@toonarmycaptain To clarify, this amount is per annum not monthly. The HSA contribution limit is currently $7100, which is a figure inclusive of any employer contributions (that's a national thing, not specific to any employer or HSA provider).
Just to confirm, functions that operate on a string always return the modified or new string. This is because strings are immutable so if you use the same string again you won't see the changes the function made.
no: if string_changify('input') is 'potato': ...
yes: if string_changify('input') == 'potato': ...
I guess this is a bit of a non sequitur, because if a new string is returned then you definitely shouldn't use is in such a context. But anyway it came to mind thanks to the whole "return a different string" subject.
Hi I am trying to scrape all the teacher jobs from this url indeed.co.in/?r=us for this I wrote the script using selenium dpaste.com/0J9YDT1 but the problem is I am not getting all the pages data can anyone help me to achieve this..
Contrived example: what if you only need <= for your class for some reason? Why would you have to define < and == to make that work? — Andras Deak23 secs ago
It's for deriving expression to await points in time. Waiting targets await (time >= 2000) (at or after) and await (time == 2000) (at) are well-defined, but await (time > 2000) (after) isn't.
Since these are invertible, the same holds true for time < 2000, time == 2000 and time <= 2000.
that personally makes me wonder why await (after) isn't well defined. But also makes me hesitate since i honestly don't really have the necessary underlying understanding of async await
it's not about await in the strictest sense, it's about time. "After" means "time + epsilon" where "epsilon > 0 and epsilon ≈ 0". There's no way to represent that accurately.
>= is like waiting for the girlfriend to get ready because you have a flight to catch.. you still haven't given up and there's a chance you'll make it at or just after the gates close... as opposed to > time where you stop nagging her and just walk down to the hotel bar and start drinking because you know she won't get her sh*t together soon enough
i thought it was mostly for task based cooperative multitasking
that's the thing though.. we've made it easier to support async.. and maybe the syntax could apply to threading, but it doesn't make threading any easier
other languages have special syntax to make it easier to lock resources and synchronize
I wouldn't know, I tried multithreading a couple of times in python and always hated it. So now I avoid it from the get go and am a happier person for it.
@Todd To add some more background: The async/await language support just provides suspension/interrupts. The entire concurrency and synchronisation layer associated with async/await is not part of the language. Rather, libraries like asyncio, trio and curio implement it explicitly. One could write a concurrency layer based on threads/processes just as well.
All common async/await frameworks use threads, in fact (to handle file I/O and interoperability). The real problem ties back to why we have the GIL as well: Proper concurrency (as in parallelism) requires to know "when things happen", or the functional approach of "nothing happens implicitly". Python is really bad at making that apparent, and one would have to re-engineer large parts of the interpreter to infer sufficient information.
The good part about the current async/await developments is that people are building lots of experience in the desired semantics of concurrency. Current open questions are concurrent cleanup and concurrent exceptions. Threading/Multiprocessing could basically just hush-hush these issues, but async/await requires finding answers.
Fresh cabbages everyone. Dumb question, what defines the order of the chat rooms? The time after the last message sent? I almost panicked I got banned from this chat room when I couldn't find it in the first 10 rooms
@CeliusStingher actually there's sort button by active (last active user in the room) , event( last created event), people (number of users inside the room) and finally with created (the date where the room created in )
first I must mention the project is on python 2.7 but I try to run it on python 3.7 as the owner said it will be compatible with python 3
config['exp_dir'] = exp_directory # the place where logs, models, and other stuff will be stored TypeError: 'method' object does not support item assignment
this line is in python 2: config = imp.load_source("",exp_config_file).config
but as imp is not exist any more in 3 I changed it : config = importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader("", exp_config_file).load_module config['exp_dir'] = exp_directory
well, first of all, creating a SourceFileLoader isn't the same thing as importing the module. And secondly, you're accessing .load_module instead of .config
@MisterMiyagi its a table that have been created from JSON object that has been extracted from the database , now I just want to update it with the new changes only
@AjayMishra changed on front end only
should I add key and call it"modified" to each part of the json ?
@diamond Do you have the primary key in the data? If so can you not just get the current data from the database and then update it as if it were a new object?
Are there any way to optimize any of these two version of code[preferrably the second one as it is relatively faster]? I am stuck due to inefficient code from almost a week now.
If you need detail regarding the problem which I am trying to solve please tell me.
@Peilonrayz what do u mean by primary key? u mean like adding a primary key to each level ? I thought about that but I'm asking because I wonder if there is a better way out there that I dont know about.
this python code using pyserial package is giving error i want to listen to the serial port `/dev/hidraw1` ```import serial with serial.Serial('/dev/hidraw1', 9600) as ser: x = ser.read() s = ser.read(10) line = ser.readline()```
this is the error: ```Traceback (most recent call last): File "sensor.py", line 2, in <module> with serial.Serial('/dev/hidraw1', 9600) as ser: File "/home/manik/.local/lib/python3.6/site-packages/serial/serialutil.py", line 240, in __init__ self.open() File "/home/manik/.local/lib/python3.6/site-packages/serial/serialposix.py", line 272, in open
Yes, seems to me for the heap one, 1/3rd of the time is taken in reheapification, and for the first one, it is the proper placement of the element[I am basically doing insertion sort in the first code]
I have checked for 41*41 maze it takes about 0.14 second for both of them to solve.
