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00:13
@roganjosh If you're speed comparing JSON libs, it might be interesting to look at (mis)using YAML parsers/generators for the purpose, given JSON is a valid subset. ;^P
00:27
Hey all. Let's say my class has a variable, and I assign a value to it in a method. When I access the variable later it seems to retain the type it had earlier. Do I need to re-architect, or is there a way around this?

x = None

def updateX()
#do something that ends in x = json.loads(someJson)

updateX()
print(x['someproperty'])
#NoneType object is not subscriptable
please see this for formatting code in chat
You should clarify if that is indeed inside a class. Would that make x a class or an instance attribute?
Hrm, not sticking. I'll fiddle with it.
Either way you have scoping problems. In your example x = None refers to a global name, later updateX binds a new value to a local (to the function) name x
you could probably fix that with nonlocal or global but the class thing makes me careful about your design
Is there a way to reach back to the parent's names?
I am not explicitly declaring a class.
then how do you have "a class [that] has a variable"?
00:31
Sloppy problem description, sorry.
My native language wont run if there's not a class for the framework to grab. It's weird for me to think outside of that context still.
If what you wrote is a representative example and x = None is at the top level of your module that makes x = None a global name. You could add global x to updateX before you assign to it, but you should consider returning a new value instead and x = updateX(x) (I'm told it's easier to test functions that don't mutate)
In this instance I'm trying to update ~8 names.
But I'll take a look at the global keyword, thanks! :D
Hmm, yeah, I don't know how that could be done well or whether that's good design or not. Lack of experience :)
no problem
00:47
@Billdr also if the names are dicts you can initialize them to {} and call .update inside the function. Mutation will affect the objects in the global namespace. See also nedbatchelder.com/text/names.html
I'll follow up on that. Doing global seems to work, but it kinda destroys my attempt at reducing line count.
01:06
(of course any mutable object will work)
wim
wim
Ignore Deak. Make your function return the updated value. Assign the return value. 0 days since last scoping accident.gif
01:28
They don't have to ignore me, I said "I don't know how that could be done well or whether that's good design or not"
and they can mutate inside the function; I never said they should
I was considerate enough not to share how I usually handle this situation :P
note that "ignore <person>" isn't a particularly constructive or convincing argument
02:00
For this particular use case sloppiness is fine. I will keep it in mind when I'm doing something actually productive. Thanks for the help and guidance.
 
2 hours later…
PRY
PRY
04:20
I am new to this. I need to convert 3D nii images to slices of 2D images, how can I do that?
From somewhere I found that I can use linear interpolation.
 
2 hours later…
06:15
cbg
PRY
PRY
And will image_slicer work?
 
1 hour later…
07:19
@PRY how are your images stored?
And what's image_slicer?
If you want to separate the nx*ny*nz voxels to nz images with nx*ny pixels you needn't interpolate
PRY
PRY
08:29
0
Q: OSError: cannot identify image file 'file_name'

PRYI have already read answer of this question Image.open() cannot identify image file - Python?, that question was solved by using from PIL import Image, but my situation is different. I am using image_slicer, and there I am getting these errors: Traceback (most recent call last): File "image_slic...

I was getting error while using image-slicer
09:22
sopython.com/chatroom Don't post your recent questions here.
 
2 hours later…
11:51
@Billdr objects in Python don't really "have names". The same object can be bound to more than one name - consider the simplest case: a = b = 'some value'.
... and a low line count is not the best code quality metric ;-)
 
