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00:02
Seems interesting
wim
wim
LMAO
> Users still on Python 2 can use e to compute the
instantaneously compounding interest on their technical debt.
it's a play on the last release version number (2.718) from here.
 
3 hours later…
02:47
migrate to Superuser (my bounty q) stackoverflow.com/questions/61135835/…
03:46
@JoshuaVarghese The solution you tagged in that post is just using registry commands to enable proxies. Could you not use something like winreg to do the same thing in python?
 
1 hour later…
04:51
@RoadRunner well i dont know how to use winreg. tried the docs and guides. the thing wont get inside my head. thats my i put up the bounty
05:05
Nowadays, google recaptcha's are bypassed using google itself :)
@BradLangtry please remember the room rules -- you are expected to wait 48 hours before bringing up a question here
also, when you add the requested additional information as prompted by RoadRunner's comment, maybe you will also want to fix the spelling of "scraping" (it's a pet peeve of ours)
@PaulMcG thanks for the helpful example, though reimplementing a possibly large number of methods of the standard str class is what I'm trying to avoid here
05:54
is my comment on stackoverflow.com/questions/61379903/… ticked answer right?
in my second code, you could go infinitily many times indexing large function. and also you can only tick one answer :) — Joshua Varghese 11 mins ago
@JoshuaVarghese ^ you can link your comments, ctrl-click on the timestamp to get a link you can paste
if you are trying to say "you can't mark more than one answer as accepted" then yes, that is correct
you can remove the accept or accept a different answer at any time at your leisure
comments on the question to promote your own answer is probably a habit you should give up
06:11
ok, i was tryingto tell him the answer he choose is very fragile
commenting on the problematic answer should be quite sufficient
 
2 hours later…
07:57
cbg all
08:42
@JoshuaVarghese Run reg add /? to see what those registry commands are actually doing. Then look up the equivalent in the winreg documentation. Will be a tedious task, but definitely doable.
08:59
@CravanPZ please see the room rules in regards to new questions. You should wait at least 48 hours before bringing questions from main into the room
Oh so I have to place a bounty? but my rep isnt enough ;'(
@CravanPZ That's not what the rules imply. You should wait at least 48 hours (i.e. the period of time required before the question is eligible for creating a bounty) before we discuss them here. Not that you have to place a bounty. Only the time period is important. This is to ensure that we don't have discussions about questions in multiple places e.g. comments under the question and also comments in chat
Oh alright thanks @roganjosh
09:15
your question about sprites is wayyyy too broad for Stack Overflow, probably spend some time in the help center and in particular How to ask
09:30
Could someone give me some pointers on things to check to speed up a Django app?
@superv as in, every route appears to respond too slowly?
@roganjosh Yes.
Then you'll have to start high-level. What server are you using? What database are you using? Have you used something like Chrome's F12 to look at network/performance to see if you're loading anything "heavy"?
Thanks for those pointers. I will have a look.
The first 2 you should be able to answer right away
09:47
Thanks man.
Hi! AttributeError question. I need to remove values between start (21600) to stop (61200) for every 86400 (next remove 21600+86400 to 61200+86400 until end of data). I did that for the first set between start and stop, then I applied it for all data with code below, but I get an error: AttributeError: 'DataFrame' object has no attribute 'rmdr'. Anyone see what I am missing to make it work?

df = pd.DataFrame({'val': np.arange(0, 259201, 1)})
divisor = 86400
df['val'] % divisor
low_remainder = 21600
It is a rather trivial question, so that is why I did not post it on the main site, but I am asking it here.
did you mean to assign df['val'] % divisor to something, perhaps?
say, an rmdr column/field/attribute?
I just did, but is just doing reset after every 86400 instances. What I need is to remove from 21600 to 61200 and then apply same logic for every 86400 between those values...
When you say remove those values - do you mean remove the rows?
@JonClements yes :)
10:02
It seems you want to remove any occurrences between 6AM and 5PM, is that correct?
@MisterMiyagi correct :)
AFAIK pandas has support for dates. That may be more appropriate than juggling timestamps yourself.
@robmiller505 Note that a % b is inherently periodic in b (i.e. a in a', a'+b, a'+2b, ... result in the same). If you want to remove just the first range, % is not appropriate.
@MisterMiyagi unfortunately I need to do it without timestamps since I have readings of multiple large dataset done in such way. I wish doing it with timestamps...
@MisterMiyagi I did it for the first range like this:

