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03:12
cbg
user3444876
03:40
cbg
user3444876
OpenGl_accelerate
cbg
 
2 hours later…
05:15
cbg
@KrisEdison CBG
Does anybody know how I can handle a post request from a browser using pyhton and add the data back to the original site
Instead of just sending some post data
06:16
@Ufoguy you've been here enough times to know the rules by now. Don't ask to ask a question or ask "Does anyone know X". Please just ask your question if you have one.
@Ffisegydd STEWIE!!!!!!!
@Jon BRIIIIIIIIIAN!
How do I hadle a postrequest from a browser using python and add back to the original site instead of sending just the data as a seperate page
?
I'm building a site numbersindia.com
And am thinking of using python as backend
read into how ajax works
06:19
What if the user has javascript disabled
@JonClements
Then you have to have the server return the whole page including what it's already previously sent... or you just tell the user - "This site requires Javascript"
How do I return the whole page
Is there a library for that
Dude- read a basic tutorial please
Point me to one
Please!
Start with flask or something
06:25
So, flask can do it easily?
How? You haven't even said what library you want to use.
How do you expect us to point you to a tutorial when we don't know what you want or what level you're at.
I don't know any libraries that do that
A lot of tutorials can be for much more advanced users.
I'm a beginner
I can do beautiful soup
regex
etc
Simple
Nothing complicated
Then google around and find a tutorial that you feel looks good for you.
Some tutorials can work in different ways, there's no point me spending my time googling something for you only for you to find that it's not to your liking.
06:27
I don't know aht to search fp0r
Keywords please
Seriously?
@ufoguy just start here and read it, and associated links: flask.pocoo.org/docs/quickstart
Thanks @JonClements
@Ffisegydd lol, I can feel that too bro... ;-)
me hugs the cute little puppy
06:29
hello cabbage jerry :)
cbg @Jerry
cbg @Ffisegydd!
But the flask tuts are only for returning a specific dat like a <p>wfqf</p>
Sprouts, got some SQL queries to write, then run and to report on before noon
@JonClements @Ffisegydd said I am cute... :D yay...
06:33
@Ufoguy you will find more in the docs... are you incapable of searching for "using flask with ajax" for instance... or similar terms? Why not just get it returning "a page" first... that'd make sense for starters would it not?
Cabbage all!
So you say I should use Ajax first?
@JonClements
Gurble @Iplodman
Gurble to you too.
Anyway brb in a bit, need to head to work.
06:34
No - get a page working first... it's shown on that tutorial page.... maybe ask again if a few hours when you've had time to read it and try stuff
I'm on my way to school now :3
@Ffisegydd see you in a bit then Stewie!
@Ufoguy Please install flask and try the basic examples first.
You will get the basic idea of how the browser and server interaction works.
06:36
What does this do @app.route('/')
I dont understand the syntax
@app.route('/')
@Ufoguy @app.route is called a decorator
When you issue a HTTP request from the browser for your browser, by default, that function will be executed. It is similar to the root directory in the Unix file system.
Just been looking up at regex - seems pretty fun.
@Iplodman Trust me, it is not... You can check with @Jerry ;-)
they can be fun, but they can be a pain too
depends on what you want to do with them
Regex is fun
!
06:45
Is it purely used for string manipulation?
and they're a pain especially when you want to do impossible things
Never woulda' guessed ;)
extraction of substrings rather, I'd say, and then to a lesser extent, manipulation through replacement/backreferences
So you can grab a string and replace it?
Feel free to ignore that total guess.
@Iplodman Try this one?
06:49
I'll take a peek later, when I'm not on my way to school.
Rhubarb all.
(School now)
07:10
I don't wanna go to work :( can someone write me a sick note?
Sure. I will Stewie
I'll say that you've got nappy rash?
As I don't like to work today, I am unable to come to work. Please grant me leave for one day. ;-)
07:43
signed: My Mum
Signed :That Infernal Woman.
