Hello All,
>Similarly, if you call sorted() on a list of large strings,
you get a new list, but the strings are not duplicated, so it's not
nearly the duplication it might look like.
1. Sorry, but I did not understand the above point.
2. My interpretation of your answer is that the stack memo
Hi!
I am trying to do an exercise abt classes, but I find it really hard even after
reading. I have tryed to start it at the bottom of this document. I hope
someone can help me. I have to submit the question by sunday.
Exercise 7.4. Make a class for straight lines.
Make a class Line whose con
On 25/10/13 09:13, Amir Fawzi wrote:
Exercise 7.4. Make a class for straight lines.
Make a class Line whose constructor takes two points p1 and p2 (2-
tuples or 2-lists) as input. The line goes through these two points (see
function line in Chapter 3.1.7 for the relevant formula of the line).
It's better to use the "with open" statement to open the file and then
process it line by line with occurrence counter, like:
def occurence(pathToFile, substring):
substringCount = 0
with open(pathToFile, 'r') as src:
for line in src:
substringCount += line.count(substr
On 25/10/2013 08:20, #PATHANGI JANARDHANAN JATINSHRAVAN# wrote:
> Hello All,
>
>>Similarly, if you call sorted() on a list of large strings,
> you get a new list, but the strings are not duplicated, so it's not
> nearly the duplication it might look like.
>
> 1. Sorry, but I did not understand t
Hello Jay,
thanks for your reply.
On Thu, Oct 24, 2013 at 11:45 PM, Jay Lozier wrote:
> On Thu, 2013-10-24 at 21:57 +0200, Rafael Knuth wrote:
> > Hej,
> > I can't get Python 3.3 up and running (it's properly installed but I
> > can't launch it), and I was wondering if anyone using OpenSUSE 12