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user559633
15:01
ah
I can't think off the top of my head, a good justification for using one. Other than, "the rock and the hard place I'm caught between requires me to have an associative collection, and an ordered collection"
user559633
it's a [{},{}] thing
@Kevin crowz likes dicts :)
I suspect that a programmer with infinite foresight would never use it. For us mortals, it's a handy tool for escaping from the corners we've painted ourselves into.
15:02
Ordered dict just contains a list of keys ordered by their entry into the dict. it's a very elegant solution.
brb
hi all. i'm akik. this is the first time i'm at this chat room.
Welcome.
Don't be afraid of all our strange customs here - some of us have way to much spare time.
Is there anything we can help you with? (@JonClements come say hello to our guest)
Hello @user2420437
@Inbar no - I don't recognise the smell - I'm staying behind the curtains...
15:07
thanks inbar rose
@JonClements Come on boy, (Don't worry akik, he won't bite)
Hello Akik - welcome :)
if one has a custom error class, that one wants to raise in another module, how can one prevent it to be printed out with the module name? Instead of: module_name.ErrorName: some message -> ErrorName: some message
Sadly, I'll have to resume being my afk and trying to sort some problems out :)
import it with:
from module_name import error_class
15:08
taht was my first guess
@user2420437: protip: if you use the "@" key, you can address the user directly. For example, "this is a message for @InbarRose". This way, the targeted user gets a notification as well ;]
but it is not working @InbarRose
can u please teach me something about pyqt progress bar?
and raise it on its own.
when you raise that error, raise it as error_class not module_name.error_class
I did that ^
15:09
You will need to show me some code then....
one sec
user559633
can someone do my work for me today so i can go drink instead
I'm too busy not doing my work
well, i know how to show copy progress of lots of files but i don't know how to show the progress of a single task.
@tristan Can I get your salary as well?
@user2420437 Is this part of TKinter?
user559633
15:11
@InbarRose sure
user559633
if os_details['type'] == 'Darwin' or 'Linux':
That should be:

if os_details['type'] in ['Darwin', 'Linux']:
user559633
My brain is foggy today. Is this going to be True for os_details['type'] == 'Darwin' OR os_details['type'] == "Linux' or is this going to do identity checking on 'Linux'?
user559633
oh, that's cleaner
15:12
i'm talking about pyqt
user559633
it is doing value comparison though, right?
@user2420437 I am not familiar with it, sorry.
@tristan It is checking if the value of os_details['type'] is the same as any values in the list ['Darwin', 'Linux']
ok. thank you for your kind response.
@InbarRose here it is:
# test.py
import x
a = x.Var()
a + 1

# x.py
from error import Error

class Var:

    def __add__(self, other):
        raise Error(other) from None

# error.py
class Error(Exception):

    def __init__(self, wrong_value):
        self.wrong_value = wrong_value

    def __str__(self):
        return 'Expected blahblahblah but got {}'.format(type(self.wrong_value).__name__)
What you were doing was checking if it was equal to 'Darwin' or if 'Linux' was a true value...
Think if ___ or __ :
You were hoping for: if something is __ or __:
user559633
15:14
@user2420437 does this not help you? stackoverflow.com/questions/19442443/…
Which in python is written as in
user559633
ah, thanks inbar, that's why i stopped and bounced it off someone
@PeterVaro And what are you getting?
@tristan, that was my post.
@tristan Sure. Now where is my salary? :)
user559633
15:15
i had a bad feeling in my stomach after writing that
@InbarRose one sec, I write this as a dummy version, did not test this (my original one is quite big now)
user559633
the longer version would have to be
`os_details['type']` == 'foo' or os_details['type'] == 'bar'`
user559633
okay, thanks
@InbarRose I got error.Error: Expected blahblahblah but got int
So instead we just check if the vale of os_details['type'] is in a list.
user559633
15:17
yeah, i did the in instead because it's cleaner :)
and not Error: Expected blahblahblah but got int
user559633
as you suggested
it's always so hard to find tutorials of programming at my level... it's either for like, a beginner or a grandmaster wizard programmer
user559633
brain just wouldn't give my fingers those words
@tristan its not just cleaner, it is the right way to do it.
user559633
15:17
well, yes
user559633
@InbarRose i live in nyc, so my salary mostly goes towards taxes ;)
@tristan, that's about busy indication only. it will not show u the progress in percentage.
is there anyone expert in pyqt?
@InbarRose so?
@PeterVaro : it really goes well! thanks by the way for your help, you'll see how far it is now :)
super-duper!
15:29
but, you probably will find it is a bad implementation : I use XML
I haven't used classes in Python in like forever
(mostly in order that I can read it easily with a text editor)
I didn't say that XML is bad, I only said, that you should use JSON cause it is lighter, easier to read, more like a Python dictionary, etc.
JSON is less easy to read for human with a text editor, don't you think so ?
user559633
I don't.
15:31
I couldn't make it work, and I could with XML, so maybe somebody later (if interested) will improve and convert to JSON?
15:53
@PeterVaro Sorry - busy at work... :s
okay, just let me know if you find any solution
:)
@PeterVaro : I have now implemented lots of things, I'll show you !
I now have a list L containing objects Texte() (=>Entries)
Example : L = [Texte(...), Texte(...)]

