At this point British/European people start to get active, then in 6-7 hours time our American compatriots start to come online also so it tends to stay pretty active from then on
It's a good chatroom though. I actually prefer this side of SO to the Q+A side. In the Q+A side it is far too much a "race" to help someone, and a lot of the time the people that are asking questions don't need a sterilised answer, they need to talk to someone about their problems, so if they come here it can be better for them in the long run.
@thefourtheye I think that what @JonClements means is that you need the indexing to be an O(1) operation, whereas in a linked list it is potentially an O(n) operation.
@thefourtheye also I do believe collections.Sequence is a higher-level object wrapper, vs. a generic Python object implementing something like e.g. the iterable protocol – I don't know but I don't think most standard-library “sequences” would be built on collections.Sequence at this point.
If there is anything about CS I REALLY love, is Data Structures and Complexity. Those two subjects actually make you think deeply about each decision you take regarding choosing the correct DS to solve a certain problem. Especially planning a complex DS, I simply love that.
(Having read could we be a bit nicer to new users and related posts.)
I work alone, every now and then coding in Python (which I enjoy), on medium to small projects. I often wish I had a sound board, just to reflect on approaches to a problem, tools, libraries, and so on. As one would with coll...
@thefourtheye not the least ambiguous term I could have used, admittedly – collections.Sequence is an abstract base class that exposes a bunch of methods for a Sequence-y object (as I understand it).
@thefourtheye I was just offering the caveat, if you were testing explicitly for inheritance (vs. behavior, duck-punch style) – that’s all I was saying. Pardon me if it was tangental and/or confusing, yes!
> This module provides abstract base classes that can be used to test whether a class provides a particular interface; for example, whether it is hashable or whether it is a mapping.
Abstract base classes are pretty nifty… but their use of baroque metaclasses to bend runtime inheritance to their will is often at odds with, say, how protocols and duck-typing typically work.
IMHO of course.
Not a bad thing, just gotcha-prone, for certain mindsets
@thefourtheye Ahh I see now. Aight if you take a look at the source, collection.Sequence inherits from a class named "Sized" (and 2 other classes, but it is irrelevant at the moment) Sized itself has the ABCMeta as a metaclass.
@thefourtheye I find that isinstance() is more trouble than it is worth, especially if you’re passing it instances of totally unknown provenance (e.g. something returned by dequeue(), or a promise-style return value, etc).
isinstance is rather unpythonic. When you deal with duck typing, you more care of whether an object conforms to a certain set of operations or has a certain set of attributes, less whether it is a class X or Y or even if it inherits from X or Y.
Also regarding metaclasses, I love metaclasses. They are a great way to confuse others who try to debug your code at runtime instead of looking at the source :P
@thefourtheye my (poorly-phrased) point with that was that they can be a source of instances that can confuse poorly-concieved isinstance()-based branching code.
(by “they” I mean “promise-style lazily-evaluated objects”
@thefourtheye that is one reason – it doesn’t get any easier if you use, say, Tornado or Gevent or similar; Python’s evaluation fundamentals still make you jump through all those misdirected-proxy-method hoops that you see in that Django example to be properly promissory
@thefourtheye good to know about that – I still generally have to straddle the 2/3 divide and so I haven’t been able to indulge in all the new 3-only toys like that one
@thefourtheye Actually I did. I worked for a startup company that deals with phishing, I did quite a few things with Python there. But the salary was less than minimal wage as they didn't have enough money to pay... so I had to go towards the big market, which is dominated by mostly .NET and some Java
@thefourtheye recently I reimplemented a host of image-processing algorithms and techniques in NumPy, from Java source – it was awesome. Often dozens of lines of nested for-loops could be condensed into one or two legible array expressions, yes
@thefourtheye It is worth learning how – I don't know what your work environment is like, but I find that if you are seriously interested in doing stuff like that, and you build a little demo to show the stakeholders, you can end up running a little skunkworks
It’s worth the effort, for the authorship you get back (if the workplace is amenable to that kind of sub-rosa development, of course)
I work for a consulting company, which means I actually work at other companies as a developer (and actually doing a consultant job as well) and I offered the current place I work at to convert all their Perl codebase to Python, especially that those scripts started breaking down recently for some reason and the only guy who could maintain them no longer works there.
@thefourtheye pick a small, trivial task – one that’s useful, and has been done before, like walking a directory tree and generating an HTML index of all the .txt files, or somesuch – and make yourself build it using only google and a text editor.
@thefourtheye that sort of task will get you started
@Terfin perl… ugh. I wrote enough smugly illegible perl in the 90s to gross myself out for the rest of my career
@fish2000 Which is exactly why I offered them to convert it. It also becomes harder and harder to find good Perl developers nowdays, amongst the youngsters at least.
@fish2000 HAHA! Branch! I doubt that the entire system is even backed up somewhere. They only started using a VCS with TFS, when .NET was introduced to them.
@fish2000 In my experience, companies over a certain size fixate on mitigating risk. By potentially introducing (unauthorised) risk, it could get you some serious flak
@IntrepidBrit asking forgiveness for a wholesale swap of an established codebase for an untested rewrite out of left field will not work, I can only imagine!
Oh well. I think it is time to get the whiteboard if I want to get that OData framework going somewhere. Someone needs to design the features. Since I am the only contributor on my own project, I guess that will be me :D (Or my other self)
@IntrepidBrit that helps, yes – but if you’re coming from an entrenched methodology like “no testing methodology,” or “it works for me”, you don’t have to prove that it’s done right, if people sufficiently believe it is working (for large enough values of sufficiently)
@fish2000 My advice would be to lead by example if you can. Even if you have to do something silly like merging branches into your own local "testing" branch
Not that you were asking for my advice. I felt compelled to lecture ;)
I recognize that not all self-answered questions need to be CW, but I want this post to be a canonical reference for novices, which feels like a CW-ish objective
In any case, I can do it myself, right, by checking the "make community wiki" box
Oops, that box is for the answer, not the question
@Kevin cabbage dammit... thought you were going to say "pink umbrellas are only applicable to purple unicorns on Wednesday's" - now you've gone and confused me!
Now to update the common questions wiki. Suddenly I see a drawback in numbering all the "Unanswered questions"... Removing something from the list is an O(N) task!
I have a big file, what I must do is: every time one line starts with a certain string, I want to detect the third line before this line. What can I do?
with open("mybigfile") as file:
lines = file.readlines()
for idx, line in enumerate(lines):
if line.startswith("A certain string"):
line_to_detect = lines[idx-3]
I've been playing retro games lately. Pokemon Gold & Silver have internal clocks, which must be calibrated while playing. "What's the hour and minute?" - easy. "Is it daylight savings time?" - I'm sweating bullets.
Trying to remember decades-old civics classes which discusses what half of the year comprises daylight savings, and which doesn't.
Could anyone advise a simple, easy GUI toolkit to quickly build a windows app to annotate some yaml data in a text file? I know TkInter a bit. I find it hard to choose from wiki.python.org/moin/GuiProgramming.
@RolfBly Do you have any experience with out GUI toolkits? If you can find one that behaves in a similar way to one you already know - that'll probably have the shallowest? learning curve
I personally would go with QT. Very solid and if you ever need to do projects in other languages, you might fight bindings for that other languages too
And together with QtCreator and pyuic, you get a nice looking GUI in no time