Ya'll remember if there is some command to perform both a reshape and a reorder (on the last dimension, like some_array.reshape(new_shape)[...,last_dim_order] ?
question now that I am working full-time in python is it worth while learning a statically typed language like Java to have it in my 'arsenal' or languages?
@Kwsswart I second what @inspectorG4dget said. Plus learning other languages can teach you a lot about programming in general and may help you see python in another light.
then there's also the argument that some libraries may only exist in certain languages. So if you need to use one, you could create a binary in that language just to use that library. You could then use python to call that binary... and just like that you've expanded your capabilities
@Kwsswart I second @JonClements's point. Java is garbage collected. C is not. Both are statically typed
@JonClements hey Puppy! It's been a while. Greetings from my parents' place in Chennai, India :)
@JonClements I assumed Java had to handle it as does c and c++, no? i know statically typed is refering the the declarations of variables before actually assigning them etc....
statically typed = my_var is of type int and will always be an int. statically typed ≠I need to clean up the memory allocated for my_var when I'm done with it
@JonClements cabin fever's getting to people. But aside from that, people are doing well. How's you and yours?
@Kwsswart what kind of things would you like to go into? Different industries have different requirements? For instance - if you wanted to go into web development, you wouldn't want to focus on C++... you might want Python/Ruby etc... if you wanted to go into embedded stuff, you might want to look at C/C++/ASM or if you wanted to focus purely on a Windows based system then either VB/C# etc.. etc..
@AlexandreMarcq when I started learning to program the course i did was the CS50 introduction to computer science which starts you off in C and makes you do fairly basic things within them to learn about basics, before moving to python
@JonClements To be honest mate I am not certain just yet what main field would like to go into at the moment I am in data extraction, cleaning and process automation and enjoying it, however I also like the idea of web or application development
@Kwsswart sounds like the wrong way around of learning to me... I've always though the teach the higher level of "you can get this done", then the "this is how it's actually done"
@JonClements Thing is after the course focused alot on Python and feel I am fairly fluent with it and working in it every day, thus thought might be a good time to challenge myself and learn something that will help me in other aspects
@AlexandreMarcq and what did you learn from it now you're using Python that'd be useful?
@Kwsswart honestly, depending how long you've been using a language - don't keep trying and switching - focus on one for a bit - get to know it's ins and outs... and look to another if you know it can complete a task better in a way that what you know can't... (probably not making sense there but hopefully you know what I mean)
@JonClements It was in my first year, so I got traumatized by pointers. When I though I was over with C, I had a OS course in Erasmus that traumatized me with linked lists, threads, processes, mutexes and semaphores. But I survived so I guess it helped understand how things are done and gave me some basic knowledge about low-level problems.
@AlexandreMarcq yup... but wouldn't it be better if a teaching approach was using high-level stuff of "hey folks, you can do and achieve this" first so you can actually get something happening and later on have a "so what you folks did looked easy, but under the hood - here's what's going on"?
asked him to send me the code - typical templated stuff and vague comments about traversal... so walked him through that and we got there, but he asked a pertinent question: "what would I use this for?"
just got a gut feeling we've got people that can write algorithms they don't need to write as it's already been implemented in the most optimal way a language can provide - but they don't why you'd choose to use it
I think it's probably fair to ask here if you're trying to get Python running in Docker. If your Dockerfile is long though, please post on some off-site service e.g. dpaste or gist and link to it here
each time you use RUN ..., another layer is created. This takes up space in your HDD. A multistage build is a way to tag each RUN directive so that it can be referenced later in a FROM. This reduces the footprint on your localhost and doesnlt make the image as large
ive read through the article but am not 100% i understand - it just says you can use 2 x FROM which i had. although i have moved the FROM selenium part to the top so that the ADD and CMD are after the final from... testing now
thanks that did seem to work.. now just need to try get selenium running correctly
The thing would be to keep the first layout you sent here and just copy the files from the python image to the slenium image. Then have the CMD in the selenium image
Something among those lines, try to get more familiar with multistage or try to figure out if you really need both images
I am not suggesting to stop asking what you wanted to ask, if you have worked on the suggestions given to you here, or have some new bug or change then do feel free to ask
everything seems to work and i can launch selenium container seemingly but now im not sure how to get my script to execute... i have tried: docker-compose run chrome && docker run -it selenium-chrome python3 test.py but this just seems to launch selenium only
@MisterMiyagi I provided all my code, explained my problem, gave the error message, and explained my failed attempts. Anything I missed? I was never told that I didn't give sufficient information, otherwise I would have gladly done so.
Looking through the transcript I only found this code snippet. It doesn't have the imports to know what library you are using, nor any sample data to try ourselves.