#sample = np.arange(0, 259201, 1).tolist()
#df = pd.DataFrame(sample)
#df = df.drop(df.index[21601:61200])
10:09
I don't understand that reasoning against datetimes...
@tripleee Dang, I posted an update (chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/49191364#49191364), but addressed it to MM, not to you. I too did not want to implement lots of overriding methods, so I came up with a class decorator.
@AndrasDeak The program I am getting those readings from does not support datetime format since when I clean the data, I need to plug them back to the program.
You can add a new datetime column for filtering, if that makes more sense than the memory burden it causes
annotate with datetimes, filter, pop them off
@robmiller505 I'm not quite following your requirements. You are using timestamps at the moment. Why can you not convert them to date times? Note that you can also convert back from date time to timestamps when you are done, or just keep both. Also, do you really need to remove each range individually?
I'm not sure whether my approach to this went off the rails a bit heh, but it does cut out set slices
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np

df = pd.DataFrame({'val': range(30)})
df['grouper'] = df['val'] // 10

df = df.groupby('grouper')['val'].apply(lambda x: x.iloc[np.r_[0:2, 4:10]]).reset_index()
10:16
@AndrasDeak @MisterMiyagi problem is since I have 31 million of rows, or 1 year of certain readins that were done per second. I thought it is the easiest to figure out how to apply this logic every 24 hours to delete reading between 6AM and 5PM, rather than first converting time data to timestamps and then applying your approach. I wanted to avoid that...
as a rule of thumb, if there is an inbuilt way to do something, it will be faster than doing it manually.
@PaulMcG this one? thanks!
@robmiller505 If you do want to do this with timestamps, I guess reverse-iterating through the days is feasible
I have a function in two classes that do exactly the same thing. How can I write the function so as not to repeat myself.
@MisterMiyagi I'm onto it. I will get back if/when I find solution
10:28
for day in reverse(range(366)):
    df.drop(df.index[21601+day*86400:61200+day*86400])
@robmiller505 I used timeit on my approach for your problem and it's coming out at 7.13 s ± 69.1 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
Which isn't too bad for 31m records I guess
No guarantees about runtime, though.
@superv why don't you use the same function (method?) in both classes?
@roganjosh I did the same problem in matlab, and it is working, but after 20 hours it is still running. Since I am far more comfortable with python, I thought maybe, maybe I can optimize it to be faster.
Consider: If the classes do "the same", inheritance is appropriate to "re-use" methods. If the classes don't do "the same", they should not share code either. If the functionality is not tied to the classes, it should be an external function.
@MisterMiyagi It is actually like that. I just am thinking if I can use just one function instead of having the methods in two places. Thanks tho
10:32
You can use one function as a method on two classes.
Thanks
def foo(self): print(f'{self} is a {type(self).__name__}')

class A: foo = foo
class B: foo = foo
@robmiller505 I'd say my 7 seconds beats 20 hours :P
It's not quite such a good test of patience though is it :)
Oh, should I inject a bit more Shaolin training to the approach? :P
10:37
@MisterMiyagi Understood. Thanks
@roganjosh I agree :D that is the reason why I don't use matlab much and try to do everything in py
@robmiller505 to be fair to MATLAB, you've probably coded it up incorrectly. It should be just as, if not more, capable but then I barely know it
@roganjosh senior developer check it, and she said it is fine... I do not know mate, but of course there is always possibility for mistakes
One of my friends to trying to get a PC on a shoestring budget given the current circumstances. I'm kinda mulling over suggesting getting a Raspberry Pi and buying a Windows instance, to access via the Pi. As a short term solution. Anyone have any idea whether this would be viable?
How thick is that shoestring? I was quite happy with my 250€ Laptop for years.
10:44
@roganjosh to do what with?
@JonClements Only general computing but he'll want MS Office to send off CVs etc and he's also interested in trying to learn Python/Flask to try build his own website (which could be done on the Pi itself, to be fair). As for budget, @MisterMiyagi, thin as possible as he's lost his job
Office works online (as a webapp). Or is that a separate license?
@AndrasDeak actually, that looks viable looking at it. Thanks
11:04
I think ages ago (not sure what it is now), but I think I use to pay £7.99/mth and for that you got the full office suite you could use locally, plus the online stuff and also £5/mth off Skype to phone call credit
 
