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00:13
unlocking 15k privileges feels a bit underwhelming
"protect questions"? Never felt the need to do that
I have sometimes wanted to do it, to prevent repwhore answers that just copy and paste a comment on a question that will be closed but may take a while, but I'm pretty sure that's an abuse of the feature, so I never do…
 
2 hours later…
02:23
cbg
02:52
Is a question marked as duplicate eventually closed?
In the sense of deleted
 
1 hour later…
04:00
 
1 hour later…
05:00
cbg all
I'm getting a 500 error when I try to add a question to sopython.com/canon
05:15
Never mind. Anyway, I wrote my own answer, and added it to socanon, because I couldn't find anything decent.
05:43
@abarnert Your answer got deleted
I liked that answer, would crafting a question to which that was the answer be good? I think it would be a good canonical answer
Yes. I posted it on the wrong question, deleted it there, reposted it on the right one—and then a mod deleted it for being duplicate answer. I flagged it with an explanation; hopefully it'll be fixed.
Is the link to that canonical answer on sopython correct?
It will be if the mod undoes the deletion. So far, no response to my flag, but mods are busy, and it's only been a few minutes.
06:40
cbg
cbg
07:07
cbg
cbg
I blame you @IljaEverilä
that would have been an unbroken chain of c-b-g of length 6... that would've been amazing
@IljaEverilä why? You broke the string of cbg :(
That would have almost been a world premier
07:11
And for what?! A suicidal cabbage?
> Some men just want to watch the world burn
@piRSquared It is a cabbage train, mind you!
To add the cabbage or not to add the cabbage that is the question.
Oooh! Ok, I can respect that
Is that glue?
Or sludge? I can't tell what that gloppy stuff is holding the cabbage to the track
🍍to me. 7th all time question asker.
07:27
Nevermind, apparently I don't know my salad.
Perhaps they have all been good questions,
^ Uhhh, no. No they have not. But a lot of them have been.
I just got a gold badge today because a bad one became famous
Goes to show, I have no way to predict what will garner lots of votes.
Must sleep. rbrb
Rbrb
Shall we all do some rbrb messages now?
you've already blown it
Never mind...
07:34
:D
@piRSquared cya
I have a pandas dataframe which contains the data in this way drive.google.com/open?id=1sPRp7G8FKfaB6z610dJtUGsYpRT8p3CU I would like to use regex in dataframe and filter out certain things. I have formed the regex pattern but not really sure on how to apply it in the dataframe. Any help would be appreciated.
Here is how my regex looks like regex101.com/r/67PzXu/5
I wanted to apply the regex pattern to a dataframe and copy the filtered results into another dataframe. Is that do-able?
07:56
Just found another home-work question :/
Soo many upvotes:
Cabbage, all
@holdenweb Cbg
feeling-old cbg
@piRSquared There's nothing holding hte cabbage ott he track. The 'sludge' is the remains of earlier cabbages who ended it al.
@Simon I would rather say that poor dumb cbg was wanting to get onboard the cbg train! Just a bit too dumb though :-p
08:18
@Simon Nice, I didn't take a second look at that question after leaving that comment
Is there a utility to convert config to csv . cant find anything on google
the quick green cabbage jumped over the lazy rhubarb o.o
That is still pretty impressive... I've never seen a comment upvoted 10m times in 3mins. Had 12 when I last looked).
It's somewhat disappointing that all my highest voted comments are on questions that are slated for deletion
Lucky I took the screenshot then :)
08:21
At least three people yesterday and today posted gimme-codes for how to sort alternating positive and negative numbers, and two of them deleted the question as soon as I asked whether this was homework or a job interview prescreen question. Is some big company using it to prescreen a batch of intern candidates right now or something?
AFAIK most of the big companies are done hiring here (for the summer session at least)
Is that why the question amount has gone down since January?
more gimme codez questions come from school students doing CS101, because there are more of those
But is that a question people get for homework? I know Google at least used to ask it long ago. (Not as prescreening so much as to throw your code back at you and see how you could modify it for different requirements and whether you'd slip up when one of those rapid-fire changes made it quadratic, which seemed like a really stupid thing to be testing people on, but that's Google…)
08:36
Is How to clone or copy a list the canon dup for [[]] * 2 as well as listb = lista, or is there a different one?
