@NordineLotfi There is also the DRY principle and Code-Reuse principle that advice you to write small functions that can be reused instead of one giant function that uses code you are using elsewhere probably again.
@Thingamabobs I mean, I could really make a stand and argue that everything will move to being browser-based due to cloud providers and (if it actually gains steam) WASM. But I'm not sure that's the kind of stand you're looking for?
I think the main problem with tkinter is that it's simply not powerful/flexible enough for a serious GUI. Sometimes you just need more than basic buttons and frames and labels
I only ever used Tkinter when I was first learning python so I can't really talk from experience. But I build tonnes of interfaces for business to control and monitor production facilities, which would normally have been software packages with GUIs themselves, only I build all the interfaces via web frameworks
@Aran-Fey so basically, portability? or do you just want it to be inside the actual browser (and interact with other non-browser part of your running OS)
@Aran-Fey I'm glad we can agree those two don't have good/enough documentation, sadly, tkinter isn't there either
@Aran-Fey async should be possible. running in a browser is kind a hard to do. Do other toolkit offer this functionality ? Because, at the moment it is kinda enigma to me. Either you have a normal app or you do have a web app. Don't you ?
@Aran-Fey That is something I hear often. But for tkinter there are thousands of tutorials and websites showing how things can be done. There is the documentation of NMT and the "mother" documentation but yea, it points to tcl, but python's implementation is really straight forward.
@NordineLotfi I might be able to do this in Windows, but nothing I could do in other OS since I just using Windows :P
@NordineLotfi Ideally it should run in an actual browser, but I guess that's only a feature if the programming language can also run in the browser, like Rust
@roganjosh I don't have anything against WASM (I never used it), but from what I understood, aren't the system resources inaccessible from WASM side? Unless: 1. you use a server-client setup, and the server part will handle the "system resources" and other restricted parts, and communicate with the client part (wasm). 2. You convert/run everything on WASM side, (even computation heavy part).
You could probably get around that. dash, for example, could be considered the foundation of a GUI that is programmed in python but runs in the browser. But it's so far from being generalised that I would never stack it up against tkinter. Still, it wraps bootstrap for component placement and you need never <heavily caveating this> write JS
@NordineLotfi that's not my understanding of it, though I'm still only pencilled in to play with it properly. The bytecode should be sent to the client and it should use their resources
Actually, I'm not sure what your "unless" means here since (2) seems to cover it, so what is missing in "aren't the system resources inaccessible from WASM side?"?
Ah. Well, to my knowledge, there are issues about passing secrets in WASM (for example, db access) but I could imagine a reasonably happy medium whereby I could use a regular web interface for all the simple stuff and then pass back a solver with all the necessary parameters, then let the client PC sound like a jet aircraft as it chugs through all the iterations
I'll have to play with it first, though. Atm it might be the blind leading the blind. There's a lot of hype and it's hard to pin down concrete examples, for my domain at least
However, even without WASM, it's all gonna be web-based interfaces in the end; I'm almost certain of that. I could do most of my work on a Raspberry Pi if I really needed to, because I have plenty of resources to offload to. And I could do the same as a customer on the other side of the solvers
@NordineLotfi you don't generally get to pick the fans in laptops/Macbooks but I certainly can scale to any number of cores you have :)
@roganjosh I see. I never doubted you could out-cores me though. In my mind, I already see you with thousand of Amd threadripper running dozen of things related to your domain :D
There's a couple of things that I can't visualise quite correctly in a format for a GPU, and they're not insubstantial aspects to a useful solver. Maybe I will try it out. I've said several times before (possibly not to you) that nobody has a proper implementation for driver breaks
@roganjosh it's all gonna be web-based interfaces in the end; I'm almost certain of that. -- but all you want is basically be able to have something like an echo client, don't you?
so your application response in an "easy way" from the other side of the world. Is that what you are looking for ?
Not in the slightest. Stuff I have produced in the past is fully stateful and impacted every user in the factory. It wasn't a dashboard, it was a control panel
I had a single server running a single flask app. That was broadcast across a whole factory. The Production Planner could sign in and generate a full production plan for the next few months. Every Production Manager was logging into the same site and then saw their plan for the week. I read machine data in real time, to see conformance to plan. All of this is in a central control panel. How is that any less than what you would build with tkinter?
It's a full GUI, just in the browser. It wasn't just interactive graphs - if the production planner decided to cut a shift for a department, there was a section for them to do that, and it impacted everything in real time. The whole thing was recalculated and immediately communicated to every user
I see. It reminds me of a common antipattern that novices try to employ -- they create a textbox / dropdown / etc, then immediately try to get its value without running the mainloop. They expect the user to have typed in something or selected something by that point, but in reality the window has only been open for a nanosecond
@roganjosh I mean messages on the web can be targeted and corrupted, that seems to me common sense, with a "closed system" it should be harder to get sensitive data.