1 hour later…
12:31
Can you someone here ask a question/help and get answer for it?
@user3641381 depends on the question. Please read our rules to see what's OK to ask here.
12:58
From where to read about class decorators? as all resources which I've found deals with the function decoraters. I've this problem in my mind.
class and function decorators work exactly the same
What would you place as parameters?
Decorators are basically just syntactical sugar for assignment so you can derive their behavior in any scenario from first principles
:D I didn't get that, sorry.
decorator effectively translates to func = decorator(func)
13:03
#this:
@foobar
class bazqux:
    #...



#is equivalent to this:
class bazqux:
    #...
bazqux = foobar(bazqux)
it's as simple as assignment, where the only "magic" is that the decorator function is accepting a function and giving back a function.
@AjayMishra Something like this?
That Kata requires a metaclass. Hiding that behind a decorator seems... ahem... bad.
Now, here's the thing. any callable works to make a decorator, since python doesn't care.
@Aran-Fey it works without a meta class if the object bound to A is not required to be the class defined as A.
13:04
That'd make it even more bad, though
that's the second code wars question in short time that makes me seriously doubt the usefulness of their katas.
tries hard to forget his recent Rust katas
There are some good ones though.
They're all created by the community I think, so there's bound to be a few lot of bad ones
has anyone seen bad exercises from exercism? My list of code-sites-to-try-new-languages is shrinking fast :/
The last time I decorated a class, the decorator simply added the class to a list I was keeping for diagnostic purposes, and returned the original class object. Making a decorator that alters the class or returns a new class seems quite challenging
13:06
@MisterMiyagi meh, setup is nutty.
I'm past that stage already, so that's not an exclusion criterion
Any good problem?
I'm willing to invest O(1) of time if it means no-one strangles me with a borrow checker because of unidiomatic code.
Checked, numbers are low and most of them are easy(in python)
@roganjosh Thanks, that should give a platform.
as for the above code wars object: you need to write a function remember(tp: T) -> {__call__: (*args) -> T, __getitem__: (*args) -> T}.
where __call__ instantiates a new T and stores it, and __getitem__ fetches an existing T from the store
13:14
@AjayMishra Also found this which might be better
I don't think that's what we want here. That shows how to use a class as a decorator, not how to write a decorator for a class
You're right. I misread the problem statement, sorry
13:37
@wim it was a nice voting ring by the way (I just didn't want to comment until it was handled)
13:48
@AndrasDeak there's nice ones are there? :p
Cbg
On the class decorator topic, I wrote one just yesterday for triplee's question about inheriting from str dpaste.com/0ZWTNW1 . It modifies the class in-place and then returns it.
14:03
Is there a way to have VSCode detect unused imports and also not throw a fit about flask-sqlalchemy on every column definition? Piecing together different questions, I have the following config file but I'm not convinced that all flags to python.linting.pylintArgs are being parsed
{
    "python.pythonPath": "C:\\Users\\jpilk\\Anaconda3\\envs\\hospital\\python.exe",
    "python.linting.pylintEnabled": true,
    "python.linting.pylintArgs": [
        "--load-plugins",
        "--enable=W0614",
        "pylint-flask"
    ]
}
14:17
is it just me, or do those legend colours just make anyone else do a double take?
It's to bring hope :)
14:40
needs details (and invites to code-golf) stackoverflow.com/questions/61389369/…
closed
thanks, it was difficult to resist answering with a doubly-nested map...
14:54
whew, the day was hard!
just cant find an online video storage to get direct .mp4 links
15:07
cabbage
cbg
15:31
cbg ... although took a lot of refrain doing a c-c-c-cbg breaker! :p
15:42
Fixing a bug: 15 minutes:
Writing a post-mortem of the bug fix for the intern so he can understand the deeply arcane ORM-hacking code that broke: 45 minutes and counting
Yesterday he looked into the widening gyre, turning and turning, ever turning, and so I have to guide him back to the warm shores of sanity and logic
@Kevin ... roll forward time... how'd that one go Kevin? :p
16:10
@JonClements I have assembled an intern-like shaped thing out of the shattered remnants
my Brother posted his old sound system yet again to me
can't be beeped to set this stuff up
It beats the mail I get every month from my Great Uncle Ogelvie. Dude's been dead for ten years but he keeps sending postcards.
I keep telling him to head towards the light but frankly I think he likes hanging out in the world between worlds
@AjayMishra A decorator doesn't really take multiple parameters. It takes a single callable object: the function (or class) that's being decorated, and returns a new object which it binds to the name of the thing being decorated. When you see a decorator that looks like it takes parameters, it's better to think of that as a decorator factory.
