@user3546546 What I was thinking was to, every time a change is made to a tournament, recalculate the statistics page and store it in a html column on the Tournament table. Then the user just requests the html. The only time he might get old data is if he opened the page while a change is being made - which I'm okay with.
Another thing I want to do is to have the HTML be in the actual source code of the statistics page. I can't do that if I generate HTML dynamically in the Javascript, but I can if I do that with Jinja2. Regarding the actual calculating statistics code, I'm pretty sure it's as good as it's going to get. It's just simple iterations through the objects. But I will try the profiling tool to see if I have any major bottlenecks
@abacus just don't make the user calculate on his browser, you don't want to give him a bad experience. But anyway if the server side code profiling gives optimal results, you have to check your db, put the indexes on the most expensive queries or switch to a nosql database
No, with the way I'm suggesting, the user isn't doing anything but requesting html. Changes to the database are made when someone uploads a game or a tournament director changes some settings - that's when server-side code will regenerate the statistics file.
@abacus It all depends on the time elapsed between a static and dynamic request. How often are these changes done? How many users will you have on average?
At maximum maybe ten times that, in case multiple tournaments are going on
Yeah, changes won't be happening any time near 2 minutes. So if this is okay for a short-term solution, do you think I should try using websockets in the future?
Well absolutely, if you expect to grow beyond thousand users you should rethink your infrastructure. Gevent is interesting too (asynchronous processing), I'm using it for my current project. I think that Flask + Gevent + MongoDB + Websockets are the perfect combo for performance and scalability.
With Ajax you would poll the server every x seconds/minute to check if the db changed. Websockets instead keep a light persistent connection between the client and the server and updates are instant.
@user3546546 when I print request.POST shows me everything, including files as dataURL. But the problem is that request.FILES is empty, and files should be there
@edwardoyarzun Are you sure you have all necessary fields on the input field? Because it looks fine like this, so the problem must reside in the html. Not sure, but let me try.
Particularly look out for the "form-theme-edit" id in your input. You can also try to do:
hey everyone, i need to do research for a speech I will be giving... http://strawpoll.me/1517151 Mostly I need reasons either way that I can attribute as research. (they don't come from my brain.)
Clarification: I mean simple programming, nothing complicated or advanced, or theoretical.
well bye everyone, if anyone has any comments on that poll (which is what I really care about) then please do an @theHeretic or other form of contact that I will see.
"Now how do I print the names of all the people in the world... Ah ha, I'll do for country in countries: for city in country: for building in city: for apartment in building: for person in apartment: print person.name"
A fractal is a mathematical set that typically displays self-similar patterns. Fractals may be exactly the same at every scale, or, as illustrated in Figure 1, they may be nearly the same at different scales. The concept of fractal extends beyond self-similarity and includes the idea of a detailed pattern repeating itself.
Fractals are distinguished from regular geometric figures by their fractal dimensional scaling. Doubling the edge lengths of a square scales its area by four, which is two to the power of two, because a square is two dimensional. Likewise, if the radius of a sphere...
Sounds like you're asking if anyone else has had a problem, in the hopes that they had the same problem you have, and also have the answer. It may be more productive to provide a minimal test case of your problem directly.
Ahhh... I think I saw that earlier... was it the one with "eval(input(...))" and would like to make a linked list from an array and print each array item one per line (or something equally - I've got as far as this... do the rest please?)
Voting to reopen: I was wrong to close this as a dupe of the slice notation; your question is not about what the syntax means but about how the language treats the notation. — Martijn Pieters40 secs ago
terminology nitpick: the collection object created with square brackets and commas is called a list. Arrays come in their own dedicated module, and are used much less frequently.
this did what I wanted in my app CSVs = [x for x in os.listdir(basedir + CSV_PATH) if x.endswith('.csv')]... that should be reliable? Ah actually, not quite, want a list of the absolute paths
I feel like I should do this with multiple things... I have variables like CSV_PATH = 'static/csv/'. It might be useful to make everything an absolute path...
The actual number is smaller because argument unpacking isn't something "everyone" knows. Since it's local to the Python community, you're more like, in the lucky 100
Old Macdonald had a sign... e i e i o.... and with that sign he had a subtract, e i e i o, with a minus here and a minus there, here a minus, there a minus, everywhere a minus minus... Old Macdonald had a sign, e i e i o!
Well, birthday parties for one year olds aren't that great anyway... The guest of honor doesn't know what's going on, and will likely make a tremendous mess of things