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I am concerned my most highly up-voted question is one of those :|
My interviews at google consisted of a single question that could take up the span of 45 minutes, replete with modifications and writing test cases, so no I would not put it past them
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ would be very interesting if SO can identify traffic from Universities and with a little bit of word analysis being used in the question draft, can suggest "Are you asking a homework question? Did you try it yourself first?"
Thanks.
08:39
@Simon As long as it shows effort from your side beyond being °just° "GIMME CODZ!!1", then it's fine. Basically, as long as it follows SO's guidelines of what a good question should look like, then ye
@AshishNitinPatil That, along with hints from OP's profiles, and a database of CS curricula of all the biggest schools/universities... then yes, very possible :D
Would you mind taking a look? stackoverflow.com/questions/48549535/… I am still doubtful
good enough for me.
* relief* That is a lot of concern off my mind, thanks :D
Is os.environ.get('ROWS') or os.environ.get('LINES'))` not cross-platform enough? Sure, it doesn't work on NT unless you're running cygwin or 4NT, or on most modern Mac or Linux setups, but it covers DOS, Win9x, and tons of old Unix terminals from before the days of tput or BSD-style stty. :)
Erm was that comment for me? If so I'm not even sure what they are.
>>> import os
>>> os.environ.get('ROWS')
>>>
09:06
@abarnert If it is would you consider leaving an answer?
09:38
Somebody (very politely) contacted me on LinkedIn for an issue they are facing from a forked repo of mine. That's a first.
He could have just created an issue (which is what I told him to do) on the github repo with the problem details, might have had a faster answer.
09:53
I lost my consecutive days :( even though I was here
Probably a time zone thing. StackOverflow days end at 2am in my time zone, for example
1am for me.
That is so sad. I spent so much time building that up.
How many days were you at?
@abarnert you also can't protect unless there's a (deleted?) low-rep answer
cbg
200 or something. Every day since I first signed up @Aran-Fey
Hey it's fixed ?????
What the yam is going on?
10:02
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@OlivierMelançon it gets closed, but not deleted. There are auto-delete processes but the mostly apply to non-dupes. Good dupes are helpful.
@Aran-Fey Must be browser cache again...
452 consecutive. I think I need help.
That is a great amount. :D
> visited 1004 days, 992 consecutive
10:12
Well that's something entirely different.
@AndrasDeak That profile should be counted in years not days ;P
Should've been more active in the first 12 days :D
Yep. Or on the 12th day at least...
There, I made a userscript for all those who're struggling to rack up consecutive logins
10:28
My profile looks really good now... :D
Lol :D
@Aran-Fey You know that is not Python code right? You have tagged it Python
lol
oops. Habit.
that paste will delete itself in a week, so that star won't be of lasting value :P
Well I could read what it does so it can only be python
I can upload a permanent version if you want, gimme a moment...
10:34
except for the nasty regex syntax, I'm okay with JS.
@AndrasDeak It is possible the world just gained another web-developer :p
there you go, now people can permanently benefit from a script that boosts a stat only they themselves can see anyway
@AshishNitinPatil 95% of the time I spent on writing that script was spent on figuring out how to use a replacement function for the regex substitution :/
it passes in each capture group as a separate function argument :/
only JS could think of doing something that stupid
I mean, regex is a string (for me at least), so there should be some sort of quotes around it for crying out loud.
Imagine the horrors of multiline regex, hurts even to think about it.
@AshishNitinPatil I miss verbose regexp in Javascript. Having to open a complex regexp up in comments gets old really fast, instead of writing pretty much self documenting regexps.
The good thing about regex literals is that you can set modifiers like /foo/m
If regexes were strings you'd have to write "(?m)foo" instead. Clearly that's an inferior syntax.
10:44
Well, that's why you have functions and modules right?
The way Python does it seems quite good to me. You don't have to coerce something into syntax just because it is very widely used (is it?)
If by functions and modules you mean splitting complex regexp up, there's at least 1 use case where that won't help. Writing a tokenizer / lexer (though perhaps regexp is not the right tool for that to begin with).
Jan 9 at 15:54, by Andras Deak
And I created a new page for localhost:5000/hi. Welp, I guess I know how to web dev now.
I'll first neef "bro"
I'll first need "bro"
@IljaEverilä But that's not a standard use-case right?
