Hi! I have an exception class that I'm dynamically setting as a class attribute, but when I raised it the name gets qualified with the module in which the exception class was declared instead of the class it's being set as an attribute of. Does anyone know how to do this correctly?
I think if you'd import that class and run elsewhere, you'd see the module name you want
@Jovito when you set that error as an attribute you can also set its .__module__ attribute to be __name__, but please promise me to find a proper way to do this :P
@Cam_Aust I've been doing some ray tracing over the last couple of days. I posted some results here, that you can see in yesterday's transcripts, eg this stereo pair i.stack.imgur.com/aofVY.png
I spent several minutes looking for a dupe target for this, but could only find questions where the OP shadows the standard module with their own script. I guess doing this sort of double import isn't common, but I'd be surprised if this were the first question about it.
How many other standard modules could this problem occur with? Off the top of my head I can think of datetime, but I assume there are several others.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ And the OP just edited the original problem out of his code and has a new question. Grrr. I've sent him a comment, but if he doesn't roll back, I'll do it myself.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ It's no problem for the parser. And very handy in code golf. :)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I just gave Jacob my standard "don't answer typos" lecture. I'll delete vote in a couple of minutes, I'm curious to see if he'll respond to my comment.
found it: "Reporting details about a failing assertion is achieved by rewriting assert statements before they are run. Rewritten assert statements put introspection information into the assertion failure message."
from what I've seen so far, pytest is a very magical module.
@Kotlinboy I haven't looked at your pastebin, but you should probably be using the or operator, not bitwise OR. The or operator short-cicuits, so the 2nd expression won't be evaluated if the 1st is True-ish.
@AndrasDeak Well, you can intercept bool too, via the __bool__ magic method:
class Test:
def __init__(self, val):
self.val = val
def __repr__(self):
return f'Test({self.val!r})'
def __bool__(self):
rc = bool(self.val)
print(f'BOOL {self.val!r}')
return rc
a, b, c = [Test(u) for u in ('', 'abc', 'def')]
print(a or b or c)
#output
BOOL ''
BOOL 'abc'
Test('abc')
@AndrasDeak bool returns True or False. You could do weird things in __bool__, but I admit it would be ugly because to do anything useful you'd be creating side-effects. Messing with __bool__ doesn't give you a way to make and or or result in a different object.
To change the subject, I wrote a slightly weird recursive function a few hours ago, while investigating this SE.math question. It's a recursive function with a float arg involving square root. lim x->1 f(x) = 1, so the recursion has to keep taking square roots to get to the base case. Fortunately, iterated sqrt converges to 1 fairly quickly. :)
I need some insight in the thinking process of the modeling process. I have a User and a User has a profile. However a User also has a message inbox and an online status. I consider those two features as a relationship and field on the User model not the UserProfile model. Am I on the correct path?
@AndrasDeak I don't think so, since it's such an intractable function. SE.math is pretty tolerant of homework questions, although they do expect to see some attempt by the OP.
I guess it could be homework, if the student is just expected to investigate it using numerical methods (like I did) but I don't have a clue how you'd even go about proving convergence.
Here's a nice SE.math question I answered a little while ago. The OP has made a decent attempt, and although it is homework-ish, I assume that he's a self-learner, as his user name proclaims. But his Google skills don't appear to be very strong, since he ought to have stumbled across the Chinese remainder theorem by now if he's studying congruences.
I like chilli with chocolate, but I hate mint with chocolate. And I don't like milk chocolate that much. Ever since I was a kid, I've always preferred dark chocolate.
For any given class, function or a variable, I see __getattribute__, __setattr__ & __delattr__ defined by default. Is this valid for any x, where isinstance(x, object) == True?
Yes. __getattribute__ doesn't exist in the function's dict, it exists in object.__dict__. It's an inherited method, so it doesn't show up in the __dict__.
How to find the own attributes of any object? >>> object. HIT TAB gives it's own attributes as there is no base class, How to find own attributes of >>> type. HIT TAB shows the same base class attributes?
Uh, I guess calling it a memory leak was inaccurate. It's probably one of the functions in the recursion loop allocating some memory that never gets released because the recursion never stops
But no, it's not crashing anymore. I think it was a combination of two bugs, and I fixed one of them.
To be honest, I don't think I want to bother learning yet another new technology (pdb) this week. I'll go with the good ol' "I'm sure it'll fix itself as I finish the project" solution
OK. I'm in love with gdb --tui for fortran/c so I'm biased
I strongly suggest taking a look when you have too much time, it can be real useful :) But pdb is a bit cumbersome so third-party pudb improves a lot on the experience
To follow DRY principle, I used class based decorator for debugging on every method access in that class. But to further follow DRY principle to avoid adding decorator to every class, I used meta class.
Is meta class mainly used to follow DRY principle in coding?
Hello, I have been using sqlite for python, and I have it in my online website.
Could anybody of you try the register form, to let me check if it was saved to the database? Invent an email and username and password. For password put 12345678. It actually just saves it to the database.
I want to check if it works.
Thank-you. And apart from that, any feedback would be useful, referring to the styling of the navigator bar. The register form in my website is: nasom.svcdev.com/register
BTW the website is in Flask
hey you tried it!
Thanks.
Your username was 'user123', email 'user123@email.com', password '12345678' Who entered it?
Python ints have a .bit_length() method. I'm not sure what you mean by "number of bits", though, because you'll need 5 bits to represent 16, but your formula floor(log2(16)) would only give 4, so maybe you have an unusual definition in mind.
I'm attempting to connect to a webpage with this script: dpaste.com/29G3RXS but it's returning an AttributeError: module 'urllib' has no attribute 'error'. Can anyone suggest anything to get this working?
Packages are often written to allow the user to decide what portions of it should be imported. scipy, for example, would take quite a long time to import if you always needed to import the whole thing.
He's saying that urllib is a package with submodules, and the top-level __init__.py doesn't import all the submodules, so importing just urllib only imports part of the package. I mean, if I understand correctly.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Hey coldspeed, I'm using Numpy to pad the left and top portions of any array with zeros. I have got it working this way: a = np.array([[1, 1,1], [2, 2,2], [3, 3,3], [4,4,4], [5,5,5]]) print(a.shape) top =np.zeros(a.shape[1]) y = np.insert(a, 0, top).reshape(a.shape[0] +1, a.shape[1]) left = np.zeros(y.shape[0]) y = np.insert(y, 0, left, axis =1) print(y)
Anything I should do to make it more efficient or maybe more readable?
@AndrasDeak Thanks going to test it out. @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Ah didn't know. I'm trying to getting better at writing these type of functions from scratch, if i need to implement something from scratch in the future.
@AndrasDeak Yea, you are right, but I'm trying to implement computer vision algorithms from scratch to get a deep understanding of algorithms, and also improve numpy skills, so I can implement custom algorithms in the future.
Part of using a library well is also having gone through the struggle of implementing its functionality yourself only to discover the library after doing all that hard work for nothing