Any ML/statistical modeling people opinions on this? How to convert Python datetime dates to decimal/float years is a good question and I'm going to add it to the canon. But that quantity is called "time index". Should we leave title as is, and just have a mention in the question body?
I think people who know that term will be able to equate the description in the question title, while those who don't wouldn't know to search for that term. I'm not sure I'd even put it in the question body - why put words in the OP's mouth, especially one they don't even know from the sounds of it? Just include it in a comment or in the body of your answer.
In fact, when I google "what is time index", I'm not sure that it actually does mean the same as floating number of years. google.com/…
Ah, a floating number of years is one form of a time index. Just as Julian date could be a time index, or Unix timestamp number of seconds a different time index, or Excel timestamp decimal number of days since 1/1/1900 another kind of time index. They are all ways to convert a yy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss timestamp to a linear timeline.
I want to do a function that allow me to use another function each 5 seconds. When the first call of function is started another variable will store last execution time.. I calculated the 5 seconds interval and return if 5 seconds not passed.
class MyClass():
def __init__(self):
last...
@IrinelIovan - you just posted that question about 20 minutes ago. Chat room rules say you should give the general populace a chance to answer before posting in this chat. You'll also get more responses if you leave the f-bomb variable names out of your sample code.
I am kind of confused just what you are asking though. Wouldn't a "call every 5 seconds" thread do what you want? If not, how does what you want differ? Maybe give a more concrete example of how you want a delay timer to work? It looks like a couple people want to help, so clearing up just what you are asking might get you more helpful responses.
That is much clearer. But you aren't really trying to code a delay in the code, as much as detecting if X amount of time has elapsed since the last call. If you include that game scenario in your question, you should get some good answers in a very short time.
@PM2Ring - oh nice. I think this OP might still be mired in Py2-Land, tho. But thanks, I will make a note for use at work, we do quite a bit of timing bits for automated testing.
@Zeta.Investigator I am not aware of any naming conventions or recommendations around virtual envs. If I have multiple venvs for different Python versions, I probably put the version in the venv name. But you are free to name how you please. (I think venvs are particularly difficult to rename though. so it is worth thinking about up front.)
It's not totally clear - he did put parens around his print arguments, which is usually a good Py3 telltale. But I wasn't sure, so I didn't use nonlocal, but one of the Py2 hacks to work around not having nonlocal.
Nicely conducted by Kevin, I'd say it was fruitful overall. I'd prefer bit.ly links (room desc.) or if we are okay with tinyurl, maybe we could get a SOpython website functionality for our own shortener :-p
Good question, I've never really understood that myself. An application factory makes sense for testing but you've reminded me that I was also confused by that statement
"you can have multiple instances of the same application running in the same application process which can be handy" is the kicker. I could imagine someone having an app that they sell to two other companies. Each company has their own "portal"... but that doesn't merit running them in the same application process, so I get lost there
I might be wrong, but I think it's got to do with working on multiple requests in parallel. Flask stores the request state in a threadlocal object that is magically made available to all functions decorated as routes. As a consequence, you can only work on one request at a time per thread, and working on multiple requests at the same time requires multiple threads.
That would launch the app in multiple processes/threads (configurable) but they would still create the same app from the factory. It would be confusing if they used the factory to produce different apps :P
But I think you're on the right lines, Arne. I just don't quite get a practical use case
@MisterMiyagi But then the logic falls apart for me in the latter part of that point
Because I couldn't see why, practically, you'd want to mix two apps in this way. I'm talking about implementation, not theory here. Beyond a live version and a staging version, I don't know whether people would actually make use of this facet of Flask
Spin up an instance and have a dedicated app instead
seriously now, a) I think it's good software design to design everything as instances, not singletons, and b) I see zero reason to risk side-effects from shared process state only to avoid running more processes.
in theory, you could benefit from in-app caches if instances serve similar content. Not sure if that is a frequent use-case.
If you could tell me a situation as an example then it would make sense
That was the initial question, so in light of what you're saying, I think it's pretty valid
I'm less concerned that Flask went down the route of supporting this, but "pretty handy" as a qualifier in the point that we're referring to suggests that people actually want to do this.
(Also, in case it was misread, "teach me your ways" was in reference to giving up questioning what people do, not how Flask should work)
Thanks. Another question - I understand about flask dev server. To move flask to production, I know about gunicorn and nginx (pip install gunicorn; pip install nginx). Does it make more sense to keep one server with nginx and one server with gunicorn? Or better to keep both on one server?
No Im reseraching my options - I am even thinking about docker'izing this
@roganjosh assuming I got 2 servers on a computer. Each server is an independant entity. Is it better to put nginx on one and gunicorn on other. Or shall I use only 1 server and have both nginx and gunicorn on that one server.