@AjayMishra Can you document your code, please? It's really not clear how the pieces fit together. For example, what's the purpose of node.cost, node.totalCost and related? Is node.getTotalcost reliably called to initials node.totalCost?
even `stty` gives error invalid argument $ sudo stty -F /dev/hidraw1 9600 1 ↵ stty: /dev/hidraw1: Invalid argument /dev/hidraw1 is the mouse connected to my laptop *how to make this work?*
@MisterMiyagi yes i used diff on ls output to know which device gets connected hidraw1 was the difference before and after connecting and i confirmed this manually also
@AjayMishra Your Open class should have two members, a list and set/dict
Ideally, the dict maps from node to index. That would also allow to replace the self.container[self.container.index(other)] search with a direct lookup.
I didn't understood your statement regarding mapping node to index, I can surely store them in set, but, what is the identify or name of the node is, I mean how should be dictionary look like?
I think I got it.
But doing by dict would be slower.
Anyway, can you tell me how the dictionary should look like?
hey guys, I have a function that calls an API for certain data, then does a calculation over the obtained data, and finally saves the data as CSV. It however takes quite long, so I am thinking of ways how to increase the speed (threading?). Anyone experienced with this ;)?
@MisterMiyagi thanks, sorry the computer I'm connected to is remote and doesn't have an ide for me to debug, but I changed to if not i.name.endswith(".csv") and i.name.startswith("train") that should work when I run it
I'm trying to piggyback a tool onto my existing domain as a blueprint in Flask. For this particular blueprint, I want to render a different sidebar for all of its routes but it would be convenient if all blueprint templates inherit from the same base.html file. This, in theory, would be a simple if/else for which sidebar to render based on the blueprint url_prefix, for example, but I'm not sure how to get at that. Is this idiomatic or should I pursue a different approach?
@erotavlas Please be aware that not is a rather basic Python feature. If you're not aware of it, there are likely other mistakes in your code as well. Consider running at least some static verifications on your code, such as flake8 or mypy.
In other words, I think it can be solved in base.html simply with the following, but I don't know if there is a hook I can catch, or what it is if I can catch it (without returning some flag on every route)
{% if some_test_for_blueprint %}
{% include 'special_cased_sidebar.html' %}
{% else %}
{% include 'standard_sidebar.html' %}
{% endif %}
That's what I mean about "without returning some flag on every route". If I end up with, say, hundreds of routes, it's a bit of a faff. I was hoping there was something more intrinsic that I could catch (but there may well be no other way, in which case it's probably convenient to create a new base.html)
sometimes, pandas read_html responding back with 403 Forbidden, but running requests on the same target, will pass through with 200 OK without a header involved. seems that pandas using urlib3 in background without passing any default user-agent such as requests. is it?
then we could prevent questions like "why is my question downvoted?" and "why was my question closed?" and "how was I supposed to know what's on topic?"
Anyone know how I can write "[*a]" (without quotes) in a question title? The stupid system keeps rejecting it because "Title contains a [tag] prefix;".
mmm, I appear to be getting closer with bp.add_app_template_global but I really can't get my head around that little bit of documentation. I can set it when I register the blueprint but then the name becomes true for every blueprint, not just where I set it. I've tried a lambda for f but that doesn't work. The docs are... sparing on details :/
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "sensor.py", line 2, in <module>
with serial.Serial('/dev/hidraw1', 9600) as ser:
File "/home/manik/.local/lib/python3.6/site-packages/serial/serialutil.py", line 240, in __init__
self.open()
File "/home/manik/.local/lib/python3.6/site-packages/serial/serialposix.py", line 272, in open
self._reconfigure_port(force_update=True)
File "/home/manik/.local/lib/python3.6/site-packages/serial/serialposix.py", line 326, in _reconfigure_port
raise SerialException("Could not configure port: {}".format(msg))
i'm trying to read input data from my mouse(or any input device) but 'invalid argument` error is coming
Does anyone have experience with the Requests library? I'm wondering if there's a way for a page to return full links for a site instead of just symbolic links.
I wonder if there is a way to use python to resolve a hostname that resolves only in ipv6 and/or for a hostname that resolves both in ipv4 and ipv6?
socket.gethostbyname() and socket.gethostbyname_ex()does not work for ipv6 resolution.
A dummy way to do that is to run actual linux host command ...
I'm trying to get a webpage which is hosted in the tor network. I'm using the following code:
import requests
def get_tor_session():
session = requests.session()
session.proxies = {'http': 'socks5://127.0.0.1:9150',
'https': 'socks5://127.0.0.1:9150'}
return ...
How does Tor resolve .onion Domains? Are there also some central DNS servers in the Tor network that store these records? Is there a chance that two hidden services generate the same domain name?