As far as I know it's a program that exclusively runs on a designated micro-controller which doesn't have to be a fully capable computer
no I have
my question is ... how do i put it ...
for example
at a school
lunch ladies might ring out kids who are buying food
they use "computers" which are locked to specific application intended solely to process payments for lunches etc etc
Yes they are computers sure enough but they are only running a particular program ... I'm not quite sure if it contains a complete OS that auto-starts an installed program which is then restricted only to use that program
or if there is a way to develop a compiled self-contained program without an OS that loads in
in any case ... how would someone go about developing that
I've looked into it but I'll I've found it stuff on Pi and MicroPython and really low level GPIO and LEDs
Is there something that pertains to fully featured standalone GUIs?
Hi.. I am new to python. I am creating a restful API using python flask and the database I am using is SQL server connected with pyodbc. I have some problems with my code. Could anyone please help me out
Okay, let's back up and start from the beginning. You want to do what exactly? You want to start a certain number of threads, and join only the 800th thread?
Hi Rawing, I would be glad if you can solve my problem too. This is how I get all records from my database table. I want to know how to get a specific record. Plz help!
I still don't understand your goal, so I'm going to tune out of this conversation until you start answering the questions I ask and make an attempt to post a proper explanation
@AngelaAmarapalan Not familair with Flask,either. But generally to select a record from a database table, you need to append a WHERE condition. Change your SQLCommand to something like SELECT * FROM PartyOrders WHERE no_of_beers = 1
True, and I guess they could've said some time & cash if they'd been able to spend more money in the first place, rather than having to upgrade it several times to get the required sensitivity. OTOH, I guess they've been able to benefit in improvements to technology that might not have been available when they first started.
But the physicists who've worked on LIGO have my sympathy. It must be scary to devote a major part of your career to an experiment that gave null results for so long.
@PM2Ring That throws an error if foo is empty, so it's better to use set().union instead. And then there's no need to convert the arguments to sets anymore, so you're left with Alex Hall's set().union(*foo)
@AndrasDeak Yeah, if you want to detect gravitation waves you really need nice big path lengths to measure. And detectors that don't have to deal with a vibrating planet.
I've never really looked at Qt, but I don't mind Gtk (it's certainly nicer than Tkinter, although it's obviously got a bigger learning curve), although I've hardly used it in the last few years, and I only know Gtk2+, not Gtk3.
It annoys me how everything resizes itself automatically, but once you add scrollbars to a widget it shrinks to a size where it's practically unusable
which you can "fix" by setting its minimum size, but that conflicts with Gtk's responsive layout/size allocation
and I never did understand how widgets are resized and placed. Half of the time you call widget.set_hexpand(True) or widget.set_halign(Gtk.Align.LEFT) it has no effect whatsoever
^ that was a lie by the way, there is no Gtk.Align.LEFT. There's only Gtk.Align.START and Gtk.Align.END, which correspond to either left or right depending on whether your language is read from left to right or from right to left.
@Rawing Sorry, I can't offer much help there. I'm a bit too rusty, and I gather a lot of that stuff has changed between Gtk2 and Gtk3. But you might get better results using a Table for layout, rather than using the pack methods.
Preserving symmetry in code can often be more important than making trivial special-case exceptions. Among other reasons, it makes it much easier to see patterns.
ah so if the first call to the func call is true the state is updated to the value that it returns, if it's false it continues to see if any of the other ones are true?
@SebastianNielsen Not quite. The and operator short-circuits, which means that the right-hand expression is only evaluated if the left-hand expression is truthy.
Hey, can anyone help me with openpyxl, i have a problem that all my cells data types are changed to TIME format after i import some data into the sheet. is there a property that i can edit to change it back to number?
Anyone using docker that can try logging into their service using docker login? I'm inputting the correct username and pw but cannot login. I wanna know if it's me or them.
What is a graceful way of quitting a Python application? Right now I raise an exception, log the cause and do a quit(). I'd like it to show in the console the exception + the reason
The equivalent in Java would be to throw an exception and add a message inside of it
Funny. Looking up "python" in SO search returns the tag result. Looking up something else, like docker for example does not "tag" the result for me and I have to explicitly do [docker]
@idjaw I know I can do whatever I want :) But it's always nice to hear other people's opinions, and you certainly have a point. A script inside a docker container? It's weird.
FWIW, I always thought it was a really dumb move for Python 2 to permit non ASCII in plain string literals. If you want non-ASCII literals use a yamming u string.
@wim No, you'd still need the # coding directive so the interpreter knows how to decode your source. I'm saying that s = 'Война́ и миръ' should be a syntax error in Python 2, just like s = b'Война́ и миръ' is in Python 3, and if you want Unicode literals you need to use an actual Unicode string s = u'Война́ и миръ'.
