Fredrik Lundh wrote:
...
> fwiw, they've also been around for ages:
>
> http://foldoc.doc.ic.ac.uk/foldoc/foldoc.cgi?list+comprehension
>
> (the name goes back to the early eighties, the construct is older than
> that)
Ahh... Fair enough. I hadn't come across it as a programming construct un
"Michael" wrote:
> List comprehensions get their name (AFAICT) very clearly from set
> comprehensions in mathematics. As a result anyone who has ever seen
> a set comprehension in maths goes "oooh, I see". They're not the same, but
> IMO they're close enough to warrant that name.
fwiw, they've al
Xah Lee wrote:
> as i have hinted
> ( http://xahlee.org/perl-python/list_comprehension.html ), the
> so-called List Comprehension is just a irregular syntax to facilitate
> generating lists. The name is a terrible jargon, and the means is also
> quite fucked up. The proper name should be something
X-Ftn-To: Paul F. Dietz
"Paul F. Dietz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> As a similar example: I've been told by various women independently,
>> that "there are more babies born near a full moon."
>
>That's also a myth.
Perhaps not, consider deamon or vampire babies.
:)
--
Xah Lee wrote:
[snip]
>(they tried, with their limited implementation of lambda and
> shun it like a plaque)
Can't say I've heard that expression before...
--
--
Lucas Raab
lvraab"@"earthlink.net
dotpyFE"@"gmail.com
AIM:Phoenix11890
MSN:dotpyfe "@" gmail.com
IRC
Ulrich Hobelmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> When TV is turned off by a power failure, lots of people that
> usually never have sex start making love, and lots of people that
> usually use contraception lose their minds and forget about it.
>
> 9 months later more babies are born, unless that's
Paul F. Dietz wrote:
> Bart Lateur wrote:
>
>> As a similar example: I've been told by various women independently,
>> that "there are more babies born near a full moon."
>
> That's also a myth.
Right, everybody knows that it's not natural (moon) light that
influences reproductive behavior, it'
Bart Lateur wrote:
> As a similar example: I've been told by various women independently,
> that "there are more babies born near a full moon."
That's also a myth.
Paul
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
(posted c.l.python ONLY)
Xah (may i call you Xah?)
SOrry to say, but your older posts were much funnier:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.lisp/browse_frm/thread/15f7015d23a6758e/9ee26da60295d7c8?lnk=st&q=&rnum=5&hl=en#9ee26da60295d7c8
(also seems your anti-cult cult really hasn't gotten
the programers in the industry, including bigwigs such as Guido or that
Larry Wall fuckhead, really don't know shit about computer languages.
Sometimes i get pissed by Stephen Wolfram's megalomaniac cries, but in
many ways, i think his statements about the fucking moronicities of the
academicians a
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>A skeptical policeman who says he doesn't actually believe the moon
>affects behaviour nevertheless reports that "last weekend" things were
>really crazy, and it was a full moon. Somebody writes in to correct him:
>no, the full moon is actually "tomorrow".
As a similar exa
Tony Meyer wrote:
> X-Spambayes-Classification: ham; 0.008
>
> On 30/09/2005, at 10:56 PM, Gerrit Holl wrote:
> > Tony Meyer wrote:
> >> X-Spambayes-Classification: ham; 0.048
>
> Unless I'm misreading things, that's *my* message that scored 0.048
> (the "from:addr:ihug.co.nz", "from:name:tony
I have an excellent idea. Create your own programming language and do
whatever you want with it. Until then, I'm thinking that Guido can do
whatever he wants with his. But I'm guessing that your programming
skills will be in the same place as your greatness - in your own head.
--
http://mail.pyth
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 18:02:14 -0400, Sherm Pendley wrote:
>
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> >
> >> I wonder if his postings are related to the phases of the moon? It
> >> might explain a lot.
> >
> > Yes, it would. Note that the word lunatic is derived from the Latin word
>
On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 18:02:14 -0400, Sherm Pendley wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
>> I wonder if his postings are related to the phases of the moon? It
>> might explain a lot.
>
> Yes, it would. Note that the word lunatic is derived from the Latin word
> luna, meaning moon.
