I'll be running said script as a (child) process from another application: is there hence something like above that can be done?
I know I could run the child process as a server but that seems kind of overly complicated for something where I only wish to have a "graceful exit" command.
Morning! I need some design advice. I'm having some parameters passed to my script & I'm building a class that reads these parameters, processes them and set them as properties of the object. The thing is my scripts use different parameters, sometimes the same are reused over scripts.
So I have a basic Message() class, but also one that takes the often reused parameters ConfigMessage() (derived from Message), Then I have another class AnalysisMessage, which again derives from ConfigMessage and TrainingMessage, which also derives from ConfigMessage.
Now, I end up with the problem of having to add new derivatives for small differences.
Is there any pattern that can help me with this? Or another approach?
Probably a bit late for this now, but it helped me write better python code.
In that vein, you can keep things contained to a single message type and add properties dynamically. Or do you absolutely need to know which properties to expect whenever a message object is passed?
say the most general parameters are: accountName, accountKey => Message class. Then it also has some configuration file path sometimes: configPath => ConfigMessage class. Sometimes it has a start & enddate => AnalysisMessage class which inherits from ConfigMessage.
But using a class helps in the sense that you know what the message looks like. The attributes it has. While using a dict is very dynamic and unpredicatable.
whether that is good or bad depends on how your program works. Do you actually check on each message object what type it has, or do they get more or less the same treatment anyway?
structure is only good if it simplifies your problem
You could also just check if 'start_date' in msg.misc_data. If that line covers all the same cases as a class definition, you should probably use it instead.
*disclaimer: I am just a stranger who dislikes custom classes
Sounds to me like you should define some mixins. Then inherit from Message and all the mixins you need: class ConfigMessage(ConfigMixin, Message): pass, class AnalysisMessage(DateRangeMixin, Message): pass, class ConfigAnalysisMessage(ConfigMixin, DateRangeMixin, Message): pass, etc
Not that it really matters. Mixins might have a little less code, but it's not like they can do something that normal classes can't
So yes, multiple inheritance sounds exactly like what you want. Each class handles its own attributes and then passes the remaining input to the next class. Everything's modular and can be combined to form new kinds of Messages.
I saw mixins used quite a lot in scikit-learn, which is a really popular python package. Not that that should alleviate all concerns, but at least some smart people thought mixins are good enough for their codebase
Hi .. I am new to python, i have a python project (project1)... now in another project (Project2) i created a python script and wants to use project1 folder's API.. I am using IntelIJ. how can i provide project1 reference to project2
I have some code in a project which I'd like to reuse in another project. What do I need to do (in both folders) so that I can do this?
The directory structure is something like:
Foo
Project1
file1.py
file2.py
Bar
Project2
fileX.py
fileY.py
I want to use functions from file1.py and f...
I have a string which contains non ascii character and I want to replace some string but it gives unicode error and If I am trying to do the same with the help of decode and ignore='error' in regex it removes the non-ascii character any suggestion to do the same ?
Actually, questions that originate here are a bit different. I believe the spirit of the rule is that it prevents parallel discussion of a problem here in chat and on the main site. So if a question starts here, I think it would make sense to link it here (preferably without a one-box :P) when moving the discussion to the main site.
@AmanJaiswal What is that non-ascii character in (encoding)? You need to handle the appropriate encoding and then try the decode. There would be a lot of questions regarding the same out there
IMO this one was is okay to stay on chat. OP is most likely unaware of what all he might get into and it's not a good experience (unicode-decode horrors) unless they have at least some knowledge / previous exp. in that area.
In addition to it being OK to post a link to a question in here if the question started its life in here, I'm less interested in enforcing the solicitation guidelines for even the clear-cut violations. IIRC from the last room meeting, that was the direction we wanted to move in.
If quietly ignoring a solicitation produces 0 nuisance messages, and chiding a solicitor produces 10 nuisance messages (as they argue their case ad nauseam) then it's not even a contest what we should do
Since I entered sem-retirement at 50k, I don't even believe the original justification of "everyone interested in answering the questions is monitoring the question queue" any more, because I'm my own counterexample: I'm interested but not monitoring.
@Arne The last semi-official pronouncement about 4.0 was that "it will be held to the same backwards compatibility obligations as a Python 3.X to 3.X+1 update"
"Can I do something like the following?" I suggest you try it and see if it works. (If you're thinking "I already tried it and I got an error", why didn't you mention that in your question?)
mildly annoyed that I don't have a sql server profiler at my work place yet I need to open a .trc file :( sigh these things should happen on Monday not Tuesday
BTW Kevin, did Evening Kevin listen to morning Kevin ?
@MooingRawr Yeah. Possibly because stage 2 was 1% coding, 99% browsing Youtube for specific kinds of videos.
He/we/I also tried to do a little work on stage 3, but could not progress because github refused to accept his/our/my commits. Something about an SSL something-or-other error.
I tried it from git gui and from the command line and from the "add new files..." page on Github and none of them worked, so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I'll try committing from my work computer, which should narrow down whether the problem is with the repository, or my computer's credentials, or my internet connection, or what
As a test, I was able to successfully make a small commit to another one of my projects. Although I might have seen some kind of warning message as I did so? But it definitely went through.
So I think I can rule out "Github does not recognize your home computer as owning the kms70847 account", because I was able to add a new project, and commit to an existing project.
