workspace
stringclasses 1
value | channel
stringclasses 1
value | sentences
stringlengths 1
3.93k
| ts
stringlengths 26
26
| user
stringlengths 2
11
| sentence_id
stringlengths 44
53
| timestamp
float64 1.5B
1.56B
| __index_level_0__
int64 0
106k
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
pythondev
|
help
|
None
|
2019-05-13T11:23:29.454300
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:23:29.454300
| 1,557,746,609.4543 | 23,421 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yeah, you need an instance of keywords, or make analyze a class method (likely the first).
|
2019-05-13T11:29:54.455200
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:29:54.455200
| 1,557,746,994.4552 | 23,422 |
pythondev
|
help
|
None
|
2019-05-13T11:30:15.455300
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:30:15.455300
| 1,557,747,015.4553 | 23,423 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Ok I will try that
|
2019-05-13T11:30:25.455800
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:30:25.455800
| 1,557,747,025.4558 | 23,424 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`__init__() missing 1 required positional argument: 'keyword'` Getting this now
|
2019-05-13T11:31:33.456200
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:31:33.456200
| 1,557,747,093.4562 | 23,425 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Code is the same
|
2019-05-13T11:31:44.456400
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:31:44.456400
| 1,557,747,104.4564 | 23,426 |
pythondev
|
help
|
ah, yes, when you initialize `Keyword()` it looks like it wants a keyword to set to `self.keyword` sorry i missed that
|
2019-05-13T11:32:35.457300
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:32:35.457300
| 1,557,747,155.4573 | 23,427 |
pythondev
|
help
|
So do I need to re-initilize a `self.Keyword`?
|
2019-05-13T11:34:15.458000
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:34:15.458000
| 1,557,747,255.458 | 23,428 |
pythondev
|
help
|
lets take a step back - what are you trying to do with this class?
|
2019-05-13T11:34:36.458600
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:34:36.458600
| 1,557,747,276.4586 | 23,429 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I needs to read in a string, process it and return either true or false
|
2019-05-13T11:35:30.459500
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:35:30.459500
| 1,557,747,330.4595 | 23,430 |
pythondev
|
help
|
ok, what does “process it” mean, and what is `self.keywrod` supposed to hold?
|
2019-05-13T11:35:58.460100
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:35:58.460100
| 1,557,747,358.4601 | 23,431 |
pythondev
|
help
|
processing the string is basically checking to see if it has certain attributes and then based on the conditions it will return true or false
|
2019-05-13T11:37:29.461300
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:37:29.461300
| 1,557,747,449.4613 | 23,432 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`self.keyword` is holding the keyword. And I am new to classes so this may seem like a dumb question but if I am only defining the `analyze` def in the class do i need the `self.keyword = keyword`
|
2019-05-13T11:38:51.463000
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:38:51.463000
| 1,557,747,531.463 | 23,433 |
pythondev
|
help
|
in the `__init__`
|
2019-05-13T11:38:59.463300
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:38:59.463300
| 1,557,747,539.4633 | 23,434 |
pythondev
|
help
|
is the keyword the condition you are searching for in a given string?
|
2019-05-13T11:39:22.463700
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:39:22.463700
| 1,557,747,562.4637 | 23,435 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Ahhhh I see one moment that code is confusing let me fix it one moment
|
2019-05-13T11:40:04.464300
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:40:04.464300
| 1,557,747,604.4643 | 23,436 |
pythondev
|
help
|
hold on…
|
2019-05-13T11:40:19.464600
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:40:19.464600
| 1,557,747,619.4646 | 23,437 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Lets talk it through first
|
2019-05-13T11:40:32.465000
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:40:32.465000
| 1,557,747,632.465 | 23,438 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you might not need a class, it might be simpler (or harder)
|
2019-05-13T11:40:43.465300
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:40:43.465300
| 1,557,747,643.4653 | 23,439 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Ok
|
2019-05-13T11:40:50.465500
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:40:50.465500
| 1,557,747,650.4655 | 23,440 |
pythondev
|
help
|
it can be useful to leave out the implementation details and mainly discuss the problem.