My question is : if I do L=[], the list is destroyed BUT the objects are not : the Entries are still displayed!
How should I do ?
you have to iterate through the list first, destroy each widget, and then destroy the list
Ok... Is it Pythonic ? Or more generally is it oriented-object-ic ?
Or should I replace the "list" of objects by an object containing child objects ?
Or should I avoid these details and focus on adding features first, and do this "beautifulying of the code " then ?
I'm not sure what you are talking about, but do what I told: go through, destroy them one by one, and empty the list.
16:03
Ok. is there a "standard" name for destroy an object class in Python ?
Like __init__ for creation ?
del
del object-name
@Basj those are tkinter widgets
and in the class, I should define : "def del(self): "
widget.destroy()
oh sorry
16:04
No no, Texte is an object containing an Entry
but Texte is not a widget
it should be a subclass
Let t=Texte()
I have :
t.entry => the widget
t.blah => some other things
t.blah2 => some other things
user559633
doesn't tkinter have a .destroy() ?
it does
What function is called when I do :
t = Texte()
user559633
oh, sorry, missed above
16:07
del t
class Texte(tkinter.Entry):

    def __init__(self, your_var1, your_var2, *args, **kwargs):
        tkinter.Entry.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
        self.blah = your_var1
        self.blah2 = your_var2
now you can use t=Texte(1, 2, root); t.destroy()
@PeterVaro : for you, blah is a child of the Entry ?
blah is an attribute
What I was talking about before...stackoverflow.com/questions/20548256/… Look how many damn answers this silly question gets.
Ok @PeterVaro
16:08
@InbarRose lol I answered it tooo :P
But more generally in Python, how to define what happens when a class is del ?
class Texte():
   def __init__ (self):
        #...
   def del (self):
        #...

a = Texte()
del a   # -> what happens here ?
@KDawG You do know it is like one of the most asked questions? You should VTC those asap.
@InbarRose VTC???? WTF???
16:10
@Basj What do you think happens?
@KDawG Don't get upset. VTC = Vote To Close
@Basj, You can override __delete__. But in this case, it's probably easier to make your class a sub-class of Entry or some other widget, and use destroy instead of del
So the good solution should be :


class Texte():
def __init__ (self):
#...
def __exit__ (self):
#...
@InbarRose I don't have enough rep for that
@Basj You could even employ a solution I just used as an answer.
@KDawG You can flag something and then say "should be closed for another reason" and its the same thing.....
16:11
@Basj, Nope, __exit__ has nothing to do with del. It manages objects when you use with.
@Kevin : thanks Kevin, I didn't know
@InbarRose any possible reason.....
@Bas - See this
lemme guess, too easy
The land of double-underscore methods is forever shrouded in mystery
16:12
@KDawG Off-Topic Does not show minimum understanding of the problem being solved
@KDawG Or - Duplicate (most likely) - and especially in this case.
@Kevin For you maybe :P
@InbarRose just got removed....
@Kevin I explained it a few lines earlier
There was a rather neat guide on HackerNews yesterday - A Guide to Python's Magic Methods
@PeterVaro Do you mean the Texte implementation you posted? Yes, that's a good approach
brb
16:15
brb too
I'll solve this later
For those who are interested how far I went, here is the lateest result https://github.com/basjo/bigpicture/blob/master/bigpicture0.py @Kevin @KDawG @PeterVaro

