@X4748-IR Take a look at longobject.c. It may not be easy to read if you aren't familiar with the CPython source code, and that file itself admits that "The functional organization of this file is terrible".
I need some help in Django. I am having problems with serializers, I would like to pass Foreign Key to serializer but at the same it I want it as excluded field so that it does't show in DRF. If i include the 'car_owner' field in serializer it works fine. But when I remove it gives error: JSON object not serializable. Here is the code https://dpaste.org/k6pS
What I want is pass user field from PartnerProfile, while creating Car model. I have attached View and Serializer also. Any help would be appreciated.
two_dlist is a list with two items, hence len(two_dlist)=2. Each of those two items happens to be another list, so both two_dlist[0] and two_dlist[1] have lenghts of their own, which both happen to be 3
There's no counting going on. A Python list stores its current length. When you call len(two_dlist) the list looks up its current length and returns it, which in this case happens to be 2.
two_dlist[0] refers to the [1, 2, 3] list at the start of two_dlist, it's like a nickname for that list. So len(two_dlist[0]) returns the length of that list, which is 3.
@smci yep, I agree with the reasoning in both cases but they didn't strike me as particularly egregious if you were to benchmark the pandas tag. There's an alarm bell in my head for seeing the same user back-to-back that automatically goes off, regardless of who the user is; that makes me extra cautious that we sense-check what is being asked for
but chat is a terrible medium for learning the basics, the net is shock full of basic network programming tutorials (though many of them presuppose C knowledge)
@Sam you choose not to print it but you could choose otherwise, too
so you don't know what unpack does either? you can't unpack stuff you don't know the structure of -- your first argument to unpack is very specifically the structure of an IP packet, not of some random data
@Sam no, I'm not a moderator on Stack Overflow, nor a room owner here
@roganjosh I'm not brigade-voting that user, and one Q was an abandoned needs-details unanswerable question from 2017, the other a near-dupe. At least please help close the first, and leave the second, then.
the reference documentation is not very good for learning unfamiliar concepts, you should read something lighter first ... I don't know of a good current intro but the pymotw looks reasonably friendly, though you need a football-sized pinch of salt because it's obviously for Python 2
So I thought I'd print the bytes out. So I got bytes now, do I need to learn to recognize bytes or something? I get stuff like b"\xd6\x83\xd6\x83 etc. etc.
@Sam if you mean "is there already a parser for IP packets or do I need to figure out what to put in the first argument to unpack" you already have that in the code you copy/pasted
@Sam Please go elsewhere for help on this. triplee has spent plenty of time helping you and we don't seem to be getting anywhere. This is not the place to help you.
@JoshuaVarghese Because basically everything is about configuring windows proxies instead of programming (should go to ServerFault or SuperUser), it asks multiple questions (Why is it so? Why was I unsuccessful? How do I succeed?) and the single programming related line doesn't say what your specific problem is.
Yeah, it looks like we can't do anything while there is an active bounty but I don't see the harm in it just running its course. I'm not sure you could migrate a bounty because other sites will have their own rep system
Odd, it does allow me to go through the whole close vote process and pick a site for migration
I haven't voted to migrate btw, I was just seeing how far I could get. I thought bounties added a level of protection but, short of clicking to actually cast the vote, it seems like a normal process. Maybe it would reject it once I try to cast my vote; I don't feel like testing it, though :)
Also, anyone who needs a weird base should know enough about that stuff to do their own conversions. Actually, IIRC, one of my old SO answers has functions for that which take a string arg for the digits.
@JoshuaVarghese Which docs? You can't learn a language just by reading the reference docs. You also need some kind of structured tutorial. Ok, a veteran coder who already knows a bunch of languages well, can learn from the docs, but it's not fun, and definitely not advised for a newbie learning their 1st language.
@JoshuaVarghese Ok. Those are the reference docs I talked about in my last message. They're pretty good, compared to some other languages. But they do assume some background knowledge, and especially that you are confident with the core of the Python language.
@MisterMiyagi Agreed. And they should work through the official tutorial (or a tutorial aimed at raw beginners if they don't already know how to code in some other language) before attempting to dive deeply into the module docs.
@JoshuaVarghese So why do you need someone who works on the Requests library to help you with that? Surely you only need someone who uses that library.
@BumBum Never heard of it, no idea, there are tons of books, and more being written every month. Try a few different ones and use whichever one's style and content you prefer. Sit down and program from it and skip any irrelevant/boring bits. It helps instead of saying "I’m a beginner" to tell us do you know any other languages (Java? C? etc.), and what sort of programming you've done in the past, and what you want to learn to do.
@PM2Ring What they are trying to do is visit a site via a browser, grab the csrf token (which is visible in "view page source") and then switch to requests and use that to try make the site think it's still a browser session. It is a pretty weak plan
Although, I'm guessing I just explained something to you that you already knew, in which case the only relevant part is the last sentence, sorry
@roganjosh I considered the possibility that they want to use a browser cookie in a Python script, but I wasn't sure. And I agree that it's not a good plan, especially if they're trying to get around rate limitations.
