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11:39
hey , does anyone knows where are python's logs on ubuntu ?
Python has logs?
Do you mean the logs of your own program? Or CPython's logs? Or something else?
12:27
@Aran-Fey yes, my program's logs, its my first time in ubunto , before in cpanel i used to look for a file right next to the application is where all logs are saved stdrr.log, I assumed ubuntu has the same system?
if not I can build my own logging system but I think there is an easier way to do that
I've never used the logging module before, but I'm pretty sure it doesn't write anything to a file unless you tell it to
but it doesn't write anything to the ssh either
when i ran python on windows using cmd, i can see the entire log live, but in ubuntu it's always clean , nothing is getting logged on the ssh
 
1 hour later…
13:48
If I want to check if a regex match corresponds to True/False, I have to type cast the match object into bool, right?
if bool(re.match(...)) == expectation, with expectation can be True or False
It doesn't look very elegant to me. So I thought maybe I'm overlooking some operator?
Or a re function that is a better fit
14:01
Just do if re.match(...): (or if not re.match(...):)
Unless you're saying you literally have a variable named expectation, then what you have is already the best solution
@Aran-Fey Thanks for the reply :) But that's not what I meant
-1
Q: How to find out if a regex search is successful or unsuccessful, depending on another variable?

rattlesnakeIf I want to find out if a regex search was successful, I write: if re.search(pattern, text): # this will run if search was successful But what do I do if I have another variable expectation, which is True or False and I want to find out if the re.search result matches my expectation? Is the...

I turned it into a question
馃槀 Hahaha and it's already downvoted and closed
Wiktor is still terrible with duplicates, I see
I mean, I understand it's hard to keep up with spam - but it's equally frustrating to get your questions closed for the wrong reasons... "This question already has answers here" is just not true
The king and simultaneously also court jester of the regex tag
^ is bitwise xor by the way. The boolean equivalent is !=
@Aran-Fey Yeah, I know. It was an example. If you add the bool() typecast, you can also use ^ to do what I want
14:15
Actually that wasn't exactly true, != doesn't really have anything to do with booleans
"If this question doesn鈥檛 resolve your question, ask a new one." 馃う In the future, every question will begin with 3 paragraphs explaining why it's not a duplicate, otherwise overzealous moderators will keep closing questions as soon as they see some word they've seen in another question before... Can't be bothered to read the whole question before closing it. It's sometimes exhausting on this site.
@rattlesnake I do think that it's not a good question. The question should've been "Is there a re method which simply returns True or False?" and nothing else. All that stuff about a variable and ^ has no business being there.
It's also not necessarily a regex question
It's not exactly a difficult question to understand, but you did throw in 1 or 2 red herrings
Yes I understand that. On one hand, its not a regex question, because I just want to compare a non-boolean to a boolean. On the other hand, if there's a regex method that return a boolean, I'm happy, too
14:22
I don't really understand what you're complaining about here. It's true that the original duplicate was terrible, but Wiktor corrected himself just 2 minutes later. Where's the problem?
True. I didn't see that, thanks. So it seems like there no explicit boolean regex search. I will have to typecast into bool myself. 馃憤
@rattlesnake side note: that's why you can always ping gold badge holders who hammer a question
@AndrasDeak--小谢邪胁邪校泻褉邪褩薪褨 How does that work? For me, it doesn't even show the username who did it? You don't have to answer, though. I'm pretty sure I can find the answer somewhere on meta.stackexchange or something. I'll remember for next time. Thanks for letting me know :)
14:38
@rattlesnake same as any other reply, it just doesn't auto-complete for you. Strip the whitespace out of the name
And hope they don't have special characters that make it fiddly :)
@rattlesnake you can see the close voters in the timeline I think. Dumb new interface.
Does it match on the first few characters like chat? @rog is enough to ping me in chat, for example
 
2 hours later…
17:02
hey, I have noticed that my flask app gets 502 if I used ports 3000 or 5000, is there is any reason for that ?

