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17:00
@toonarmycaptain that's a good suggestion.
Hi Guys.
@OneRaynyDay Not a great idea to copy venvs around - for example, entry points created in the bin subdirectory will have shebang lines pointing to the original env's python.
@PM2Ring Aha thanks, I'll have a look at that later
This answer mentions a virtualenv-clone package, but I know nothing about it.
@holdenweb so the inherent issue is that I'm not allowed to use anything from python, to duplicate a python directory. The reason is all just compliance. I decided I'm just going to complain
17:16
Corporations! le sigh. If doing things right means breaking policy then you will damned well do things wrong!
@OneRaynyDay brings back memories ;)
For me too, but not happy ones
Nice thing about working for software companies or software-driven service companies: compliance rules are all based on how they affect development rather than written by some team that’s in charge of “policy” for everything from paper manufacturing to international finance as well as software.
I have a question. Is Python appropriate for web development? I almost can't find backend jobs which only utilize Django or Flask...
17:27
Python is appropriate for web development and I'm sure there's jobs out there for it. Can you define only ?
There’s a huge number of Django and Flask websites out there. If you’re having problems finding a job, maybe it’s because there’s also a huge number of Python developers out there?
Is PHP appropriate for web development? Not really, but that doesn't stop it from being used...
It means that the job only requires the skills about Django or Flask without knowing other framework like Java Spring
@abarnert It's possible. But PHP & Java web development are still the majority.
@abarnert I see lots of web development jobs regarding to Django in USA but not in Europe...
Often companies that require two frameworks are gradually porting from one to the other. If they’re going from Spring to Django, a solid Django programmer who’s a good learner and willing to learn Java and Spring (demonstrating that you, e.g., know 3 languages, even though Java isn’t one of them, would definitely help there) is an attractive hire. Going the other way, not so much.
@abarnert After investigations about the job market(indeed.com), the requirement for ML has most needs and web development(FULLSTACK) follows it.
17:33
@Stallman I assume you're starring abarnert's comments... stars are reserved for interesting comments for others to read in general. Please do not star replies to your comments
well the first one might have been starred anyway
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ All right, but he shows great points.
@miradulo smashing my own face for the past couple days
When I was looking for a job to move to Europe last year, I found proportially more Python opportunities there than in the US, not fewer. Berlin and Estonia were especially full of companies looking for Python engineers. Unless things have changed (maybe because people who would have gotten H1Bs in the US are going to Europe instead because of Trump)?
I don't doubt that, every point abarnert makes is great
but still, be aware of this little point about the room's culture while you are here, and enjoy your stay :)
17:39
@abarnert May I ask you that what kind of job were you seeking for last year?
Web development, automation testing, data analysis or something else?
@abarnert Sorry I had to leave yesterday, it was super late here. But, yeah, it does make sense, if I were transferring frame by frame, which I'm not. So I think I'm going another way. Thanks anyway! :)
Honestly, I was looking for… anything interesting, really, and anything that fits easily into a category like “web development” usually isn’t that interesting. Some of the things I looked at were audio streaming, spatial searches of AR data, a game server, and heuristics for flagging programming test/contest submissions.
But recruiters kept sending me to generic back-end Django interviews, so there must have been a lot of demand for that.
Hey folks just started with web development :D
Is is correct that fcgi allows for stateful webapplications, while in general wsgi does not? Also from what I understood django is mainly ment for as a wsgi application to be used with gunicorn for example? If all the above is true, are there any state of the art fcgi python framework? Or do we then just need an api and the application is launched by apache/nginx? My usecase does not expect more than 5 simultaneous connections btw
@Felix.C Honesrlt, it sounds like you’re reading articles from around the year 2000 from that question.
Is there a reason you'd want to go with fcgi rather than wsgi?
17:54
@abarnert Ok, I got it. I guess this is because there are few software companies using Django, Flask or Tornado in Asia. They mainly still use PHP & Java.
Unless you’re writing a 90s style web application, you handle state by passing it from one stage to the next, not storing it in globals and worrying about your session being migrated to a different process or stopped and restarted.
Also, if you're just starting, then these are implementation details you probably shouldn't have to worry about yet
I'm an elec. eng. stud. in his 4th semester and I came in contact with back end stuff this week for the first time so bare with me ;) My goal is build application that uses a webserver as an access point for remote configuration of the application and maybe to display some data. For that reason I'd like my webapplication to be stateful. A alternative would be I guess to have a stateless webapplication that then communicates with another application (maybe with xlm-rpc)
but Id prefer to have a single application
Django abstracts that for you, and Flask gives you tools to build that abstraction yourself pretty easily, so you just deal with stuff passed into the endpoint and stuff stored on the session object and it just works, even if you move the backend/container/whatever to a completely different paradigm.
