Hi to all, I have a question. In the past I have given an answer to a question. After some time I have now found a different answer to the same question. The second answer doesn't make the first answer obsolete; it is another approach to the same task. So the question is: is it OK to post the second answer as a separate answer? Thank you.
so, Ilja, you suggest to append the new answer, to the first one? Is this definitely the better / more accepted option? (instead of writing a separate answer)
i am declaring global variable in one module and my fucntion is updating it but when i call that global variable into other function i get the old value not the updated one
In general terms, when things don't get updated as you expect it's a good idea to ask what is getting updated that shouldn't, as well as what isn't getting updated that should. You are updating something, after all, right?
Rather than have a function update a global variable it's often better to have the function return the update value and then have the calling code bind that returned value to some name.
@SohaibAsif: It's best to avoid using global variables, especially globals that you want to modify. Also, Python globals aren't like C globals, they're really only global to the module they're defined in.
I see that you've now added the code in text form, but you might as well get rid of those images since they don't really give any additional information & just add clutter to your question.
@SohaibAsif while there is no answers to the question (and as this is not a very high quality question), if you consider your question answered, you can still delete the q
Also, it's not a good idea to get into the habit of deleting questions as that can lead to a question ban. OTOH, it's better to get rid of useless questions than to leave them hanging around.
@SohaibAsif however, if you have a good question, and you yourself later find an answer to it, then you can and should always self-answer it, you can even accept your own answer as the solution
@SohaibAsif you can still undelete your question if you have the link
folks with 10k reputation will see your question too, if they've got the link, we can edit it and vote to undelete it.
but the biggest problem with that question is that it didn't have a MCVE. The PySerial stuff is completely unrelated to the problem of updating globals
you should always trim the excess fat, by testing if you can achieve something smaller that still reproduces your bug
PM2 process manager for node restarts the server automatically after occurrence of any error. My team is using uWSGI application container for Django and Python.
What shall we use to restart the server after any error or stuff
Nice example, BTW, Antti, and neatly illustrates how importing a global really just binds the name in the importing module (so later changes of binding in the imported module don't affect the importing namespace).
@holdenweb yeah it was, but it still wasn't minimal really, as in if there was another error, I couldn't repeat it without installing pyserial and whatnot,
@GandalftheWhite you wouldn't really need it?
@GandalftheWhite ah you mean if the whole process crashes?
supervisor is a general process manager that was written in python, could use for node too
> I am not happy with the stability of PM2 so I will use Supervisor, as advised by a CTO, friend of mine.
in comments
I am using supervisord for my servers, but, it is because my stuff existed even pre-systemd era, now I would really consider researching systemd instead.
started learning linkedin scrapping and i just want to advise use lxml library and don't waste your time on Beautifulsoup on linkedin you will not get any div data
LinkedIn recently closed their support and began directing their users to use Stack Overflow. This has seen an upsurge in questions within linkedin. This has been previously brought up on Meta here where it was closed as a duplicate.
Unfortunately, the majority of these questions are off topic o...
Good morning. I did a self Q&A yesterday that wasn't greeted by a slew of incompetents (like last time). Surprised no one from here commented on it either. Anyone notice? I welcome feedback. Perhaps the word "private" should be changed to something else?
Yeah I don't know if I'd call dunder methods "private" because I usually mentally reserve that term specifically for names that undergo name mangling. That only happens for names with "at least two leading underscores, at most one trailing underscore", so dunders are out
I've experimented with feeds in chat. I have determined them to be too obtrusive for me to allow the inline feeds. I don't mind the drop-down ones though.
@AaronHall I saw it, and didn't downvote either the question or answer. ;) I also disagree that dunder methods are private. Sure, they're special, and you should generally not call them directly (apart from in the circumstances you describe), but that doesn't equate to private in my book.
to me public/private implies that the language treats them in different ways, but it's not the language that's imposing restrictions on their use, it's the community.
well, I think the semantics of the word "private" in my answer are correct, but in other languages private means that you are not allowed to even know they exist.
I'm going to stick with my original viewpoint: "private" doesn't have a single well-defined meaning in the context of Python, so it isn't "wrong" to call dunders private. It's only a difference of opinion.
I doubt you can find a term that will make everyone happy, because the community doesn't yet have something everyone can agree on
As an incompetent non-professional, I associate privateness to a very strict lack of accessibility of entities from outside the class. Which is missing from python altogether. The whole "consenting adults" picture replaces hard privateness.
