@ParitoshSingh I figured it out. inspect.getcallargs(funcPointer, *arguments) actually gives me back a dict with the param names and their call-time values. I filter that against the param names of the lambda that is the precondition, and double-splat the resultant dict to call the lambda... boom!
hahaha! Yeah, the problem with signature.bind is that it doesn't show you the values that (as a broad example) any default arguments take. It basically answers the question "if I called <this> function with <these> params, which variables do these params bind to?", not "what are all the params and their values when the function is called?"
@ParitoshSingh If you really want to have that functionality I can think of a way that kinda works. You can 'sandbox' the function in an exec using inspect. But then if you need to call other functions in the same sandbox it gets a bit more messy.
def custom_slices(iterable, lengths):
iterator = iter(iterable)
for l in lengths:
yield (*islice(iterator, l),)
a, b, c = (*custom_slices(tup, [2, 3, 5]),)
I tuplized the (*custom_slices(tup, [2, 3, 5]),) first and then realized I needed to make tuples what the generator was yielding. then I neglected to undo the first thing. Long way about saying, "AD, I see your point. Thx"
Suppose I have a dictionary and a list of potential keys.
def callCondition(fn, func, args):
callArgs = inspect.getcallargs(fn, *args)
needArgs = set(inspect.getfullargspec(func).args)
return func(**{k:v for k,v in callArgs.items() if k in needArgs})
def preConditions(*funcs):
def decorator(fn):
def wrapper(*args):
if "__testmode__" not in globals(): raise NameError("__testmode__ not set")
if globals()['__testmode__']:
fails = []
for i,func in enumerate(funcs):
if not callCondition(fn, func, args): fails.append(i)
ok, I have another ninja-level question for you wonderful people: let's pretend I'm a decorator. I appear somewhere in a chain of decorators that decorate a function. Is there a way for me to find the identity of the function that is being decorated by the chain of which I am a part?
@deco1(p1)
@deco2(p2)
def func(a1, a2):
# do stuff
meaning if your decorators aren't compatible can you compose them anyway? Can't you extend them instead such that they expose whatever info you need for chaining?
Or, an extremely good botnet that makes accounts that give detailed answers (however their quality, but pertaining to the question), and they all give their 1 or 2 votes to a mothership account :P
@wim you've had a few subtle downvote-pls hints in a shorter time. All of them were crap, and I understand your frustration, but please cut down on these. I don't want voting mob accusations against us to hold water. This goes for everyone else voting here: keep this in mind.
A genuine question: what exactly is the difference vs. something like a delv-vote or a close vote? Both of those actions will lead multiple people from any room (ok, maybe via an equivalent but different policy) to take some moderation action on content that will negatively affect the originator's account. I'm obviously not questioning the need for restraint, but what is making people view one thing as moderation and another as a mob?
In a generic sense, I mean. If people are going to level the argument that it's a mob mentality against the room, what are they using as the criteria for it being a mob and not moderation?
Today has been an odd day. I've gone from the weird tenuous position I had at work for the last few months to now having the head of production taking me in for a meeting to say that they're now fully endorsing my project and we'll have every production manager, IT and Continuous Improvement in an office to tell me what they want. It's a topsy-turvy world I'm living in right now :P
But, at least no more secret projects that nearly got me fired. That's a bonus :P
Yeah. It was actually a really surprising move, I didn't expect to have the discussion at all because the head of production even went so far as to apologise and acknowledge that they'd told me 3 times that the project should be thrown away.
Because I wanna leave a door open to walk away afterwards. I don't suppose I'm the best fit to teach Python fully, but I just need one of their guys to be able to understand tracebacks and have some sense of how to fix it
'twas not for the sake of complaining. I'm curious how a 10 years late answer that just copies and pastes some stdlib source code can get upvoted 4 times like that. If it was on a question on main page it would be downvoted, so I think it's something about posting answers on popular old questions (some automated voting perhaps)
@wim my personal take is just that it's a law of averages. The question gets a lot of views and maybe people digest the information in another way (we don't know what language the viewer comes from or how they understand/conceptualise their issue). There's no reason to believe the 110K views were front-loaded around the time the question was asked
In fact, it's probably actually end-loaded as Python becomes more prevalent for teaching and 4 upvotes vs. 110K views and an answer at 935 votes. It doesn't look that suspect to me
Law of averages is not right, I'm drawing a mental blank on the correct phrase. Do it enough times and you'll get such results e.g. by a normal distribution.
the lack of downvotes is the weird part. my theory: some users have scripted upvoting via API, motivated by badges (civic duty, electorate, suffrage, vox populi). they select on which Q&A to vote via searching popular questions with high score.
this one answer is not a particularly great example, but I've certainly seen cases where an absolute garbage late answer ends up on something like +16/-0 because it's on a highly upvoted question
Counter-point. The people who know enough to maybe disagree with the answer but are actually trying to complete a project and just find the first answer that solves the issue vs. the people who really can critique the answer and happen to scroll through multiple to find it definitely lies in favour of the former group by numbers
Aran-Fey (I'm pretty sure) posted a ranking of close votes on the Python tag but I can't seem to be able to find the source via Google
@wim In any case, until someone with better searching powers than me either finds his post here or the feature on SO, basically everyone in the list is known to us in this room and the bottom of the list drops off dramatically. So the actual moderation of the tag is in a handful of people. It doesn't surprise me that such posts as you linked go unnoticed.