Why XML-RPC instead of JSON over REST? This makes it sound even more like you just stepped out of a time machine from the turn of the century, or found a dusty old book on Web 2.0 in your uncle’s attic.
@abarnert It's a robotics application, and my main app will need to communicate with another application using XML-RPC (not my decision), so I don't really bother how the communication is done between between the main app and the web application, but I'd like them to be the same anyway
Shouldn't have mentioned XML-RPC it's actually not that important
@abarnert what do you mean by passing it from one stage to the next
18:07
wow. Really, I left a bounty for this question(it's been a couple days) and it has received no answers: stackoverflow.com/questions/50223565/…
well perhaps the original answerer who said it's not possible is right
@abarnert Thanks for your precious advice. :)
@AndrasDeak whoever said it's not possible is wrong; whoever says "it's possible but probably requires you to write 5 days of code to wrap around the abstraction" is right
If you’re looking for a server that runs directly in your app and can work directly with its objects as an admin interface or the like, what you want is neither fcgi nor wsgi, but an embedded server. (Running in 1 process instead of N doesn’t help you if it’s not the same process as your app, and being stateful doesn’t help if the state can’t interact with your app’s state.)
even then, I don't believe it will take 5 days. 1 day with 3 cups of coffee at most
18:09
ah
anyways, just an opportunity if someone wants the 50 reps; I don't even need the answer to the problem anymore, since I complained loud enough
@abarnert Ah I think I confused things here, is correct that using fastcgi just gives me the advantage that there is only one process, so I can save the startuptime of the interpreter, but request handler is called everytime as before, so it's stateless too?
18:31
@Felix.C Are you asking about the startup time for the server, or for each request? The problem with traditional CGI is that it spins up a new interpreter for every request. FCGI runs a single interpreter that persists across requests, so you only have to pay that startup cost once. WSGI is more flexible, but one common way it's used is a pool of Python interpreters, so there's more total cost, but it's still only paid once.
am i going crazy or did they reorder "favorite tags" ...
You're probably right. I don't think they were always in alphabetical order
@MooingRawr I just noticed that as well
The traditional reasons to use FCGI over WSGI are mostly obsolete (WSGI, being newer and more complicated, didn't have as many libraries and tools at first; many shared hosting providers didn't support it; etc.). And even in the late 2000s, often the best answer was to just use flup as an FCGI to Apache/WSGI container to your code.
@abarnert I can use WSGI on top of CGI or FCGI right? My question is whether it's correct, that even though with FCGI there is only a single interpreter, every request ends up being handled independently? So it would not be possible for example to create python objects, that persist over the duration of several requests
18:48
As a relatively high rep user, I can confirm that rep plays a factor in determining upvotes. I don't think my answers have become that much better since I was a low rep user, but I average at least 2-3 more votes per answer than I did back then
Depending on your FCGI container, you can configure things so that the same interpreter persists across all of your requests. Which means you can store state between requests in globals. But that's rarely a good idea. Besides all the usual issues with globals, there's also the fact that any time the server needs to do a graceful restart, all your state vanishes. So you almost always want to do the same things you do in WSGI: pass state from request to request, or store it on Sessions.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ when do you start being "high rep"? 10k, 20k, 100k?
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Maybe it's just that a few people like Alex Martelli and mgilson are a lot less active than they used to be, so there's less competition for good answers?
@OlivierMelançon I think 40-50k is a good general estimate.
cbg all
18:53
@abarnert maybe... but those are names from waaaay before my time :D
I used to be beaten to the punch by a lot of good answerers at first. Now that happens less often, and when it does, they usually post something really similar to what I was going to. That's kinda gratifying, because you know you're thinking along the same lines as the best in the business.
@abarnert Ok this is very nice to hear! I'll have a look on flup. Actually I plan to deploy this application robot/vehicle, and as I said it's just meant for configuration, so if the server crashes I have far bigger troubles than just some lost globals ;P
thank you very much for your help!
Hey is there any way to keep a logger from printing to stdout, b/c when I log an error it shows up in the terminal, not only my log file(which is what I want).
Here is my logger setup:
log = logging.getLogger("HECK_FILE_LOG")
log_file_handler = logging.FileHandler("HECK.log", mode="w")
log_file_handler.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
log_file_handler.setFormatter(logging.Formatter("[%(asctime)s]:%(name)s:%(levelname)s:%(message)s"))
log.addHandler(log_file_handler)
I'm sure there are others who come and go who just aren't quite as visible as the two of them, but add up to more than them. And then there's people who are still here, but whose frequency of answers slowly but steadily decreases over the years. I think Ned Batchelder might be one, for example—he still answers the really good questions, but rarely appears on anything else.
