workspace stringclasses 1
value | channel stringclasses 1
value | sentences stringlengths 1 3.93k | ts stringlengths 26 26 | user stringlengths 2 11 | sentence_id stringlengths 44 53 | timestamp float64 1.5B 1.56B | __index_level_0__ int64 0 106k |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
pythondev | help | It's a bit scary though lol, with the Dynos and the Databases and everything seems to be customizable haha... | 2017-09-06T18:06:41.000138 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:06:41.000138 | 1,504,721,201.000138 | 92,303 |
pythondev | help | ha. it’s not so bad. | 2017-09-06T18:06:51.000159 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:06:51.000159 | 1,504,721,211.000159 | 92,304 |
pythondev | help | Im used to run PHP with MySQL/PHPMyAdmin on a shared hosting :stuck_out_tongue: | 2017-09-06T18:07:17.000277 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:07:17.000277 | 1,504,721,237.000277 | 92,305 |
pythondev | help | it’s mostly a terminology issue, they complicate things with these crazy names like “dyno” | 2017-09-06T18:07:25.000251 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:07:25.000251 | 1,504,721,245.000251 | 92,306 |
pythondev | help | this stuff, in a sense, isn’t much different than what you did. a “dyno” on heroku is basically just an instance of your application | 2017-09-06T18:08:15.000354 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:08:15.000354 | 1,504,721,295.000354 | 92,307 |
pythondev | help | and you put some files in standardized places so it knows how to run it | 2017-09-06T18:08:30.000043 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:08:30.000043 | 1,504,721,310.000043 | 92,308 |
pythondev | help | the big difference between running a python (or ruby or node) type web app and something like PHP via say Apache is that in Python you’ll usually run the application and have a webserver connect to via its ip address | 2017-09-06T18:09:51.000142 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:09:51.000142 | 1,504,721,391.000142 | 92,309 |
pythondev | help | so the user talks to say, Apache, like normal, and then instead of running mod_php or whatever inside apache, it will run what’s called a reverse proxy and send the connections to your web application’s ip and port | 2017-09-06T18:11:02.000200 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:11:02.000200 | 1,504,721,462.0002 | 92,310 |
pythondev | help | oh | 2017-09-06T18:11:16.000397 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:11:16.000397 | 1,504,721,476.000397 | 92,311 |
pythondev | help | that sounds weird to me lol | 2017-09-06T18:11:38.000290 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:11:38.000290 | 1,504,721,498.00029 | 92,312 |
pythondev | help | ha. it does seem kind of weird at first, but it can be beneficial, because for example you can have many workers behind a simple reverse proxy | 2017-09-06T18:12:24.000389 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:12:24.000389 | 1,504,721,544.000389 | 92,313 |
pythondev | help | and it’s also possible to develop locally without needing the whole big heavy apache server | 2017-09-06T18:12:55.000176 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:12:55.000176 | 1,504,721,575.000176 | 92,314 |
pythondev | help | well, weird or not, I am very interested in both Python and NodeJS so gotta learn haha | 2017-09-06T18:13:07.000002 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:13:07.000002 | 1,504,721,587.000002 | 92,315 |
pythondev | help | I saw that Django seems to come with a kind of webserver on its own | 2017-09-06T18:13:22.000356 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:13:22.000356 | 1,504,721,602.000356 | 92,316 |
pythondev | help | yup, so that the reverse proxy can connect to it | 2017-09-06T18:13:38.000459 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:13:38.000459 | 1,504,721,618.000459 | 92,317 |
pythondev | help | and so you can develop locally | 2017-09-06T18:13:44.000168 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:13:44.000168 | 1,504,721,624.000168 | 92,318 |
pythondev | help | I see | 2017-09-06T18:16:32.000007 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:16:32.000007 | 1,504,721,792.000007 | 92,319 |
pythondev | help | So, my learning stack would be: Docker -> Heroku -> Python -> Django? | 2017-09-06T18:16:48.000211 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:16:48.000211 | 1,504,721,808.000211 | 92,320 |
pythondev | help | That’s up to you - you probably could get started with Django on Windows without too much fuss. | 2017-09-06T18:17:37.000244 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:17:37.000244 | 1,504,721,857.000244 | 92,321 |
pythondev | help | But in my experience things like Node or Python projects do tend to be more oriented towards unix like operating systems, so problems can arise. | 2017-09-06T18:18:11.000254 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:18:11.000254 | 1,504,721,891.000254 | 92,322 |
