@thefourtheye Why? It's preferable to keep the question as broad as possible. What about the question or the answer is not applicable to things other than strings?
@smci can you please stop changing the intent and focus of questions? the issue is not at all about raising an exception using print instead of raise. The issue is that the exception handling must be in the function instead of the other way around.
if I were the questioner, I would feel seriously harassed by such a misrepresentation.
@MisterMiyagi Can you please stop misrepresenting things? The OP used a print() statement to do print "Divide by 0 Error" then wrote My message "Divide by 0 error" is not going through, instead I'm getting a normal ZeroDivisionError. How on earth do you misconstrue that?
@MisterMiyagi Just stop with your personal attacks on me based on misrepresentations and things you misread. (Two weeks ago you grossly misrepresented me saying "There is no one single universal newline character in Python (across Windows-MacOS-Linux)" as somehow having claimed "Python does not have universal newline support", which I never said).
I would really, really like to just ignore you. Believe me. But this has been a repeated occurrence where edits from you caused me to misjudge a question before going through the process of crawling through edit logs.
@MisterMiyagi The question was hopelessly garbled. The OP declares a function in the try-clause of a try-except, then proceeds to not use or call the function anywhere. Hence the except clause will never get triggered. The except-clause is attempting to catch ZeroDivisionError. Then the user complains "My message "Divide by 0 error" is not going through, instead I'm getting a normal ZeroDivisionError." which is not in the least surprising, because a) the try-except ain't going to catch anything
...b) even if it did, claimingexcept ZeroDivisionError: print "Divide by 0 Error"*"is not going through"* sounds like a garbled attempt to raise an exception with custom text.
@MisterMiyagi But "going through" appears to refer to a failed attempt to raise a custom exception. Not to print a message. Otherwise most people would simply ask "Why is message not printing"
@MisterMiyagi Even now you're mispresenting me, The first line of the question says My message "Divide by 0 error" is not going through. So when we look at the code, it looks like a garbled attempt to catch an exception and reraise as an exception with a custom message: except ZeroDivisionError: print "Divide by 0 Error"*
@MisterMiyagi No they didn't; what they wrote was garbled. Like I said.
:47546739 Yes that's the description, and when we look at the code, it sure looks like a garbled attempt to catch an exception and reraise as an exception with a custom message: except ZeroDivisionError: print "Divide by 0 Error". The fact that the try-clause doesn't actively call anything at all (it only defines an unused function di) make things even more garbled.
@MisterMiyagi No, I'm not standing for repeated abuse, rudeness and misrepresentation from you. Do not be so sure that your reading of garbled newbie questions is the One True Reading. Also, you will start being polite and stop violating room rules.
The correct and polite way to phrase what you wrote above to me is "Hey I think you misread OP's intent..." (To which my answer was already "It's hopelessly garbled and the user clearly doesn't know how to use a try-except and appeared not to understand the difference between an exception and a print command).
@MisterMiyagi I had already read through both the question and the answer and it still very badly looks like a garbled attempt to catch an exception and reraise as an exception with a custom message. Again, do not be so sure that your reading of garbled newbie questions is the One True Reading. It isn't. You often go knee-jerk like that.
@AndrasDeak Yes he did personally attack me; for the second time in two weeks. Stop pandering to him. I'm not accepting excuses. If he wanted to politely say "Hey I think you misread OP's intent..." that would be perfectly fine and welcome. I am not going to ankle-dog MM around the site and pounce on things he wrote to attack his credibility.
I've edited the title to something that covers what OP is asking about
I'm wondering if we should close that as a brain "typo"; I don't know how often people would make the same mistake and whether they could google that question
as basic the mistake is, it's a very specific kind of basic, so there might be value in keeping it around
@AndrasDeak Your edit still doesn't unambiguously capture the issue; it's unclear that the calling code isn't also inside the try-clause. I'd title it "Why doesn't wrapping just a function definition in try-except catch exceptions raised when it runs?"