i have a test server of ubunto 20.04 ,Nginx,gunicorn , python , flask , flask_socketio, eventlet , flask_cors

basically, if I redirected traffic on nginx to 127.0.0.1:3000 or 127.0.0.1:5000 , the site go down , but 127.0.0.1:8000 works well , does anyone know why ?
17:36
@LoopingDev Do you mean stdout, i.e. stuff from stuff from print and such?
Yes, because you have misconfiguration nginx
Misconfigured*. This'll be a fun one to debug from my phone; I'm off to a good start
@roganjosh lol I still appreciate you and your phone efforts :D
You would need to show the nginx code (off-site and link back here)
@MisterMiyagi yea but I kinda buit my own logger instead.
@roganjosh sure but it's like 7 lines.
That already sounds like it could be a problem. I'd be expecting ~40 but maybe that's with TLS enabled
17:40
remember that this site as for this moment is just a test project, I started with something very simple, just to use ubuntu for the first time in my life and to host something a bit complicated like socketio on it , so the website is just have 2-3 functions
home page that returns ( helloworld ) , 1 socketio (connect ) and one (disconnect )
nginx is hella complicated but even the entry, baseline code can do quite a lot. I'll have a look now\
This doesn't look right: proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8000/socket.io;
Why proxy-pass to the URL that you're capturing in the first place?
@roganjosh that is actually what migule ( developer of socketio ) asked me to do, it's in the flask_socketio doc, let me get a link
Yes please
hey asked me to start by following the settings here just to get it to work and then I could improve it from there
you'll notice that he has it on port 5000, for some reason port 5000 gave me 502 bad gateway, so I switched to 8000 and it worked
I was just about to pick up on the port number. What port are you launching gunicorn on?
17:52
i'm using the same example code to launch it so probably the default
gunicorn --worker-class eventlet -w 1 module:app
And what does it say when you launch it? It will probably say "listening on port: XXXX"
"If the PORT environment variable is defined, the default is ['0.0.0.0:$PORT']. If it is not defined, the default is ['127.0.0.1:8000']." here
@LoopingDev Meaning what exactly? Doesn't it write to stdout?
So it's no surprise. You can't get nginx to redirect to a port that isn't serving the app. The reason you get a 502 is because you're effectively delivering your traffic/deliveries to the person living at the other end of your street.
The IP address effectively gets your street, and the port is the door number that's either open and expecting you, or just closed with a big sign saying "Beware the giant wall of fire I have installed here"
Slightly less relevant when we're talking about localhost... I guess the analogy there would have to be a very isolated community with complex diplomatic hierarchies and... I think I'm going off-topic
17:59
@roganjosh loool , oh yeah that make sense, so based on this the problem is not just port 3000 or 5000, its every port beside 8000 lol
thank you so much !
@MisterMiyagi no i made my code that writes the log to a new file ( I called it pyLogs) but I learned that ubuntu doesn't write to file unless we tell it to do so
if u are interested i could share my code with u, I found it on StackOverflow somewhere.
My fun now is trying to understand proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8000/socket.io; but I was just happy when I got nginx running and then left it alone so I probably won't dig too deep on that
Eh, it's a relative path on port 80. Makes sense. That was a short mystery
@roganjosh honestly yea, i litterally caged myself in my room didn't even do any of the work I supposed to do for my job :D for like 3-4 days to learn how to use socketio and ubuntu with all of it's necessary configurations and dependencies :D
i'm gonna be in a big trouble but I'll try to make it up to my company some how like working on a weekend or over time lol
80 is the HTTP port. If you have a server, you wouldn't open ports 3000, 5000, 8000, 8080 etc. to the open world. You keep them locked behind your firewall. However, you allow port 80 to be open and nginx is your security guard that will allow/deny stuff going through
If it lets things go through, it'll redirect based on the URL patterns you provide. location /socket.io is one of those, so it passes the request on to your server running your... server. I wish there was a clearer way to distinguish between servers listening on ports and hardware servers but I'm pretty sure I've lamented this before
18:18
@roganjosh I loved the way you've described it, that was so interesting! and was easy to understand, so only port 80 is allowed for visitors, if someone tried to go to port 5000/8000 right away, he will have to be redirected to port 80 first or would the server reject him right away?
80 is the port that accepts HTTP requests, 443 for HTTPS requests. I think you can bend these rules, but why would you? They're the two ports you'd want open to general traffic, then you get nginx listening on both of them to decide whether the request is let in
Don't open 443 unless you have SSL certificates and you know what SSL/TLS means. In other words, don't open that port in the firewall unless it's needed
@roganjosh Yes I understand, thank you <3 :)
 
