![](/static/66c60d9f/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/7a3abe0c-c1ab-495c-bb0c-2e3621530d13.png)
Yeah, I have no idea, that’s just the only real-life scenario I could think of lol
Yeah, I have no idea, that’s just the only real-life scenario I could think of lol
Maybe there’s standing water somewhere that they’re wanting gone
Here, I’m going to scare all the front end devs “Make it pixel-perfect to the designs”
Oh. Turns out, we were looking at different pictures! You’re right, that one with the flaps retracted does kinda just look like it’s the skin. I was looking at the one with the flaps deployed, where it’s much more obvious that the core of the flap is missing.
I’ll give you that, but what you said was that it was just the skin peeling
Are we looking at different pictures?
See, that makes sense, but the problem here is when it’s cold, they don’t let the kids go outside at all because some of them may not have coats
What I think is absurd, at least around here, is that schools are allowed to require that students wear a specific uniform, but they’re not allowed to require that students have a coat
Huh, I thought it was WD40
Exactly! The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few or the one. Tuvok and Neelix are the many, Tuvix was the one. Simple math
I’m planning to do the same thing with Paramount+ (got it free with Walmart+)
I’ve heard good things about Kobo, but I have an old Kindle Voyage that I absolutely love. It’s the perfect size, it has proper pages turn buttons (on both sides of the screen!), and the battery lasts forever. If it were just waterproof it would be the perfect device. And I’m happy with it being a Kindle because I can check out ebooks from there library and just have them show up on my ereader
It’s good that someone said it, bit since that’s already a blue state it doesn’t really change anything, does it?
I keep hearing good things about Niagara, but it seems like such a shift from what I’m used to
Yeah, if we use that comparison now, what are we going to do when they actually use an atomic bomb?
This is not an answer to your question, but if you’re not already familiar with it, check out Advent of Code! It’s a really fun series of programming puzzles each December.
If you’re in the Google ecosystem, Bard recently gained the (toggleable) ability to access you email/notes (can’t remember if it can access documents)
Actually I was talking about Schlock Mercenary lol
Petey?!
So what it comes down to is that
int()
,float()
, andinput()
(as well asprint()
) are functions that you are calling. In the case ofint()
andfloat()
, they return (simply put, when you make a function call it “becomes” the return value) anint
orfloat
type object based on the argument (the value between the parentheses) that you passed in. In the case ofprint()
, it causes the program to print out the provided argument.input()
is a little more complicated. It prints out the provided argument (in your case:Who are you?
) and then puts the program on pause while it waits for the user to input some text and press enter. Once they have done so, theinput
function returns the text the user has entered. So as mentioned before, the codeinput('Who are you? ')
“becomes” the text the user input, which then gets assigned to the variablenam
.I think where you may be getting confused is what exactly defines “text”. The only things that python considers text (referred to as a
string
) are characters surrounded by “” or ‘’. In your example,input('Who are you? ')
is not a string, but code to be executed (although the argument being passed toinput
,'Who are you? '
, is a string). As an experiment, try surrounding that code with quotation marks (name = "input('Who are you? ')"
) and see what happens!