2 hours later…
14:06
@holdenweb Not absolutely correct; many objects are aware of their place of definition, e.g. functions and classes, such that it's entirely possible to take an object and recover the import path needed to fetch the object. On Python 3 it's "easy" using __qualname__. Python 2 requires exhaustive search.
In the Python 2 case, it can't resolve functional closures (function within a function), but in Python 3 it can thanks to __qualname__ being added to the language.
There was additionally some recent development adding a protocol method to descriptors to let them know what attribute name they were attached to a class with, too, largely eliminating the need for my own declarative metaclass magic.
Well, yes but ... the __name__ attribute of a function, for example, tels you how it was defined rather than which names are currently bound to it. I can define a function, assign it, then delete the original name. What's its "name" then? Everything you say is correct, but somewhat tangential to my point.
I see this as less a disagreement of fact and more a disagreement of terminology
If we define "name" as "the identifier(s), if any, that an object has been bound to", then a function's qualname may not have anything to do with its "actual" name.
In the earlier version of the code, if you re-assigned it within the same module scope and cleaned up the prior reference, it'd end up exhaustively searching and finding the new name (using the older code). Under the modern code, yeah, you'd potentially have a problem; as this is not a case Python itself seems to handle: def foo(): pass; bar = foo; del foo; bar.__qualname__ == 'foo'
That's actually a very good rationale for keeping the exhaustive search around; if __qualname__ doesn't map to the same object, to heck with __qualname__.
I expect that most classes and functions don't ever get reassigned to new names, in which case qualname still contains useful and accurate data. On the other hand, if you find yourself needing to dynamically reconstruct object paths, you're probably off the beaten path already, which increases the chances that you're dependent on some too-clever-by-half class that rebound all its methods for a reason that seemed really good at the time
14:31
With a mild note that "good enough can be good enough"; the biggest use for my own canonical name lookup is for assignment of plugin references to database objects. This type of use can be highly effective, as "shenanigans" are unlikely on plugins you want to be discoverable (and may likely have registered via entry_points).
hi all, I am trying to export a .dat file into csv format but I am first converting it into .mdf format which is the original file format and after that i am converting it into csv but the csv file created is having empty rows after each record. how can I repair this code to ensure that is does not create these empty rows? Thanks
for fullfilename in onlyfilenames:
    file_name, file_extension = splitext(fullfilename)
    if file_extension == ".DAT":
        input_file = dat_folder + fullfilename
Not enough information. We have no way of telling why the MDF object is doing what it's doing, because we don't know what the MDF class is or where it comes from.
stackoverflow.com/help/mcve — I have no idea what yop is beyond yoghurt. ;) Additionally, that code does not seem to concern itself with lines or records, so I doubt there's anything you can do to that code (in particular) to correct the apparent problem.
Perhaps How to delete all blank lines in the file with the help of python? will be useful to you. It is unclear to me whether an "empty row" is a completely blank line or something else.
thanks.. i imported MDF from the assamdf library which is used to read CAN messages in automotive area.. i tried to create another loop to read the converted csv files and remove the blank rows but its causing too much preprocessing time. ill try these suggestions
14:44
Though that sounds dangerously like patching a problem not understood; stripping blank lines post-facto might seem to work…
… but doesn't do anything to actually identify or solve the problem of generating them in the first place.
Q: Do you have string values containing newlines in that dataset? CSV might be hostile to such data, as a mildly related example.
sorry it is asammdf
except the headers the rest are numerical values
Ok, I now believe it is a real library. I don't see anything obvious in the documentation that would make it output blank rows... I think I need an MCVE if I'm going to investigate any further.
Let's move that previous message so I don't unnecessarily put people off of a legitimate question
15:11
Ugh. Diagnosing and correcting decoding errors during import is… un-easy. Though the longest stack trace in there does a brilliant job highlighting the reentrant generator approach. XD
okay i guess ill just try to solve it using other ways.. thanks anyways
15:34
question:

Say we've got a structure like: [__init__.py, foo.py]
In foo.py, we have:
def foo(): ... and def _bar():

