Available methods: ['NamedTemporaryFile', '_play_with_ffplay', '_play_with_pyaudio', '_play_with_simpleaudio', 'get_player_name', 'make_chunks', 'play']
That's code works fine:
song = AudioSegment.from_mp3(data.selected_song["PATH"]) slices = song[::1000] for slice in slices: pydub.playback._play_with_simpleaudio(slice) time.sleep(1)
Folks, for print()ing with customizable indent level, do you use pprint, textwrap or what? Looking for something that's ok with long lines, Unicode-safe etc.
^ one nice-to-have requirement is something that works nicely with pandas commands like df.info() that directly write output, without needing print().
@SaiAstro what do you mean? \s* skips whitespace but then you have [^\s]* (which could more succinctly be written \S*) which matches non-whitespace, including anything containing "unix"
from your limited problem statement, I guess you want something like (?:JOIN|FROM)\s*(?:UNIX)?(\S+) (to skip UNIX and match whatever comes after) or perhaps (?:JOIN|FROM)\s*(?!UNIX)(\S+) to not match the strings where the whitespace is followed by UNIX
also perhaps you actually want \s+ to force at least one whitespace character before the match -- probably that's actually what you are really looking for
is there a way to check if something was installed using a local whl or over pip?
I have the odd issue that on one install my cv2 gets recognized by pycharm but on another not. Now I think once I used pip install opencv-python and on another I used a prebuilt whl from this one site which has all the whls(you know which one :P ) but I'm not sure which is which
hmm ok, I worded that badly. I mean is there a way to check if i did pip install some_file.whl or if I did pip install opencv-python(where it downloads it from the net)
like get that info out of the env somehow? Because windows doesn't keep a command history sadly
"net" means the global python package index, then. I don't think there is something like "downloaded_from" in the metadata. Unless they use different setup.py files to build to project, it sounds hard to figure our.. maybe the version can be used as a hint?
What kind of algorithm will find the longest repeating substring from a given string? Here I mean that a substring must be repeated twice without any letter between the repeated parts. For example, if a string is hfhfggccaggccagccafff, its longest repeated string is ggcca. But if the string is about 700000 characters long, how one can find the longest repeated string?
I was wondering if one could use regular expressions for this, but I got a wrong answer.
import re
s = 'hfhfggccaggccagccafff' def find(s): r=max(re.findall(r'((\w+?)\2+)', s), key=lambda t: len(t[0]))
@Hakaishin I found a difference. for whatever reason, gohlke doesn't package the license into the metadata. So you can just search for opencv_[...].dist-info in the site-packages where it was installed into, and if there is a LICENSE.txt in there, then it was fetched from pypi. and if there isn't, it's from gohlke.
I get the previous UNKNOWNs but the last one you feel the frustration of the program, it doesn't even know, what field is unknown, it's just unknown :D
@roganjosh I did that :P But my genius decided as it seems, to download the whls on both pcs and only use it on 1 :D Luckily there is the direct_url.json. Seems like installing it from the file let's pycharm recognize it, whereas using pip install opencv-python doesn't
in the direct_url.json I had: "url": "file:///C:/Users/<username>/PycharmProjects/whls/opencv_python-4.1.2-cp37-cp37m-win_amd64.whl"}
@Hakaishin the bottom of the metadata is where the long_description will be pasted. That's a seriously borked build process, I am surprised the code is working at all
well, I found out during my master thesis, how hard it is to build stuff. So I'm very greatful, that the website is doing it for me, because it works, be it a bit borked :D
hmmm still no luck. Even after invalidate cache and reeindex. Pycharm refuses to see cv2 on 1 pc. I can see two differences and was wondering what do you think I should check first. 1 is that on the setup where pycharm doesn't recognize cv2 the env is outside of the project folder and the version of python is 3.8 and cv is 4.2. On the working setup I have the venv inside the project and python 3.7 and cv 4.1.
So which would you test first, moving the venv inside or changing the python and cv version?
Can someone who knows Python look at the line header = self.header_structure.parse(raw)in the following Python program and tell me what the parse() method does?
