If I am making lets say 100 threaded requests.get call and I am writing the results to a csv file, is it better to write them in batches? say 10 at a time to a file, my concern is to make sure I dont lose any data in case some request in the 100 raises an exception
usually i tend to do a recursive loop to call the request once or twice incase it failed for aa simple timeout or something and if it fails again then save to file to check manually
I have an algorithm that solves minesweeper, but it's not perfect - in some scenarios, it can't find a solution even though one exists. My question is, what do I do with the unit tests for these scenarios? Do I mark them with xfail? Do I comment them out?
(It's not worth the effort to "fix" the algorithm, so the test cases will only become relevant once I do - or maybe never)
Ok. And what do I do about a test that's intentionally "dumbed down" to match the current capacities of the algorithm? I.e. a test that'll fail once the algorithm is improved (because then it'll find more mines than the test expects it to)
I don't know why but many python beginner tutorial uses pycharm and later the new user ends up struggling with it, I think they should explain how python script can be written even in notepad and then use something simple like sublime or VSC
TBH I started on VSC and moved to pycharm when started at this company and truely love the ide more just due to the way you can use it integrated with aws... not sure if vsc has that
My experience with mysqlclient is an absolute nightmare, @CoolCloud
With *Fedora*: - With mysqlclient==1.3.7 (which we are using on Debian): `mysql_config` missing, even when reinstalling connectors such as `mariadb-connector-c-devel` or `community-mysql-devel` - With 2.0.3: MySQL-python is missing, or not recognized
With *Windows*: - With `mysqlclient==1.3.7` , I can't install it: tells me to use Visual C++ but nothing changes. So I've tried a pre-built version from Christoph Gohlke's site but it's not compatible. - With >2.* I have: `OperationalError: (2006, '')` in a large part of SQL queries like the following one:
python
c.execute("""
UPDATE `{table_name}`
SET `{column_name}` = CONCAT('hash_', {expression})
WHERE {pk_name} IN ({ids})
""".format(
table_name=table_name, column_name=column_name, expression=expression, pk_name=pk_name,
ids=','.join(ids)
))
when you take a string, sure even if it's a string that you'll run python's .format on: there's no "safety checking" that's going on. ultimately, it will be parsed and then a single string will be generated from it, yes?
if you want to actually use a parameterized query, the sql library itself should be getting a string with placeholders, and the args that it needs to sanitize and then use. there's "usually" some kind of .prepare method in sql libraries for this
that, and only that, is a parameterized query in sql terms.
@MisterMiyagi yeah that's what I mean. Somebody here mentioned that the merger with this other company which also owns homework sites could help so, by routing homework traffic to the other company. Don't remember the names
recbg, how can I use this when I am not using a session (directly calling request.get or request.post)? stackoverflow.com/a/15431343 I read in an SO answer session is not thread safe
@JonClements I make post requests for the urls and then do some modification to the responses and save these as a csv, the sample data I was given is ~100, it could be more, not more than 5k
I wonder how hard it would be to train an AI to take these verbal descriptions and actually insert the xkcd. That would be a perfect project for this room :) It's just whacky and hard enough but actually doable :P
laurel, maybe I will run this with MM suggestion of creating a session per thread and check, anything less than 71 is a win for me, I get retry behavior after all
@Kevin I find using lines = (line.strip('\n') for line in file) and consuming lines is generally what I end up using (assuming I don't need it in a list after...)
Me: "I finished the project that so many others abandoned halfway through. Some of my finest work, if I do say so myself" Client: "There's a typo here on the landing page"
To be fair nobody asked me to create a heartbreaking work of staggering genius, so I couldn't reasonably expect the red carpet and flutes of champagne to be ready at short notice
amusing that you have a comment on that question :P > Note that python makes no guarantees about memory layout. Are you asking about a specific implementation? Are you asking about the name num, the reference num or the value of num? – MisterMiyagi Aug 23 '20 at 5:41