Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-18 Thread Citizen Kant
rusi said: > And let me suggest that you follow your own advise -- Can you say what > you have to say in 1/10th the number of words? Ok if not 1/10th then > 1/5th? 1-third? Thanks for the suggestion. I apologize for being that expansive; maybe you are right about this. In my world less use to be

Re: Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-16 Thread llanitedave
On Thursday, May 16, 2013 5:28:11 AM UTC-7, Citizen Kant wrote: > On May 16, 5:55 am, Citizen Kant wrote: > If someone's interested on thinking outside the box with me for the sake of helping me, that would be great and highly appreciated. Sorry, but you're asking for more than just thinking o

Re: Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-16 Thread Chris Angelico
On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 11:46 PM, rusi wrote: > IOW a programmer is one who quickly and easily comes to the nub/core/ > kernel/essence of a problem and as easily and adroitly shaves off the > irrelevant. +1. This is a fairly good description of a programmer's job. Of course, that's the theoretic

Re: Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-16 Thread rusi
On May 16, 5:28 pm, Citizen Kant wrote: > > I'm just an honest and polite guy asking you guys a couple of simple out of > the box questions that are important for me. Everyone here has the freedom > to keep on with their own assumptions and beliefs. If someone's interested > on thinking outside th

Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-16 Thread Citizen Kant
On May 16, 5:55 am, Citizen Kant wrote: > As a matter of > class, the word python names first a python snake than a Monty Python, > which is 50% inspired by that python word, word that's been being > considered the given name of a particular kind of snake since times in > which Terry Gilliam wasn'

Re: Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-15 Thread Fábio Santos
On 15 May 2013 20:59, "Citizen Kant" wrote: > Of course one always may want to perform random hacking and turn tables just because and treat the word python as a variable's name, setting that python equals Monty Python in order to checkmate any given conversation. In that case we'll have to cope t

Re: Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-15 Thread alex23
On May 16, 5:55 am, Citizen Kant wrote: > As a matter of > class, the word python names first a python snake than a Monty Python, > which is 50% inspired by that python word, word that's been being > considered the given name of a particular kind of snake since times in > which Terry Gilliam wasn'

Fwd: Fwd: Python for philosophers

2013-05-15 Thread Citizen Kant
On 2013-05-14, Citizen Kant wrote: > 2013/5/14 Steven D'Aprano > >> On Tue, 14 May 2013 01:32:43 +0200, Citizen Kant wrote: >> >> >> An entity named Python must be somehow as a serpent. Don't forget that >> >> I'm with the freeing up of my memory, now I'm not trying to follow the >> >> path of wh