@MyWrathAcademia header_structure is a Struct; so it calls the method parse in the Struct class. Anything more than that requires familiarity with the Struct class, more than general Python knowledge
man, pcs are weird. I just uninstalled opencv-python and then installed it over pycharm package manager(which uses pip) instead of using pip install and now pycharm see it. Well goal achieved I guess
@Arne yeah, that would make sense. But I already got the newest one. Looks like installing it from the internet instead of the edu site works. Now I also have a license.txt
good to hear. On the one hand I wonder why a regular pip install didn't work. On the other, I am burned out on investigating IDE inconsistencies for at least two lifetimes
I think it wasn't about the pip or using the pycharm gui, it was the source of the whl. the lfd.uci.edu didn't work for python 3.8. But the online opencv-python did work. Strangely on the other setup the lfd.uci.edu did work. Because I clearly used that one, as can be seen by the missing licence.txt and the direct_url saying file:// blabla. What I could kinda imagine, but what is weird too, is that the opencvp bundle from ldf.uci.edu worked for 4.1 but not 4.2. But that's only a guess.
"I'll just help vectorize this easting/northing to lat/long question. We don't need that pesky PyProj slowing us down. Let's find the formula"... holy hell
@MyWrathAcademia it sets up a memory structure so you can find fields within a memory region of a particular size with a particular structure ... so yeah, it says the "magic" member is a string starting at offset 0, "version" is a 32-bit int starting at offset 12, "unknown" is an array of 10 16-bit ints after that
looks like the thing after / is a type declaration
Everything you need to know about endianness summed up: If you're creating/parsing data that has been or will be exchanged between different computers, don't use native endianness. The end.
@tripleee Thanks. What offset does the member "unknown" start from? Is it offset 16 since Int32 is represented by 4 bytes?
@tripleee Noo, I am familiar with endienness. It is is simply the byte order when reading bytes. So little endian is reversed, and big endian is forward.
@Aran-Fey good catch.
@Aran-Fey so native endianness in Python is little endian, right?
@tripleee thanks. Then in that case, after the member "version" there are 16 bytes left. Since 16 bits is equal to 2 bytes, an array of 10 16 bit ints is the same as an array of 20 bytes. So using the native endienness and 2 bytes per digit, those 20 remaining bytes are converted to an array of 10 digits which gives a single integer? Is this correct?
@tripleee I mean after the member "version" there are 20 bytes left
there is an array of length 10 and each element is a two-byte integer but the label name etc suggest that this is just a way to say "skip 20 bytes somehow"
so if you populate it with the bytes 0x01 0x02 0x03 0x04 0x05 0x06 0x07 0x08 0x09 0x0a 0x0b 0x0c 0x0d 0x0e 0x0f 0x10 0x11 0x12 0x13 0x14 it encodes the ints 0x0102 0x0304 0x0506 ... or with opposite endianness 0x0201 0x0403 0x0605 ...
but we obviously have no idea what those ints are used for or how they are interpreted
> In this technical and political examination of byte ordering issues, the endian names were drawn from Jonathan Swift's 1726 satire, Gulliver's Travels, in which civil war erupts over whether the big end or the little end of a boiled egg is the proper end to crack open.[3][4]
I always thought that the "end" refers to the end of the stream. Which would swap the meaning of little and big endian. Because the subject is not confusing enough already.
@AndrasDeak You're right that a baby chicken most likely hatches from the side. After all an egg does not stand freely on its own, it just rolls unto its side.
Well I imagine there's no room for a chicken to move before hatching, so it hatches wherever its beak is when it's ready to emerge. It's just that its orientation in the egg won't be too random, there'll be a likely place where it ends up before hatching.
Correct one:The baby ratchets his body around the interior of the shell until he has completed a full circle of peck marks. After that he pushes on the pecked area for hours until he has completely broken free.
As Andras said, it's going to hatch out of the side @MyWrathAcademia, but not because of support. It's because it has a larger surface area.