pythondev | help | So yeah, to your original point, putting things in Ubuntu would help there. | 2017-09-06T18:18:25.000073 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:18:25.000073 | 1,504,721,905.000073 | 92,323 |
pythondev | help | But there’s a learning cost, so in my opinion it’s worth it to just learn Docker instead, it’ll give you the same benefits and so many more. | 2017-09-06T18:19:07.000220 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:19:07.000220 | 1,504,721,947.00022 | 92,324 |
pythondev | help | And then too when you go to deploy the site, you can rest easy knowing you are deploying the same thing you developed on. | 2017-09-06T18:19:31.000044 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:19:31.000044 | 1,504,721,971.000044 | 92,325 |
pythondev | help | Docker and Python have some decent courses on Pluralsight if you have a subscription. The Django course there is kinda old now | 2017-09-06T18:19:41.000421 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:19:41.000421 | 1,504,721,981.000421 | 92,326 |
pythondev | help | Yeah... I am not very good in the "sys" side so the faster I can start coding, the faster I will be comfortable building the site lol xD | 2017-09-06T18:19:44.000269 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:19:44.000269 | 1,504,721,984.000269 | 92,327 |
pythondev | help | oh that’s a good idea, yeah a course like that might help jumpstart things a bit | 2017-09-06T18:20:16.000051 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:20:16.000051 | 1,504,722,016.000051 | 92,328 |
pythondev | help | I don't have an inscription but they give a 10 days free trial | 2017-09-06T18:20:30.000135 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:20:30.000135 | 1,504,722,030.000135 | 92,329 |
pythondev | help | and that’s sort of the interesting thing too - Docker seems to many to be “advanced” but I actually think it helps do a good job of obfuscating a lot of the sys admin stuff pretty well | 2017-09-06T18:20:56.000148 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:20:56.000148 | 1,504,722,056.000148 | 92,330 |
pythondev | help | so that in the end that yes, you need to learn this tool, but things overall get a lot simpler. | 2017-09-06T18:21:28.000063 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:21:28.000063 | 1,504,722,088.000063 | 92,331 |
pythondev | help | okay | 2017-09-06T18:21:47.000092 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:21:47.000092 | 1,504,722,107.000092 | 92,332 |
pythondev | help | well I suppose I could deal with Docker at the same time as I learn about Heroku | 2017-09-06T18:22:07.000043 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:22:07.000043 | 1,504,722,127.000043 | 92,333 |
pythondev | help | hum <@Britteny> do you have any specific course for Docker to recommend on pluralsight? There's like 63... xD | 2017-09-06T18:22:43.000114 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:22:43.000114 | 1,504,722,163.000114 | 92,334 |
pythondev | help | yeah, make sure you feel comfortable with a simple hello world django app locally first | 2017-09-06T18:23:17.000274 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:23:17.000274 | 1,504,722,197.000274 | 92,335 |
pythondev | help | Getting Started with Docker - was good | 2017-09-06T18:24:07.000216 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:24:07.000216 | 1,504,722,247.000216 | 92,336 |
pythondev | help | Also, for Python “Python Fundamentals” and “Python – Beyond the Basics” really helped me | 2017-09-06T18:24:42.000034 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:24:42.000034 | 1,504,722,282.000034 | 92,337 |
pythondev | help | oh nice they are much shorter than Udemy too lol | 2017-09-06T18:25:21.000082 | Forrest | pythondev_help_Forrest_2017-09-06T18:25:21.000082 | 1,504,722,321.000082 | 92,338 |
pythondev | help | Beyond the Basics is longer, but in my opinion there is no filler. It’s all great stuff. Actually, Beyond the Basics I think is the best screencast I’ve seen | 2017-09-06T18:26:22.000351 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:26:22.000351 | 1,504,722,382.000351 | 92,339 |
pythondev | help | Hey guys | 2017-09-06T18:26:31.000081 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:26:31.000081 | 1,504,722,391.000081 | 92,340 |
pythondev | help | Could you list the most typical questions on python interview? | 2017-09-06T18:26:55.000024 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:26:55.000024 | 1,504,722,415.000024 | 92,341 |
pythondev | help | Is python pass by reference or value? | 2017-09-06T18:28:50.000142 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T18:28:50.000142 | 1,504,722,530.000142 | 92,342 |
pythondev | help | I think that’d largely depend on the position | 2017-09-06T18:28:53.000164 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:28:53.000164 | 1,504,722,533.000164 | 92,343 |
pythondev | help | I am applying to back-end role | 2017-09-06T18:29:56.000444 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:29:56.000444 | 1,504,722,596.000444 | 92,344 |
