@AndrasDeak Isn't that an implementation-dependent detail, and could the cPython implementation special-case the fairly common [::-1] idiom on a string to be O(1) if they really wanted to?
@Tim Oh God, unfortunately that's accurate. I thought the only (ab)use of the term was "Agile seating". But then I googled and I found various cargo-cultist forms of "Agile working" being used. Sigh.
@smci is a little more encompassing than just hot-desking, includes working from home etc. Beyond software, most other teams don't really use the term Agile.
Well in the same context as software engineering does. Although I have encountered it in a newspaper newsroom when working with them on a project.
@smci except companies do see benefits in terms of the reduced cost of office space. Still doesn't make it better for workers, but I think it's a little more than just a cargo cult or a bunch of pointless slogans.
@Tim You're misunderstanding me: I merely objected to the ongoing abuse of the word 'agile' ever-further outside its domain. I didn't say those office practices didn't make sense.
@smci I'm not following you, Agile is an adjective for "move quickly and easily", can technically be applied to anything that exhibits those behaviours.
How do you handle questions like this one stackoverflow.com/questions/57121703/… issue is with the developers of the package only doing a single build and not providing a source package.
@smci no, not for strings nor lists nor tuples. Python says lists slicing copies, and strings/tuples are immutable so again you have to copy unless the string/tuple has length 0 or 1.
@Tim There's a whole "agile management" paradigm that's sprung up and, like most newly-introduced techniques (in this case mostly borrowed from the world of XP/agile programming), people are jumping on the bandwagon, using it to justify changes made for other reasons, and so on. There really is no end to human folly.
Our business' pricing is dependent on multiple parameters, and now we want to introduce another possible M2M parameter to the existing setup in Django.
For this, we have an existing table for pricing, which has a unique_together constraint on all fields except the price_field. Apologies for the ...
@Tim instead of hacking around with requirements and sources, I recommend telling the developers the distribution is missing. often enough missing distributions are just an oversight.
My first theory was "the arguments are getting sent to python.exe, not test.py" but if that was the case, I'd expect test.py --version to display my Python version number. But it doesn't.
If it is mapped to pythonw, that puts the "arguments are getting sent to the executable" option back on the table, since pythonw doesn't support --version or AFAICT any options at all
Currently researching how to determine the current default program for a file extension... I know how to change it, which is extremely easy. Finding what's being used now is another can of worms.
pythonw is off the table again because pythonw test.py displays nothing, which doesn't match the usual behavior of just test.py
I have two computers with Windows, and I just found that on one of them, if I ran python code directly, like:
test_args.py input1 input2
Python will not recognized the input I gave, but this works:
python test_args.py input1 input2
I tried the code:
import sys
print 'Number of arguments:'...
superuser.com/questions/963464/… says I can find the full pathname of a default program by checking my registry. I'm looking, and my registry says that Python can be found at c:\windows\py.exe. This is a lie.
It can't just be that the default action for me running .py files is to try to run py.exe in a directory where it doesn't exist. I would expect the command test.py to fail spectacularly in that case
Ok, now that I have vented about Windows' cryptic and terrible design, I will read these links.
I'm reading it now. It's somewhat related - both posts suggest poking around the registry. But mine advises looking in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\<program name>, and yours in Computer\HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\python in general looks... Stale. I see subdirectories for 2.7 and 3.4, but nothing for 3.6, which is what I use daily.
I can confirm that sys.version prints 3.6.3 no matter how I try to run the file.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Python\PythonCore\3.6-32\InstallPath has my most up-to-date Python install, at least.
I predict a lot of similar cursing as I'm going to have to be working with windows over the next couple months... not looking forward to it, first goal get a VM with linux onto the corporate PC.
I guess my own google searches on the topic didn't turn up anything because I was being too abstract -- instead of searching for python-specific solutions, I was trying to basically reverse-engineer the windows default file association system.
Next I must determine why I can run my test.py file as just test when I use a regular command prompt, but it fails to guess the extension if I use a command prompt that was opened from explorer using the "open command window here" option.
Current guess: "Because %pathext% is getting overwritten???"
Only three more metaproblems to solve and I can go back to doing productive work
Does anyone have a preference on displaying Python code on, let's say, a HTML-based blog post? I'm kinda looking for something like this but I really don't like the full-width part. I could probably fix that with fixing the <div>. I've also found Pygments but it doesn't, on the surface, seem to fit the style I want
The outcome is obviously always going to be open to personal preference, so there's not a definitive answer. I'm just curious to crowd-source potential approaches
Normally I couldn't give a yam about appearance; I'm more for functionality. But in this one case, I really do care about having a "dark theme" to display the code. I can't argue you on your requirements because I agree, but I'm really focusing on the options for modifying the display aspects here
Mm hmm. Nothing wrong with putting more effort into styling than what my bare minimum requirements prescribe. I don't think a fancy dark theme with cool syntax highlighting etc etc has ever harmed my reading experience or anything. It's a strict improvement, just not one I find essential.
