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00:06
I need some guidance regarding code reuse for sync/async code. I have a snippet of synchronous code, which calls 2 synchronous functions. I need the same thing again but with 2 asynchronous functions. I can't seem to think of a way to do that without duplicating a lot of code. Is there any way to reuse the code? Demo:
class Synchronous:
    def make_request(self):
        for _ in range(max_retries):
            try:
                return requests.get(some_url)
            except:
                time.sleep(a_while)

class Asynchronous:
    ... # the same thing again, but in async: `await aiohttp.get(some_url)` and `await asyncio.sleep(a_while)`
There's some more logic in that loop which I omitted for brevity, so I'd really like to avoid copying the whole thing just to swap out 2 functions and add 2 await keywords
What's the Python Flask equivalent of JavaScript's $(".classname").text(variable_containing_text)?
I don't think there's an equivalent, because javascript operates on a HTML document and flask creates the HTML document
What do you do when already have the .html file then?
You put a placeholder in your template HTML file
Don't ask me for details because I don't know flask
But flask comes with jinja for templating
I'll ask only two: do you mean a placeholder, empty, element? And by template HTML file, what do you mean there?
00:13
It's chapter 2 in this tutorial: blog.miguelgrinberg.com/post/…
 
5 hours later…
05:33
@Aran-Fey There isn't much you can do. I know there are some major libraries that handle this via hand-crafted async code that has its await etc removed/replaced by a preprocessor to generate the sync code.
In general, as soon as your logic mixes several effects (here: sleep and get) the chance of re-use plummets, because you cannot factor out the async/effect parts.
 
1 hour later…
06:53
That sucks :/
 
2 hours later…
08:33
@Aran-Fey NB: Separate sync/async variants are generally fine if there are only a few, effect-full functions like this. Most code should follow a sans-IO design and e.g just return handler.make_request() with some outer code knowing whether this needs sync or async treatment.
If most of the code is effect-full, I'd just go for making everything async.
08:58
@Code-Apprentice from what I've heard you can't be too pushy to a recruiter
 
2 hours later…
10:34
Cabbage. I see a lot of C code with constants listed near the beginning of a file. Although there are formally no constants in python, I am used to defining them just ahead of the local scope. Is there a consensus on pythonic style - should I be listing my definitions of constants separately from their instances at the beginning of a script?
> Imports are always put at the top of the file, just after any module comments and docstrings, and before module globals and constants.
From PEP 8
Ah, also python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#constants but that only mentions scope
oh wow, I missed that! @AndrasDeak
Well PEP 8 is long, I had to search it for "constant" :)
I only read under the heading, sorry
No worries. And it's still not 100% specific. But for what it's worth I usually see constants at the top
10:42
thank you
11:25
Is there any way to get help for example "sort_values" from pandas? For example help(sort_values) ?
@MLEN doing exactly that?
just with pd.sort_values unless you imported the name directly
@AndrasDeak @MisterMiyagi Doing a intro course on Datacamp and wanted to open the help file, but help(pd.sort_values) returns "module 'pandas' has no attribute 'sort_values'
@MLEN and does pd.sort_values otherwise exist? I doubt it
If you have a function/method that actually exists you can look at its docstring with help()
@MLEN help(pd.DataFrame.sort_values) should work.
Python cannot guess which sort_values you mean.
11:38
Thanks guys, I think the issue is with Datacamp then
@MLEN Did help(pd.DataFrame.sort_values) work?
11:56
It does, thanks!
Ok, async is driving me crazy. Is there any way to write a function that supports both synchronous as well as asynchronous objects? Something like this, where session could be either a requests.Session or an aiohttp.ClientSession:
def make_two_http_requests(session):
    session.post('foo')
    return session.get('bar')
If this isn't possible then I have to copy/paste roughly 50% of my library just so I can sprinkle in some async and await keywords :/
Hey Aran, how's the weather? It's such a lovely day, don't sit on the computer all day long. shifty eyes
Too obvious? :/
Yes :P The weather is nice, though. Nice for programming, that is
How crazy would it be to check if the function returned an awaitable, and if so, call asyncio.run on it?
12:08
I could offer some helpers to make it always async even when it's not. That's probably not what you are looking for, though.
I might end up doing that, but as of now I'm not yet desperate enough
Have you considered just using gevent instead?
I don't know what that is, but I don't think it would help - parts of my code depend on a library that's written with async functions
Good morning
13:08
@Aran-Fey from context, probably jquery for python
13:25
New crazy idea: A function decorator that automatically calls asyncio.run on the return value if no event loop is running. dpaste.com/86GQNJYWE Will I regret this, yes or maybe?
13:36
I think it'll work but defeat the point of having async if you use it too much – this may seriously slow down things.
Hm, I think the check won't work if you have an async function calling a sync function that calls demo.
@Aran-Fey those @ characters look atrocious
ha, they really do
@MisterMiyagi Dang, you're right
Time to find a new programming language
Hm, as far as I can tell not even greenlet will save you. There is just no way to suspend an arbitrary function unless it is explicitly cooperative in some way.
Yeah, looks like I don't have a choice but make everything async
13:57
Welcome to Hell async!
There's not even cookies! D:
That's ok, I have my own cookies. I'm making a lot of http requests
 