10:53
Hola
@AshishNitinPatil I don't think that it's that uncommon either. Having the equivalent of Python's re.VERBOSE mode would help immensely in code clarity.
But, I'm not that sure and you might be entirely correct.
Here's an example of what I mean. Suggestions and outright "you're doing it wrong!" are welcome.
@Aran-Fey Great, so we can now permanently deceive ourselves :D
@AndrasDeak I knew it
11:03
@IljaEverilä I don't use python's verbose, I instead do this:
my_regex = re.compile(
    r'(.*)'  # match everything or nothing
    r'(.*)'  # same here
)
does this look bad?
Not at all and given Javascript's String.raw that is what I'll do in the future. Thank you for the idea.
glad you like it
@AndrasDeak visited 574 days, 3 consecutive
geez, you guys play in a whole different class than me
11:19
@IljaEverilä I'm not sure either :-p I'm just stating what seems convenient and non-ugly to me.
visited 1122 days, 1122 consecutive
aha! :-p
phew, just finished an entire primer on markov models. Bit zonked out... time to watch something
@AndrasDeak wow, I have more visited days than Andras! :D (1120)
@AshishNitinPatil Well, turns out github "issues" is not enabled by default for forked repos, hence the LinkedIn approach.
11:50
Anything we use for a dupe of questions like: stackoverflow.com/questions/49671622/… ?
12:04
@AshishNitinPatil you registered 4.5 years ago, I registered 3 years ago ;) Then again it's not a race
Instant regret -- After downloading a 5GB windows update only to be told "can't proceed with update until you manually uninstall Symantec Endpoint Protection*", I canceled the update, only for the update to immediately restart from the beginning, by downloading the same5GB package again.
And of course this update is super extra important deluxe turbo edition, so it can't be halted or canceled, for my own good
(*go ahead and guess how hard it is to uninstall Symantec Endpoint Protection. Did you guess "impossible"? You win!)
*fetches the world's most microsoft violin*
{coworker} tells me that they have been in a predicament like this since last week. Symantec's documentation tells you that uninstallation is possible using the Symantec Endpoint Administrator Console, which was never installed on our computers. Independent tech support sites suggest that you can partially remove it by deleting certain keys out of the registry, but in {coworker}'s case that just makes the Windows update crash when it looks for noncompliant programs
{coworker} is not an Officially STEMmy Person so it's possible that me trying the same thing would have a better outcome, but I'm not optimistic
I guess my long term solution is: leave the "couldn't update :-(" window open forever, and hope I never need to reboot.
12:25
@IljaEverilä imo way better than having two distinct places for the same thing. I also nest my comments for additional 'readability':
very_long_regex = re.compile(
...
    r"(?P<feature_7>"  # start feature_7
    r"(8.\d{1,3})?:"     # optional group identifier
    r"[1-8]\.[a-z]?"     # status code
    r";(\w)+;"           # content
    r":!)"             # end of feature_7
...
)
@Arne I couldn't agree more. Having to keep them in sync irked me to no end.
This works if x is an empty dict:
val = x["bleh"] or False

But not if x = None
I want val to be false because x doesn't have the "bleh" key in the None object, but it gives an error
use get
val = x.get('bla', False)
None doesn't have .get
ohhh, next time I should read before I write
12:32
val = x.get("bleh") if isinstance(x,dict) else False, or I guess there are a few other options
you'll have to handle what happens if "bleh" is not in your dict, get can do that for you
Woah that works, thanks
oh right that if works like a ternary operator
In some cases it can be good to have a layer that defaults values to certain types. E.g. if x is None: x = {}
(But driven off some sort of schema)
(And also it can complicate reasoning about some things)
@JohanSundman Strange, that doesn't work when I try it on an empty dict.
>>> x = {}
>>> val = x["bleh"] or False
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
KeyError: 'bleh'
works if you use
>>> x = dict()
12:39
>>> x = dict()
>>> val = x["bleh"] or False
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
KeyError: 'bleh'
Maybe x somehow became a defaultdict when you weren't looking ;-) then it would work
>>> from collections import defaultdict
>>> x = defaultdict(int)
>>> val = x["bleh"] or False
>>> val
False
lol maybe, I might be using python 2.7
It's not the kind of thing that's easy to do accidentally though
All I know is that it worked and that the terminal output is long gone now
12:41
@AndrasDeak definitely not a race, I have 4 consecutive days, you have wayyyyyy more.