When I do log.info("Hello World!") is does not show up in terminal, but if I do log.error("This is an error msg.") is does show up
@Mr.Zeus The simplest solution is to use basicConfig instead of starting with the default config and then doing the changes manually.
19:01
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Not at all, I'm sorry I will make sure I do that in future. I'm was in a hurry.
Ok, but my code is also a module, would this mess up other people's loggers?
Still am actually. Rbrb all :)
Have you read the tutorials? They cover a lot of this.
You'll probably want to use logger = logging.getLogger('my_hopefully_unique_name') instead of logging directly.
Obviously not carefully enough abarnert.
There’s a ton of stuff there. After you’ve read both tutorials, the main docs, and the cookbook, and used it (or at least other log4j-inspired libraries) in at least 4 projects, you can sometimes find what you’re looking for. :)
19:09
also, FWIW, I didn't see this in the documents, probably because it's not the best idea, but you can get the best of both worlds if you're lazy
import logging
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.debug('yay!')
@Aran-Fey not an imgur link
nor does it actually end in .jpg (not sure if those actually work)
more reasons to dislike the new reddit
greenshot is the best - select region -> click upload to imugr -> paste link here <3
Help settle an office debate: Do you hear "Laurel" or "Yanny" in this clip? https://t.co/8AtiS2RLN5
19:15
You know what's also terrifying? People drive cars around
laurel ^
That's wiggity wack
True. And people even complain about those who drive safely in snow/fog/rain/whatever
I can't even hear any of the higher frequency parts
which is weird because I hear the mosquito ringtone pretty fine
Wait can you change the log file's editing mode to write rather than append in basicConfig?
19:19
it's weird, first I only heard the high-frequency part, then I picked up my laptop and it switched to the low one and I couldn't get the high back
@Mr.Zeus mode='w'
also, FWIW, help(logging.basicConfig)
I tried that, it didn't work
this is being advertised as "the new blue/gold dress", but I think this is closer to the silhouette illusion or those images where close up you see Einstein but from afar (or if you're short-sighted) you see Marilyn Monroe
Man, that guy looks like he hasn't had a good nights sleep in quite a while, :|
19:22
I could hear yanny just fine when he pulled it out but I legit can't hear it at all when it goes together
Ah, there we go, filemode, thanks for your help.
rbrb!
ah, yeah, there you go :)
I haven't looked at that clip (I don't have sound output turned on ATM), but is this a version of the McGurk effect?
@AndrasDeak Ah, ok.
Nah. Apparently the "Yanny" is said in a high frequency, while "Laurel" is said in a low frequency
I wonder if it would be different if they were switched, though, because Yanny is a nonsense name
That's a name?
19:30
Well, Laurel is a name and a thing. I don't know what Yanny is, that's the first I've heard of it.
Yeah, that's probably accurate
20:04
All of the search hits for “yanny” are either about Laurel/Yanny, or misspellings of names like Yanni that are pronounced totally differently.
And one page that’s about Yancy Fry, which doesn’t even have a misspelling on it, but I guess enough Futurama fans have misspelled it on Google?
That user asking how to increment a value everyday... that's funny
20:33
boo!
oh noooo maintenance
I was just about to hammer a question
I had 4 more options...
2 hours ago, by cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ
As a relatively high rep user, I can confirm that rep plays a factor in determining upvotes. I don't think my answers have become that much better since I was a low rep user, but I average at least 2-3 more votes per answer than I did back then
I can confirm no improvement I mean yes, rep is a factor...
funny (-:
@AaronHall cmon dude, you only answer crusty old questions, you aren't going to see anything :p
I get the distinct impression that people tire of my answers when I blast them throughout the day. When I come in occasionally, I get more upvotes per.
I think
@piRSquared probably paranoia. You just write an "occasional" answer when you know you can write a good one. Probably.
20:38
That is totally true.
I'd be interested seeing how pandas answers fair on average to plain python answers. I'd imagine they are upvoted much more frequently.
Quality degrades with volume
@chrisz that's likely true because of the more friendly pandas community
On the other hand, rep points increase with volume...
@AaronHall not when you've crushed the rep limit and you're answering for upvotes w/o rep.
It almost makes me want to actually learn pandas
20:41
I don't want to admit it, but pandas allows for some intense, gratifying, community-compliant rep farming
@piRSquared That's how Skeet does it, or maybe did it, has he laid off lately?
