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01:05
@roganjosh yes, I missed your reference
piR hadn't gone completely mad when he was quoting Smooth Criminal :P
Jackson has a patent on the shoes he wore on stage
01:56
Hello?
I want to write a shell code
that opens up python shell
and then enter some command to the shell e.g. print("hi")
is this possible?
I have been doing a bit of a research and I think I can refer to them as a sub shell or virtual enviroment
The following might give you a better idea of what I am trying to do
I have a file called jupyterLab.sh
and inside I have the following code
py -m pipenv shell -c "Jupyter lab"
sleep 1
echo "Jupyer lab have started"
In an attempt to open up the pipenv shell and start Jupyter lab
the idea is so that I can start up jupyter lab automatically by executing the shell code
02:49
I honestly do not know why py -m pipenv shell (jupyer lab) doesn't do the job
 
1 hour later…
04:04
@WantingtobeanAndroidDevelor jupyter can be opened with the command jupyter notebook so maybe you can cut out the middleman
in a similar way
oh nvm, saw your second comment
04:43
Any suggestions?
 
1 hour later…
user8203210
05:54
Hi,
user8203210
I am developing a web application using Django framework while reading the use of manage.py file I came across the phrase "It puts your project’s package on sys.path". I really not able to understand what they are trying to say?
09:02
@Chirag It basically says, if your project is structured as "my_project/my_app/views.py" and you use manage.py to run the project, then you can do from my_app import views or something similar.
 
1 hour later…
10:27
cbg all
i just installed the vim keybindings for vscode. Its like having the best of both worlds. But I wonder if this can replace Vim itself? I'll find out after I use...
 
1 hour later…
@AndrasDeak done.
12:04
\o/
Hello
Im sorry to kind of repeat the question I had
but I did further research and I am summarizing the question here:
I want to automate the process of starting a jupyter lab server
so I wrote a shell command
py -m pipenv shell -c "jupyter lab"
This command works perfectly well
but when I save it in form of a bash file and execute
It gives me an error:
bash: jupyter: command not found
Please can someone help me?
Your PATH is off. Don't you have to activate an env for that to work?
Can't you have a shell script that just runs jupyter and call that?
Why the py -m pipenv shell?
12:20
I thought the jupyter lab is a command that needs to be executed to start the jupyter lab
my PATH is off?
can you be a bit more clear by giving an example plese?
I see what you mean
just call py -m jupyterlab
Well if you open a regular shell and execute jupyter lab, does it work?
That's what I meant by activating an env.
Does py -m jupyterlab work in the shell?
If it works, does it work when put into a shell script when you execute the script?
yes
it works everywhere
So is it solved now?
yes
except
for some reason my github client doesn't launch
I think its because I was messing about with the github shell
I'll be back later, explain in the mean time
For the benefit of others as well
12:44
I reinstalled all git software
and it works fine now
thanks
People in Python room are 10x nicer than JS room
Hello
Am i allowed to ask coding questions here?
13:08
@TPguru within the room rules yes, please read sopython.com/chatroom
Thanks andras
hit a wall trying to fuzzy merge, spent a few hours reading similar posts, but no success, have tried d6tj(with random duplicates) and mergeasof(with sorting errors)
if anyone can help, let me know
thanks!
 
3 hours later…
15:59
Does anyone have any advice on documenting backref attributes in SQLAlchemy? Like, should I just add it to the docstring for the class?
Really, I guess the question applies to all class attributes. Like, including those defined in __init__
I'm just going to add them to the docstring.
<-- New to documentation :-/
16:55
Hello, I'm new!
17:17
@TypeError hello
17:58
hey there
@AndrasDeak Does it really need a MCVE? The OP's trying to use a local from a function in the global scope. I just spent several minutes trying to find a decent dupe, but no luck.
Just Curious (rip cat.), can you use a builtin after shadowing the function name? Say, input for example
@PM2Ring no full error. It could be a python 2 input call
hmm, or maybe not, I was more confident when I saw the post
right, they'd have to add strings for that
@AndrasDeak That's always worth considering when you get NameError and input(), but highly unlikely here, as you just figured out. ;)
I'm happy to leave it open, on the off-chance that someone writes a decent answer. The existing ones are pretty ordinary.
@ParitoshSingh Yes
Just found out how
existing ones pretty ordinary. rip hopes and dreams :P
Martjin told me, pretty nifty actually.
18:13
@ParitoshSingh Ah. I see you wrote one of those answers. It's better now, after the edit.
hehe yep yep.
And your final code example is ok. But IMHO a function named cube should just do what its name implies: return a cube. It shouldn't ask the user for input, and it shouldn't convert its arg.
Good point
Btw dont worry, feel free to call me out on stuff. I appreciate it
The input function makes it easy to request user input anywhere in your code. But that doesn't mean that burying input gathering, conversion, and validation at random places in your program is a Good Idea. Raw user data is dangerous stuff, you have no control over what it might contain.
Think of your program like a castle. At the perimeter, you have a gate, with guards who are trained to deal with potentially troublesk
potentially troublesome outsiders. Once the guards are satisfied that an outsider is harmless, they can enter the castle and (probably) won't cause trouble.
18:32
haha. i like the "probably" :P Interesting analogy, but yeah, makes perfect sense.
Similarly, functionality that gathers raw data, validates it, and converts it to the appropriate datatype, is the outer perimeter of your program. Once data has been properly dealt with by your "data guards" then the rest of your program should assume that it's safe, and has the correct datatype.
18:45
So try to limit the parts of the program that are exposed to raw data, and don't scatter input calls & data validation routines thfoughout your program structure. Sometimes, this approach is too simplistic, and the very nature of the task your code performs means that the bulk of it is either reading or validating data. In that situation, you may need to adopt "defensive coding" practices, where internal functions do have to validate their args.
But try to avoid that unless you really need it, since it's less efficient, and you tend to end up with lots of code duplication, which makes the code harder to read & maintain. Eg, Is the validation code in function X supposed to be slightly different to the validation code in function Y, or is one of them buggy?
 
2 hours later…
20:45
cbg
 
1 hour later…
21:48
cbg
slow weekend, I see
 
2 hours later…
23:37
when module load python gives you 3.6.5 <3

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