@SShah I've used eyed3, but that was a few years ago, so I'm pretty hazy on the details. But I agree that the docs are pretty patchy & confusing. I'll try to remember to take a look at your question tomorrow. I turned my computer off a few minutes ago (I'm on my phone now).
@PM2Ring Thank you very much, if you do find a solution, kindly please answer at my post on the main site because I feel it would help several others. And yeah I do agree, the docs are not straight forward to understand, I wish they had some examples there. I was looking at another module called Mutagen, but from the look of it I am not sure if it is used to tag, it rather seems like a module to retrieve tag info. Anyways, Thank you and really appreciate the help :)
Kevin's suggested pattern with keyword-only arguments is quite nice for the cooperative inheritance. You won't see it in the wild much, though, because most big codebases still promise to support 2.7.
@SShah I can't promise anything, but I wrote a couple of little demo programs while I was figuring stuff out, and maybe one of those does image manipulation. Or maybe I never worked out how to do that, and used a mp3 tagging GUI program to do that stuff. ;)
I mostly avoid XML, although I do stuff with SVG from time to time. Mostly hand-written, but occasionally generated using Python. But I don't use a library for that, just print & f-strings.
IIRC, some brave soul wrote a scientific calculator using sed. Which is pretty impressive when you consider that sed has no support for arithmetic, so you have to do any arithmetic with pattern matching & replacement.
Incrementing non-negative integers isn't that hard, but I'd hate to try doing anything more complicated.
What exactly is the purpose (genuine curiosity)? Similar restrictions applied to a database I used in the past so I prepended all the records with a and then the number , but it was a hack and probably ended up being an XY problem
Why does it have to warp the naming conventions? read_1234, write_1234 would still be grouped? And still orderable if you keep the rest of the name consistent
@roganjosh I have a thing that does things in 3d and I've been calling it 3d<thing> for more than a year and I'd hate to rename it. I usually don't import it so some hacks when I actually do should be OK
@piRSquared Thanks for your effort on that. I think the bottom example of the docs should be scrapped. It wasn't in the older versions. I think someone has exploited a niche; it's not broadly applicable. As I said to DSM earlier tonight, people seem to be answering json_normalize questions with different approaches
those elements of the meta argument ['state', info', ['shortname', 'governor']] the first or only elements refer to dictionary keys at that first level of depth