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Where in a virtualenv does the custom code go?
What sort of directory structure should one follow when using virtualenv ? For instance, if I were building a WSGI application and created a virtualenv called foobar I would start with a directory structure like:
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How does HashSet compare elements for equality?
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What is a sealed trait?
Sealed classes are described in 'Programming in Scala', but sealed traits are not.
Where can I find more information about a sealed trait?
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100% width Twitter Bootstrap 3 template
I am a bootstrap newbie and I have a 100% wide template that I want to code with bootstrap. The first column begins at the left corner and I have a Google map the stretches to the rightmost. I thought I could do this with container-fluid class, but that doesn't seem to be available any longer. I h...
setuptools vs. distutils: why is distutils still a thing?
Python has a confusing history of tools that can be used to package and describe projects: these include distutils in the Standard Library, distribute , distutils2 , and setuptools (and maybe more). It appears that distribute and distutils2 were discontinued in favor of setuptools , which...
Is pass-by-value a reasonable default in C++11?
In traditional C++, passing by value into functions and methods is slow for large objects, and is generally frowned upon. Instead, C++ programmers tend to pass references around, which is faster, but which introduces all sorts of complicated questions around ownership and especially around memory ma...
Python Linked List
What's the easiest way to use a linked list in python? In scheme, a linked list is defined simply by '(1 2 3 4 5) . Python's lists, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] , and tuples, (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) , are not, in fact, linked lists, and linked lists have some nice properties such as constant-time concatenation, and b...
How do I catch a numpy warning like it's an exception (not just for testing)?
I have to make a Lagrange polynomial in Python for a project I'm doing. I'm doing a barycentric style one to avoid using an explicit for-loop as opposed to a Newton's divided difference style one. The problem I have is that I need to catch a division by zero, but Python (or maybe numpy) just makes i...
Why can I pass 1 as a short, but not the int variable i?
Why does the first and second Write work but not the last? Is there a way I can allow all 3 of them and detect if it was 1, (int)1 or i passed in? And really why is one allowed but the last? The second being allowed but not the last really blows my mind.
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