>>> x = {}
>>> x['bleh'] = 0
>>> x['bleh'] or False
False
"Anyway isn't this all besides the point, since the other room members gave me a useful solution already?", you are probably thinking. Yes it is. But I have no moral compunctions about beating a dead horse.
this whole or False thing looks worse and worse
Yea this works perfectly
power = data.get("power") if isinstance(data, dict) or False
thanks
If x can only ever be a dict or None, I would prefer the ternary to look like val = x.get("bleh") if x is not None else False because I like to avoid using isinstance where possible. But this is splitting hairs
12:45
I'm gonna come up with a better solution earlier in the code so it's never None, this is just a temporary solution
In that case it could just be val = x.get("bleh") if x else False
Because an empty dict won't have it in either :)
^
it also doesn't silently replace values like 0, "", or []
If you can ensure that `x` is always a dict, then `val = x.get("bleh") if x else False` is a bit weird because it can have three different outcomes:
- x is empty: result is False
- x is not empty, but doesn't have a "bleh" key: result is None
- x contains a "bleh" key: result is whatever the value is
My code smell receptor twinges when I see False and None in the same context both representing different null-ish states
@Kevin absolutely agree with this
It's not an error per se, since Python is perfectly capable of distinguishing between False and None values. But it does increase the potential for bugs if you forget that you have two different possible values of val that are both falsey in a boolean context, and you absent-mindedly write a conditional later like if not val: with the intention of detecting only False values and forget that this also detects None values too.
90% of Present Kevin's job is making it hard for Future Kevin to shoot himself in the foot
8
13:08
@Kevin that other 10% of the time I remember you mentioning something about a bounty?
That's right, I set a bounty to have Past Kevin captured, dead or alive, to be brought to justice for his crime of not protecting me from myself
hah, but did you step up your game? Else past Kevin might do the same to you!
\o cbg
13:23
I have a question about English... If I multiply 4 x 4 = 16, '1' has a name what is it? In French we say "retenu", anyone?
If you do 13 x 13 = 169, what is the retenu then? 6? 1? 16?
I guess 16
I'm really looking for the word
That means (answer // 10)
I don't know of such a word
Maybe it does not exist...
The general concept of "numbers that appear in a column indicating more significance than the one you were just operating on" is "Carry digit(s)" although that's principally used in the context of addition, not multiplication
13:28
Carry!!!
Thanks
It like translates to "2. (Mathematics) number to carry over"
"congruent modulo ten" perhaps is the closest I can think of
Kevin'd lol
Likely the term doesn't appear much when talking about multiplication exactly because of the ambiguity of whether 1 or 6 or 16 is the carry digit when doing 13 x 13
In addition there's no ambiguity since the carry digit is always 9 or less unless you're adding together 11 or more numbers
It's just for a variable name, so it does not matter that much
13:34
This is a duplicate to this
Hmm, UI design quandary: I have two pages, widget_view and widget_edit, for viewing and editing widgets. Each widget can have any number of comments. the widget_edit page will definitely have a text box that the user can use to add a new comment. Should the widget_view page also have one? Or should comments be read-only on that page?
option 1: comments are a property of widgets, and widget properties should only be editable on the edit page. the view page should not have an Add Comment option.
option 2: anywhere a user can see a series of comments, they expect to be able to add a new comment. The view page should not have an Add Comment option.
option 3: comments should not be addable on _either_ of these pages, because adding things is different from both viewing things and editing things. Force the user to go to the `comment_create` page if he wants to create a comment.
@Kevin how can this produce a None value?
@RobertGrant For example,
>>> x = {"troz": 42}
>>> val = x.get("bleh") if x else False
>>> print(val)
None
@Kevin Option 2 probably. I feel most will think they should be able to add a comment on the go when they are seeing the comments
Doh yeah
In my head, I said "or" instead of "else", which probably breaks something else
13:46
A compromise between conceptual purity and practical usability might be to have an "add comment" button on the widget view page that takes the user to the widget edit page, with an anchor link that scrolls the "new comment" textbox into view
Or perhaps if I'm going to have a page load, it would be better to have an independent comment_create page
For proper context, comment_create would display both the widget information and the information of all the preceding comments. I should figure out if I can include the template for one page inside another page, so I don't have to write these twice.
