@PedroSpinola Yep, that is what Aran was talking about: you would need to send a POST or GET request from within your HTML/JS script to your server which contains the python script then allow that to return the output (template)
^^ you can use JS to do this but you don't need to. HTML allows for POST/GET requests using a standard form submission (this is basic HTML so if you don't know this I would look up some videos and tutorials on basic HTML and web development or you will get very lost jumping straight to using flask)
I will use direct html to post/get. Js is only to validate and create the form.
alright @LinkBerest, thanks a lot man - I'll read some more in-depth about http and https requests tomorrow before going on with the "connection" form-python script
@PedroSpinola if its only on localhost you will not need https - if you do not understand that basic architecture you need to research web development from the beginning - take this or any course or tutorial or etc... or you will be very, very lost trying to jump into flask
@CranberryJuice I don't know what you mean by "track" (I'm assuming deciding on some courses) - I use Python a lot for networking tasks. I also use a lot of scripting languages (including powershell when dealing with Win) so its not a bad choice. I used to use Perl a lot but haven't touched it for 3 years at this point
@LinkBerest I mean by learn python and perl to help boost my resume once I graduate. Like is python and perl going to help me in networking in the long run? I know python is but I've heard others say pearl is good as well
I've just been trying to decide what languages I can learn (besides bash and other CL scripting languages I know) to help in the real world(I'm 19, sophmore)
That isn’t really a reasonable question to ask. Which language you use is going to depend a lot on the specific job and the task you want to accomplish.
Rather than trying to learn languages, focus on practical tasks, using any language you want or seems appropriate. If you build some hobby projects, or even better, contribute to open source projects, that is something better for your resume than just claiming you “know” languages A, B, and C.
Oh...I just read up to see you’re focusing on “network engineering”. In that case, I guess contributing to open source software projects may be less important. Still depends a lot on what you actually want to do, though.
@LinkBerest it's only on localhost while I'm developing it, but when I finish I intend to publish it on the web. I will take a look at this course content - thanks! But you know, I don't expect to reach high quality code or web application, because I don't have knowledge or experience and I won't get enough for this project in time. I just expect to have a fully functional application: input and output for the python code, and for this script to be secure.
If we can lend a couple of clients with it I hope to get a professional and qualified dev on the team to take proper care of code, architecture and infrastructure :)
I have been coding/studying/building for 200 hours already, and I expect around 100 more before I finish. If I would aim for top quality, I'd have to go for at least 10x that, time I don't have available at all.
@PedroSpinola What I was describing was not high level - it was the basic level of understanding I would expect for anyone attempting this task. You have to know how "the web" works at a conceptual level before attempting to build anything
@CranberryJuice learning the language by itself means very little to be honest. If you want real knowledge and experience, which will help you on your resume aswell as on real interviews, go for real projects, you will learn a ton and will have fun too! Maybe you can make something useful, also.
But do I @LinkBerest ? I'm not saying I'm not gonna try and read and learn what you linked and more about requests etc, but I have a flask running with no problem atm
You do not know what a "request" is - that means you do not know how "flask" is handling communications between Python (the server) -> HTML (the UI) -> the Client and back. This is fundamental: everything else builds off of how you set up this type of communication
@CranberryJuice actually to build off what Cody said (re: open source) with networking I look for "setup print server using RasberryPI" and either a github or video link (or anything else using IoT or Server setups like this) so picking projects like that and learning the language they require (could be Scala, Python, Java, C++, etc) is a good way to go
Last 20 days I learned python, javascript, html, css, json, flask, mysql. Wayyy to go lol
@CranberryJuice If I might add to Link's and Cody's advice, learn as you go, like me. It's a lot easier to learn when you have a real project to apply theory! Maybe you even have a startup idea or something: build it! gl ;)
@CodyGray This is why I stopped using SO Jobs - the developer story is great for people who use opensource but gov guys like me (or people who code proprietary code - i.e. traditional CVs) just don't fit their model
teaching and signal processing stuff for academia; building data flows and the backend and devops systems for various data analytic applications and dashboards for the other
or that's what I was doing in my job - lately its a much broader scope due to how few people we have
nope - I build signal processing apps for research. I teach intro classes and a few upper level OOP and Data Engineering courses (okay, there's a little in one of those classes but its very low level)
..or else, should we just cv-pls as Needs clarity, since the OP doesn't give any specifics about what in the examples doesn't work according to their understanding
@smci Did you downvote it? That's the appropriate response to answers that aren't useful and/or don't help to solve the problem. (Leaving a comment is also fine, of course, as you did.)
