creating a pricing program. I need to calculate the amounts according to the current tax list in the US (in various places).
I want to have a button 'Update taxes' in the administrative settings of the application, so when the user clicks it, it should download from somewhere the active tax amounts.
So I actually want to have a function decimal GetTax(string zip).
Any resources, ideas are welcommed.
Thanks
I have a list containing version strings, such as things:
versions_list = ["1.1.2", "1.0.0", "1.3.3", "1.0.12", "1.0.2"]
I would like to sort it, so the result would be something like this:
versions_list = ["1.0.0", "1.0.2", "1.0.12", "1.1.2", "1.3.3"]
The order of precendece for the digits should obviously be from left to right, and it should be decending. So 1.2.3 comes before 2.2.3 and 2.2.2 comes before 2.2.3.
How do I do this in Python?
I have a function foo(i) that takes an integer and takes a significant amount of time to execute. Will there be a significant performance difference between any of the following ways of initializing a:
a = [foo(i) for i in xrange(100)]
a = map(foo, range(100))
vfoo = numpy.vectorize(foo)
a = vfoo(range(100))
(I don't care whether the output is a list or a numpy array.)
Is there a better way?
How do you get each item in the ForeignKey field in a list, for example:
class Delegate(models.Model):
excursion = models.ForeignKey(Excursion, limit_choices_to = {'is_activity': False}, related_name='excursion', null=True, blank=True)
Template:
{% for object in formset.excursion_set.all %}
{{ object.lable }}
etc
{% endfor %}
My reason is that I don't want the options to display as a dropdown, but in a custom way that I will style etc.
I generally have ignored using macros while writing in C but I think I know fundamentals about them. While i was reading the source code of list in linux kernel, i saw something like that:
#define LIST_HEAD_INIT(name) { &(name), &(name) }
#define LIST_HEAD(name) \
struct list_head name = LIST_HEAD_INIT(name)
(You can access the remaining part of the code from here.)
I didn't understand the function of ampersands(I don't think they are the address of operands here) in LIST_HEAD_INIT and so the use of LIST_HEAD_INIT in the code. I'd appreciate if someone can enlighten me.