@AndrasDeak Yes, but that book list is pretty ancient, and needs revising with what's available free (e-book/online), genuinely rewritten for Python 3, and currently popular. 'Dive into Python 3' doesn't seem to have been updated since 2012 (the "What's New in DiP3" is really old), its coverage is patchy and its style is too dry.
@BumBum No idea, but it looks popular & gets good reviews. He has some practical stuff, like making a simple game using Pygame, and a simple Web app using Django.
Eric Matthes is a high school science and math teacher living in Alaska where he teaches Introduction to Python. He has been writing programs since he was five years old.
And her guitar playing is pretty amazing too. Incredibly precise timing. Here she is with Tommy Emmanuel, both playing at breakneck speed: White Freightliner
This one is confused Python loop that also accesses previous and next values about whether it wants to start iterating at the 1'st (not 0'th) element, and end iterating at the last-but-one element. Some answers special-case those, some are bad for other reasons, like making 3x copies of the input, or just tortured Python. It's a veritable Pythonic house of horrors. It also has...
@PM2Ring When my brother and I went to see Billy Joel last year... he was almost outshone by one of his musicians... she was impressive... some awesome violin, saxophone and guitar... I'd be quite surprised if she couldn't have a successful career herself instead of being part of the entourage...
When you said itertools there - I had to check it wasn't me @smci :)
@AndrasDeak You're misunderstanding me. I'm pointing out the vast array of stale, tortured and overkill Q&A on that simple theme. Arguing that a handful of decent answers are hidden under that pile somewhere, essentially unfindable to newbies, is beside the point. Flamethrower is needed.
@AndrasDeak Well, I still haven't seen the answer I would use today: write a generator that just stores the previous item. It's stunning what length people go to just to show they know itertools.
@JonClements Pretty amazing! And being in Billy Joel's band is pretty good for your CV. ;) A couple of days ago I was trying to track down a violin player named Jason Crosby, who I saw on a clip. I found that he's a singer-songwriter & also plays guitar & keyboards. And I wouldn't be surprised if he programs rhythm tracks too. :)
@PM2Ring Yeah there's strangely a number of people out there you wouldn't by name... but if you say to someone "have you listed to X, Y or Z" and they're "oh yeah - they're great tracks" - you can be: "well so and so write the music and lyrics for those..."
@MisterMiyagi Gratuitous use of itertools is one of Wim's pet peeves. IMHO, itertools is fine in small doses, but I do object when people overuse it in an attempt to turn Python into a functional language.
@JonClements I know how you like "crying in your beer" country music. I think this song by John Prine, recorded last week by Sarah Jarosz, fits the bill. Unwed Fathers.
@PM2Ring I mostly agree, seen a lot of misuse. I see a point in using them when their full capabilities are actually needed, but abusing an arbitrarily sized chunked buffer of itertools.tee to trail one element is a waste.
@MisterMiyagi I don't know. Generator beats itertools, obfuscated itertools approaches could be worse than a simple for-loop, certainly for a simple list. Approaches that make 3x copies, or instantiate 3 separate iterators, or can't handle multiple occurrences of target value foo are bad. I'm off for now, rbrb. Let me know what you all think.
@JonClements I'm not sure. Sarah used to have a 3 piece band, with a fiddle player, and a cellist playing the bass part. In that clip, she's playing her "signature" instrument, an octave mandolin. She's also an excellent clawhammer-style banjo player, and she occasionally plays guitar.
@smci I have a simple algorithm for loops vs itertools. step one: the itertools solution may only import itertools, no fancy from or as stuff. step two: count characters. The lower count wins.
@JonClements Yep. He Didn't Have To Be has a pretty powerful effect on me. My mum was a widow by the age of 23, and met my step-dad a couple of years later.
@smci for prev, cur, next in zip(3-iterators): to do before-current-next iteration over a sequence doesn't seem so bad to me (as long as you create the 3 iterators correctly - if you use the same iterator then you are doing 3-element chunking). Maybe not as clear as accessing [i-1]'th and [i+1]'th elements, but not all sequences are indexable.
@JoshuaVarghese The default is for zip to end when the first given argument (iterator or sequence) falls off the end (i.e., raises StopIteration). If you want to zip until the longest argument ends, then you have to use itertools.zip_longest.
@JonClements It's a pretty dominating instrument. Clawhammer is an older style of playing that predates bluegrass. Here's an example from Sarah. It's an Edgar Alan Poe poem that she set to music when she was 17. Annabelle Lee. That's the legendary Danny Thompson on double bass, who played in Pentangle, and with John Martyn.
@JonClements BTW, there's a quiet revolution going on in the world of bluegrass, due to people like Molly, Sarah, and a young man who goes by the name of Billy Strings. Here's one of Billy's compositions, about the perils of crystal meth: Dust In A Baggie. Billy started out in bluegrass as a kid, played in a metal band in his teens, but has returned to bluegrass. But it's generally not exactly traditional bluegrass.