1 hour later…
15:05
Force functions to be cooperative by injecting yield statements into their bytecode
15:16
Hm, at a glance the disassembly of def foo(a, b): return a + b and async def foo(a, b): return a + b looks exactly the same.
@Kevin "Uncooperative cooperative concurrency"?
Volunteering is mandatory
I'm surprised the disassembly is the same. Or rather, I figured the function body was the same, but I thought the MAKE_FUNCTION code would be replaced with MAKE_COROUTINE or something.
co_flags indicates whether a code object is a coroutine/async/whatever. I guess that information is established somewhere other than the bytecode that dis shows.
Probably during construction of consts
15:40
compute_code_flags sets the CO_COROUTINE flag, and this is called by makecode, and the flags are passed to PyCode_NewWithPosOnlyArgs
I would investigate into how the syntax tree object decides its value for ste_coroutine, but I've depleted my MP for the day
I wager 1 quatloo on if (tree.contains(AsyncDef)){ste_coroutine=true;}
The AST at least stores AsyncFunctionDef versus FunctionDef.
Hello
I can't install Chatterbot module. I tried almost everything for 2 days. dpaste.com/A3ES68ZJS Here is the exception in cmd
I also tried installing the module using wheel file
15:59
"error: [WinError 2] The system cannot find the file specified msvc" looks important.
I suspect this means you don't have the microsoft visual C++ compiler installed
wiki.python.org/moin/WindowsCompilers gives a gratuitous amount of detail about this problem
If you're using a recent version of Python (3.5 and up), try installing Build Tools for Visual Studio 2019
(Visual Studio not required)
I get another exception on Visual Studio C++ Tools
Just a sec. Let me post it on dpaste
"fatal error LNK1112: module machine type 'x64' conflicts with target machine type 'x86'" looks important.
I don't have a convenient solution for this one
x64 and x86 are assembly instruction sets used by different processors. You typically can't run an x64 executable on an x86 processor and vice versa.
Compilers typically let you choose what instruction set you want to compile to. Seems like something's using the wrong set here.
It looks like cymem is the one that's failing to build. Try downloading and installing the appropriate pre-built cymem wheel from lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs.
Incidentally pip install cymem fails on my machine too, but with a different error. My compiler is probably out of date.
16:43
Thats not the case i guess
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\BuildTools>pip install cymem

Requirement already satisfied: cymem in c:\users\rootadmin\appdata\local\program
s\python\python38\lib\site-packages (2.0.3)
The error is occuring on spacy. If I try to install it seperately, the error occurs
 
1 hour later…
17:56
I did it... I finally did it (except I.E. guys. Soz to them). 4 hours of getting my head around Bootstrap's grid system after winging it until now. I vow never to change my frontend from this day forward.
👍
18:41
what's the proper response for a post like this?
when people wonder why they don't get X% accuracy
18:56
@NicolasGervais those kind of questions don't make a good fit for SO and you see it playing out in the comments. FWIW I don't know why you were downvoted, though
19:14
@roganjosh it's because my answer didn't provide a better accuracy after 20 epochs. OP downvoted me, and he did for the last 3 of his questions I answered too.
I think you know the answer to your question, then :) Vote to close as too broad
How to remove all breakpoints in PyCharm?
I tried ctrl + shift + f8 but it just opens up a window doesnt delete anything
Even if we take the question on face-value, and ignore the meta data of past experience, it's still a reasonable course of action for those questions IMO
@NicolasGervais for future ref, we have a cv-pls policy that you can use for such questions
how do I write it? [tag: cv_pls]
You can also edit comments for up to 2 minutes :) use the dropdown on the left of comments
[tag:cv-pls] (note hyphen, not underscore and no space (not sure if the last bit is relevant)). Also, without the backticks that I added
stackoverflow.com/q/63041419/4799172 needs debugging details (separate question from the above)
20:29
@NicolasGervais that's 3 more questions than what I would have answered for that user
 