|
2019-05-13T11:41:13.466700
|
Eliana
|
pythondev_help_Eliana_2019-05-13T11:41:13.466700
| 1,557,747,673.4667 | 23,441 |
pythondev
|
help
|
conceptually what are you thinking `self.keyword` will represent?
|
2019-05-13T11:41:20.466900
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:41:20.466900
| 1,557,747,680.4669 | 23,442 |
pythondev
|
help
|
well I am using a class because I want the keywords function in another program
|
2019-05-13T11:41:27.467100
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:41:27.467100
| 1,557,747,687.4671 | 23,443 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you can import functions too
|
2019-05-13T11:41:36.467400
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:41:36.467400
| 1,557,747,696.4674 | 23,444 |
pythondev
|
help
|
everything in python is an object and can be imported
|
2019-05-13T11:41:44.468000
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:41:44.468000
| 1,557,747,704.468 | 23,445 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`from Keywords import analyze`
|
2019-05-13T11:42:39.468400
|
Holly
|
pythondev_help_Holly_2019-05-13T11:42:39.468400
| 1,557,747,759.4684 | 23,446 |
pythondev
|
help
|
It will represent a string where the keywords will be taken out
|
2019-05-13T11:42:51.468700
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:42:51.468700
| 1,557,747,771.4687 | 23,447 |
pythondev
|
help
|
so if my string is `Hello how are you`
|
2019-05-13T11:43:03.469000
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:43:03.469000
| 1,557,747,783.469 | 23,448 |
pythondev
|
help
|
It will cut it up into `hello`, `how`, `are`, `you`
|
2019-05-13T11:43:27.469600
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:43:27.469600
| 1,557,747,807.4696 | 23,449 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Hold up
|
2019-05-13T11:44:43.470100
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:44:43.470100
| 1,557,747,883.4701 | 23,450 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Oh i fixed it
|
2019-05-13T11:44:49.470400
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:44:49.470400
| 1,557,747,889.4704 | 23,451 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yay
|
2019-05-13T11:44:51.470600
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:44:51.470600
| 1,557,747,891.4706 | 23,452 |
pythondev
|
help
|
so i removed the `self.keyword` funtion which was giving me the error
|
2019-05-13T11:45:18.471400
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:45:18.471400
| 1,557,747,918.4714 | 23,453 |
pythondev
|
help
|
it did look superfluous
|
2019-05-13T11:45:34.471700
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:45:34.471700
| 1,557,747,934.4717 | 23,454 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yea
|
2019-05-13T11:45:39.472000
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:45:39.472000
| 1,557,747,939.472 | 23,455 |
pythondev
|
help
|
but now you don’t need the calss
|
2019-05-13T11:45:43.472200
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:45:43.472200
| 1,557,747,943.4722 | 23,456 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`analyze` (or more preferably `does_string_meet_conditions`) can be a standalone function
|
2019-05-13T11:46:40.473400
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:46:40.473400
| 1,557,748,000.4734 | 23,457 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Yea now I get what you are saying
|
2019-05-13T11:47:13.474000
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:47:13.474000
| 1,557,748,033.474 | 23,458 |
pythondev
|
help
|
:thumbsup:
|
2019-05-13T11:47:23.474200
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:47:23.474200
| 1,557,748,043.4742 | 23,459 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Clemmie> :taco:
|
2019-05-13T11:48:26.474400
|
Eliana
|
pythondev_help_Eliana_2019-05-13T11:48:26.474400
| 1,557,748,106.4744 | 23,460 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Clemmie> :taco:
|
2019-05-13T11:49:21.476000
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:49:21.476000
| 1,557,748,161.476 | 23,461 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I’m simply trying to bring more awareness to our local friendly neighborhood taco bot. If someone has been helpful we try to encourage ppl to give them tacos. why? b/c tacos are delicious :smiley:
|
2019-05-13T11:49:26.476200
|
Eliana
|
pythondev_help_Eliana_2019-05-13T11:49:26.476200
| 1,557,748,166.4762 | 23,462 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I love gamification! ….. probably too much…..
