@roganjosh Yes, but I believe automation (or at least something vaguely about antisocial use) used to be in the TOS, and that they broke that too... Wahnsinn...
@Aqua4 User AI to profile check for bots...the behavior of SO users, some of whom are engaged in the creation of human-like AI...? No way that can escalate quickly.
Oh I know they do, and I know SO does. It just sounds funny, and we know how much the type of people on this site love being told that they can't do something.
SQLAlchemy quotes the column names for you. You can use Robert'); DROP TABLE Students -- as a column name. You can even use double quotes in a column name. And it just works. Why would you want to break it? — Antti Haapala24 secs ago
@PM2Ring haha the guy whose answer you deleted yesterday again...
This is probably a super bad idea but............is it possible to introspect if you're inside a REPL? Mostly just curious. Maybe more specifically the built in REPL or the iPython REPL
IPython seems easy to detect, there's a get_ipython loaded in globals. But what about the standard interpreter?
i recently discovered the joys of docstring generators
but i was wondering if anyone knew of a docstring generator that worked on either 1. jupyter notebooks or preferrably 2. vs code editor with a .ipynb file opened. (best i can tell, the vs code extensions such as autodocstring don't work. And i haven't been successful in finding something that works for jupyter notebooks so far)
I'm still impressed with the amount of IDEs these days that make some hard things extremely easy, yet for what one would consider simple things (seemingly) impossible...
@TheLittleNaruto I've been using VS Code lately, cause my PyCharm pro expired :( I'm finding it nice and usable. But bulk renaming doesn't work, ever. And the typing inspection and code finding is really hit and miss, normally miss.
@AnttiHaapala Right, long century back I had tried developing one Eclipse plugins. But I could never finish. However I managed to write a gradle plugin for Android development(That works locally).
Again For Android Development there is an IDE called Android Studio which is from Jetbrains only.
There are basically no appropriate dupes for such basic questions. The proposed one already got the action itself right, and is stuck a few steps further.
I am trying to append a table to a different table through pandas, pulling the data from BigQuery and sending it to a different BigQuery dataset. While the table schema is exactly the same i get the error " "Please verify that the structure and "
pandas_gbq.gbq.InvalidSchema: Please verify that t...
@khajvah popular choices for a private pypi are devpi and pypiserver, both of these have well-documented deployment options that your org's admins/devops should be able to work with
First make sure the text is really not there, did you try a simple string search in the extracted output?
eyeball and pick a review string, search through the generated html from scraping. If it's not there, then that means you can't scrape it without selenium
I apologize if this isn't appropriate for this chat but I couldn't find anywhere else to ask. I'm trying to be a good community member but my questions was downvoted and I want to know what I did wrong so I can avoid similar mistakes in the future: stackoverflow.com/questions/60253722/…
I've found a solution and about to link it and mark it answered, but I do want to be a good citizen, so any insight into why this wasn't a good question would be helpful.
@Chu_bot I cast a close vote on your question because I didn't really understand what you tried to solve. You had code, which is great, but the problematic inputs and expected behaviour were missing for me. But your question isn't partiularly bad, which is also why I didn't downvote it (which means a lot, coming from me).
A single downvote on a question isn't something you should be worried about, that happens all the time.
Thanks. Can I mark my own question as duplicate or should I just delete it if I find a similar question? I don't know why I couldn't find that one when I posted the question. SO is usually pretty good about suggesting related questions before submission but a bunch of searching didn't turn anything up for me :(
@Chu_bot I don't see anything significantly wrong with it. Since the question is basically just "how do I remove dangling stdin before calling input", you could have removed some of the fluff of looping, password checking and printing.
@Chu_bot 1) you can only cast a self-close-vote with more reputation, so you can't help that. The comment you left with a duplicate is as much as you can do. 2) You can choose to delete your question, as long as it doesn't have answers there will be no repercussions against you for deleting. Downvoted posts count against you in a question ban, and you can't fix questions if they are deleted, but you also can't gather more downvotes if they are deleted...
(whether or not a particular question is deleted doesn't affect the question ban if there are no answers posted on it)
It's alright, searching takes a lot of practice. And SO's internal search engine is pretty crap, I suggest using your favourite search engine and appending "site:stackoverflow.com" to the query to restrict hits to SO
Hmm, it seems you could vote on the dupe after all
@AndrasDeak I could only vote on the duplicate after I received a notification that someone else had marked it a duplicate. I didn't look to closely, but it seemed like an option for me to respond to the duplicate votes in some way
The OP seems nice, if under-informed, and I wouldn't mind them having their lost points refunded. And the rep-farmers lose a few points, so it's win-win. ;)
for my last use-case, it's sort of like a sparse storage, it should be something that quacks like a dict but pretends to have infinitely many values if you're accessing them explicitly
@LittleBowsette Starring is just bookmarking. It doesn't necessarily mean the question is good. Some people star bad stuff so they can check it later, to see if it's improved, or if it needs downvoting or delete-voting.
