Hi, any number of times I re-run this code, the number of process ids printed are completely ordered(e.g 455,456,457,458,etc...). Is there something I don't understand correctly about this?
from multiprocessing import Process
import os
def func_to_distribute(num1,num2):
print(os.getpid())
print(f"{num1} times {num2} is:", num1*num2)
if __name__ == "__main__":
for a in range(10):
for b in range(10):
p = Process(target=func_to_distribute,args=(a,b))
p.start()
When I started Python, I couldn't get my head around why people weren't using multiprocessing all the time. I've since found that it's only useful in a handful of cases and I can't remember the last time I directly used it
@roganjosh Do you mean you use multithreading or you use neither? I just read an answer on the SO that explained why multiprocessing is usually faster than multithreading specifically in Python.
i have a dict whose values are list
example
{'a':['a123-10','a456-10,'a789-10'], 'b':['b456-10','b123-10,'b789-10']
}
I need to sort it like
{'a':['a123-10','a456-10,'a789-10'], 'b':['b123-10','b456-10,'b789-10']}
So we are generating some statistics report in HTML. The generated report size sometimes goes to more than 1GB(It's expected). What I want is to compress these HTML statistics data in order to avoid occupying too much memory. What is the recommended method in Python3 ?
Was expecting this question lol that's why I had mentioned : (It's expected) . But since you asked let me tell
The statistics has data of individual user, for each individual user we are generating one .js file which is easy to load on html. Of course our next target is to improve the approach. But for now we will keep it this way.
@AndrasDeak many moons ago, I remember you telling me to use the cv-pls tag correctly because some people were doing some kind of automation to follow that tag. Do you happen to know what that is, or whether it still happens?
You also invited me into a chat room bombarded with bots throwing in questions, with a queen bee bot. I'm guessing it was that?
@roganjosh it usually happens in SOCVR. But people get conditioned to look at cv-pls requests, it's easier for them to stand out in chat. And yes, there's SOBotics where Queen can ping you with dupes if you want. But cv-plses go in language-related rooms or SOCVR
True, but the flip side is interesting; does the community have any data on this experiment that might be on-hand to counter any claims if the SO analysis goes south?
There's nothing to do about that if it happens. If SO wants to change or not change something based on their own assessments no amount of community feedback will sway them.
Anything you want to build outside of that then? I can't tell you what will make you a great programmer because I'm not sure I'm close to that mark, but I do know that my projects are what keep driving my learning
yeah. I have a few ideas, but they mostly require languages like C# and html. I'm just scared about learning a new language before I've mastered python - I've been waiting to master python before starting a new language up until now, and I think it's really holding me back
You'll find concepts from languages carry over without issues honestly. And you'll also find that "mastering" a language becomes an increasingly vague and deep rabbit hole, with no real end.
So frankly, don't fuss too much about it. Do things you like.
Well, HTML is just a google-fest "is it none, false or off I have to use here?". At least that's my experience of it. So the HTML side you'll get through without too much knowledge building
Just try to focus that different things can be idiomatic or an anti-pattern depending on the language. Try to write each language well and not just correctly.
@jack.py FWIW I used to follow sentdex's tutorials when I was starting out. His code actually isn't that great once you have a footing to be able to evaluate it, but his projects are still pretty cool and span a huge range of things. It might give you some inspiration.
You gotta give it to him, though. Big YouTube channel, a vast array of projects that you can actually follow to completion and a side business for investment
Doing better than me, whatever I think of the code quality :P
@jack.py it is highly unlikely that you will ever "master" Python - more likely than C++, but there is a lot under the hood and the ecosystem grows quickly
just start experimenting with other languages
it is much more important to learn the non-language skills - design patterns, coding best practices like TTD, language paradigms such as functional, etc.
if you want to learn another language fast, I recommend building your own LISP: norvig.com/lispy.html
@holdenweb or maybe that's just the sign of a great programmer. Being on the right side of the Dunning-Kruger spectrum and realising that true understanding is basically impossible :)
Hi, I have a json file that contains some characters such as 'Å‚' which in the file is represented by \u0142. When read the file into a dictionary the string containing the \u0142 is of type string and when I am trying to write it to another file I get the error: 'charmap' codec can't encode character '\u0142' in position 71: character maps to <undefined>. Anyone got any idea what I might need to do to fix this
I think you need to specify an encoding the supports that symbol, when opening the file. Something like open(path, 'w', encoding='utf-8'), however I can't reproduce your error to check if this is right.