I implemented CTRL+click + mouse move
+ some other features ... Read/Write works but only if we click it Once per session ;) (not reread something already read... etc.)
See you later, and thanks for your answers again ! See you!
16:30
He asked the question again after it was closed once.
user559633
I don't have the points to close it
Well - I am sure that is true for most people in here. but you can still flag it to be closed.
It's been closed now anyway
" i have tried things like counter and it doesn't work." Ooh, so close to being an actual question! If only he had posted an sscce, expected output, etc etc
any idea for having a transparent background for a Entry widget in tkinter ?
I found stackoverflow.com/questions/19080499/… with attributes, but cannot make it work
16:52
Is there a built-in module that does smart word-wrapping?
Like, breaking on whitespace when possible
There was one tossing around here a while ago
The idea being to give a max-line length, and then get a long string - the function would add line breaks to keep the string correctly sized without destroying the integrity of the test (ie: trying to keep words/sentences together)
Found it, it's textwrap. Handy!
if I want to do something with the expression x/1 I use the __truediv__ magic method, but what if I want to do something with 1/x ? Is there a way, to do something with it?
oh.. stupid me.. there is a reflected arithmetic..
grrr.
17:27
wake up pythonistas
I'm up, what do do you want mom?
entertainment
Hi guys, so I'm new to python. I made a blackjack style game. I just don't know where to go from here though. Like how can I make the game visual with images instead of just text?
can i see it?
@codehorse I think this? wiki.python.org/moin/TkInter
17:33
thanks crowz
@hanleyhansen How much money are you going to be betting?
i can bet a couple kittens a pack of gum and a shoelace.
oohh, thats too high stakes for my game
Hey guys, In crawler i am using breadth first search method. How to know that there are no more url left to crawl in website. Basically end of website.
you could empty the house's cupboards if you win 2 hands in a row
@GamesBrainiac It looks very simple :)
17:38
then i want to play!
@thefourtheye Yea, it is, and its quite extensible. So knock yourself out :)
But, does it support dust.js?
@GamesBrainiac I really want to try dust.js with my Python site... Is it possible with any of the frameworks available?
17:58
flake8 is pretty useful
@Kevin thumbs up!
I love fractals so f**** much :)
Took a couple tries to get this one right
and you did this with tkinter?
nah, PIL
sigh -- okay
18:15
Plus imagemagick for coalescing all the pngs into one gif
gotta go, time for a meeting
that made my mind cry
Working as intended then
DSM
DSM
18:39
@Kevin: good catch. Can fix it using random.seed(prompt) or something else, I think-- you want to take it?
umm.. why 12.__truediv__(1) doesn't work, but ofc int.__truediv__(12, 1) does?
Nah, I've posted my own alternative solution. the seed idea is pretty good, though
Might even be more efficient than setting up all the encryption junk my answer requires
@PeterVaro, I think that's a symptom of the interpreter
it sees 12. and thinks, "this dot indicates that the fractional part of the number is coming up"
and then it flips out when you give it an underscore instead of a digit
I suspect (12).__truediv__(1) will work
YOU GAVE ME AN IDEA, one sec
yes
that's exactly what I tried out:)
it is working
Or just a space will work as well
>>> (12).__truediv__(1)
12.0
>>> 12 .__truediv__(1)
12.0
18:54
@PeterVaro : my zoom in / zoom out works now. Do you think it is possible to do a "smooth" zoom in ? ie instead of zoom change in 0.00001 sec, there is "fade" ?
change the step size of your zoom and will look like a smooth change
@thefourtheye Why not use the myraiad of different templating engines avaliable in python?
I mean flask comes builtin with jinja2.
But there's mako
And genshii
Sigh, why do some people embed their question inside their code sample?
Then you have to scan through the whole thing to find the comment explaining that there's a problem
Doubly worse if they have to mangle the code formatting, because SO rejects their post as "this appears to be all code" otherwise
@PeterVaro I implemented deletion of an Entry. When I ALT+RIGHT CLICK on an Entry, entry.destroy() is called, and it works : the entry is destroyed.
But a reference still exists in the list L.
So the idea would be : delete the object in the list?
19:09
L.remove(entry)
What happens if
a = MyObject(1)
b = MyObject(2)
L= [a, b]
del b
What is L then ?
IIRC, still [a,b]. del just disassociates an identifier from the value that it's holding.
If references to that value exist elsewhere, they remain there.
actually that is how garbage collection works in python
if you use the del it will lower the reference count of an object
but because one reference is still in that list
Agreed
the object itself won't be "killed"
19:13
ok
DSM
DSM
And it's worth noting that del doesn't call __del__; the language doesn't actually promise that __del__ will ever be called.
that is also true @DSM, I fixed my answer :)
    class Texte:
        def __init__(self):
            self.entry = Tk.Entry(root, bd=0)
            self.x = ...
            self.y = ...
            self.entry.bind("<Alt-Button-3>", lambda e: self.entry.destroy() )