pythondev | help | Junior, or senior? | 2017-09-06T18:30:50.000274 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:30:50.000274 | 1,504,722,650.000274 | 92,345 |
pythondev | help | by value;) | 2017-09-06T18:30:57.000063 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:30:57.000063 | 1,504,722,657.000063 | 92,346 |
pythondev | help | Middle | 2017-09-06T18:31:03.000230 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:31:03.000230 | 1,504,722,663.00023 | 92,347 |
pythondev | help | not all arguments are by value | 2017-09-06T18:31:49.000312 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:31:49.000312 | 1,504,722,709.000312 | 92,348 |
pythondev | help | Explain the HTTP Request/Response process | 2017-09-06T18:32:04.000088 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T18:32:04.000088 | 1,504,722,724.000088 | 92,349 |
pythondev | help | Describe RESTful APIs, HTTP verbs, idempotent, etc | 2017-09-06T18:32:46.000176 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T18:32:46.000176 | 1,504,722,766.000176 | 92,350 |
pythondev | help | actually a common related question is about mutable default arguments, since many people don’t realize that each time a function or method is instantiated, it gets a reference to the same object | 2017-09-06T18:32:59.000282 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:32:59.000282 | 1,504,722,779.000282 | 92,351 |
pythondev | help | so if you have `foo(bar=[])` and modify bar in foo, each run of foo() will be modifyin the same default bar | 2017-09-06T18:34:03.000070 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:34:03.000070 | 1,504,722,843.00007 | 92,352 |
pythondev | help | MVC architecture will often come up, as well as perhaps some questions about [No]SQL or any ORMs you have experience with. | 2017-09-06T18:35:48.000208 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:35:48.000208 | 1,504,722,948.000208 | 92,353 |
pythondev | help | Definitely, also maybe some basic SQL, joins, 3rd normal form, etc | 2017-09-06T18:36:23.000339 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T18:36:23.000339 | 1,504,722,983.000339 | 92,354 |
pythondev | help | CORS, CSRF tokens, other security related questions might come up as well. | 2017-09-06T18:37:49.000317 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:37:49.000317 | 1,504,723,069.000317 | 92,355 |
pythondev | help | mid-level is tough for both the interviewer and the interviewee because a mid-level is naturally not going to know certain things | 2017-09-06T18:39:03.000291 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:39:03.000291 | 1,504,723,143.000291 | 92,356 |
pythondev | help | I’m finding this kind of interesting. When I interview these days, which has only really been for seniors recently, I’m generally looking for qualities above and beyond technical skills. Your CV and Github / provided code should give evidence of that, and then I just want to understand -how you solve problems, how d... | 2017-09-06T18:39:06.000019 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:39:06.000019 | 1,504,723,146.000019 | 92,357 |
pythondev | help | yeah I certainly have moved away from a focus on very technical interview questions | 2017-09-06T18:40:01.000226 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:40:01.000226 | 1,504,723,201.000226 | 92,358 |
pythondev | help | I find I ask no more than about 25 mins of tech questions, but then drop in stuff like ‘Have you seen the new feature in Node 8, what’s your opinion of async/await versus promises’ | 2017-09-06T18:40:05.000252 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:40:05.000252 | 1,504,723,205.000252 | 92,359 |
pythondev | help | (we are mainly a JS environment) | 2017-09-06T18:40:28.000258 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:40:28.000258 | 1,504,723,228.000258 | 92,360 |
pythondev | help | yeah I think that’s a good approach. give people a topic and let them run with it and they’ll tell you a lot about themselves | 2017-09-06T18:40:57.000157 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:40:57.000157 | 1,504,723,257.000157 | 92,361 |
pythondev | help | I like the async/await vs promises, basically language features, or differences between languages even and get their opinion | 2017-09-06T18:41:19.000226 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T18:41:19.000226 | 1,504,723,279.000226 | 92,362 |
pythondev | help | I also like to talk to people about projects they’ve worked on in a very conversational manner. I find it can tell a lot | 2017-09-06T18:41:33.000127 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:41:33.000127 | 1,504,723,293.000127 | 92,363 |
pythondev | help | I usually ask stuff about what they're into, what excites them, their favorite projects they've been on | 2017-09-06T18:42:33.000042 | Beula | pythondev_help_Beula_2017-09-06T18:42:33.000042 | 1,504,723,353.000042 | 92,364 |
pythondev | help | All of the above, yeah. If they can’t talk coherently about the design choices and trade-offs they’ve made, then they’re not really fluent enough with the tech | 2017-09-06T18:43:05.000087 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:43:05.000087 | 1,504,723,385.000087 | 92,365 |