My understandign is - the request will go to the nginx server first, if static file then it will handle it. If python req then it will forward it to gunicorn.
Ok so you mean for example depending on volume or traffic - we could have 1 nginx and multiple gunicorn servers. And decide if they gonna be on independant machine or not
All NginX is going to do (I'm massively oversimplifying) is take a request and pass it on. If it passes it on to something else listening on the same machine, that's fine
If you're gonna get hammered by requests then nginx can distribute those requests to multiple servers hosting your app. I suspect this is an unlikely case here
Ok so I am thinking of using docker - within the docker image I wil do pip install gunicorn and pip install my flask application and do gunicorn run [or what ever is the command ot run flask via gunicorn]. That should be sufficent then for a basic setup. and for scalability I can use something like service fabric cluster to scale it
Ok it is makign sense to me now. Thanks for the help with server
Do you think it is an overkill to implement factory and blueprint pattern for small rest api app? I am thinking that we can use OS environment to configure the app object. Just want to know general opinion about this
Is there a way to split the views in separate file? Because if I do that, then current_app will not be available - so need to use with app.context while using the view file int he factory? Hope makign sense
If I move the routes to view.py, then there is no app object in the view.py file. So in view.py if I use current_app, and then in init.py if i do from pkg import view - this will fail as there is no current app.context so current_app will fail. So am I right to say i need to manually push app context before using from pkg import view
I cant import app in view.py because app is returned from factory present in the init file.
So what I was saying above is, if I try to use current_app in the view.py, to setup the routes, then, in init.py, in the factory, after creating app object when I will do 'from pkg improt views' it will fail isnt it?
anyway... I'll stop doing that typing out lyrics now... it's annoying even me - wonder if there's any decent Python stuff to answer this morning... goes and has a quick peek
Oh come on now. Pushing app contexts is way beyond the fundamental restructuring that I'm suggesting
I will say this, since it's not the first time I'm trying to help you; you're overstretching your knowledge. I'm in the position all the time. But you're missing a hell of a lot of things along the way and you have something of a responsibility to yourself to get to grips with it. At the moment, your app cannot hold water because it has leaks everywhere; take a step back
Please be considerate when pointing me to sopython containing 100s of files that I dont know where to start. I am not arguing, I know I need to know a lot more and I am trying. But the question I asked here was - I am having a project where all code is in app.py. Now I want to make this better by moving to package and factory pattern.
So I moved code from the app.py into the pkg_init_.py. Now, within init I have implemented the create_app factory method. Now, I wish to move the routes into a new file view.py which I did using current_app and then when I replaced the routes from the factory with 'from pkg import views' it gave me the error related to missing context. Which I subsequently fixed by manually pushing the app.context just before doing the 'from pkg import views'.
Now you are saying I need to take step back. Please be considerate to tell me in few words in what context are you saying to take step back.
"take a step back" is a suggestion that you might want to fill in the gaps in your flask knowledge. It's not an insult; if I intended to insult you, it would be more obvious. However, are you going to argue with me that you're putting a diverse range of problems to me?
What I am saying is that you can't expect this all to fall into place in the space of a couple of weeks with no experience. That's not meant to be an insult to you, I'm sorry if you've seen it that way, but it wasn't intended
Also, I have a bad habit of saying "argue" when I mean "debate". I don't see them as separate entities, regardless of how heated (or not), but maybe I misspoke
playing around with google cloud api, I get what i think is a Json string, need to put into a dict to then put into a df in pandas. Looked around, but keep getting into different errors... if I print what i get from google: translations { translated_text: "Bolivian street clashes leave 5 dead and 22 injured" }
You send a POST request to https://translation.googleapis.com/v3/{parent=projects/*}:translateText and get a JSON response. Easier than dealing with google's junk code, ain't it?
Though I guess implementing the OAuth authentication is a bit of a hurdle if you've never done it before
Hmm if I have a set of factory methods to create objects: would it be best if those factory methods are "free" methods, static methods or even class methods?
Since by "factory" you mean "creates class instances", you will probably want to make them class methods, and use the 'cls' argument as a way to find the relevant class to use in constructing the instances.
For instance, I'll often create an abstract base class that knows how to find the correct subclass given some selection criterion. The base class then implements a classmethod that take criteria, finds the correct subclass by navigating cls.__subclasses__, and then returns it to the caller, or creates a default class instance and returns that.
Well it's mainly "utility functions", ie I need to define a (keplerian) orbit. Which is normally done by giving semi-major axis, eccentricity, inclination, argument periapsis and longitude ascending node. However there are lots of "variations": ie for parabolic orbits the semi major axis is replaced by semi latus rectum. Or you can just use state variables at a point (position + velocity in 3 dimensions). Or you could replace the semi major axis + eccentricity by peri + apo apsis.