I am aware of the existence of paprika but I don't think I could tell you a single thing about it. Other than "it appears on the children's show Blues Clues as the offspring of the Salt and Pepper characters"
If mandelian mendelian genetics applies to talking spice containers, I would expect paprika to be gray. Is it gray?
Just another piece of evidence showing that any file you store online could be deleted against your wishes when the host decides to pivot to a different tech stack
I'm confident that any active user of the site can port over whatever they need. What I'm worried about are the abandonware repositories that are owned by DenverCoder9, who hasn't logged in since 2010.
I believe Facebook does... (if I recall Martijn even did a presentation on why FB chose it over git and the reasons why...) - although, I might be mis-remembering
Dr. Who is a sausage machine whose input is the entire corpus of horror and science fiction. It's not noteworthy that there are elements of Lovecraft, but it is noteworthy that it got through the grinder without being rendered into a fine paste.
@Kevin Stay ahead by changing channels regularly, I guess. I would't dream of looking to comp.lang.python for advice any more, but at one time it was the cream of the crop. Then Google threw the Usenet archives away ...
Mm hmm, all communities eventually devolve into noise, so you've always got to be on the lookout for the next enclave that hasn't been discovered by fools and corporate interests
Umm... it's a long weekend in the UK (it's a bank holiday Monday today) - and it's a bloomin' warm one at that... not been doing too much - a little bit of working and some watching netflix...
Example use case: you have a GUI application. If any of your functions take more than 1/60th of a second to execute, the window will lock up and annoy the user. You have a button that needs to execute the function reticulate_splines, which takes thirty seconds to run.
"if you ever have to apply one function to a giant collection of inputs" <- that's the classical example of the need for multiprocessing. I use it in the fitness evalution in evolutionary algorithms when the fitness of an individual does not depend on the fitness of other individuals
Although... a decent GUI framework will just abstract that stuff away into event loops anyway (be it greenlets/threads/whatever...) so generally you wouldn't have to worry
Rather than calling reticulate_splines directly, you create a new thread that runs it. The main thread checks the child thread every tenth of a second or so to see if the splines are done reticulating.
@JonClements I dunno whether the issue is retention or access. There was a specific period when the Usenet archive was in Google's charge, and stuff got lost.
Ok, backend use case: you have a web server. If any page takes more than one second to load, the browser will spin its loading icon and annoy the user. You need yoursite.com/reticulate_splines to call the function reticulate_splines, which takes thirty seconds to run.
@inspectorG4dget Not from NYC but have spent time there, and used to know Gloria Willedsen (PyGotham and many other things organiser) quite well. Happy to ping her if the email address still works.
It's all fine and good to be forward-thinking about what kinds of techniques you'll need to implement a design, but I think there's a limit... If you fret about things for too long, you'll never get around to actually writing code.
If I were in your position, I'd just jump in and implement what I can, and revisit the issue of threading once the design solidifies enough that I actually have a concrete problem description
Right. Much depends on load. I had a client who was concerned that their job scheduling process might be too expensive. I pointed out that it was scheduling computations that took hundreds of thousand of times more resources, so cost of scaling was unlikely to be a factor. In practice nobody ever complained, so they could optimise slowly as the system matured.
Also bear in mind that multi-threading is only a win for things that aren't computationally intensive, unless different threads can run on different processors in parallel. That isn't easy to achieve in Python, though definitely not impossible.
It sounds like what you wanted to ask was "Can I make my application more efficient by using threading?", but the question you actually asked sounded more like "is there any point where I have to use threading in my application?"
In my estimation, threads are good for 1) enabling unusual kinds of flow control 2) parallelizing the computation of algorithms that don't depend on one another. For backend stuff I expect 2 will crop up more frequently than 1
If you need to query data from the tables USERS and WIDGETS and VEGETABLES before you can render a page, then maybe it makes sense to have a thread for each one.