And anyway even if my computer's git credentials were donked up, committing straight from the web interface should work as long as I'm logged in
@AndrasDeak University? Same in Germany, 1-4 is pass, 5/E is fail, 6/F doesn't exist (it's a thing in highschool though, and basically "did close to nothing, not just bad enough to fail"
@AndrasDeak Google says it's because A B C and D are all passing grades. F is not a passing grade, so it does not follow the naming standards of the passing grade enum. The fact that "failing" starts with the letter F and therefore appears to be just one letter away from meeting the passing grade enum naming standards, is a coincidence
@AndrasDeak What do you use? I'm looking for something that works nicely on both windows an android, a cross-platform ability that seems rather underserved.
Well I've been using liferea (< linux feed reader) for many years. I liked google's reader a lot more, but for my basic need of keeping track of comics and a few blogs it's fine
@poke I think 4- being a pass/no pass was always up to discussion though. In that sense, yes, it's a huge mess. The percentages they listed should also have the [citation needed] thing in big read flashing letters.
still the closest thing to a consens out there probably
I am doing regex in Python but am failing to combine my rules here. I would like to validate my phone number with three requirements. 1. It must start with +26373 [for which i use /^\+26373/] 2. It must be of length 13 including the +, no less and 3. Must be numbers only for which I saw[ 0-9]. eg +263736072177. The last 7 digits can vary. How I do that
Nor sure what you mean by "numbers only for which I saw". If you mean "only numbers that appeared in the "26373" prefix", I don't understand why you can match 072177, since 0 and 1 aren't in the prefix
Online testers may differ from Python's engine in other subtle ways, so I always let the IDE have the last word on whether a pattern actually works or not
Which is not to say that online testers can't be valuable debugging tools. Just remember who it is that breads your butter at the end of the day. (Python does.)
There's a trick for modifying a first-order Euler integrator to get it to be stable (you basically modify the timestep to decrease with the increasing scale of the change). I remember it as folklore, but saw a paper confirming the details a few years back, and now can't find it. I could rederive it, I think, but I'm lazy. :-/
I'm just trying to detect when the contents of a file have changed, and make backups for post-mortem analysis. Not doing this right only means that my progress reports will be less self-congratulatory
I heard once of an astronomer who wanted to batch download some webcomics which had a habit of only partially downloading. He wound up using length + a hash of the start and the end + some random values chosen using a fixed-seed generator.
@DSM I don't think I've seen it, but that looks like the example in this wiki page. It might be helpful because it seems to be a first-order Euler (I hope)
@AndrasDeak: I'm not thinking of Richardson, unfort. I might have to ask an old colleague of mine who also remembers the paper. I might also have it printed out somewhere.. I should really upload every paper which I'm at all interested in to google drive or something. :-/
Ok, to be fair, just comparing file names will be successful in the same way "def changed(): return False` is successful: it correctly identifies when no changes have been made.
Which is the majority of the time, maybe 80%
It would be more correct to say "I need a false negative rate lower than 100%"
Hey, hello. Got a quick question cos my Googling skills failed me. Do any of you, my dear firends, happen to know if there's a pssibility to display a lockscreen widget in Windows 10 using Python?
Reminds me of the bit from Sandman where the bad guy has just apparently destroyed the protagonist, and he's standing alone in the empty white void of the dream realm and he says "when I became king, I thought people would clap" and the camera zooms out to show the complete emptiness of his surroundings. "I thought somebody would say something"
@KrzysiekSetlak You can interact with a good amount of the Windows API through the pywin third party module, and failing that, via the built-in ctypes module. If the Windows API provides and interface for creating lockscreen widgets, then you have a good chance of being able to make one in Python.
You are on an island surrounded by an orange sea. On the horizon you see a colossal ninja figure, listing and half-melted into the waves. Jon Skeet is here, on his back looking at the stars. "My stomach hurts", he says.
Pytest's plugin/hook/conftest system is a giant plate of spaghetti.
This is in relation to testing Flask's examples by the way. I added a conftest to the new tutorial and it's interfering with the conftest for Flask's tests.
Hmm, I can commit files to Github from my work computer just fine. So if Github really mucked something up for Windows computers, it's strange that it would affect my home computer and not my work computer.
Also I would find it curious if a change to Git for Windows would have any impact at all on the "upload a file" button on the github web page
Or the "create a new file" button, rather.
I'll probably put this riddle aside for now and just upload commits via home computer -> flash drive -> work computer -> github, and just try to deal with the 8 hour latency
@ThiefMaster aha, it was actually because of Pytest adding all the test dirs to the path, and __name__='conftest' was causing Flask's root_path to always point at the last test dir added.
So we need to stop using Flask(__name__) in test fixtures.
@ZackTarr I'd like a nice RSS reader/aggregation that works on both Windows and Android, preferably also available in-browser, but that's not a deal-breaker as use offline is a greater priority. I have, looks in pocket, USD$22, AUD$0.20, and an unused hair tie. Go!
Well are we defining "property" as "a general OOP concept where values can be accessed with dot notation, as in a.b" or "a Python concept, dependent on descriptors, where attribute access can cause arbitrary code to execute" Because df.name is a property for one of these but not the other
Granted you can ask two programmers what "property" means in the general OOP sense and get three different answers
"But Kevin," you hypothetically say, "the wikipedia article for properties specifically says that they are class members with getter and setter method calls, so don't you think that your first definition is overly broad?". I think you have a smart mouth, hypothetical reader.
Hot tip: every expression in the REPL gets secretly assigned to the variable "_" so you can retrieve the value right afterwards if you forgot to assign
Yes, I keep having to do variable = _ on the next line. Later when I pull up %history on IPython to copy code, I have to look for those instances and fix it :)
Of course, if the line results in a huge dump to stdout, that's annoying
I just assumed that by default you can cook a corn chip without ever accidentally frying one, but this extra insistence makes me imagine a manufacturing line absolutely fraught with friers on all sides