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00:01
Hi
can you tell me please how can I fix this JSON structure using python:
Current:
{
"artifacts":[
[
"path: scheduler-task",
"version: 0.28.2",
"type: helm",
"chart: scheduler-task",
"repository: amd-core-test-helm-release"
]
]
}

Expected:
{
"artifacts":[
{
"path": "scheduler-task",
"version": "0.28.2",
"type": "helm",
"chart": "scheduler-task",
"repository": "amd-core-test-helm-release"
}
]
}
 
5 hours later…
05:10
@arielma please indent your code by selecting it and pressing control+k. Then, give some more detail as to how you building the current json. Read about python json, json.loads, json.dumps. Then share what is blocking you from achieving the expected result
 
3 hours later…
07:45
Hi, I need to run python inside android platform? Does anyone know a work round?
 
3 hours later…
11:24
@JonClements goodness :P
12:13
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη I have no idea how to tag you in a comment for a question that you've made multiple edit suggestions to but didn't comment, so I'll have to say it here. Please look closely at what you're suggesting; you even formatted "enter code here" back into the question so I rejected both. I was trying to fix it but once you make a suggestion, I'm blocked until I vote on your edits
12:31
Hmmm @roganjosh alright.
i were asking myself why you keep reject ! now i understood.
If you had an ASCII name I might have more confidence that you'd get my reply in a comment btw since I think that's enough interaction to be pinged even without a comment. But since you didn't comment, I don't get an auto-complete suggestion to reply :)
Or maybe I don't mean ASCII. I'm hopeless with encodings. But, not your squiggly letters :P
@roganjosh will change it specially because you ! you tired me.
hahaha
@roganjosh i were trying to catch you behind the screen and asking why you keep reject my edit :@:@
lol
 
2 hours later…
14:12
I had a bug for two months in some of my code and it's because I didn't take into account the units correctly. It literally all started working when I pushed a button. fml. Classic mathematician not worrying about the units.
Wait what? they have a Python Core Mentorship I should try this out once break starts. I've wanted to contribute to Python haha.
14:28
cbg
 