In other words, the egg is cut in half. Just look at Google pics and you'll see
I'm bothered by the fact that 90% of the Google image search results for "chicks hatching" are stock photos of clearly-not-newborn chicks emerging from clearly fake shells, often broken in ways that are aesthetically pleasing at the expense of being scientifically correct
The chicks should not be fluffy and cute, they should be damp and kind of gaunt
any socket experts? Using the free too tcp port listener tool i receive the request the server sends
using following python code i get nothing
import socket
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.bind(('', 5005)) # Bind to the port
s.listen(5)
print("Starting to recv")
while True:
c, addr = s.accept()
print("Connected to ", addr)
msg = s.recv(1024)
print(msg)
@Kevin and lol, as a vegan symphatisant I agree that the more realistic it looks the better
Most of the eggs you can buy at the grocery store are unfertilized, so there's not much gross-out potential if a vegan protester shows pictures of slimy chicks to people in the egg aisle. "I bet you'd hate to see one of these while you're getting breakfast ready" is an implausible scenario
If realism is not a concern and you just want to make the shoppers queasy, there are probably grosser pictures out there on the Internet. I nominate the pacific geoduck as the ideal combination of "nasty" and "not nasty enough to get you arrested for presenting it in public"
I'm hedging my bets because I don't know how things are in other cultures. For all I know, they have an entire shelf of fertilized eggs in every store in outer Elbonia. If I were talking about my grocery store in particular, I'd put it at 0.01% odds.
I have a camera which sends some data i can chose protocol=tcp, ip and port. I don't know more about the sender. Listener I used the program called free tcp port listener tool
@Kevin Sure, but if you have 3 eggs 3 mornings a week, that's five-ish times a year. Similarly with double-yolkers, although I've seen less of those since I moved to the US.
with which I could receive the packets from the camera, but with the above python code, which I thought should also listen to tcp packets I didn't get any data
The Internet tells me that a fresh fertilized egg that has been refrigerated to grocery standards will probably have an embryo that resembles a small white dot. You might not even notice it if you're not looking.
Stack Overflow is not very receptive to code optimization questions whose code is functional, but long/slow/un-idiomatic. That's better suited for Code Review.
@Hakaishin so to minimize that into a shorten road. you do have a camera, which is sending some packets to "x" which you don't know it. and you are trying to listen to those packets instead of "x" or you would like to intercept the outgoing packet to "x" while you are locally within the camera?
Closing the tkinter window normally causes root.mainloop() to return, and mainloop() typically appears close to the end of the script
I believe it's possible to create an event handler for WM_CLOSE window events. I'm not sure how exactly to do that, but I'm sure it's explained somewhere online
But perhaps that's not necessary to begin with, if you put your "stop audio" code right below player = Mp3Player()
Ok, so I feel very brave saying this so much more experienced Python developers than myself, but I think I may have come up with a better way of dealing with Python dependencies than using a different virtual enverioment for every project.
There you go. I'd say that approach is more useful for scenarios where you want to do something with the window object before it ceases to exist, or if you want to override the user's choice and keep the window open forcibly
I suspect it's possible to get more responsive drag-and-driop behavior, but I don't know enough about the AudioSegment interface to recommend anything concrete
This is based mostly on my general expectation of how media streaming interfaces are typically set up, based on my experience wresting with mp4s from Youtube
Ok, so I am that much of an inexperienced Python developer that I've been installing all of my modules to my global enviroment and only recnelty came foul because of it with conflicts appearing and so understand this is at least one of the reasons why people use virtual enviroments.
I really didn't want to create a vitural enviroment for every one of my Python projects and have constantly switch between enviroments. This also means duplication of your externally installed modules. Anouther issue with it is that if you want to use two modules which conflict so that they need different versi…
I'm surprised to hear that it's even possible to have two modules in different virtual environments, and which can both be imported into the same environment
it's entirly containerised and so can't conflict with other modules which use different versions of the same dependensy. They each have their own versions
I'm tempted to say "this defeat the purpose of virtual environments to begin with: protecting your wider system from whatever's inside the venv", but on second thought, if the wider system is consensually entering the venv and pulling something out, I guess it should be allowed to do that?
sys.path.append('/home/jamesmcintyre/.local/pipx/venvs/opencv-python/lib64/python3.8/site-packages') puts that in the PYTHONPATH, so chdir should not be required. So I'm with MrMiyagi - why the chdir?
I don't get what that code achieves. You have a virtualenv in which cv2 is installed, and you use some weird sys.path hack to import a module from that virtualenv. What's the point of this?
"It's annoying when two libraries depend on different versions of the same library" is a valid problem. What is the usual solution? fork the upstream library and hack it to be compatible with both?
Note that this only "containerises" the immediate dependencies. Secondary dependencies that are shared by multiple primary dependencies will depend on the import order.
