Is it me, or can I not find a good tutorial on non-blocking sockets in python?
I'm not sure how to exactly work the .recv and the .send in it. According to the python docs, (my understanding of it, at least) the recv'ed or send'ed data might be only partial data. So does that mean I have to some...
A similar but different question:
I have an IRC client that generates strings. This IRC client uses a hook to call a method (somone_said) whenever someone says something. I want to send this string over a socket to my flash client.
I have a working client in flash and a server in python but the...
Okay, first of all. That is the worst question I have possibly seen on SO ever (just kidding) but seriously man, your question is all over the place. You spend the first 5 paragraphs explaining something that makes no sense to anyone but you and that is not even the problem.
You need to refine you question down to the essential.
No one cares about the rest of your code, or what a great idea it is. You have a question about getting your sockets working. Ask that.
There is too much JUNK around your question to understand anything
person = dict([('name','Throatwobbler'),('age',42),('name','Mangrove'),('age',42)]) or person = {'name': 'Throatwobbler', 'age': 42, 'name': 'Mangrove', 'age': 42}
When you have one thread/process running, it can only do 1 thing at a time, when you tell it to connect using sockets, it will wait until that action is done before continuing.
I am having a class which access person[name] from the available values in a dictionary so the thing you mentioned a list of dictionaries is that the right way?
From my question : I think I need to create my socket in a separate thread but this creates three more problems. 1) how does my someone_said event driven method access the socket 2) What if someone says something when there is no server client connection (while listening) or if the client has closed the connection. 3) How to check if the thread is alive and if not to open a new one?
You just refuse to learn. Instead you ask a question, and assume you know exactly what the problem is, and wait for the answer to fall into your lap. Instead of going out and searching, or figuring out why what you are doing is not working or getting another method to do it. I see all your question history, I see this is how you are doing things. It is not conducive to learning anything.
Im' sorry again if I have offended you, I'm a biochemist who is trying to learn a mixture of C++, Java, python, arduino wiring and actionscript. I'm not a programmer
You totally give up on it being your lack of knowledge, and you tackle the issues with your limited experience and assuming that you know what needs to be fix
This whole time you are trying to figure out how to make a non-blocking socket. Where that is NOT EVEN THE PROBLEM
As simple as just learning threads... just like that. So having learnt' threads you know the answer to my problem but you'd rather not tell me but you think I need to work it out myself ?
depite me writting in my question, that you clearly took time to read : I think I need to create my socket in a separate thread but this creates three more problems. 1) how does my someone_said event driven method access the socket 2) What if someone says something when there is no server client connection (while listening) or if the client has closed the connection. 3) How to check if the thread is alive and if not to open a new one?
You are the one getting bent out of shape and upset because some 'stranger' on the internet is trying to help you, (and not for the first time) on a problem that you have given up trying to solve.
a person tries to help and gives you useful links maybe his method of help is not your way of understanding what help is but the fact is that he spent time actually replying to your questions
@Zac yet you totally ignored "When you have one thread/process running, it can only do 1 thing at a time, when you tell it to connect using sockets, it will wait until that action is done before continuing. You need multiple threads/processes"
At what point do you realize that you just need to start reading the manuals, and the tutorials. How do you think we learned anything? I didn't hang around chat-rooms asking for help. I read the tutorials, and the guides and etc..
Look at my previous questions, I needed to communicate via RS232 to a peristatlic pump. I didn't know how to do it so I tried C++ and Java after weeks I got it working
that is just one example of a problem I needed to get working. I'm sorry if asking for solutions is a bad thing because I need to learn the entire language before it is acceptable for you to help me out
You have to start with the BASICS and work your way up.
You have a prestigious task. It will not be easy. My help to you is that you should use threading and etc... if you already knew that.. why did you ask the question?
@InbarRose that's kinda the point of my question; if you are building an app because you like to, you must be ready to do what programmers do: learn the stuff
So…apparently I have no idea how to install gtk or whatever so I can "import gobject" in a python document using eclipse. I've (embarassingly) spent the better of two days trying to figure it out, and everything I've tried hasn't worked. I'd REALLY appreciate some help.
An extra tidbit, this goes a LONG way to helping me graduate college. I'm graduating at the end of this month, but really need this to finish my project. Thanks in advance!
Ugh, sorry. I just saw you wrote "you should use threading" and tried to make the point that someone wrote to me that asynchronous programming, when referring to a chat program was better. I don't know if it's true, it's just what I was told.
I very much dislike macPorts and pretty much gave up trying to use it for anything :-) (But, I have very little patience for package managers which don't manage my packages in the way that I want them to)
[1] Rerun phase build [2] Ignore error and continue to install [3] Give up on module [4] Start shell [5] Reload configuration [6] Go to phase "wipe directory and start over" [7] Go to phase "configure" [8] Go to phase "clean" [9] Go to phase "distclean"
I guess my question still remains. Technically you probably could do that (I'd have to refresh myself on queues in python) but if the data is failing, should you be attempting to run it again?
In you previous example, I suppose it would also depend on what 'database query fails' means. Thrown Exception? Simply no data returned? Unexpected resultant behavior?
Grr, I was going to actually check the documentation on queues but I can't access it behind my company's firewall because python is 'shareware and freeware'
Seems to me that you should put the task back in the queue, and then call task_done. If you do it in the opposite order, there could be a brief moment where the queue appears to be empty, even though the final task failed and will shortly be reinserted.
It might mislead workers into thinking that their job is done and that they can terminate themselves.
If you think of the task as "attempt to put the data in the database", then the task is done after the query executes, regardless of whether the query succeeded or not. On a failure, you might like to add a new task to the queue, but that's irrelevant to the question of whether this task is done.
Style point: never compare something to a literal boolean value. Using if process.processQueue(data): instead of if process.processQueue(data) == True:.
Probably would depend on how much data you are logging and how long the server might be down for - basically if it matters that you keep the queue in memory or not.