Yeah... but no one will believe your mum wrote "That Infernal Woman" - "My Mum" is far more convincing - think about it Stewie! :)
08:25
08:56
cbg
cabbage from PyconSE! :)
Jealous.
pyconuk.org who's going? We should all go and wear cabbage leaves on our shirts.
09:14
:)
Not sure I can afford 4 days + £110 atm.
would love to go, but budget is tight atm.
@Ffisegydd Unfortunately I don't live anywhere near there :P
I didn't realise it was so much :/ I'd probably only be able to go for the weekend itself anyway.
WTF
@staticmethod
def getOverlappingPeriods(start_date, end_date):
    return Reservation.getReservations(**locals())
WHY
MA1
MA1
Is there anyway to run a single unit test two times either in parallel or sequence?
09:28
@ThiefMaster indeed :d
@ThiefMaster obviously because typing out two keyword arguments is too much work.
I just wonder why the locals and glboals still are in builtins
they should have put in some module
_introspect_lowlevel
and listed in the manual in chapter 36.8
09:40
Can I handle post and get requests using python without using a CMS like Django or Flask?
On webservers ofcourse
Like Google app engine
or my own site
@Ufoguy that is a very broad and unclear question, what do you mean by "handle" them? You mean handle incoming ones to your website? Or do you mean you want to serve them to something else?
Yes incoming
And send a response
Django anf Flask are messing my mind up
I don't get a single thing
That is why I want to to if there is a simpler way to do it
Don't use Django, it's most probably too complicated for what you need.
yes
But what don't you understand about Flask?
09:48
@
I don't get what the @ does
You mean @app.route('/')
Yes
It's called a decorator
I read about it but don't understand it
Too complicated for me
What does it do
I just don't know
You use it to alter the function/method that you decorate it with
09:51
What do you mean alter
?
Do you not understand the word? It means to change or modify.
How does it change the function?
@Ffisegydd
Well that depends on the decorator, different decorators will do different things.
Note that neither Flask nor Django are a CMS.
They don't manage content.
What does @app.route('/') do @Ffisegydd
09:53
Django-CMS is a CMS, as is Plone.
The quickstart does explain what @app.route() does.
How does it modify the function?
In this case it doesn't modify the function
it only registers the function.
Hmm yeah maybe modify was the wrong word
It adds to the route map; if you access the server with a path / (the homepage) then Flask maps / to that function.
@Ufoguy you can always read this for decorator basics : stackoverflow.com/questions/739654/… answer by e-satis
09:56
@Abhishek That might actually confuse at this junction.
as that specific decorator doesn't actually replace the function; it returns it unchanged.
So if you want to handle the url http://localhost:5000/foo/bar/baz then the /foo/bar/baz part is the path.
Flask maps the path to a function (called a view).
@MartijnPieters i didn't want to but may be he is having trouble understanding decorators.
How do I submit forms using flask
@app.route('/foo/bar/baz') tells Flask to register the function for that path.
BTW cbg everyone :)
09:59
The browser submits the form, and it depends on the method attribute of the <form> tag what happens.
The browser takes the action attribute (defaulting to the current page URL)
and takes the method attribute (default is GET).
But it returns some data I want to embed in the page
and sends a request with the contents of the form.
Is there ready made code for that
10:00
So you have a form that uses POST or GET?
For embedding the returned data in the post itllse
GET
GET sends form data as query parameters, everything after the ? in a URL.
Flask parses those parameters and gives you access to the parsed results as request.args.
So ?foo=bar becomes requests.args['foo'].
Then I how do I send back data based on that
Thanks for waliking me with flask BTW
I hate reading manuals
Most of the time I don't understand them
@MartijnPieters SO how do I send data back for the post request
Get request
ie.,
10:04
The function can do one of a few things:
return a string; it'll be sent back with a text/html content type, IIRC.
you can render a template to do that (return render_template('templatename.html')).
you can return a tuple, specifying the content, the response code and the content type.
What do you mean by render template
I don't get it
so you can do ('Hello World!', 200, {'content-type': 'text/plain'}).
return('Hello World!', 200, 'text/plain').
