@MarcusS I picked up Witcher 3 with out playing the prior ones. Was a really good game as a starting point. Some points I got confused or I didn't really understand. Overall it made me want to play the original 2 to understand. Overall it's worth the money.
I'll summarize the plot as I have gathered it through Internet osmosis: there's this guy named Garett or Garth or Gumble or something. He's a witcher. He witches(verb) witches(noun). But most of the game is actually about playing cards.
I have another question, albeit not sql sorry xD. I found code of a calendar that is perfect for my coursework I'm doing, however its quite advanced for me to be able to understand. When you click on a date it highlights green, and I want to link that date to a sql query function. Would anyone be able to help me sort this out?
@simons21 regarding your previous question: I've seen it a lot that a single-element tuple is unpacked on assignment: my_scalar, = function_returning_single-element_tuple(), note the comma. I'm not sure how idiomatic this is...
With just that information given, the task could take anywhere between thirty seconds ("just do mycalendar.bind("date_click", execute_sql)"), or five thousand hours ("turns out event handling doesn't natively exist in this library, so we'll have to rewrite it from the ground up")
I got this code online in order to create a calendar with tkinter:
"""
Simple calendar using ttk Treeview together with calendar and datetime
classes.
"""
import calendar
import tkinter
import tkinter.font
from tkinter import ttk
def get_calendar(locale, fwday):
# instantiate proper calend...
If you're asking "how do I get the datetime that's currently selected from the calendar?" you only need to do calendar.selection. If you're asking "how do I execute code in response to the user clicking on a new square in the calendar?", you probably need to edit the function around line 185, self._show_selection(text, bbox)
I haven't look too much at the code, but the function "selection" looks like it gives you the date when its selected? You could use that function with the details returned to craft your sql command?
"That second one sounds pretty hard," you think. I agree! It would be easier to just add a "submit" button to your window or something, and bind to that instead.
all of it seems pretty hard to me haha. Our school hasn't really shown us how to use any of this and I know using something that you don't know how to use is bad practise but its like the only one that works. the selection function seems good however ive tried to make it print out to the shell so I know the function is working but that never works, and I wanna use both of those ideas from you kevin xD
but they look too complicated from my perspective lol
from calendarWidget import Calendar #replace `calendarWidget` with whatever is the name of the file you saved the Calendar class to (don't name it calendar.py, that's already a built-in module name)
from tkinter import Tk, Button
def clicked():
print("This is what the user selected: ", calendar.selection)
root = Tk()
calendar = Calendar(root)
calendar.pack()
button = Button(root, command=clicked, text="submit")
button.pack()
root.mainloop()
Result after clicking some squares and buttons and such:
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>py -3 test.py
This is what the user selected: 2017-03-16 00:00:00
This is what the user selected: 2017-03-26 00:00:00
All right, you've twisted my arm. You could change the definition of _show_selection to:
def _show_selection(self, text, bbox):
"""Configure canvas for a new selection."""
print(self.selection)
x, y, width, height = bbox
#rest of code goes here
Suppose I have a list, a = [1.2, 3.6, 5.4, 3.9, 6.7] How can I convert this to a list of singleton list like this: [[1.2], [3.6], [5.4], [3.9], [6.7]]?
new_list = [] >>> for item in a: ... new_list.append(list(item)) ... Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 2, in <module> TypeError: 'int' object is not iterable
@Shubham When in doubt, Googling the error message can help. In this case it would have taken you straight to this answer here in the first result: stackoverflow.com/a/19523620/1946923
@MarcusS I agree. To be honest, I was trying to solve this issue for the last 15 mins. Idk, maybe my head wasn't working, I just couldn't figure out the issue. Been doing Python after a long time and I remembered that we can use list() to convert a number to a list. My mistake.
In Nier (and Automata) most of the music has lyrics, but they're all in languages that have been "adjusted" for thousands of years of linguistic drift. Or in completely made up languages.
Because as soon as the web server runs multiple threads or processes, everything gets out of sync. Maybe not in this really really simple case, but as soon as it gets more complicated.
Zero's 34th Law of Neurotic Coding Practice: global is only acceptable if the complete statement is a common phrase in popular dsicourse, e.g. global warming, global village.
back on sqlalchemy ... should the test setup / teardown do Base.metadata.create_all / Base.metadata.drop_all ? Or should we just truncate the tables, instead of dropping them?
I'm currently doing the first
I think Django's test runner truncates tables instead of dropping them, though ..
@wim once per session, but unfortunately SQLAlchemy (and Django) don't have commands for creating the databases, only the tables. There's a way to write custom DDL for it in SQLAlchemy, or you can be lazy and just execute a raw query.
Or you can be lazier and require that the database already exists and just call drop_all at the beginning.
the code Kevin provided me recently with the calendar thing (orange knows) prints out a date when I click on one. self.selection is that variable. I want to be able to, when the print statement is executed, take whatever is in self.selection and query it with a sql command ( what the function will be used for) because I don't have a button to click when I want the command to execute, I was wondering how to call the function from the print statement
@wim One interesting method to consider in testing depending on DB in use is to use a master transaction created in setup, then have the test session join that and rollback in tearDown. If your tables etc. don't change that much.
I'd appreciate some UI opinions on an issue I'm debating at the moment (all 4 pics taken in context)... I put the questions directly under each picture: imgur.com/a/nx6Hw
@simons21 that code doesn't work for a number of reasons. Given the types of questions you've been asking, at this point it would be more appropriate for you to read a tutorial at this point than to keep asking us questions. sopython.com/wiki/What_tutorial_should_I_read%3F
I found some pytest-mysql fixture , but it actually went and ran the /usr/bin/mysql_install_db script ... (!) and I was all, umm, ok .. pip uninstall that thing ..
being able to do the same thing globally vs starting from each individual instance (in case I understand the problem) isn't a problem
plus I sometimes long-press the menu button on my samsung which opens the corresponding options menu. If there's no options menu, then I might get confused;)
@AndrasDeak So in the case of the food items, for example, you would expect long press = same as pressing settings button, I imagine? What would you expect a single press on the item itself to do?
OK, I think it's fine to have both per-item settings icon and the bottom left one:)
and I'd either expect a long-press to open the per-item settings; or I'd expect it to select the given item (in a scenario where those selection tickmarks are not enabled by default, so multiple selection only becomes an option when you long-press first)
Ok so I read through the documentation you guys gave me and I'm still kind of confused on my error. Why does the above code work, but then the example below it gives off that error? pastebin.com/83N4sJSU