3 hours later…
wim
wim
17:35
import gzip
That's pythonic
So Django by default supports a built-in user model which is all fine and dandy if you want to support your own registration/login/password reset/etc form and manage the users yourself
I'm an intern and I'm trying to integrate SSO for my company into the app I'm making
i.e. if authentication is successful Django should map the attributes from that provider and create or get a corresponding User model and log it in
I've done a little reading and I did see a RemoteUserMiddleware
But the docs didn't go into much detail on how to actually use it
Does anyone know how to integrate external auth?
18:02
I want to read an excell sheet with over 10,000,000 records and multiple columns.
Would this be suitable for threads or a process
probably neither. What's going to be slowing you down is disk IO, and no code you write will make your hardware any faster
@objectiveME Since Excel only supports 1,048,576 rows per sheet - I'd consider that quite the achievement :)
@Aran-Fey Wow
@JonClements I am counting all sheets
Sounds like someone's trying to use Excel as a database or something :p
So not even asyncio can hel?
absolutely not
Actually its data exported to the excel sheet, emails and numbers
telephone numbers
Nothing in this country works!!!!!
18:12
An Excel workbook isn't even in a structure where you could even try to split responsibility of reading bits across things...if it fits in memory then just read the entire workbook in one go and then do the needful
cbg guys o/
cbg @TheLittleNaruto o/
@objectiveME It helps enormously if you describe your problem accurately. You said: "an excell sheet" which implies there's a single sheet. Are all these sheets actually in a single file?
@PM2Ring In one excell file, i have 14,000 records
Lets concentrate on this
Does Python have any ORM support for MongoDB? /cc @roganjosh
18:14
@objectiveME Ok. Having multiple threads or processes reading from one disk file won't speed things up. It's more likely to slow things down.
@JonClements \o
@PM2Ring so what should be done?
@TheLittleNaruto there's various libraries that operate with Mongo and also provide some level of ORM functionality - yes... but don't expect it to be the same level as SQL ORMs
Oh!
My current codebase is becoming a bit complex because of not using any ORM
Depending what you're trying to do - implementing an ORM won't necessarily make any difference to that
@objectiveME I'd probably go with just reading the data in the simplest way possible and see if you do actually have any bottlenecks/issues before looking to see if you there's better ways that could be used...
18:18
I feel for a long run using ORM is good. At least that's what I have seen in Android.
@objectiveME What Jon said: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/47930559#47930559 Do the 14,000 records fit into memory?
hmm
I hear you
@JonClements Any help on how should I design my database part of code if not ORM?
But i shall be processing around 200 such excel sheets each with over 15,000 records per hour
Filling my memory with all this data is not going to help
have you tried processing just one at all yet?
18:20
Can someone tell me how the sorted() function sorts the values according to the output of the key function? If I sort the outputs then we also need to keep track of the indices of the inputs
@Quark it's a stable sort... so the order will be by the key and then in the original order seen for tie breaks
@Quark if you want indices, sort (value, index) tuples by the first element
@objectiveME Does your processing actually require the full information in the sheet? It may use less RAM if you can export the Excel data as a simple CSV file.
@AndrasDeak No I mean, suppose I want to sort [3,2,4,5,1] using key = lambda x: x%2 (or maybe any other func)
@PM2Ring I shall try that as well but mostly i am receiving xls files. I shall try changing the xls to csv then use one of the aiofiles packages and see if i see an improvement
18:24
@Quark Perhaps you should explain what you're actually trying to do, and why you need to preserve the original indices. Otherwise, we may end up working on an XY problem.
If I want to implement such a general type of sorting algo where I will pass a function and the values will be sorted according to the output from that function, how I can implement it in Python
wim
wim
that's exactly what key already does
What the badger said.
Looks like I missed reading the bottom part of this blog: realpython.com/introduction-to-mongodb-and-python
wim
wim
if you wanted a function that receives pairs of values, rather than just using < operator, then check out cmp_to_key
18:27
If you wanted a function that receives pairs of values, you should rethink whether you really want it or not. :P
@PM2Ring So, eg; L = [3,2,4,5,1] and key = lambda x:x%2. Then as I think, it first creates the output list opt = [1,0,0,1,1] and then it sorts this opt list and I need the corresponding indices in L to get the actual position of the elements after sorting
It sorts opt and L.
@Quark No, if you do L.sort(key=lambda x: x%2) then L will become [2, 4, 3, 5, 1]
Here opt[i] = key(L[i])
@PM2Ring Yes, that's OK. By opt I meant output from the function key for each elem in L
Rhubarb o/
18:34
@TheLittleNaruto ahh sorry - got distracted... not sure what to suggest I'm afraid - if you provide more details at some point though - might be able to suggest something
@Quark The .sort method (or sorted function) handles those details for you. You give it the right key function, and the list is sorted so that the items are ordered by the value of the key function.
@Aran-Fey If I want to implement the sorted() function using Python 3 then how I can implement?(Tim sort may be hard to implement, suppose I'm using a simple sort algo but focusing mainly on the functionality that sorted() function provides)
wim
wim
why would you do that?
@Quark I'm getting more confused what you're actually trying to do here? Are you looking to write your own sort for some reason or do you want to be able to do something with the existing sort that you're unsure of?
18:38
@Quark Sorry. I thought you were trying to use the builtin .sort() or sorted(). I didn't realise you're trying to implement your own sort.
1) Generate `opt`
2) Use a sorting algorithm of your choice to sort `opt`, but whenever you modify `opt` (as in, move an element), you modify `L` in the same way
3) return `L`
I have this class
import asyncio
import json
import time
import random
import string
import uuid
from PIL import Image, ImageDraw, ImageFont


