I am not good with English but this seems to me as a person trying to thrash the other but with cherry on top (to avoid flags?)
Sorry, I don't mean to be rude, but IMHO this hardly "gets rid of the inessentials", and does not answer the question. What the OP posted is standard code, with the first being the pyuic output and the second the normal usage of that approach, as suggested by official documentation too. If you want to post simpler and shorter code that's fine, just ensure that it actually is simpler and shorter (your code can be written with half the lines, improving readability in the meantime); also, you should really avoid using capitalization for variables names, including instancies.
Explanation of why I think this is rude:
but IMHO this hardly "gets rid of the inessentials"
- Escalating IMO by adding humble
- Unnecessary quoting to point something?
If you want to post simpler and shorter code that's fine, just ensure that it actually is simpler and shorter (your code can be written with half the lines, improving readability in the meantime)
- I don't think the guy who posted answer have to "ensure".
- It seems like this guy is saying "you should know what actually means simpler and shorter".
your code can be written with half the lines, improving readability in the meantime
- The other guy says the code can be written in half the lines. But in later comments doesn't reveal so.
- Improving readability in meantime - what does this mean? seems a bit not good.
What do you guys think?
I am not against any of them here. Just want to interpret english better. cherry at bottom :)
IMHO
can also refer to "In My Honest Opinion" - wouldn't exactly call it a disclaimer, but rather an explicit way of saying it's their opinion. If you mean the extraH
is "with [a] cherry on top (to avoid flags?)", that's hardly grounds to avoid flags when it has two meanings. Or, to make another extreme comparison, a targeted personal insult wouldn't be any less rude if there was a "thanks" at the end.:(
instead of/s
(yes, his comment is a sarcasm)