It doesn't matter how aware I am of the issue, or how many hours I've wasted over it, I'm positive that I'll get bitten by it again. That PR looks promising
ahh, you know what. Event is the class, and its in the event module. I was specifying the module, not the class
my bad
Ok, one more then. I'm storing some callback functions in a dict, when I come to execute them like this func(arg) it works fine, but the IDE flags it as unexpected arg. Is there a way to make it expected, and not flag in the IDE?
cbg, I am trying to filter a list based on two conditions, the elements in a list should not being with certain elements in a different list and should not end with certain elements from a different list, this is what I have now, my actual list sizes are more, is there a pythonic way or any faster way?
not_begin_with=['sys','host']
not_end_with=['py','pyc','pyw']
file_names=['sysTEM.sys','allowed_file.txt','not_allowed.py','host.pyw']
allowed_files=[]
for file_name in file_names:
if not sum(1 for begin_check in not_begin_with if file_name.startswith(begin_check)) and \
not sum(1 for end_check in not_end_with if file_name.endswith(end_check)):
allowed_files.append(file_name)
print(allowed_files) # ['allowed_file.txt']
not_begin_with = ('sys','host')
not_end_with = ('py','pyc','pyw')
for file_name in file_names:
if (not file_name.startswith(not_begin_with)
and not file_name.endswith(not_end_with)):
allowed_files.append(file_name)
Guido used to say that tuples are for heterogeneous data, lists are for homogeneous data. But in this case this would exactly mean that lists are better than tuples.
This answer makes me wonder how Dexter funded his huge underground lab. I'm starting to think that my childhood cartoons gave me unrealistic expectations of life
cv-plsstackoverflow.com/q/62570334/4799172 opinion-based. I've drafted and deleted two answers; both are just full of anecdotes about how bad the premise is rather than addressing the code itself. I don't think there's an angle to be useful and objective at the same time
1) become proficient at finding low hanging fruits and answer them quickly. in the past, the pandas tag was a popular choice for that. it's generally not regarded as very nice because it adds very little value to the site and a fair bit of noise, but at least OP will be happy about any help, or 2) heavily filter your question stream with libraries or frameworks that you are familiar with and only answer those.
if they are even a bit specific, you will have more time before someone else answers them, and if OP knows how to properly tag their questions, the overall question quality is usually a lot higher as well.
I have been coding only in python for almost a year but I try to limit my search to stdlib questions guess I will have to follow point 1 and be fast at typing
@python_learner unfortunately by now most questions have been answered, so the remaining on-topic non-dupe questions are rare. It's not you, it's the system.
@python_learner there are some stdlib modules that have a tag. to give an example, I did a lot of stuff with dataclasses back when they were introduced, and since them am farming a couple of questions tagged with python-dataclass every other week.
@python_learner I haven't reviewed the questions, but the gspread tag seems to have a lot of open questions and I used that library quite a lot when I was learning; it's pretty accessible
@JonClements Now that you've mentioned this, I'm reminded that, on more than one occasion, it was only half-jokingly suggested that I do this. I've seen it suggested that Chemical Engineers should take a Hippocratic Oath of some kind
I'm afraid that's on you to go back through the chat transcript. The last discussion was off-topic for Python because there's no active discussion going on about Python, though
We do. Regularly. The room has been around for years - it's not reasonable to expect that there's some continuous musing going on. If you go back up the transcript, you'll see discussions about Python
@Tanmay nothing has actually changed btw. Many people have been here for years and there are "traditions" (I'm not sure that's the right word) that are reasonably-well understood. As I suggested, there is a transcript you can go back through to see the dynamics of the room
I hadn't followed the link in the first comment but saw the funding issue pop up again in a later comment. From following it: "Otherwise issues and pull-requests will be left to linger until somebody can’t afford to not fix them." That's... gross
@ChrisP Please do. I'm tired of suggesting it. In the meantime, I'm moving those last disembodied comments. You will note that there is a link to the sandbox in the guide I sent you, so you can practice in there before posting here. But you really must know that I'm bored of this now so I'm not joking about the kicking.
