Hey all, wondering if you can point me in the right direction - I have a class that extends a base class. Upon instantiation, I want to check if the subclass has one of the classes implemented from its base but I'm not sure the best way. hasattr(self, '[method]') returns the method from super not the child - so it always appears as its implemented.
Can anyone recommend and reading on unit testing in Python? I'm not working with Django but instead focused on writing an app that communicates with google cloud.
@Mikhail this is cool, I assumed one has to hack the parser to add new expressions, but after reading that it is syntactically correct and the byte code hack applied makes this a lot more doable that I thought it would be
I bet you could implement ++x for user-defined classes without hacking the Python engine, although it wouldn't be able to tell the difference between ++x and +(+x)
Oops, I thought I had a cool way to make x = +y; z = +x not trigger my custom preincrement behavior, but it doesn't work, and I don't know why I ever thought it would work.
guys anybody got any good articles on memory management during python script lifetime? I have run into an issue where the script i am running is consuming to much memory and even though i am manually removing variables and saving data to json files it still seems to use to much and want to leanr how to stop this
My gut tells me "if you're trying to manually deallocate objects because they're staying alive in your context for too long, maybe you need to use smaller contexts". One way of doing this is to ensure that all of your functions are short. The end of a function essentially dels all local variables it was using.
Disclaimer: Knowing too much about Python memory management may have negative effects on your outlook on life, the universe, and everything. Consult your doctor before ingesting knowledge of Python memory management. Don't drink and memory manage.
When it comes to memory management, I think an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. When you first assign to a variable, have a clear idea of its purpose, and how long it needs to live to fulfill that purpose. When you create objects, understand what values it is dependent on, and what objects it may be keeping references to. This includes both objects you create directly, and objects created by functions that you're calling.
@AndrasDeak Well hey, there's a thought. If memory management is really important, then using a language with more explicit memory tools may be a sensible choice.
Hi All, I am using openpyxl on Windows machine that runs very important spreadsheets and runs all time. I am logging into the machine using a different profile. Can I be sure that using openpyxl, which will open and close Excel spreadsheet, does not interfere with spreadsheets running on the other different profile
But if you have a file opened and excel crashes, then excel won't release its lock on that file. Meaning that next time you open it, you will be told that someone else currently has it open. In that case, you will have to manually delete the lock file
input = ["aaiabbc"]
# precondition -> variable length, user defined
sequences = ["aa","bb","ab","cc","bc"]
# n number of sequences
exp-output = ["aa","ab","bc"]
# i is ommitted (invalid, un-present sequence)
# traversal from the beginning
# note "bb" though apparently present is ommitted
need some help in approach
citing personal reasons i would like to avoid "re" involvement
@PIngu my first recommendation is to give a clear problem statement rather than a bunch of comments you only understand if you already know the problem
@AndrasDeak this is the error I get when I run a script called Untitled.xsh,
c:\program files (x86)\microsoft visual studio\shared\python37_64\lib\runpy.py:125: RuntimeWarning: 'xonsh.main' found in sys.modules after import of package 'xonsh', but prior to execution of 'xonsh.main'; this may result in unpredictable behaviour warn(RuntimeWarning(msg)) c:\program files (x86)\microsoft visual studio\shared\python37_64\python.exe: loader for xonsh.__amalgam__ cannot handle xonsh.main
For the first one, I considered it plausible because code inside func2 can access local variables defined in func without qualifying them first, right (without the dot prefix)
That's still unclear to me. Does a "scope" encompass all variables the function can see, or those it can write to, or <insert a bajillion other interpretations here>
Thats what I was trying to figure out, because it seems that most resources use Definitoin B when they use the word "scope", but take a look at this answer: https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/273302/what-is-the-relationship-between-scope-and-namespaces-in-python
From the answer, "A scope defines which namespaces will be looked in and in what order." (I assume when a name is looked up). Wouldn't this be considered part of the "name resolution" process rather than a scope?
I was reading this answer about adding custom methods to built-in types, it seems that it is possible by subclassing the type, and then overloading or adding the methods you want. However, as the answer states, objects created via literal syntax still implement the normal dunder methods. Is there any reason this is so? For example
class int(int):
"""Changes plus operation to minus"""
def __init__(self,x):
self.x = x
def __add__(self, y):
return self.x - y
print(int(3) + int(5)) #Outputs -2
print(3 + 5) #Still outputs 8
You can literally define an int class that returns a custom string by overloading the __new__ method, so I am wondering why Python objects written in the second line fail to implement the new methods
@AstralWolf Well, python doesn't know how to create instances of your int class. How is python supposed to know what value(s) to pass into your class's constructor? What should happen if your __init__ doesn't take any arguments?
Exciting news in an email from Atlassian/Confluence (cc @MisterMiyagi). You can now apparently use emojis to "jazz up your page"! It's the change I've been waiting for
I'm not much of an expert, mind you. But what matters is that in the first case the interpreter first loads the literal 1, then it builds the list directly at the bytecode level, then returns that list. In the second case it loads the list name (whatever that is), then calls it with the argument 1, then returns the result. If you shadow list with your own type it will only be called in the latter case.