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stringclasses 1
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stringlengths 1
3.93k
| ts
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26
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11
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pythondev
|
help
|
So there can be multiple `{'10.01.2005': {'issue': ['important1', 'important2'], 'url': ['url1', '<http://google.com>']}}` ?
|
2017-07-02T11:22:52.831205
|
Deedee
|
pythondev_help_Deedee_2017-07-02T11:22:52.831205
| 1,498,994,572.831205 | 83,903 |
pythondev
|
help
|
all. tired better not to sit at the computer. go to the beach.
|
2017-07-02T11:23:23.833359
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-02T11:23:23.833359
| 1,498,994,603.833359 | 83,904 |
pythondev
|
help
|
so if important3 and url3 came in, there are different "10.01.2005" that it can go into?
|
2017-07-02T11:23:33.833974
|
Deedee
|
pythondev_help_Deedee_2017-07-02T11:23:33.833974
| 1,498,994,613.833974 | 83,905 |
pythondev
|
help
|
append, it list.
|
2017-07-02T11:23:40.834473
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-02T11:23:40.834473
| 1,498,994,620.834473 | 83,906 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`z[date]["issue"].append(df["issue"][i])`
everything is very easy.))
|
2017-07-02T11:25:02.840347
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-02T11:25:02.840347
| 1,498,994,702.840347 | 83,907 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I don't think you can use a dictionary for this. Hopefully someone else can confirm, but I think you're looking at using a list instead.
|
2017-07-02T11:34:16.882325
|
Deedee
|
pythondev_help_Deedee_2017-07-02T11:34:16.882325
| 1,498,995,256.882325 | 83,908 |
pythondev
|
help
|
z[date]['issue'] is probably a list
|
2017-07-02T11:38:26.899961
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-02T11:38:26.899961
| 1,498,995,506.899961 | 83,909 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Exactly :)
|
2017-07-02T13:19:48.367417
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-02T13:19:48.367417
| 1,499,001,588.367417 | 83,910 |
pythondev
|
help
|
In PyCharm, can you have the project run kick off a bunch of things at once? For example, I want to run Django, Celery Workers, and Celery Beat
|
2017-07-02T15:36:48.023198
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:36:48.023198
| 1,499,009,808.023198 | 83,911 |
pythondev
|
help
|
If you find out that share it with me. I have to open like 5 command windows to get started
|
2017-07-02T15:46:40.067721
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-02T15:46:40.067721
| 1,499,010,400.067721 | 83,912 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`subprocess.open` at the start of the script ? :smile:
|
2017-07-02T15:48:08.074203
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-02T15:48:08.074203
| 1,499,010,488.074203 | 83,913 |
pythondev
|
help
|
haha, no kidding. I guess if you don't need a bunch of workers you can run beat and the worker:
```
celery -A <your proj> worker --beat -l debug --scheduler django
```
|
2017-07-02T15:48:09.074291
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:48:09.074291
| 1,499,010,489.074291 | 83,914 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Is that it?
|
2017-07-02T15:48:21.075096
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-02T15:48:21.075096
| 1,499,010,501.075096 | 83,915 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I think those block before starting
|
2017-07-02T15:48:43.076822
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:48:43.076822
| 1,499,010,523.076822 | 83,916 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`&`
|
2017-07-02T15:49:01.078203
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-02T15:49:01.078203
| 1,499,010,541.078203 | 83,917 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Beula> i use honcho to do that now.
|
2017-07-02T15:49:30.080389
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:49:30.080389
| 1,499,010,570.080389 | 83,918 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I tried to run the worker and beat with django-beat and it didn't seem to work
|
2017-07-02T15:49:33.080659
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-02T15:49:33.080659
| 1,499,010,573.080659 | 83,919 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<https://github.com/nickstenning/honcho>
|
2017-07-02T15:49:51.081927
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:49:51.081927
| 1,499,010,591.081927 | 83,920 |
pythondev
|
help
|
And running django in a docker container involves too much hacking. I prefer to just run postgres and redis in it
|
2017-07-02T15:50:04.082973
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-02T15:50:04.082973
| 1,499,010,604.082973 | 83,921 |
pythondev
|
help
|
but you can use it as a library.