For this level of debate, one would be excused for thinking the content of the question was some earth-shattering observation. It is not. I don't see the need to be changing it any more
My first impression is that the OP is confused about how to do exception handling. Defining a function inside a try block like that is pretty unusual, but people do all sorts of odd stuff when they don't really know what they're doing. Maybe some future newbie will do that, but will they be able to Google this question? Probably not. But I'll take a closer look & think about it, while I drink a coffee...
@roganjosh Noone said it was hugely important, but it's a newbie misconception, like all the others. Again, if you look at the garbled code, it sure looks like the OP thought that print statements somehow pass exceptions. Which would be an important basic misconception. Turns out they had a different misconception.
Hey yesterday somebody posted a post about unittest ips which was usefull, but I can't find it again with googling along the lines "unittest unreachable ip"
@smci I disagree about the prints, which is why I edited the title. They thought that putting exception handling around the def would be enough/correct/meaningful
@AndrasDeak The question statement was pretty garbled. You agree with me that the OP's original title ("Exception message wont go trough in error Handling operation TRY:") was inadequate (since you also edited the title), and that was what MM disagreed with both of us on. I don't see any need for that discussion to be in any way adversarial.
@smci he may have been harsher than necessary, but I don't think he was rude. You must understand that seeing several of such edits that you think confuse the reader will make someoen impatient. It's not great, but it's somewhat inevitable. Escalation is rarely a solution to this. You can make your discomfort known without escalation. There's plenty of drama on the network without having some here.
I'm sure Miyagi will make an effort to phrase his objections more calmly next time
assuming Mister is an indication that "he" is appropriate :P
I would really, really like to just ignore you. Believe me. But this has been a repeated occurrence where edits from you caused me to misjudge a question before going through the process of crawling through edit logs.
@smci I've told you before, something about the way you communicate often comes across as off-putting (I can't really put my finger on it, it's just an impression). That's the same reason why I told you numerous times in the past that I won't argue with you. That is probably the same sentiment behind Miyagi's message.
in any case, @MisterMiyagi you can actually ignore users in chat
Andras, you kicked me from the room for flagging MM's blatant violation of room rules. Then you tried to gaslight me that it wasn't a violation. That's why escalation is necessary with you.
Oh btw where would I ask this question. I want to delete my old(7years unused, never logged in) Twitter account. I lost the email to it, but it has my name so I would like to delete it. I wrote twitter support twice and told them this is my old account it's obv. inactive as they can see I lost the email pls delete it. I even attached a scan of my passport to prove that it is me. But after 2requests they refuse to delete it.
Now i saw and send them this: https://gdpr-info.eu/issues/right-to-be-forgotten/ But they still refuse. On what SE site do I ask a question where the probability of success is the highest, but the effort is the lowest. Ofc I could ask on Law, but that seems like ppl will tell me get a lawyer which sounds expensive. Is there a SE site which could help me with this problem?
@AndrasDeak Ok, I've had a closer look. I think we can keep it open. With the current title it may be findable by someone who defined a function in a try block. Also, I like to encourage OPs who post MCVEs, and getting your question closed & roomba'd is a bit discouraging. Prune's answer is fine, but if someone wants to write a fuller answer that would be ok too.
@Hakaishin if you're in the EU they don't really have the right to refuse a GDPR deletion request, but I guess you would have to be able to identify yourself uniquely, which is probably the key problem
Don't know where you could ask on SE. Perhaps someplace on reddit is better, no idea.
I don't know how I feel about old me. Going through the most ludicrous part of my code base trying to knit 5 spreadsheets together, I've come across # You're not having a good time at this point, are you?On the one hand, I feel he gets me but on the other, it's really not helping me feel any better
@Hakaishin You might enjoy my answer here: stackoverflow.com/a/36551857/4014959 It's rather old, so it's Python 2. Sorry about that. Before the a if condition else b ternary expression was added to Python, we had to use and & or for that sort of thing, but it's less common these days.