2 hours later…
22:02
For pandas people:
@roganjosh Yeah I'd use a decorator if I was writing my own class, but right now I'm just trying to monkey patch a DataFrame's methods so it tells me what dunder methods run when I modify it. Then I can monkey patch those dunder methods to print a statement notifying the user when it's modified. I know all this monkey patching seems very dirty but if you have another solution to my first question I welcome it! — Esostack 2 mins ago
See also their previous question. Maybe it's not confined to just pandas; I don't think this is realistically possible
Is it? :P
22:26
Could certainly be possible, depends if the relevant part of the code is written in C. If it's all python, monkeypatching all dundermethods is easy
There's one-fell-swoop for the dunders?
Welcome @Esostack :)
Hi! Didn't know there was an SO chatroom, cool
Well I mean, all you need to do is check which methods the class implements with dir() and then replace all of them in a loop
That's what I've been working on. I ran into an issue though where it appears some methods / index access doesn't call any dunders at all

```Python
from collections import OrderedDict
import types
obj = OrderedDict({'a': 5})
def track_methods(obj):
tracked_methods = []
for attr_name in obj.__dir__():
attr = getattr(obj, attr_name)
if isinstance(attr, types.MethodType) or isinstance(attr, types.MethodWrapperType):
tracked_methods.append(attr_name)

def tracked_method(*args, _attr_name=attr_name, _attr=attr, **kwargs):
Doing it with an OrderedDict first before attempting on a DataFrame since I figured it'd be simpler
Oh code blocks don't work here, it's this pastebin.com/ug1neUhr
22:41
Dundermethods must be defined on the class, adding them to an instance has no effect
ten thousand dundering typhoons
@Esostack twas me that dropped you into the room, so I should explain that your triple backticks have no power here. We have a formatting guide (and also some room rules - not that you've broken any btw)
So if I take a DataFrame and monkeypatch it to print("something") whenever it's modified, I'd have to monkeypatch the whole class and that behavior would happen on every DataFrame. It's not possible to get that behavior on only a single already existing DataFrame?
nope
assuming we're still talking about dundermethods and not other methods
actually, it may be possible with some gross shenanigans by reassigning the object's __class__
like df.__class__ = MyCustomDataframeClass, essentially
22:53
Oh good idea, I like gross shenanigans
I don't want to think about what a project that uses that ^^ would eventually look like
then again.....probably the same level of ugly that I see in all pandas projects ;)
And you call yourself a Data Scientist?! <ducks/>
I DO!!!.... not >.<
It's the same project where I had to make use of this monstrosity :)
https://stackoverflow.com/a/57436077/3620725

(this if you're curious https://github.com/adamerose)
Data Engineer, if you please :P ;)
22:56
:P
or Professor - depends on which hat I'm wearing
@Esostack aha, so the latter link takes me back to what I was trying to say on the first question
Data Scientist sounds like someone who studies data. Data Engineer sounds like someone who makes data up :P
6
It doesn't make sense that you'll accommodate meddling from outside. It either goes through your interface or, frankly, screw them
or you want a console like Spyder with some convoluted, shared namespace
Well my GUI takes existing DataFrame instances and then displays them, and I want it to update if they make changes to it in iPython, I think any way of doing that is gonna get pretty dirty
I could put the DataFrame in a wrapper so changes made to it within one part of the GUI can trigger an updates elsewhere in the GUI, but detecting changes made from iPython wouldn't work since they're not using a wrapper
23:02
dataframes are esoteric. The way you communicated it (or, how I read it) is that you want some shared memory
What problem are you trying to solve?
(I'm still at the point of feeling correct that Spyder does all this, and it's bitten me in the backside a few times)
Just what I said above. It's a GUI for display a DataFrame and viz of it - and being able to modify a DataFrame in iPython while watching the GUI reflect your changes would be neat

Spyder and PyCharm have iPython dataframe displays, but mine sucks less :)
Jokes aside, Spyder is pretty mature at this point. Do you understand how that library does it?
@Esostack that sounds interesting but you will end up running the risk of trying to build MS Excel
@roganjosh TBH I use PyCharm more than Spyder, and it just shows
@Dodge That's basically the goal, viewing DataFrames inside an Excel-like GUI without ever leaving Python. I've got that pretty much done, recent work has just been minor improvements and adding plotting and stuff
oops hit enter - was going to say Pycharm just shows the DataFrame in a popup window like this https://www.screencast.com/t/7g25bKUEF

My package is same thing but better and IDE agnostic
