I have had a fair amount of discussions on continuous learning and knowledge sharing the past few days. It became rather obvious that a lot of us have developed their own techniques, but also that maybe most of us are still in search of more efficient techniques. Having gone through several phases myself, I would like to share my current way of learning: the Hacker Way. Here are some snippets take
In 2005, <a href = "http://mathieu.fenniak.net/">Mathieu Fenniak launched <a href = "http://pybrary.net/pyPdf/" target = "pybrary">PyPdf "as a PDF toolkit ..." focused on document manipulation: by-page splitting, concatenation, and merging; document introspection; page cropping; and document encryption and decryption. At the end of 2011, after consultation with Mathieu and others, <a href = "http
I wanted to compare reading lines of string input from stdin using Python and C++ and was shocked to see my C++ code run an order of magnitude slower than the equivalent Python code. Since my C++ is rusty and I'm not yet an expert Pythonista, please tell me if I'm doing something wrong or if I'm misunderstanding something. (TLDR answer: include the statement: cin.sync_with_stdio(false) or just use
The world of infrastructure as code is becoming far more pervasive and many Python developers are trying to find a way to get started. This class will get you up and running with Chef and Fabric to manage your systems be they in the cloud or under your desk. Python projects can succeed or fail because of their documentation. Thanks to Sphinx, Python now has a “documentation framework” with indexin
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く