@SylentNyte I've moved the messages. Just wanted to let you know that it's preferred to provide long pieces of code using something similar to pastebin. Including your output that took several lines. Also, since you solved your own problem, it made sense to also just remove the other messages with it. For future reference, please refer to the chat rules: sopython.com/chatroom
does anyone know how to turn a .py into an exe on 3.5? I finished up a weather alert program and wanted it to run every morning via task scheduler since task scheduler can wake a sleeping pc to run it
and @ZeroPiraeus assisted me with an issue I had actually so props to him
cuz I think thats one of the main problems. In the task scheduler it needs to run a program by file location and I put in pythons exe and then my scripts file location but I can't run python from putting in the complete file locatoin
alright so uh not sure why but that actually wasnt the problem I checked my tasks and they had the right locations but when I would finish creating a task it would give me the options to go to advanced options
and literally touching ANYTHING would later give me an argument error
I would even change them back to the original value and still get it which is very weird
@oso9817 Beyond my ability to offer suggestions at this point then, I think ... I would recommend battling on though (maybe an SO question?). Knowing how to make Python do what you want in your chosen environment is going to be important ... and although I know Python-to-EXE tools exist (googling "python exe" ought to lead you to them), they're not the preferred way to run Python programs on Windows by any means.
@AshishNitinPatil Moses often rushes in with an answer that doesn't quite fit the question and then deletes it. Sometime he repairs his answer and undeletes it once the question is clarified.
@AshishNitinPatil Also, as I expected, I just get an empty list (and an empty set) when I run your code. How the yam did you get the output you posted in that answer?
I'm trying to create a .exe using pyinstaller but getting this error. using python-pptx module. script does as intended but pyinstaller is throwing error. error - http://imgur.com/LC7qvBe
I use python-pptx package for my script.
This package has a subfolder like that
pptx/
templates/
default.pptx
py files
I use py2exe to generate a windows executable, but when I execute it I get this error which explains that the 'templates' directory is not put in the ...
@Mirac7 It will only block until either timeout or something is available in your queue
(or it hasn't received CPU time to actually check the Queue)
> Remove and return an item from the queue. If optional args block is True (the default) and timeout is None (the default), block if necessary until an item is available. If timeout is a positive number, it blocks at most timeout seconds and raises the Queue.Empty exception if no item was available within that time. Otherwise (block is False), return an item if one is immediately available, else raise the Queue.Empty exception (timeout is ignored in that case).
@RobertGrant ^^. It's also a game where if you get rushed at the start, it's hard to recover
i watched an episode of Ultimate Beastmaster on Netflix, thinking it was going to be a drama/thriller set the in the context of an assault course TV show. Turns out it was literally just an assault course TV show, which basically made using Sylvester Stallone, Terry Crews etc pointless
It's probably as hard as Ninja Warrior, although it doesn't look quite as difficult
NW is still the gold standard of tough challenges
It's just with all the stars involved in it, it really looked as though, I dunno, someone was going to fall to their death or get murdered and it was going to turn into a cool thriller
Ahmad, you can ask questions, but full on 'here's my problem how do I solve it' are often better on the main site. We fill up the spaces in between with off-beat general chitchat.
@AhmadTaha If you have hosted it somewhere, I think the host may not allow you to write files to disk or only allow it for certain locations. In either case your D:/ path won't work.
Your paths are just completely wrong. I'm assuming you're developing on Windows and then moving the code to PA.
You'll either have to be aware of the differences between the two OSes and make appropriate changes when you move code across, or download a Linux VM and develop on that, which will minimise the changes needed to move to PA (they'll become pretty much nonexistent, I think)
Another Question : Why SO is so rude? Whenever i tried to post some question that i really need help with, some people mark it 'too broad', duplicate (even it the other question was diff.), and other thing..
Probably because you hadn't followed the 'how to ask a good question' guides, tbh. And if it's been marked as a duplicate, it probably is, even if it's not that obvious. But 'too broad' is generally the 'you're asking us to write code for you', ime.
my guess is that by using 2 copies of the same iterator, each passing "consumes" one of the numbers, so the second iterators starts from the next one and so on
It does not use 2 copies, *[iter(data_list)] * 2 creates a list of 2 items, both being a reference to the same iterator, then unpacked as arguments to zip.
So when zip starts going through the iterables, it actually reads from the same iterator all the time.
I might've misunderstood what you meant by copies.
The *[iter(data_list)] * 2 stuff is a bit cryptic, but you get used to it. :) It's very handy when you want to select the chunk size at runtime: *[iter(data_list)] * chunksize
If the length of data_list isn't a whole multiple of the chunk size, the final partial chunk is lost, since zip stops iterating when its shortest arg runs out of items. However, itertools.zip_longest lets you specify a fill value to pad out the last chunk, In Python 2 the equivalent is itertools.izip_longest.
