@jigglypuff It gets the class instance as an arg, complete with any class attrs and methods? If in the __init__ I have self.var = self.class_var + self.modify_arg(var_passed_to_init), it needs access to class_var, as well as the modify_arg method, which it will find in...*itself* via the reference to self if I understand correctly.
I think it's more like it takes a 'blank' template from the class definition (which has all the things I said), then it 'initialises' that template with instance variables etc rather than that there's 'already an instance', but yes, the details from the definition are there before __init__ runs, or can be run, since the __init__ method itself is part of that definition.
3 hours later…
user13682510
3:18 AM
will there be any consequence for users whose comments are always flagged for no longer needed? like they never clean up after themselves.
well, I delete my own comments as "no longer needed" all the time (like when I ask the OP to add details, code, etc) to the post and they do - that comment is not needed. Sometimes I get busy (esp. when timezones mean I'm not on at the same time as OP) and others delete it for me - this is also okay. "no longer needed" doesn't mean someone failed to do something - it means something changed and that comment is just...not...needed. So I definitely agree on not adding negative consequences here
^^ What they said. No consequences whatsoever for having your comments flagged as "no longer needed". However, moderators do notice users who repeatedly engage in lengthy discussions in the comments section, and we do reach out to those users in hopes of modifying their behavior.
That's kinda why SO was so nice when I first started using it (and still today): it was the only code site I saw where the community could edit and improve stuff (this was huge compared to the forums where you had to wait and hope OPs would show back up and edit) and really helped it be the place for finding "good" answers
We especially don't want to start assigning any penalties to "no longer needed" flags, as we don't want to discourage anyone from flagging comments that have become, for whatever reason, "no longer needed".
@LinkBerest This, among many other reasons.
Have you ever heard anyone say that SO is really nice because you can give handwashing emojis? Me neither.
Yeah, I had a discussion with Shog on Tavern once about using Java Ranch with Java 2 and the nightmare finding information on Collections was at the time (ah, memories)
@LinkBerest Lowering close votes to 3 was a sustained effort with support from several staff members at the time, including moderators (ahem), who pushed it forcefully. Shog9 and Megan Risdal were the main employees who got it going.
yeah, I remember it being Shog's answer (or maybe it was just a bunch of comments) that pushed some of the nay-sayers over to the "okay, lets try it side" but then how often has this been the case?... sigh now this without Jon, Shog, or Tim (he's at least not listed as a CM anymore) - oi
The teams literal reaction: "we wanted to use SE to avoid all the Slack level chatting that happens and steals focus from work - why would we want this?" — LinkBerest25 mins ago
@LinkBerest Already upvoted that one. :-) Although, to be fair, this "reactions" feature has been on Teams for quite some time. I had complained about it in private channels, expressing my worst fears that it would be rolled out to main, and I distinctly remember being reassured that it wasn't (or, at least, wasn't "planned").
yeah, the two companies (or to be more accurate government agency teams) decided on Stack over Slack mostly because of that during the whole Covid remote-work change over (literally, regulations make "reactions" sit in a weird "does this met regulation, orders, and requirements" status - which directly state "no social media platforms for communication"). They might be changing off Stack to MS Teams now just because of this so its been a bit of a discussion
@LinkBerest Ah, wow. Yeah, those are the kind of data points that SE needs... Make it much more visible than a comment, please.
That also just drove me to your profile in hopes of figuring out which government. Apparently the US. Also, apparently this is a sockpuppet account that is a shadow of your former self. Pardon me if I don't know the history.
in my class methods, should I return some value and assign to a self variable in the __init__ or just assign the variable immediately in the class method when __init__ calls it? Pedantic I know but just wondering what others would do.
@CodyGray ehh...more I just had two at one time - this one had my name attached for resume but I also asked on Workplace and Academia and others where I didn't quite want my real name showing up (it had far more rep on SO - this one had far more rep on WB.SE but my real name at one time - so I kept it)
was mostly after the firings - that just peeved me off enough to delete one
Well, C++ looked really weird when I came to it from BASIC and COBOL so there ;p :)
@CodyGray I don't see a place to put it and honestly if I started a new Meta question it feels like it will become a "oh, you just want to say your leaving" (I mean we are but at this point it may just be seen as sour grapes and ignored by SE) - I'll leave it to the team lead to email SE or whatever if she wants
maybe, I'll think about it (and ask the team, someone else might want to do it but I don't think anyone else actually uses SO - at least if you mean "asks or answers questions")
anyway, I'm off for the night - rbrb and always nice to chat Cody :)
@AndrasDeak quick, write a bug report. If you word it right, they might get an intern to fix the code instead of the docs.
