it's just a thing to notify me when my service goes crazy
my phone occasionally drops the provider's signal and silently goes into "emergency calls only" mode
I mean, I guess I could even put it on github, but as I don't know anything about app development, nor java, nor android, the result will definitely be an exquisite corpse
Currently I have a button and two dynamic labels, and pushing the button produces a notification/vibration depending on press/release
if I can get the GSM stuff to work (which will be the hardest, lowest-level part), I should eventually succeed
actually, the largest problem will probably be to make it run a service in the background...
Dear friends, I got error in this line : fuente = Gst.ElementFactory.make("filesrc", "file-source") self.reproductor.add(fuente)
as : File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/dbr/reproductor.py", line 36, in init self.reproductor.add(fuente) AttributeError: Reproductor instance has no attribute 'reproductor'
@JoranBeasley And I certainly don't agree with his latest comment:
No, just use [] instead of list() :) But seriously, you can't always advocate for breaking an API, even if the naming decisions were very bad. If the OP was fine with breaking the API, he wouldn't have asked the question, he would have just changed the name. Remapping a builtin isn't unheard of, and it's certainly preferable than having a giant comment saying "this function has to be last in the class definition". — Brendan Abel11 mins ago
Maybe we should invite Brendan here so we can thrash it out...
@IljaEverilä "I want code". I'm so tempted to comment: "I want a pony". :)
This is awkward, I'm a software engineer, I've been studying for a long time and I keep googling for everything in my job, I feel like I know nothing !!
I don't have to Google everything: I have a local copy of the Python docs on my HD. :) But seriously, I'm sure you've absorbed a lot of info about the languages you use. And it's good to check that your assumptions are correct and up to date. OBxkcd: xkcd.com/903 "When Wikipedia has a server outage, my apparent IQ drops by about 30 points."
@Ffisegydd Currently, it's not. Now that I'm back, I'm going to start making the proposals and make sure we're focussing on the right features with "field experts"
They're likely to look at me strangely and conclude I'm some kind of wizard.
Heh, that's cool, didn't know about that. Might be a good entry point for me playing with some of that stuff. I was trying to get to working on ML stuff for football prediction at my last project, and realised a) it's super hard, and b) there's loads of people doing it wayyyy better than I (ever) will.
@Anuj: BTW, you will have problems migrating this to Python 3 because you cannot compare objects of different type in Python 3. Specifically, sorting a collection of integers mixed with Nones will fail.
>>> print(sorted([3, 1, 2, None, 4]))
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: '<' not supported between instances of 'NoneType' and 'int'
@Anuj Or you could modify the key function that you pass to sort so that it converts None to 0 or -1, but it would probably be more efficient in the long run to replace the None entries in the actual data.
FWIW, although I see the benefit of restricting comparisons in Python 3 I'm a little sad that None isn't given special treatment to permit it to be compared to anything.
@Ffisegydd I think using None is cleaner than using an invalid int. OTOH, it would be even cleaner to have an explicit record_type field so that it's more obvious that a heterogenous mixture of records is being processed.
d = defaultdict(dict)
for l in results:
key = l['name']+'-'+l['work_type']
if d.get(key,{"car_type":5}).get('car_type'):
d[l['name']+'-'+l['work_type']] = l
@Ffisegydd Sod it. I've been looking at standardising my projects a certain way. Might as well cookie-cutter it so that others have a hope in hell of understanding how my brain misfires works
And now you know what the "Zen of Python" means by saying that the one obvious way to do it "may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch" ;-) — Tim Peters7 hours ago
Just had a call with an online gaming company; the guy's seen my CV and portfolio, and it wasn't until 2/3 the way through I realised he was talking about building stuff in Java.
I feel like one or both of us should have picked that up earlier.
@AndrasDeak FWIW, I'm currently wearing a T-shirt that's got "BUDAPEST" "HUNGARY" embroidered on it. But I guess embroidering that Zalgo post might be a tad difficult. :)
Yeah, we usually stay round the Bacjisly (sp) end of Kiraly. There for a couple of days in August before we head off to Novi Sad & Belgrade. Come say hi and get a coffee. :)
@Withnail It might be possible to do the Zalgo thing with embroidery, assuming the sewing machine can get the fonts but I suppose it'd be simpler to just screen-print it. Or iron-on print it.
I almost answered a regex question a little while ago but the OP deleted it when it was only 20 minutes old. His main problem was a simple typo, but I was going to post some code that would've been more efficient than what he was doing. He was processing a small text file line by line that could easily be done in one hit with .findall; oddly he was already using .findall, even though each line only contained a single record.
@BhargavRao stackoverflow.com/questions/37319913/… I'd would probably just do this line by line using strip and rsplit, but I guess regex is handy to build the list in one hit.
And I see from the timestamps it was only 12 minutes old when he deleted it.
I'm not sure I really like techy questions, if they're not done well then they can just end up testing memorisation - for example "Write me a list comprehension that returns only even numbers."
You can do a bit better with something like "What's the difference between a list comprehension and a generator expression?"
But really I think better questions come from having a conversation - "What's your favourite part of Python? Least favourite? Oh you've used X library, tell me about it." etc
Unfortunately I also need some case studies to give them something to really get their teeth stuck into.
Playing around with making a prog bar for my tkinter app and not sure how people estimate how long a task will take. In my case. I've got a simple app that will browsed a selected dir and print out each file if the file meets certain conditions. But if I simply do one loop to find out how many of those are I'm doing nearly double work for when I actually print the files. How is something like this approached?
You know the total and when you started, you know how many you've processed and how long it took, seems straightforward. Of course, this is only WinXP level of "time left", but improving that is an exercise for the reader,
@Ffisegydd to return to this convo (that I inadvertantly let me machine sleep over...) - my experience of a lot of hiring (both tech and non) is that the ability to hold the conversation is a) a general test of fit, and b) a marker for understanding and comprehension of subject. Those questions you've outlined are a pretty good opening, imo.
"What's your biggest technical achievement? Why did you pick it?" is another good one.
If processing a file that meets the condition takes five minutes, and processing a file that does not meet the condition takes five seconds, then you can't easily determine how long it will take to process a full directory.
As an alternative to precomputing the conditions before showing the progress bar, you could: 1) use a heuristic; for example, assume that 10% of all files in the directory meet the conditions. Then you can increment the progress bar every tenth file without having to actually check them for that condition. 2) Increment the status bar asymptotically. After the first file, increment it 25%. After the second file, increment it 20%. After the tenth file, increment it 1%.
Or possibly a mix of the two. You can also adjust your heuristic as you gain additional data on the actual directory. "I've processed 20 files and seven of them meet my conditions; I'll adjust my '10% assumption' up to '33%' and move the progress bar accordingly"
This all assumes that checking the condition is actually expensive. If you just need to look at the filename and time of creation in order to check your condition, I'd expect that to take a fraction of a second for a directory with less than, say, a thousand files.
engine = create_engine('sqlite:///:memory:', echo=True) Does this mean that the data base will exist only in ram for the time being because that would be cool.
Tkinter.Canvas.create_line's dashoffset argument doesn't appear to do anything. this guy has the same problem as me. Post made in 2009, no replies. The struggle is real.
I can't be the only person that has ever needed to make a dashed line with two colors.
Hmm, might be time to make a post on SO. Is it a blue moon already?