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη I have a router, cam and pc. Cam sends tcp packets to my pc. I have a tool which receives them and I can read them. I want to do what the tool does in python :)
It sounds like there isn't too much objection here to the idea of "what if you could import two versions of one library simultaneously?", and we're mostly bikeshedding* about the best way to do that
If you're talking about a conflict in the sense that you have moduleA which depends on version 1 of moduleC, and moduleB which depends on version 2 of moduleC, then installing moduleA and moduleB in separate virtualenvs won't help you
Right. As soon as you import any version of module Z it will be cached in sys.modules, and subsequent imports will use that exact same version of module Z
All a virtualenv really does is that it gives you a different location to install modules, and a matching module search path. If you use a sys.path hack to import something from a virtualenv, you're practically defeating the purpose of a virtualenv
Consider also the opposite problem: If you do manage to have two version of the module, that affects all of their content. E.g. if any part of the common code does except module_z.ExZedPtion: it handles only one of the versions.
@JamesMcIntyre You may want to take a look at sys.modules. Basically the first time you do import foo, the module is loaded and put into sys.modules. Every subsequent import foo will fetch the already loaded module from inside sys.modules.
But surely even importing B breaks A. Worst case sonario you import A again before you use it. You couldn't do this if they were both globaally installed as A wouild simply be broken?
Proposal: create two fully sandboxed virtual machines that import A and B respectively, with the correct versions of Z. Both VMs communicate with your real script via TCP.
So even if you still can't use A and B in the same script. This way of doing things is a tleast as good as creating a vertual enviroment for all of your projects and possibly better as your probably going to use the same external modules over and over again so you'll save disk space by only having them installed once. You'll also save yourself the headach of creating and switching between virtual enviroments for every project.
I basically see the advantage of re-using modules (which is incidentally the opposite of containerising). As for muddling with path/chdir/... to import each correct module, I don't see that as a win over activating a venv once.
Anyways, if you want to automatize the path magic, look at import hooks. Those could be used to dynamically look for specific modules at specific locations, without changing the import places.
I think the world is moving in a more portable code direction. Just look at Google Fusia and Harmony OS. Both OSes of the futre and both built on micro kernals.
For a historical perspective, I'd like to point out that many languages have been able to import multiple different versions of a library for decades. The name of this concept, DLL Hell, should give you an idea about its ease-of-use
I'm aguing that all of your dependencies are isolated and so module A does not require anything that module B requires. They both have their own versions of module Z self contained
you sharing it for your own projects but it breaks because your update somthing then that's your own fault. it shouldn't break because somone else updates somthing
I believe the current idiomatic solution is "find the github pages for modules A and B and harass them until they get off their butts and upgrade to module Z v.2020"
@Aran-Fey Hmm, could work. "Please don't drop compatibility for Python 2.7 :'-(" convinced quite a lot of popular libraries for quite a long time.
@JamesMcIntyre I think the idea of "have separate environments so both modules can import different versions of Z" is a promising idea. I am unsure whether your specific implementation does that flawlessly. I couldn't completely follow the technical discussion of module caching and pipx-importability etc etc.
I'm honestly not sure about that either but even if that did cause a problem, I dont' think it would be that hard to build in the function of renameing sub dependencies to counteract that
I don't think it's crazy, but I do think that it'll take more effort to implement than you realize. Importing two versions of a module is easy; what'll be difficult is installing the dependencies correctly
I'm not even sure if it's possible to hijack pip to such a degree that it would let you install two versions of the same dependency. So projects using your idea/module might not be pip-installable
If hypothically I ever got my repo into pypi, you could only use one import statement (import importx) and then you could just importx any modules you've pipxed
Whoever asked about pydub - AudioSegment is fine for what you were proposing
audio processing is just one of those signal processing tasks which made me learn MATLAB but pydub, pyAudioAnalysis & pyAudioProcessing have been useful these last few years switching that over (which is nice)
when an app or library packages up exact versions of the dependencies they need
so when user code would import msgpack for example, pip would from pip._vendor import msgpack
this allows pip to "use" msgpack==1.2.3 while user code can have installed whatever version user wants, without conflict, because the pinned code is namespaced by _vendor in sys.modules
your idea won't work as written because you didn't do anything to evict from the sys.modules cache