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00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

alright thanks !
@davidism Thanks I'll look it over
17:40
hi
@MisterMiyagi that feels better
sys.maxsize/(2**32) gives 0.49999999976716936. yep so thats it :P
Hello to everyone!
Hello
17:59
I had 240 warnings and I fixed 30, and now I have 250 warnings
Trapped in a cliche, send help
I'm using a Color class from a 3rd-party module in my own library, and I've also defined some color-related utility functions in a file named color.py. Should I create an alias for the Color class in my color.py or should I import Color directly from the 3rd-party lib?
I would also like to know the answer.
from colour import Color
from .color import get_closest_color

# vs

from .color import Color, get_closest_color
18:05
from colour import Color makes me irate.
Pick one!
Regarding your own situation, the latter seems nicer.
I'd probably do #2 if I had to choose without looking up advice online
color was already taken I guess
The former has a slight smell of "exposing your internals" to it, with #2 you could hide details that the users of your .color module do not need to know. Unless of course you must use that 3rd party thing all over anyway.
And by "users" I mean you and your other modules :P
I'm still debating whether I want to wrap the 3rd-party Color or not. On one hand I'm pretty happy with its interface, but on the other hand, if I ever had to stop using it and find an alternative, I'd go with a slightly different interface
Still a reason to go with #2 I guess
or you could wrap it with a new interface for it now ;)
18:11
+1
class Color(colour.Color):
    @classmethod
    def parse(cls, color):
        return cls(color)
^ :/
Hardly worth doing... but then again it only took 10 seconds
Hmm, thinking about it, I should probably move my find_closest_color function into my class. So yeah, Andras definitely made the right call
Does this feeling of "That's obviously the best choice, why did I ever have trouble deciding?" ever go away?
I'll take the collective silence as a "no"
Trying to think of the last time I didn't come to that conclusion after making a decision
 
1 hour later…
19:37
any of you fine folks use Locust for load testing?
i can't get it to go passed 14 RPS for a really simple test :l
19:52
figured it out: my application sucks :D
cbg, aren't these two blocks equivalent? For some reason, I am getting different results.
if side == 'left':
    root.left = Tree(val)
    return
elif side == 'right':
    root.right = Tree(val)
    return
else:
    raise Exception('never')
vs.
insert_direction = root.left if side == 'left' else root.right
insert_direction = Tree(v)
return
They're not equivalent. The 2nd snippet is like doing a = 1 followed by a = 2; the first assignment is pointless
After python executes insert_direction = root.left, insert_direction contains an object (the value of root.left). It does not remember where that object came from (root.left) and consequently has no effect on it
@Aran-Fey "Contains" is a wee bit dangerous word here, I'd say use "points to" / "references" / "is bound to".
And of course, @isquared-KeepitReal read nedbatchelder.com/text/names.html
20:06
looks like I do need to read that. I am getting this link at least a second time now :) thanks
It's worth it for sure.
will read it now. I can actually simplify that above code using seattr: setattr(root, side, Tree(val))
setattr is good, but you should probably add a sanity check to avoid subtle bugs (i.e. assert side in {'left', 'right'})
wim
wim
20:40
opinions differ.. I say don't use assertions to validate data
I thought asserts should be gone in prod
I'd throw a ValueError, but I was too lazy to type more code than that
20:51
I wanted to mention that I don't assert but throw instead, but was too lazy
this is for Leetcode anyway, so doesn't matter
21:04
@wim Agreed. Assertions should only be used to validate program logic. That is, if the assertion is raised, your program logic is broken, and you need to fix your code. But that's kinda what's happening here, since it should be impossible for side to not be 'left' or 'right', since it's an instance attribute of a tree node.
Rez
Rez
Would this be a proper place to ask questions or is this more for general Python discussions?
@Rez Sure, but please take a look at our room rules first. sopython.com/chatroom
 
1 hour later…
22:32
afternoon cabbage
wim
wim
@Code-Apprentice don't answer in comments 👿
@wim It didn't feel like an answer since it was just a hint of how to solve the problem.
wim
wim
don't even hint, unless you're 100% sure your idea works
they're to ask for more information and clarify question, sorry for being grumpy but this is really my pet peeve :)
ugh, now 2 b0rked answers using list.index already
22:49
I have no idea how you can feed that many pets, it must cost a fortune
wim
wim
23:02
they're cheap and easily findable on main feed :)
23:46
What should we do with all the questions about floating point precision in Python? There a variation of that every single day
dupes of "is floating point math broken?"
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