and in __init__.py we have:
from .foo import foo
Say I want to use _bar() in another file (in my case, I want to test it)
how can I import it?
from foo import _bar
from foo import _bar doesn't work ---because what is imported is the "foo" that is imported in init
from name_of_your_package.foo import _bar
"name_of_your_package.foo" has no attribute "_bar" (same problem)
I vaguely recall that names with underscores are intentionally hard to import
15:37
it's getting around the init that's the problem
@AmagicalFishy Depends on how the "package" is being imported and executed. I'm always a fan of explicit relative imports: from .foo import _bar, but this will only work if the package itself is being imported, not if a module within is being directly executed. The full path approach would be less fragile, though.
ooohh, it's because of the name clash with the foo function, I get it
A useful diagnostic step might be to temporarily rename _bar to bar
Otherwise you might try a solution that would ordinarily work on non-private names, and assume that it just doesn't work at all
ah, @amcgregor nailed it. explicit relative import was able to grab it
i tried removing the underscore—but got the same error
@AmagicalFishy Explicit relative would avoid looking in __init__.py for the reference, AFIK, thus success.
15:41
Nevermind, I can't repro that problem. from name_of_your_package.foo import _bar works for me.
And yeah, the import machinery (let alone almost all of Python STDLIB) makes no distinction about leading underscores being "private" or anything. That's a soft-convention for human eyes.
On second thought I think underscore-prefixed names only get excluded if you try from whatever import *. You can still import them in the usual way.
@Aran-Fey huh. really? even with "from .foo import foo" in your init?
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>type test.py
def _qux():
    return 23
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>python
Python 3.6.3 (v3.6.3:2c5fed8, Oct  3 2017, 17:26:49) [MSC v.1900 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from test import *
>>> _qux
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name '_qux' is not defined
>>> from test import _qux
>>> _qux()
23
yeah, i think the only technical difference w/ underscore names is that they don't get imported via a wildcard import
15:43
@AmagicalFishy yep
Star imports? People still use those? ;^P
A shiny quatloo to anyone that can find a passage in the official documentation that mentions this. I can't find it anywhere in docs.python.org/3/tutorial/…
"this" being what exactly?
The fact that underscore-prefixed names aren't imported during a star import
Oh, here it is. " the set of public names includes all names found in the module’s namespace which do not begin with an underscore character ('_')"
The moment star imports are introduced, the second sentence mentions the underscore filtering behaviour. ;^P
15:46
@AmagicalFishy That's an AttributeError. Imports don't throw AttributeErrors. They throw "ImportError: cannot import name '_bar' from 'package.foo'".
Whatever you did, it wasn't from name_of_your_package.foo import _bar
What show was it that had that gag that was like:
Captain: a shiny doubloon for the first man to spot the white whale.
Crewman: there she blows off the starboard!
Captain [putting the doubloon in his own pocket]: ... I saw it first.
huh. it looks like you're right. lemme look through my undo branches
man. and here i thought i had a problem that wasn't entirely my own error
I think Python's import system is an arcane mess that nobody truly fully understands
Evidence: the dead silence I encountered the last three times I asked some variation upon "how can I import {thing} from {place}?"
henceforth i'm only using "from * import *"
And that's why 95% of my projects have a completely flat directory structure. Can't go wrong when everything is in one folder
15:57
Small correction to what I said earlier: Imports can throw AttributeErrors, if you have an incorrect name in your __all__ list and you do an from module import *
But then you had it coming
So now that we know that, I expect everyone present in this chat room will henceforth stop writing except ImportError: and start writing except (ImportError, AttributeError):
Theory: everyone else does understand the import system, but they wisely don't advertise that fact because then they'd have to help me the next time I need to import thing from place.
Clearly you all have watched Monty Python's How Not To Be Seen. I am so proud.
Honestly, I don't think the import system is very complicated. At least not the stuff that you actually need. If you're talking about things like import hooks and finders and loaders, then yeah, that's an incomprehensible mess
I've yet to learn how to create modules I can install and execute with -m
Last time I tried I refactored myself into a corner
And it was something about absolute vs relative imports... can't remember details
16:04
I'll admit I've never made a module installable (i.e. written a setup.py)