@simeg some languages differentiate between functions (which return values) and procedures or soubroutines (which don't). In FORTRAN-77, for example, a procedure call had to be a standalone statement. Python simplifies things: it allows any expression as a statement (as well as the keyword for, if and so on statements). It simply throws away the value of the expression (except in the interactive interpreter, when its repr() is printed and it's bound to the name _).
@Rawing What's UTF-8 got to do with it? I'm comparing the number of bytes in the original string to the number of codepoints in the decoded version, and that will only be less than the original length if the unicode-literal decoding managed to decode a \u sequence. I think. :)
This allows you to use functions as procedures. If the return value of a function is never intended to be used, it's conventional to write ` return without a value, but to keep everything straight (all expressions must have values) the interpreter treats that as a request to return None.
You can not.
There is no way to tell if '"A\u0026B"' originally came from some text that was encoded, or if the data are just the bytes '"A\u0026B"', or if we arrived there from some other encoding.
How do ... you know whether or not to run .decode("unicode-escape")
You have to know if...
@PM2Ring Well, AFAIK python 2 strings use utf-8 encoding. A unicode escape \u1234 has 6 characters. So if there was a unicode character that takes >5 bytes to encode with utf-8, then the decoded string wouldn't be shorter.
If your function returning None is a part of its specification, it's good practice to explicitly write return None even though return is entirely equivalent.
So yes, the original "Война и миръ" string uses the coding specified in the # coding so its got UTF-8 bytes in it. But the decoded version has codepoints, which are represented by u'\uxxxx
I don't care about losing a few points, but I do care that the negative score makes it look like my answer contains technical inaccuracies &/or is giving bad advice.
Which reminds me... I hate how the example code in the standard docs (and many 3rd party module docs) is generally written to work with star imports. It makes it so much harder to convince newbies not to use star imports.
@PM2Ring it's convenient to be able to write complex examples without module-name prefixes, but I agree that importing the specific names used would be a much better example of good practice.
Starts to wonder whether he used from module import * in the Nutshell
And I guess repeating the module name all over the place would add clutter to the docs. OTOH, it would show people what the code looks like in a real program. On the 3rd hand, I often do stuff like from random import seed, randrange and from itertools import product, groupby if I'm only going to use a couple of names from a module, and those names are sufficiently distinct.
Speaking of which, I am now so keen to find Android developers (and if they aren't afraid of Python that's a bonus) I am offering a free copy of Python in a Nutshell, 3rd Ed for any introductions.
@wim It'll always work if s is a string literal in a script with the UTF-8 coding directive. If it's not a string literal, the the OP needs to clarify the question.
LOL, come on. This is obviously not a string literal in a script, it's some data coming over a socket or out of a file
If it was a string literal in a script, they don't have the question in the first place (they just look at the literal and see if it has a unicode escape in it) :)
Certainly for literals in the program it's best to specify an encoding, but it's not unknown to have to unscramble data where (_e.g.) different components have modified rows of a database table randomly in a specific column, so some values are encoded and some values aren't.
I am having networking issues. My application sends tcp data to a server as part of GUI clicks. However, I also schedule regular tcp data to be sent every 100ms. These frequent messages are mixing together with my user-clicked data on the server side. Can someone recommend me a way around this? Should I use a separate tcp/udp connection for the more frequent data? I'm using socket module on python side, winsock2 (c) on server side
Okay. I expected my flag to be declined, and explanation to be written as the custom reason. I did not know that comment flags are handled differently from post flags.
random people (cc @PM2Ring), do you think generating points on a unit sphere using normalized normals (3 normal random variables per point) is competitive in terms of speed?
it's really straightforward but this part should be as fast as possible
Doing normalized normals isn't uniform since you're scaling vectors in a cube, so you get more points along the long diagonals and less points on the vectors approaching the centres of the faces.
I am able to do this (use the copy function on an image) in a normal script but not in my class apparently. the copy function is defined in cv2, which I already imported.
I happened to learn it for 4 years in high school, and I was in the top 10 of my year in the national Russian competition. Unfortunately I haven't used it in a long while and I understand very little.
@AndrasDeak Traceback (most recent call last):\n File \"<string>\", line 1, in <module>\n File \"/home/yalishanda/openface/demos/recognitionClass.py\", line 5, in <module>\n import alignDlib\nImportError: No module named alignDlib\n
I am able to load that module from my command line in the virtual environment but am unable to load it from my C++ code. Any idea's?
@AndrasDeak well I am able to load all the modules except that one
it is related to some extent because all I am doing in my cpp code is passing a command (the same I write in my command line) to the python virtual environment
it does receive it (based on the structure of the error message)