|
2017-07-02T15:50:08.083270
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:50:08.083270
| 1,499,010,608.08327 | 83,922 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Looks like celery got rid of the `--autoreload` option :cry:
|
2017-07-02T15:50:50.086309
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:50:50.086309
| 1,499,010,650.086309 | 83,923 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you don’t necessarily need the Procfile
|
2017-07-02T15:50:53.086552
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:50:53.086552
| 1,499,010,653.086552 | 83,924 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Yeah <@Mariano> I have docker running postgres and redis
|
2017-07-02T15:51:26.088868
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:51:26.088868
| 1,499,010,686.088868 | 83,925 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I wrote it on version 3 because i'm a cool kid
|
2017-07-02T15:52:38.094257
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-02T15:52:38.094257
| 1,499,010,758.094257 | 83,926 |
pythondev
|
help
|
thanks <@Johana> I will look at that
|
2017-07-02T15:52:44.094677
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:52:44.094677
| 1,499,010,764.094677 | 83,927 |
pythondev
|
help
|
What's new in v3?
|
2017-07-02T15:52:48.094941
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:52:48.094941
| 1,499,010,768.094941 | 83,928 |
pythondev
|
help
|
It changes the version field to `3`
|
2017-07-02T15:53:00.095808
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-02T15:53:00.095808
| 1,499,010,780.095808 | 83,929 |
pythondev
|
help
|
idk what else
|
2017-07-02T15:53:06.096205
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-02T15:53:06.096205
| 1,499,010,786.096205 | 83,930 |
pythondev
|
help
|
haha
|
2017-07-02T15:53:17.097035
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:53:17.097035
| 1,499,010,797.097035 | 83,931 |
pythondev
|
help
|
time to update...
|
2017-07-02T15:53:21.097394
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:53:21.097394
| 1,499,010,801.097394 | 83,932 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Beula> good example here: <https://github.com/hypothesis/h/blob/master/h/cli/commands/devserver.py#L60-L89>
|
2017-07-02T15:54:07.100820
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:54:07.100820
| 1,499,010,847.10082 | 83,933 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`os.environ[‘PYTHONUNBUFFERED’] = ‘true’`
|
2017-07-02T15:54:27.102350
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-02T15:54:27.102350
| 1,499,010,867.10235 | 83,934 |
pythondev
|
help
|
sorry about that paste
|
2017-07-02T15:54:57.104711
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:54:57.104711
| 1,499,010,897.104711 | 83,935 |
pythondev
|
help
|
:sweat: Now we are on docker-compose 3 too :wink:
|
2017-07-02T15:55:07.105495
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:55:07.105495
| 1,499,010,907.105495 | 83,936 |
pythondev
|
help
|
the example is the click cli that hypothesis (pyramid app) uses. then you can put this in your make file. <https://github.com/hypothesis/h/blob/master/Makefile#L30>
|
2017-07-02T15:56:02.109887
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:56:02.109887
| 1,499,010,962.109887 | 83,937 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Oh nice - I'll keep that in my back pocket. I like keeping things stupid simple as long as I can
|
2017-07-02T15:56:07.110250
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:56:07.110250
| 1,499,010,967.11025 | 83,938 |
pythondev
|
help
|
with flask, webpack, and react it’s nice.
|
2017-07-02T15:56:41.112808
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T15:56:41.112808
| 1,499,011,001.112808 | 83,939 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Yeah - that totally makes sense
|
2017-07-02T15:57:23.116020
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T15:57:23.116020
| 1,499,011,043.11602 | 83,940 |
pythondev
|
help
|
wow that's handy
|
2017-07-02T15:58:11.119584
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-02T15:58:11.119584
| 1,499,011,091.119584 | 83,941 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Yep, honcho is great. already in love
|
2017-07-02T16:36:37.291225
|
Beula
|
pythondev_help_Beula_2017-07-02T16:36:37.291225
| 1,499,013,397.291225 | 83,942 |
pythondev
|
help
|
glad you likez. :smile:
|
2017-07-02T16:46:41.334876
|
Johana
|
pythondev_help_Johana_2017-07-02T16:46:41.334876
| 1,499,014,001.334876 | 83,943 |
pythondev
|
help
|
are there any good channels like this for javascript? im having a small bug
|
2017-07-02T17:56:05.635327
|
Sherry
|
pythondev_help_Sherry_2017-07-02T17:56:05.635327
| 1,499,018,165.635327 | 83,944 |
pythondev
|
help
|
try <#C45V5EJ15|javascript> or <#C07EYDP25|webdev>
|
2017-07-02T17:57:05.639576
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-02T17:57:05.639576
| 1,499,018,225.639576 | 83,945 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Hi, all.
