Typical solution is to use a caching layer like Flask-Cache and a ¡memcached¡ server to cache recently accessed data.
Having an edit form in the page is good. You can have as many forms as you want. Btw the common approach is to have only some sort of "templated" forms hidden that you'll then fi...
You asked someone to shoot you... it's strongly against my morals, but if you can provide tea, then I'm sure they're not insurmountable to overcome for a brief period :)
@JonClements Yeah I'm near that point :D still a few commits and will be there..then I'll have to choose between Redis and MongoDB capped collection :/
What is this? Using a CSDL (XML based language) to statically define entity types and properties... HOLD ON! IT CAN BE PYTHONIC! OMG I LOVE YOU METAPROGRAMMING.
they're disintinct enough to warrant their own grouped routes, models, views etc... (possibly even templates)
And your route definitions here - you might want to consider there's a 3rd party flask plugin that does restful api stuff, or failing that, you might want to consider flask.Blueprint to write something that extends a common route and does the boilerplate for you
@Peter hahaha... haven't heard this one in ages :)
For the templates I think we're there. What do you mean by grouping "methods" and "views" into separate modules? Aren't they already like that? Or you mean like having a separate "view" for each "view" in "views" (as /views/index.py /views/post.py..)?
Didn't know about the 3rd party plugin but will look into it now
Well, all I know of you is that you're named Danish Iqbal and asked if building a small offline ERP system is possible in Python... I'm certainly not qualified to determine if it'd be easy or hard for you :)
i actually thought that bcz where i have to make ERP system they already had my 1 software which i made on VFP9 and they dont care if it take much time then usual
Whatever you're happy with - I can't suggest anything - as I said - I know nothing about you, your capabilities, your passion, your aptitude, the depth of your project etc... This is something only you can work out :)
this question is funny to me. Halfway through, he reveals some detail about the problem and says "(forgot to mention)". And I'm thinking, well, you remembered before submitting the post, so why not just... Go back and revise your introductory sentence so that you do mention it?
Like, if he thought the question was fine as-is, then I wouldn't mind. But clearly he doesn't think that, because why would he then have an apologetic aside there?
Anyway, cv-pls since he didn't actually ask a question
I don't really feel comfortable providing help here, since the purpose of codility is to "[filter] out job candidates who cannot write correct programs." Cheating at this would only mislead the recruiters and hurt both them and you, in the end.
I rather dislike the habit of using a single variable to refer to different data types at different times. In this case, my_time is first a string, and then it's a datetime
The OP asks for 'what is a good datastructure to represent just time (hours, seconds)'.
The upvoted answer is: use datetime, here is how you parse a string to a datetime.datetime object.
that's all rather nice, but it doesn't address the question, nor does it address the miriad number of use-cases the OP didn't narrow his question down to.
I think the reason that guy is using strptime, by the way, is because he considers strptime('%H:%M:%S', '05:43:34') more descriptive than datetime.time(5, 43, 34). The former resembles the way time would be written in real-life; the latter is just numbers.
Not that I consider that strong enough justification to use datetime over time
I experienced a strange coincidence yesterday. There was a news post on Hacker News, about the danger of leaded gasoline and its connection to the crime rate. Later, on a completely unrelated site, a blog post from three months ago linked to the same gasoline study.
It's like how my dad said that he's seeing a lot more trucks on the road than he used to. How coincidental, that this apparent surge would occur just after he decided he wants a truck for himself!
I drive by a two-story car dealership every day. I wonder how they get cars down from the second floor. Freight elevator, maybe? Seems like a harrowing task.
@Kevin if you ever need a lighter "only header" GL math implementation for graphics instead of GLM: here it is. datenwolf created it, I found him and/or this at SO
I didn't really get the resolution of the parents' plot. The father didn't make any grand gestures or anything. His characterization felt a bit flat.
Like, why did they get back together in the end? Was it because of the way the neighbor handled the main character's vandalism?
I guess it's not too endearing to leave an ailing person on someone's doorstep...
But then, I guess that's just a consequence of having a non-omniscient viewpoint. Some plots get resolved, and the narrator doesn't know how. That's how it is in real life, too.
umm that's interesting -- for me the whole plot was about the father-son similarity (and actually all men's stoicism) in a similar situation, what men can't handle the most: being loved and not being loved.
for me the father figure was a perfectly "full" character, however the characteristics of him was very simple: he was antisocial
in a lot of ways -- that's why he chose the "sea" and the world of "underwater" (that's why it is Submarine afaik)
and that kind of character will go back -- even what happened with the neighbor and the wife
he will always go back, and he will always hopelessly love his wife
however he will never be able to express his love ever
Yeah, the father-son parallel is important, I think. It was a sad moment to see the main character drink the hot lemon-tea, symbolic of the depression he inherited from his dad.
mm hmm. You can see both layers in the scene where Oliver goes to christmas dinner at his girlfriend's. They're having a touching scene in the background, and he's awkwardly sitting at the table alone
Nothing like reading Careers to make me feel inadequate. How can I call myself proficient, if I haven't had 8 years of continuous commercial experience in full-stack django/flask/HTML/postgres/florby/cloud/enterprise solution management?
Some of them are really taking the proverbial... 10+ years in this, this and this... and we'll pay you £40k.... errr.... no thanks... 10+ years in just one of those is at least £80k
okay I think my brain is not functioning correctly here, but this should be simple... someone puts www.asite.com/?chart=chart_name. Now I want to grab the thing at root www.asite.com/chart/chart_name. How?
@JonClements is it a dirty hack to build a struct with "finite" number of int, char* objects and fill the values with stepping memory block to memory block? (where int will be the id the OpenGL returns, and the char* is the path from the OpenGL should load the file which returns the int)
I thought this guy just wasn't passing in enough arguments to his method, but he's getting missing 1 required positional argument instead of takes exactly X arguments (Y given)