So I have a few utility functions. I once tried that by using keyword arguments, but then the error checking for "did I have enough and not too many constraints" got overwhelming.
If I make them class methods I never use the cls variable so any checker might fall over that
So you could have a base AbstractOrbit class, then have the subclasses implement a class-level list of required arguments. The base class has a make_orbit takes a **kwargs, and iterates over cls.__subclasses__ to find the one with matching required kwargs, and then returns an instance of that.
Because it makes little sense to me to use anything else? "MakeOrbitFromStateVariables(position: (float, float, float), velocity: (float, float, float)) -> Orbit"
I guess you don't really need the complexity of the class hierarchy. Just define a make_orbit classmethod on Orbit that takes **kwargs and does the mix-and-match validation.
@PaulMcG That is a pain with the amount of variables, there are 6 independent ones necessary out of a pool of 18 (some of which are dependent). And then there are a lot of combinations that "officially" work, but are just a pain to implement and never needed.
Here is a little example of multi-dispatch using __subclasses__ (skip the first translated-directly-from-Java example and jump down to the but-Python-is-not-Java version): python-3-patterns-idioms-test.readthedocs.io/en/latest/…
You could also have make_orbit call a kwargs-normalizing method, to reduce the amount of which-kwargs-did-I-get logic in Orbit.__init__.
@PaulMcG Well the big problem is that there's a lot of "simplifications" on the calculation to the base 6 keplerian variables. But I guess having a single constructor could make sense. But then I can just as well use a constructor instead of a factory.
When I hear "factory" I tend to think in class-level logic, so my first thought was the AbstractOrbit.make_orbit. But you could also have various methods to normalize one set of args to another, and have make_orbit (or even just __new__) convert the given args to a normalized set, and then write Orbit's __init__ to just take the normalized set of kwargs.
By comparison, you could have a Line class that is constructed with a slope and y-intercept, and define normalization methods to convert Line construction using 2 points, or a point and a slope, or any other geometric relation that resolves to a line in the x-y plane; have the method convert the args to slope and y-intercept, and then return Line(resolved_slope, resolved_y_intercept)
@AaronHall PIL has some basic drawing commands. But IMHO that diagram ought to be done with vector graphics rather than bitmap. You could code it directly in SVG, although it can be fun to use Python to create SVG.
Of course, that requires knowing some SVG, but it's pretty easy to pick up the basics. There are various tutorials around; I used this one a few years ago. Dashed lines are easy in SVG.
Hi, @AndrasDeak. Sorry I missed the room meeting. I simply forgot about it. :( I've read the transcript, and have no disagreements.
On that topic, which GUI, or actually "state memory" would you recommend for python? Like "creating" a set of data and then selecting the function to use (which might modify data). Currently I use an interactive python shell for those things. But it gets messy at times.
@AndrasDeak Ah, right. SVG can't do much about that, since it's a 2D program. I suppose it wouldn't be too hard to handle hidden lines in Python, but I've never tried.
However to "select" which transitions it does I currently rebuild the earth-moon system. Then create the initial setup and add transitions using code. It would be nice if there's just a select box that says "perform function xyz on object abc".
@AndrasDeak I think pycharm uses ipython internally when creating an interactive python shell?
What does "rebuild the earth moon system" mean? I'm probably being dumb here but it's not my area. A GUI in itself won't alleviate this but isn't it something you could store? So you have two components; storage of state and user interaction?
@roganjosh of course I could store this, the "problem" is that in a linear (command line) interface non linear operations (load state, modify state, show results, now further modifications/calculations) tend to get unreadable.
If it always has to be calculated on-the-fly, that'll remove the db aspect, and you're left with tkinter, pyqt and then web interfaces like flask/django. Any of those can do the job for the user interface
@paul23 I suppose you could use Tkinter, which has the advantage of now being part of the stdlib. And it's small so it's pretty easy to learn, although it has less features than big frameworks like GTK or Qt. Here's something I was messing around with a year ago. gist.github.com/PM2Ring/d6a19f5062b39467ac669a4fb4715779
@AaronHall And all modern (and most not so modern) browsers can display SVG.
SVG has some nice animation features, and you can do even more anim stuff by inlining JavaScript, although doing that means you can't use simple SVG viewers / editors like Inkscape to display it.
