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15:18
rbrb
My module now imports from anywhere as desired. I have written a document for the benefit of Future Kevin and other interested readers, available here.
I am 80% sure that the steps are technically correct. I am 25% sure that the steps can't be made any simpler.
@Kevin I think #3 is not the best
I smelled a smell from step #3 myself... I think the "right" way is to put def bang_halves_together in a separate .py file in that directory, and make __init__.py redirect to that file somehow. Perhaps with from actualSourceFile import bang_halves_together?
yup, and __all__ = ['bang_halves_together'] for clean imports
@Kevin Why does it require a package?
15:24
@AndrasDeak Ok. Other than being unidiomatic, is there a reason to prefer the right way? Is there some scenario where the wrong way makes the package harder to import, or more confusing, or something? I'm trying to find a justification stronger than "this structure is a little cleaner". If the end user is as lackadaisical as I am, they'll never even look in this directory.
@AaronHall don't you need that for installation?
@Kevin I'm pretty sure all logic in __init__.py will work
@AaronHall If there's a way to make a file visible anywhere without making it into a package, and without messing with PATH and/or sys.path, I'm very interested in learning more!
Are we installing it in site packages?
Sure. That's where python-m pip install typically puts things, I gather.
> "The Simplest Possible Way To Make A Python File Importable From Anywhere"
15:26
Are you about to say "skip all this claptrap and stick the .py file straight into the site-packages dir yourself"? I don't completely hate the idea...
too spooky for me
Well, I wasn't aware of conditions...
plus if you want to edit it you'd have to look it up in site-packages, and with different python versions you'd have to copy it over, right?
that's basically what installation does for you with less work
I see what you mean... Now we're in subjective territory about what counts as "simplest", when taking a long view of maintaining your module across versions and environments
arguably "transform your one file into a package" is almost only as much work as "find out where your site-packages live" for a random user, and the former is much more maintainable (including version control and publishing)
15:33
Maintainability and reusability require some degree of sophistication. It's interesting to see what people do when those requirements go out the window.
Ok, I've decided that the truly simplest way really is "Put the file in a directory that's already in sys.path". But writing a guide containing only that sentence is unsatisfying to me personally. Therefore, I will change my goal to "The Simplest Possible Way To Make A Python File Into A Package Importable From Anywhere "
I'm taking this goalpost and sprinting down the field with it
> "The Simplest Possible Way To Make A Python File Into A Reusable, Maintainable, Version Controlled, pip Installable Package Importable From Anywhere"
@AndrasDeak Ok, supposing I keep my __init__.py separate from my code file. Is there any standard on what I should name that code file? Is it OK if it has the same name as the project and/or package?
Having just tried it, I think it causes a circular import. Oops.
I'm not wholly convinced that it's a bad idea to put code in the __init__.py... That's how BeautifulSoup does it, for example.
16:04
Well you definitely need a module for your base classes called bases.py.
mixins can go in mixins.py
Requirements that you're "freezing" by keeping a copy need to go in their own frozen subpackage (let it go.)
ui goes in the ui package..
tests that ship with the install go in a test subpackage.
I suspect that cramming your code into __init__.py harms maintainability if your package will eventually grow to become larger than a single file. Certainly, I expect the average package to reach that level of complexity. But my target audience isn't so sophisticated.
Their module is already feature-complete, or very close to it, and now they just want to fix their ModuleNotFoundErrors so they can ship v1.0.0 and move on to something else. Hopefully when they revisit the project for v2.0.0, they've learned more about the packaging system and have enough knowledge to refactor it the right way.
so I guess I can stop googling for examples of packages with cython implementations...
I know that I'm picking a point along the easy/right gradient in a subjective arbitrary manner. But, well, that's my prerogative as the tutorial author.
@AaronHall Yeah, that's a little outside my scope :-)
@Kevin I guess something semantic-based is best
So what's the ideal organization of our all-inclusive __init__.py? Without too much thought, first try would be a docstring on usage, imports, def main with functions called like an outline, implementations in the order outlined beneath that, recursively so.
16:14
as you could see I use modulename.py for this purpose, because I have simple modules
Hmm, I'm confused by that. When I named my module after my package, I got ImportError: cannot import name 'bang_halves_together' from 'LovelyCoconut'. Does your __init__.py import the module in some way that makes it clear that it wants the module and not the package?
ah, yes, relative imports
$ cat package/module1/__init__.py
from .module1 import *

