try:
assert("Concurrent Log On Detected" not in r.text), "Please Logout From Web"
assert ("Login Failed" not in r.text), "Invalid User/Pass"
except AssertionError as msg:
print(msg)
exit()
How can you achieve the same target with more Pythonatic way ? as i feel that one count false
Yeah... so you'd do session = requests.Session()... then session.headers = headers then just use the sesson, eg: session.post(login_url, data=creds)...
I have heard of this term but I dont understand how it is any different from just doing a normal attribute assignment, so any instance attribute assignment is considered monkey patching?
I have a script with name find.py. I need to run 'find.py test.txt' from command line to run it with an argument file (test.txt is in the same folder). it gives WindowsError [Error 2] windows can't find the file specified for all the processes (it is a multi processed AV signature scanner tool).
Also is there a way to make such scripts an executable bundle (i have create executable packages before with py2exe, pyinstaller, cxFreeze, i can't figure out a way because how will i be supposed to pass in the file arguments to an executable)
@CoolCloud this is how tkinter decides to format the content. Most likely the { X } are used to preserve whitespace, the same way one would write " X " in Python.
though the general answer to "why is the output strange when passing a tuple as text" should probably just be "because a tuple is not text".
@CoolCloud Worth learning: The textual representation of a thing is not the thing, and many things don't have a strictly correct textual representation. Just because Python decides to represent a tuple as, say, (0, 1, 2, 3) does not mean the tuple is(0, 1, 2, 3).
@PSSolanki The usual way to do this in Unixland is to put a "shebang line" at the start of the script (typically something like #!/usr/bin/python - the path should be to the executable you want to process the file), make it executable and put it in a directory that's on your $PATH so the shell finds it. I have little idea what the best way is in Windowsland, sorry.
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη Be aware that assert can be switched off externally, without your program being able to object. Do not rely on assert/AssertionError for control flow, unless you want a program that is mysteriously broken.
An assert should never depend on external input. The purpose being that once you have asserted that the internals of your program are sound, one can switch off all assert at once to save on the now redundant sanity checks.
2 hours later…
user13415013
1:08 PM
How to check python for memory leaking problems, which arised when deploying ?
user13415013
Is there any method , Im stuck when deploying project on heroku, after successful running it says memory quota exceed killing me,
I was deploying ml application on heroku, at first glance, it worked and after all it says r15 r14,h12 errors . I tried to restart, and use tactics but it unsolving problem.
Other than that, you may want to check for cases where you mistakenly keep objects alive. Common problems are using containers such as lists for stream processing, which keeps all items alive even though you only care about the most recent ones. Using dictionaries to store auxiliary data also can keep both the data and metadata alive too long.
The weakref module can be very useful to avoid such issues.
user13415013
1:22 PM
thank you, that means, We should avoid using multiple objs and use dictionary to save them .
@nerd just to be clear: if you construct a dict of objects you will still have a reference to the objects and they will use the same amount of memory (plus a little more for the dict)
user13415013
Thank you guys, i'll be right back when problem vanishes :)
No it seems I'm the only one with the wrong time, as Google finally kicked me from waiting to join. (trying not to read too much into this...)
Unf my grocery pickup is just after when I thought the meeting would end, so since I'm off by one hour (and since I have to put groceries before camaraderie), it looks like I'll miss this event. I'll have a lightning talk or two ready for next time.
This works
((a,b),(c,d)) = [['a','b'],['c','d']]
This does not
a,b,c,d = [['a','b'],['c','d']]
I've never found an explicit explanation in the docs but I think it is
docs.python.org/3/reference/…
Anyone know some other place in the docs?
@PaulMcG - I know why they are different. I like to reference the docs in comments and answers and the section on Assignments seems the only place but it is not very explicit. I was wondering if there was something else in the docs.
@nerd inspectorG4dget and I edited the room hangout description, to clarify it's a general non-Python chat, without any formal agenda, slides etc. More just a social meetup (I also had no idea what to expect, I'd never been to one before). But if you do want to raise a Python question, just show up in the hangout and ask it. (Microphone is optional but suggested.)
From the hangout: Jon Clement's recommendation of [All of Netflix’s interactive specials, ranked by how much your choices matter](polygon.com/2020/5/13/21257711/netflix-best-interactive-shows-movies-ranked-bandersnatch-kimmy-schmidt-minecraft). Fun things to do in time of C***d.
@smci the specific use case is using a tuple as an index for a multi-dimentional numpy array to get the q value of a state + action in a q table for q-learning.
for example, current_q = q_table[discrete_state + (action,)] from sentdex's q learning tutorail
@Aran-Fey (In the case where you can't be 100% sure both arguments are in fact tuples. If they're integers or strings or objects that implement .__add__, then you get exceptions or surprises. I see this a lot in data-science code.)
@ThaddaeusMarkle FYI in pandas, we don't need to, we can use .loc[arg1, arg2] / .iloc[arg1, arg2] with multiple arguments.