While composing my question "why is dashoffset broken?" I've discovered that the dash keyword argument is also broken. When I do dash=(20,), which should specify dashes of length 20 followed by gaps of length 20, I get dashes of length 18 followed by gaps of length 7. When I use the alternative syntax, dash=(20,20), I get dashes of length 3 followed by gaps of length 3.
And either my google-fu is on the fritz today, or I'm the first person that has ever noticed this.
@Kevin Do you want to post a MCVE and I'll test it on Linux. There might be a difference. I'm pretty sure X windows uses the same convention as PostScript for specifying line dash patterns. And GTK inherits that convention: pygtk.org/pygtk2reference/…
Ok, you guys are pretty consistently getting lines of identical shape, so I'm guessing that the 3-and-3 shape I'm seeing on my own green line is due to me using a relatively older version of 2.7. What versions of 2.7 have you guys got? I'm still on 2.7.2
@PM2Ring yeah ... I gave up trying to explain that my answer still has a_Class.property ... and doesnt shadow the builtin... its like people just read my comment at the bottom about @property being useless (imho) and think that i broke the guys properties
If I want to put my pytest tests into another folder (obviously called "tests") but still import stuff from the root directory, I have to use a setup.py right?
@DSM I had a feeling that might happen. FWIW, I encountered a Tkinter bug the other day that affects OSX and Linux but not Windows, which I thought was really weird.
TIL there's an annoying Tkinter bug: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5886280/python-tkinter-overrideredirect-cannot-receive-keystrokes-linux . The bug doesn't affect Windows systems, only *nix systems, which is a bit weird considering it's a Tcl/Tk thing.
@ochawkeye: don't forget to read the room rules linked on the top right for an explanation of some of our strange customs, which you might have picked up already if you've been lurking. :-) And you can always ping those of us whose names are in italics for help -- we're room owners, and that's technically our job..
@PM2Ring: feels weirder to me that all of a sudden tkinter bugs are a thing we do this week..
Wow. One of my recent SO Meta comment's hit 90 upvotes. :)
ObTwitter: twitter.com/jakevdp/status/625349748292071424 "StackOverflow devs have the hardest job on the internet… when the site goes down, they have to fix it without StackOverflow" #PyData. :) Seriously though, in that situation, they can access the database directly. — PM 2RingMay 16 at 13:00
Probably the best thing about expertsexchange is that its horribleness was one of the motivations behind the creation of Stack Overflow. From http://blog.codinghorror.com/introducing-stackoverflow-com/ "Stackoverflow is sort of like the anti-experts-exchange (minus the nausea-inducing sleaze and quasi-legal search engine gaming) meets wikipedia meets programming reddit".
Also see http://blog.codinghorror.com/whos-your-arch-enemy/ "I never appreciated how easy Experts-Exchange makes it for us. They are almost universally loathed. We don't just have a rival, we have a larger than life moustache-twirling, cape-wearing villain to contrast ourselves with. "
Wrestling with? No. Letting it consume my every thought as I pore over the source code to debug a problem I can't locally reproduce? .. of course not. That would be silly.
Ok so Canvas.create_line calls self._create('line', args, kw), which calls self.tk.getint(self.tk.call(self._w, 'create', itemType,*(args + self._options(cnf, kw)))), which calls, uh I dunno because I can't figure out where the tkapp class is defined
Pretty sure it's implemented in C, so I'm rapidly going out of my depth
@JRichardSnape Yeah that seems very likely at this point. The Cpython github repository has 0 search results for "dashoffset", which is one of the configuration options for Tkinter Canvas lines, so I think it's safe to assume all logic related to dashed lines is happening elsewhere.
hi, all. how did i do answering this question? there was no MCVE. but i tried anyways. it doesn't seem like the type of question were an MCVE could be provided. so it might not even fit the SO format.
Ok, I managed to fulfill the commenter's request for more information. Uh, I think.
This seems to imply that the problem is with tcl/tk and not any Python-specific part.
Initially this seems to conflict with ochawkeye's observation that it works in one Python and not in another, but it's possible that his two versions of Python have different versions of tcl, used locally.
Which might imply that the bug has already been identified and fixed in Tcl, but some versions of Python don't have an up-to-date version of Tcl.
Earlier we established that PM has 8.5 and I have 8.6 and they both work. So I think "windows bug" and "windows bug in 8.5" are both still on the table.
that anyone know why I cant connect to my postgresql database in docker.
I'm running this code in host
import psycopg2
conn = psycopg2.connect(host='192.168.99.100', port='5432', database='test1', user='postgres')
cur = conn.cursor()
cur.execute("CREATE TABLE holiday(ID INT PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL, NAME TEXT NOT NULL, AGE INT NOT NULL, ADDRESS CHAR(50));")
cur.execute("INSERT INTO holiday (ID,NAME,AGE,ADDRESS) VALUES (2, 'Paul', 32, 'California');")
cur.fetchone()
conn.commit()
cur.close()
conn.close()
I think TCL is just acting as a wrapper to Windows GDI functions. Windows is less fully featured here, but you're using the API that's only fully featured enough to make MS Paint.
I was thinking of going to OpenGL anyway. I want a "crawling ants" type dotted box, and if I want proper contrast, I ought to be inverting the pixels underneath it rather than just drawing white and black stripes. And I suspect that's well beyond Tk's abilities.
When I from eventlet.green import urllib2 PyCharm doesn't recognize urllib2.urlopen() but runs it fine without exception. Anyone know why PyCharm can't find the reference?