:) the one thing I can say is that this mess has captured every bizarre corner case for the last 18 months. I must have anticipated a full rewrite at the time
@AndrasDeak I know, this is why their email response is so infuriating. I'm kinda lost how to get it deleted. I guess I will try law and see what ppl say
hah, this is all gonna be more complicated than I thought, since I'm in Switzerland and we are only kinda eu, dammit
@AndrasDeak 3.8 features a new package, importlib.metadata, which lets you get metadata of an installed lib in an easier way than the pkg_resources stuff that was necessary before. version would be importlib.metadata.version('my_lib') and license importlib.metadata.metadata('my_lib')['License']
I was wondering why the meta post about gender pronouns had so many downvotes until...
> Explicitly avoiding using someone’s pronouns because you are uncomfortable is a way of refusing to recognize their identity and is a violation of the Code of Conduct.
@Aran-Fey I think that is just bad wording. Many comments suggest it applies only if you selectively avoid that single pronoun. If you generally avoid pronouns, it is fine.
So there's no universally good strategy (save not using any pronouns, but some are skeptical about that). The reasonable approach is to avoid all pronouns, or default to "they". And if someone objects then accept that end use their pronouns instead.
No, they aren't. Similarly to how you wouldn't want to be called "she" (or maybe you do, but a lot of males wouldn't), some people object to "they". Either because they feel it can't be used as singular, or because they are non-binary and prefer a specific other pronoun. (Or other reasons I guess, people are diverse)
Pronouns are deeply tied to identity, and this is a key point that many reject. The company really is doing a ghastly job about the whole subject, but the underlying issues are real
if you're interested in what I think I had a longer chat last night in the MATLAB room, I don't want to rehash the whole thing again here. Starts here
but you have to admit that pronouns are part of the core API of language, and extending it so aggressively after it's been stable for hundreds of years is going to whiplash people that are only just now learning of the wider issue
intolerance is also a part of the core API of culture
Things will only start getting better if we do something, and slightly changing how you use language is usually not a huge price to pay to make someone feel less rejected by society. Which is really the core of the debate.
I can sympathize with not wanting to be referred to as "he" or "she" if someone's gender doesn't align with "male"/"female", but the whole point of "they" is to include every gender (that's what gender-neutral means), so objecting to the use of "they" is just childish/ridiculous as far as I'm concerned
@Aran-Fey why is "I don't like he" inherently better than "I don't like they"? There's an arbitrary line in between, rooted in our prejudices. You have to should accept that people's identity is attached to their pronouns, and there's nothing to debate about that. If you believe that transgender people exist then you can as easily believe that people have non-trivial pronouns. It's the same root.
@Arne there's a lot to unpack in the matter, and I tried articulating my stance in the linked transcript. One key point is you can't really effect this change with force. It needs discourse.
@Aran-Fey you'll be surprised then, gender is more than "male" or "female". There's also "neither" and "other" and I think there's multiple kinds of others.
and to some it implies their gender, or a concept of gender they don't identify with
No matter how many boxes we define, some will always not fit in any of them. So the only maintainable solution is to take people's identity (pronouns included) at face value. And try to be nice.
the company is managing this in a very not nice way, which shadows the whole intent of the change, hence the public uproar
@AndrasDeak reading through it right now. Is there a post of monica where she explains why using "they" causes her mental distress? It sounds incredible to me.
I'll try to see if she posted something on her blog
"Mental distress" is my phrasing, she's adamant that "they" doesn't work as singular. I charitably imagine it's how a compiler might feel when a segfault happens.
@Arne so there's some here but she doesn't go into much detail
I've seen a now-deleted remark where she explained that her brain just isn't wired to handle singular "they" and it's too much to ask from her if she can work around it. And she at the same time explained that she'll gladly use any neopronoun (ze/xe/ve/ne/...), it's entirely just about "they". This is where the whole controversy started from...
