I'm working on a simulation with Router and Host classes to demonstrate routing algorithms. I want any constructed host to start waiting for messages received on a TCP socket. I thought what I had to do was create a task for my host.update() method which just has an infinite loop that awaits for messages, but then the next asyncio.open_connection() call I await for never ends. What am I doing wrong?
Do we have a question about applying difflib.get_close_matches to a list of objects with a string attribute rather than a list of strings? Like finding the closest match from a list of Person instances based on their name
@Aran-Fey Short answer: don't do it, unless you can't figure out how to do it with a sane key function. There's functional.cmp_to_key, but it's pretty slow, partly because it has to handle arbitrary objects.
Ah, I see I phrased that in a misleading way. It's not about using a cmp function with key=, it's just about sorting a list in a custom order. Like sorting a list of Person instances by their name or whatever
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais hi now iam working in realtime chat application, this github programs are more complicated and this does't run on my local, routing problems
You're welcome. If you face difficulties implementing it, then feel free to come back here. We do better at (and mostly stick to) objective questions with MCVEs.
@AndrasDeak Just spent thirty minutes looking at the Wikipedia page for "involute" without understanding how one can wind a string around a curve with no thickness
Maybe a better metaphor would be "a curve obtained from another given curve by peeling the plastic wrap off of the given curve"
A recent answer ends with "So, to fix it, just make classAtom = "" or some thing. But, this wont actually fix it." I appreciate their forthrightness in admitting their answer isn't an answer.
can i do something like '*' * len(my_var) in jinja2? I got as far as {{ my_var|length }}, and my daily pensum of doc reading for today is at near its max
I ran the code below;
from win10toast import ToastNotifier
toaster = ToastNotifier()
toaster.show_toast("Hello World!!!",
"Python is 10 seconds awsm!",
icon_path="custom.ico",
duration=10)
I am getting below error :
File "C:\Users\jnp...
@Aran-Fey Ah, right. In that case you want to use attrgetter. There's some good info here: stackoverflow.com/questions/403421/… There may be better ones, but it's a bit painful doing searches on the phone.
@PM2Ring Oh, that's pretty good. I was hoping for something more generic though (i.e. not specifically about sorting by an attribute; just something showing that the key parameter exists). But I'm not really sure if that's worth having/writing a canonical for
That bug report though... "'ToastNotifier' object has no attribute 'classAtom'" The end.
@Aran-Fey I mean... Maybe just that bug report by itself should have been enough for the dev to go "oh dang, maybe I should take out that except:pass now"
It's not a horrible solution/workaround if you use a sensible value for the classAtom, but I'm too lazy to read the win32gui docs to find out what values are sensible
Hang on, which of these guys are we supposed to side with? The OP's dict looks reasonably json-y to me. Granted, None isn't a valid json value, but the json module can trivially convert that to null
@Kevin It was discussed with the OP on multiple occasions that what they're dealing with is a Python dict, deserialized from JSON in a file and that it was all ok. Except for the Pandas issue.
My project has made it to the QA env, with much less glass-crawling-through than I predicted. Dare I hope that the QA to prod transition will be the same?
Somehow all the Oracle descriptor setting configuration code that I wept and bled over on Tuesday, turned out to be completely unnecessary in every environment other than my local one. They must have installed some secret environment variables that mortals such as myself aren't privy to
But yeah, I'm also a little sad that tuple unpacking args is gone, but the reasons for its removal are good, as was mentioned last time we discussed it in here.
I don't know those kind of questions are overly specific as to the exact format of input-output. There surely are dozens which are close but not quite, so I prefer to just answer
The question is specific, but the possible range of answers is broad. I'm not totally happy that the community closes questions for reasons that the asker can't possibly deduce ahead of time, but that's how it is.
Yea, probably. I guess I have not been around enough to have a good duplicate feel. I'm starting to for some overly asked questions, but not in general yet
Nebraska is centered over a vortex in space-time that causes the fine structure constant to be off by 0.001%, and incidentally makes quatloos sublimate into a harmless yet unpleasantly musky gas
I just discovered a subtlety of itertools.tee. Did you know that when passed a tee object as argument, tee not only reuses the same state, but also returns the exact same tee as first return value
@AndrasDeak Not it is not. What is documented is that the initial generator should not be reused... but tee smartly let you reuse it when it's ok to do so
Speaking of animals in Australia, and by extension Australia in general, last night my friends played a trivia game, one question of which was "select all island nations". We picked Australia and we got marked wrong. There was much yelling at that time.
An island or isle is any piece of sub-continental land that is surrounded by water. Very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys. An island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm. A grouping of geographically or geologically related islands is called an archipelago, such as the Philippines, for example.
An island may be described as such, despite the presence of an artificial land bridge; examples are Singapore and its causeway, and the various Dutch delta islands...
So I spent 10 minutes writing down the documented and undocumented reasons why they should not use tee in some particular situation. And what they answered is that they liked the example I wrote with tee and that they are going to use it...
You should make 'em work for it. Change all the variable names in the footgun so they can't just copy and paste it in. Maybe hide a syntax error in the middle.
Reminds me of a bit in the Discworld novels where the protagonists are traveling through a forest of magical talking trees and one of them addresses The Luggage, asking "Did it hurt?... Becoming joinery? Is it good?"
A question which The Luggage contemplates for some time before finally shrugging. A rare moment of vulnerability for a character whose motivation is 90% bloodthirst
The possibility that it might not like being an unstoppable monster, and preferred life as a tree, seemed very sad to me