@PM2Ring actually the question is duplicated. I've just typed a simple comment which hold a very short answer and then flagged it as duplicated. @AndrasDeak told me before to @αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη when that happens you don't write an answer. You vote to close as unclear, or a duplicate. and even said that i should stop posting answering to duplicate questions.
btw @AjayMishra, it's more efficient to do a.extend(0 for _ in range(n)) than a.extend([0 for _ in range(n)]). The former creates a generator that is iterated over once. The latter creates a list, then iterates over it.
@Todd Well yeah, that's why I originally said that you made a good point. :) But it's good to know when list multiplication is safe, when it's dangerous, and why. And if you're ever unsure you can make a small example and test it to make sure you don't get unexpected behaviour.
Mutable default args can be useful, if you know what you're doing. However, many people have been bitten badly by them in their early days of using Python. So they have a bad rep, and lots of Python coders avoid them, and may even consider them a flaw in the language.
i'm overjoyed.. i fixed a problem with my new filesystem driver.. now I can load youtube playlists in a second.. it was taking a horribly long time earlier
@Todd I don't think so. I have looked at the lru_cache source, but that was a while ago, and I'm hazy on the details. But I do remember it's not pretty. :) The LRU machinery is partly to blame for that, though. FWIW, Antti Haapala is not a big fan of lru_cache... but he's rather critical of a lot of the cide in the stdlib. ;)
@Todd Oh, I use lru_cache myself sometimes. One nice thing it does is that you can get cache hit stats from it. Decorator syntax is cute & compact, but that extra Python function call can be a killer in time-critical loops. Python function calls are notoriously slow.
@PM2Ring I've stopped doing that completely these days. Automatically makes a function non-concurrent for practically no benefit.
I mostly don't consider mutable default argument a bad design decision anymore because to me there are exactly zero use-cases left where I'd mutate a default.
The last time a mutable def arg bit me was when I was using code I found online for Knuth's Algorithm X, which solves Exact Cover problems. Knuth's implementation is commonly known as Dancing Links, which uses a 2D pointer structure. The Python code I found uses dicts. A list arg is used to accumulate solutions.
The code works properly if you pass in an empty list, but it can misbehave if you use the default arg list and then try to call it multiple times. I'd used that code several times before I even noticed that little bug...
Here's an example of that code, complete with the def arg list. It's safe because I pass an empty list in, but I better fix that. :) stackoverflow.com/a/42871384/4014959
I guess packaging it will be a bit tricky, due to the cffi stuff. I know next to nothing about packaging in Python, but there are a few room regulars who seem to know a fair bit about it.
@Todd An RLockblocks the current thread of execution. If your concurrency is coroutine based, it will block the entire event loop. Including the other task holding the lock. That deadlocks all tasks.
@MisterMiyagi I tried the same, and then checked my annotations using mypy. It complaints with Argument 1 to "foo" has incompatible type "*Tuple[Union[int, str], ...]"; expected "int"
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη I don't use Beautiful Soup, but your dupe target doesn't look like a close match to me, so I didn't hammer it. And because you deleted the dupe comment it's not easy to see which dupe target you nominated.
@DeveshKumarSingh Can you perhaps clarify why you'd want to do that? It might be easier to just # type: ignore that, since it isn't strongly typed anyways.
Both cast and ignore tell Mypy "pretend this is so", so there isn't much point in making these too precise.
@Todd There is some minor overhead for re-ifying the types in the source code (e.g. Tuple[int, str] is an expression that gets evaluated) but type checking itself completely static.
@MisterMiyagi I was thinking that on cast(Tuple[int, str], t), the tuple knows that first argument will be int and second will be str, and that's how the function foo is defined
@DeveshKumarSingh neither. the runtime does nothing with it, Mypy says "oh, if you say so"
@DeveshKumarSingh Any is never a good option.
if you want to pass one type check point, use # type: ignore. If you want to pass all type check points, use Any, then ask yourself why you are using type checking in the first place.
@DeveshKumarSingh seriously, why? What's the purpose typing these like that? If you know that super(CompletionCommand, self).__init__ will always be Command.__init__, then you are not taking *args and **kwargs. If you don't know, then you cannot type it.