Either way, "my entire code" is indeed a fitting description of the Colab notebook. It's huge, to say the least. You can of course try your luck in finding some willing to go through it, but my guess it's well beyond the volume that people are willing to put up with.
@MisterMiyagi Great, so the criticism used to be I didn't give enough code -- now it's too much. I already gave the small 6-line portion of my code that was causing the problem.
@Alice I don't get your question. The issue underlying is a circular import; it's just failing in a way that the symptom leads to an error before the root cause does.
@rb3652 There's a difference between "Here is the more detailed information you asked for" and "This is all my code, read and tell me what's the problem"
thank for responding MisterMiyagi, as I have pointed out in a comment, I was expecting an obvious error message, what you said clears things out for me
ohh, alright, I did provide working code, thought I would get better responses, but only one user bothered to comment even then
should I delete it?
one last question, can you please explain "Why does it work if I run from python module_a.py and not python module_b.py" if it fails in one how does it work in the other, circular imports are supposed to happen at either end right?
FWIW, I think you could edit it into shape with some effort – the issue that import * just silently leaves you with nothing is indeed a tricky case. You would have to drop the many, many subquestions though and focus on the core issue: "How come that a circular from module_a import * just silently imports nothing?"
@Alice Your module_a doesn't actually use anything from module_b, so there is no error if the import pulls in nothing.
In other words, module_b requires the import of module_a.fun_a1 to work but module_a does not require the import to "work".
I think Python's approach to quietly handling circular imports is silly, so rather than try to follow its twisted unlogic I just try real hard to never let it happen in the first place
My rule of thumb was "circular imports can make statements execute in seemingly nonlinear order, but you can at least be sure that every statement will execute exactly once". But my test program had duplicate output.
#x.py
print("x begin")
import y
print("x end")
#y.py
print("y begin")
import x
print("y end")
#result of executing x.py
x begin
y begin
x begin
x end
y end
x end
After this I wrote prototype 2, which produced output that matched my expectations. The code is the same as prototype 1, except there is a third file, main.py, which contains only import x. Running main.py gives the output "x begin", "y begin", "y end", "x end", exactly as I thought prototype 1 would do
no, i think it's as simple as python only seeing imports to cache when main invokes it upfront, whereas when you invoke x directly x isnt a module to cache yet.
or to phrase it in an even simpler manner, python only sees import x and realises x is a module at that point. when you run main, this is seen upfront, when you run via x, this isn't seen till y is imported which contains this line.
im not sure whether that is a good thing or a bad thing, considering i think what i said makes sense in my head... which is a dangerous place to put my trust in.
I forget, does the stdlib have a convenience function that prints the stack trace of the currently running code? It's easy enough to show one during an exception, but I want to see it for my non-exceptional code too.
Debugging, tracing, hooting at the black box and banging a femur in the dirt, the usual
Yeah it's still the import thing. I'd like a nice concise and objective visualization of which modules have been imported and which lines have executed etc
i've got myself into a proper rabbit hole trying to demonstrate this behaviour.. and so my question is this: is it possible to run some python code before running python x.py that injects stuff in the builtins? (...i feel rather silly typing this out)
@Code-Apprentice As far as I know, a circular import is never the direct cause of an exception in Python. You might get a NameError down the line, but that's one degree of separation away.
My example code won't crash with a NameError because I don't reference any variables.
Cool. I wonder what criteria it uses for guessing. "AttributeError on a module object" is a safe bet. Maybe there's a not_done_being_imported flag too.
Possibly of general interest: github.com/python/cpython/blob/… shows the desired outcome of various import-related scenarios, although you'll have to dig through test_import/data/circular_imports/ to see the actual details
But just knowing that some tests expect to see the output "cannot import name 'b' from partially initialized module ", tells you that there's some circular import detection going on
IIRC "the modules attribute of sys" isn't where the cache is defined, it's just where you can access it. If you rebind the attribute, the original cache is still used, you just cannot access it.
this one states "The first place checked during import search is sys.modules. This mapping serves as a cache of all modules that have been previously imported, including the intermediate paths."
as for sys.modules itself, it states > This is a dictionary that maps module names to modules which have already been loaded. This can be manipulated to force reloading of modules and other tricks. However, replacing the dictionary will not necessarily work as expected and deleting essential items from the dictionary may cause Python to fail.
im not quite sure how to interpret that last sentence.
but it does seem a bit more tightly coupled just a view into the cache (at least, that's how i interpret it and the behaviour in the demo above)
Yeah sys.modules gets mentioned enough times in that document that I'd consider it "effectively" the original cache. Maybe there's some layers of indirection under the hood, but the abstraction shouldn't leak and do something unexpected
Confidence that I'm not about to get proven wrong by a trivial counterexample: 65%
I interpret "replacing the dictionary will not necessarily work as expected" to mean, sys.modules = entirely_new_dict_instance might have surprising behavior if there's code in Python's guts that still have a copy of the original dict. But sys.modules["foo"] = bar should propagate into all those holdouts, since the dict reference is still the same
I originally had a method that can plot a route between a pair of locations (which could either be a pair of postcodes or a pair of lat/longs) which had another bool argument called is_postcodes (the reasons it needed to be explicit at the time are not important). Point is, it now doesn't need to be explicit and I want to remove it. I'm tempted to just put **kwargs in the function definition to keep back-compatibility but is this the reasonable approach?