Whether the question should be closed is an entirely different issue. Please don't take your judgments of the answer(s) and apply them to the question.
well, one of the current things we are looking at is the effect of masks on speech recognition and how the application of different filters (built by finding predicable patterns of alteration within a wave and using frequency-sweep test signals based on microphone captures) effects this - i.e. can we apply these to hearing aids/phones. I do a lot of the augmented listening and the a bit of video/audio processing for better automation for data capture
depends on the group - its mostly Python but their are still a few Matlab people (and if I have to build a full automation systems or dashboards: I tend to move towards Java/Scala for that task - though a lot of Python ends up mixed up in this)
@PedroSpinola What kind of data do you feel you will be handling?
Be aware that as soon as your site goes online, you will be targeted. Pretty much immediately. Given that you're racing through on your development, you really better not be handling any sensitive client data on a first-run. My reading of what you wrote suggests that you need clients before you can get professional assistance with your site. That could be a recipe for disaster
Indeed. Just saw a homework question that still had "Can you draw all possible states [...] on a sheet of paper?" in it. Thanks for helping up help you, respected question asker. :/
The OP wasn't even a new member, they're close to 10k rep.
@MisterMiyagi FWIW, there's a guy whose been a member for almost 11 years, with over 50k rep and 117 gold badges. He has no (undeleted) answers & has asked over 1200 questions. You'd think by now he'd be an expert, but he still asks spoon-feeding / cargo-cult stuff.
@MisterMiyagi I agree. I don't get any satisfaction from spoon-feeding people like that. And it's kinda scary that there are professional coders like that.
But to be fair, I guess it can be hard to find a dupe for that if you don't understand what's causing the problem. OTOH, it sounds like he's doing a coding challenge... and probably didn't even think of running his code on his own test data.
@IvoMerchiers it gets called if the while loop exits regularly because its condition isn't fulfilled any more. An irregular exit would be if there was a break at some point, and that's why the loop exits.
It actually wasn't open at the time... in fact I think I closed it just before it stopped working in the task manager due to the program crashing and locking one of the word documents.
However, while I've found that running CreateObject('Word.Application') creates a new backround Word process in task manager - DispatchEX('Word.Application') still results in "AttributeError: module 'comtypes.client' has no attribute 'DispatchEX'".
It's really weird and I don't understand it as it was working great before.
@IvoMerchiers Sorry for the confusion. I was just being silly. That while from isn't part of the code, it just got included into the code block by accident.
@LinkBerest I actually had done but at that stage I still didn't have word open in the background.
I've just tried win32com.client.DispatchEx with Word in the background and my previous optimisation of having the create instance before the loop and close instance after and now the PDFs are creating in under a second each!
You are a saint @LinkBerest
To ensure that word is open in the background would you run StartWord = comtypes.client.CreateObject('Word.Application') at the start and StartWord.Quit() at the end?
user13036845
Hello everyone! I'm new in the chatroom. And was wondering if someone here knows pygame.
@BruceBanner Hello :) Please take some time to read our room rules regarding posting code
Specifically, if you have big blocks of code, they should be hosted off-site and linked here so they don't disrupt other conversations. That said, have you made sure that you have an MCVE that people might be able to help with?
ctrl + k is the normal way to block-format, but it won't work if you mix plaintext with the bit you want to format. We have a guide for that (it's in the top right of the room)
I'm moving that in the meantime since you double-pinged and it's missing indentation. Please practice in the sandbox (linked in the guide) and re-post when you've fixed it
@LinkBerest @LinkBerest I think that is effectivly the same as what I've got. What I'm worried about is if Word happens to not be open in the backround when at some point in the future when the automation is due to start. Should I insert StartWord = comtypes.client.CreateObject('Word.Application') in before the start of my code to ensure that Word is open in the backround?
import os
import comtypes.client
import win32com.client
wdFormatPDF = 17
word = win32com.client.DispatchEx('Word.Application')
for line in VDDs:
doc = word.Documents.Open(os.getcwd() + "/PDFs/" + str(line[13]) + ".docx")
doc.SaveAs(os.getcwd() + "/PDFs/" + str(line[13]) + ".pdf", FileFormat=wdFormatPDF)
doc.Close()
os.remove("PDFs/" + str(line[13]) + ".docx")
word.Quit()
@MisterMiyagi - should I just delete my answer and vote to close the question since it is not very clear what the OP wants? - stackoverflow.com/questions/62760241/…
@wwii I'm in no position to tell you what to do. As said, I don't get the question (cv'd myself) – if it's the same for you, cv it. Your answer is not wrong, and given the obscure question it might just be right.