@Aran-Fey the technical term for someone who makes data up is a statistician ;)
@Esostack pass them as json or similar format (I use SQLite a lot) then display/process
^ as just an I've built these type of systems and this will save a lot of heartache note
23:13
Why pass JSON? I'm already passing DataFrame objects and displaying them successfully
@Esostack you can edit/delete messages for 2 minutes in chat
Oh really? I don't see any button for it
Nvm found it, ty
I'm gonna rewind a bit, and go in a different direction
Or if your trying to make something more complicated then that (with sharable dataframes) - it sounds like your trying to make something like Spark
I test a lot of stuff in SQLite because I can fire up SQLite Browser and see stuff in spreadhsheet form
23:17
@Esostack then it would be my second comment (JSON just used a lot for sharing data because its easy to process - if its formatted correctly which is never assured)
@roganjosh I love that tool :)
In which case, I can see a market for what's being suggested. I just think it's horrendously difficult to do
Basically what I want is for my GUI to automatically reflect the result of the dropna()
https://www.screencast.com/t/nnfHxgjnzg

I don't think it's a hugely important feature, especially since most people don't like doing in-place modifications during EDA, but it would be a slight improvement still
It partially detects the change, thats y the 3rd row index number is blank, but in other respects it doesn't update - there's still a 3rd row. I need to trigger a re-render
Anyways I gotta go shopping, thanks for the talk! I'll tag you if I come to a solution
@LinkBerest My understanding of what Eso is saying is that it's similar, but for dfs
Yeah, I'm checking up on the transcript - it would be a cool tool but very difficult to build (esp. with Qt)
Yeah, I don't think the advice has been unrealistic :)
23:22
I use Spark Dataframes more than pandas lately and trying to imagine building a GUI for those is making my mind bend a little
There are so many good and free tools for viewing and interacting with data, I don't understand the value of this honestly (other than the fun of learning and building). If it is all about sharing items in memory to instantly see row updates rather than writing from python and reading in libre or excel it's not worth it IMO
I mean, I've seen a few of these but they usually focus on workflows over the data itself (the project reminds me of databrick-style notebooks which are pretty useful). Especially when you have mixed media dataframes (like text, images, videos, etc...)
@Dodge surely you're not suggesting microsoft office as an appropriate means of data visualization or database access :P
for instance looking at rows to see if the NAs are gone is sub optimal, call len on the df or test for the presence of remaining na values, don't look at your data like that. You will eventually get to the point where looking at rows has no utility at all as your data volume grows
@AndrasDeak shivers, I mentioned libre office
that's actually beside my point for once :D
office is on the more decent side of software that ms makes, assuming you use it for its intended purpose
23:32
Ah, plus it is available as a web app so you can stay on Ubuntu, great for folks like myself
Tadaa, Devil's Advocate! Every office has a Terry or a Susan that can barely use Excel, but needs to skill-up. And another generation behind them. Since I still rely on spreadsheet-like tools of SQL, is it unreasonable that people won't want better df tools?
People don't want what they need. It's not like "Hey people, do you want electricity? Want me to invent it for you?". It's up to the tool providers to provide awesome tools that Terry or Susan can realize they can use much more easily and better
people don't like change
^ overcoming that (there's a Software Lifecycle term for this but mind's a blank) can be a huge hurtle
A kind of wetware-level vendor lock-in perhaps
@AndrasDeak disagree. Once you have some buy-in, you'd be surprised what people want
23:45
OK, don't always want what they need.
more specifically, "people don't want better tools" is not a good reason not to have better tools
That's not a counter-argument to what I was trying to say. Let me review
double negatives can be confusing
@roganjosh It in not unreasonable at all, my main point was that it will take a long time build excel and it might not be necessary. I applaud anyone who does what Esostack is trying to do, just would not do that myself.
27 mins ago, by roganjosh
Yeah, I don't think the advice has been unrealistic :)
But I think we might be a bit too quick to shoot it down
so not unreasonable to want but unreasonable to expect many others will want, not that anyone said anything about what others want
23:51
I thought we didn't care about others these days :P
What? ... No. I stand to make millions by being the obvious business partner in pursuing this. Of course I care.
(about others)

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