I've visited chat very very rarely. I'm also curious about another thing. How many of you are Data <s>Nerds</s> Analysts/Scientists? Maybe I can find a good home here <3
You should do import numpy as np instead and explicitly use the required module / method in the code, that way you don't mess up things you don't intend to.
Can anyone explain how sorting with key works? For example, if I do list.sort(key=lambda item: item[0]*item[1]), is the lambda run on all of the items as a preprocessing step, or is it run in place when comparing two items?
Also @excaza thanks for the link, "This technique is fast because the key function is called exactly once for each input record." pretty much answers it
Townsville is way too close to the equator for me. Coffs Harbour is nice: it's subtropical, but close to the mountains so it generally doesn't get too hot.
How come python doesn't have a safe data serialization module that can dump arbitrary objects? Do I really have to write a custom json encoder/decoder?
If you have to allow serializing weird_foo_objects, I don't find it hard to imagine that sooner or later someone can come up with corrupt input that will break you
You can even instantiate the class without calling its constructor, and then just overwrite its __dict__ and you're done, it's deserialized
The point is, I don't have to dump anything dangerous. Basic types like ints and dicts are the only thing that's dumped, and it's possible to deserialize objects without calling any code (like the constructor)
Are you sure it's possible to deserialize objects without calling any code? I'm only asking because smart people seem to think that it's non-trivial to "fix" pickle et al.
What if the object has code execution as, say, default arguments for certain methods?
I think the only thing that could execute code is when I access the class. So for example if I try to load a foo.bar.Class object, that'll cause __getattr__ calls on foo and bar
@Aran-Fey as I understand the problem is not something evil that was pickled, but rather a hand-crafted pickle that unpickles into something evil
my impression is that you can't pickle evil_call_to_rmminusfslash(), but you can construct an evil pickle file that on unpickling would do exactly that
Well, I don't execute arbitrary code on deserialization. I guess the problem is if something unexpected is deserialized, and then subsequently used incorrectly.
not sure when that would happen. Like shown above, I can create an object of any class without calling dangerous code, and I can set its attributes without calling dangerous code
as I said I know next to nothing about the subject but my go-to assumption is that the python docs claim it's insecure with big red letters for a reason
But again what are you talking about? Using pickle or reimplementing pickle?
If the former, the point is that you're not safe as long as third parties can access your pickle files. If the latter, sure, we can debate that, but I don't have any knowledge to have an opinion :P