

Context matters. Always. One person can use a word and it will be not racist, another can use the same term and it will be racist. You should ask the person what they define as “civilized”. Their reasoning is your answer.
Context matters. Always. One person can use a word and it will be not racist, another can use the same term and it will be racist. You should ask the person what they define as “civilized”. Their reasoning is your answer.
Well, not quite. You’d have to have rights to the land to do that. Else someone could ride up and just take it from you.
So then it’s not worse?
If you do it for side money, you’re only accomplishing that by fucking someone else over. Otherwise you wouldn’t make money.
2010, simply because of how english works.
If you say 2001 as twenty one, it’s confusing. Same goes all the way up to “twenty nine”.
And it’s more garbled and slower to say “twenty oh one” vs “two thousand one”, especially if you’re speaking quickly.
“Twenty ten” and up, however, starts making sense as a different piece of information and can be used easily.
Content warnings seem to be useless or add stress
I cannot tell if you are being serious or just having fun with buzzwords
Seriously, fuck off with the AI shit. At best it’s intelligent regex. And “intelligence” here means a specific thing.
Through their paws for one, and when they lick their coats, the saliva acts like sweat and cools them down as it evaporates. And if it’s really bad, they pant.
Eh, degrees can be overrated. I don’t have one and it hasn’t hindered me at all. Ultimately, it depends what kind of work you want to get into and your drive to self learn, how quick you can pick things up, and adaptability. You got this.
That’s fair, I was trying to be a bit vague since you’re learning and wanted to help point you to the solution. Went a little too vague with it 🙂
No problem bud, good luck
the signature for the input
function (that’s what it’s called instead of command) is
def input(__prompt: Any = ...) -> str
which means it’s always going to return a string.
So it starts off as a string, then becomes whatever is typed in
there’s no real way for something to do that automatically without a much more robust setup.
this snippet proves that
test_int = input('enter integer:')
print(type(test_int))
test_float = input('enter float:')
print(type(test_float))
test_str = input('enter string:')
print(type(test_str))
>> <class 'str'>
>> <class 'str'>
>> <class 'str'>
it is the responsibility of your program to validate and do whatever you want with the result, and part of that can include casting it to a different type.
The traceback should give you an idea of what’s going on, but you can test for yourself by checking the result of input:
test = input('enter number:')
print(type(test))
Another question to ask is “why did you cast ‘h’ as a float?” And what happens if you just do h + r?
Bored toddler.
Slouched forward shoulders, weight on my heels, head back with a pained expression and small crying sounds.
1: I wholeheartedly believe being a whistleblower is a courageous and brave act. Full stop.
2: drawing conclusions as to why these people decided to speak up when they did without hearing it from them is nonsense.
3: assuming and repeating a John Gresham novel from news articles between corporations and their whistleblowers is not only buying into a conspiracy theory, but is also parroting it.
4: partaking in these conspiratorial shenanigans helps no one and isn’t something to be waved away as harmless - otherwise, what’s the difference here and qanon?
If the “bravery” and admiration comes against the idea of assassination, then it completely matters. Idk why you’re hand waving the nonsense here
I’m on your side dude, the response here is kinda nuts.
Yeah, I believe the phrase is short for the weather:
What’s the weather doing?
It is raining.