I expect the average ORM would require one class per table. If you're comfortable with metaclasses, that could maybe let you churn out a lot of slightly different classes without too much typing.
why are you registering a teardown handler? I said twice that it was handled for you. I can't run it now, I'm out, but I wouldn't be surprised if that borks the natural behaviour
@roganjosh Pretty much. If I only had 3 classes in my project, I wouldn't mind writing a bit of boilerplate for an ORM. But I have like a dozen, and describing the layout of each class in ORM syntax feels like a waste when I've already described it in @dataclass syntax
use your local postgresql or you can get a free one from Heroku.com puts this a bit short of an A+ MCVE by my reckoning... But I knew all along that db/flask-y MCVEs are dang hard to make, so don't feel too bad about not meeting my high expectations
the "give A+ mcve, get troubleshooting" offer still stands indefinitely
Although in my original setup the models were in a different file and db were defined there, Not sure if that could be the cause of all piling up of the connections
@12944qwerty Oh, strange. Maybe repl does something strange to user input that breaks membership testing? In any case, you don't have to use a dictionary if you find it frustrating. Just one potential design.
Making it so the user can't backtrack is rather un-zork-like, but that's OK because it doesn't necessarily mean you can't make a good game. As long as you're continually thinking of interesting new things you can make your engine do, then you're still gaining useful design experience
For example. Your first version had bullets, so I'm guessing you were already interested in having the ability to remove items from your inventory, not just add them. Make a gun that costs one bullet every time you fire it, that kind of thing
I strongly encourage you to add it to your list of things to learn. It's a great tool that, when used right, allows you to recover from borking your code.
you know , its such a relieved, for long time I thought socket Io and flask_login was a part of it so the first thing I did was removing the socketIO from the app
apparently, socketIO was actually very good at preventing it. after I removed it I got the error exactly on the 10th update, before, I could stay for hours before it occurs.
I learned git from the command line before using integrated tools such as IntelliJ. I don't think that path is 100% necessary, but in my case, I think it helped me form the correct mental model for what git is doing.
I thought IntelliJ (well, Java IDEs) were complicated. Then I found out a whole new arena of right clicking on some things and getting a nested dropdown of further options. At that point, I'm out
I've done very little Java with it, but I can't imagine using it for Python is any less complicated. The key is to learn how to search for commands efficiently. I never click on menus or submenus.
I think a file can be as long as you want as long as you're very good at organizing
user13727121
How do I concatenate the result of maketrans() to an empty string before using translate() on it. Example: dpaste.com/D3M2MW7BM (I know it seems unnecessary, just wanna know if it's possible)
@LoopingDev When it comes to solo personal projects, really the only thing you need to consider is, "do I know where everything is?", or at least "do I know how to find everything efficiently?"
user13727121
the argument given to translate() is supposed to be res, right? If so, my output is incorrect. print(plain_text.translate(res))
@roganjosh joking about what? about not clicking on menus...nope, not joking. I use the mouse as little as possible. Ctrl+Shift+A is the most useful shortcut in intellij. And I use a lot of other keyboard shortcuts.
and like most searches in intellij, it matches on word boundaries. You can type the first letter or two of each word in a command and it will match
I should get a commission from JetBrains. I sold my last company to convert entirely to IntelliJ. Every new dev automatically gets a license.
I guess they can opt out if they want...they hired a lot of new peeps after I left 2 months ago.
user13727121
@Kevin thanks but I found a way to do that, I had res as an empty string instead of an empty dictionary, changed that and update it using .update(), res.update(encrypt) and I finally got the output correct
I still don't really understand why you need to copy encrypt into an empty anything to begin with, but if you're getting the results that you want, more power to you
It's fun to talk about maintainability and efficiency and elegance and all that, but at the end of the day I sleep soundly as long as my code just works
Well alright then. I'm quite familiar with having "I just wanted to see if I could" as my one motivating factor
user13727121
yeah apparently, I asked Google the wrong question because there wasn't a single solution about concatenating result from maketrans() to an empty string and use it on translate(), only to realize maketrans() returns a dict and dict has a way to update the value, or "concatenate" it into an empty dict...
user13727121
well that was dumb, but anyway, I appreciate the help
That is happening, I need not suppose. My program was hanging for quite sometime.When I checked it line by line, I found an error in the function assigned to the thread. But, Python never reported it, though, it was making my program halt from the point of error.
But, this is a minimal example. I have a more complicated project involving around 12 threads that moniter and draw/destruct things on the tkinter canvas. Can I do something to make my program thread safe while working with tkinter?
The common "solution" is to use root.after(0, some_function). This will arrange for some_function to be called by the tkinter mainloop. But I'm not 100% sure if root.after itself is thread-safe, so...
That isn't safe! I have tried using root.after(..) and also <canvas_instance>.after(...), but, they halt the process of drawing even by threads that have not called the .after function.
@Aran-Fey After the mainloop is called, other threads in my program successfully use the time.sleep(..) to successfully invoke any required delays. The only problem occurs when an eventual thread safety issue or runtime error halts one of the threads and the program fails to pause.
gui interactions in the main thread, long running tasks in the other threads, communicate via queues. i imagine that should be fine, as long as youre not trying to run gui operations from the other threads. make every gui interaction on the main thread.