Yes, lunatic is
On 30/09/2005, at 10:56 PM, Gerrit Holl wrote:
> Tony Meyer wrote:
>
>> X-Spambayes-Classification: ham; 0.048
>> X-Spambayes-Evidence: '*H*': 0.90; '*S*': 0.00; 'bug.': 0.07;
>> 'flagged': 0.07;
>> "i'd": 0.08; 'bayes': 0.09; 'from:addr:ihug.co.nz': 0.09;
>> 'really,': 0.09; 'cc:no real
Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> [off-list]
>
> Peter Hansen wrote:
>> Gerrit Holl wrote:
>>
>>>True. However, most mail to this mailinglist has less than 0.001 spam
>>>probability. As you can see, this one had 0.048 - a vast score, almost
>>>enough to put it in my unsure box. It seems t
that's lunatic, of course
(check spelling is not in my system yet)On 10/1/05, dimitri pater <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yes, it would. Note that the word lunatic is derived from the Latin wordluna, meaning moon.
so, he is a just another lunitac barking at the moon?
well, err barking at the python
Yes, it would. Note that the word lunatic is derived from the Latin wordluna, meaning moon.
so, he is a just another lunitac barking at the moon?
well, err barking at the python list...
greetz,
dimitri
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> I wonder if his postings are related to the phases of the moon? It
> might explain a lot.
Yes, it would. Note that the word lunatic is derived from the Latin word
luna, meaning moon.
sherm--
--
Cocoa programming in Perl: http://camelbones.sourceforge.net
Hire me! My
Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm responding off-list
No you're not!
Sorry if I missed some subtle joke here...
John
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Jorge Godoy wrote:
> His intent was never to convince people or pass information.
On comp.lang.lisp Xah Lee is a well known troll... don't feed him :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> In comp.lang.perl.misc Kalle Anke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 19:44:28 +0200, Matt wrote
>>(in article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>):
>
>
>
>>>OK... your post seems to indicate a belief that everyone else is
>>>somehow incompetent. Sounds a bit like the
In comp.lang.perl.misc Kalle Anke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 19:44:28 +0200, Matt wrote
> (in article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>):
>> OK... your post seems to indicate a belief that everyone else is
>> somehow incompetent. Sounds a bit like the "I am sane, it is everyone
>> else wh
On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 19:44:28 +0200, Matt wrote
(in article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>):
> OK... your post seems to indicate a belief that everyone else is
> somehow incompetent. Sounds a bit like the "I am sane, it is everyone
> else who is crazy" concept. Can you suggest a technology or
> technologist w
[off-list]
Peter Hansen wrote:
> Gerrit Holl wrote:
>
>>True. However, most mail to this mailinglist has less than 0.001 spam
>>probability. As you can see, this one had 0.048 - a vast score, almost
>>enough to put it in my unsure box. It seems to be just not hammy enough.
>>It's interesting to s
Gerrit Holl wrote:
> True. However, most mail to this mailinglist has less than 0.001 spam
> probability. As you can see, this one had 0.048 - a vast score, almost
> enough to put it in my unsure box. It seems to be just not hammy enough.
> It's interesting to see that no none of the foul language
Tony Meyer wrote:
> X-Spambayes-Classification: ham; 0.048
> X-Spambayes-Evidence: '*H*': 0.90; '*S*': 0.00; 'bug.': 0.07; 'flagged':
> 0.07;
> "i'd": 0.08; 'bayes': 0.09; 'from:addr:ihug.co.nz': 0.09;
> 'really,': 0.09; 'cc:no real name:2**0': 0.14;
> 'from:addr:t-meyer': 0.16;
On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 07:50:45 +1000, rumours say that "Delaney, Timothy
(Tim)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> might have written:
>You have to admit though, he's remarkably good at getting past
>Spambayes. Despite classifying *every* Xah Lee post as spam, he still
>manages to get most of his posts classified
On 9/29/05, Tim Leslie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 29 Sep 2005 07:24:17 -0700, Xah Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Of course, you begin to write things like Java, in three thousand words
> > just to state you are a moron.
> >
> >
>
> +1 QOTW.
>
> Tim
>
-1 XLEGQOTW
(Xah Lee Ever Getting
> I know nobody wants to do add "white/black-listing", so we can do it
> probabilistically. In case it is not obvious, mailings with the words
> "jargon" or "moron" and their derrivatives should be flagged as 99.9%
> probability for Moronicity Xha Lee, Jargonizer, spam. If spam bayes
> can't
> fi
I know nobody wants to do add "white/black-listing", so we can do it
probabilistically. In case it is not obvious, mailings with the words
"jargon" or "moron" and their derrivatives should be flagged as 99.9%
probability for Moronicity Xha Lee, Jargonizer, spam. If spam bayes can't
figure this
On 29 Sep 2005 07:24:17 -0700, Xah Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Of course, you begin to write things like Java, in three thousand wordsjust to state you are a moron.
