Right, so (and correct me if I'm wrong, I haven't touched django since 2015), Django is designed to be thread safe, but it is a wsgi application, not server. You have to handle concurrent requests on whatever is serving your django application.
@chrisz So this WSGI thing, I read up on it and what I can gather is that it's an interface for some python web frameworks with servers like apache/nginx
so that means that django has the capability of being concurrent
Less impressive of a monopoly, I expect, if you calculate total stars / total posts. It's easy to get a bulls eye if you fire a thousand darts simultaneously out of your comically oversized dart cannon.
Pretty much, there's not an option you toggle in Django to handle concurrent requests or magic like that, you just set up your uwsgi or whatever and Django rolls with it
I know that the room's early history is muddled because there was a period where there were two Python rooms, and they got frozen and unfrozen and deleted and undeleted and merged... Easy enough to accidentally drop a couple tables while doing that.
@chrisz hey, sorry to bother but what's the rationale for the whole django-restful framework? I see serializers being a major selling point of it, and sure I understand that
what I don't understand is why can't we just run queries on the database and get back json?
There was an additional smaller kerfluffle when that one fellow said "I'll make my own Python room!" and he did so for a while. I don't think that caused any problems on the backend.
Project report: my Internet Connection Strength Indicator LEDs have been functioning correctly all day. Unfortunately, they are sitting in nearly direct sunlight so it's not obvious which ones are actually lit up.
But say you want some object Foo with its attributes in the db. You make a GET request and the server goes and queries for the database. Finds the items and gives it back to the user.
@OneRaynyDay Sure, but then you need to handle authentication too. DRF (rest framework) essentially is like Django, it takes away the pain of writing your own things every single time. You just have to have a config, then create serializers (like models), and you are almost good to go.
Turns out, Andras, that trying to replace that Modbus equipment (the non-exception exceptions) with Raspberry Pis is a gateway to a whole world of pain :/
I let a browser display sending Ajax requests run the process. That has been a painful mistake but a good learning experience. The browser is stable in Ras Pi 3b but, for some reason, crashes a lot on Ras Pi 3B+, and that shuts down my modbus queries
@AndrasDeak My mistake was thinking Chromium would behave the same way across B and B+ models. It seems not to be the case. It's not (I can't find why), but it's a bit of an embarrassing mistake for me too since the IT dept. was sure it would fail
Andras, my swamp monster only needs a 5th arm to keep going long enough that I can just start from scratch with a proper scope :) I'll throw a few more globals into the mix, weep a bit inside, and get the job done properly :)
I'm not sure if the new pypi.org allows you to edit a release after the fact (think it's immutable index now) but a 1.0.1 would shadow it for all practical purposes
it's useful whenever you have some environment variables that are necessary but you're switching between shells/environments quite often. Docker might be an example of that but it's useful even without it
(Flask-agnostic) Coming from a naive standpoint, I'd assume that 1.0 suggests you're feature-complete from your initial goals? There's a number of big businesses using Flask (as an example) already, does this translate to increased support from them?
I have to admit it's a little funny that the whole reason for using env variables in the first place is to avoid config files, so we all decided on a file format for it
@AndrasDeak The CV question is truly awful, but my interpretation is that they have 5 distinct lists and want to see if there's items in those lists that appear in other lists. I'm not sure the dupe is valid.
why they bother with implementing these crazy obscure features but won't implement basic and useful features (such as searching your deleted posts) is beyond me
I think that's on purpose, wanting to prevent a lot of meta posts complaining
just like an opt-in "notify me of negative rep changes too" feature; it always gets shot down because "it would cause too much drama only to satisfy the curiosity of a few people"
I like how the top comment on the HN post for 1.0 is "here are these other projects that are better." Thanks, random HN user, that's great to hear. :-|
HN is trash, the only reason I was looking was because it directly involved me. Which on second thought was probably a worse reason than normal to read HN.
@davidism in my pathetic attempt to pretend I'm a full-stack developer recently, the only thing that has made any sense to me is Flask. Whether you want to unleash people like me on to the net is one thing, but the framework you maintain is truly awesome in its simplicity to enable this kind of thing. I'm sincerely grateful for it.
I have a bs4 problem. I am trying to parse this text but I only want the message. data = BeautifulSoup(content, 'html.parser'); print(data.li.text) returns the whole lot.
def to_json_file(self, path=None):
if path is None:
path = join(self.base_name, '.json')
== or ==
def to_json_file(self, path=join(self.base_name, '.json')):
# the base name *should* never change, so from a practical pov this is ok
I prefer to set optional parameters to None because it avoids having to define the default value in multiple places (like in a child class that overrides the method)