I'm 80% sure this framework supports that
@Kevin but .get only works for dicts, right? Oh, you said "if x can only ever be a dict or None". In that case yes, and that's what I'd have written for that case ;)
current me wants to ask who ever decided it was a good idea to build a anonymous-based database yet use a strong typing language to interact with it :(
Final code for review: val = x.get("bleh") if x or False
Oh wait, what does the ternary do there
Yeah, works
Although don't forget the three-line comment explaining it
Currently feeling pangs of jealousy at C#, which has syntax for "call this method if the object has it, or evaluate to null otherwise", in the form of x?.get(y)
x.maybe_get("bleh")
14:00
morning cabbage
I wonder if there's a CSS selector for "the element identified by the part of the url following the hash sign". Ex. if the url is example.com#foo, then the foo element is selected, and if the url is example.com#bar, then the bar element is selected.
I'm struggling to come up with a google query that doesn't return a lot of irrelevant results on the topic of "here's what <a> tags are and how you can use them"
@AndrasDeak yeah, perhaps we should've wrapped x in the maybe monad
It's probably antithetical to Python's design, but I wish we had a way to catch exceptions at the expression level
x = try{y/z}except{ZeroDivisionError: float("nan")} or something
Braces? Braces?!?
I was going to go with x = try(y/z).except(ZeroDivisionError, float("nan")) but obviously you can't do that kind of thing with regular functions
Since y/z will evaluate long before Python makes any attempt to resolve the except name
14:18
@RobertGrant did you ever continue the Flask tutorial?
how about the concise x = y/z except ZeroDivisionError, float('nan')
@Kevin what's the motivation for this?
Example use case. You have a list ["1", "two", "3", "blah"] and you wish to convert each value to an integer, if and only it can be converted to an int, with a result of [1, "two", 3, "blah"]. So you might do mylist = [try(int(item)).except(ValueError, item) for item in mylist]
The best you can do currently is try to reverse engineer the logic Python uses to determine whether a string is convertible to int, ex. mylist = [int(item) if item.isdigit() else item for item in mylist]
But you don't want to call a different function right?
his point is that he can't
unless you mean a function that does the exception handling which defeats the purpose
14:34
Sometimes I actually want to do this exact thing and my usual approach is to write a try_int function which encapsulates the try-except behavior. Then I call it from the list comp.
But this violates the constraints of this thought experiment, which is: the solution must be all in one line.
SOEthics question. Keep in mind that if I asked this question on meta, I predict that I would get downvoted into oblivion because I dared to think of such an atrocity.

on to question: I see question with no attempt and a downvote. Is it "ok" to edit the question with a contrived attempt in order to improve the quality of the question? I've actually done this 2 or 3 times. I justify it in my own mind but I'm curious what others think.
Nope.
Attempts are only relevant in the local context of "OP is a lazy tomato", and you'd be fiddling with that aspect. In the big picture attempts don't matter.
to some people^[citation needed] it would even seem like trying to hide that you answered a lazy asker's lazy question, which is again something negative
So you see an attempt as a hurdle an OP must clear in order to earn an answer?
To be clear, that's a question not an argument.
def try_substitute(function, to_catch, default, *args):
    try:
        result = function(*args)
    except to_catch:
        return default
    return result

mylist = ["1", "two", "3", "blah"]
test = [try_substitute(int, ValueError, item, item) for item in mylist]
print(test)
I guess, for a lot of people, yes. It's a bit ambivalent because in the long run SO is about questions and answers, and it's irrelevant if the asker of the first NullPointerException dupe target made an attempt or not. Still, when new questions are asked we make sure that they aren't using us as a free code writing service, in order to maintain a higher quality on SO.
14:37
But I do see your point.
@Kevin Is my above code snippet what you mean by a try_int type of function?
So attempts are an indicator of quality on very short time scales.
a lot of people will agree and a lot of of others will strongly disagree, so this is just my stance
@shuttle87 Yeah.
And I'm swayed by the fiddling with what other's perceptions may be. I do think that is wrong. I'll have to solicit an attempt in the future.
Can this be put in a lambda for one-liner-goodness?
14:40
is the day over...?
@shuttle87 Not that I'm aware of.
@AndyK not for me. 7:40 am. You, however, are free to head to the pub.