That is easy for simple stuff (even I could do it :P)
For -m though, all you need is a __main__.py (if it's a package) or a if __name__ == '__main__': block (if it's a single file)
Hmm, I may have been missing the former. I'll check later to see what I did
All I know is that ever since I unflattened my KevinScript project directory, I have to pip install it every single time I make a change to any source file, which has contributed to my extreme delinquency. If I wanted a mandatory build process, I'd use a compiled language.
@Kevin pip install -e
Or python setup.py develop
Latter definitely works for me, former just a vague memory
16:12
I'll be sure to try that next time.
16:31
Just sayin', but that's not the import system's fault
Yeah, pip install -e . is the shiznit.
I needed to import a module from a directory that was up-and-over-and-down one and the only two evident solutions were 1) manually append to sys.path; 2) make the project into a package
If the import system let me import from sibling directories, I wouldn't have had to do either. Therefore, I blame the import system.
No comment :P
Now everyone is thinking "of course you need to packagify your project to import from sibling directories, and everyone knows this, and of course you need to use the -e flag to make dev changes quickly reflect, and everyone knows this. But how do I tell Kevin this without making him feel like a dolt?"
oh look here pip --help ;)
16:44
Well, honestly, I don't see a reason why importing from a sibling directory should be supported. You can do it if it's within the same parent package, and if it isn't, should you really be relying on the module being at that specific location on the file system? If you really want to, you can just hack sys.path or use importlib.
What I'm hearing is "a project that contains directories that depend on each other is already a package on the conceptual level. By not formalizing that status, you're unnecessarily tying one hand behind your back"
pretty much, yeah
another possibility though is that each directory should be a separate project
I have that ^
2+1 modules with a bit of interdependence that I often use
Ended up making them into a single installable project with 3 packages
So I can just use absolute imports (might be bad)
17:13
Dev goals: to write a piece of software that people continue to voluntarily use even after half a decade of no updates.
Baby steps, though. First I should write a piece of software that people voluntarily use.
17:32
That's easy, just name it "Windows"
I would prefer not to
Windows has had tonnes of updates. Not good or useful ones, but tonnes.
I had actually thought I'd made progress on Windows 10, then a pensioner in the pub asked me if I could help them get Solitaire to work. I couldn't.
Oh, that's true. I was thinking of all the people still using old versions like XP and Vista, but update != upgrade
They didn't have an internet connection at home and I became pretty intent on getting this thing to work so they actually had something to do in the daytime, but my best efforts failed. Even the most basic games come from an online hub, just to play. In the end I had to go for Steam and start downloading stuff on the pub WiFi. Infuriating.
XP was last updated in 2008 so that still qualifies
@roganjosh Ironic that the games I only ever played because I had no Internet connection, now require an Internet connection.
Ok, I half-lie. Solitaire and Pinball were games of desperation. Minesweeper and Freecell I legitimately enjoyed.
17:44
Yeah. There were a load of hoops you had to jump through to get it to work offline. I don't understand the Microsoft policy. I had to catch a train but I put a good 30 minutes into it before abandoning it.
I presume it's just one of the many big sacrifices that Windows 10 made to be more tablet-friendly. Less local storage... and who has a tablet that isn't on WiFi?
Just another casualty in the campaign of "you don't own your software, we licensed it to you"
BUT, I did find that they introduced the Windows Subsystem for Linux which was quite a big move
That's a massive gain, but it doesn't plug the holes that Windows 10 introduces in my nice workflow on Windows 7. I need something in the middle
@roganjosh embrace, extend...
@roganjosh Fun fact, Windows has had a POSIX subsystem since the early NT days.
^^ Very true
17:57
It's pretty nice that Microsoft is starting to acknowledge the existence of other operating systems. Maybe someday it'll stop rebooting into linux 3 times a day.
Back when I was still actively using Windows (2000) as a desktop environment (dual-booting Linux via ntldr.exe ;), I was the envy of my friends with access to UNIX tools. Wget from command.exe, etc. ;P
@Aran-Fey Windows' IP stack is BSD-derived; HyperTerm (and some of the other ancillary utilities) still mention the earlier copyright. ;)
I was going to link that website that emulates Windows 95 in the browser and say "here, point your pensioner at this site" but the first thing it does is throw a pop-up that says "by using this you agree that you are solely responsible for all copyright infringement involved in using this project. Really continue?" which is not the friendliest message if you're just trying to play cards