del module1 # remove spurious module1.module1 from the namespace
Ah, makes sense.
note that I don't know if any of this is more idiomatic, it just seems nice to me
in my head __init__.py is responsible for pulling together submodules into one namespace
Well 90% of the packages I have installed don't put a lot of code in their __init__.py, so I think you're on to something.
16:18
:| (deleted)
Not as funny as it was in my head (-:
I do think it's conceptually cleaner to make __init__.py responsible only for housekeeping pertaining to the project structure
@Kevin if you're happy with module1.submod2.subsubmod.foo then those can even be empty
was it ever explained why import * gives the module as well?
nevermind, what I just wrote not precise, because it doesn't seem to happen with absolute imports
16:22
Hm... I'm not demonstrating it (using os), but I seem to recall it being so.
same here
maybe the bug was fixed
Maybe it only works when you're inside a package directory's __init__, trying to access a module in the same folder.
but it was fixed in 2 as well.
@AaronHall I added that del not so long ago, so I don't think so
16:23
Is there a site that does this but maybe better?
Insert handwave here about the import mechanism already having constructed a tree of modules out of the package directory and subdirectories
If module1.submod2.subsubmod.foo is visible without a long chain of __init__.pys explicitly importing their descendants, then there has to be some magic behind the scenes setting up those imports on your behalf
no, you have to import all of those manually I think, level by level
Or maybe you can import it with a single call? I'm not sure...
16:38
With use of __init__.pys doing imports and __all__ stuff etc...
17:18
Hmm, is there a function in the stdlibs that can determine whether a directory x contains a file y, or any of its subidrectories contain y? For example, contains("C:/foo", "C:/foo/bar/qux/troz.txt") returns True, and contains ("C:/foo", "C:/zort/blah.txt") returns False.
I could write my own, but I like to use existing tools for manipulating paths when possible
cbg
Anyone here done much with YouTube API v3?
Maybe I can use os.path.commonpath to do most of the work...
@Kevin Path.relative_to does it, kinda
>>> Path("C:/foo/bar/qux/troz.txt").relative_to("C:/foo")
WindowsPath('bar/qux/troz.txt')
>>> Path("C:/zort/blah.txt").relative_to("C:/foo")
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "C:\Python37\lib\pathlib.py", line 867, in relative_to
    .format(str(self), str(formatted)))
ValueError: 'C:\\zort\\blah.txt' does not start with 'C:\\foo'
I've got a program that someone asked for to get all of the subscribers to their YouTube channel and do a .csv and download the thumbnails. For some reason it stops after 1,000 results every time. I'm using the mySubscribers, not myrecentsubscribers. Wasn't sure if anyone else had done anything like this.
17:23
I'm guessing there's a limit of 1000 results per query and you have to send another query with a next page token?
@AndrasDeak yes, if I'm looking at it correctly, I should be using approx 3 credits per page pull (of 50 results each). Guy only has 25k subs.
@Aran-Fey it's capped to 50 results per page.
Give me a few and I'll get it popped into a gist
@Aran-Fey I'll probably go with that, thanks
@Kevin that's the general approach - what happens if froz.txt is under C:/bar//cabbage/` instead? What's the result meant to be for that one?
Hey everyone
@Kevin you don't need the __init__.py at the level where the setup.py is, here. Regarding putting everything in the then-only __init__.py, no downsides to it except maintainability
thanks, but I was only rubber ducking ;)
I'm legit lost on this. 1000 seems like a super arbitrary number to stop at. Also the myrecentsubscribers only returns 1000, but I'm clearly not using it.
it's suspiciously round
Also suspicious since one returns 1,000 results.
>>> value = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/ip').raise_for_status().json()['origin']
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'json'
But it doesn't do what it says it should do. Am I doing it wrong?
17:32
@Arne Thanks. I'll remove the spurious init in v2.0.
@aadibajpai apparently requests.get('http://httpbin.org/ip').raise_for_status() is None
@AndrasDeak the note says that if the request is successful, then the response object gets assigned
> if the request is successful
hmm...
Yeah so if you do it without the .raise_for_status() it is successful
I notice that 2.python-requests.org/en/master/user/quickstart/… indicates that raise_for_status can return None. But this is presumably for a different version of the library, so I don't know if it applies.
In any case, definitely check the version of requests you're using and confirm that it matches the documentation you're referring to.
17:36
@aadibajpai You're reading the docs of version 3, which is still in development
Ahhh so they will implement that in the new release but haven't yet released it?
Seems like it
@biggi_ looks like a (more than) reasonable paging size to me :)
That is weird, Version 2 has a soft limit of 500 (so I guess they upped it to 1000 for 3)
Seems weird to release documentation in the present tense for an unexpected release
s/unexpected/future
17:37
@JonClements 50 is max results per page :)
@Kevin wohoo, I contributed to opensource!
So shines a good deed in a weary world
This is where it catches after 20 pages (1000 results) gist.github.com/biggidvs/…
Maybe your PC got tired of opening the same csv file 1000 times
^
I'd agree if it wasn't 1,000 everytime
17:39
You can find your quotas in the cloud console fyi (that will only open the youtube quota page if you have added a youtube API instance to your GSuite)
Yea I'm fine on quota I think
If I was getting a more random number (not 1,000 on the nose) then I'd say maybe.
yeah, v3 has a hard max 1000 but you can get around it:
18
A: How can get all results from Youtube API (search API) response

johnh10YouTube imposes a soft limit of about 500. There is no direct way to get more than that through the API. Full details: https://code.google.com/p/gdata-issues/issues/detail?id=4282 Relevant Excerpt: "We can't provide more than ~500 search results for any arbitrary YouTube query via the API with...