Is it
10:06
I am not going to explain everything here.
You do need to read the quickstart.
Ok
Thanks BTW
and there's an excellent tutorial as well.
sorry, the 3rd value of the tuple is the headers; a dictionary of headers is most common.
You can also return a flask Response() object, and if all fails, Flask treats the response as a WSGI-compatible object. The latter you don't need to understand here, that's the 'advanced' option.
Hi. I'd want an image analysis library. I don't want to modify images, rather I just want to do a kind of pixel analysis on them - find their background color, and that sort of thing...

What is the best library for this?
But if you accidentally return, say, a boolean True then you'll get a confusing error message because Flask tried to treat it as a WSGI response.
@deostroll PIL, Pillow, maybe even numpy.
10:18
Ok I now have read flask intro page
But I see it can only send data
What if I want to dynamically add data to a page on submitting a from
That's where a template comes in
and do you mean to store some information that should be added to?
Templates Ah!
I get it now
I'll try some video tuts and be back
So, say your page has a list of items; foo, bar and baz, and you wanted to add spam and ham? Then you need some kind of storage layer too.
10:42
Golden Jubilee Milestone... Yay :-)
11:19
flask pfft, pyramid <3
3671 btw
flask <3, pyramid <3
flask pfft bc I do big apps
it is like,
look into "bigger flask apps" and they say "use packages instead of just modules" :D
user559633
raw.githubusercontent.com/pypa/pip/master/contrib/get-pip.py am i crazy, or is there no way to specify an install directory? i'd really prefer not to install into '/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/pip-1.5.6.dist-info'
user559633
i'm trying to get packaging steps down so i can limit external dependencies and make a python install user-portable (e.g. bitbucket.org/pypa/setuptools/raw/bootstrap/ez_setup.py can be passed --user to install in a user's homedir instead of system-wide)
11:45
@AnttiHaapala Right, that's about the right tool for the job, then.
Don't use a full blown digger when all you need a shovel, really.
but don't try to dig the foundations for a house with a shovel either.
Hello all
@Martijn I here now
@MartijnPieters how can I avoid the 0A and 0D new line translation ?
By opening the file in binary mode.
That's the reason to open the file in binary mode, really.
My point was more to illustrate that the only difference between ASCII and binary data is the way you interpret the bytes.
0A is a newline character if interpreted as ASCII.
Got it, thanks for the clarification again mate
But it could just be decimal integer value 10 if interpreted as an unsigned byte value.
I don't think that will be the case, I have a strict description of each parameter, length and coding type
12:00
@MartijnPieters I have never met a problem that "ok just need a simple webapp" however
I have a few projects like that at the moment.
it is "ok just need a simple webapp, and now that we have that simple then make it very complex"
I would like to have those kinds of projects too
The 'complex' is a PHP-based CMS that they are going to shield from most outside access apart from an API.
then there are several new projects that use the API for various pieces of content, like badges to put on other people's sites.
user559633
@AnttiHaapala I have met a lot of problems that could be solved by a simple webapp, but everyone loves to think his/her problem is more complex than it is.
You use a form, fill in the badge properties, get some embedding JS back. The Flask app serves the badges themselves. Heavy caching, runs on Google App Engine, uses the API in the background, done.
It includes a simple API endpoint to add the badges, doesn't handle the form itself.
12:03
that is so simple
the things we have like is that...
@AnttiHaapala FYI modern type-generic functions are not using sizeof, they are using the (C11) _Generic keyword, and it's syntax to decide which function to call, therefore they are compiler independent
"well it is sort of like facebook, twitter, foursquare and some business features all combined with business apps etc
*business analytics
anyway, 3671 for all!