@simons21 As khajvah said, that's a big chunk of code. However, it looks like you need to do some study on how classes work in Python. You can't just chuck a function into the middle of a class and expect it to behave like a function defined outside a class.
@simons21 Functions defined inside classes are called methods. See how all those other methods have self as their first argument? self is a reference to the class instance, and when you call a (normal) method the instance gets automatically passed to the method as its first arg, before any other args that are explicitly passed to the method. That arg could be called anything, but we call it self by convention.
When your datefunction method gets called it gets passed a reference to the instance, just like any other method, except datefunction calls it agro instead of self. So it prints the representation of the Ca;lendar instance, not the self.selection that you've assigned to the local name agro in the _show_selection method.
What I just wrote is probably a bit confusing at this stage, so I suggest carefully reading through some tutorial material on classes, and experiment with small "toy" classes before you attempt to hack a large, sophisticated class that someone else wrote, like that Calendar GUI class.
Thanks for the explanation. I'm using this for my coursework and have a time limit so I had to throw myself at the deep end. Ill have a look at some tutorials and see if I can fix it myself.
@zero - I like the word palilalia, a new one one me. As you speculate, I'm sure linguists have a specific word for repeated syllables in that form, they're notoriously cunning at word creation.
@RobertGrant Everyone in my board game group likes eclipse, but we usually can't play it because if we started at our usual time of 7:30ish, we'd still be playing at 11:00. Not practical for a weekday session.
This is partially my fault because in strategy games, the time I take to make a decision is quadratically proportional to the number of possible decisions I'm allowed to make.
I suggested that the OP should reduce his rambling Raspberry Pi / Qt GUI code to a MCVE. So what does he do? Two weeks later he posts a YouTube link. :facepalm: stackoverflow.com/questions/42414987/…
@PM2Ring perhaps this is how it was received: blah blah blah blah blah here's a quick fix to your immediate problem: <code to copy and paste> blah blah blah
@RobertGrant Well yeah. I even admitted that my explanation was probably a bit confusing at this stage. But somehow the corrections I gave him got lost in the process. Maybe he just accidentally copied from the wrong version of his code when he was posting the code into his question.
@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. http://sopython.com/wiki/What_tutorial_should_I_read%3F
Thanks for the explanation. I'm using this for my coursework and have a time limit so I had to throw myself at the deep end. Ill have a look at some tutorials and see if I can fix it myself.
@PM2Ring as I said I have a time limit for my coursework. If I had the time I would go and research everything you guys told me to do, but I don't. My school doesn't teach python to a standard that we need, so I have to do it myself. Sorry to ask stupid questions, but they aren't stupid to me.
@simons21 Your questions aren't stupid. It's just that they are hard for us to answer properly when you don't have the necessary background knowledge.
You're trying to cobble something together from parts that you don't understand, and that's both confusing and error-prone. And generally not fun. Even if it ends up working correctly, it won't be a good learning experience and it won't be satisfying because you won't understand why it works. But I guess your bottom line is simply to get an adequate mark for the class.
@simons21 Ok. Maybe the phrase "adequate mark" was a bit harsh, since what you're doing is beyond what the assignment requires. But IMHO, it's better to submit a simpler project that you understand and can explain to your teacher than to submit a project that does a bunch of fancy stuff that you can't explain.
@PM2Ring thing is though that they don't want simple. My school doesn't teach python to a high standard ( like I mentioned ) so simple is pretty basic. They haven't taught us any GUI or SQLite, but expected us to use it in our projects. I know to you that its a breeze but to me I found it pretty difficult. This calendar thing is way above my level, I know, but that's because I want to impress, and if I use code above my level then hopefully I will learn some stuff about it along the way.
I understand what you guys are saying, and the rest of my code is pretty simple. I just wanted to use a calendar and this one was the only one that fitted my design specification. Sorry to be a nuisance, good luck with future coding:)
@simons21 I'm not saying to never use a cool piece of code that you've found that's beyond your current level of understanding. Most of us learn new stuff by playing with other people's code. At first, it's like some mysterious magical incantation. But as we pull it apart, modify it, and put it back together, how it works gradually sinks in.
I realise you don't have the time to do that. But you do need to improve your basic understanding of how classes work or you'll find yourself wasting a lot of time through blindly trying random stuff until it works. That's generally an unpleasant, frustrating experience.
I want to modify the static files of a django app that I am using. How do I go about it? Do I fork the app, change the static files and use this new app or what's the other way?