|
2019-05-13T11:49:52.476600
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T11:49:52.476600
| 1,557,748,192.4766 | 23,463 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Clemmie> don't eat to many tacos :slightly_smiling_face:
|
2019-05-13T11:50:20.476900
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:50:20.476900
| 1,557,748,220.4769 | 23,464 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yes we want that! lol
|
2019-05-13T11:52:27.477200
|
Eliana
|
pythondev_help_Eliana_2019-05-13T11:52:27.477200
| 1,557,748,347.4772 | 23,465 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Haha
|
2019-05-13T11:52:59.477500
|
Rodrick
|
pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-05-13T11:52:59.477500
| 1,557,748,379.4775 | 23,466 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Does anyone know a good library that will allow me to do non-blocking (async) requests to mongodb?
|
2019-05-13T14:55:32.478700
|
Pura
|
pythondev_help_Pura_2019-05-13T14:55:32.478700
| 1,557,759,332.4787 | 23,467 |
pythondev
|
help
|
A few people I know have used motor; I haven't used it myself though
|
2019-05-13T15:29:35.479200
|
Holly
|
pythondev_help_Holly_2019-05-13T15:29:35.479200
| 1,557,761,375.4792 | 23,468 |
pythondev
|
help
|
question on how to pull a string of characters but ignore spaces
|
2019-05-13T16:09:29.479900
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:09:29.479900
| 1,557,763,769.4799 | 23,469 |
pythondev
|
help
|
typo, i meant text = "your string"
|
2019-05-13T16:09:58.480400
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:09:58.480400
| 1,557,763,798.4804 | 23,470 |
pythondev
|
help
|
use `replace`
|
2019-05-13T16:11:32.480600
|
Hiroko
|
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-05-13T16:11:32.480600
| 1,557,763,892.4806 | 23,471 |
pythondev
|
help
|
eg `text.replace(' ', '')`
|
2019-05-13T16:11:43.480900
|
Hiroko
|
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-05-13T16:11:43.480900
| 1,557,763,903.4809 | 23,472 |
pythondev
|
help
|
ok, so i'd have to edit the string and then call for the 6 characters?
|
2019-05-13T16:18:10.481500
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:18:10.481500
| 1,557,764,290.4815 | 23,473 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`text.replace(' ', '')[:6]`?
|
2019-05-13T16:21:26.481800
|
Hiroko
|
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-05-13T16:21:26.481800
| 1,557,764,486.4818 | 23,474 |
pythondev
|
help
|
ah ok
|
2019-05-13T16:22:25.482000
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:22:25.482000
| 1,557,764,545.482 | 23,475 |
pythondev
|
help
|
but can I do this without editing 'your string'
|
2019-05-13T16:22:44.482500
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:22:44.482500
| 1,557,764,564.4825 | 23,476 |
pythondev
|
help
|
basically i'm whipping up usernames, and need to consider people with last names like, "de la santos"
|
2019-05-13T16:23:13.483400
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:23:13.483400
| 1,557,764,593.4834 | 23,477 |
pythondev
|
help
|
but I don't want to manipulate the last name, i just want to use their name as a basis for a userid
|
2019-05-13T16:23:38.484100
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:23:38.484100
| 1,557,764,618.4841 | 23,478 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Oh i'm a moron. i can just uid = text.replace('",'')[:6]
|
2019-05-13T16:24:17.485100
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:24:17.485100
| 1,557,764,657.4851 | 23,479 |
pythondev
|
help
|
wait! i was reading that!