I have three pandas data frame.
Challenge them to unite and write the result to a file.
The first two has common headers. a third plug on the left.
```len(frames)
Out[1]: 3
result = pd.concat(frames)
result.to_csv("file_name.csv", sep='\t', encoding='utf-8', index=False)```
Everything is good, except a wrong result, not beautiful.
<http://imgur.com/VIoHXnel.png> this problem
<http://imgur.com/cdUxjkrl.png> - so it looks in the editor
and need
<http://imgur.com/gmY8UtKl.png>
<http://imgur.com/1e4fRKnl.png>
I hope for your help, just don't know what I'm doing wrong.
Thank you.
|
2017-07-03T03:41:00.462949
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-03T03:41:00.462949
| 1,499,053,260.462949 | 83,946 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Looks like you need `merge`, not `concat`.
|
2017-07-03T03:53:26.703334
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T03:53:26.703334
| 1,499,054,006.703334 | 83,947 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Suellen> the first two data frame which has common columns normally unites, the problem with the third.
the third has no common poles with the first two.
the `merge` would be for the first and second if I understand correctly.
But why? And so they're fine.
|
2017-07-03T04:05:42.956185
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-03T04:05:42.956185
| 1,499,054,742.956185 | 83,948 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Due to having no common columns and no index, the third df is just appended to the end
|
2017-07-03T04:07:23.990292
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T04:07:23.990292
| 1,499,054,843.990292 | 83,949 |
pythondev
|
help
|
df.merge will merge the third df and the big one despite no common data between them
|
2017-07-03T04:07:58.002050
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T04:07:58.002050
| 1,499,054,878.00205 | 83,950 |
pythondev
|
help
|
nothing happens.
first two should be together? Then the two third?
|
2017-07-03T04:20:52.274301
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-03T04:20:52.274301
| 1,499,055,652.274301 | 83,951 |
pythondev
|
help
|
```f = pd.merge(frames[0], frames[1])
g = pd.merge(f, frames[2])
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/cat/.virtualenvs/mof/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/IPython/core/interactiveshell.py", line 2882, in run_code
exec(code_obj, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
File "<ipython-input-2-2943dd979cc4>", line 1, in <module>
g = pd.merge(f, frames[2])
File "/home/cat/.virtualenvs/mof/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pandas/core/reshape/merge.py", line 53, in merge
copy=copy, indicator=indicator)
File "/home/cat/.virtualenvs/mof/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pandas/core/reshape/merge.py", line 553, in __init__
self._validate_specification()
File "/home/cat/.virtualenvs/mof/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pandas/core/reshape/merge.py", line 928, in _validate_specification
raise MergeError('No common columns to perform merge on')
MergeError: No common columns to perform merge on
```
|
2017-07-03T04:24:44.359291
|
Georgeann
|
pythondev_help_Georgeann_2017-07-03T04:24:44.359291
| 1,499,055,884.359291 | 83,952 |
pythondev
|
help
|
[silly] question for the slack bot experts: in many examples I keep seeing a variable named BOT_ID, what is this ID? All I get from slack is the bot token
|
2017-07-03T07:54:29.587457
|
Caitlyn
|
pythondev_help_Caitlyn_2017-07-03T07:54:29.587457
| 1,499,068,469.587457 | 83,953 |
pythondev
|
help
|
that's not a silly question. It's the id of your bot that slack return when you use <https://api.slack.com/methods/rtm.connect>
|
2017-07-03T07:57:38.644476
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T07:57:38.644476
| 1,499,068,658.644476 | 83,954 |
pythondev
|
help
|
or `rtm.start` it's useful to filter message coming from your bot
|
2017-07-03T07:58:21.658066
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T07:58:21.658066
| 1,499,068,701.658066 | 83,955 |
pythondev
|
help
|
but normally they shouldn't need it as they can easily retrieve it for you
|
2017-07-03T07:58:53.667702
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T07:58:53.667702
| 1,499,068,733.667702 | 83,956 |
pythondev
|
help
|
this is a pretty basic questions - but when an exception is thrown the rest of the code after where the exception occurred is not executed unless it was handled in a `try` `except`?