610 lines in all for the Python code. There's documentation and a buildout too, but that's really all.
ok mostly they are like 60k lines of python code
user559633
12:05
3671?
for 610 you can use flask :P
There is a more complex one I am working on atm.
tristan int('cbg', 17)
@tristan base 17..
user559633
Ha, I love how our intra-personal communication is so unpythonic
12:06
where complex is 2666 SLOC at the moment.
user559633
(and thanks)
@MartijnPieters where do you get these easy projects
:D
I also do much more complex stuff. :-) Plone-backed intranets for 10.000 employees, that kind of thing.
guys, what is the difference between double underscore (_) and single () for python variables and methods?
@PeterVaro: I found a site that supports my claim of being an eclectic music listener based on Last.fm stats :-)
12:11
@KrisEdison in class body, __ will be replaced with _ClassName__
for attributes, methods
@MartijnPieters something is not working with this site, mine is 752/1000
>>> class X:
... __a = 5
...
>>> dir(X)
['_X__a', '__doc__', '__module__']
More about double underscore names: Private Variables and Class-local References
user559633
@KrisEdison what you're asking about are called the "dunder" methods, that might help you in your search
@MartijnPieters although if you look at the artists, they are all jazz musicians
(almost all of them)
12:14
752 is perfectly respectable!
yeah, but how is it calculated?
as I mentioned, I used to listen to jazz music only on Last.fm
I am seeing some example like def _method() and def __method().. Honestly, I don't get it. which is for private method/variable?
user559633
Weird. @AnttiHaapala would you use the '__a = 5' style to make it clear that the method/attribute was defined in a named class?
user559633
(e.g. as a hard reminder of the class name, not the instance?)
It takes your top 50 artists
Then for each finds the top 20 related artists
12:16
@KrisEdison single underscore names are not mangled. double underscore names are mangled.
so you end up with 1000 artists. The score is the number of unique artists in that list.
(except for names that both begin and end with two underscores, such as __add__ or __init__. Those are not mangled as well)
hmm.. imho this method has nothing to do "with me"
(and names ending with more than two underscores, but you don't see that often)
12:17
The less overlap between these artists, the more eclectic your music taste is (supposed) to be.
_method isn't treated in any special way by Python. You could find/replace it with method without affecting the program's behavior.
hmm... that's interesting.. anyway, thanks for the link, I didn't use last.fm for ages, it is good to see this list if mine -- I completely forgot some of the artists I used to like :P
You could do this in Python by putting all related artists from your top 50 into a Counter() object.
The length of the Counter() is the score.
@Kevin, so I guess I should use __ for private methods? Sorry for being like this. :(
I just can't understand.
The Counter().most_common(20) output is the list of artists you see listed on the page.
12:20
Yes, use double underscore names if you want your methods to be hard to access outside of their class.
@MartijnPieters do you like something like mixed(jazz, hip_hop, electronic)?
@Kevin, even for variables, right?
It's hard to pigeonhole what I like.
@Kris but understand (and sorry if you do understand this and I'm reiterating) that these methods aren't truly private. They can still be accessed by a determined person.
Yes, for attributes too
12:21
Depends on mood, specific album color, etc.
I have a "freshly caught" band on BandCamp, I'd like to share it with you
(I think one of the finest contemporary bands out there)
@Ffisegydd, so there is no really private in python?
I'll try anything!
here is one song: try it, and then listen to all the albums they have: badbadnotgood.bandcamp.com/track/listeriosis
@Kris exactly. Though most pythonistas agree on the princple of "We're all consenting adults" and so will understand that if they go messing around with variables that are "hidden" through name-mangling then they may break things.
12:23
There is no private in python. Even if there was, the user could just open the .py file and remove the privateness.
Actually, I really don't care on who will access the variables and methods. I am just thinking that it's one of the best practices. If not, what is the best practice?
I just want to be a better coder. I know you all knew what I mean.
I think you should only keep things "private" if an average user using them could seriously break the code.
So for instance a method that you need to use in your inner workings but which really shouldn't be used outside by a user.
From the document I linked:
> there is a convention that is followed by most Python code: a name prefixed with an underscore (e.g. _spam) should be treated as a non-public part of the API (whether it is a function, a method or a data member). It should be considered an implementation detail and subject to change without notice.