So you are saying that Command.__init__ have fixed parameters already defined, so we should use them in super(CompletionCommand, self).__init__ directly, instead of trying to use *args and **kwargs and jumping hoops typecasting them?
@DeveshKumarSingh The problem here is that the function doesn't actually take *args/**kwargs. The arguments are not variadic (as in "I take any number of args") they are merely unknown (as in "I take some number of args").
then it's basically Sequence[T] in (e.g. strings aka sequence of strings) and List[Squence[T]] out (e.g. list of strings aka list of sequences of strings)
I felt rather embarrassed by association when in an interview for a Python/Java job, the interviewer hesitated to ask about public/private because my CV was basically just Python.
So don't joke about these things unless you are absolutely certain us savages don't get associated with that. :P
@Permian Look, I don't think people have a problem with still helping out on coding challenges every now and then. But please consider how your requests look to others. We have absolutely no idea what you are doing, what your code is doing, what your tests are doing. If you don't know what RE stands for, how should we?
And that's not a bad thing. But if you want us to help you, then help us help you. That itself is a great skill that is worth learning and will benefit you a lot.
like this old guy I worked with was almost 70 and been developing for almost 50 years.. he didn't even know how to use gdb.. and his code was utter crap
i'm basing my evaluation on the guy on his general lack of understanding the technology that he's been working with for years. and part of that lack is due to his reluctance to learn simple things like how to set breakpoints with an IDE and understand how the stack view works to trace the path of execution..
the unfortunate thing is, he lacked the framework to understand how limited his skills were.. dunning kruger effect
but he'd been working for the company for years and just squeaked by with consistent but slow work
I was going to say that the next logical step is "you can't write good code without an IDE" and then "you can only write good code in <your pet OS>" :)
it really needs to be said. if you think that it's okay not to know how to use the features of debuggers is okay and print statements and log files are all you need.. you're part of the problem
@Mannya Ok, so what does that change? You're not making it easy to help you; both Andras and I found sources showing that you could upgrade numpy to 1.17 and still have decorators
@Mannya if you ask that question one more time I'll kick you
@Mannya Going forward: there's no point in repeating the same question only a few minutes later. The same people will see the question, it won't affect your chances in any positive way. It only makes you come across as needy. And you wouldn't want that. Please be considerate to those who spend their free time on a weekend helping people. When and how they feel like it.
I have taught many other developers how to use debuggers, and one was so happy that she proclaimed it had changed her life and she was finally able to conceive children with her husband because of her reduced stress at work, and she went so far because of this to name her first child after me.. and the second one too.. even though they were girls.. and my friends, that is how important debuggers are
do i really need to use r while compiling a string directly without meta-chars?, without it, i still getting the same output. I know it's necessary to use it while passing meta chars and that actually covered how meta-chars interpreted within python process.
No, you don't need to use a raw string for a regex that doesn't contain any backslashes. But it won't hurt, and developing the habit of always using raw strings for regexes means that you won't forget to use a raw string when you do need it.
I'd love it if at least the docs stuck to "raw string literal". Calling them "raw strings" leads to the usual question of "how can I turn my string into a raw string?"
once the string is created it's just a cigar string
@PM2Ring I just giving example to understand if it's doing something while searching string directly. just was passing through a youtube video while the guy saying it's must
@AndrasDeak I keep any knowledge about such confusion locked away in my head, behind a 12 inch imaginary impenetrable wall of doom. The alternative is crying myself to sleep every night.
@AndrasDeak Since I mostly work with Python versions that other people only find behind their fridge, I haven't felt up-to-date enough to feel like contributing.
import re
pat = re.compile(r'\\\\(\d+),(\d+)')
data = r"bla bla bla\\123,456hey hey hey\\789,987bye bye"
a = pat.findall(data)
print(a)
#output
[('123', '456'), ('789', '987')]
Note that if we don't use a raw string for the regex we need 8 backslashes in a row: '\\\\\\\\(\d+),(\d+)' That's hard to read and too easy to mess up.
@Todd And even raw strings won't help if you find yourself in the unfortunate situation of needing an odd number of backslashes at the end of a string literal.
I tend to use implicit string literal concatenation in that case: r"some [funny] \d regex" "\\" That makes it obvious in the code that something weird is going on. :)
@Todd The raw string docs try to explain it, but IMHO it's one of those things you just need to experiment with until it sinks in. ;)