class Seeder:
I think "I want to implement" is code word for "please explain how it works"
I was just about to post the link to the Schwartzian transform, but I see Andras beat me to it. :)
Is there a dependency manager like maven that would allow me to download the imports automatically without having to pi everything i need beforehand
18:40
@Aran-Fey Thanks :)
wim
wim
@objectiveME the package should already do that when you install it
problem is
say i want to run in another machine
Can i just like get the dependencies first then run it
wim
wim
so, then you install it on the other machine too, and it will install dependencies there too.
@wim you dont seem to get my question
In java for instance, you can just update maven pom and all dependencies are downloaded for you
I haven't come across such a tool in python
python's dependency manager is pip
wim
wim
18:44
a lockfile or requirements.txt is probably the closest equivalent
but the way the project locks dependencies depends on who wrote the project, there's unfortunately no "one obvious way" here
pip is not a dependency manager!
Why isn't pip a dependency manager?
wim
wim
It's just an installer (pip = "Pip Installs Packages"), if you want to be really charitable you could call it a package manager
but a dependency manager needs a solver, which pip lacks
wim
wim
is there an echo in here?
18:52
Anyone using this?
wim
wim
poetry and pipenv are examples of dependency managers
@objectiveME Maybe. It is not popular. That answer is posted by the author of the tool.
there is always a backstory in the py ecosystem
@wim gotcha
18:56
@wim thanks for the comment
Apparently, python foundation is paying devs this December to build what i want pyfound.blogspot.com/2019/11/…
Pip is getting a makeover
anyone studied machine learning here?
19:15
recbg
@wim and that's why PSF is throwing some money at the problem...
there is also pip-tools, which works.
wim
wim
yeah I already mentioned it in chat earlier, but there wasn't much interest here
Nov 14 at 21:39, by wim
they are seeking contractors for pip's resolver http://pyfound.blogspot.com/2019/11/seeking-developers-for-paid-contract.html
we did send a proposal, so at least there is a baseline :P
oh ok
if in future i can just have pip.xml and list all dependencies in there and simly do pip update
that shall be great
wim
wim
xml? "\N{FACE WITH OPEN MOUTH VOMITING}"
@objectiveME you know what to do with XML? Kill it with fire a billion laughs.
19:21
hahahaha
wim
wim
ha, that can kill yaml too
nothing triggers pythonistas quite like xml
who in their right mind did design that :F
and thought it was a good idea.
SOAP is even worse, but that one makes us shudder rather than trigger us
@Aran-Fey guess what I've been programming over last weeks :F
wim
wim
19:23
No SOAP, radio
my condolences
I shall add 50k to everyone working on pip to spite the py crowd and create a new twitter handle, @fightmepycrowd
hihi
I wonder though what they shall come up with
19:40
@objectiveME The stdlib XML parsing stuff & its docs aren't exactly pleasant.
Aug 25 '18 at 10:53, by PM 2Ring
I soon realised that the xml.sax docs are almost completely useless to someone who isn't already familiar with SAX. But the original SAX docs presume you are a competent Java coder. And I've never touched Java.
@TheLittleNaruto There is mongoengine but I cannot say I've used it sorry
I mostly avoid XML. The main time I have to deal with it is when I create SVG stuff, which is a relatively benign form of XML.
Oct 2 '18 at 7:00, by PM 2Ring
Another option, especially if you want to to vector graphics in the browser, is to use SVG. It can do some pretty cool stuff, however some parts of the SVG spec were designed by a total lunatic. ;) But it can do some nice synchronized animation stuff, especially in combination with JS. The downside is that SVG is a XML format, but that's motly tolerable, compared to some usages of XML I've seen.
A bit unrelated but I so wanna read the one article again written by a guy who had been given a programming assignment in any programming language and he did it in PostScript.
it was something about statistical simulations and one problem was generating random numbers in postscript
I've been browsing the coder jargon on stackoverflow.com/q/2349378/4014959 (10k+ only). There's some amusing stuff in there, but a lot of stuff that's very unwelcoming and non-compliant with the CoC, so I understand why it's been deleted.
@AnttiHaapala There's a rand function in Postscript, but it's only 32 bit unsigned int. Probably just a classic linear congruential generator; I haven't used it much.
19:55
@PM2Ring I like Carpet logging. I will take it into use.
@wim that's even worse than implied variables in perl regexen
How do you even end up with that? :/
Here's some stuff on a forum about Postscript rand. Yes, it's a LCG, and not necessarily a very good one. But bad LCG PRNGs were quite common when PostScript was created. computer-programming-forum.com/36-postscript/…
@roganjosh Closed
Thanks
20:08
I have no idea what Ghostscript does, probably just calls the underlying rand stuff in C's <stdlib.h>
wim
wim
Ghostscript rasterizes your pdf and then just leaves without saying goodbye
rasterize, I like this euphemism
Pokemon Exception Handling
It's not very effective.
20:25
@wim :) I don't mind Ghostscript, but I don't use it much these days, so when I do I end up wasting time trying to remember where in the docs I need to look for stuff. I haven't used Adobe PostScript tools, so I don't have anything to compare Ghostscript with. But in the 90s I owned an old Qume laser printer (which I got 2nd hand) that had a proper PostScript interpreter.
20:45
Speaking of Adobe, check this rant about PSD: stackoverflow.com/a/769443/4014959
"Trying to get data out of a PSD file is like trying to find something in the
// attic of your eccentric old uncle who died in a freak freshwater shark
// attack on his 58th birthday." Trying too hard :/
Not enough Tony the Pony
21:00
spotted there:
+.5 for Rickrolling in the comments, +.5 for total_hours. Awesome — Wayne Werner Jun 2 '10 at 12:48
wow, wayne is a Great Old One.
Wayne fhtagn
21:18
@roganjosh he comes
He'll spare me, I'm sure. I outright reject regex and don't know much about strings. Ignorance is my defence :)
21:32
"defence" is an odd word because it follows a pattern that you'd expect "fence" to describe an attack, but it doesn't. For that, you need an "offence". Time to etymologise that one.
Interesting. So the common garden fence looks like it comes from actual duels with fencing
wim
wim
22:02
british probably screwed up the spelling
defense is more typical (from french, I guess?)
language agnostic homework dump (too broad) stackoverflow.com/questions/59022195/…
Closed
I'd like to allow users to sign in to my application via an external SSO with OAuth
Is there a recommended lib to handle this for me in Django
All I've seen in django oauth toolkit which appears to be for making your own provider ... not using an existing provider from let's say a university or company
All other libs seem to be for social logins like Google or Facebook which doesn't suit my use case
Any ideas?

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