@jigglypuff __new__constructs the instance, i.e. it creates self based on cls. __init__ initialises the existing instance.
@jigglypuff assigning them to self inside __init__ should be the preferred approach. Makes it clear that __init__ is self-contained, even if some of its logic is factored out.
Though consider that if your initialisation is so complicated it has to be split into multiple pieces, perhaps the class itself should be split. There are veritable cases where this is needed, though, mostly classes representing data structures – for example, I had a Graph class where each different input type (adjacency matrix, adjacency list, edges, ...) was normalized by a separate method.
TypeVars use covariant and contravariant parameters, so I figure I'll stick to the same interface
I'm still wrapping my head around that assignment, but contravariance also doesn't seem terribly difficult to do: is_instance(X, Y, contra=True) == is_subtype(Y, type(X), co=True)
Definitely requires more brain power than invariance though
I don't think assignments need two typevars. Isn't target: T_co = source enough?
Ah, I think I see what you were going for. T_contra means you can change a target: bool to target: int, and S_co means you can change target = 3 to target = True
@jigglypuff Yes. I see that MisterMiyagi has already mentioned this, but it bears repeating. ;) The __init__ method is not the constructor, it's the initializer. The constructor is __new__, it's the method which returns the new class instance. You rarely need to define a __new__ method yourself, your class can be constructed using the __new__ that it inherits. When __new__ returns, __init__ is automatically called, if it exists.
Well, they must be aware that there's a hierarchy at least. Even if they don't know it's done via inheritance, it shouldn't be too hard to connect the dots once you bring it up
@MisterMiyagi :) Of course, if you're playing with metaclasses, or subclassing immutable built-in types, you do need to mess with __new__. But those things fall into the category of "if you have to ask 'do I need this stuff?' you probably don't need it".
@jigglypuff Indeed. Although you can initialize instance attributes in any method, it makes your class more readable if you initialize them all in __init__. Sometimes, you can't assign the desired value to some attribute when __init__ is executing. In that situation, you may like to assign None (or some other placeholder) to that attribute.
Maybe I should take this opportunity to clean up... take down all the unfinished/undocumented stuff (i.e. everything... except the SO dupe manager, I guess)
He asked me what the point of the repo was - it was a good question, because I'd been wondering the same thing. When he sees the repo gone, I hope he won't think he bullied me into deleting it...
Today I learned that, as of a year ago, the sums of three cubes problem had been solved for every integer between 1 and 100, except for 42.
It seems fitting that they threw an astronomical amount of computing power at the problem of "the answer is 42, now find the question"
I have a great deal of fondness for problems that require a million hours of number crunching, to discover a solution that can be written down on a post-it note and verified with a four function calculator
Exercise: suppose every solved problem in mathematics has a property, "density", which equals the number of years the problem went unsolved, divided by the number of characters in its (verifiable) solution. "42=(-80538738812075974)³ + 80435758145817515³ + 12602123297335631³" has a density of (2019-1955)/66= 0.96 years per character. Which solved problem has the highest density?
Most likely any candidates will be examples or counterexamples of a theory, since those concisely act as a proof/disproof without a lot of intermediary steps
Cheesy candidate: the problem of "how do we record large numbers with log(n) marks?" is answered with "like this: 123", and took 30,000 years to graduate from "tally marks on a mammoth bone" to Mesopotamian base 60, giving the problem a density of 2143.
Case in point, I'm currently setting up a service that's written in Python2. I'd estimate the maintainers will not have the manpower to move to Python3 before late 2021, and that is being optimistic.
Python2 is still the default on any OS that we deploy. Right now I'm working on deprecating one that ships with Python2.6.
user13682510
Why all the doenvotes on the meta post about thank you?
@MisterMiyagi I'm surprised this number is so low. Maybe that implies "Another 20% of respondents are just too ashamed to admit they are still using Python2."
@MisterMiyagi that sounds suspiciously like something one would say if they had a shadow army of python 2 developers poised to strike. I feel the odds have increased
@LinkBerest What are the use-cases for this? Usually, I know people using Python for its availability and breadth of libraries. IronPython seems to have none of that.