The parameters are passed to the factory, which returns the real decorator which then acts on the object to be decorated. See stackoverflow.com/a/50587490/4014959
16:25
Hey, did everybody see that the SO.blog is finally jumping on that crazy new Python 3 bandwagon?
in Tavern on the Meta on Meta Stack Exchange Chat, 2 hours ago, by Gimby
Next week: welcome to the OpenPython2 project! You don't simply drop support for legacy that refuses to disappear.
Python 2 diehards remind me of the Black Knight from Holy Grail...
well, there is tauthon for those who can't let go...
16:44
and PyPy...
17:01
Any better suggestions for handling stackoverflow.com/questions/61379554/… ?
@JoshuaVarghese I love it how you keep asking for feedback half a day after posting something
Mar 25 at 23:34, by Andras Deak
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη we generally don't encourage getting around server-side restrictions
and it's scrape/scraping, not scrap/scrapping
@AndrasDeak i didnt get this
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak ah, how can you tell?
oh because usernames turned into random placeholders?
@AndrasDeak why would you downvote?
17:09
@wim my flag was marked helpful
at least three users gone, the two left lost 100-130 rep each
@JoshuaVarghese We don't like to help people to scrape sites that have captcha or other stuff designed to prevent scraping.
@PM2Ring but its no harm scraping cache files
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak I was pretty sure these two users were socks too stackoverflow.com/posts/60235204/revisions
the votes invalidated, but user remains
what evidence do mods use I wonder, IP addresses?
every time they have these weird edits stackoverflow.com/posts/61320412/revisions
@JoshuaVarghese I guess it's ok, since you did tell them to use rate limiting so that the captcha isn't triggered. So their scraper isn't placing much more load on the server than a human using a browser does.
@wim same, but they must be friends
None of the socks had 40 rep. No attention span to have two 300+ users
17:25
@wim I love the edit comment: "grama corrections"
17:49
Seems like some people are gaming the system
that's partly why we have moderators
wim
wim
Andras you are one updoot away from 25k
that's the last privilege IIRC
meh
Technically yes, but you still get delvotes later
wim
wim
precious delvotes 🔥
17:58
random question: is it safe to delete /usr/lib/python3.7/site-packages and pip install -r requirements.txt to reinstall everything?
wim
wim
not really
packages can install files outside of site-packages too
Another good reason to use virtualenv
wim
wim
you have to look in the dist-info subdirs at the record of files (with checksums) that were installed, and remove them. which is what pip does when uninstalling.
yeah I mean if you have a requirements.txt then you usually want a venv associated with that project.
Hello @wim i would like to ask about your answer here, what if i need to pass a string argument like that .. thanks in advance
wim
wim
not much point to use timeit when you are making a network request.
18:09
^that
wim
wim
if the json loads and re search is one cent then the requests.get is $100
so timeit is not preferred to measures execution time for a network tasks then.
The answer to 99% of questions of the form "I need to send a callable-with-arguments into this context that only accepts callables without arguments" is "use a lambda"
Or functools.partial, or just write a regular old function with no arguments that does nothing but call your function with arguments
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη More like, it's not preferred to measure the execution time of a network task using anything at all
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη Timeit is good for testing a small piece of code by running it many times to get an accurate average running time. There's just too much variability in the time a network request takes for that to be meaningful (and there's also the issue of caching). Also, network requests are slow, so you don't want to make the same request a million times!
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη If you want to see how I use timeit on functions that take parameters, see stackoverflow.com/a/46569726/4014959 (I also have examples that time expressions rather than functions).
Or, hmm, I'll backpedal on my last message. The problem is not "timeit is unsuitable for timing network requests", the problem is "if you're using timeit, you're probably trying to solve an optimization problem, and you can't optimize your network speed, so it's not very useful to time network requests with it"
18:19
Well, in that case, my initial target is to compare time taken using regex and soup.find, so yes i was planning to run function around 1 to 3 times to compare times. no more. as i understood the point of cache and network traffic which you pointed as well.