@Kevin interesting
@piRSquared going to have a beer indeed. 4:40Pm at my end. Going there in an hour. Thanks God/Buddha/Allah/Ganesh/You-name-it, it is Thursday
@shuttle87 lambda != one-liner-goodness. While we're at it, one-liner != goodness :P
even if it were possible, you might as well define a full function rather than a lambda
14:41
I couldn't find the unicode trademark sign fast enough to indicate the sarcasm :)
@Kevin one-liner badness, yes
sigh just spend the last 30 minutes in c# room just to not find an answer... I really miss getattr() from python :(
If we imagine that try_substitute was a part of Python's default builtins, then we can use it to emulate the behavior of the proposed inline try-except structure. Although it gets a little crufty if your list comp's expression isn't a single callable, since you then need to wrap it in a lambda.
@AndrasDeak Ah so maybe that was my first installment in "shuttle87's terrible one-liner™ code suggestion" series
Like, if you wanted to find the reciprocals of zero through ten, you could do:
>>> [try_substitute((lambda: 1./x), ZeroDivisionError, float("inf")) for x in range(10)]
[inf, 1.0, 0.5, 0.3333333333333333, 0.25, 0.2, 0.16666666666666666, 0.14285714285714285, 0.125, 0.1111111111111111]
14:43
holy yams, installing GDAL via conda is so much easier than installing via pip.
The lambda being necessary since there's no built-in reciprocal function
must get coffee/breakfast... temp rbrb
Unless...
>>> [try_substitute((1.).__truediv__, ZeroDivisionError, float("inf"), x) for x in range(10)]
[inf, 1.0, 0.5, 0.3333333333333333, 0.25, 0.2, 0.16666666666666666, 0.14285714285714285, 0.125, 0.1111111111111111]
Now you're trading the cruft of a lambda for the cruft of dunder methods
just curry operator.truediv with 1 ;)
@Kevin nice
15:18
rb folks
rbrb
Out of all rejected, deferred, and abandoned PEPs, the try-except expression is the one I most wish had gone the other way.
15:42
Why's that?
Oh yeah, that's interesting
Very interesting PEP
Hi
I'm astonished that they even considered it
15:48
It might be very useful in a lot of simple use cases. But reading it would probably need getting used to.
Yeah buried exception catching is interesting
Actually, I wanted that when I was coding about 2 days ago
a lambda of a bulky comprehension and it was all ruined when I had to add try except
"ruined" :P
It seemed pretty close to approval until someone realized how bad all the examples were.
ultimafely the motivation was “If we had this years ago, we wouldn’t have pairs like [] vs get and index vs find. But there aren’t many of those, and they’re obviously not going away, and new parallel-API idioms like that seem to pop up at a rate of 1-2 per decade, which is slow enough for Python’s evolution to handle, so... if that’s he main reason for except expression we don’t need them.
I'm so accustomed to putting try: in front of failure-prone code, that it feels wrong just looking at the proposed syntax that uses except but not try
The mandatory parentheses makes the try redundant, but still
16:02
@AndrasDeak I can't be the only person that likes to write big one-liners, whether it be readable or not :P
@OneRaynyDay You are my nightmare scenario when trying to understand code
I like writing big one-liners, as long as nobody has to read them against their will
@StevenVascellaro I only write it in scripts where I know noone will read
@OneRaynyDay People like you are probably the reason the proposal failed. After all the original examples turned out to be worthless, people rushed to come up with new ones, and they were all “I could make this already-hideous one-liner even more incomprehensible”.
I always try to write code with the assumption that someone else will have to maintain it in 5 or 6 years
16:04
I'm currently working on a project that evolved from "scripts that nobody else has to read" and there was a lot of work in fixing that code.
Forget someone else in 5 years, even 6 months away from my own code and I can’t maintain it unless I wrote it nicely in the first place.
@shuttle87 I have a scripts folder titled "Single use" that I've had to revisit more times than I'd like
^^
Nov 23 '17 at 19:00, by Andras Deak
and "anybody" includes yourself 3 months from now
woops :-)
Now granted there's sometimes some educational value that comes about from writing things in a non-best-practices type of way. But yeah it's something to definitely be careful about. And I say this mainly because you want to consider the habits that you will create if you do this a lot.