|
2017-07-03T09:09:51.201023
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:09:51.201023
| 1,499,072,991.201023 | 83,957 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I'm deciding whether I should test code with a context manager of an object that throws an exception, although I don't think I am correct in the what happens
|
2017-07-03T09:10:38.220468
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:10:38.220468
| 1,499,073,038.220468 | 83,958 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yes. you can add a `finally` if you want a piece of code to always be executed
|
2017-07-03T09:10:42.222475
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:10:42.222475
| 1,499,073,042.222475 | 83,959 |
pythondev
|
help
|
it depends on the what but in some case it can overlapp yes
|
2017-07-03T09:11:47.248863
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:11:47.248863
| 1,499,073,107.248863 | 83,960 |
pythondev
|
help
|
so let's say that's the code and we're expecting a new_object to be created based on the paramteters, but an exception can occur like a URLError or something
|
2017-07-03T09:12:40.271046
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:12:40.271046
| 1,499,073,160.271046 | 83,961 |
pythondev
|
help
|
what I'm trying to do is test the correct exception is thrown/handled
|
2017-07-03T09:12:52.275601
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:12:52.275601
| 1,499,073,172.275601 | 83,962 |
pythondev
|
help
|
so I was thinking...
|
2017-07-03T09:12:56.277393
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:12:56.277393
| 1,499,073,176.277393 | 83,963 |
pythondev
|
help
|
`as new_object` looks strange to me
|
2017-07-03T09:15:32.341793
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T09:15:32.341793
| 1,499,073,332.341793 | 83,964 |
pythondev
|
help
|
If you are testing code I believe both pytest and unitest have special context manager to test errors
|
2017-07-03T09:15:48.348469
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:15:48.348469
| 1,499,073,348.348469 | 83,965 |
pythondev
|
help
|
just do
```
with self.assertRaises(URLError):
new_object = NewObject(param_to_cause_exception)
```
|
2017-07-03T09:15:54.351171
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T09:15:54.351171
| 1,499,073,354.351171 | 83,966 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yah that is unittest
|
2017-07-03T09:15:59.353128
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:15:59.353128
| 1,499,073,359.353128 | 83,967 |
pythondev
|
help
|
also, don't test anything else in this function
|
2017-07-03T09:16:03.355190
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T09:16:03.355190
| 1,499,073,363.35519 | 83,968 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you're testing only the fact that wrong URL causes an exception
|
2017-07-03T09:16:17.360894
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T09:16:17.360894
| 1,499,073,377.360894 | 83,969 |
pythondev
|
help
|
in that case if the assert is correct the test will continue as expected
|
2017-07-03T09:16:33.367359
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:16:33.367359
| 1,499,073,393.367359 | 83,970 |
pythondev
|
help
|
with the `as new_object` I can pass it through the rest of the code as an exception object which I found here<https://docs.python.org/2/library/unittest.html#unittest.TestCase.assertRaises>
|
2017-07-03T09:16:36.368569
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:16:36.368569
| 1,499,073,396.368569 | 83,971 |
pythondev
|
help
|
but <@Suellen> make a good point
|
2017-07-03T09:16:41.370825
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:16:41.370825
| 1,499,073,401.370825 | 83,972 |
pythondev
|
help
|
oh ok. You want to test what is in the exception ?
|
2017-07-03T09:17:03.379866
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:17:03.379866
| 1,499,073,423.379866 | 83,973 |
pythondev
|
help
|
thanks <@Suellen> that does make sense
|
2017-07-03T09:17:04.380404
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:17:04.380404
| 1,499,073,424.380404 | 83,974 |
pythondev
|
help
|
right
|
2017-07-03T09:17:08.381833
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:17:08.381833
| 1,499,073,428.381833 | 83,975 |
pythondev
|
help
|
and how the rest of the code responds to that <@Ciera> if that makes sense
|
2017-07-03T09:17:25.388958
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:17:25.388958
| 1,499,073,445.388958 | 83,976 |
pythondev
|
help
|
both object have the same name that's a little confusing
|
2017-07-03T09:17:45.397414
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:17:45.397414
| 1,499,073,465.397414 | 83,977 |
pythondev
|
help
|
you can interact with the exception after the `with` like any other object. For example to check what's inside
|
2017-07-03T09:18:21.412151
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:18:21.412151
| 1,499,073,501.412151 | 83,978 |
pythondev
|
help
|
right, check error codes and such
|
2017-07-03T09:18:39.419348
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:18:39.419348
| 1,499,073,519.419348 | 83,979 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I think I was incorrectly thinking of how the object would be handled if an exception was thrown (not under test)
|
2017-07-03T09:19:07.431535
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:19:07.431535
| 1,499,073,547.431535 | 83,980 |
pythondev
|
help
|
in my test I am asserting the correct exception is thrown given a bad parameter
|
2017-07-03T09:19:31.441423
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:19:31.441423
| 1,499,073,571.441423 | 83,981 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I think I've got it from here thanks guys <@Suellen> :taco: <@Ciera> :taco:
|
2017-07-03T09:20:20.461799
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:20:20.461799
| 1,499,073,620.461799 | 83,982 |
pythondev
|
help
|
I think I just gave you guys 2 tacos each but you guys were great so keep 'em
|
2017-07-03T09:20:59.478376
|
Susann
|
pythondev_help_Susann_2017-07-03T09:20:59.478376
| 1,499,073,659.478376 | 83,983 |
pythondev
|
help
|
thanks good luck :slightly_smiling_face:
|
2017-07-03T09:22:09.508017
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:22:09.508017
| 1,499,073,729.508017 | 83,984 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Best way to order a list based on another list?
