Could do with something in between though - like yelling at me if I miss a colon after an if etc. Especially if it's in some place you find out only rarely (because it's nested, or in a function not often called..)
@davidism: hilariously, I find myself wondering if a basic understanding of Flask is exactly what I need. Find myself in need of making a very lightweight web service prototype.
@davidism: How easy is it to construct/steal and build upon moderately complex little widget thingies? (You can see my familiarity with the technical terms.) I have in mind a treetable-like object with some quirks.
Any idea why django-admin.py --version on Windows (version 7, 32-bit) would result in "Could not load Python dll"? I'm honestly not sure what it should respond with (I did it at this suggestion), but I'm pretty sure "Could not load Python dll" is not supposed to be it.
@davidism: so the idea is that for the low-level stuff you write in JS and then handle the higher-level logic/stateful stuff on the Python side?
@aliteralmind: you seem to be having a run of bad luck. :-( Unfortunately many of the people who'd be happy to help otherwise don't have a lot of Windows experience, and configuration issues are the ones which differ most between OS.
Flask is the backend, it gets requests to different urls from the clients and responds with, for example, HTML, or JSON. The frontend is HTML pages or some JavaScript app
@aliteralmind that sounds normal on windows, you won't be able to use straight django-admin.py unless it's on your path, and you can't use python scripts without the python first because windows doesn't parse the hashbang at the beginning.
so that full line is correct, if it works, use it :)
@davidism @Vader They did work without the python. I've already successfully gone through the Django tutorial, in which the first step says to use the command without "python". But now it doesn't work anymore.
@DSM sopy isn't doing any fancy widgets on the front end, it's just straight html POST forms, but it does provide a very good framework for all kinds of things, if I do say so myself :)
In python 2, input is basically like eval(raw_input()) -- you're typing a string and then it's trying to evaluate it as Python code, as if you typed it at the console. If you type "orange", it looks for a variable called orange..
Nope, there's no need to do the eval. eval is the "treat this as if it's Python code" command (from "evaluate"). You just want the string, so raw_input is what you want.
@annabananana7 the reason you're getting <function count at ...> is because you've shadowed an outer variable (the function name) with an inner variable
@anna: do you see why your original code wouldn't give you the answer you wanted? Instead of if i == j:, try print i, j. You're looping over every possible pair of letters, so AA, 'AB` will give you AA, AB, AA, and AB.
Hi @Tim I'm one of the admins of sopython.com. We had a lot of continual ssh login attempts from him but the website itself seems to be holding up fine. Unfortunately @JonClements (who owns the server and takes care of it and I believe made the original flag for mod intervention) doesn't seem to be about right now.
user50049
Oh that's unfortunate. Very, very unfortunate. Linus speaking of monkeys comes to mind when I think of people doing that sort of 'research'.
user50049
@SufiDeveloper While we can't really do anything based on what you do when it comes to other sites, we can and will curtail disruptions in chat. If your activities there lead to a disruption being created here, then you'll likely find yourself unable to use chat or the main site for a considerable amount of time.
@TimPost @Ffisegydd Sorry I didn't want to come up that way. I'll not bother here on chat and send every loophole or security issue I found to the Sopython owners directly. Have a good day.
@SufiDeveloper when you told us that you were going to do some testing davidism said politely "Thanks but no thanks" and yet you did it anyway. What davidism said still stands: we don't want you to security test the website.
@Ffisegydd I didn't see that before because Davidism didn't ping me for me to notice, and I already left the chatroom. If this is what you want I'll stop. Anyway the 12+ hours of SSH cracking attempts or whatever wasn't me. I don't put SSH cracking at first when I check vulnerability vectors. And really 12+, me? Look at my history, I was on Hangouts and before busy in something else. I didn't test it for more than 30 minutes at best as I wanted to continue the following day. Again, sorry.
If it's possible show the suspect ip you got in the log, I'm sure it's not mine.
Was complaining yesterday about (and got help with) nump.nan:s being able to repeat themselves as keys in dictionaries:In [43]: set(tuple(id(np.float64(np.nan)) for _ in range(1000000))) Out[43]: {43998928, 44564656, 44564816, 47577984}
I can't shake how disturbing that is, and it seems not related to np.nan != np.nan
Anyone have a clue where to dig for the root of it which seems to be specifically 64bit float nans in numpy randomly getting new id
IDs in CPython are memory addresses, if an object is garbage collected, it's possible a new object will be assigned that address and thus have the same id
In Jython - all object IDs will be unique as it uses an incrementing counter
It was a pandas data-frame that was missing values that was the root of all this, but sure I've learned my lesson hard and will never trust a nan in my life, ever again
In [67]: d = {np.float(np.nan):i for i in range(10)}
In [68]: d
Out[68]: {nan: 9}
In [69]: d = {np.float64(np.nan):i for i in range(10)}
In [70]: d
Out[70]:
{nan: 0,
nan: 1,
nan: 6,
nan: 4,
nan: 8,
nan: 9,
nan: 7,
nan: 3,
nan: 5,
nan: 2}
I think I'll ask DSM about that later. There's a difference between np.float and np.float64.
I see you've kept digging around this, I was indeed using the nan:s directly but I suppose the array was 64-bit and I needed to put parts of it into dict at a time or something like that.
I think part of my issue with these nan:s is actually with the dicts. I alway saw them as a type of a hash-map. They after all do require their keys to have a __hash__() method. But the dict doesn't use the hash
I suppose dicts are id-maps for objects that have a hash-function
My guess is, the initial thought process was, "I want to use execfile. What should I name the first argument? Well, file, of course, that's what I want to execute."
then "with open(x) as y typically has identifiers filename and file. Hmm, I get a NameError when I do with open(filename) as file. I guess with open(file) as filename is the correct form. "
Yesterday I finished watching early 90's supernatural drama Twin Peaks. On the whole, it reminds me a lot of LOST. In particular, its rotating cast, and its tendency not to answer all of the questions the narrative raises.
@PeterVaro The only time it felt dated to me was a scene where Dale is talking with a fellow FBI agent, who has this giant monolith of a laptop on the conference room desk.
I think I'm going to check out the prequel, Fire Walk With Me, to see if I can get some closure on the more prominent unsolved mysteries.
Not that I'm too hopeful, since I stumbled upon an article saying, "twenty years after the end of the series and we still don't know why [REDACTED for super mega spoilers]"