@amcgregor They are late to the party but thankfully there are clean VM solutions for the stuff I need Linux for, and bridge the port. Coming into the market with this feature when the main OS has started to veer horribly out of usable terrain for developers is a bit late. Now the "middle ground" I need will come versions down the line by which point I'll either have outgrown Windows 7 or, well, Windows.
I was hopeful for WPF. But they never ended up killing GDI, because compatibility, so the benefit is largely wasted. XD They have such good ideas. (The metadata filesystem idea was one I totally yoinked and ran with for my home data.)
… but then they pull things like trying to patent basic IP protocols like ping, traceroute, finger, and time.
@Kevin The problem is that they don't have the internet. They just had their laptop with them in pub, so I needed to get it set up for when they went home. Unless you're saying it's a local system that opens in a browser?
Otherwise they could have played Solitaire fine... but only in the pub on the free WiFi
18:10
If the description is to be believed, it's all emulated on the client side. So he should be able to open the page in the pub and continue using it at home as long as the window stays open.
Ah ok, that might be feasible. I will have a look into it. By the time I got to setting up their email address, setting up their Steam account, trying to explain their free "purchases" and how to open them.... sorry, no. Windows 10 has totally locked that generation out.
Steam?!
I'm 75% joking in suggesting this since it is self-admittedly a very sluggish emulation, and in fact I didn't even try running it because I got impatient waiting for the 100 MB download to finish
im sure theres probably non steam related substitutes for those games
and cbg!
If I were seriously trying to solve this problem I'd probably look for an open source version of Solitaire. Surely this is a moderately popular project for aspiring game devs?
(But perhaps that only means that there are a million half-finished implementations, and zero finished ones)
18:16
@AndrasDeak As I was saying earlier, the old games that used to ship with Windows are now on some weird games portal that you have to access online. I had tried some of the guides I found online to get offline games but they weren't working. So the default position to play basic games is that you access your online portal account.
I'll do some more research and have another crack. I guess there'll be like a 101 freeware games bundle that I could download
I wrote a clunky implementation of FreeCell in C++ and I'm a rube, so it can't be too out of reach
Mind you, Freecell does not have the fancy drag-and-drop functionality that Solitaire does. That might be where the difficulty curve becomes a difficulty cliff
I'm not suggesting I'm gonna write the games myself lol
It would be fun though :^)
I think that solution might be considered a tad more "over-engineered" than downloading Steam :P
<Sits in pub for 30 minutes trying to work with Windows 10> "Sod it, start again" <opens editor>
"Here, I wrote a Solitaire program just for you" might make him swear a life debt to you
Pros: he might buy you a beer every time he sees you in the pub. Cons: he might come over to your place every Thursday and talk about his bursitis
18:26
I interrupt this discussion to bring you news that, after all the ridicule I got about ManBearPig (half man, half bear and half pig) about 6 months ago, there are now official warning signs on research laboratory doors on HNQ: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/125718/…
Strictly speaking, a warning sign forbidding the presence of ManBearPig does not necessarily endorse the existence of ManBearPig
It doesn't refute it either, and suggests a credible threat. Which he is, I'm super cereal
Similarly, there is an image floating around reddit etc which warns the reader not to engage in certain acts with android girls, despite the fact that android girls do not (yet) exist.
You don't see signs on the door prohibiting ridiculous things like Bigfoot or vampires --> ManBearPig is a legitimate threat. It's just logic.
You don't need Keep Out signs for vampires, just don't invite them in ;-)
18:37
... Such a fatal flaw in my argument :/
I think I would let Bigfoot into my lab. He's famously unobtrusive so he'd probably just hide behind the coat rack the entire time.
Unicorns, on the other hand, would probably smash up all your glassware
oi, whats that about unicorns?
I mean, I'm extrapolating a little from bulls, but I think you're being incredibly hasty in your judgement
Modern literature and Lisa Frank trapper keepers depict unicorns as graceful gentle creatures but in antiquity they were regarded as ferocious
Except in the presence of virgins. Here I will explicitly not make the obvious joke about nerds.
18:46
Is that so? I actually didn't know that. Maybe a narwhal washed up somewhere and went a bit crazy
