Anyone who is good with Scrapy willing to offer some guidance? Posted a few questions about abs/rel file paths and files pipelines but haven't gotten any bites!
I'm having forum, the forum thread and reply content are stored in the DB as markdown text. While Saving i need to convert HTML to Markdown text by html2text and While retrieving Convert the Markdown text to HTML by Mistune. For that parsing i'm using two package. Is this better way orelse suggest some better solution
I'm going to create forum like Stackoverflow, for that question and reply data. I was planned to convert and Save it in the DB. Is this good or bad idea?
Well, poke asked you what you get as user input, markdown or HTML, because the input should be stored in the database. If you are transforming that input (markdown to HTML) for representation purposes, then you can do it on the frontend.
@poke User will enter the plain text, front-end it will be converted to HTML and in the backend i will the convert the HTML to markdown for storing purpose
@sakthiselvam What do you mean by how? How were you going to store HTML / markdown in the database? It's just long text, so whatever appropriate field is applicable for that in whatever backend you are using should do the job.
There's nothing inherently wrong with saving HTML in a DB, but it's better to store the user input in a more readable/useful format. What if you ever redesign your HTML? All the HTML stored in your database will be outdated. You don't have that problem if you store the user input as-is, and convert it to HTML when you need it.
Well… I’m in the 1% percentile for Python, and I’m really annoyed at myself for getting distracted during one question and for not being able to decipher what one question meant in time… >_<
We should have a canonical for stackoverflow.com/questions/48686886/… but I can't find one in our common questions, or by Googling. We do have a canonical for the similar problem where the sublists are created by multiplication, and I can find other similar questions via Google, but not one where the sublists are created by modifying a list and appending it in a loop.
My work project has an unusual bug: whatever page you're on, the url bar shows the address of whatever page you were on before this page.
If you're on main.aspx and go to widgetView.aspx, then the url still shows main.aspx. Nobody has complained but it makes debugging unrelated problems harder because I don't know what page I'm on.
I'm not soliciting technical assistance here; I just think it's an interesting story.
Grrr. That Cartesian product question now has 2 virtually identical answers that show how to do it properly via itertools.product but which totally ignore the OP's question as to why their algorithm didn't work. Fortunately, the OP accepted the answer that does have an explanation. And I still haven't found a good dupe target...
@PM2Ring “but which totally ignore the OP's question” – To quote another user on that… *rolls eyes*
@poke Answers are not required to adhere to bad design restrictions posed by questions. Stating that they're bad and offering the better alternative is the preferred way to answer. As a 173k user, you should know better than to promote bad code. — jpmc26Feb 4 at 20:51
@poke Well, sure, a good answer should show the better way to achieve the desired goal, but it should also explain why the OP's code doesn't do what they expect, since the same problem can arise in a lot of other contexts.
If someone asks "I'm trying to do X with Y, but why isn't it working?" and you reply with "don't use Y here, use Z", then you have not answered the question
It annoys me when answers just give a solution that promotes cargo-cult coding, especially when the OP has specifically asked for an explanation for why their code doesn't behave as expected.
I knew all the answers for the ones I got wrong (~4) :( They should probably put a warning before they start the test that "answer options can be dubious".
In the future, 3d printers will be able to extrude wood pulp and cure it in-place so that you can cover objects in paper even if they're not topologically equivalent to a flat plane.
I feel sorry for that OP. Even if he had enough rep for chat, I guess such a discussion is rather off-topic for this room, since he's light-years away from writing actual code. But maybe there's another chat room somewhere on Stack Exchange where he could have the necessary discussion.
I hate paper wasps. Australian wasps make mud nests, and are much less aggressive than the yamming European paper wasps that somehow got imported here.
Hi Experts, kindly assist with following doubt. On the code below, i'm having trouble wrapping my head around the working of this function in the for loop.
1 #! /usr/bin/python3 2 3 def countdown(): 4 5 a=5 6 while a>0: 7 yield a 8 a-=1 9 10 for i in countdown: 11 print(i)
I want to believe that the question is actually "is it really necessary to have a variable a here when I could just as easily do yield from range(5, 0, -1)?" But somehow I doubt that's the case
however sometimes even though i do the testing and the outcomes make sense, its the underlying logic that gives me the thinking
@ArneRecknagel yes, the i variable will act as an index number, it will start at 0 and go over the list you have provided, so number 5 will be index 0, 4 will be index 1 and so worth
@DRP no, it won't it will actually be a direct copy of the values in the array. so, in sequence, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0. Pyhton loops are by default for-each loops, not index loops
@davidism i think i see what you mean, its a bad example, but following the code as it reads its like saying that for the function part yield a number untill the while finishes, now how do we print each yielded number, it has to be invoked several times, and for this a for/in is needed
@ArneRecknagel yes very good point, im still wrapping my head over this details
Thanks Arne Recknagel and Davidism, it is clear now. Cheers!
