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How to determine a Python variable's type?
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It is so simple. You do it like this.
print(type(variable_name))
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assertEquals vs. assertEqual in python
...as been deprecated as well:
Method Name | Deprecated alias(es)
_________________________________________________________
assertEqual() | failUnlessEqual, assertEquals
From 25.3.7.1.1. Deprecated aliases
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Static methods in Python?
Is it possible to have static methods in Python which I could call without initializing a class, like:
10 Answers
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transform object to array with lodash
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You can do
var arr = _.values(obj);
For documentation see here.
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What is NSLayoutConstraint “UIView-Encapsulated-Layout-Height” and how should I go about forcing it
...eels like an Apple bug, I think it's probably the right thing to do. Especially in light of the fact that Apple recalculate this constraint and everything does lay out correctly after the error prints.
– Rog
Mar 18 '15 at 12:15
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What is dynamic programming? [closed]
...ith dynamic programming, you store your results in some sort of table generally. When you need the answer to a problem, you reference the table and see if you already know what it is. If not, you use the data in your table to give yourself a stepping stone towards the answer.
The Cormen Algorithms ...
Upload artifacts to Nexus, without Maven
...=1.2.3 \
-Dpackaging=zip \
-Dfile=myproj.zip
This will automatically generate the Maven POM for the artifact.
Update
The following Sonatype article states that the "deploy-file" maven plugin is the easiest solution, but it also provides some examples using curl:
https://support.sonaty...
node.js fs.readdir recursive directory search
... search using fs.readdir? I realise that we could introduce recursion and call the read directory function with the next directory to read, but am a little worried about it not being async...
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printf with std::string?
...f what it expects definitely won't give you the results you want. It's actually undefined behaviour, so anything at all could happen.
The easiest way to fix this, since you're using C++, is printing it normally with std::cout, since std::string supports that through operator overloading:
std::cout...
Passing an integer by reference in Python
...d you can't just assign the "variable" a new value because then you're actually creating a new object (which is distinct from the old one) and giving it the name that the old object had in the local namespace.
Usually the workaround is to simply return the object that you want:
def multiply_by_2(x...
