Someone has been upvoting every question that gets downvoted in flask lately, it's really frustrating.
cv-plsstackoverflow.com/q/33799168/400617 too broad, boils down to "I don't understand that you need to set up a web server to use CGI, but also I want to use Flask."
@paul23 could you please write about something interesting rather than your continuous dissatisfaction with the practices of the language you chose to use? The astronomy stuff was much more interesting.
@poke I never use underscores in my filenames (and no, no spaces either), and since I don't do that it makes searching for userfiles easier on my pc. Now in a future when I long forgotten the real project name etc -or even -python- but I know about the topic and I know I once made something with it, I could search my pc for the project. And then I wouldn't search using underscoeres.
I see, well to be fair, I name all my variables, classes and other things with camel or pascal case too, even if PEP8 mostly says lowercase + underscores. But for some reason, I do use lowercase and underscores in filenames (and as such for modules).
I am rather ridiculously pleased that my rep to answer ratio has broached the 50 barrier. Still can't catch DSM - my original pace setter - but I'm pleased with it.
#python is a place where people go to learn which question they are not supposed to ask and what kind of things they are not supposed to want, because.
Actually, a good reason to adhere the PEP8-ish style is that it is usually consistent with the standard library and most of the popular libs as well (except Twisted).
Yes, if you want your code to fit into an existing code base, adopt their convention. If that happens to be PEP8, then PEP8 everything. If it is something else, use that instead.
I have started to adhere to it. I can bare spaces as indentation if that makes the Python community a little bit happy reading my code :) <3 python soooo much.
@poke Formatting doesn't really matter, but doing approximately the same stuff everyone you're working with does. I only mention tabs because I honestly can't remember the last time I saw them in team code.
@JoranBeasley You can use this to further your cause to move to docker containers. https://github.com/docker/dockercraft
That project is so freakin' cool. We are trying to see how we can use this for a demo we want to show off for one of the projects we are working on. Anyone else interested in this kind of stuff...worth a look.
I disagree that the meaning changed. The question states, as it did before, that you have a postfix server and want to display the messages that it receives with Flask, and shows your prior research. It just doesn't take 6 verbose paragraphs to do it. What were you asking differently? — davidism1 min ago
anyone want to compare the revision and weigh in on whether I "destroyed" this new user's question?
@corvid Is there a word for that 'feeling' you get from listening to that kind of music? Like... I think there's something universal feeling about hearing a warhorn and power chords and some northern european lady singing who may be a valkyrie.
It's like that part of a movie where things are going really well for the good guys before the final showdown between hero and villain.
The Daffy Duck wizard song falls in the neat category of "Satire that can be appreciated unironically.", but probably only for people who pretended to be wizards as children.
@paul23 Are you thinking of java-like method overloading where you can have e.g. multiply(double[]... arrays) and multiply(int[]... arrays) in the same class? If so, Python is not your bag.
Currently running 3 methods: Radius(theta); RadiusFromTrueAnomaly(theta); RadiusFromEccentricAnomaly(theta); Where Radius just uses is_instance and then calls the correct one.
Why not have class Radius subclassing float and then have static methods in it called from_anomaly (or fromAnomaly - I don't want that argument) that return an instance. So e.g. r = Radius.fromAnomaly(theta)
My coworker also mentioned something about a bigwig at the BigCorp Virginia branch sending an email to the wrong recipients. Possible connection there.
@Kevin: several times over the last year or so I've thought of hanging out a shingle as a Python data consultant, with a website and business cards and everything. Then I'd be in charge of all my (non-salaried) development.
Noob question: If I have an event loop running for some async http requests, is a callback function necessarily executed outside of the i/o loop thread?
but as far as I understand it, the most it will do is wrap that function as a coroutine, but it has no way to make the internals of the function work with the event loop
Just fyi, the sleep thing was kind of a joke, of course it will hang if you put a blocking call in it. Everything "blocks" to some degree in asyncio, the idea is you figure out if it's worth the time to make more of the internal calls coroutines
If you make calls that do io and aren't coroutines, odds are you should fix those
@davidism I just don't see why using a callback or a future is a problem per se. It's not like it's any less asynchronous. You could still block a coroutine if you were a noob like me.
@Kevin @corvid gist.github.com/awalGarg/4f436831b1c69d3b24af#file-ngxconf-py stuff I care about: that MATCH_NOTHING object. Not sure if that is not crazy silly. Also, do I need to do anything more to make it explicit that _rule_finder is not to be used outside the internal methods? Any other general things?
MATCH_NOTHING is fine; creating a blank object is the ordinary way to create sentinel values. _rule_finder's leading underscore should be sufficient to warn users to please not use it.
The only thing I find unusual is using _rule_finder(self, rule, value) instead of self._rule_finder(rule, value)
I don't think there's an official style guideline against it, but where possible I avoid having if and elif blocks with the same suite. if a: x(); elif b: x() could be written as if a or b: x()
The latter clause of that sentence seems like it would exclude itself from possibility, because why would I tell you that I'm trying to deceive you? But maybe it's reverse psychology. And maybe this sentence is pentuple reverse psychology.
Alright, there's got to be a better way to do this than iterating through each one
In Pandas I have two dataframes with the same y-axis label (a date). However the first dataframe has a variable number of columns, all with different names than the column of the second dataframe (which has a single column besides the index). What I want to do is add the value per row of the second dataframe to the values in the same row in the first dataframe
is there some trick that can help me do that without iterating through each one, looking up the cells in both, and adding the values?
I couldn't figure out how to do it using .apply() with two separate dataframes, especially with a varying number of columns, but that's the sort of thing I'm looking for
I use the IPython console, but when working on SO I typically use it in --classic mode so that I don't get people asking "why do you have all those numbers in brackets like [34] there? I don't."