1) Do you have references to nextWindow anywhere else in your code? 2) while (nextWindow == True): is a little unusual, most objects aren't equal to True even if they have a boolean value of True. I don't know what object .find_element_by_css_selector is returning, so it's not impossible, but I'm a little surprised that while loop is ever entered.
@Bonstark: I don't know what you're trying to do, or how your objects behave, so it's hard to know what to recommend. If find_element returns None if it can't find anything, then while nextWindow: would skip the loop if it's falselike and enter it if it's true, but again I'd be surprised if nextWindow.click() suddenly made it falselike, so I'm not sure how you'd expect to get out of the loop.
@idjaw, this is my first real python project beyond one script practice. With that in mind, I probably don't know how to use it well enough. Organizing my project, copying it and running console commands always seems to be a hassle or give errors.
@DSM I'm trying to run a while loop taking information, as long as there are available pages. If I try to find it when I'm on the last page I get the error:
File "C:\Users\Louis\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python36-32\lib\site-packages\selenium\webdriver\remote\errorhandler.py", line 237, in check_response raise exception_class(message, screen, stacktrace) selenium.common.exceptions.NoSuchElementException: Message: Unable to locate element: td.font10:nth-child(8) > a:nth-child(1)
So either look before you leap (if your library offers a way to get a present/not present result), or wrap the offending call in try/except. But again, the code you posted looks to me like it'll keep clicking forever, so there's probably something I'm missing in the #DO SOMETHING part you suppressed.
Thank you I didn't know about present/not present, I will try: Boolean isPresent = driver.find_element_by_css_selector('td.font10:nth-child(8) > a:nth-child(1)') > 0
cur.execute("Select * from home_reportcreationdata where query_name = " + queryname)
psycopg2.ProgrammingError: column "query1" does not exist
LINE 1: ...ect * from home_reportcreationdata where query_name = query1
cur.execute("Select * from home_reportcreationdata where query_name = %s", [queryname])
@HiteshRoy there's the three-line code example and a one-liner as the answer
For an image you need img[:,0] if it's grayscale (2d array) or arr[:,:,0] if it's rgb (3d array) and arr[...,0] works for both (even if it doesn't make any sense in this example)
@Jonathan I am a beginner at data science, and are currently studying that subject. It means that you select all the item at index 0 in all "dimenions" or lists.
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I never get recruitment spam :( correction, I've only gotten it twice, one is where I'm currently at, the second came 1 week after I took this position
I'm assuming all the good jobs aren't going to come to you ?
I would imagine that's how job hunting works. kinda like a stork bringing a baby, there's a email bringing you a job :D
btw Poke, off topic, If I visit Germany, will they be offended or displeased if I don't drink their beer, and only go for the food and scenery? (do you know?)
@Rawing more like if i order say a meal and it comes with a beer without me knowing, and I dont drink it, is that offensive/rude to em ?
@Rawing some country has unspoken rules on how to eat their meals and what not. Take Japan, they offer different sizes for the same price, however if you don't finish all your food, that's disrespectful for the chef of the place. So was just wondering if German has any unspoken rules
I don't think any nation can be so smug to be offended if you don't eat/drink anything they offer you in particular, unless you frown and say something along the lines of "sorry, I hate <your nation's> food and you disgust me"
Stack Overflow is a site on the Stack Exchange network. Stack Exchange network sites are for asking questions and getting answers. I feel unfairly targeted as a site that all of these annoying projects get applied to Stack Overflow and not the network as a whole; it's like we can't have the site we want, which is an SE network site about programming, because you guys keep messing with it because it is "special". There's nothing special about it, it's just the biggest. Stop applying all your company initiatives to one site please. — TylerH12 mins ago
Isn't there something in that import direction though? I seem to remember that there are things you can do, or at least there used to be, which resulted in you getting a broken module in sys.modules or something. This is very handwavy, but that's all I can remember.
@AndrasDeak, @poke: I'm trying to arrange a room general meeting on Monday, 5 Feb. When's a good time of day for you European types? (I'm not sure we'll find a time which works across the planet, but most of us are NorthAm or Europe.)
With bugs A.1 through A.42 out of the way, I'm finally able to execute my program on the known bad input file and see the error that the user is reporting... Theoretically. The program now runs with no error at all.
187 possible lines where a null reference exception could occur, take one down, pass it around, 186 possible lines where a null reference exception could occur...