Wonder how long it's gonna take before people start complaining about "they" when it's referring to a hypothetical person. You say "If someone wants a burger, they have to pay for it" and someone's like "I don't feel included in this 'they'. You should use 'they/xe/ze' instead"
And that will almost never happen, because from what I've heard most trans/non-binary people are fine with generic "they". It was trans users who told me that my stance of defaulting to "they" is perfectly fine. But if someone objects to that, then I should try using their pronoun instead.
Since 1. you almost never talk about people in the third person on SO, and 2. when you do you can default to "they", and 3. most people have he/she, you will never in practice run into this on SO.
and you shouldn't worry about someone trying to troll or abuse with pronouns, because that's like any other kind of trolling, and not tolerated
Has anyone here used all three of Circle CI, poetry and tox together? I can find docs for all three pairs, but nothing for all three. Sorry to intrude a technical question into all this deeply interesting (yawn) stuff ;-).
It's hardly objectionable to talk about python here :P And this isn't really a debate, per se, just me sharing my two cents because I think the only way we'll get out of this sane is if we talk about it.
I estimate that 1% of users prefer a pronoun other than the one assigned to them at birth, and only 1% of that group prefer a pronoun other than "he" or "she", and only 1% of that subgroup prefer a pronoun other than "they", so the odds of you meeting someone with "cumbersome" pronoun preferences is literally astronomically low
The cognitive labor any of us has put into deciding whether this is a sensible policy is an order of magnitude higher than the cognitive labor required to actually follow the policy
There was a streamer I used to mod for. He'd always say "Hey there xxxxxx, what's your pronoun?" as a joke when he first saw them in chat. Kinda interesting thought.
@AndrasDeak Certainly I find it plausible that there are individuals that would prefer us to not use "preferred", but I don't think it's a mainstream viewpoint just yet. But who knows where the winds will blow tomorrow.
I've tried to conceal my actual opinion on the subject matter (as distinct from my opinion of "whether we should follow ToC changes in general" or "whether any particular ToC change has been carried out well"), but anyone who rolled a 5 or higher on their insight check can probably guess what it is
The weird part is that it's taps that don't register sometimes. Which also makes it hard to google because sensitivity is usually about moving the mouse
Could be some palm cancellation thing. I hate a trackpad that wouldn't register taps if you had too much hand on the pad.
also big yikes: just heard my boss say "we can't hire this other engineer we really need because we have too much management". Welps, time to find another job.
A while back I had some touchpad trouble (which IIRC was caused by a driver mismatch) and one thing that I found useful was the "heat map" application that showed exactly what points of the touchpad were being touched at the moment
@biggi_ I used to do that and the cursor would jump around, so I've stopped doing that
@Kevin maybe, thanks for the tip
The bad news is that I don't think I have a built-in for that. The good news is that I realized I can conjure unicode characters with a single button click (followed by typing the name, or parts of it). So I guess 🎉
All programmers wish for better third party libraries. Except for the ones that have eschewed third party libraries entirely, and live in a primitive cabin in the woods
All programmers wish to write a program that writes all other programs. But since this would destroy the industry, a Doom Laser has been constructed on the moon in order to vaporize the hard drive of anyone that tries
It would take obfuscation to a whole new level. At any one time I have three useless threads running in addition to what I'm trying to do, one dedicated to white noise
I've got a 3d vector, V, and I would like to choose a vector U that is perpendicular to V. There are an infinite number of such vectors, but I'd be happy with any one of them. Is there a nice cheap algorithm I can use here?
If V was two dimensional I could just do U.x = V.y; U.y = -V.x but I don't know if that generalizes to three dimensions
If V.x == V.y == 0 (within tolerance) choose U = [1,0,0]. Else U = [...] oh.
I'm not sure you can do something without a conditional. You either rotate or reflect or project or something to construct the perpendicular vector, but there are edge cases for each which will fail
I feel like there should be a branchless way to do this, because no vector is "privileged" under all frames of reference. It seems wrong that two observers should disagree about whether an algorithm would work on a particular vector just because they have different ideas about where i j and k are pointing
But I also agree with you that any rotation/reflection/projection strategy will always have an edge case. So if a branchless approach exists, it must do something fancier