Content warnings seem to be useless or add stress
Content warnings seem to be useless or add stress
Well, this is all very subjective. Idk what you do for a living, but there are massive differences between fact to fact communication and IM/email.
To say it’s outdated is just insane and flat wrong.
Not quite, this has happened before
Fuck man, don’t throw a grenade into the room without warning
I cannot tell if you are being serious or just having fun with buzzwords
No, I think everyone should absolutely vote and fuck trump. I’m just pointing out that this meme is misinformation and wrong.
Presidents aren’t decided by the popular vote though?
Seriously, fuck off with the AI shit. At best it’s intelligent regex. And “intelligence” here means a specific thing.
Through their paws for one, and when they lick their coats, the saliva acts like sweat and cools them down as it evaporates. And if it’s really bad, they pant.
Didn’t she refer to herself as as “Rivera’s wife” instead of herself as an artist at least up until the early 30’s?
What is dystopian about this?
Eh, degrees can be overrated. I don’t have one and it hasn’t hindered me at all. Ultimately, it depends what kind of work you want to get into and your drive to self learn, how quick you can pick things up, and adaptability. You got this.
That’s fair, I was trying to be a bit vague since you’re learning and wanted to help point you to the solution. Went a little too vague with it 🙂
No problem bud, good luck
the signature for the input
function (that’s what it’s called instead of command) is
def input(__prompt: Any = ...) -> str
which means it’s always going to return a string.
So it starts off as a string, then becomes whatever is typed in
there’s no real way for something to do that automatically without a much more robust setup.
this snippet proves that
test_int = input('enter integer:')
print(type(test_int))
test_float = input('enter float:')
print(type(test_float))
test_str = input('enter string:')
print(type(test_str))
>> <class 'str'>
>> <class 'str'>
>> <class 'str'>
it is the responsibility of your program to validate and do whatever you want with the result, and part of that can include casting it to a different type.
The traceback should give you an idea of what’s going on, but you can test for yourself by checking the result of input:
test = input('enter number:')
print(type(test))
Another question to ask is “why did you cast ‘h’ as a float?” And what happens if you just do h + r?
picture of two guys kneeling in front of a wall
Bullshit feely caption that doesn’t make sense to any who understands the words being used
Internet: omg, so wholesome!
You are wildly naive if you view things this way
Fuckin called it.