Unless that answer contains the secret of extracting precise line numbers from an environment that has all debug information disabled, I don't know if it's going to be helpful. "Try not to do foo.bar when foo is null" is indeed solid advice, but I have 500 lines worth of foo.bars here.
at HelperLibrary.Processor.WidgetProcessor.FiveHundredLineLongFunction(Widget w)
at HelperLibrary.Processor.WidgetProcessor.ProcessFromFile(FileInfo file)
at HelperLibrary.Processor.WidgetProcessor.Start()
at MyProject.Program.Main(String[] args) in C:\Projects\MyProject\Program.cs:line 16
@MartijnPieters have you heard of circumstances where an error during import leads to an empty module in sys.modules? We're trying to reproduce this bug: github.com/pallets/flask/pull/2588
Maybe it was something strange about a circular import? I'm convinced I'm not dreaming up this idea that it was possible to get yourself into trouble when importing broken modules once upon a time.
Progress meeting. Me: I haven't nailed down the problem yet, but I've refactored and added logging which should help diagnose the issue after our next push. Coworker: Oh, the widget processor error? I think I know what's causing that. Could probably knock it out in ten minutes. Didn't I mention that last week? Me: [twitch]
To twist the knife further, he probably did mention that, and I just wasn't listening all the way.
Now if you were talking about how there is a mandatory evacuation order due to potential mudslides after the fires in the west hills where this Friday's party is supposed to be, I'd be more sympathetic. Or how you were late for class because your car window was broken after you parked west of campus...
Coworker: This is an easy fix. See, the problem is that the Widget object has a reference to the sprocket property, which is set to null by default. But the database has a `NOT NULL` constraint on that column, so it crashes when you try to save. Me: Ok, so why does the stack trace point to ProcessWidget(), rather than SaveInitialWidget(), which seemingly runs without issue five lines earlier? Coworker: uhhh. Let me get back to you on this one.
He's probably got an important point there, but it isn't the whole picture. Wish he would check his Ps and Qs before telling management that we'll fix this in ten minutes
Co-worker is probably a smart capable person but fallible. The most obvious fallibility being insecurity where by they attempt to look smart by stating how quickly they could solve the problem. We've all likely been guilty of the same crime once or twice.
If that constraint is really in the prod db as {coworker} claims, then this function should not work on any input, and it should never have worked at any point in the past. And yet it's been running properly 99.99% of the time since April.
The best kind of programs are the ones that only need to run on your specific computer and no-one else's
Then it doesn't really matter if you used backslashes instead of slashes for your file paths, or whatever.
In a perfect world, the production environment would be configured identically to my dev environment. But one might gather from my previous workplace stories, that I'm not in a perfect world
A few months ago I instructed the student in our group that writing maintainable code is important, since one often forgets that "other people reading your code" also includes yourself in a few months. Today he told me that he dusted off a few older scripts and he had a hard time figuring out a few details. I told him that I had told him so :P
I've had a few teams where debugging in production was a thing
@AndrasDeak It's amazing how often the person in, "Always code as if the person maintaining your code is a homicidal psychopath who knows where you live" turns out to be future you.
Coworker says "it definitely used to work, but then something happened in the production database, and now it doesn't work at all". I was incorrect in assuming that it's been 99.99% functional since April; it's been 0% functional but it wasn't important enough to work on until now
I asked "do you think the NOT NULL constraint was added to production, and that's what made it break?" and got a very noncommittal response
Then he started talking about the TineCollection attribute of the Widget object, which AFAICT has nothing to do with the column with the new-ish constraint, nor with the null reference error that I'm ostensibly trying to fix
Unrelated. Today while trying to solve puzzling.stackexchange.com/questions/58907/…;, I constructed a table showing the difference between 2*k and reverse_digits(k) for all integer values of k between 10 and a million. There are many values with a difference of 1 or 2 or 3, etc. But I found only one with a difference of 7: |38*2 - reverse_digits(38)|. I'm curious if there are any other numbers with a difference of 7, beyond the range of a million.
@davidism by the way, I looked at the issue linked to that syntaxerror PR, and there seems to be another guy who could repro 6 months ago. Perhaps those two users should cross-correlate their installations...
@Kevin interesting plagiarism discussion in the comment section :)
Other categories with only one member: 10, 20, 28, 30, 31, 34. I'd be interested if there was some underlying pattern to which categories have one member, and which have more than one, and which ones have an infinite number of members.
1 certainly has infinite members, all of the form |3<some number of nines>7 * 2 - 7<same number of nines>3|
6 has an interesting sequence of [(489, 984), (4629, 9264), (46029, 92064), (460029, 920064)]. The initial 8s kind of break up into 6 and 2, and drift apart.
@Kevin I still remember there was an announcement email, and there was this one person who hit reply all stating about an issue they are having... I was like ..... huh? does the whole company need to know you have having an issue? the lead project manager who shot that email was furious at that one person :\
Antti's point is don't ask if we've used something before if you have a question about it, just ask your question. If your question in itself is if anyone has used it then I'm pretty sure someone has ..
I don't have a particular question about it - I just wanted to know if anyone had used it. If someone answered yes, I was going to ask of their experience :)