This seems like a weirdly unflexible interpretation of the word "adult". Teenagers get called young adults all the time, should we stop doing that too?
But I can see that this jovial remark from the old days of python should (by some people's measure) be revisited in a golden new age where more people use python
@idjaw See Aaron's link. A (the?) Python guide used to contain the phrase "we're all consenting adults here" in the context of explaining why it's possible to modify the "private" attributes of a class if you're sufficiently determined. Someone thought that this was unwelcoming to programmers that aren't legal adults and/or had inappropriate sexual connotations, so they removed it.
Monty Python's Flying Circus occasionally had crude / violent / sexual humor, please sign my petition to remove all references to it from the Python language, including the name
Here's my guidance: don't be afraid to experiment. If you're pretty sure one of two ways will work but you don't know which, try both. It will probably be faster than asking the truculent users of the Python room.
hello there...am quite new to python...while going thru numpy docs, I am just guessing why [numpy.dtype page](https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/generated/numpy.dtype.html) does not contain any information/pointer/reference about [numpy.dtype.byteorder](https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/generated/numpy.dtype.byteorder.html)
Isnt that obvious/intuitive to show numpy.dtype.byteorder as a property of numpy.dtype on its docs page?
now can anyone tell if it is a mistake of not including byteorder as property of dtype on its doc page, or am missing something? My primary feeling is that I am missing something as mostly this doc is autogenerated using some tool...so its something that made that tool not to include byteorder as property of dtype on its doc page. Now can I know whats that?
@Mahesha999 The page is loading extremely slowly for me but I have a feeling that dtype is an attribute of the parent class of that class, so it would be on the parent class' documentation page and not on dtype's page. I have no idea if this is true or not because the "base" link won't load, but that's my suspicion.
@AaronHall The reason I don't like to use the term "private" with respect to dunder methods is not because they aren't private: it's because they're more than merely private. Anyone can create a single-underscore private attribute, and the convention is that such things should not be accessed or modified directly outside the class in which they're defined.
However, dunder methods are special: normal coders must not define their own dunder methods, and if they do they may get clobbered if a later version of Python decides to implement a dunder method with that name. So dunder names are essentially reserved names, although they aren't (quite) in the same category of reserved words as the actual language keywords.
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------
| Data descriptors defined here:
|
| alignment
| The required alignment (bytes) of this data-type according to the compiler.
|
| More information is available in the C-API section of the manual.
|
| base
|
| byteorder
| A character indicating the byte-order of this data-type object.
|
| One of:
...
@AndrasDeak do you know why it is that pydicom decided to implement a different vector order for dose matrix than what is already in the dicom standard?
@Mahesha999 Ok, now I'm inclined to agree with you that it's a quirk of the autogenerated documentation. Wild guess: maybe dtype isn't a "formal" attribute in the sense that it lives in the object's __dict__. Maybe it's something that's dynamically created during setattr/getattr calls.
Sorry, by "dtype" in my previous message I mean "byteorder".
I've used numpy for an accumulated 30 minutes over the course of my lifetime so I'm only going by what I can see on these pages
I barely remember what __dict__ is most of the time, so take solace that you can live a rich fulfilling life like me even if you never grasp the concept
@RobertGrant I guess actually forbidding them would make it a little trickier to implement them, or at least it'd add extra bulk to the interpreter with little benefit. Similarly, nothing stops you shadowing names of built-in types and functions, or other names defined in the standard library.
Oh that's easy, you just have to mine the ore then smelt it into metal then craft it into armor and weapons, then stockpile them in designated bins and also designate dwarves as part of your military, then assign them to squads and assign the squads equipment levels so they go and arm themselves, then station them where the lava is and then they'll still all die because you don't mess with lava elementals...
I would have done all that except every dwarf was threatening to mutiny because I hadn't figured out how to make beer yet. I think I was trying to set up a lava forge for just that purpose...?
Or maybe not. As previously indicated, I didn't know what I was doing.
:D yeah the part I skipped was "and do all of the above while making sure your dwarves are fed and clothed and have places to sleep and ..."
I seem to recall there was one particular mushroom or something that was easy to grow and you could turn it into both bread and beer, which is how I survived the year or two that I did