I've reconsidered offering a bounty on the dependencies question. Maybe someone who actually knows stuff about packaging wants to offer one? I feel like we could get much, much better answers to that question
Thinking about it some more, free_list is empty when python.exe first spins up, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's empty by the time the first bytecode instruction executes.
Oh, right. I do think there is value in providing clearer guidance on deploying Python projects. Knowing how to do package dependencies is useful to anyone that wants to share nontrivial code with anyone else.
That's pretty much why I thought the question could be very useful - a lot of people know jack about the topic, even though it's a rather important one
Packaging & distribution of Python stuff is a problem area, and probably its biggest weak point. If it were easy, there wouldn't be all these people wanting to make executables from their Python stuff.
@roganjosh A bit of both I think. Mostly because I never needed to look, but I did try to wrap my head around packaging once - it didn't end well, and I didn't remember most of it
@roganjosh If there was, surely a definitive answer would be found on python.org. Alas, it seems there is currently no simple universal answer, even for fairly common use cases.
Hey ya'll, if I have the following groupby, groupby_test =df["test"].groupby(df["ID"]), how can I check if the groups contain all items from a list? test_list = ["test1", "test2", "test3"]
stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/… shows questions which currently have bounties. I don't know if there's any way to see questions that have ever had bounties at any time
So I'm cool with changing up the code, but I just want to group a dataframe by a unique identifier and then check to see if each unique identifier contains all values from a list
this is just how I started to code it but not sure if there is a better way
Hi all...I am trying to parse a Jinja template (modify it to certain needs) and then evaluate them. The problem is I cant seem to figure out how to evaluate the result of Environment.parse(source). I read that it is an ast but when I attempt ast.literal_eval(parseresult) I get a malformed node error on the outermost template object. PS: I am not modifying the ast yet.
not really a Python problem per se; the Python environment on Windows is usually constrained by whatever character-set settings the system was configured with
JSON is Unicode by definition; the error is probably that you are trying to print it to an output channel which is configured to only support some legacy 8-bit character set, such as what Windows misleadingly often calls "ANSI". The modern solution is to configure it to handle Unicode but I hear that's only finally really possible in some recent versions of Windows 10
anyway, a common workaround is to set PYTHONIOENCODING=utf-8 in the environment where you are running Python, and then maybe something like chcp 65001 to configure the system to display UTF-8 correctly
this is all hearsay though, I don't own a Windows system
@Biswapriyo Sadly, there's a lot of Python 2 code out there that doesn't handle Unicode properly, but it appears to work correctly if it only has to handle codepoints < 256, but will break when it has to handle larger codepoints. And even with the codepoints in the range of 127 to 255 it can make mistakes if it assumes Latin-1 but gets cp1252, or vice versa.
> This character encoding is a superset of ISO 8859-1 in terms of printable characters, but differs from the IANA's ISO-8859-1 by using displayable characters rather than control characters in the 80 to 9F (hex) range. Notable additional characters include curly quotation marks and all the printable characters that are in ISO 8859-15 (at different places than ISO 8859-15). It is known to Windows by the code page number 1252, and by the IANA-approved name "windows-1252".
cp-1252 is what passes as latin 1 in Windows land. Almost latin 1 but not. So how is Windows not to blame here? :P
stackoverflow.com/questions/2737479/… doesn't have a bounty but is returned by the query above, otherwise all the results I looked at seemed correct, i.e. had a bounty
note that you're saying "this can't be windows' fault because I only see UK issues on a server", I'm saying "there are probably a lot of crap desktops out there on the mainland"
@roganjosh Vast amounts of HTML has been generated that claims to be ISO 8859-15 in its <meta> tag, but which is actually cp1252. The blame for that is squarely in Microsoft's court.
@roganjosh finding and promoting a good canonical would be a step in the right direction, I have been meaning to clean up the morass of probably a hundred or more similar questions with so-so answers
The fake ISO-8859-1 thing got so bad that all modern browsers assume that pages claiming to be ISO-8859-1 are really cp1252, and HTML5 made cp1252 the default text encoding, rather than ISO-8859-1. Of course, modern pages ought to use UTF-8, but there's still plenty that don't.
When software assumes you're lying about your data format and goes ahead and parses it some other way, that's where you enter the Dark Timeline
Browsers have got it both coming and going since they do wacky things to page encodings as previously established, and add "mozilla" to their user agent string even if they're not part of mozilla
Partial credit to Opera for trying to start their user agent string with "Opera", but eventually giving up; and partial credit to Firefox for actually being a mozilla browser, but this is basically a coincidence so let's not congratulate them too thoroughly
@roganjosh this goes back to the browser wars in the 90s, Microsoft IE decided they could lie that they were actually Netscape (the original Mozilla) in order to improve their compatibility with sites which were (more or less) designed for Netscape
there was an intel 64-bit architecture code-named Itanium which flopped, the AMD alternative which was broadly backwards-compatible with the old 32-bit Intel architecture succeeded
are you talking about the mid-1990s? Intel Pentium was introduced 1993, Intel Itanium 2001, the AMD x64 architecture 2003 which basically ate Intel's 64-bit lunch for several years
You'd probably not believe me but there were guys walking around with pockets sewn into the inside of trench coats where they stashed their copied discs
> [MAINTAINER REQUESTED/HELP WANTED] A blazingly fast and Pythonic SNMP library based on the official Net-SNMP bindings net-snmp.org
last commit almost a year ago
@Neo anyway, accessing .value should work unless you're trying to apply it to a list of SNMPVariables as the repr() suggested
so instead fo snmp_query_result.value you want snmp_query_result[0].value because you really have a list of SNMPVariable objects... (note the enclosing [] in the repr())
otherwise your expectation was correct
if you read the error message you get you'd notice that it complains that list objects don't have a .value attribute