per the linked guide: 1. Restart from scratch. Create a new program, adding in only what is needed to see the problem. Use simple, descriptive names for functions and variables – don’t copy the names you’re using in your existing code. - with Tk issues this is especially critical as it helps you and us (I typically have a blank form open that I keep messing with when having problems with features then re-clearing) — LinkBerest1 min ago
is anybody able to explain what this sqlalchemy error means? I have provided a hashed password as input but when running flask app it says sqlalchemy.exc.StatementError: (sqlalchemy.exc.InvalidRequestError) A value is required for bind parameter 'password' [SQL: INSERT INTO users (name, password, email) VALUES(%(user)s, %(password)s, %(email)s)] [parameters: [{'user': 'Kieron', ':password': 'pbkdf2:sha256:150000$aQfm996V$af032bc39170c1e2b59cab53691ebb48e50d3824b851de6921c56f07f4a10d3c', 'email': 'kieron@example.com'}]]
its saying i need a parameter but i have it there through this db.execute("INSERT INTO users (name, password, email) VALUES(:user, :password, :email)", {"user":user, ":password":passwordHash, "email":email}) db.commit()
Basically those are all values i ran in through the webpage interface to 'register' a user to the database using the `db.execute("INSERT INTO users (name, password, email) VALUES(:user, :password, :email)", {"user":user, ":password":passwordHash, "email":email}) db.commit()`
No, db.execute("INSERT INTO users (name, password, email) VALUES(user, password, email)", {"user":user, ":password":passwordHash, "email":email})
I need to build an example for this. Referring back to my comment that there's "fighting" about binding params, I'm not sure whether SQLA is doing something fancy
sqlalchemy.exc.ProgrammingError: (psycopg2.errors.UndefinedColumn) column "password" does not exist LINE 1: ...T INTO users (name, password, email) VALUES(user, password, ... ^ HINT: There is a column named "password" in table "users", but it cannot be referenced from this part of the query.
[SQL: INSERT INTO users (name, password, email) VALUES(user, password, email)]
I'm not so sure why I couldn't diagnose the initial issue on-sight. As it happens, I also use postgres so I'll try rebuild on my end but I have a few plates spinning so it'll take a little while :)
@Daniil I know . about python on Mac, but is it possible you uninstalled a user env, and the system has its own, and you can get 3.x by typing python3 or something?
@roganjosh Hmmm im not quite sure what is the issue i have been playing with it and have no idea what you have dont particularly there
sessionmaker(bind=engine, autocommit=False, autoflush=False) that is different and also the class you made to represent the table... however the query is the same
I don't know what it was. I'd like to think I'm ok at finding issues but I really struggled with that one; it was a "holy yam, now it's working". I need to figure out what i did
@Kwsswart you could have saved me some time by providing the code and not leaving me to pull it together from my own code base, btw. It's only that I'm interested myself that I built it at all
@Kwsswart please see the room rules about asking new questions here. I'll take some responsibility for not checking, but I've put time into trying to fix something for you, built it from scratch, and now find you already had an open question
About the usual. My more pertinent frustrations are my loud neighbors, my glitchy fire alarm, the red tape I need to deal with from the township, etc etc
Where's that tweet that's like "just have to get through this month, and then there will only be one more month before the next month we just have to get through"
FWIW, there's a fresh MSE question (by one of the MSE mods) complaining that the new Closed Post notices encourage OPs to re-post questions rather than repairing the closed question. I assume that most of us have noticed that such re-posts are rarely much better than the original, and agree that re-posting is sub-optimal. See meta.stackexchange.com/q/349951/334566
I don't mind OPs posting a new version if 1) it's substantially improved, and 2) if there weren't any valuable comments or answers on the original that are now lost
As you say, most reposts do not satisfy these requirements
I actually remember last school year (Aug-Sept) I just started clicking on user profiles to see what their last questions were for exactly that reason (to dupe them) - never put 2 & 2 together that the new close post might be contributing to that (it happens every year but last year it was cyclic)
@LinkBerest I think I've subliminally fixed a typo in transcribing what was posted here and the errors initially thrown are... unhelpful in tracking down the issue
I'm getting kinda annoyed at all the IoT stuff I'm encountering only working for SQL Server. I don't really understand why Postgres isn't the de facto at this point :(
Or, being more egalitarian, at least supporting more than only a proprietary dialect
I really want to play with Postgres Big Data options (I've heard from others they are really nice) but alas I am stuck with what people want to pay me to use
I haven't had a chance to play with fancy stuff for a while now. It's just what I've set up. I guess I could go make IT set me up 5 VMs or something for "reasons" :P
Wow, are there seriously no python modules for parsing CSS and finding out what a particular node in the DOM would be styled like? There goes my plan to write a flexible theme switcher for my website
hello, a quick question. I am making an appointment chatbot and wants to make sure that nobody is able to book the appointment for the weekend because we are closed on weekends. So, user will give a date. like 26 June, 27 June. And I have to determine whether this day falls on weekend and if yes then I will tell the customer that we are closed on weekends
^ that just ends the plot at today (which is what rogan asked the first time). Inventing data to finish off the plot would mean calculating the likely extension of the plot then adding those points and continuing the plot "past today"
....to be fair I get asked to make those a lot (people are shocked when I explain accuracy every single time too)
The thing is, the dark theme is because of the photo editor. Its a transparent background instead of the dark color, but I need that transparency for discord
@ExoticBirdsMerchant Sure. Forgot to say the most obvious thing: quality chair, make sure its seat height is correct wrt desk height, elbow and wrist angle, this is important for ergo so your leg arteries don't get squeezed and cause pain from extended sitting. Also, lock the seat back(/lumbar support) from reclining, that;' terrible for lower back muscles. A chair whose back cannot be prevented from reclining is really nasty.
