KG3 | KerbalGalaxy 3 is a planet pack | 3D Printing library
kandi X-RAY | KG3 Summary
kandi X-RAY | KG3 Summary
KerbalGalaxy 3 is a planet pack for Kerbal Space Program. This pack adds 7 new solar systems, two black holes and one wormhole.
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QUESTION
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Mar-16 at 21:46The error:
QUESTION
I need to convert my JSON to a CSV file, but I don't know how to do it correctly.
I have this code already
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-May-16 at 11:31You can try this
QUESTION
So, right now I'm working on a chess game. I've finished all the basic stuff, and now I'm trying to add the functionality of importing a PGN and viewing the moves as they're being played slowly.
Here's the part responsible for this:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Apr-17 at 19:59To keep the window responding, you have to handle the events by either pygame.event.pump()
or pygame.event.get()
. This function do not only handle the IO events, they handle internal events, too.
e.g:
QUESTION
I am new in python and tried to understand the working with dictionaries operations but stuck in between.
I have data like below:
...ANSWER
Answered 2019-Sep-17 at 12:45Try this:
QUESTION
I have a column in a dataframe df$moves
which looks like this:
ANSWER
Answered 2018-Jul-12 at 04:09You can convert it to a function (I'm not sure what the purpose of your add_queen
function at the moment is as it just surrounding the loop) and then call using adply
from library(plyr)
.
This should be faster than a loop but hard to tell for sure without the full data set
QUESTION
I am trying to extract the blocks of code that follow each [EventDate] tag in a given file. These all begin with 1. and end with varying numbers. The examples below begin at 1. and end at 46., and 50.. There are many more than 2 in each file.
The goal of this is to count how many moves each block of code has. In this case, 46 for the first block, and 50 for the second. Once i have extracted the blocks, I will be able to count the periods "." to get a total count of moves.
...ANSWER
Answered 2017-Feb-02 at 04:13The sample of two games you have provided is actually a standardized format known as PGN (Portable Game Notation). You can read more about it on the wikipedia PGN article. This is important because a python parser for pgn already exists in a library known as pgnparser
which is listed on pypi here. If you're comfortable with installing the pgnparser
library, you can make this task quite trivial. The installation itself is as simple as running pip install pgnparser
if your python installation is already set up with pip
. I'll assume that you've installed the pgnparser
library and also have your two example games into a file called example_games.pgn
.
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