pythondev | help | For a senior role | 2017-09-06T18:43:14.000413 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:43:14.000413 | 1,504,723,394.000413 | 92,366 |
pythondev | help | I’ve not interviewed for juniors in 10 years, which is a bit sad really as we need to do more of that | 2017-09-06T18:43:35.000232 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:43:35.000232 | 1,504,723,415.000232 | 92,367 |
pythondev | help | interviewing a junior is basically flipping a coin. lol | 2017-09-06T18:44:18.000189 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:44:18.000189 | 1,504,723,458.000189 | 92,368 |
pythondev | help | Looks I am the only "lucky guy" with questions about big O | 2017-09-06T18:46:48.000132 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:46:48.000132 | 1,504,723,608.000132 | 92,369 |
pythondev | help | and internals of JVM | 2017-09-06T18:46:57.000168 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:46:57.000168 | 1,504,723,617.000168 | 92,370 |
pythondev | help | I am more a Java-developer but also looking for a python role | 2017-09-06T18:47:26.000228 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:47:26.000228 | 1,504,723,646.000228 | 92,371 |
pythondev | help | Haha.. wow. I think it depends on who you interview with. We’re not trying to be google and have the best engineering team. We want to solve our customer’s problems, even those they haven’t been able to explain to us | 2017-09-06T18:47:40.000268 | Britteny | pythondev_help_Britteny_2017-09-06T18:47:40.000268 | 1,504,723,660.000268 | 92,372 |
pythondev | help | Big O, algorithms, traverse a binary search tree in order, post order, pre order, but then your role has very little to do with that. I mean I understand needing to know fundamentals but those questions have always bothered me. | 2017-09-06T18:52:19.000156 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T18:52:19.000156 | 1,504,723,939.000156 | 92,373 |
pythondev | help | But Java roles seem to like those types of questions. | 2017-09-06T18:53:39.000004 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T18:53:39.000004 | 1,504,724,019.000004 | 92,374 |
pythondev | help | Yeah agreed. And honestly an interviewer asking those sorts of questions to me is a huge red flag about a place. | 2017-09-06T18:55:32.000381 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T18:55:32.000381 | 1,504,724,132.000381 | 92,375 |
pythondev | help | But there are many red flags though | 2017-09-06T18:58:51.000223 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:58:51.000223 | 1,504,724,331.000223 | 92,376 |
pythondev | help | I am ok with questions about datastructs and access/search time because you use datastructs every day | 2017-09-06T18:59:29.000208 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T18:59:29.000208 | 1,504,724,369.000208 | 92,377 |
pythondev | help | yeah, that’s true, there are. and that’s actually an important thing as a job seeker. don’t settle for a place raising a bunch of red flags if possible. | 2017-09-06T19:00:28.000066 | Junita | pythondev_help_Junita_2017-09-06T19:00:28.000066 | 1,504,724,428.000066 | 92,378 |
pythondev | help | But writing an optimal solution having 5 minutes when interviewer is near you - it is weird | 2017-09-06T19:00:34.000143 | Georgiana | pythondev_help_Georgiana_2017-09-06T19:00:34.000143 | 1,504,724,434.000143 | 92,379 |
pythondev | help | Weird and just not how you do your day to day job. I'm not what information interviewers think they gleaning from a candidate in those situations. | 2017-09-06T19:37:55.000081 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T19:37:55.000081 | 1,504,726,675.000081 | 92,380 |
pythondev | help | it's neither by value, nor by reference | 2017-09-06T19:47:16.000127 | Suellen | pythondev_help_Suellen_2017-09-06T19:47:16.000127 | 1,504,727,236.000127 | 92,381 |
pythondev | help | That's always been my issue with smaller companies following suit with the "Google style" of interviewing blindly. They fail to realize that these methods are essentially an ongoing experiment executed by organizations that can afford teams the size of companies to crunch the data and adjust processes, and absorb high ... | 2017-09-06T19:53:41.000040 | Mallie | pythondev_help_Mallie_2017-09-06T19:53:41.000040 | 1,504,727,621.00004 | 92,382 |
pythondev | help | I think this was posted to a channel here not too long ago
<http://robertheaton.com/2014/02/09/pythons-pass-by-object-reference-as-explained-by-philip-k-dick/> | 2017-09-06T20:10:02.000166 | Eve | pythondev_help_Eve_2017-09-06T20:10:02.000166 | 1,504,728,602.000166 | 92,383 |
pythondev | help | even with all "blockers" disabled or whatever. | 2017-09-06T21:49:51.000121 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T21:49:51.000121 | 1,504,734,591.000121 | 92,384 |
pythondev | help | Is there a way to order words in the terminal? (MacOS/Linux)
```
The words looks li
ke this
```
And..