2 hours later…
20:41
Hi everyone! I have a question I hope you guys can answer for me. Shouldn't there be multiple infinity constants in Python? I am asking this question because in mathematics, it can be proven that there are in fact many infinities. For example, the set of real numbers has a cardinality greater than that of the natural numbers. Now, in Python, there is an infinity constant, but there is only one of them. Also, it seems there is only a float infinity. So shouldn't there be at least a few more?
Why, what would you use them for?
Python doesn't even have a way to represent "the set of natural numbers", so what's the point of adding a constant that represents the size of this set?
Plus, you can make up however many infinite sets as you want. The set of all even numbers is larger than the set of all numbers divisible by 3, which in turn is larger than the set of numbers divisible by 4. Do you need constants for all of those, as well?
It's used a lot in pure maths, so...
Also, they are all the same size.
You have to be careful with infinities.
Sounds like another reason not to add them :P
Yeah, but the set of real numbers has a greater size than the set of natural numbers. And the powerset of the real numbers has a greater size than the real numbers.
20:50
Also keep in mind that infinity is a float. It's part of the specification for floats. Adding more infinities would lead to confusion because they wouldn't be floats
the only reason inf makes sense is due to the IEEE standard that defines it
@MathGeek how does that affect Python code?
You are proposing a solution to a problem that is not there.
Wait, what do you mean by 'no'?
Shouldn't there be multiple infinity constants in Python? No. So shouldn't there be at least a few more? No.
Does a 3rd-party module exist that implements all of these infinities?
20:54
I'm having a hard time believing that a lot of people need this
A lot of people need this, on paper. Not in Python code, I'd think.
@AndrasDeak--小谢邪胁邪校泻褉邪褩薪褨 So just one? Then it doesn't really count
You don't normally argue about cardinality of discrete and continuous sets in Python. If there's a library that does this, you have to argue there.
How about we add a constant that's literally 2蟺 when there's already a constant for 蟺?
It really makes more sense for this kind of thing to be implemented in a math-specific 3rd-party module, rather than the stdlib or even the language itself
21:01
@Aran-Fey Yeah that's fair.
there's some side discussion about cardinalities at github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/2995, an open issue from 2014
This conversation reminded me of a rarely-used constant in python, so now I bring you today's installment of "writing code like a psychopath":
>>> import numpy as np
>>> arr = np.arange(2*3*4).reshape(2, 3, 4)
>>>
>>> arr[Ellipsis, 0]
array([[ 0,  4,  8],
       [12, 16, 20]])
The 0 threw me off, for sure
for the sake of non-numpy users that should actually be spelled as arr[..., 0] which is a lot more readable
21:12
@AndrasDeak--小谢邪胁邪校泻褉邪褩薪褨 what point are trying to make :-)
@Aran-Fey presents code with "writing code like a psychopath". You reply "meh, I can read that fine"
Option 1: "I can read that fine therefore it can't be that psychopathic."
Option 2: ...
I think you meant Option 2: Ellipsis
^ that
Protip: If you're struggling to make a point, just use an ellipsis. It contains no less than three points! Couldn't be easier
22:00
^ Saved me during my arguments
Wes
Wes
22:47
\o
do any of you folks have the paid version of pycharm or can suggest a better ide?
I don't use an IDE, but can you say what you're missing from free PyCharm? That might help others who do.
assuming it's something you can put your finger on
Wes
Wes
specifically i wanted to ask if partial() preserved the documentation of the original function in the paid version of pycharm. it doesn't in the community one
btw, i think i've found a hack to preserve the documentation but i can't get it to work
class MyClass(OriginalClass):
    pass

MyClass.__init__ = partial(MyClass.__init__, optional_param="default value")

what i am trying to do here is to change the default value of optional parameters of OriginalClass
but i think i need to bind self
May I ask why you're trying to do that?
No Andras, it's still April
Wes
Wes
to preserve the documentation, the type hints
22:58
Eternal April the first? Would explain a lot.
@Wes No, why are you monkeypatching a class's __init__?
Wes
Wes
to preserve the original documentation and the autocompletion in the ide, the type hints
or documentation is non pythonic?
Why are you changing __init__'s parameters?
Wes
Wes
i am changing the default arguments in my own class
You mean the subclass is overriding the parameters of the parent class?
Wes
Wes
23:02
the subclass is only changing its default arguments for now
So you have written a class with a def __init__(...): inside, and then you retro-actively modify that __init__. Why? Why not just write it correctly in the first place?
Presumably they need both signatures
Wes
Wes
i am inheriting init from a parent class, to which i want to change some default arguments
i don't need both signatures, i just need to change a default argument
If you don't need both then you should indeed change the parent :P
Wes
Wes
what if it's a third party library
23:07
Anyway, you could use functools.wraps to copy the docs of the original init. But do the wrapping inside the class body.
Still smells weird.
@Wes submit a PR
Wes
Wes
it has nothing to do with the library, the default argument is my own use case
Ok, in that case I'm not sure if partial is the ideal way to do it, but more importantly, I have to question the idea of copying the docstring. If your function behaves differently, shouldn't you document that? If you just copy the docstring, it'll likely contain some wrong information
Wes
Wes
class MyFrame(sg.Frame):
pass

