@Aran-Fey Why would you...need to make that an abstract method? I can imagine making a compliant subclass without an __init__ method, but not a reason for enforcing one..
Guys, I need some guidance, as I don't know how to properly approach the matter in hands... I had a 800-line python code that would access functions defined inside the code. At the start, I had my global variables, aswell as 3 arrays representing user input (which I'm building atm).
Now I need to run this code on different user inputs, from a json feed from web javascript from my forms on website. To do so, I learned I should make my code a function, so it would receive userinput as function parameters, and return an output. OK
But when I tried to make my code itself a function, I realized I had a full-on scope problem, because now variables and arrays were not global, so when accessing other functions variables were not defined...
How should I approach this? Should I define nested functions inside main function, or something like that? Never dealth with such a problem!
building small scripts? Use Python like glue to make some amazing connections. Need to build full architecture? Such as what you describe - its time to break out true classes and really get to work on the design
@jigglypuff if that's what you need - make a dictionary of lists would seem a good idea but without an MVCE I would be (and am) guessing at the best implementation
@jigglypuff okay, so what if there are two "k"s (for whatever K stands for) in this case I would think it stands for "KEY" hence dictionary but the question remains what have you tried and where is it not working
the most pythonic way would be the way which is least complicated for the use-case (and its potential scaling). Which, again, would depend on what your trying to do
@LinkBerest thanks for answer for my question man, but this kinda knowledge is way out of reach to me atm, I have never built a class in any programming language. This script I mentioned just sorts lists based on SQL data, and return a dictionary, nothing fancy :P
I think you might be trying to talk to @jigglypuff
I'm talking about the SOLID Principles thing you recommended
Either way: your answer is learn them or build unmaintainable spagetti code (I say this from experience: learn solid concepts, build a solid design idea, implement it - saves you massive pain later)
Hint: the biggest part is learning to properly inherent between functions (that ABC library they meantion)
@PedroSpinola For instance - I love the Python Ninja's answer on using dataclasses to track inventory items and this is something that is a base for how I build full data structures for handling (and analyzing) results from databases
@PedroSpinola No, use a class (an abstract) then inheret it and modify it when needed. A dataclass looks like a good idea for this but any class would work - using globals can lead to a lot of problems vs. proper inherentance.
^ technically at this point I would actually draw (on a whiteboard or chalkboard) the classes or data structures I think I need and then connect them where their is overlape (removing the repeated code by adding inheritance) until I come up with a good design
alright, gonna read on those, it ain't immediately obvious to me on why a class should be adopted, but after reading I'll think I have a better grasp on it all - I'm quite a begginer
Once I was a beginner too (it was Cobol and Java but same concept) and growth took a lot of struggle and work - so enjoy it. If your lucky it never stops ;)
@PedroSpinola if you wan to know from a software engineering perspective (regardless of language) why DRY is so important - there is a really good discussion on that in another stack
/me waves to @thefourtheye (been a while - I linked to your answer on caching with recursion in one of my lectures and a lot of students said it helped (just fyi :)
@JBJ That sounds like the logic of your program is a bit upside-down, according to the Liskov Substitution Principle. A parent class doesn't know about its children's methods, and it can have many children.
You might be able to call a ListWrapper method, passing a Wrapper instance to the method. But in general that kind of thing isn't safe, because the parent might not have attributes or methods that the child method expects to exist.
@JBJ I assume you're using this pywinauto. Sorry, I don't know much about Microsoft Windows, so I have little motivation to study those docs. But maybe someone else here is familiar with that API...
Still certain things - but on Saturday the restaurants, cafes and pubs were allowed to open up and stuff... but I don't think people are that optimistic it's going to last that long before some beep happens and stuff has to shutdown again...
@cs95 Fun fact: the way viruses mutate themselves into oblivion is to become too lethal. If they kill the host too quickly, then they can't replicate and spread. This is...not exactly what want we want to hope for, at least not in the short term. :-)
Were you sitting playing the board game Pandemic one day and thought - "I hate board games, they're so boring, I'm a molecular biologist - let's see if I can't make this much more exciting..." :p
I have a spritesheet with sprites of 40x30 each, and I'm trying to split it up into indivdual sprites named from 0-number_of_sprites
from PIL import Image
from os import mkdir
mkdir("assets/icons")
sheet = Image.open("assets/icons.png")
count = 0
for x in range(12):
for y in range(97):
...
I'm only familiar with debian-like linux distros where removing system python is fatal
> Do not attempt to remove any Apple-supplied system Python which are in /System/Library and /usr/bin, as this may break your whole operating system.
NOTE: The steps listed below do not affect the Apple-supplied system Python 2.7; they only remove a third-party Python framework, like those installed by python.org installers.
@Daniil from that post ^
are you sure that python is not the system python?
