disclaimer: dont really know type annotations. But is python itself even aware of a type hint? my first search seems to indicate python itself doesn't really have any knowledge of what's hinted.
"If the right hand side is not present for an expression target, then the interpreter evaluates the target except for the last __setitem__() or __setattr__() call.". So... d['k'] : int evaluates d but not d['k']
I did find an question on SO which is addressing this same behaviour, but I guess I am not permitted to share it here since it might hint towards the puzzle
When the riddlemaster says "I don't actually know answer, or if it is even possible", I think it's ok to post hints out in the open. We're all working on it together :-)
@wim it is not possible without inspecting the source. only symbol annotations are stored. annotations for subscriptions, slices and attribute references are eliminated from the bytecode already.
@MisterMiyagi Can I walk away from this discussion knowing this is True? Meaning, are you sure. If you are sure, I'm disappointed (not sure why but I am).
Suppose I have a dictionary that contains key/value pairs that I use often. I want a function that returns a copy of that dictionary but updated with overrides to keys and possible other keys.
I think since you unpack the dictionary you pass before, the duplicate key gets overwritten with the value in d, so it gets the job done, but it's not really readable
How about this
In [7]: def h(d):
...: c = {'a': 1, 'b': 'c'}
...: c.update(d)
...: return c
...:
...:
...: print(h({0: True, 'b': 2}))
...:
{'a': 1, 'b': 2, 0: True}
@DeveshKumarSingh Yes. And I've had about 3 or 4 hours of sleep in the last 36 hours. I'm trying to shift my sleep cycle, but it's not working too well...
Yes. Hopefully I'll move to SD soon. My wife just has to find a house she's willing to commit to buying. However, I was flying back and forth from Orange County to Seattle every other week for a year when I still worked up there and lived down here.
Hello all, I just want to understand why decorators are used. I was going through Pytest documentation and they use @pytest.fixture a lot. If anyone could explain in simple terms, its would be really helpful. TIA!
just thought of something, at a company that allows work from home once a week, how do they deal with the event that everyone works from home simultaneously on the same day (leaving the office empty)
but as always, a (good) tutorial is structured such that it's easy for someone new to the concepts to understand it, which is not necessarily (usually) true of PEPs
@Tim The term for no-assigned-desks is "hotdesking". (analogous to "hot bunking"/"hot racking" in the navy, where two shifts share the same bunks). Please let's not let people further abuse the coverall term "Agile..."