Or would you, the hypothetical user, expect a deprecation cycle?
@ParitoshSingh So, this is again IIRC since my last venture into the depths... Basically when Python starts it creates a dict to store all modules. This is then bound to sys.modulesand some C variable. Various Python level functions, like those in importlib, will access the cache via sys.modules. However, various interpreter internal objects just directly access the cache via its internal variable. So rebinding sys.modules doesn't fully replace the cache.
@ParitoshSingh No, I would not. That's a great question for levelling this out. The fact it had to be explicit at all was annoying to me, and probably baffling to users too, though
This may be a distraction from the core issue, but I'm curious what ought to happen if you keep back-compatibility and I try calling plan_route(my_pair_of_postcodes, is_postcodes=False). Now that you have the power to determine the first argument's postcodeness without a flag, are you going to verify that the parameters are consistent?
yeah, i'd say that if you want to nuke it from orbit, depreciate it and nuke away. no half compromises just for backward compat. though take my word with a grain of salt, i dont maintain softwares and provide awesome services and stuff.
@roganjosh IMO using **kwargs is a bad idea because it will prevent obviously incorrect code like your_function(yaurfhtoyui3h=True) from crashing like it should. I would leave the function signature as-is, and emit a DeprecationWarning if is_postcodes is passed. (You may have to change the default value of is_postcodes for this, but that's the only change to the signature I'd make.)
@ParitoshSingh Oh, I always want backwards compat unless it's really serious, it's just that I don't think a user would have wanted to set it in the first place: "what, you can't tell the difference between a string and a list of floats?"
My server is running RoganJoshLib, and I accidentally got gum in all its I/O ports except for its internet hole, so it can still pip install update automatically every morning but I can't edit any of my code
If is_postcodes ceases to be a valid argument, I will go out of business
This is what I haven't quite got a grip on. I've found plenty of methods in the past that take **kwargs for inexplicable reasons to me, but maybe it's for precisely that, or it's just sloppy design?
@roganjosh Sorry, been thinking way too far. I was hung up on the string escape sequence deprecation which went through several rounds. Your case should do fine with deprecations.
Now that I think about it, I remember a deprecation-related frustration I had in my day job. Our project depended on libraries A and B. Both libraries depended on WidgetLib v1.0. Everything was good for a long time.
A new version of A came out with some features we wanted, so we upgraded. But the new A required WidgetLib v1.1. Now, when B interfaced with WidgetLib, it would occasionally get functionDeprecated warnings and/or crashes.
"Surely you could organize your project so that A and B have separate copies of WidgetLib with different versions?", you suggest. I tried, it didn't work ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@Aran-Fey In honour of both your suggestion here and also for bringing the HTML code to my attention some time back, you'll be pleased to know that this is now handled by the server responding with a 418 if it sees a version mismatch in the payload
I'm trying to get 5 different repos to talk properly to each other :'(
Finally got round to cleaning everything up. The is_postcodes flag just saved a headache against time pressures
I imagine that there are a variety of stories like mine, where the right solution is to clean up the mess that I made myself instead of asking the WidgetLib maintainers to bandaid the problem for me. But if the WidgetLib maintainers consistently say "sounds like a 'you' problem" to everybody on their issues page, it's maybe not a good look
I'm feeling quite conflicted about this as a library writer and library user
I want to deny responsibility for extra work in all possible roles and scenarios, is that so much to ask
@Aran-Fey the only pattern I've seen recur is "at least two versions". Sometimes they are just floated around as the Sword of Damocles, like collections(?!\.abc). Sometimes the deprecation warning itself specifies "two versions from now". Although now I'm realising that I don't usually pay attention to DeprecationWarning vs PendingDeprecationWarning (although the latter is invisible by default)
All deprecated functions in KevinScript are phased out stochastically. They call random.random(), and if the result is lower than 0.1, the process segfaults. Otherwise, the function executes normally.
The 0.1 factor grows in size with each version release until it hits 1. Then I remove the function on the next release.
As long as I hash a password like 1 million times with salt and pepper of course, is it useful to hash each password a different number of times like 1 million + 1-1000? Or would that be unnecessary?