The "bare minimum" is "what will sell me well?". I've been hammering together an interactive personal profile for a few weeks now for my projects. It's becoming pretty exhausting but I'm still holding to the principle of being uncompromising on the front-end.
I don't, but I personally like the way code is naturally formatted on SO. I don't like dark themed code blocks on light themed sites. If I could add anything to the SO code formatting it would be line numbers
Yeah dark-themes are popular. I use one in Pycharm. I know how to use <code> and some in line styling to make custom code blocks but I don't know to perform syntax highlighting like what we see in a code block in SO flavored markdown. That is why you are looking for a library I guess...
Oh man, I'm really not gonna try to implement from scratch! I already have 3 servers running, in addition to the app server, just to power my examples. I want something a little more simple here :P
Allow me to ask a quick question, no code, just about class. Disclaimer - I just asked about it on SO, but it's Saturday, might not get an answer today
click button --> flask route --> call some process --> process responds --> flask receives data --> flask passes results to front-end
That's a really simplified version of things, because I have a Java server waiting for problems to solve, so flask passes that data to my Java server via ZMQ in a set format. I also have a self-hosted version of OSRM that both generates distance/time matrices for vehicle routing problems, and also powers a JS library to map out the route
Reading about the WordPress vulnerabilities I found this: 74 different versions of WordPress were identified. 11 of these versions are invalid. For example version 6.6.6. version 6.6.6 just sounds like trouble
I bet you can use the tokenize module to get quick-n-dirty syntax highlighting. As an example, pastebin.com/36Tzz238 colors all keywords blue and all string literals red.
... And it also deletes all whitespace that isn't part of indentation. Making it not do that is left as an exercise to the reader ;-)
@Dodge It's a common convention on many sites to convert HTML tags to a form that uses square brackets instead of angle brackets. That makes it easy to support a restricted set of tags while preventing undesirable HTML injection. phpBBS sites like the xkcd forums use that strategy.
@Dodge No worries. I just checked an old xkcd post of mine, and it definitely uses that exact syntax. Eg, I used this: 0=black, [color=brown]1=brown,[/color] [color=orange]2=orange,[/color] [color=green]3=green,[/color] [color=blue]4=blue,[/color] [color=purple]5=purple.[/color]
I have a Django form and there is certain criteria for a record to fall in a database probably some validation. I have written the validation in forms.py file and now I would expose the same functionality but via REST API so I will have the trouble to rewrite the same logic again. What can I do ?
My Proposed Solution Write a common business logic function in some place(lets name it BusLogic.py) and pass the objects to that function so that the business logic written once can be resued ?
So if you write a common function you could just pass the object and that function would validate and add the record to the database.
If you are exposing the same functionality via REST, I will take inputs from the request create the object that the business function needs and then pass the prepared object to that function which will do the same job hence reusing the function
At a higher level this is what I mean, creating an object that is recognized by the business function so that it can do its job.
Writing a code for an enterprise is a no joke takes so much time to understand and architect that's what I learnt..
@piRSquared bit late to the party, but I've finally gotten around to playing around with GIMP. Here's a proof of concept for creating a gif from the command line, using GIMP's python-fu. There are some inevitable hacks involved (for instance, python 2). Might be useful in the future (cc @Kevin)
it could easily be turned into a proper python-fu plugin, but that's mostly useful for running it from inside a fully fledged GIMP window I think
Hi team, I am looking for a python library or framework for getting complete search results of a successful search engine (like: google, bing, yahoo or duckduckgo). Most of search engines have restrictions and I don't want to waste time with restrictions. I want to query specific keywords like: inurl:wordpress
I am trying to deploy a trained U-Net with TensorRT. The model was trained using Keras (with Tensorflow as backend). The code is very similar to this one: https://github.com/zhixuhao/unet/blob/master/model.py
When I converted the model to UFF format, using some code like this:
import uff
impor...
@AliOkanYĆ¼ksel I'm a layman when it comes to web stuff but my impression is that free search engines have restrictions for a reason. I wouldn't be surprised if there were paying API customer options
@Mikhail small world that both of you have to solve the same specific problem within 2 days :)
Well 3.8 is not released yet. But it has positional-only parameters, and some syntax warnings are raised in common typo or dumb situations. But 3.8 will also have assignment expressions, ew. See docs.python.org/3.8/whatsnew/3.8.html for current list
@RaphX .str.contains operates on a full Series. That's the whole point of pandas methods; if they can't be properly vectorized, they'll implicitly iterate through rows of a dataframe or, in this case, items in a Series.
@Arne It might just be that I got to "grow up" with SO, but I've never found it to be difficult to ask a good question. I mean, sometimes I've asked non-SO questions
or other poor-quality questions
but I think the challenge is that asking a good SO question is an entirely different skillset from the one required for writing reasonable software
I'm not surprised that industry vets have a bad time asking on SO because it's an entirely different paradigm than any other community that they've previously been a part of