|
2017-07-03T09:42:13.039564
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-03T09:42:13.039564
| 1,499,074,933.039564 | 83,985 |
pythondev
|
help
|
there is something like `sorted()`
|
2017-07-03T09:44:53.110885
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:44:53.110885
| 1,499,075,093.110885 | 83,986 |
pythondev
|
help
|
and I guess you can pass like a lambda to do custom sort
|
2017-07-03T09:45:13.120118
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T09:45:13.120118
| 1,499,075,113.120118 | 83,987 |
pythondev
|
help
|
```
>>> order = ['b', 'c', 'a']
>>> sorted(['a', 'b', 'c'], key=order.index)
['b', 'c', 'a']
>>>
```
|
2017-07-03T09:49:16.231300
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T09:49:16.231300
| 1,499,075,356.2313 | 83,988 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yeah <@Vada> helped me on the django channel. btw have a :taco:
|
2017-07-03T09:49:31.238066
|
Mariano
|
pythondev_help_Mariano_2017-07-03T09:49:31.238066
| 1,499,075,371.238066 | 83,989 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Suellen> :taco: I missed that you could just provide order.index instead of a full on lambda. This will be much better
|
2017-07-03T09:51:03.279211
|
Vada
|
pythondev_help_Vada_2017-07-03T09:51:03.279211
| 1,499,075,463.279211 | 83,990 |
pythondev
|
help
|
:heart:
|
2017-07-03T09:51:12.283312
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T09:51:12.283312
| 1,499,075,472.283312 | 83,991 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Do you have a specific question about dns ?
|
2017-07-03T13:55:31.161611
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T13:55:31.161611
| 1,499,090,131.161611 | 83,992 |
pythondev
|
help
|
<@Ciera> I'm using namecheap
|
2017-07-03T13:58:53.224193
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T13:58:53.224193
| 1,499,090,333.224193 | 83,993 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Does this record look alright?
|
2017-07-03T13:59:00.226477
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T13:59:00.226477
| 1,499,090,340.226477 | 83,994 |
pythondev
|
help
|
Or should it be the whole domain name?
|
2017-07-03T13:59:16.231327
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T13:59:16.231327
| 1,499,090,356.231327 | 83,995 |
pythondev
|
help
|
this will point `www.my_awesome_website` to the same IP as `c.storage....`
|
2017-07-03T13:59:55.243267
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T13:59:55.243267
| 1,499,090,395.243267 | 83,996 |
pythondev
|
help
|
no you don't need to put the whole name
|
2017-07-03T14:00:06.247203
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T14:00:06.247203
| 1,499,090,406.247203 | 83,997 |
pythondev
|
help
|
so this should work :confused:
|
2017-07-03T14:00:15.250585
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T14:00:15.250585
| 1,499,090,415.250585 | 83,998 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yes
|
2017-07-03T14:00:21.252414
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T14:00:21.252414
| 1,499,090,421.252414 | 83,999 |
pythondev
|
help
|
if you do `dig www.my_awesome_website` you should see the result
|
2017-07-03T14:00:44.260521
|
Ciera
|
pythondev_help_Ciera_2017-07-03T14:00:44.260521
| 1,499,090,444.260521 | 84,000 |
pythondev
|
help
|
yep
|
2017-07-03T14:02:16.290077
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T14:02:16.290077
| 1,499,090,536.290077 | 84,001 |
pythondev
|
help
|
kinda...
|
2017-07-03T14:02:32.294934
|
Suellen
|
pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-07-03T14:02:32.294934
| 1,499,090,552.294934 | 84,002 |
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