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What is the significance of ProjectTypeGuids tag in the visual studio project file
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3 Answers
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Python integer division yields float
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Take a look at PEP-238: Changing the Division Operator
The // operator will be available to request floor division unambiguously.
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How to tell Maven to disregard SSL errors (and trusting all certs)?
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239
You can disable SSL certificate checking by adding one or more of these command line parameters...
What are the differences between vector and list data types in R?
...tors are "atomic vectors" in strict R parlance:
aaa <- vector("list", 3)
is.list(aaa) #TRUE
is.vector(aaa) #TRUE
Lists are a "recursive" type (of vector) whereas atomic vectors are not:
is.recursive(aaa) # TRUE
is.atomic(aaa) # FALSE
You process data objects with different functions...
What is the difference between an expression and a statement in Python?
...duced to some kind of "value", which can be any Python object. Examples:
3 + 5
map(lambda x: x*x, range(10))
[a.x for a in some_iterable]
yield 7
Statements (see 1, 2), on the other hand, are everything that can make up a line (or several lines) of Python code. Note that expressions are stateme...
What is more efficient? Using pow to square or just multiply it with itself?
... elapsed << " "; \
\
return x; \
}
TEST(1, b)
TEST(2, b*b)
TEST(3, b*b*b)
TEST(4, b*b*b*b)
TEST(5, b*b*b*b*b)
template <int exponent>
double testpow(double base, long loops)
{
double x = 0.0;
boost::posix_time::ptime startTime = now();
for (long i=0; i<loops; ++i)
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urllib2.HTTPError: HTTP Error 403: Forbidden
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3 Answers
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How can I confirm a database is Oracle & what version it is using SQL?
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Oracle Database 10g Release 10.2.0.3.0 - 64bit Production
PL/SQL Release 10.2.0.3.0 - Production
CORE 10.2.0.3.0 Production
TNS for Solaris: Version 10.2.0.3.0 - Production
NLSRTL Version 10.2.0.3.0 - Production
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ROW_NUMBER() in MySQL
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I want the row with the single highest col3 for each (col1, col2) pair.
That's a groupwise maximum, one of the most commonly-asked SQL questions (since it seems like it should be easy, but actually it kind of isn't).
I often plump for a null-self-join:
SELECT t0....