@paul23 to my knowledge, no, there's nothing like what you're expecting. I could probably throw a Flask app together with your dropdowns etc in 10 mins, I never really got a grip of tkinter. But whichever route you take, you're gonna be coding it out yourself I think
I had started to make a Python library to generate html (for documentation and my own edification more than any other reason) so I might even do something like that... here's some sample usage: github.com/aaronchall/HTML5.py/blob/master/html5/__main__.py
now that I look at it I actually did include some svg in it... :D
@smci What would be bad about the outcome is that, if you used something like bootstrap, I think it would be impossible for pandas to ever get a grip of the CSS so the output of to_html seems like it would never really fit in any site.... which is why I wondered whether it had a use
@roganjosh Tkinter's not hard to learn, especially if you've ever used a GUI framework before, in any language. And if you haven't, Tkinter is a reasonable first framework. The hardest part of doing GUI stuff is getting used to the concept of event-driven programming.
@roganjosh So i kinda just saw this conversation randomly, and i want to say that i think we did use df.to_html() in one of our flask apps, routing the html to a jinja template, where the frontend uses bootstrap without issues?
And by randomly, i meant i kept clicking the "reply to earlier message" till your post made sense to me, but that made me see the df.to_html question
Our goal was fairly simple though, make one of the tables in our database accessible to the user on the browser, with the option to download a csv of their current selection as well.
@ParitoshSingh I'd be really interested to see that implementation :) There wouldn't be a technical issue, but certainly I think there could be problems visually
Let me pull up my work laptop and see if i have anything related to it with me. I potentially might not though, I wasn't the one who built that portion. In which case if you remind me on Monday i can get my hands on it
Oh i doubt that. The folks i worked with on that particular project, they're masters of getting things done quick and dirty. So, im half afraid to see what i'll find exactly if i dig in too deep :P
(Which is to say, im actually very impressed by their ability to try things out till they get it right. Very quick learners too. I wish we had more folks like that in our team)
Well, would you like to see what lies here instead? :D
col_headers = [x[0] for x in cur.description]
col_headers.insert(0, 'Entry Number')
col_headers = ''.join(['<th><b> '+i+'</b> </th>' for i in col_headers])
table = '<table id= "datatable" class="table table-bordered table-striped"><thead><tr>'+col_headers+'</tr></thead><tbody>'
row_number = 1
for row in data:
table += '<tr>'+'<td>' + str(row_number) + '</td>'
for element in row:
table += '<td>' + str(element) + '</td>'
table += '</tr>'
See what i mean about quick and dirty? :P I can't complain, it got the job done. but oh dear. haha
Haha. Because i know exactly the circumstances under which they must have come up with that. Considering they essentially had to teach themselves just about everything, i can understand this probably seemed like the best possible way to do things at the time. Im willing to bet, right now, if they see this code again, they'll probably want to refactor it too right away.
My bet: we didn't quite know what jinja was when we wrote this far.
If i had to give some context that would make everything "click": We outsourced UI work on our project. It came back in PHP, and it was SO bad we had to take matters in our own hands, and prematurely end the contract.
@ParitoshSingh That's not so bad. Those for loops that populate the table could use .join and listcomps. Although it'd be more readable if it used Aaron's html5 module.
Only problem: No one knew anything about building UIs. And im still very proud of the folks for coming up with what we're running as of today.
@PM2Ring Aye, though i wonder if a case should be made for letting this looping happen over at jinja instead of constructing the string in python or not. I'd imagine doing this in a templating engine is considered better.
I am assuming it's better suited to be done on templating side. (Please correct me if im assuming wrong.)
Back before HTML5 we used to do crazy things with tables. One friend of mine used them for simple bitmap graphics. They were a bit slow, but it was better than nothing.
Yeah HTML5 was pretty huge, wasn't it? We take it for granted today, and HTML5 has been around whenever i've done anything on the web, but i've heard about the time it wasn't a thing
I do remember, as a kid, playing games online that required adobe flash and stuff though :P
It was a huge leap forward. Also, back then there were major browser incompatibilities, so it was almost impossible to make anything (apart from very simple pages) look good on all the major browsers, which is why stuff like jQuery became so popular.
@roganjosh Python string concatenation in a loop is pretty slow, mostly because strings are immutable. It has been optimized a fair bit since the early days of Python 2, but those optimizations only go so far, and things bog down when the strings are long.
Sure. I was just trying to think about how I could set up a %timeit test case
I'm so used to actually serving pages with render_template but actually, that's only gonna call Jinja and doesn't actually have to return anything. So it's relatively easy to benchmark the timing
I'm actually curious now. I don't like the code, but I also am conscious that I offload a lot onto Jinja just on a hunch that I don't actually know about
Hmm, does string size play a part in the speed of concatenation?
In setting up the test case, it's easy for me to take ints at random, convert them to strings, and concat them. But maybe I'm missing something in that vs. concatenating an address
Sure. Honestly, i expect even the ints to work just fine in that sense, the number of rows and columns introduce much more concatenations and should make a much greater impact by themselves