@IanClark at this point, I actually don't lint that often, and usually debug by traceback :) However, if you're using ST3 (and you should be), I can't say enough good things about the Anaconda plugin (no relation to the Python distribution). It has awesome code completion, even in virtualenvs, and includes pep8, pylint, pyflakes, and pep257 linting capabilities, among other features.
It really goes a long way into turning Sublime into a Python IDE. It's easy to set up, is very configurable, is updated frequently, and the author is quite responsive to issues, at least in my experience.
And, as a quick plug, make sure you check out Python Improved for syntax highlighting - soon to be fully Unicode-aware!
Unfortunately, Sublime itself doesn't handle RTL languages well (if at all), but if you want to use z͡al͠g̛o as a variable name, pretty soon it'll be highlighted correctly.
At any rate, I have lots of experience with Sublime, and am one of if not the top answerer in its related tags, so if you have any questions please ask!
@MattDMo Really? Awesome! I use vim with the python.vim syntax file and flake8 for my dev environment. What does Sublime bring to the table that I can't do (or would be difficult to implement) in vim?
Yeah it's homework, so I wanted to post it piecemeal so the help vampire OP would think critically about the code
There's a funky edge case where end - start == 1 so (start + end) // 2 == start. I catch it and break manually, but only because it's been too long since I've had to deal with that crap.
Actually, I'm favoriting that post so I can use it to tutor people on binary searches (have algorithms for C, C++, and Java - never run into it with R or Python due to the tools available)
I can add an edge case later but edge cases usually just confuse beginners and I just want them to understand concepts
Also, its a good example of the difference between an answer and an education (feed a man a fish, teach a man to fish)
@nivixzixer is it because you've never actually used one and were simply conforming to peer pressure :p I use Windows, Mac and Linux, and Mac is definitely the best one
@AnttiHaapala I think my main difficulty is, unlike learning other frameworks, there is a specific order of things you need to know to get some stuff working.
Because using something like django-guardian is so powerful, it's a shame to not have that easily available. Especially when it looks as though the building blocks are almost there
^ like you have unique connections between company and user, then the natural primary key for that is the tuple (company, user); you can get them from db by (company, user), you can delete them by ID without ever fetching the record etc.
but in django you can't, you need to know the "primary key" for (company, user)
But that sounds more like an artefact of how the ORM happens to work with link tables, not a fundamental issue with company and user having integer primary keys
always aim for the perfect solution if the difference is 2 lines of code
you're confusing:
django forces you always to have an integer primary key on every single model, period
sqlalchemy does not force.
so to have a object permission system that forces you to have such a primary key would be stupid, can just spend 5 minutes more to think about the solution which does not place restrictions.
because django forces things, it is essentially a framework to build a CMS :D
they state things like "you do not need to do complex queries, you do not need to do x anyway, you can cache your content so slow templates do not matter" blah blah blah = CMS
The only concerning thing is, instead of decorating a view with (for example) @permission_required(Company, 'permission.name', 'request_field_that_contains_primary_key'), you might have to do something much more convoluted to identify the multiple fields that make up the primary key
@MattDMo thanks for that :) - I briefly saw Anaconda in package control, but thought it was the dist. I shall take a look :) - I opted for PyLinter plugin yesterday, found a way to reference the pythonpath and pylint paths, seems to semi-work. Doesn't follow things like Django foreign key references though so throws some erroneous warnings
Awww.... yes.... that's the name of the big tennis ball in the sky... I keep forgetting what that's called - don't see it that often for it to stick in my memory :)
@MartijnPieters Yep, I know (I was the one who asked this question :P)... What's not clear to me is why do accounts on different sites have different identicons. Maybe there's some sort of entropy?
@AnttiHaapala while I'm looking at traversal, the short answer is: SQLA supports all sorts of primary keys, so you want to support them in a permissions system. Pyramid supports URL dispatch as well as traversal, so they also both need to be supported :)
I want to keep an eye on the votes of the ongoing election, but the unsortedness of the list during the primary election phase makes it hard to keep track of anything. So I wrote a quick script that goes through them all and puts a short overview list at the top, sorted by the current vote count....
@AnttiHaapala having read the traversal docs again, I think the reason I didn't use them is because the idea of traversal (unlimited moving from one object to another) doesn't exactly fit my incredibly simple data model. Unless there's another reason to use it that isn't in the thing I read.
@Jon @davidism how do you feel about offering to try to host disorient.ddns.net/SOVoteMonitor? JaconC has added a message asking people not to share the link as his server can't handle it, but sopython-server would be fine with it.
I suppose we'd need to get the code and see if it's something we could easily fit into Flask.
I don't mind hosting that for a little bit... I think the other thing he wanted was something to break up the questionnaire posts/do something else blah blah... but I'm happy for sopython to be used for the above
@MartijnPieters And if they don't like it... just say - don't care: "The ninja said it was fine..."
Also, re. my rage and anger last night: I've contacted <COMPANY> and they've said I can do a "Statutory Credit Report" instead which requires less address paperwork crap.
@RobertGrant notice how I can make say a delete view that is generic for all subclasses of all classes inherited from Base; same for example for permissions etc
now if you have url /companies/123/edit, it will take find the /companies/*traverse route, then use the root factory to instantiate the root, then ask its getitem for '123', which does select on db, then asks its getitem for 'edit', (does not implement getitem, so stops there), puts that Company object as the context, then looks up for a view with name 'edit' that would match otherwise given the predicates and the context, finds the edit view...
and surprisingly all this is actually faster than the "simple" things that django does
haha got accepted for the "remove .0"
@JonClements your problem is that everyone who knows you pretty much knows martijn too
@JonClements they're give their 1sts to martijn and you can't win by 2nds
I was saying yesterday that the huge electorate overlap isn't going to be good for me
user4433485
My teacher just said that Python is not worth to learn because there is only a small community and that Python is dieing anyway, Should I burn him alive?
@Antti it's unlikely, but also plausible, many doesn't get as many votes as would seem reasonable, as everyone will think everyone else is going to vote for him anyway... it's going to be fun to see the elections... but I'm happy enough with my result in the primaries