wim
wim
then patch out the network request
alright got it.
thanks all :)
@RoadRunner I use virtualenv on my dev machine to silo different projects. Is it commonly used on production servers? Even if there's only a single python system running on that server?
wim
wim
but keep in mind time taken within regex and soup find is irrelevant because of this
@Code-Apprentice yes.
we are doing that with one of the projects I work on regularly. I've been wondering if it is really all that helpful and why we can't just install packages on the system globally.
wim
wim
18:24
system python belongs to the system, period.
There's an art to getting meaningful timing data. You have to make sure that you're actually timing what you think you're timing. ;) Try to isolate that code from all of the other stuff, that us, the stuff that creates the input, and stuff that uses the output.
wim
wim
packages should only be added/removed with OS package manager (e.g. yum, apt-get)
@wim ok, makes sense. I guess Ubuntu and other system packages use it, right?
wim
wim
@Code-Apprentice correct
this is a good article about it hynek.me/articles/virtualenv-lives
well, that completely invalidates my original question then.
18:35
@Code-Apprentice Depends if you have one or multiple projects running on the production server. If you have multiple Its definitely worth splitting them under different virtualenvs.
wim
wim
You should still use venv in production even if there is only one project running on the box.
^Agreed
wim
wim
didn't you just said it depends..? 😕
Well, you dont need to do it if its just for one project for a production server with a limited lifespan.
Of course its best practice to always use them
wim
wim
the point is that on linux many of the system services are written in python. if/when their dependencies overlap with your project dependencies = trouble.
18:44
> Even if there's only a single python system running on that server?
Lesson: Windows users don't have to use venvs
wim
wim
yes. and it's surprisingly easy for things to blow up, I've seen it even with a different version of package as simple and harmless as six.
Windows users be livin on the edge
@Kevin I still use them on windows
@wim thanks for the link. I'll check that out.
18:46
But then again I run dual boot windows-linux, so I've gotten into good habits from using linux
meh, should've voted no MCVE
My comment got deleted. Apparently it's ok for the answerer to tell me that I need to read the question but not to say it back to them. Not sure how "first try to read what the error is?" is less offensive than "why don't you try to read the question and the context" said in response. Oh well
@roganjosh he must have flagged your comment
Eh, someone did. Nevermind :)
My jimmies are rustled on your behalf
"Try reading it again" is the online equivalent of tourists that speak louder and slower when faced with someone that doesn't speak their language
3
19:34
Speaking of language barriers, we often get questions on Physics.SE which are hard to read because of bad English. Sometimes, we can clarify them via comments, but that requires an OP that responds to comments; usually their English reading skills are better than their writing skills, so eventually we muddle through. But sometimes we aren't so lucky...
Your question and its title are confusing, and it's hard to see the connection between them. — PM 2Ring 3 hours ago
In this case, they went on to ask me whether I knew what NameError or some equivalent was, with multiple "???" but it's been cleared away now, presumably on a second pass from a mod. I'm less sure about it being a language barrier. Anyway; Peace is restored once more :)
@ChrisP I've pointed you to rules and formatting guides so many times :/
Actually, it was more on the formatting-guide-side, so please review the room rules about posting questions from main
20:33
@wim huh, never happened to me. I even actively tell my boxes to skip creating venvs
but it sounds reasonable now that I read about it
so nice, just skimming the transcript once per day and picking up all kinds of useful stuff
20:46
cbg. Is there a way to get a behaviour like that of python -i main.py to interactively inspect the context of the programme in command line REPL, but instead at the point of code failure. i.e. I have a try and except statement and I do a modified version (if at all possible) of python -i something something main.py and I get the context at the point of failure in the except statement?
I'm not sure what you're asking, but you might be looking for a debugger
Hmm. It is a bit confusing. Let me try to clarify.
Putting breakpoint() or on older pythons import pdb; pdb.set_trace() somewhere will halt execution there and drop you into pdb. Or you can use another kind of debugger and set a breakpoint ahead of time, before execution.
