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20:02
That feeling when you remove the dead commented-out code from a file, and now it's half as tall as it used to be
Uh oh, a three hundred line long function whose name ends with "temp", in a file that hasn't been modified in two years.
That's a funny definition of "temp".
time is relative, after all
Hmm, it tries to fetch data from a file that doesn't exist. How did this ever work?
WGH
WGH
20:31
oh, damn, this's been a while since I've had problems with circular imports
the last time I encounterd such imports everything was fine, partially initialized module did no harm
but this time I'm using relative imports (from . import x) and something went wrong
@WGH what's the issue?
WGH
WGH
stackoverflow.com/questions/6351805 - this one, essentially
I guess these ImportErrors just suggest that I should revise my design, hehe
So I've been down voted on an answer I gave and no one left a comment. I was wondering if this is the right place to ask people about why that may have happened.
If any expert has five seconds stackoverflow.com/questions/18859540/…
20:46
@Rawrgulmuffins, what's your question ?
@AsTeR what's wrong with the answer provided ?
WGH
WGH
@AsTeR that was so simple you could as well ask this here instead of cluttering SO
The answer wasn't here a couple second
dict and zip is the cleanest way in my opinion
very useful
Many thanks
alright, new question: I have an action that I want to take anytime any sort of Exception is encountered within try:except blocks... how can I extend the Exception class to do the normal function, but add in my custom handlers as well?
WGH
WGH
20:50
one of the many reasons why one should at least try some functional programming
@sadmicrowave do you want your exception to be caught in two except blocks? I don't quite understand
so I have a bunch of try:except blocks all over my program, rather than inserting this custom statement at the end of each except block, I thought I could extend the Exception class with something like:

class Exception( Exception):
....

and add in the statements there
WGH
WGH
ah, so you want to extend an existing class
:) indeed
WGH
WGH
it seems it's not possible
WGH
WGH
20:56
TypeError: can't set attributes of built-in/extension type 'exceptions.Exception'
so, let me tell you alittle bit more about my case then: I am using selenium to create a scraper and the pyvirtualdisplay module to obviously create a virtual display to push my selenium browser to. When any exception within a try:except block gets raised within my program I want to call browser.close() and display.quit() [or close()] whichever the syntax is
WGH
WGH
why don't this logic into outer try/except block?
this way nothing will be repeated
why don't put*, I mean
@sadmicrowave you don't have to subclass an exception for that
that is what the try/except statement is for
:) thanks all
21:02
try:
    # do something that raises an error
except Exception:
    browser.close()
or something like that, I'm not sure what exactly is you want
although I don't recommend you this kind of behavior, since this means, that a lot of exceptions will pass silently
A better design should be specify on which exceptions do you really want to catch, like:
except (TypeError, AttributeError, NameError):
    # do something
@Paco So I'm not sure what's wrong with it, that's why I'm asking. =P

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18737255/dynamic-fields-depending-of-previous-fields-with-wtforms/18775088#18775088
WGH
WGH
using backslashes? :)
@Rawrgulmuffins you should definitely have to use string formatting 'name = {} : role = {} : active = {}'.format(user.user_name, user.role, user.is_active) or at least '%s' % thing -- although I don't know what's wrong with your answer (I didn't check if it is working or not), but your indentation is horrible
WGH
WGH
BTW, one of the factors that sometimes deter me from using complicated comprehensions it that I'm not sure how to format them
21:18
@PeterVaro alright, that helps. What's wrong with the indentation?
WGH
WGH
@PeterVaro this factor, too :)
however, I usually get a lot of pleasure when writing some awesome comprehension
I rarely receive any from for loops
@Rawrgulmuffins I mean the problem is not exactly with indentation but with your code formatting
WGH
WGH
call it fetish or anything
as @WGH pointed at, you should never use `\` as a line-breaker!
@WGH as a matter of fact, list comprehensions are cool, just like lambdas and ternary conditionals
but using only them, because they seems more pythonic is a stupid thing
because readability counts! and if you are doing something like this:
([(Class.method() if thing else OtherClass.method(), my_dict['some_string']) for j in i] for i, thing in my_function(arg1, arg2) if thing != CONSTANT)
^ this is a really stupid example, but I think you get the point
WGH
WGH
21:26
oh, I did write something like that: govnokod.ru/11909 (don't mind the Russian site, jus look at the code)
this is unpythonic, hard to understand and hard to read
WGH
WGH
though I knew it is unpythonic from the beginning
I just wanted to have some fun with comprehensions
beside, Python's ternary operator is something I dislike
besides*
ternary operator in C-like languages is easier to read, in my opinion
well, it is a matter of taste. I like it more than the condition ? if_true : if_false
WGH
WGH
are you referring to obscure punctuation?
the python ternary operator is more natural, like plain english: do something if this is true else do some other thing
@WGH am I referring what?
WGH
WGH
21:31
@PeterVaro to what you dislike in C-like ternary
sort of, yes
WGH
WGH
@PeterVaro but would you order then-condition-else this way in if-blocks?
I wouldn't, but I would order it in natural language
WGH
WGH
I dunno, sometimes I'd use one way, sometimes - another
I really like the way, that we have plain english operators. like in or is not or or or and
these are the tiny little things, that makes python so much understandable
WGH
WGH
21:34
I like that, too
easier to learn, to memorise, to write it on a keyboard, etc.
sure, sometimes they are longer a few characters..
but who cares?
:)
anyway, I gotta go now, my pizza has arrived
rhubarb all
WGH
WGH
some people actually believe that shorter is always better
Just quickly popping on folks - I have a question for a change
Does anyone have a good resource for writing a custom key function for sorted() ?
i am a python noob who needs help
is anyone out there?
[aafghani-01:~ amir.afghani]$ python marquee.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "marquee.py", line 38, in <module>
sendTextToMarquee("foobar", line);
TypeError: sendTextToMarquee() takes exactly 1 argument (2 given)
i'm getting this error
and my method definition looks like this
def sendToMarquee(message, serverAddress):
does anyone know why the interpreter doesn't like this?
21:41
Because sendTextToMarquee != sendToMarquee?
WGH
WGH
...that's what I wanted to say
let me see if thats it
ugh, i hate starting a new language
thank you guys
WGH
WGH
the more languages you know, the easier each one will be
No worries. Good luck. You should start to love Python sooner rather than later ;)
@WGH +1
22:28
Rhubard y'all

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