|
2019-05-13T16:25:13.485500
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:25:13.485500
| 1,557,764,713.4855 | 23,480 |
pythondev
|
help
|
:stuck_out_tongue:
|
2019-05-13T16:25:17.485700
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:25:17.485700
| 1,557,764,717.4857 | 23,481 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you don’t need it
|
2019-05-13T16:25:50.485900
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:25:50.485900
| 1,557,764,750.4859 | 23,482 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you have it right
|
2019-05-13T16:25:54.486100
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:25:54.486100
| 1,557,764,754.4861 | 23,483 |
pythondev
|
help
|
mine was way over engineered
|
2019-05-13T16:25:59.486300
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:25:59.486300
| 1,557,764,759.4863 | 23,484 |
pythondev
|
help
|
thank you everybody
|
2019-05-13T16:27:05.486500
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:27:05.486500
| 1,557,764,825.4865 | 23,485 |
pythondev
|
help
|
i need to give out tacos
|
2019-05-13T16:27:13.486800
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:27:13.486800
| 1,557,764,833.4868 | 23,486 |
pythondev
|
help
|
::taco:: <@Hiroko> <@Clemmie>
|
2019-05-13T16:27:34.487300
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:27:34.487300
| 1,557,764,854.4873 | 23,487 |
pythondev
|
help
|
i have 3 tacos left? what sorcery is this?
|
2019-05-13T16:28:18.487700
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:28:18.487700
| 1,557,764,898.4877 | 23,488 |
pythondev
|
help
|
5 to give each day
|
2019-05-13T16:28:41.488000
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:28:41.488000
| 1,557,764,921.488 | 23,489 |
pythondev
|
help
|
no rollover
|
2019-05-13T16:28:49.488300
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:28:49.488300
| 1,557,764,929.4883 | 23,490 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Is that a Bruins Jersey in your profile?
|
2019-05-13T16:28:54.488500
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:28:54.488500
| 1,557,764,934.4885 | 23,491 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yup
|
2019-05-13T16:29:01.488700
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:29:01.488700
| 1,557,764,941.4887 | 23,492 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I want my taco back
|
2019-05-13T16:29:05.488900
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:29:05.488900
| 1,557,764,945.4889 | 23,493 |
pythondev
|
help
|
:stuck_out_tongue:
|
2019-05-13T16:29:08.489100
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:29:08.489100
| 1,557,764,948.4891 | 23,494 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Should I read rogue as rouge?
|
2019-05-13T16:29:46.489600
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:29:46.489600
| 1,557,764,986.4896 | 23,495 |
pythondev
|
help
|
hehe. was nickname from former bosses
|
2019-05-13T16:30:48.489900
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:30:48.489900
| 1,557,765,048.4899 | 23,496 |
pythondev
|
help
|
ok, another newbish question. I want to add a 1 to the string. but i dont really want to convert it, because later on I need to see if this UID already exists, and if it does, go back an increment by 1, and repeat until the UID is unique. is there an easy method?
