mmm... I am not sure. I am open() a png, taking an slice of around 4000 bytes file.read(), adding to the slice |/! and !\|, .encode(), sending it with socket.send() and then .decode() and finally I get the error.
That doesn't make sense to me. If you're reading bytes, there's no encoding. Your "adding to the slice" must be concatenating bytestrings, but then since it's already binary data, why would you encode it? I'm missing something.
The local businesses are definitely much busier than normal. The coffee shop a block from my apartment is not usually open on Sundays at all and they were very hopping today.
But sometimes some motivation does help, specially when most questions I end up answering are from the new queue list which are usually from new people. Low upvotes, low acceptations and a tonne of work.
def get_all_indexes(char,string):
result = ()
for i, c in enumerate(string):
if c == char:
result += (i,)
return result
Then when I run this function, for example, get_all_indexes('e','evening'),what I expected is (0,2), but the output is (0,) instead. An...
@AnttiHaapala Ah. True, it doesn't really have to have an accepted answer. I still don't like either one of those two questions as canonicals though - one of them asks specifically about print vs return, and the other is far too lengthy. And the top-voted answer is kinda... why the yam is it adding up numbers?
sql = 'INSERT INTO custom_user_test_data(taskid,test_data) VALUES (?,?),("final","new")'
db.engine.execute(sql)
Can someone tell me what is wrong with the above code
It works perfectly in SQL browser and inserts data into tables
but when i run this through flask application It throws an error
sqlalchemy.exc.ProgrammingError: (sqlite3.ProgrammingError) Incorrect number of bindings supplied. The current statement uses 2, and there are 0 supplied. [SQL: 'INSERT INTO custom_user_test_data(taskid,test_data) VALUES (?,?),("final","new")']
If you just meant "why was my original not working and why does the right one work": they asked for 30 dollars from you, but instead of your wallet you only gave them a picture of your wallet.
hehe :D Don't sweat it. But there are hints: assume that an answer with that much upvotes and no negative comments is probably right, and try to see what you're doing wrong
"I have written 11 books, but each time I think, 'Uh oh, they're going to find out now. I've run a game on everybody, and they're going to find me out.'" — Maya Angelou" Lireally me
But I have not written 11 books or coded anything significant
I have a folder in my computer with many .txt files:
file_one.txt --> location = r'C:\Users\User\data\file_one.txt'
file_two.txt --> location = r'C:\Users\User\data\file_two.txt'
file_forty.txt --> location = r'C:\Users\User\data\file_forty.txt'
How can I turn the name of the files (wit...
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ: I know this happened a while ago, but reopening a question unilaterally should not be done hastily or quietly. Furthermore, why reopen an obvious duplicate, when you can add better (?) links to cover it completely? A couple of your past comments and actions got me thinking that your understanding of how this feature works and when it should be used is a bit flawed. Could you take time to read this and this, and not be so quick to vote to reopen? In general, please use your privileges more responsibly. — vaultahAug 17 at 20:02
I have a Django template loop that is stuck in an apparently infinite cycle, and I can't figure out why. I am trying to figure out ways to troubleshoot. pdb and print to console don't seem to be working from inside the loop.
You can print the object (or it's details) over which you are iterating, before the iteration (remove / comment it during testing since you said it gets stuck with it)
Now start with each individual step inside the loop. Try removing (comment) it all at first, see if you get an output. Then slowly start re-adding stuff.
@AshishNitinPatil Yes, the docs are a bit obscure in that regard, although they do say "Return a callable object that fetches item from its operand using the operand’s __getitem__() method. " But it would be nice if they had an example that showed that you can use itemgetter on a dict.
Django docs question. Where do I find the description of all the functions and attributes that are printed when doing dir() on django objects? Some are intuitive,some are not and many of them are not anyhow listed on django docs website.
I am trying to get going with django, which so far I have found to be amazing other than repeated db issues.
My latest is following the Django by Example book and I have followed everything to the letter, yet when following some simple instructions to add some data via the python shell api I get...
Hi, i've got a question about best practices. I'm processing some objects, and right now i've got a bunch of function for processing them individually and then functions using those to process lists of objects. I was wondering if it was a good idea to nest the functions so the code is less scattered ?
@SewdiO When you say "nest the functions" do you mean that you want to nest the function definitions of the core processing functions inside the definitions of the list processing functions? That doesn't sound like a good idea. That's not what function nesting is for. Each time you call the outer function, all the inner function objects get regenerated, creating fresh function objects, which wastes time unless you actually need new inner functions on each call.
@AndrasDeak: (replying to your last message to me) my home notebook is linux, but we use Windows a lot at work. I spend most of my day in a virtualbox.
@SewdiO If those functions work together on the same data objects it may make sense to bundle them together into a class. Or if they don't need that tight integration with the data, you could just put them in a module. But unless it's a large amount of code, I wouldn't worry about it. Just use comments in your source code to group them together.