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ quick tell us what the name Pandas means. :P
@chrisz You'll have a huge advantage over many of the low-rep users asking Pandas questions: they didn't bother to learn Python first. ;)
I don't pay attention to the tags he's in
Panel Data Structures
20:42
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ good job, you get a cookie.
Ya think I'm that stupid?! (Well, maybe)... but I asked the horse's mouth (Andy Hayden) this question, straight up, so I ain't forgetting that easily :p
And Panels are deprecated lol
I asked Wes, no way to top that. :P
welp you deserve a cookie... with sprinkles!
yum, sprinkles!
20:44
typo stackoverflow.com/questions/50379391/… OP accidentally re-used a variable name
@PM2Ring Myself included.
Interview for my new job. I was asked "So, you're a Python expert?" I responded "Whoa, whoa! Pandas maybe. Python, I'm better than some and not as good as others."
14 hours ago, by PM 2Ring
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Wise move. If more people would take the time to get a decent base in core Python before they attempted to use frameworks like Pandas, Numpy, Django, etc, many SO questions wouldn't exist. A similar thing applies to GUI frameworks, even the built-in Tkinter. Maybe it's just me, but I find it baffling that someone would even try to do complicated stuff before they know how to do the simple stuff.
you can be good at pandas but not at python... wat?!
well I actually believe that is possible. You can't beat jezrael when it comes to pandas knowledge. But some of the pandas questions that require some hardcore python, he tucks his tail between his legs and shows himself out the door :p
20:48
@piRSquared hard to calibrate expertise. I emphasize my percentile rank and what technology I attribute it to (core Python).
People at the .01 % look at people at the .001 % and think they're not experts.
Quick! Before you get more answers that don't actually answer your question... — cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ 29 secs ago
is this too pushy?
probably nah.
Gee, that's a quick five answers.
yup, and all with XY upvotes
I used to answer those and I'd sometimes get lucky and read their mind. Nowadays I don't think it's worth it, so I don't even bother. I usually like to take my time and write good comprehensive answers so I don't miss anything. My name's on the answer, after all.
20:57
hey master Pythonistas, could someone take a peak at: pastebin.com/kk9xhuhL . When I run this with as m = MyClass(); m.run_warning_checks(), it correctly spits out b and c but omits the severity. I have a suspicion that it's because the functions stored in the Checks set are not bound to the instance and thus do not share the severity. How can I fix this?
@AaronHall and that's how it should be. Answering questions can't/shouldn't be answered yet aren't going to help you, OP, or anyone else. If the question is salvageable, ask OP to clarify in the comments. OTOH, that can backfire... someone else ends up getting it right in an answer, and OP effectively shows my comment the finger
it's happened a few times
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I also think there are diminishing returns to a marginally higher stackoverflow reputation. There's also open source contributions, which I'm trying to get more involved in.
BTW, if anyone's interested in getting involved in contributing to CPython, here's the dev guide, which has some useful tutorial-ish things: devguide.python.org
DSM
DSM
@mart1n: you're adding the unwrapped version to the Checks instance.
21:14
gosh darn it.... i got a varbinary column in a sql table from what it looks like it's a hex encoding but it's not, and I need to decode it. The kicker is no one knows what the encoding is.. guess I get to play guess the encoding tomorrow :\
@DSM what do you mean by unwrapped?
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I disagree with the knowledge claim. People who ask pandas questions are less adept at recognizing good idioms and patterns. Many a time I've posted what I think is a superior approach only to be severely outvoted. That is partially due to FGITW, and also due to lack of attempt to understand a better approach. My point is, said person is not more knowledgeable. I can count on one hand, any original thoughts or patterns that they have posted.
with that \o rbrb
DSM
DSM
@mart1n: the one you didn't wrap. You do self.add(check_fn), and then later loop for rule in self.warnings: -- but self.warnings doesn't contain your wrapped versions of the functions.
rbrb all
DSM
DSM
21:17
Rhubarb for piR2 & MR!
@DSM but if I move self.add(check_fn) into the wrapped function then it won't add to the warnings set unless it is executed.
DSM
DSM
Let me try again. Why are you adding check_fn to Checks in the first place? It's never going to print out the severities.
@DSM ohhh, I see what you mean now. Once I add the wrapped version it all works.
@DSM for the sole purpose of being able to loop over it in a MyClass instance.
DSM
DSM
I was mostly getting at that it wasn't check_fn you wanted to add, but sure. :-)
@DSM understood now :-) Thank you!