Here's an example of his metal-tinged bluegrass. youtu.be/PBep_kSkXRw Billy also plays banjo, but his banjo player in that band (also named Billy) is a pretty hot player.
@JoshuaVarghese One-liners are over-rated. You should aim to write code that's easy to read. So don't optimize for minimum character count, optimize for minimum reading time.
@PaulMcG Possible DOS vector: Executing 2^N operations using N deferred execution statements. e.g. a @= 1 and b @= a+a and c @= b+b and d @= c+c. Once I get to around u @= t+t it takes about a minute to evaluate. I'm guessing it won't hit the max recursion depth unless I use 999 different variables.
Perhaps you could cache the value of each deferred variable and only recalculate it if a new assignment statement (deferred or not) could cause it to change. So b @= a + a calculates a once, then checks the cache for a's value the second time. Result: N operations are executed instead of 2^N.
Not sure how to reconcile that with the possibly desirable behavior of always recalculating deferred variables after every statement, so e.g. you could make a coinflip variable that evaluates to something new every time. Maybe clear the cache out at the end of each submission?
On the topic of deferring expressions, I wonder whether it would make sense to implement short-circuiting for the ternary operator. For example, make 1 ? 2: 3/0 evaluate to 2 rather than crash with ZeroDivisionError.
... Although if you do that, I suspect it opens up a fun new category of DOS attack
Something like a @= rnd() > p ? a+a : 1 where p is a constant carefully calculated to make the expression recurse a lot without coming close to the max recursion depth
@PaulMcG Agreed. I'm pondering whether you can have your cake and eat it too by having a little bit of caching that prevents this category of 2^N attack, but allows rnd-powered variables to still do their thing.
Unrelated feature request: permit function calls with set literals, e.g. max({1,2,3})
No, I don't know why anybody would actually need to do that.
Oh, I just now understood your point about a @= rnd(). That's an issue.
Extra difficult solution: defer the evaluation of all rnd() calls until you've evaluated absolutely everything else that you can in the expression, with the hopes that the whole thing simplifies down to something like rnd() + rnd() + rnd() + [2^32 more of these...] + rnd(), which you can then turn into a single random.normalvariate call.
Or at least I assume that the sum of many rnds closely approximates a normal distribution. I fell asleep in prob/stat a lot.
Ah, I see how you did this. I actually do screen for @= assignments to not permit deferred expressions as terms (to prevent nefarious recursion). BUT if you use an unassigned var, and then assign a deferred expression to it afterward, you have weaseled around my screen.
Unclear to me whether there's a fast way of calculating the sum of N rnd() calls that exactly matches the probability distribution. I expect a normal distribution does a good job for large N, but obviously it's not a great match for small N
@Kevin yes, that kind of lazy evaluation makes a lot of sense in general. In fact, in Haskell, all expressions have that kind of short circuiting built in due to lazy evaluation.
If Paul forbids deferred variables as terms in deferred variable assignment statements, then that probably blocks off the fun category of DOS attacks I had in mind for short-circuited ternaries.
@JonClements I don't have ternary expressions, but I really should. I also don't have short-circuiting for and or or.
Maybe I'll just make the if statement into an expression that evaluates to the final statement in its body. But, hmm, what should it evaluate to if the conditional doesn't pass? What if it passes, but the body contains no statements?
@davidism Nice... and also thanks for reminding me... need to check in with Betsy at the PSF regarding some job board stuff
@Kevin you mean by now that KevinScript doesn't just take a text file containing "I want to do this, then that and output it to this - many thanks - run?" :p
@PaulMcG In C, ?: is right to left associative, like the unary operators and the assignment operators. And it has very low precedence, just above the assignment ops, which are just above the comma op, which has the lowest precedence.
@Kevin That's what I figured. It's fun watching an Italian guy having a conversation with a Nordic guy. The Nordic guy keeps moving back a pace because the Italian guy is gesticulating wildly in his face, and the Italian guy keeps moving forward because the Nordic guy is too far away. :) (FWIW, I have some Swedish ancestry, and some half-Italian cousins).
@PM2Ring Pyparsing does not dictate associativity or precedence of operators, you call infixNotation with whatever operators, associativity, and precedence that you like. Plusminus does though, since it strives to be a valid arithmetic evaluator.
Plusminus does a funny wrinkle on multiple assignments, that I would enjoy hearing comments on. If you do a, b, c = 1, 2, a+b you'll get a=1, b=2, and c=3. In Python, the entire RHS tuple would evaluated first (and failing because a and b are not yet defined), then unpacked into a, b, and c.
@PaulMcG That sounds ok to me, assuming it's clearly documented to work that way. OTOH, as Andras said, it'd be confusing to people who are expecting Python-like behaviour. So that documentation needs to be fairly prominent.
Yeah, I've been somewhat positioning plusminus as a safe version of eval(), but the syntax is steadily migrating away from pure Python syntax into more arithmetic and algebra (such as in use of Unicode operators).