tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3676448.post6158532529229955570..comments2023-06-17T12:47:19.240+01:00Comments on Subclassed: Simple Python script to clean up HTML produced by Exceltoyghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04499664589774142384noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3676448.post-12822397329748187072012-03-20T08:50:26.033+00:002012-03-20T08:50:26.033+00:00I see.
Truth be told, I would need someone with t...I see.<br /><br />Truth be told, I would need someone with the same showoff teaching attitude for the code I am currently writing - it is constantly on the verge of becoming a hideous mess.<br /><br />Anyway, I will hold back myself in the future.<br /><br />Gist (they are quite nice) pro: anyone with an account could easily fork your script, improve or extend it, and you could merge back the changes. They are backed by git, as the repositories on GitHub.Giulio Piancastellinoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3676448.post-38645222519872363582012-03-19T22:45:14.189+00:002012-03-19T22:45:14.189+00:00Also, I do know Blogger gets preferential treatmen...Also, I do know Blogger gets preferential treatment on Google, which is my real target for this sort of snippets. GitHub, not so much.toyghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04499664589774142384noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3676448.post-90919489312307919252012-03-19T22:37:34.083+00:002012-03-19T22:37:34.083+00:00Dude, your teacher's mindset is always on show...Dude, your teacher's mindset is always on show... yeah, I was just being extra-careful, making it explicit that it references the current script dir.<br /><br />I've never used Gists and I don't like the "blog by github" way of life -- you can't see stats on anything on github.toyghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04499664589774142384noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3676448.post-1966520622004779622012-03-19T22:34:22.658+00:002012-03-19T22:34:22.658+00:00I still wonder why the natural home for this kind ...I still wonder why the natural home for this kind of scripts couldn't be a Gist on GitHub. Anyway, I just wrote to ask why inDir and outDir values are formatted with Windows-like forward slashes: shouldn't everything just work by using "data" and "output"? After all, path separators are what you imported join for, aren't they?Giulio Piancastellinoreply@blogger.com