    L= [Texte(), Texte()]
Then if ALT+BUTTON3 is pressed, the entry is destroyed, but not the object Texte() and not the item in L
How would you do here ?
I already showed you before that you have to subclass the entry
not surprising. Why would Texte.entry.destroy destroy the Texte?
19:16
3 hours ago, by Peter Varo
class Texte(tkinter.Entry):

    def __init__(self, your_var1, your_var2, *args, **kwargs):
        tkinter.Entry.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
        self.blah = your_var1
        self.blah2 = your_var2
If Texte was a subclass of Entry, perhaps you could do without L at all, and just iterate directly over root's collection of widgets. (at least, I think tkinter exposes that functionality)
3 hours ago, by Peter Varo
now you can use t=Texte(1, 2, root); t.destroy()
@PeterVaro, I didn't understand this version... because of tkinter.Entry as parameter, why ?
@Kevin I don't recommend that
root can only show you all the widgets
it can not sort by type
or any other property
@Kevin: no, because I may have other widgets for something else, I may have entries for other things that main
19:18
True. You could store all the Textes in a Frame that contains only Textes.
Good idea! Or a Canvas also ?
Dunno, I never tried giving child widgets to a Canvas
@PeterVaro, I try to understand your class Texte(tkinter.Entry): what does it mean tkinter.Entry as a parameter?
that is subclassing
search for it
owww okay, this is not a parameter?
got it :)
19:21
If this were my project, I'd make some changes to the responsibilities each class has. It shouldn't be Texte's job to listen for ctrl-clicks so it can destroy itself. That binding should be performed by whatever class owns L. Then it can bind to a function that removes the Texte from the list and destroys the Texte all at once.
Of course, if you want to do that, then Texte must be a subclass of Entry
Kevin is absolutely right, this is what I preferred to @Basj yesterday
that he should design his code to decide which object does what
You are both right : I don't have a wide enough knowledge in order to know how to implement what should be handled by what...
I would love to "design my code", I think I will improve this with more experience on Python. You cannot get big experience before having worked a lot with Python and objects ;)
I wish these kind of design considerations were discussed more on SO. Too bad it's fairly subjective.
Ask a question on SO about this is maybe too broad, don't you think so? I cannot sum up the idea in 10 lines... that can be easily understood
Ask ten other people what they think and you may get ten answers
19:25
agreed, although this is something 'not pythonic' in a sense that there is always more than one way to design objects for a task :P
summarizing design problems is wickedly hard, as well. Simplify too much, and others will suggest a design that may not work due to some of the requirements you didn't mention.
@Kevin yes
simplify not enough, and everyone says, too long didn't read
So I see you both agreed about Texte = subclass of Entry, so I will do it.
@Kevin +2
umm.. but what about Design Patterns ?
19:27
If I summarize the idea :
1/ Do a subclass of Entry -> I will do it right now
2/ What to do instead of this dirty list L ?
I have the Gang of Four book in my left hand as I type this :-)
You can keep L, but then you gotta move the bind
Then you do something like:
Waw, it starts to be conceptually difficult for my currentskills
L= [Texte(), Texte()]
def remove(texte):
    texte.destroy()
    L.remove(texte)

