Ok... got it. It's because when a singleton tuple is written as a literal, it must have a trailing comma in order to not be confused with a parenthesized value... :-/ Kind of ugly that the reasoning carries over to the string representation when printed imo.
based on the doc "conda list env" and "conda --info envs" are the same but for me first one shows only the main env, while the second one works as expected and shows all envs
well my aim is to get it set differently based on the user in session so lets say i'm logged in and my x = something.com then @app.route(f'{x}/text') should be @app.route(f'something.com/text')
Thanks. Ohh, ok, I thought you were when you said that " Preparing for tomorrow tutorial". Moreover, you have an answer for almost everything in Python...so, I thought may be you are a python teacher/trainer.
@JRick From my understanding of the problem, you're trying to redirect users to other domains. Those are sites running on code that isn't yours; it's not logical to expect that url_for could accommodate that since it's referencing routes in your own site
I don't know the purpose of this redirect, but you may be able to store the redirect URL in a session
but i'm pretty sure there is lots of ways to secure such a connection
since lots of cpanels , banks ... etc can do it i'm sure i'll find my way as well if i even got stuck into it ... i will struggle a little and learn something new afterwards
the usual ;)
for now iam trying to learn this part @app.route('<x>/test')
Very sure. Flask might have add-on libraries to help with this; I've never had reason to check. But flatly redirecting a logged in user to a URL, however random you may think it is, is not secure. It'll get indexed by google and you'll be hacked in, say, ~30 mins
i'm not guessing all those secure method are out there already
i'll just add it to the same subdomain and whoever hacks would spend his nights banging his head aganist the wall trying to figure out how to bypass mobile auth and google auth to see my site
i'm pretty sure he will have something better to do instead of wasting his life trying to hack a chairty site lol
anyway i thnk i will post a question about @app.route('x/test') as i really don't know if anyone ever have required to use do something like that in flask
@ksalf i don;t think anything is 100% safe but yeah i think sure mobile autho is really hard to hack or guess
When you are done with your website, ask for some bounty hunters to test its security. You will be surprised to see how secure/insecure it is...based on the money you are ready to shell out
I'm curious why you raised this in the chat room and then ignore everyone's opinion. This is a bad idea but you're going to push ahead anyway. I can't say anything more
@roganjosh @ksalf i havent don't anything with it yet and nether did any of us , i'm justin the researching phase as i said , i'm not pushing with it , just researching and this topic , it's risks and possibilities
@ksalf i'm sure everything is unsafe when we put money on it.
@roganjosh what i dont understand is that this is unsafe but as much as any page in the flask app not sure why the subdomain is more unsafe than regular url
Bla et al introduce x, we do y with it. Some more stuff. Later in the text. Bla et al also found z, which is very interesting. Do I cite it both times?
if there's a longer comparison between your results and theirs it's not necessary to cite all the time, because it's clear enough that you're comparing to a specific paper (which should be made explicit anyway)
@Hakaishin I know that now, my point is that your readers might not
and the worst that could happen is that some co-author of yours or the editor says not to cite it, but there can't be any harm from a redundant citation
Is there a reason to rotate a point using a rotation matrix, that is build from a quaternion, instead of rotating the point directly using the quaternion? Is it computationally maybe more efficient? Or did the person maybe not know how to rotate a point using a quaternion?