As you may already know, the Global Interpreter Lock means that threading typically doesn't make code faster if your threads only execute native Python code. The upshot of this is that it makes it easier to identify what code can be made faster. If you're working with a library that isn't implemented purely in Python, then calls to those libraries are ripe for parallelization.
@JonClements mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list goes back to Feb 1999, though there were times when cross-posting between the list and the newsgroup weren't brilliant.
@TheLittleNaruto I never actually deployed with nginx, but I'm pretty sure it can handle scheduling of requests and multiprocessing of the application for you
@JonClements Good find! There is one post that purports to come from 1992, which is probably someone whose system tine was wrong, but otherwise it appears to start in 1995!
What I'd really like is a giant chart of every language's json parser, with checkmarks and Xes indicating what features of JSON they implement or fail to implement
I'm not sure whether "parses certain kinds of string which aren't strictly valid json, but which are popularly used anyway" should be considered a good or bad thing
Plenty of users would be thrilled to have a library that parses []\n[]\n[] but I'd rather have a DecodeError. (Or the parser could return [] and leave the file pointer at index 2. See last week's conversation.)
Moderately interesting optimization problem I came up with yesterday: you have a beautiful garden which is constantly under attack by aphids. The aphid population increases by one every day. Each morning, you may either spray the aphids with Aphid Sleepiness Juice, at a cost of P$ per aphid; or you may hire a professional aphid shooer to shoo all the aphids out of your garden for a flat fee of Q$. Choose a strategy that minimizes the money you spend per day.
The simplest solution is to hire the shooer every day, which costs Q$ per day. But if P << Q, it might make sense to use the spray for, say, six days, and then hire the shooer, and repeat. Then the average daily cost is (P*(1+2+3+4+5+6) + Q) / 6
The math on this cocktail napkin says this is a superior strategy when P < Q * (5/21)
I remember rust uses toml a lot, but I just like it because I had to fix our servers for a couple of days when pyyaml had its update breakdown last year
@roganjosh Right. You can't spray and shoo on the same day. This is because the shooing technique involves having a constructive dialogue with the aphids and convincing them that the garden across the street is much nicer. You can't convince the aphids of anything if they're asleep.
Additional information: Aphids are pretty dumb and the shooer is an expert debater, so the technique always succeeds. Your neighbor across the street will never hire the shooer to send the aphids back to your garden, because he and the shooer are embroiled in a love triangle with the florist the next town over, which is accessible only by a train that departs from the station every X hours, and takes Y hours to reach its destination, carrying Z passengers each time.
My cocktail napkin says that the strategy "spray for N days, then shoo" has a daily cost of (P/2) * (N+1) + (Q/N). I'm not sure if you can find the optimal N if you don't have concrete values of P and Q.
Possible silly question, if I run a command with subprocess.run(['ls'], shell=False) how does python run the command if not through a shell? Can it call binaries directly?
AFAICT when shell=False, the module makes a direct request to the OS to create a new process, and this can be done without involving an existing shell.
I'm inclined to say that it comes down to your definition of "shell". If by shell you mean "a Windows process that identifies itself as 'cmd' or 'PowerShell', or one of the many Unix processes that consider themselves shells", then subprocess.run(x, shell=False) doesn't use a shell. If a shell is "any interface between a program and the OS", then subprocess has to use a shell, because there's no other way to talk to the OS.
My cocktail napkin says that "spray for N days, then shoo" is optimal when N = sqrt(2*Q/P) - 1. There are about ten places where I could have screwed up the math, though, so I'm skeptical
(basically just means a browser doesn't expose /home/jon/something/whatever/project_name/some_thing_else/some_thing_else/filename.whatever - it just does "I'm sending you filename.whatever")
how would I go about using str.format if I wanted to name a varibale as well as specify alignment? "{:<22desc}".format(desc='asdf') fails pretty spectacularly
The github repo, in particular the process journal, gives some insight into the author's development process. Skimming through it, it doesn't tell us a whole lot about the inspiration, beyond "wouldn't these be wacky?"