+1 QOTW.
Tim
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
[Delaney, Timothy (Tim)]
> Tony Meyer wrote:
> > It's made worse because he uses so many words that you'd expect to
> > find in legitimate c.l.p messages.
> It's this last bit that's the problem. I've got no problems filtering
> other types of spam messages to the list, but XL adds so many non-sp
Tony Meyer wrote:
> I expect that if you look at the clues for such messages, you'll find
> that any 'Xah Lee' clues are swamped by lots of 'c.l.p message'
> clues. A big problem with filtering mailing lists at the user end
> (rather than before the post is accepted) is that the mailing
> softwar
On 30/09/2005, at 9:50 AM, Delaney, Timothy (Tim) wrote:
> You have to admit though, he's remarkably good at getting past
> Spambayes. Despite classifying *every* Xah Lee post as spam, he still
> manages to get most of his posts classified as 0% or 1% spam.
I can't believe that people are using c
On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 10:44:28 -0700, Matt wrote:
> OK... your post seems to indicate a belief that everyone else is
> somehow incompetent. Sounds a bit like the "I am sane, it is everyone
> else who is crazy" concept. Can you suggest a technology or
> technologist who, in your expert opinion, has g
Delaney, Timothy (Tim) wrote:
> You have to admit though, he's remarkably good at getting past
> Spambayes. Despite classifying *every* Xah Lee post as spam, he still
> manages to get most of his posts classified as 0% or 1% spam.
Hmm, perhaps he's using steganography. Maybe the emails actually
On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 13:13:51 -0400, Bill Mill wrote:
>> But, this post of his shows [Guido's] haughtiness
>
> +1 IQOTW
>
> (Ironic Quote Of The Week. Thanks for the laughs, Xah)
I swore I wouldn't feed the troll by responding to his post, but the
opportunity to quote from "The Princess Bride"
Sherm Pendley wrote:
> "Matt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> OK... your post seems to indicate a belief that everyone else is
>> somehow incompetent.
>
> Xah's just a troll - best to just ignore him. He posts these diatribes
> to multiple groups hoping to start a fight.
You have to admit thou
"Matt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> OK... your post seems to indicate a belief that everyone else is
> somehow incompetent.
Xah's just a troll - best to just ignore him. He posts these diatribes
to multiple groups hoping to start a fight.
sherm--
--
Cocoa programming in Perl: http://camelbone
Xah Lee wrote:
>There are quite a lot f___ing liers and charlatans in the computing
>industry, especially the OpenSourcers, from the f___ing
>a-dime-a-million students with their "FREE" irresponsible homeworks
>on the net to f___heads like James Gosling of Java , Larry Wall of
>Perl, Linus Torvolts
> But, this post of his shows [Guido's] haughtiness
+1 IQOTW
(Ironic Quote Of The Week. Thanks for the laughs, Xah)
Peace
Bill Mill
bill.mill at gmail.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
addendum:
reduce() in fact embodies a form of iteration/recursion on lists, very
suitable in a functional language environment. If Python's lambda and
other functional facilities are more powerful, reduce() would be a good
addition. For instance, in functional programing, it is a paradigm to
nest
Xah Lee wrote:
> ...What the fuck is the former?
> ...What the fuck would anyone to
> ...]”, is rather inane, as you can now see.
>
> ...What the fuck does it mean...
> ...you begin to write things like Java...
Can you please alter the tone of your voice?
Gerrit.
--
Temperature in Luleå, Norrb
Michael Goettsche <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thursday 29 September 2005 16:24, Xah Lee wrote:
> > A Moronicity of Guido van Rossum
> >
> > Xah Lee, 200509
> >
>
> Assuming you want to reach people to convince them your position is right,
> why
> don't you try that in proper language? "mor
Michael Goettsche wrote:
> Assuming you want to reach people to convince them your position is right,
> why
> don't you try that in proper language? "moron" occured 7 times in your not
> too long text, that doesn't let you look like a tech moron or a math moron,
> but just like a moron.
Actua
On Thursday 29 September 2005 16:24, Xah Lee wrote:
> A Moronicity of Guido van Rossum
>
> Xah Lee, 200509
>
Assuming you want to reach people to convince them your position is right, why
don't you try that in proper language? "moron" occured 7 times in your not
too long text, that doesn't let y
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