ahh okay, don't some quotas on G do that, so you're allowed N many total per period, and N many per certain frequency? So you might be allowed 24,000, but only allowed 1000 an hour and at most N a minute and all that kind of stuff?
Yeah, most of the GSuite ones do, that's how I knew what to search for :)
It's allowed 3,000,000 in a 100 seconds time period or 10,000 for the day total (which seems backwards), however, I can always restart with no problems. So if it were an issue with units, I'd think it wouldn't let me restart over and over.
17:45
Or you get a various generous frequency if you give 'em some billing details... but then you'll have to end up mortgaging your house :p
that's a daily total, there is also a "soft total" (which sometimes v3 lets go up to 1000 - its suppose to be 500) - the are different things
Ok so let's say that's true. I should need 1500 total for the whole thing.
If each page takes 3 (which I can't 100% confirm or deny yet, but that's what it looks like each should take)
so use the two methods specified in the answer (and read it - once it hits 500 or 1000 it just stops sending "nextpages")
I was once looking at using the google vision thingy for a quick solution for a cllent as it seemed to work well, and I've got GCP stuff going which includes a few freebies, but when I looked at the price for the quantity required, I was just.... "oh yam.... maybe not then :p"
@JGreenwell what methods are you even talking about? And keep in mind, if I were hitting unit limits, why would I get the exact same number of results every time even if I restart literally right after it finishes?
17:48
if you want to up the daily total (don't know if you do but just for completiness) you contact the GSuite team (there's a form in the quota page I linked earlier.....or at least that's where I remember getting it 2 years ago)
@biggi_ read the answer I linked
sorry, id idn't see that
> Use the filters 'publishedAfter' and 'publishedBefore' to break up your query into loops of queries by day/week/month until no more results are returned. Each periodic query should return less than 500 results each, but you'll get them all.
np
@JonClements yeah, there tools are awesome & I still use it for small side projects (like a few of my guilds) but oi, the prices go up quick (and you have to watch your usage like a hawk)
@JGreenwell so how would that help?
I'm semi confused by reading that (it's a miracle I've gotten this far)
Same way as in a normal search query using POST & GET requests from a database (think of publishedbefore & publisedafter as OFFSETs)
I'm trying to figure out how to implement that haha
17:59
So you send the first request same as always then with whatever was the last result set publishedafter=<some ISO 8601 format> using the last published date (from your results) as publishedafter & repeat as needed
^ changed to bit easier use-case
wait, i know enough to know that was a stupid question.
You can use nextpagetoken using the way I just described (at this point its just "what algorithm do you want?" there are a few methods for doing this - I typically just use a dictionary or class of Counters but I do a lot calculations with the totals & other types of counts anyway)
Hmm, halfway through writing this program that ostensibly improves my workflow, I realize it's actually only good for making it much easier for others to annoy me without making anything more efficient. Maybe I'll shelve this one.
or... pickle it...? :p
@biggi_ oh, but note the ISO 8601 format requirement (you cannot just set a date - Google is weird about this it has to be an oddly specific format - if you grab it from the last query you'll be fine but just a heads up cause that broke something critical for me and it was not fun figuring out why)
19:03
@JGreenwell sorry had to step away for a meeting. I'll look into this tonight...seems this is quite a bit above my head.
I found another good question on it (which is specific to subscribers or videos & includes how it effects your quota):
23
Q: Retrieving all the new subscription videos in YouTube v3 API

SARoseI need to know the equivalent request in YouTube Data API v3 as this v2 request for retrieving all the new subscription videos. https://gdata.youtube.com/feeds/api/users/default/newsubscriptionvideos I have not seen any simple and clean requests that are as simple as the v2 version of the req...

19:27
@JGreenwell so what I'll need to do is after the first request, get the publishedbefore tag and then somehow tie that into my next request as the publishedafter?
as publishedafter, yep. pretty much (at least it should be a good starting point).
20:15
afternoon cabbage
 
3 hours later…
23:29
dupe/too broad(?) This is a very broad question, but part of it is a dupe of What is a list comprehension, how dose it work and how can I use it? Else, useful to provide dupe targets for all the multiple things the question asks about.
...Don't close as too broad
@smci I think there are two possible confusions there...understanding a general list comprehension, and understanding the tuple syntax in the for clause.
@Code-Apprentice Yes clearly, but I don't have the time and energy to research all the dupe targets, for a multiple-questions-in-one; if you do please add those links in comments. PS: I guess the What is a list comprehension, how does it work and how can I use it? needs to be improved with an example of tuple-unpacking.
23:50
@smci yah, that probably could help. I don't have much time right now, either. Trying to wrap up my workday and head home.
@Code-Apprentice Likewise. I'm chasing my tail. Gonna be offline most of August.
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