It might be interesting to write a framework that allows that antipattern to actually work exactly as the novice developer expects. Perhaps the main process suspends itself until the user actually does enter something. (although this begs the question, how do you tell when the user is finished entering something? Hard mode: no explicit "submit" button)
@Kevin gotcha, that is what I was thinking @roganjosh was suggesting with the web application. And I think that is an interesting feature that might be worth a try
re: web security. Keep in mind that an intranet site can only be accessed by users that have already been vetted for intranet access. That filters out the average evil user.
@roganjosh No but there could be an entry point out of the box. But I would need to think about that a little bit. Not sure how I would implement it in a useful way.
The evil user would have to get a job at roganjosh's company before he could start wreaking havoc. At that point it would probably be easier for him to just pick up a pipe wrench and smack some expensive looking machines
But there are tonnes of things that would be exposed to the internet too - you probably use online banking, for example. Also consider that local machines are probably less secure - every company will have that one person that'll download a virus that could either work locally or run rampant across the company network
one way would be to make a framework that works across the different remote configurations. Could be through internet/intranet, or through tcp/etc, might be done with socket, websocket, etc. The problem then would be to make this available to people in an intranet and internet settings. I can concede that with a wasm/web application, one can just use an URL and see it being displayed, but with a non-web application, you would need to go through some hops in order to do the same.
To be clear here, I'm not talking at all about WASM. I think that has its own risks that I don't properly know or understand. But you can make browser GUIs without it
In any case, I know a lot of software now that either gives you the option of "self-hosted" or "cloud" and it's a web server interface in either case. It's all moving to the browser.
@roganjosh people will still need to build browser.. snipping tools.. office tools. Don't think you can do everything or should do everything with a web application. I think that is just a portion of what is needed on the market.
The company I work for insists on us using google services for all office tools. So, googlesheets etc. We've also got SOC-2 and ISO 27001 accreditation. We're not supposed to do anything locally
I mean, there are a lot of things I could say in that regard, but I'm gonna refrain since there would be way too much to write, and by extent, way too much to read for the patient viewers.
That's fair. Also, I have to say that I'm not exactly happy with this move in general anyway. I have always valued having something physical in my hand, even if I can't read a HDD anyway... but it's here. And putting everything online leaves people unable to control their own home lighting if the system goes down. I'm just playing devil's advocate in some sense, but I believe my prediction is true anyway
I'm not happy about it either. I first noticed it with Win8 and Chromebooks. Now everyone and everything tries to do the same. In a way, Google Chrome did show some possibility of making it harder (eg: by removing/lessening the permissions of certain key features to make browsers access systems resources more easily, mostly because of existing vulnerability, etc) but I don't think this will stop anyone from doing it still.
Maybe my beloved AS400 that still had products listed with prices in "d" before decimalisation of our currency?
@MisterMiyagi ah, maybe I misspoke sorry. 2 different companies. Indeed, the flask software was running locally on the intranet. Where I'm at now, everything is online
another question that I'm fiddling around is licenses and until somewhere in the future (shouldn't be forever with tk 8.7) there is no SVG support and if I should use pycairo in the framework or PIL or none at all and leave it to the users what they want to use if any. Any thoughts on this one?
user20508351
how to send a specific amout of packets and return only answered packets ?
@Thingamabobs if you ever get an answer, feel free to ping me to it. I'm actually curious about similar cases, where I want to make a project with support for X features, but don't know whether to upload it with X,Y,Z licenses.
there is already an help for which license to pick for your open source lib. My question is more about if the licenses underneath will scare users off. I'm confident to find an answer there and will look for a link to that help I was referring to
@Thingamabobs so you mean like, for people who wouldn't want to contribute to the project, or use the project? I know both are valid reasons for some people, although the latter would be a bit weird but not uncommon (GNU fans, and such)
I started dowsing off to some random Netflix series - "Flavorful Origins". Good lord. After some lengthy explanation about how people make Souherb (a kind of nettle soup, basically) there was a bombshell - "but some people take this a whole lot further. They pour the soup into a pan and stir fry it. The locals call this... 'stir-fried Souherb'". Mind. Blown.
@unknown you need to find somewhere else to discuss this
"Dowsing is a type of divination employed in attempts to locate ground water" I don't know how to even spell the English slang. Both would make Netflix series in themselves - I'm either out trying to divine water with sticks, or the other is I'm taking different doses of different intoxicants. Note to self - just use "starting to fall asleep"