I would like your opinion regarding a small theoretical detail on an NLG (Natural Language Generator) system that I am building in Python and Java. Given my decent simplicity of construction, I don't know if I can still call it NLG or just sophisticated if/else software with so many rules (which ...
@Max_98 that doesn't seem like a suitable question for Stack Overflow at all. Now the bounty prevents us from closing it as off-topic / opinion-based / lacking focus; but don't be surprised if the bounty ends up attracting downvotes instead of answers
@smci Wow - I can't remember - that was 2015, seems like a lifetime ago. Reading the conversation, looks like it was in numexpr, but I really can't recall even the context.
@JonClements yeah, it is. I played with other stuff on openai myself, even though I don't necessarily like that kind of stuff usually (and have my own probably pedantic POV when it comes to AI...). Anyway, there are a couple existing open source clones of most of the stuff on openai if you're interested since many things they support are paid or don't provide the model they use
you don't. The HTTP model is generally "client sends request" -> "server answers". There's exceptions but they're not relevant to simple use-cases like this
so, in effect you send the client a web page that contains the JS that does the download request
the client triggers the download when he pushes the form button but that call ends with a Flask send_file() so I cannot even use render_template() here
that sounds like you want to first make a call preparing the download and showing some info and then have a seperate route to actually trigger the download
this is what I have right know: user selects some files and sends the form -> I make some checks, prepare a zip file (some of the files the user asked for maybe not available) and start the download
the thing that I don't have right now is a message where I could tell to the user the files that are not included in the zip
I don't have anything at hand. But you should probably break it down into its parts like usual: 1. how to handle the form submission request/reply from JS 2. how to display you message contained in a reply to the form submission route 3. how to trigger a download in the handler for the first reply (optionally how to poll for a long running process)
I avoid dataclasses because 99% of the time it would lead to different behavior than I'd get if I implemented the class manually. For example, the instances won't be hashable (unless you set eq=False). Writing the class manually is just less of a hassle than making @dataclass do what I want
I pretty much only use them in quick-n-dirty code where such concerns simply don't matter
Plus I made my own version of dataclass, so I just use that ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Your IDE might use your type annotations to deduce the types of other variables that you haven't annotated. But at no point should it change a type annotation you've written