I'm trying to figure out how I fit in there, because I see my name, but then when not logged in I don't. So I don't know why I see my name, or what the context is of why my name is there
...because I'm pretty sure I am not in the top all time user list
Debugging character set encoding problems today ;_; of course I have no way of knowing if the character set my database uses is the same character set that prod uses
I am doing data science-related stuff, and I want to add metadata to columns (as variables) and rows (training/validation/etc. sets) and be able to select groups easily syntactically (e.g. df.loc['train','exogenous']). I looked at subclassing MultiIndex, but that seems like a LOT of user code is needed to wrap around it.
I also looked at xarray and it seems much easier to subclass the Dataset object with "variables" support, but it is much less pleasant to work with indexing "rows" than with pandas.
This wouldn't really fit an SO question, just this design decision has been really annoying me.
End use is for a time series framework, by the way.
My error is occurring probably because the user is entering a "special" character that can't be encoded in Windows-1252, or perhaps some other similar character encoding.
Our error reporting system can't identify the exact character, because it gets sanitized to a "?" in the stack trace, but it usually appears at the beginning of a sentence where things are being listed off. So the character might be a bullet point, or some kind of hyphen-like symbol. The user might be using a non-American keyboard. Are there any non-American keyboards that let you easily type hyphen-like symbols that are not actually hypens?
It's easy to do em-dash using a Compose key sequence. That's very common on *nix, but it's also available for Windows. And of course word processing software can magically promote chars, so you get fancy hyphens, smart quotes, etc.
When I intentionally try to insert a character sequence that definitely isn't in 1252, such as "ಠ_ಠ", it crashes, but not with the same error message and not on the same line as the stack trace from production
My best guess is that if the character isn't in 1252, it tries to make a reasonable conversion. There's no reasonable conversion for "ಠ_ಠ", so it crashes hard. Maybe whatever the user is typing does has a reasonable conversion, so the program gets a little farther along before some other component notices the discrepancy of "database has EM_DASH, application has SUPER_FANCY_UNICODE_DASH"
@Kevin Ok, but that's a pretty weird char. Try something European with a smaller codepoint that's not in cp1252, and see what error message you get, eg ā, which is chr(257)
Hmm, good idea. 1252 has a number of "a with a squiggle on top" characters, but they don't have the same byte value as their unicode-encoded equivalents I think
Ok... "foo ā bar" gets saved in the database as "foo a bar". Even if I modify the db directly. So Oracle does do "reasonable conversion".
wiki.python.org/moin/TimeComplexity lists both "get item" and "get length" as O(1), so seq[-1], which is equivalent to seq[len(seq)-1], should also be O(1)
If you're thinking "I don't know if array is an array or a list, I just did array = [1,2,3]", then it's a list. You're not using arrays unless you imported from the array module.
Ajax's code is ok, but does have a pointless explicit double loop, and it doesn't actually explain what's wrong with the OP's code, even though the OP specifically asked for that info. But as we all know, Ajax is a perennial offender at doing that sort of thing.
@Kevin Sadly, array module arrays generally aren't noticeably faster than lists, but they do tend to be a lot more compact.
To be fair, the whole idea of asking "what's wrong with my code" on a site like SO doesn't make a whole lot of sense. How's anyone else ever going to benefit from that question and its answers? So it kind of makes sense to interpret the question as "how do I do this correctly?" and write an answer about that.
IIRC, when I tried to optimize a prime sieve by using arrays instead of lists it ended up being slower, because list slice assignment is very efficient.
@Aran-Fey I see what you mean, but IMHO it depends on the kind of error in the code. If it's due to faulty logic in implementing some algorithm, then sure, it's unlikely to be very helpful to future readers, since they probably won't find the question even if they're trying to implement the same (or similar) algorithm.
OTOH, if the error is due to misunderstanding some fairly common language feature, eg the example I linked earlier of trying to build a list of lists by appending multiple references to the same sublist, then I think it's important to correct the OP's misunderstanding, and I believe there's a good chance that it can also help other readers.
are opinion-type questions valid for chat? Such as which do you prefer using glob.glob or os.walk? I personally don't have any, but I'm asking for future reference