For instance when I create an instance of my data analysis objects I pass a filename as an argument upon creation (to retrieve data from it). I then have a method __import_file which I used in __init__ to import the file and process it properly. I don't ever want the user to be importing their own files separately into an already created object.
(note that _spam won't be mangled or hidden in any way; the name alone should be sufficient to warn end users)
12:27
Thanks @Kevin, @Ffisegydd. Now, I understand.
And now for something completely different. Last night I spent an hour trying to get git and github to talk to each other.
I can push to github successfully, but it asks for my ssh pass phrase every time, which is a pain in the butt because it's 32 characters long.
Sounds like something from Jeremy Kyle/Jerry Springer/Dr Phil/whatever
"Now git please explain why you don't trust github anymore?"
"now, now git, you gotta communicate if you want to resolve conflicts, alright? Let's hug it out"
On a side note did you fix it because I've got the same problem at the moment on my Mac?
The Internet told me that you can use a tool called "pageant", to store your keys for you, and apparently insert pass phrases when you do ssh stuff
user559633
12:32
@Kevin you can use ssh-agent
user559633
and/or remove the passphrase from your ssh key
although it didn't work for me because apparently you had to have configured git to use PuTTY when installing it, if you want git to talk to pageant
user559633
oh gross windows ewww moves away slowly
Yeah, I'm not clear on whether ssh-agent is available for Windows. It certainly isn't a default program.
user559633
yeah, pagent is the putty agent crappy hack (explains all modern workflow tools that are in windows in one swoop)
12:35
Well, it doesn't work, so I assume I missed the "use PuTTY for ssh" checkbox when installing git.
user559633
In this scenario, git is some gui or non-command line tool?
user559633
Otherwise, I'd assume it uses an envvar or a command line switch (is there like an --ssh-program or gitssh envvar?)
Pardon my ambiguity. Yes, I'm using git gui, because I don't want to learn a half dozen commands just to detect changes in my project, stage the files, write a commit message, commit them, and push. I'm perfectly happy having a big friendly button for each of those operations.
user559633
"all" changes?
user559633
git add .
git commit -am "it puts the lotion in the basket"
git push
12:39
I do plan to become a command line wizard as soon as I comprehend the basics of the system. "let's throw all the concepts at Kevin at once" is not my favorite way to learn.
user559633
"That's easy to fix. Just stop not understanding everything. - 2d ago by Kevin"
That's exactly what I'm doing :-) Just very slowly.
> If you come into the room and ask PHP question, because we're the only active room at the moment, nobody will answer your question. Even if they know the answer. Unless someone feels like being extremely nice that day. While we all know and use more than one language, we primarily do C++. You might have a chance of getting Haskell or Python questions answered, but know that you're taking a risk.
And no PHP or Java questions, no matter what. They will be binned and you will be deemed annoying. See #2.
Gotta love Lounge<C++>
On Meta the other day, the Lounge's room owner explicitly said that they're only associated with C++ for historical purposes, and are really unlikely to provide actual help.
12:42
To which I thought, "Ok, then they don't belong on SO. delete the room, and they can move their non programming selves to IRC for all we care"
I doubt that will happen, though. I guess SO will just never have a helpful c++ room :-(
> Fundamentally, the Lounge is a place where we get away from serious conversations about C++. It's not a place where we actively want to attract people who want to have serious conversations about C++. We have the main site for that, or isocpp.org, or comp.lang.cxx or whatever. [...] If you come in there looking for help with your C++ problem, you're gonna be mighty disappointed in the overwhelming case.
How self-damning is this?!
user559633
I thought that these chat rooms were for communities, not for the purpose of helping time vampires that want to post low-context questions and demand synchronous, free help
so we meet again old friends
I found a sassy kitty outside of work!
Who mentioned time vampires? I read this as them rejecting all help seekers, even the ones that seek help in the most respectful and appropriate way.
@Crow take it in, and teach it our ways.
user559633
Why do you care? It's a room around a shared interest

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