Some sort of rule about verification may help your cause, and I hope it runs well for you
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Without strong and trusted mods, this will be interesting…
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL Most chewing gum is made of Plastic.English
67·1 year agowhispers you’re eating polymers. The bad part of gum.
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL Most chewing gum is made of Plastic.English
56·1 year agoIf you eat celery or beans, I’ve got bad news for you
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL Most chewing gum is made of Plastic.English
243·1 year agoYour first link is about micro plastics, and they even say not all brands have them. So if a product is made of plastic and doesn’t always contain micro plastics (which are found in the air and water and soil and foods), then…polymers might not actually be plastics sometimes. Or in gum, many times.
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL Most chewing gum is made of Plastic.English
62·1 year agoAlso silk, wool, cellulose, protein
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL Most chewing gum is made of Plastic.English
2068·1 year agoPolymer != Plastic. Plastic is a polymer, but not all polymers are plastic. Wtf is this source.
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Science Memes@mander.xyz•[Cool birb, but see comments. Not accurate.] Dinosaurs Still LiveEnglish
23·1 year agoIt is definitely an awesome looking critter though
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Science Memes@mander.xyz•[Cool birb, but see comments. Not accurate.] Dinosaurs Still LiveEnglish
159·1 year agoThis isn’t true: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoatzin
… Since Archaeopteryx had three functional claws on each wing, some earlier systematists speculated that the hoatzin was descended from it, because nestling hoatzins have two functional claws on each wing. Modern researchers, however, hypothesize that the young hoatzin’s claws are of more recent origin… A similar trait is seen in turacos, whose nestlings use claws on their wings to climb in trees.
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Games@sh.itjust.works•Former PlayStation boss says games are "seeing a collapse in creativity" as publishers spend more time asking "what's your monetization scheme?"English
9·1 year agoNot quite, this has happened before
The downside to that is the epoxy would only be surface level. You’d want to fill any cracks/checks entirely, and pouring it into the hole or flooding the whole slab would be the best way to ensure that
I didn’t watch this the whole way through, but it might help you: https://youtu.be/E_d9hK20C94?si=TOh87hZYK79tpUAl
Id guess the alternative is to pour them one at a time? If you don’t want to flood it but you want the checks filled, that’s really the only other option, isn’t it?
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Python@programming.dev•Confused about multiplying floating-point & integer values
2·1 year agoEh, 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.
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Python@programming.dev•Confused about multiplying floating-point & integer values
5·1 year agoThat’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 🙂
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Python@programming.dev•Confused about multiplying floating-point & integer values
3·1 year agoNo problem bud, good luck
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Python@programming.dev•Confused about multiplying floating-point & integer values
4·1 year agothe signature for the
inputfunction (that’s what it’s called instead of command) isdef input(__prompt: Any = ...) -> strwhich 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.
woop_woop@lemmy.worldto
Python@programming.dev•Confused about multiplying floating-point & integer values
12·1 year agoThe 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?



“im a henchman for a bad guy…and lemme tell you…I think we might be starting to do bad stuff…not sure yet…”
Thanks bud