for texte in L:
    texte.bind("<Alt-Button-3>", lambda e, texte=texte: remove(texte))
That seems to be a common issue. Doing intermediate-to-advanced work in Tkinter necessarily requires some OO knowledge, which can be a tough learning curve
19:32
@Kevin In case you have time (I'm sure you don't have, as we all have already many projects) : github.com/basjo/bigpicture/blob/master/bigpicture0.py you may have ideas that could make the project more interesting
although that is exactly the reason why I recommend writing a GUI app for anyone who has a desperate need to understand OO
because then you have to.
I'll bookmark that for later
I think I'm facing conceptual difficulty now :( and don't know how to do things... I need to design code as said by @PeterVaro, but it's pretty unclear now what I should do
Yep, I know that feeling
Last time I had design problems, why, I remember it as though it were yesterday...
Because it was yesterday
:)
19:36
well, @Basj my advice is dig deeper and deeper in Python -- to understand how things are working under the hood.. for example, everything is an object !!!!!
okay, but wait, what is an object? and instance? a class?
a class is an object too?
a function?
and what is subclass?
etc.
what exactly self is as the first argument to a method
wait! what is a method? is it different than a function?
It's all just fluctuations in electrical fields, man.
It's exactly the questions I'm asking every time :)
But what is electromagnetic force?
so @Basj I think you should search for these questions first
19:38
Miracles, man
and then you will have a great understanding on what is going on with Python
Is there an free work "exchange" platform (on SO maybe?)
@Kevin :D
Not on SO, no
I could do research on some math problem (I have a Phd in Number theory) that I could sell in exchange of resolution of Python problems ;)
19:40
@Kevin actually RaspberryPi gave me a huge step in understanding what that little mystical box in my desk is doing
and also the language C helped me a lot
Somebody in the world is fighting about a problem that I could do easily myself from beginning to end, even I need to take 5 hours for this.
And maybe this "somebody" has great knowledge on Python and could give a boost to my project...
I think you'll need to resort to selling math research for money, and using money to comission Python work
That's sad to have to use money in between...
that is one the big problems in our world, yes..
:) -- umm... -- :(
Now, here's an interesting problem. Surely there's a person with whom you could reach a mutually beneficial agreement, a math-for-python exchange.
But the two of you won't just meet by chance.
19:42
yes
We can imagine something with A, B, C, D, instead of A and B
In an ideal world, social networking solves this. People with common needs find one another more efficiently.
A has "worked" 5 hours on a problem to help B
B has "worked" 5 hours on a problem to help C
C has "worked" 5 hours on a problem to help D
D has "worked" 5 hours on a problem to help A :)
(of course, in the real world it's mostly used for posting vacation photos and stalking friends-of-friends)
@Kevin: what is the difference between:
this:

12+1/12//3*4-9-1/12

and this:

(((((((12).__rtruediv__(1)).__floordiv__(3)).__mul__(4)).__add__(12)).__sub__(9)).__rtruediv__(1)).__sub__(12)
?
Don't you have an analysis math problem that you always dreamt about solving? (I don't claim I have the answer by the way!)
19:48
I think you want (((((((12).__rtruediv__(1)).__floordiv__(3)).__mul__(4)).__add__(12)).__sub__(9))).__sub__(‌​(12).__rtruediv__(1))
shite.. that last bit.. why doesn't it generated there? umm..
thanks :)
Money is actually a good facilitator for such four-way exchanges. A has no skills that are useful to D, but A can do work for B so he can commission work from D.
Money wouldn't be a problem for me, but
Liquidity makes the world go round. That's how farmers can get surgery without paying the doctor in a thousand bushels of wheat
when I spoke about this yesterday, I was told (I totally understand) that this is not a place for hiring (I agre)
19:52
True
a lot of people like to think of SO as an all-purpose developer hangout, and are surprised when it's so strictly Q&A oriented
Then I looked at freelancer.com , but it really is difficult for a small project like mine to propose a big descrpition... like a company
An easier way would be to find a freelancer chat where you you can explain and chat before starting big things like "I invest 1000€ on this"
I wonder if fiverr.com has any programmer users?
funny website that I didn't know.
:)
There are things about Python, but I would prefer to pay 20 times or 40 times more and add some good featurs to my opensource project to give it a boost !

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