"Thank the gods it doesn't have legs to chase us!"... "We'll edit that bit out of our explorer's journal"
At least that's the impression I'm getting from Wikipedia. Pliny the Elder mentions a "monoceros", which is a "very fierce animal". Cosmas Indicopleustes reports that "it is impossible to take this ferocious beast alive". Da Vinci says "for the love it bears to fair maidens forgets its ferocity and wildness"
Pliny may have been talking about a rhinoceros.
Oh, well we won't have to worry about those blood-thirsty, malevolent beasts soon so all's good.
looks at profile pic ...i...uhm..yep
If unicorns were programmers, would they type with their hooves or their horn
@ParitoshSingh don't worry, Pliny obviously wasn't referring to you
18:52
haha
I think they'd probably do factory resets or computer restarts with their horn and type with their hooves
"My program keeps crashing". "Have you tried crying magical tears of healing onto it?"
Magical purification tears not recommended for PHP projects as it tends to erase the entire directory
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak if you package them correctly, the circular dependency shouldn't really matter
i.e. package a can depend on b and b can depend on a. pip install will just pull them both in, no problem.
multiple top-level packages in distribution is a code-smell to me - some modern packaging tools (e.g. flit) don't even support it, taking the opinion that you should have one top-level package per project.
I have yet to see any legitimate use-case for a "sibling" package import.
19:10
I'm an adult and I demand the ability to shoot myself in the foot if I so choose
wim
wim
Well, you have that ability. It's sys.path.insert..
... I demand that my footguns be sleek and user-friendly ;-)
wim
wim
try PHP ?
I thought Kevin said user-friendly
:D
As friendly as the driver of a "free candy" van
19:27
Number of times today I have commented on a question with "you don't actually want to do this": 3
Given unicorns could be programmers in another reality, and given unicorns are mythical, and given one's occupation is representative of themselves, then programming is mythical
Tally of responses: one "actually, you're right", two angry silences
Programming is a process that causes ideas to directly influence physical reality. It's basically sorcery.
@justanotherprofilename (and that by such deduction, ManBearPig is real (sorry, hijacking the logic for an earlier point))
Ones and zeroes go in, Starcraft comes out
19:36
Curiosity: How many people use python arrays?
as in array.array?
I'd guess few, and none of them on SO main
I used them briefly when I was writing a data serilization format for something or other
i once used a priorityqueue and had fewer lines, but the opportunities to use arrays are far more ubiquitous
19:49
I ultimately switched over to using bytes, if I recall
@justanotherprofilename "far more ubiquitous" really? Genuine question: do you think we're overlooking them to our detriment?
Or maybe it's a case of there is an opportunity to use them but there really isn't much to be gained so we don't
higher-order functions do not always bring order, but conversion with lambdas, i.e. lisp overload, is always available
You've lost me
@roganjosh I'm sorry who are you?
I ask myself almost every day and rarely get an acceptable answer
19:52
More jobs for programmers than QAs
We are still talking about the array module, right?
Certainly. Programming topics are so very rich in information and thus require lateral thinking.
Is this one of those GAN things I've been hearing about that generate plausible responses to essay prompts while not conveying any real meaning
Unless I'm missing the points you're making, there's lateral and then there's lateral when the Titanic splits in half and everything that was originally moving on a horizontal plane goes flying into the ocean.
and then there's pectoral thinking which requires strong forearms
19:58
Which helps with holding on to the life rings
I misremember, GPT-2 is not obviously a GAN
GPT-2 is for generating essays, GAN is for generating people (a la thispersondoesnotexist.com)
20:13
(as a sidenote, the tamagotchi website supposedly uses PHP via wordpress, but that's not what tamagotchis are for. they are for being there for you!).
wim
wim
@Kevin how do you distinguish an angry silence from an embarrassed silence?
Knowing that you're right, and this is the internet, and that everyone would respond immediately if they thought they were right instead?
I recently saw a job posting for "Pandas Developer." Sounds legit right?
20:19
@wim Anger has a more chartreuse tint when I look at the post with my third eye
Silent gratitude is octarine and exceedingly rare
you can see bursts of it when Community closes a question as a dupe
20:37
It's like chewing wintergreen lifesavers with your mouth open in front of a mirror in a dark room
@roganjosh Perhaps arrays are more frequently useful than priority queues, but that's not saying much.
My take-home was that arrays are as infrequently used as I imagined tbh