@ExoticBirdsMerchant There are lots of free office-grade chairs (FreeCycle, CraigsList, don't know where you live), else invest in a quality bargain office chair, it is likely tax-deductible/employer-reimbursable, it will be a great investment and prevent back pain. I guess we should end the ergo discussion here unless other people find it useful.
I got a 250euro from IKEA ... at the beginning i bought a cheap one and it messed my back big time. It had a bump where the lower back should have a lumbar support just thin air it had...
Right now i am living in Europe
I am listening on loop .. I am a Creep from Radiohead .. and i am trying to write something creepy for code .. but all i get bugs. Well thats life. A buggy life. With bugs
def evaluate_expression_1():
global x
x = x - 3
def evaluate_expression_2():
global x
return x + 7
return evaluate_expression_2()
# Main Program #
x = 33
print(evaluate_expression_1())
It is so counter-intuituve ... Why on earth the second global x doesnt get x= 33 which resides in the global namespace and it gets the first global x from the enclosed namespace from evaluate_expression_1? This is creep~!
There re many examples in stack overflow but it seems simply counter to the logic of a sane and collected individual
@ExoticBirdsMerchant the first function call rebinds the global x to be equal 30. That's why you get 37 after the rebounds global x gets read out in the nested function.
there is nothing "creep" about this, and if it's counter-intuitive to you then your intuition is wrong
in your code snippet there is only ever one thing pointed to by the name x, and it lives in the global namespace
@ExoticBirdsMerchant That's nice. You can even do somersaults in front of the computer, I don't care. But when you start typing please folllow standard social conventions.
@ExoticBirdsMerchant if you change the direction of the curve then the direction of the curve will change. But you don't need to do that to smoothen it, depending on how you smoothen.
@Bowcoy no, links can rot away. Ideally every SO question should be self-contained. See also MCVE
@BlackThunder See pd.DataFrame.rolling() and e.g. Plot smooth curves of Pandas Series data. There's tons of existing Q&A on that. Just use rolling(), don't resample. matplotlib/pyplot might have a smoothing filter you can apply to plots as a postprocess, I don't know, I'm too busy to check.
@AndrasDeak aha maybe changing the scale .. that can be also a way or the graphics .. i got caught up because you said .. that would be like lying--> the smoothening of the curve
Lets assume we have a dataset which might be given approximately by
import numpy as np
x = np.linspace(0,2*np.pi,100)
y = np.sin(x) + np.random.random(100) * 0.2
Therefore we have a variation of 20% of the dataset. My first idea was to use the UnivariateSpline function of scipy, but the proble...
@ExoticBirdsMerchant seriously, please reduce the number of exclamation marks and other unnecessary punctuation in your posts. It comes across as annoying.
@BlackThunder I'm being serious now. Stand by the data. There doesn't seem to be a reason to interpolate anything. It doesn't need a trendline and you're being a bit flippant with "I just wanna smoothen that line,nothing more". It is what it is
If you want a trend, fine, we can explore that. But just "smoothing" is data manipulation
As far as figure styling goes, I recommend just using something built-in in matplotlib or seaborn. It's fun to waste hours to personalize a figure beyond recognition, but the end result will more often than not only be useful for decoration purposes.
@BlackThunder to illistrate: I would read graph 1 as trend has been increasing and is now reaching a steady point. graph 2: as trend has an downward and upward curve which is moving to its downward cycle
Secondly - the points (which are where the curves start/end) are not in the same place because matplot is correcting (which is what @AndrasDeak meant by half-chars)
oh, that too (it does change the plots though - thereby showing incorrect data). I don't like "rounded" graphs with line charts - its a line that's in the name
Hi all, It is my first time trying to use python. I am just trying to simply run a python script developed by another researcher. However, a simple test of plotting a graph based on the code from the package is not working as it should. Could you guys check this out? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/62584255/python-script-not-plotting-graph-it-plots-only-a-white-pdf-recon-v2-5-python
@roganjosh lol, nah. I keep a pretty decent class for making those so just have to update it for this new "I don't get why you want this but here" project