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Python docstrings can be written following several formats as the other posts showed. However the default Sphinx docstring format was not mentioned and is based on reStructuredText (reST). You can get some information about the main formats in that tuto.
Note that the reST is recommended by the PEP 287
There follows the main used formats for docstrings.
Note: This guide may be slightly outdated. It may be still useful for older releases, but nowadays the vast majority of releases are correctly tagged as WEB-DL (unless it's RARBG/rartv). Protip: prefer looking at file names instead of release names, as they tend to be more accurate.
This is a short cheatsheet to help you determine whether a release from Amazon, Hulu, or Netflix contains the lossless/untouched (as in no further loss of quality compared to what the streaming services provide) video/audio or not. Most newer P2P releases are correctly tagged, but for older releases, it cannot be reliably determined based on the tags alone.
In most cases, non-lossless rips from these services are screen captures (which, when done by professional releasers, should be high quality and contain little to no glitches – see the history section for details), but in some cases they may be simply reencoded from the untouched stream, for example to crop black bars or reencode from a
Combining Python 3 asyncio coroutines with thread pool and process pool executors
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These are the steps I followed enable VirtualBox on my laptop without
disabling UEFI Secure Boot. They're nearly identical to the process described
on [Øyvind Stegard's blog][blog], save for a few key details. The images here
are borrowed from the [Systemtap UEFI Secure Boot Wiki][systemtap].
Install the VirtualBox package (this might be different for your platform).
Setting up chroot from a live image in Fedora. Regenerate grub2 for Fedora.
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