cbg, can anyone tell me if the second for loop is normal in python or should I stick with the first version?
from pathlib import Path
paths=['/root/folder','/home/folder','/home']
for path in paths:
path=Path()
# do Path object operations with path
for path in map(Path,paths):
# do Path object operations with path
@Kevin Coming back to your question on Dict[..., Union[...]] after digging a little into typing theory. It seems the problem is that mypy uses unification for type inference. Loosely speaking, that means it decides "this unknown type is a <known type>" – e.g. a = 3 "a's unknown type is a integer" and a: int = foo "foo's unknown type is a integer".
It doesn't use bi-unification, which loosely speaking means "this unknown type is at least a <known negative type> and is at most a <known positive type>".
That, apparently, doesn't play well with Invariance of mutable containers (dict keys/values) and Unions of multiple types (int or str).
Basically, it has to decide that a) "3 is a int" or b) "3 is a Union[int, str]", it cannot say "3 is at leastint". So assigning 3 to an invariant ("exact") Union[int, str] only works when mypy decided for b.
Case b) pretty much only happens when you tell mypy explicitly, or in a direct assignment immediately after creating a thing. So d[k] = 3 works because mypy knows it needs "3 is a Union[int, str]". Doing any intermediate steps locks mypy into "3 is a int" and that's it.
Now I just need to build a MCVE demonstrator because none of what I just blurted out is properly documented...
@Janith Can you clarify what you are trying to do? Are you looking to find a memory address written to stdout? Are you trying to file.seek on the file-like stdout?
For reference, there is no such thing as "go back to previous line in stdout", because there may very well be no previous line. As a trivial example, consider stdout being redirected to /dev/null.
Don't focus on stdout, but on whatever thing you actually want to control – e.g. a terminal very well has a concept of "previous line", and may be fed/controlled from stdout.
What GUI maker is best to use for non-commercial applications? I am looking at PyQt5 but i'm not sure how the licensing works and whether there is some kind of restriction in terms of usability. Tkinter looks a bit bad in terms of how their form looks and i'm hoping there is some functionality to ease the GUI making like Qt designer
@roganjosh Just wanted to make sure that PyQt5 could be used properly even without any paid license. Was just concerned I would spend time to learn how to use it then find out I had to pay a huge amount to get access to some essential feature for my non-commercial use
@roganjosh So far the only thing I found was something about sharing the code to others using PyQt5 as well but will have to take a look at that
Your opinion on whether this is [cv-pls]? No debugging details/MCVE/code-writing request but got an answer anyway stackoverflow.com/questions/63662308/…