21:34
Sorry about the delay, was preoccupied with this insane reindexing question
@piRSquared Yes, I've noticed a lot of nice approaches are outvoted/not accepted by OP in favour of those which are easier to understand or take up fewer lines, even if they are worse. Best thing you can do is argue your case in your post and hope sanity prevails!
wim
wim
21:59
@PM2Ring meh. I came to Python because of numpy.
@AaronHall Even if you were the #1 expert in the world at some narrow part of Python, there are going to be people who know better than you at even very nearby areas.
I remember someone saying something like "Smalltalk is better than C++ because it's so simple that Alan Kay can be the expert in every corner of his language, while Bjarne Stroustrop doesn't even know where the corners of his are", and Alan responded with something like, "I really hope it's not that simple, or it'd be useless. Even an adding machine isn't that simple."
wim
wim
Was doing C++ and MATLAB before that. If it weren't for numpy and scipy, might have never found or got interested in Python at all.
You can be decent at numpy without being good with python... but that's all you'll be... decent
tall structures need good foundations.
wim
wim
I guess what I'm saying is that wanting to do something useful with Django or pandas or whatever doesn't immediately mean you're going to be asking clueless Python questions (many people are able to teach themselves Python, and the fact that you see more questions here from the ones that can't/won't is a sampling bias)
I came for numpy too. Then I guess I stayed there
22:04
is it "num-pee" or "num-pie"?
I think the latter but I use the former
I say the latter, but I hear a lot of people say "pee"
wim
wim
num-pie
if you say num-pee you have to say pee-thon
I usually call it noompee a'la Hungarian
Numpee sounds ridiculous, but that makes it more fun to say.
22:05
FWIW I only talk about numpy to my wife
And I think it would work better to say peeton instead of peethon if you're going to say numpee. And then of course scipy is skippy, or maybe shippy?
is your wife a noopeesta as well?
no, she doesn't know python yet, hence "talk about numpy to her" rather than with her :D
(ya know, since you talk to her about it)
Mispronouncing everything also lets you differentiate the tracing JIT interpreter peepee from the package index peepie
22:07
aha, lol
@abarnert I thought it's pronounced git
I call that pypy -> piepie vs pypi -> piepee
that's how they're meant to be called
phew, at least I'm doing it right
or maybe pie-pee-eye? I've seen a discussion about that before
wim
wim
22:09
pie pee eye is correct
there was a slide about this in the PyPI talk at pycon
I definitely won't spell it out
wim
wim
it had 3 emojis.
I'll see if I can find it..
🐍π💩
wim
wim
22:11
skip to 9:45
Pie-pee-eye is how I've heard multiple core devs refer to it. I've heard Guido call it pie-pan, and I'm not sure if he was making a joke about CPAN, or couldn't remember what the cheeseshop had been renamed to and was guessing.
wim
wim
actually, the talk was pretty funny, so worth a watch
I learned, amongst other things, the original name for PyPI was "Vaults Of Parnassus"
FYI you can link to a video from a particular start time youtu.be/AQsZsgJ30AE?t=9m44s
Scrapy is scray-pee, though, right? Even if 90% of the questions about it start off with "Help me with scrapping a website with scrappy"?
22:44
Hey guys, is there ever a scenario to use stateful globals in python? I don't think it's the Right Way ever, but I see this in a code review and the author pulled out the
A script that has separate functions and operates on globals and is short-lived is more or less the same as a script that sets up a single class to do the same thing. I'd still recommend the class, but whatevs
wim
wim
huh, pandas are dropping Python 2 support a year earlier.
"Google code style says globals can sometimes be useful". This is within a module where its job is to constantly execute functions. In case a job failed, he delegates the state of the jobs running as a global in that module.
"globals can sometimes be useful" and your description of the module are too general to really say one way or another
@KevinMGranger Well, if I get into any more detail it would be specific to what the jobs are
and if I said that then I'd have to shoot you
22:50
To be fair, your description of the module can also be applied to a loop
that is fair and I don't disagree
Sure, globals can be useful. There are even some modules in the stdlib that not only use global variables to configure the module, but explicitly include them as part of the public interface. Most obviously, warnings, where even one of the functions is expected to be used as a variable rather than a constant.
But I don't see why you would want a job queue/scheduler/whatever-that-module-does to be a global rather than an instance. Even if you wanted the former for convenience, I'd do the random trick and have a "default instance" and inject its bound methods into the global scope.
23:09
Hmm, interesting. I knew there were some global stuff in stdlib, like logging, wasn't sure about warnings
Even sys.modules is a publicly-configurable global variable.
wim
wim
23:25
yanny or laurel?!
Am I the only one who can hear both 🙄
wim
wim
I heard yanny at first and then both and now can't un-hear laurel
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