```
I want them
like this
``` | 2017-09-06T23:25:11.000052 | Lana | pythondev_help_Lana_2017-09-06T23:25:11.000052 | 1,504,740,311.000052 | 92,385 |
pythondev | help | not simply like that. | 2017-09-06T23:27:48.000011 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:27:48.000011 | 1,504,740,468.000011 | 92,386 |
pythondev | help | you can take a list of words and sort them with `sort`. but it simply sorts lines from stdout | 2017-09-06T23:28:24.000107 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:28:24.000107 | 1,504,740,504.000107 | 92,387 |
pythondev | help | I think I didn't explain myself | 2017-09-06T23:28:46.000076 | Lana | pythondev_help_Lana_2017-09-06T23:28:46.000076 | 1,504,740,526.000076 | 92,388 |
pythondev | help | ❯ echo "a\nc\nb" | sort
a
b
c | 2017-09-06T23:28:52.000121 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:28:52.000121 | 1,504,740,532.000121 | 92,389 |
pythondev | help | I want them not "sorted" but without splitting them among lines | 2017-09-06T23:31:22.000068 | Lana | pythondev_help_Lana_2017-09-06T23:31:22.000068 | 1,504,740,682.000068 | 92,390 |
pythondev | help | ok | 2017-09-06T23:31:32.000015 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:31:32.000015 | 1,504,740,692.000015 | 92,391 |
pythondev | help | can you paste that text in here? | 2017-09-06T23:32:09.000063 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:32:09.000063 | 1,504,740,729.000063 | 92,392 |
pythondev | help | I'll use a lot of texts (actually, it's for a python project I'm working on), use any Bible verse, for example | 2017-09-06T23:33:10.000024 | Lana | pythondev_help_Lana_2017-09-06T23:33:10.000024 | 1,504,740,790.000024 | 92,393 |
pythondev | help | yea just a sec | 2017-09-06T23:35:25.000113 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:35:25.000113 | 1,504,740,925.000113 | 92,394 |
pythondev | help | <@Charles>
```
❯ echo "i am blah bla bla words just fill asdf asdf \ndoo" | tr " " "\n" | sort | tr "\n" " "
am asdf asdf bla bla blah doo fill i just words
``` | 2017-09-06T23:37:06.000217 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:37:06.000217 | 1,504,741,026.000217 | 92,395 |
pythondev | help | the command `tr` replaces text. | 2017-09-06T23:37:22.000078 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:37:22.000078 | 1,504,741,042.000078 | 92,396 |
pythondev | help | so make all spaces new lines. then simply `sort` them. then make new lines spaces | 2017-09-06T23:37:46.000158 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:37:46.000158 | 1,504,741,066.000158 | 92,397 |
pythondev | help | but also note in this case, you will end up with a blank line. so you may want to make sure that may not happen. | 2017-09-06T23:39:17.000069 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:39:17.000069 | 1,504,741,157.000069 | 92,398 |
pythondev | help | if possible | 2017-09-06T23:39:23.000072 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:39:23.000072 | 1,504,741,163.000072 | 92,399 |
pythondev | help | Nope, not working :confused: | 2017-09-06T23:42:11.000101 | Lana | pythondev_help_Lana_2017-09-06T23:42:11.000101 | 1,504,741,331.000101 | 92,400 |
pythondev | help | are you on linux or osx? | 2017-09-06T23:42:30.000072 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:42:30.000072 | 1,504,741,350.000072 | 92,401 |
pythondev | help | whats the error? | 2017-09-06T23:42:34.000042 | Bruno | pythondev_help_Bruno_2017-09-06T23:42:34.000042 | 1,504,741,354.000042 | 92,402 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.