Python 2.7 is the default system Python on recent systems, while on 10.6.4 it was 2.6 and 2.7 was user-installed. DO NOT UNINSTALL 2.7 FROM A RECENT OS X SYSTEM. — Martijn Pieters ♦May 31 '16 at 15:08
so please elaborate on your situation
user12867493
It probably is the 2.7 version default, I really want to remove it though as it often conflicts with Python 3
If you think there is a conflict between the system python2 and any other python, seek help to fix the conflict. Do not attempt to solve it by removing python2.
@JamesMcIntyre Try DispatchEX instead of CreateObject might help speed a bit but otherwise that looks fine
There are faster ways but that doesn't mean better (all of them require more overhead to work with Windows - currently I pipe or open a Powershell instance to do this)
Yeah DispatchEX will open a new instance of the loaded word app (rather than trying to open it or trying to use the same instance first) so it is usually faster
That's brought it down to around 20s. Thanks @LinkBerest!
I don't quite get why it's so much slower than native VBA which does it in around 1s but I'm doing it in Python rather than VBA because VBA isn't robust enough and kept breaking and your DispathEX method has reduced my time by 33% which is really going to help. Thanks very much!
Cause VBA is built in to the app. VB, C#, or PS would all also be faster because the have more direct ties with the comobjects (with .Net libs) then Python does
Anybody know why this code dpaste.com/25ZD8YJ doesnt seem to work when running in the terminal? trying to set the test server for internal errors emailing through to localhost
the terminal sort of allows entering it into but after it just sort of freezes
@AndrasDeak I have i have gone into the app and forced a error and it isn't displaying any errors... the tutorial explains it will act as if receiving the email and display the 'email' in the terminal
OK, just making sure you're not trying to debug a problem that isn't there. Others who know web stuff would probably benefit from some explanation of what you're exactly doing, how you "forced an error" and from where to where emails should be sent, and what tutorial you're following etc.
@AndrasDeak well forcing the error I am basically doing the error as instructed in the mega tutorial and I have a username field set as unique and I am changing a username to a username that is already in the database
the idea is that it will send an email with the error report along with the stack trace
@Kwsswart that's a lot of things I don't know how to put together with the smtpd server thing, but as I said I don't know web stuff. I'll defer to the others who do to help you out.
This was working for me before (re my earlier messages) but randomly it's giving me this error without any code changes (I've even tried restarting my computer).
Any idea what's going on here?:
AttributeError: module 'comtypes.client' has no attribute 'DispatchEX'
@Kwsswart It won't have frozen, it will be listening on the port, no?
There's not enough info to help you. You haven't shown your configuration of your Flask app to actually make use of this server. It won't just catch your app errors by default
I don't suppose anyone knows of a happy-medium in how VSCode auto-closes HTML tags? I've found a few answers from a couple of years ago that tell me how to disable them, but I don't want that. I like the feature if I'm, say, creating a table from scratch. I hate the feature if I go back and, say, decide to bold some text. The only option seems to let it auto-complete in that case and then ctrl-z, which sucks
Maybe I can set a hotkey that is return + ctrl Z in one go, but it'd be nice if there was a plugin that handled sane behaviour
@Kwsswart It's going to be too many stabs in the dark for me, sorry. I have a lot on currently and I'm not sure I'd be giving helpful suggestions. If it's not crashing outright with a traceback that can help me pin it down, I'm stuck currently
@JamesMcIntyre Is word open? You cannot call dispatch if word is not open (or at least the Office launcher thingy running in the background <- search for "open word in background" or "keep word open in background" for the actual name of this as I forgot). That is what was causing the slowdown in your earlier code - it takes a while to open Word (if you need to open word - you would have to use your other method but make sure to open it early in the execution due to this)
@roganjosh you could probably do something with "editor.quickSuggestions" in the configuration file not sure of a specific way to do that with just html tags though
meaning you're most likely correct that a keybinding is probably as close to that "happy-medium" as your going to get for a while
@wwii Lost. Good news is, I found it again. Bad news is, I feel very stupid.
The line of code was actually unused1, unused2 = some_string.partition('.'). That's right, I wasted 3 hours hunting down a ValueError that was staring me in the face.
@LinkBerest <grumble grumble> I suspect you're right. It's those book-ends that appear round the auto-complete </div> (middle tag in screen shot) that made me think we should just be able to hit backspace, with it targeting the thing it just added.
VSCode knows what it just did. VSCode just don't care.
@ChrisP with your track record you are required to come with an MCVE when you ask for help. Have the shortest amount of code necessary to reproduce your issue, with a clear problem statement and question.
I have a flask website (on localhost for the moment) with a javascript form with multiple dynamic inputs. I need to get these input values so I can run a custom python function using them as parameters, and then return output of this function in a different page on the website. I'm not using wtf-forms, just plain js. I have never done something like this, and I can't allow users to be able to see inside the python function.
My function and my form are ready, but I didn't built connection between them yet. Is json a good way to go to extract/return data from/to website? Any advice before I start?
If you want to show the output on a different page, then all you need is a form and a submit button. The browser will send a POST request and render the response. You only need JS and JSON if you want to display the result on the same page