@roganjosh you can make game-bots with it (its not the most effective means but I've seen it)
In specific we made a version which just demolished Chrome's "No Internet Connection" T-rex run game as a fun "hour of code" project once
I've also used it for certain automation task (which I would not call "scraping") where functions did not exist in an API (or there was no API). For instance, I used to build scripts which auto-logged into aviation sites and download all the latest manuals I was going to be using for the week (within some other automation which feed a maintenance database we used for various planes & helocopters) - was very Gov based so no API
Saved a lot of time (used to have to "click->download->wait->click->download->wait" whereas this I just threaded a few processes and worked on other stuff until it was done). There were also separate manuals based on engine and other part types and all had to be downloaded too (so second round of automation).
If you look on the main feed, there's a number of questions getting repeated. Should we be flagging them? (It's obviously not the OP's fault)
I don't know how SO does a clean-up from these issues and whether it can re-sync itself and get rid of them or whether flagging is actually useful. I wouldn't be surprised if the OPs aren't aware that they post twice
Despite my inflammatory remarks, I'm reminded that I need to pick Kotlin back up. I haven't done quite so well on my "ooooo, lockdown. New tech learning" wishlist :/
I certainly haven't downvoted them because I'm aware it's not their fault. I'm just curious whether my "huh, this is borked" should be translated to a flag so that a mod can do the merge or something
@roganjosh flagging as dupes absolutely makes sense. It’s the quickest way for the community to handle these. Especially for gold badge holders. Posts by the same author Can be flagged and closed as dupes without the requirement for any answers on the dupe target.
Sorry, missed that it was deleted in the meantime.
> Search prevents double posting and since that's down, it slows down posting leading users to think it failed to post and resubmitting the question... thus causing double posting. This should fix itself once we get search back up. – Catija
guys I have been struggling to debug a problem on my script for a few hours, but I can't grasp what's going wrong. It's a very big function so it's hard to provide a MCVE but here goes some pseudocode. I hope some kind sould can help me!
if I print t both on moment #1 and moment #2, it looks different, even though there's only one line between them, where I'm editing dictionary d, not dictionary t
I'm pretty sure that code can't produce any unexpected behavior. It would require 1 more level of nesting; something like register(d, [name, 'foo', 'a', 'yes']). In that case, d[name]['foo'] and t[tName]['foo'] would be one and the same dict
Just to affirm, do import copy then d[name] = copy.deepcopy(t[tName]). You probably don't need a deepcopy here but I just wanna cover some bases to see if that gives the expected behaviour
@PedroSpinola Well, because dict1.update(dict2) registers the values of dict2 in dict1 without creating copies of them. Doing d[name].update(t[tName]) is pretty much equivalent to doing name = tName - you end up with two names for the same object.
I originally said that you probably don't need deepcopy; I just wanted to test an approach and have no ambiguous issues. It seems, if you have nested structures, that a shallow copy won't work so you may well be stuck with deepcopy
@AndrasDeak indeed I should have read that before! I thought I was getting intuitive grasp for this matter, and was indeed, but it's all clearer now :)
this page should be on all python tutorials tbh, this stuff is not intuitive imo!
btw, in the end of the article the author mentions that '“list += seq” not the same as “list = list + seq”'. It is because on first case it would be changing a value, and on second case it would be making a new attribution for name list, correct?
This stuff is not yet 100% clear to be, and I'm still afraid to commit mistakes, but it's much better now. Thanks again :D
awesome! what I don't get is why there ain't no easier way to make COPY of stuff in python. that code.deepcopy stuff should be a default python method, no?
I'm quite a beginner of course so I might be making wrong assumptions (both in programming and math), but from my experience I believe in math when you say a = b, you are making a COPY, not an assignment. Therefore if in the next line you say a=1, it won't be expected to say b value changed.
I don't think we'll be anywhere debating thing but one thing you really should know. Do you know the difference between a shallow copy and a deep copy?
@PedroSpinola some builtins don't have a .copy attribute so when you can have both a list and a tuple and want to ensure you have a copy, you can call copy.copy
Yeah I know. I'm only using deepcopy for my dict because I really need to have a 'frozen' version of it for reference while making changes to the copied version.
I don't know how to properly explain @roganjosh, it's complex. I'm building a program to make some scientific decisions so I have to make a lot of calculations aswell as qualitative differentiations on the flow of the program. I use nested dictionaries to write info from SQL, afterwards to consult this info, and later to insert or change info on it.
Probably there's a better way to do my dataflow, but I'm not aware.
God no, I'm far away from releasing a public library! As I told ya, this I'm building is a prototype for my startup.