|
2019-05-13T16:41:39.491700
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:41:39.491700
| 1,557,765,699.4917 | 23,497 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I already get an error for names without spaces... but I can deal with that
|
2019-05-13T16:42:15.492300
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:42:15.492300
| 1,557,765,735.4923 | 23,498 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Nevermind i think I figured it out
|
2019-05-13T16:45:26.492600
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:45:26.492600
| 1,557,765,926.4926 | 23,499 |
pythondev
|
help
|
str(<number>)
|
2019-05-13T16:45:38.492900
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:45:38.492900
| 1,557,765,938.4929 | 23,500 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you can do that, but it is fragile. It is setting you up for a collision/possibly infinite lookups if two people with the same last name are trying to sign up at the same time
|
2019-05-13T16:53:00.494100
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T16:53:00.494100
| 1,557,766,380.4941 | 23,501 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Ah well, the way it works, it shouldn't. It goes row by row, ties together the lastname[:4] +first name [:2] + str(1), then it will do an ldap query. make sure its ....oh
|
2019-05-13T16:57:48.495500
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:57:48.495500
| 1,557,766,668.4955 | 23,502 |
pythondev
|
help
|
crap
|
2019-05-13T16:57:55.495700
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:57:55.495700
| 1,557,766,675.4957 | 23,503 |
pythondev
|
help
|
wait i can fix that
|
2019-05-13T16:58:04.495900
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:58:04.495900
| 1,557,766,684.4959 | 23,504 |
pythondev
|
help
|
with that replace thing, whats the equivalent of OR... could I do x.replace(' ' OR ' OR `, '')
|
2019-05-13T16:59:23.497100
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:59:23.497100
| 1,557,766,763.4971 | 23,505 |
pythondev
|
help
|
maybe .replace (' ' || ' || `,'')
|
2019-05-13T16:59:53.497600
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T16:59:53.497600
| 1,557,766,793.4976 | 23,506 |
pythondev
|
help
|
what are you trying to do, in words? that is unclear as pseudo-code
|
2019-05-13T17:00:28.498200
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T17:00:28.498200
| 1,557,766,828.4982 | 23,507 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I need to account for the O'Malleys
|
2019-05-13T17:00:51.498400
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:00:51.498400
| 1,557,766,851.4984 | 23,508 |
pythondev
|
help
|
as before it was for the De Los Santos
|
2019-05-13T17:01:07.498700
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:01:07.498700
| 1,557,766,867.4987 | 23,509 |
pythondev
|
help
|
this time i'm protecting the code against the irish
|
2019-05-13T17:01:17.499000
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:01:17.499000
| 1,557,766,877.499 | 23,510 |
pythondev
|
help
|
So Timothy O'Malley for a proposed UID should be omallet
|
2019-05-13T17:02:09.499700
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:02:09.499700
| 1,557,766,929.4997 | 23,511 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yeah, you need to check if all chars are alpha - you _do_ want what I was showing earlier - `"".join([x for x in text if x.isalpha()])`
|
2019-05-13T17:03:33.000600
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T17:03:33.000600
| 1,557,767,013.0006 | 23,512 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you probably also want to set you entire uid to lower, so `uid= <get uid logic>.lower()`
|
2019-05-13T17:05:02.001400
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T17:05:02.001400
| 1,557,767,102.0014 | 23,513 |
pythondev
|
help
|
so in your example, what would the 2nd x be? as that'd be a variable
|
2019-05-13T17:07:39.002400
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:07:39.002400
| 1,557,767,259.0024 | 23,514 |
pythondev
|
help
|
i just confused myself
|
2019-05-13T17:08:15.003200
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:08:15.003200
| 1,557,767,295.0032 | 23,515 |
pythondev
|
help
|
what is x, is an easier question
|
2019-05-13T17:08:25.003500
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:08:25.003500
| 1,557,767,305.0035 | 23,516 |
pythondev
|
help
|
What I am doing right now , using OpenPyxl
|
2019-05-13T17:09:02.004100
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:09:02.004100
| 1,557,767,342.0041 | 23,517 |
pythondev
|
help
|
that is a list comprehension - it is making a list of characters `x` with the for loop `x in text` (strings are iterable) and it tests if each `x.isalpha()` before it adds it to the list. This gives you a list of chars that are then `join`ed with the character `""` as the joining string
|
2019-05-13T17:10:06.005500
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T17:10:06.005500
| 1,557,767,406.0055 | 23,518 |
pythondev
|
help
|
gotcha. so my final string should look like
|
2019-05-13T17:13:17.005800
|
Walton
|
pythondev_help_Walton_2019-05-13T17:13:17.005800
| 1,557,767,597.0058 | 23,519 |
pythondev
|
help
|
close
|
2019-05-13T17:14:10.006200
|
Clemmie
|
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-05-13T17:14:10.006200
| 1,557,767,650.0062 | 23,520 |
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