The opportunity to use them is rare ("I need a collection that can contain only limited-precision integers"), and having a motive to use them is rarer ("... And I need to use 12% as much memory as a list of long ints would take up")
Correction: limited-precision integers and/or floats
That conversation was derailed by some bizarre responses; my other take-home was that the opportunity to use them isn't quite as ubiquitous as someone suggested
An additional nail in the coffin is that np.arrays are a more popular option for homogenous data.
No idea whether they're memory efficient though
Yep. I could see that array.array would work without the added dependency, but I use np daily so arrays just don;t seem to fit into my work. That's why I was curious if they're actually used by others
There was a question on the difference between lists, sets and arrays, and the dupe I picked didn't cover arrays, but I also made an assertion that they're not really used
20:54
I remember that question. I think it's fine to be dismissive of arrays in that context. If the OP is at a skill level where they don't know when to use sets vs lists, then arrays will almost certainly not be useful for the kinds of projects they can handle
... Assuming you're the type of teacher that's fine with saying "you won't need this until later". I know that drives some people crazy.
I want a teacher to make me aware of what they're skipping, and I'm the type of person that will research it later. The fact that there is someone who knows of the existence of python arrays in the first place but doesn't know the difference between a list and a set seems... strange
Lots of newbies become vaguely aware of the existence of arrays because a million pedants like myself Well Actually them every time they say "I have an array, x = [1,2,3]..."
After the googolth correction they say "alright alright, so arrays and lists are different in Python. So... What is an array?"
@Kevin challenge: an innocent google query that brings up the python array module from the misuse of "array" instead of "list" (used by sites like W3Schools).
You know too much, but I'd put money on almost all searches either coming up with list methods or numpy arrays from a genuine noobie
wim
wim
stdlib array could probably be removed (numpy killed it)
I've never needed it in a 10+ years Python career
I try to give people slack for not being able to compose a good Google query. It's really an acquired skill. Double slack should be given for Python related searches because v2.7 (or lower!) docs still have better page rankings than the most recent versions in many cases
21:03
You're ducking the challenge :P
wim
wim
>>> from __future__ import annotations
>>> annotations
_Feature((3, 7, 0, 'beta', 1), (4, 0, 0, 'alpha', 0), 1048576)
uh-oh
Aug 15 '16 at 13:46, by Ffisegydd
On the other hand, I feel like in 60 years time our descendants will be working in Type Camps, cursing us for not fighting against the Type Oppressors.
The query "Python array" brings up the array module, but it's lower than the accursed and improperly named W3schools list documentation
@Kevin numpy arrays? They are. One block of data with little overhead.
wim
wim
oh, wait, this is actually a good thing python.org/dev/peps/pep-0563/#non-goals
If the challenge is "compose a query that might be made by a newbie that thinks lists are called arrays, and which turns up Python's array documentation as the first result", I don't think I can win that one
wim
wim
21:07
it's actually about preventing them from being evaluated at definition time!
> Just like in PEP 484 and PEP 526, it should be emphasized that Python will remain a dynamically typed language, and the authors have no desire to ever make type hints mandatory, even by convention.
Woot
@AndrasDeak I figured it would be either super memory efficient, or super inefficient but very good at being quickly manipulated in ways that a big dumb block of data normally wouldn't
e.g. transposition, or whatever
It's a dumbish block at first but can be made slower and smarter by reordering
wim
wim
phew! I was concerned for a moment there it was going to be the opposite, making annotation mandatory.
Still memory-efficient
@Kevin transposition is free but will lead to different "fast" dimensions
21:10
@Kevin That was the challenge. W3Schools really has made a hash of all this tbh. As I stumble around in the darkness for front-end features, that site has actually become more than a little irritating.
It is, in polite terms, complete and utter garbage.
@wim I imagine a lot of the few use cases are hijacked by bytearray
And, as PM 2Ring noted, shamelessly uses a name like W3C
 
2 hours later…
22:43
I just finally used print(foo,end='\r') and its really satisfying seeing actually seeing that counting up to 3-4 million
If you're emulating a progress bar, there are cool progress bar modules out there. A friend loves tqdm but I've seen others mentioned here.
23:05
im guessing pip uses tqdm
wim
wim
23:35
pip uses that one github.com/verigak/progress

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