I have a class with an attribute that is a tuple. When I iterate through an instance of the class, I want to iterate through the attribute that is a tuple. I've done the following but I'm not sure if this is "good".
Actually, setting self._i = 0 inside __iter__ would be a violation of the iterator protocol. Calling iter() on an iterator is supposed to be a no-op, but your iterator would rewind instead (another thing iterators aren't supposed to do)
I'd have thought it was easier just to have the __iter__ method return iter(self.tuple_attr) - you can then have as many concurrent iterations as you like.
I was getting confused with the__next__ dunder. Now that I see it, it should've been obvious /-:
I'm sure someone else has already done a better job of this but I got enamoured with making a simple single variable Polynomial class after messing with project euler. So I whipped this up.
Each position represents the coefficient of a term in the polynomial. You can do this
Everything in the left panel can take a right-click with another nested list of options but I'm not going through the exercise of trying to edit again on a mac to scribble things
I noticed some unexpected weirdness in **computing intersection of key views on dicts, the naive approach is not insertion-order-preserving**. When you dig into the Python spec closely, this is implied but it's unexpected gotcha to the spirit but not the letter of the spec. The one-line summary seems to be "Dict keys views are hybrid set-like objects which preserve insertion order, but the moment you use set operations on them that order goes out the window". - dicts preserve insertion order - Keys views are set-like, yet they also preserve insertion order: https://docs.python.org/3/library…
My point is that the gotcha is implied by all the spec laboring about guaranteeing "dict keys views are hybrid set-like objects which also preserve insertion order".... But the moment you actually use set operations on them that order goes out the window. So, dict (keys) views are semantically very weird hybrid objects: something like an OrderedSet that implements the set() interface... and stops being ordered if you call those.
My point is to draw attention to the gotcha, that's all. It just bit me. Next, how would I compute keys intersection in a (performant) order-aware way, without iterating over one dict's keys() and test each key is in d2.keys()?
I mean yeah, someone might not think about it at all and be bitten, but that's mostly their fault. If it's trivial in hindsight it's not a gotcha in my book.
@AndrasDeak As a 21-year user of Python who's thought about these things plenty, I'm stating my opinion that this is a gotcha, IMO. There's a lot of laboring in the spec about what dict views do guarantee.
@AndrasDeak I know that and I never claimed it did. It's an expression using set operations on keys views. Which throws away the ordering that the keys views labor the point that they guarantee.
@roganjosh But my examples above points it out! The insertion-order-aware intersection would be E,B,X,Z. But using set operations d1.keys() & d2.keys() gives {'B', 'X', 'Z', 'E'}. Insertion order got thrown away the moment we started using set operations.
@AndrasDeak Yes, I posted that above at the top, that's what I'm pointing out. But the spec doesn't say that "keys views objects are hybrid objects that do implement the set interface, but don't implement set operations in an order-preserving way". To prove the point, one could implement keys views objects that did implement set operations in an order-preserving way, yet implemented(/kludged) order-awareness on the result. Those would also be compliant with the Python spec.
@smci it points out a behaviour but not one I'd rely on, nor something I'd expect others would. Since you've raised it, I sensed that something blew up for you
@roganjosh Syllogism: a) "dicts respect insertion order" b) "dict keys views respect insertion order" c) keys intersection can be computed from keys views. Yet if you do it naively using set operations, it throws away insertion-order. And to do it in an order-aware way, I reckon you'd have to sacrifice performance. (I'm working on a project with multiple dicts, some will eventually be nested and get very large. Obviously you'd have to flatten the dicts before computing keys intersection).
@AndrasDeak If when you reverse d2's keys, you're asking "what is d1.keys() & d2.keys() then?" it's {'X', 'Z', 'B', 'E'} It doesn't follow either dict's insertion order.
I'm getting confused. I don't think python ever promised anything of this sort (apologies). Sets are still unordered and python is unambiguous about that. "Yet if you do it naively using set operations" - well that's not a dict operation, is it?
@roganjosh I've already explicitly said that in my original post. "When you dig into the Python spec closely, this [behavior] is implied but it's unexpected gotcha to the spirit but not the letter of the spec." Ok? That's why it's a gotcha. It's annoying and misleading reading tons of posts about how magical dict views are in preserving order, without one caveat about "...but be careful about using them set operations". As said, I want to compute insertion-order aware intersection.
You mean to say that writelines() doesn't actually write lines is not a gotcha?
I think the most "fun" I've had with python is with Futures that just keep going. As I relayed it to my colleagues - it's like those vids where you stomp on a spider and suddely all the baby spiders burst out. Everything else is generally me being dumb
@roganjosh To parody Andras :) , if the method name happens to be buy_puppy() but a close literal inspection of the spec doesn't say it buys you a puppy (even if the class description waxes on about puppy-buying and the implied intent to support it), then no puppy(/newline) you get. Anyway, OS conventions on CR/LF were a known issue back in the 1970s already.
@roganjosh "vids where you stomp on a spider" Funny I was just independently thinking of Tron earlier.
I just reported this unattributed clone site: https:// www.javaer101.com /en/article/18783067.html (SO original was this). The scary thing is it had #2 SEO ranking for a Google query with specific keywords.