Among other problems with nesting functions, it makes them much harder to write tests for. And if you can't write tests, your functions are probably broken anyway, so it doesn't really matter if they're nested or not.
@SewdiO It's not terrible, but it does waste time having to re-execute the inner function definition every time the outer one's called. OTOH, sometimes you do want that, eg if the inner function has default args that are set by the outer function. Another use case is when you want the inner function(s) to be able to access the locals of the outer function.
Eg, I often have nested helper functions in the __init__ of a GUI class. There's only going to be a single instance of the GUI, so its __init__ will only be called once anyway. And it's handy for the nested funcs to be able to mutate the widgets that the __init__ is setting up.
@khajvah: First, we're talking about testing the code in the functions, so whether or not you describe that as testing the inner one or testing the outer one isn't very interesting. Second, frankly, the "everything inside a function is implementation detail" perspective doesn't work very well in practice, as the specifics of the implementation are what give rise to likely bugs.
@DSM What value has the test that tests the code? Sure, specifics of the implementation give rise to bugs. You can still write a test knowing about the implementation and exploit that by constructing the right input. In that sense, I don't understand how nested functions make it difficult.
@khajvah: er, code is what's tested. By other code. So it has lots of value. And if you agree we're allowed to write a test specifically knowing about the implementation, then it sounds like we're allowed to care about the implementation details, in which case we both agree. Nested functions make it difficult because you can see the code, worry about a problem, and then have to mock the parts of the code beforehand to get it to the right state.
For example, your nested function might close over a value which is the result of previous calculations. If the function weren't nested, it would be much easier to test.
An inner function is like a black box rattling around inside another black box. Sure, you can test the outer function by passing it various args, but you have no way of directly passing args to the inner function. And that means to thoroughly test it you have to analyze how the outer args get transformed to the inner args. So you can end up creating an artificial test harness for the inner function, and hope that it'll behave the same way when it's running inside the outer function. ;)
I'm running out of ways to say that nesting gives rise to additional testing complexity, so you can either eat the complexity or not nest your functions, so I'll leave you to nest your code to your heart's delight.
How 'bout them Jays? (Oh, wait, @MooingRawr isn't around to commiserate.)
No worries. I've had a few answers un-accepted lately, it's very annoying. Especially when you've also assisted the OP with comments, and even fixed the crummy formatting in their question. :grumble:
Of course, some new OPs don't realise they can only accept one answer. The other week I got an accept, a few moments later it had shifted to another answer, then another one, then finally back to mine after someone posted a comment to the OP telling them to make up their mind & not mess with people's minds.
Btw, you want input instead of raw_input. That should solve a lot of things. But then, you are switching to py3 now, so you need to cast to int anyway.
And? Why is that an issue? You can always trigger scripts specifically like python3 script.py, unless that throws an error, in which case, it might be an easy fix.
@AshishNitinPatil Because Python 2 input() is syntactic sugar for eval(raw_input()), and I hope I don't need to explain to you that passing arbitrary user input to eval is evil. ;)
Learning Python 2 now as a precursor to learning Python 3 makes about as much sense as learning Shakespearean English as a precursor to learning modern English.
@faceless Well, it is intended to be humorous, but it is making a serious point. The string handling in Python 2 is much more complicated & error-prone than it is in Python 3, particularly in regard to dealing with Unicode. So why waste time & energy learning it?
It's better to avoid it, learn the clean Python 3 way, and when you're confident with your Python skills you can go back & learn the old-fashioned way if you need to fix broken Python 2 code written by people who wrote the broken code because they didn't understand the arcane mysteries of Python 2 strings.
I'm not even sure I really understood how I should do things until Python 3 came along, because I tend to only learn when things break. Python 2 let me get away with a lot of mistakes, so the failures seemed very mysterious. In retrospect I could tell former me in ten minutes what he needed to know, but that's not how things work.. #causality
@PM2Ring it's so funny, because when I first came to Python3 I remember having an awful time dealing with bytes vs. strings and getting things wrong half the time
A few days, this question was posted on SO. It's a somewhat extreme case, but not atypical. There's a lot of Python 2 code out there that has shoddy Unicode handling that kinda seems to work, but which is actually riddled with errors.
I feel sorry for that guy with 10 "million" lines of code to fix. I guess we could say that the code should've been written properly in the first place, but I also understand how I got into that unpleasant situation.
@WayneWerner Sure, me too. And I still occasionally stuff it up from time to time. But at least in Python 3 you find out pretty quickly that you've done the wrong thing, because your code raises an error. Whereas in Python 2 you get stuff that runs, but which barfs when you pass it data that's not ASCII or Latin-1.
And that's why we say it's easier to go from Python 3 string handling to Python 2 than the other way around. Python 3 teaches you to think about bytes vs Unicode text strings, rather than mentally mashing everything together.