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I'm trying to exactly what is described here and seems straightforward enough:
Add 2 hours and 1 day onto a timestamp in django
Here is my code:
new_event.EventDate += timedelta(hours = int(standard_time_offsets[request.user.member.timezone]))
new_event.save
print new_event.EventDate
The print statement returns the correctly adjusted date but when I check the record it has reverted to its value prior to the save. Im stumped, all help is greatly appreciated.
You don't call the save() method. The code should be:
new_event.save()
Note the parenthesis.
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I was just writing code and then I went to my mouse and flinched clicking on the code I think I might of searched a variable or something but now it looks like this
I have pocked around the UI and looked at the documentation but its getting late and it would be better if someone just told me what the hell to do at this point
what it looks like
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This happens almost every time I type print("something here"): it puts this error message box (and yes I've tried quotation marks instead of quote marks).
Currently you have
print('hello' +inp 'how is your day?')
You might want to place another + sign on the other end of your input variable.
print('hello' +inp+ 'how is your day?')
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Closed 1 year ago.
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Kindly look at 10th line of this code snippet:
You forgot to close print():
print(txt.read())
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I have a dataframe called propertydf.
When I run my code I get a very vague error:
propertydf = propertydf[propertydf['fixed_price'].notna()].copy()
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
I checked the code and the dataframe variable has changed color to blue? But not all of them.
I also noticed some other variables are suddenly blue, such as year and date.
I think this is causing the error. How can I fix it?
In the line propertydf['fixed_price'] = fix_price((propertydf.iloc[:,[4]]) you open two parenthesis but only close one (It's above the line that throws the error).
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I'm not sure why I'm getting this error.enter image description here
You only need a return statement if you are inside a function. The syntax of a function is the following:
def functionName():
# code goes here
return # you can also specify what to return here or just leave it
# blank, a return statement is not necessary.