Frame.__init__ = partial(Frame.__init__, expand_x=True, border_width=1, relief=sg.RELIEF_GROOVE)
@Aran-Fey parameters and types are identical
But the default values aren't.
Wes
Wes
i hoped partial() would keep the documentation for all the parameters except the ones i am filling in
sounds the logical thing to do
23:11
That's... not really possible? It would have to parse the docstring, and in order to do that, it would need to know what format it's written in
Wes
Wes
i am saying it doesn't work in pycharm
and since it doesn't work and i need a workaround for that, because the __init__ in question has like 40 parameters, whose type hints i don't want to rewrite
Alright, I'm not convinced this is a good idea, but you can just do Frame.__init__.__doc__ = sg.Frame.__init__.__doc__
Wes
Wes
@Aran-Fey that only works if pycharm can understand it
Possible alternative:
Wes
Wes
23:16
from functools import partialmethod
this worked
@functools.wraps(sg.Frame.__init__)
def __init__(self, *args, optional_param="default value", **kwargs):
    super().__init__(*args, optional_param=optional_param, **kwargs)
Wait, partial doesn't just change defaults...
Might want to keep some of the original attributes intact, like __module__
@AndrasDeak--小谢邪胁邪校泻褉邪褩薪褨 For keyword arguments, that's actually what it does. The caller can override the value you passed to partial
Wes
Wes
23:19
interesting. is there a way to actually hide the arguments i am filling?
That explains my earlier confusion about a riddle
@Wes don't make them arguments in Aran's last snippet
Wes
Wes
i expected to actually remove the parameters to be honest
Definitely don't copy docstrings then, though...
Wes
Wes
but i was prepared to having slightly incompatible signatures since i am never changing the arguments again
I still don't quite understand the goal tbh...
Wes
Wes
23:22
i posted it above. i just don't want to repeat these arguments every time i create a frame

Frame.__init__ = partial(Frame.__init__, expand_x=True, border_width=1, relief=sg.RELIEF_GROOVE)
Changing the function signature is one thing, but changing the docstring is another, and changing the signature information (i.e. what you get as output from inspect.signature(func)) is yet another
It's still unclear to me which one(s) of these 3 you want to change
Wes
Wes
any one of these will do as long i can trick pycharm to give me said documentation even when i am overriding the default arguments
my original code looked like the one you posted before (even though i was still trying to figure out how to unpack....)

class MyClass(ParentClass):
def __init__(self, *args, optional_param="default value", **kwargs):
ParentClass.__init__(self, *args, optional_param=optional_param, **kwargs)

but then MyClass() would give me no documentation
@Wes at least you probably don't need a better IDE :P
Should work with a @functools.wraps
Wes
Wes
so is that basically saying that the documentation is the same as the parent method?
ie decoration without signature change
23:28
It's saying that both functions are equivalent, which is untrue, but should achieve your goal of seeing the docstring
Partial still obscures the signature, right?
The tradeoff is that if someone does something like inspect.signature(MyClass.__init__) they'll get bogus results
Out of curiosity, does pycharm parse rst to some extent in docstrings?
Even (intersphinx) links perhaps?
Wes
Wes
it's not that partial is understood by pycharm
i am tricking pycharm into thinking that __init__ was never overridden, so it gives me the original documentation, the one in the super class
If that's a reply to me, I'm talking about the signature. At the top of help(Frame), probably.
I'm on mobile and off to bed so can't check
Wes
Wes
23:34
i have no idea how pycharm works. or python. i was answering to @ functools.wraps
Wes
Wes
which is ignored by my version of pycharm. might work in the paid one, maybe
Yeah, like the feature where you can only have more than 3 levels of inheritance in the full version

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