@wim I had a brief look at its source yesterday (while I was looking at singledispatch). I didn't look closely, but I was not impressed with what I saw. I do use it sometimes, when I can't be bothered doing my own memoizing, or on those rare occasions I need LRU.
I saw in the transcripts that there was a discussion of collections.namedtuple, but there was no mention that accessing namedtuple items by attribute is much slower than by index. Allegedly, that's been optimized in 3.8, though, according to stackoverflow.com/a/57679077/4014959
Y'all are fans of passing sys.argv into main? I think that's ugly. Parsing command line arguments is pretty much the whole purpose of my main function; nobody should ever need to call that main
@Aran-Fey no, I am not a fan of it. I'm just saying that if you are a fan of it, you don't need to actually pass it explicitly when you call the main() from under the if __name__.. guard, because getting them from sys.argv is a sensible default choice anyway
I've decided to shift to VS Code for my Flask projects as of today (I've been messing around with React and Kotlin most of today and decided I've seen the light in having a single editor). Are there any must-have plugins for Python or just the default one?
@LittleBowsette can you please start being python-related? You're all over the chat server making noise and it's a bit too much here. You might see us talk about off-topic stuff here but it's different with regulars who contribute here in discussions
not VSCode, but I've recently turned my IntelliJ into a gay pride simulator by installing rainbow brackets and rainbow indentation and I don't regret a thing
Huh, Robot Unicorn Attack won't load. I'm guessing Flash is to blame here. React was fun-ish today but I think it would be more hassle than it's worth to integrate with Flask. Still, it'll be nice to be able to drop Notepad++ for my templates and just pull everything into VS code
@roganjosh What do you mean "integrate with Flask". Your flask code is a REST API, correct?
I suggest you create the React front end as a completely separate "app". It only communicates with the Flask back end with requests to the REST endpoints. This will reduce any hassle of integrating them more tightly because the React front end doesn't have to know that the backend is in Flask. It could just as easily be C# or any other language that returns correct HTTP responses.
@Code-Apprentice No, it's just rendering templates currently. I just decided to have a play with React today because I didn't have an decent understanding of what it actually did. But it seems easier for me to just handle with JQuery and render_template for individual <div>s
Yeah, that's what I've come to see. It was just exploratory, and I've come to the conclusion you've mentioned :) But I don't think I gain anything by making Flask a backend and just making it RESTful, and doing all the front-end work in React. That was the tradeoff that I wasn't sure about until I actually tried it
@Code-Apprentice I'm curious whether you've actually separated concerns like this in your work on Django?
It seems like 1 hell of an upfront-cost to decide to forego the Django template engine (and, I'm extending that to Jinja2) on the off-change you might want to transplant in some other backend potentially years down the road if things scale massively
@roganjosh and yes, I've worked on a project where we implemented a RESTful API in Django and a separate React front end that just made HTTP requests to the Django code. The front end had no idea how the backend was implemented. The entire interface was defined through HTTP request/respone.
@roganjosh Perhaps I emphasized the ability to reimplement the backend in a different language. The primary advantage is that the two can be developed and tested seprately. In another project, we heavily use Django templates and custom JQuery manipulations. None of the JavaScript is tested which frequently bites us in the ass.
@AndrasDeak or XML or whatever format is agreed upon. Django Rest Framework handles both JSON and XML out of the box and has APIs that make it fairly easy to add your own formats (like CSV, for example).
@Code-Apprentice even from my couple of hours playing today I could see the pain in that; thanks for confirming. It was interesting to have a play, but I don't think it's of any use for my project :)
@LittleBowsette yes; that's all that can be said to that question. There are people in this room that can also help you with it if you come back with a well-formed question. For the time-being, it's quite irritating to see your random musings punctuating multiple discussions. I would recommend toning it down before you make a name for yourself that people will naturally ignore, even if they don't use the official ignore mechanism
A colleague is looking to generate UML class diagrams from heaps of Python source code.
He's primarily interested in the inheritance relationships, and mildly interested in compositional relationships, and doesn't care much about class attributes that are just Python primitives.
The source code...