Ok. Please note that this isn't a personal chat, so you can gather your responses up into single posts, not one per sentence. But, good luck :) There's a few of us in this room that work with web if you're unsure
yeah, I'll be learning a lot the next few days - my challenge is to find suitable resources for someone in my position, which is not an easy task as most of them are written for badass devs and students who dedicate most of their life (or work/school-life) to such endeavours, like probably yourself and most devs :P
I have deep respect to passionate people who dedicate to specific fields of thought/practice. Particularly in sciences and arts. But it's a tradeoff you know :P
Yeah rogan that's what I've been reading and following to build my application, and it's awesome. But he's using wtforms and because I wasn't able to achieve what I needed with it I went with javascript for the forms. Or I would just follow on :P
My friend in Australia sent me this news article. I wonder if we can make a new Indiana Jones film from it? Speeding wagon, deadly snake, improvised weapons... it has all the pieces :)
@roganjosh I can't help but feel their reasoning is backwards. Injecting a meaningless default which hides future errors seems to be the path "asking for future problems".
They seem to be aware of this via their colleague, though? If you think it can be objectively answered then I will consider re-voting but I'm not sure I'm convinced it's useful
I've seen this reasoning come up often, usually by people not used to the liberal exception throwing of Python. I see some merit in making an argument, but I'm not sure whether I'm objective.
Hm, on second thought I think there are two cases, each of which can be answered objectively. Basically, do they have a valid default or not?
I'd assume just the cases "has a useful default" and "does not have a useful default". Whichever is the case for the problem at hand is their problem. :P
@MisterMiyagi snap :) In which case, I'm not too fussed that it remains closed tbh, even if the reason might not be the best (in the end, we're still building up the narrative for them and debating it)
@Kwsswart Because they mainly work when you need a full page refresh, resetting the fields. If you don't refresh the page, then you have to slightly-hackily clear the fields for the next input.
@Kwsswart Not to mention when I want dynamic dropdowns based on the selection from another dropdown. Then they just get in my way tbh. It, of course, can be done, but I seriously start questioning why I'm even bothering. The validators are nice for validating emails in sigh-up forms, I guess
@Kwsswart It won't, and you should keep in mind that I generally build dashboards rather than traditional sites where you just submit forms and have done with it, so my view is perhaps skewed
@roganjosh If/when I pick up some real js/HTML5, I'm interested in extending wtf or flask-wtf to improve some of HTML5's features, I wonder if some hooks could be incorporated to do what you're talking about?
@toonarmycaptain Ajax is jQuery, not vanilla JS, so I'm not sure it's influenced by HTML5. Do you have any specific ideas on what you're suggesting? I'm not sure I follow properly
@Kwsswart I'm half way through ripping my own website apart. The front-end code is awful (and the site looks drab). I initially just intended to give it a face-lift, but no, I'm not letting that code pass :) I hope to have it done by the end of the week, and I intend to github a lot of it. I'll ping you then
@roganjosh Unless I misunderstand, HTML5 has more form field features/ability to restrict input than previous versions (I haven't touched this for a few months). I'd like to try to implement some of them, probably plus some simple js features, in wtforms. I'd naiively presume that some of that reset fields js sort of stuff could have hooks implemented at the same time.
@Kwsswart in that case, in the meantime, I threw something together in my last answer. Note; I was just trying to connect dots for the OP to make a stand-alone program - it has no form validation and isn't great code. But you can copy/paste it and run it to see
@toonarmycaptain I know that it can do some front-end validation. I'd have to dig quite a bit into the flask-wtf codebase to see applications. That's not to say that it can't be done; I ditched the library relatively early-on
@toonarmycaptain we have a lot of problems with injection when we try to use frontend validation even with HTML5 (though I do use it - just don't rely on it)