@MisterMiyagi they were just going to rebuild the program on new machines (which were more windows 10 friendly) but the buying of new machines was put on hold due to covid (and now they need to change some features of this but are still planning to upgrade & re-write soon so don't want to fully re-write yet)
....even though its perfectly possible to re-write it now and then just deploy on new devices (and would probably be easier)
note: I'm guessing at the use-case (I've seen the program but don't only have a parital story on why it exists), I have enough jobs this month that I just declined this one (lucky)
Tripped over a property (written by a junior dev) with a side-effect (created a directory). Ran in the PyCharm debugger, and expanded the "self" variable and >BAM!< property gets evaluated. Took a while to sort out why that only failed while debugging sometimes.
cbg friends. what is a good way to check if the two files are similar? they won't be identical, but I need to check if file A is "similar" to file B. Perhaps A is a subset of B. Or A has scrambled parts from B. The first thing that comes to my mind, that definitely is not efficient is to get byte chunks of both and then compute the correlation between shuffled blocks
I am writing an algo that is supposed to check if the output of some algo, which is file A, is "similar" to the input file B on which this algo was ran. This is for purposed of identifying if there was a data leak. So someone can be clever about it and just say take B, chunk it up and shuffle it
if they are csvs, you should rather operate on lines instead of bytes.
if you're just looking at bytes, I'd recommend doing piecewise checksums. E.g. compute the checksums for every chunk of ... bytes and count them. That is very likely not what you want, though.
splitting the rows and then shuffling. say you split first row into three parts and put the first part of first row into somewhere, then second part of first row into somewhere else and so on
What prevents anyone from taking file B, encrypting every value, encoding it as hex or anything else, and turning it into a valid CSV file again? There's no way you can ever detect that
Who is Bob? An internal employee? If you put this into a database instead of a CSV then you could set access permissions (but they could still pull the whole table)
okay, just to make that clear again: We have literally no practical idea what your data is. We can only randomly guess what will significantly select true positives, and are completely oblivious to what you would consider a false positive.
@Naz I don't follow with this. The point of running an algorithm on data is, practically by definition, to have an output correlated to the input. Extracting input information is the entire point.
Does someone know if/where the typing data model is specified? E.g. it seems foo = typing.List[int] means foo.__origin__ == typing.List and foo.__args__ == (int,) but I cannot find something authoritative in the docs.
I'd be willing to motivate the masses to write yet-another-static-type-annotation-system. The last one ended with mad scribblings how to build a fully static runtime compiler, though. I'd prefer not to go there again, at the moment.
@Naz assuming this is a real requirement - the only way to do that is with permissions. The last time I had a system where people were only allowed certain access I did this with SQLite databases in different directories (so their logins only have permission to access certain ones) but that's just one way out of many (and the security of each varies but also the more secure = more pain to use program so you have to balance)
hey guys, what is the best type of list/object/dictionary to store data in if you have key-value pairs where you also care about grouping/quickly filtering all the keys based on values
cbg: polling the room: I just installed Sourcery in PyCharm, and it's suggesting if/else expressions over multiline statements. Is there a rationale for this? I tend to think multiline can be clearer to read, at least some of the time.
I mean, assigning a var: var = x if y else z` seems fine, but sometimes the if something: # do x elif/else: # do other thing more clearly shows the branching you're doing.
I do like turning for key in dict: # do something with dict[key] into for key, value in dict.items(): # do something with key but I saw the refactoring and immediately went...why don't I just change it to for value in dict.values()since I'm not using the keys...
It does want to turn my descriptive_var = expression; return descriptive_var into return expressionwhich, sure. Maybe I just need to have clearer docstrings and func names if I see that as an issue.
*rethinking utility*: Either tool is more trouble than help, or my code is well written to begin with and doesn't need much refactoring. Which is plainly not the case due to authorship.
I wonder if Sorcery uses a style guide or is just based on the creators interpretations of the PEPs to build its rules (well some of them)
All the examples on its website focus on code duplication (and pretty direct matches too) so the refactoring seems like pretty simple issues (here simple meaning it seems meant for someone new to Python or if I was refactoring intern/student code)
^ the above may just be my grumpy old man coming out though
Idk, I had a quick look for docs, as some tools provide rationale for their recommendations, and couldn't see one.
@LinkBerest lol. What do you think about my assigning to a descriptive var and then returning that eg return very_specific_object vs return complex expression?
^ common issue (and minor one): even in Java the rule of thumb is Avoid unnecessarily creating local variables (esp. if just returning or throwing them)
I know most static analyzers have that rule in their sets
I know I've broken that rule on occasion when I have an overly complex expression being evaluated (breaking a large equation into chunks to make it easier to debug) but most of the time its a good rule