ML Classification 0.12039463813670008 (Old classification 0.57)
This site is for specific questions related to programming (code) or use of a programmers tool. We do not offer study, educational, career, or any other type of advice. Try Quora or Reddit instead. You can find more information about this site in the help center. — Ken White43 secs ago
ML Classification 0.21636404420436992 (Old classification 0.43)
You could maybe publish your code for programmers with experience to take a look. Most probably someone will be able to optimize it a little bit. — Gass34 secs ago
The time is 2021-02-23T10:00:00Z and @Duga is alive
ML Classification 0.0033055419524728653 (Old classification 0.4)
In general, when writing any new code, don't use any deprecated APIs as they are likely to be removed soon. The reason deprecated code still exists (and might still work) is simply to give programmers that made use of those features time to update their code to new APIs. — samthecodingman52 secs ago
ML Classification 0.0568496135626036 (Old classification 0.4)
These kind of bugs are an initiation rite for C programmers. You keep writing them over and over until you learn to spot them in your sleep. — Lundin46 secs ago
ML Classification 0.8566199076772157 (Old classification 0.0)
Irrespective of the question's value, questions about testing architecture probably belong on softwareengineering.stackexchange.com . — Zev Spitz41 secs ago
ML Classification 0.057985076305304105 (Old classification 0.43)
ML Classification 9.96374236122894E-4 (Old classification 0.43)
This is a site for programmers. Are you saying that, as a programmer, you don't know how to increment a variable? — Tangentially Perpendicular1 min ago
ML Classification 3.410762488433504E-4 (Old classification 0.4)
I start calling to all old programmers and I find out that there is a DOScall.exe in windows that can be run with parameters, so it is not cal but it start a DOScall.exe witch parameters. That is why this work and # is just take a first line from file as parameter. This was written by some one 20 years ago. — Mikołaj Frankiewicz20 secs ago
ML Classification 0.28348925536657665 (Old classification 0.0)
ML Classification 0.0752759182392123 (Old classification 0.4)
While standards can be "annoying" sometimes... they are usually there to make us better programmers. You'd be better adding a pylint disable comment on the error (or just removing the specific no-member check) — Aneuway58 secs ago