The code is buggy :) I know that when you execute the script with python -i your_script.py you will drop into your programme "interactively". But when you do this with the buggy code, you lose the scope and so variables and so you cannot debug. So I was thinking if perhaps there is another flag to stop in the context of the exception. Now thinking about it, I think I did use breakpoint() for this. But necessitates you to know where the bug is. Would be cool to halt at the point of problem
If you can define what "the point of the problem" is you can do that.
It's not something trivial, like all your calculations being inside a function that has finished execution by the time the script reaches its end, right?
20:54
More thinking of having the try and except and if I catch the exception, then I want to drop in there. I think I will just use breakpoint
or even a logical condition
like if found_ix == -1: raise Exception('never') # drop in here. serious flaw with code this should not have happened
Well, yeah. I meant putting the breakpoint inside the try-except if that's where you want to stop
if found_ix == -1:
    breakpoint()
strictly for debugging purposes
and when you're done you can write assert found_ix != -1
20:58
thiking about whether you can hook in before / after the execution of an expression in Python. Similar to how you can hook in with decorators into functions and modify them. If that is possible, then could write a "decorator" for this. But this is more of a curious investigation than having any practical usecase :)
I have also read that asserts are bad in production code. Should always raise instead, i.e. if found_ix != -1: raise Exception("bad bad")
Think that is because you can switch off all asserts with an env variable
Depends. Assertions are for impossibilities, assumptions which should absolutely always hold. So assertions should never trip by user code, and yes, assertions go away in production pythons I think.
but it seems you have an absolutely-has-to-be-true thing here
that is correct
and this absolutely has to be true is false. So need to debug :)
yup
If you're not familiar with any debuggers I strongly suggest getting used to using one. They can be immensely helpful.
Your favourite IDE probably has one. I don't use any IDE so I prefer pudb which is a fancy terminal debugger
21:02
only the GUI ones in the IDE. But haven't used any in ages
those work fine
ahh niice
I use VSCode and change a theme every one hour. Very counter productive
I will switch to vim at some point too
it's hard to make vim function like a full IDE, if not impossible
21:04
I have recently come across a case where even VSCode wasn't enough to get the job done. IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate version has a bazel plugin for go. And that will enable autocomplete and correct linting. VSCode does not have one, so you are not getting any linting there if you are working with Bazel and Go
VSCode doesn't support autocomplete and/or linting?
for that combination of languages/modules, it sounds like
considering the quality of the autocomplete and linter warnings... not having support for either would be an improvement
VSCode has a bazel plugin maintained by the bazel team. Why IntelliJ IDEA and not GoLand @isquared-KeepitReal?
I could not get it to work with VSCode. My team suggested to use IntelliJ IDEA. I wasn't aware about GoLand. Thanks for suggesting, I will have a look
21:10
@isquared-KeepitReal It's the go IDE made by JetBrains (same as IntelliJ). It's basically what everyone uses for golang AFAIK, aside from multilang editors like VSCode.
Awesome will give it a spin
I tried android studio once, also jetbrains. It was really nice.
@Aran-Fey you code with no autocomplete?
pdb is really cool
Well, almost. I still have it turned on, but I removed it from the Enter key and I rarely ever make use of it
21:16
@Aran-Fey lol
Fair play. It drives me nuts when it crashes on Spyder :)
After 3 times of ending a line with a : and pressing enter just to have some nonsense inserted into my code, I went straight into the settings and turned that crap off
Yeah. I can't defend that part
It is useful when you are starting out with a language, I suppose
It's part of the reason that I moved (am moving) to VSCode because Kite (I assume) keeps just injecting nonsense when I just want a new line
21:22
I am using mypy extension to give me static typing in python with the built-in typing module in VSCode, cool stuff
VSCode keeps adding forms when I try to add arguments to render_template. I don't know whether I'm fat-fingering some combo of keys, but it's pretty consistent
Heard of this pyre thingy today, that is supposedly more performant static typing checker
Huh, a mypy extension could be interesting. I should try that
yea that's facebooks version of mypy
wim
wim
21:38
did nobody tell you how to enter the debugger after unhandled exception?
IPython supports it with the %debug magic
this was one of my first questions on SO actually Python: how to control namespace after an unhandled exception?
This is great. thanks

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