16:07
I'm still thanking myself from 2 months ago for deciding to add logging to my script
A lot of the code I write for just myself this one time is already non-best-practices at a higher level, which makes it even more important to be best-practices at the low level so I can figure out what the hell I was trying to do...
...and spending a lot of time fixing poor logging decisions I made 2 months ago
Speaking of which: Empty newlines in logging files. Yay or Nay?
Are you logging any multi-line messages?
Not at the moment, no
I only add empty lines when there are horrible multiline messages that I can’t easily eliminate and that I can’t read without separation.
16:10
My version of Jupyter recognizes f-strings but not fr-strings. Wrote this in an answer and not sure if I should feel dirty yet '|'.join(fr'\b{w}\b' for w in words)
I thought multiline logging is usually frowned upon anyways
I figured as much
@StevenVascellaro good logging is great
The only times I use multi-line is when I'm relaying XML error message from a third party API
Which is always fun
Usually you want to format it as separate pieces so you don't need a multi-line message (and often, once you do, you realize half those pieces are useless). But sometimes, you really need to know "what was the whole JSON doc that caused this exception here".
16:12
So something like this:
INFO:root:Logged on as <username>
INFO:root:Sending logoff request to Workforce Central...
INFO:root:Successfully logged off from Workforce Central.
INFO:root:Logged on as <username>
INFO:root:Adding job(s) to organizational set '<set_name>'.
INFO:root:Finished adding job(s) to organizational set.
INFO:root:Sending logoff request to Workforce Central...
INFO:root:Successfully logged off from Workforce Central.
No need for newlines to separate sections, right?
Yeah, I wouldn't separate them.
Right now I'm debating what to do with tracebacks for expected API errors caused by user input
Is it worth keeping a traceback for an "incorrect password" error?
The logs I have to deal with at work are horrible. In Go, you're always supposed to handle errors as locally as possible—which usually means you annotate the error and pass it up the chain so the code where you would have written an except in a better language finally logs something that's basically an ad-hoc, incomplete, single-line-mess version of a traceback. Why do people think this is better?
Right now I have this mess for login errors:
ERROR:root:Workforce Central API error.
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "U:\Documents\Scripts\wfc_helper\wfc_helper\gui\logon_frame.py", line 74, in _logon_button_clicked
    self.master.kronos.logon(username, password)
  File "U:\Documents\Scripts\wfc_helper\wfc_helper\core\wfc_connection.py", line 127, in logon
    response = self.post_request(request)
  File "U:\Documents\Scripts\wfc_helper\wfc_helper\core\wfc_connection.py", line 110, in post_request
    return self._parse_response(reply.content)
I think for "incorrect password" the only thing you want to log is that there was an incorrect password attempt, maybe including the username if your users are "that team of 10 people that sits on the other side of the office". And if you have millions of users, not even a log message; just keep a stat count somewhere.
16:17
I should clarify that this is for a desktop app, so there would only be 1 user at a time
Thanks for the advice. I'll probably discard the traceback and just note the XML message from the server
I guess the question is: if an invalid password might actually be a valid password that your code didn't handle right (maybe you're encoding to the default system encoding but the service expects UTF-8 or something), what would help you debug that?
@abarnert In that case, what about logging the traceback with logging.debug()? That way it's hidden for normal use, but it's there if needed.
Yeah, in desktop apps, I usually throw everything into debug that might conceivably be useful. (Although sometimes you have to come back and retrofit some way to turn on debug logging for a single part of the app instead of the whole thing so your users don't have to upload 54MB log files to support…)
When a previous company I worked for went out of business, one of the assets someone bought was our multi-TB collection of debug logs from our main app. I can only assume it was a spammer looking to harvest the invalid logins with some script that knows how to recover a typical idiot's actual email address from failed attempts like john@doe@aol@com.
I always wondered how those people were able to work out how to mail their logs to support.
16:47
@toonarmycaptain A little, but I'm working such long hours at the moment I can't give it proper attention
@RobertGrant Fair enough. I'm just having issues, probably related to my not having played with html much since '01, but I've copied and pasted the example code from github to make sure, and I'm still having problems with links not working
Links not working? Where?
As in url_for or whatever it is?
I create a test post, and then click logout to see if it'll take me straight to index correctly when I log back in, and logout leaves the page url as the bare IP, with no change.

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