Ok, my google-foo failed. If I'd considered it in the context of pallets and not just Flask, I would have found this blog post straight away. I join Jon in applauding your efforts; thanks so much. It's the backbone of my workflow and in a few weeks I get to extol its advantages over Shiny (and new experimental Dash support) to our Data Science team
@roganjosh the answer is to use BytesIO, not StringIO. Basically, send_file could never handle text, only bytes, but due to the way WSGI works the failure resulted in an empty file with a 200 response. Now it immediately fails.
Makes sense. While I have your eyes on that problem quickly, my approach for a CSV doesn't use send_file but actually make_response. So are you saying that I should be switching to bothBytesIOandsend_file or would make_response also be appropriate for an xlsx file from memory?
I guess yours is technically fine since make_response will encode a string to bytes. But it would be more efficient to use a generator, and probably a bit more efficient to use send_file.
Just a reminder @KeithMadison, you've made no effort to interact with people trying to help with your previous issue and also didn't read the room rules about posting fresh questions. You didn't respond to your messages being moved, either. Please don't waste the room's time considering your problem if you're going to ignore feedback. Context:
Lockdown has been killer on my the last couple of days. Sleep has been bad the last couple of days, but it's out of the question right now :/
I'm hoping the fact that I'm gonna throw 5 days of holiday in the bin and that I'm active till at least 10pm every night on the company slack channel fixing problems will be taken into account when I just can't function tomorrow :)
I found out about the bubble chamber being a "thing" earlier, though. I mean, that's useful. It seems particularly ingenious considering what was in place, technologically, at the time
Is there a simple way to stop argparse from exiting if told to parse, say, ("--help",) ? Aside from subclassing the ArgumentParser class and overriding its code, that is.
@MisterMiyagi Basically I just want to verify that the output is as expected. A bit annoying to keep restarting the Python interpreter whenever the function (in which ArgumentParser is utilized) is tried with parameters that will cause error.
the problem I seem to face is "http://www.domain.com" redirects properly to https
but "http://domain.com" open up the default Ubuntu Apache configuration page
I have disabled 000-default.conf, I have set the server name for my domain in Apache, I used certbot so the lines relating converting http to https was done by the same. Any way to debug what could be causing the same.
Hey guys quick one if I had to choose between a hp envy 15 elcorteingles.es/electronica/… or a macbook 13 which is the better option bearing in mind that the hp has 16 gb ram
@Hakaishin While it might be nice to be able to work largely alone (and much of my career was spent this way) no work of any scale can take place without communication, and meetings, when efficiently run, speed things up.
I feel like screaming when a team member says "can we get back to work now?" like meetings aren't an important part of the job, and therefore (hopefully productive) work.
@holdenweb I don't get the what this means, but I guess it's something along the line of mind your own business? I mean I know the individual words, just not what it's supposed to mean
@holdenweb Ofc, I always cite my oppions in rooms/6 :D Just personal experience with meetings
As said, meetings of 3ppl great can really be usefull. Presentation also great, very usefull. Meetings of 10 people everybody going on a tangent and everybody wanting to be heard, just because they also exist, meh
I'm asking you why you believe what you stated, in an attempt to discover how well-informed the opinion might be, that's all. I know a lot of people feel the way you do.
The place I work (jobs going, by the way) manages itself using a system called holocracy. We try to be focused in all our activities, particularly in meetings.
@holdenweb Also I'm kinda involved in a larger organisation around 100ppl now, which is notorious for loving meetings and they are way too many and they are way to large. And I learned that I can just say no and nothing bad happens
If you aren't essential to the purpose of the meeting you shouldn't have been invited in the first place. This sounds like sloppy management to me.
Of course if you make some huge gaffe that you would have avoided by attending said meetings you might regret your attitude, but it doesn't sound like they're that kind of meeting :)
@holdenweb oh it is, but you know it's great for "team spirit" to have everybody in the meeting and you know we just gotta "keep everybody update, what everybody is doing". But only a few people always talk...
when I was an intern, I would be invited to all meetings just so I can get the feel of being in a team, I understood nothing of those high level discussions
@python_learner Lol in my first internship I fell asleep in the first meeting because it was so boring and my manager reprimanded me and I just thought **** off. This was so boring I could have slept 12h and drank coffee I would have fallen asleep
Haha, yeah I got layed of from that internship, because they were going trough a ruff time as a whole company. I can understand why. I was very happy to leave
The company I'm at right now is great, they let the dev team join in on meetings if they want, but 9/10 I just stay and continue working. And sometimes I present something if there is something to present. It's a really great approach to meetings
It's just a play on words, treating "co-worker" as "cow-orker". Like most of my jokes, it fails under the necessity to explain to those not blessed (burdened) with my bizarre so-called thought processes.
Sorry it seemed so outré and hard to understand. I can be a bit opaque sometimes.
I'm just trying to switch my team from "refinement meetings" to a combination of "refinement process" and "progress report meetings" to get work ready for sprints. We currently have too many meetings where people aren't paying attention because they won't be involved in the dev.
It'd be in my notes scribbled during a meeting and I'd review it the next day to see "orc cows". Somewhere I'd make a note of "build Isengard" as an action point that would be both confusing but actioned anyway because they sound pretty badass
@MisterMiyagi did you get your sleep in the end? :) I forgot to turn off notifications on my phone and slack goes wild during work hours so I'm back up
Since I went back to working more-or-less regular hours (8:00 to 16:30 give or take at the end) my sleep pattern has improved significantly. Got interested in it when I was at the stress company.
Not to throw the rule book at you, but we set out some of the aims in our rules. Basically, a less-formal medium for people to chat about python, which doesn't fit well in the Q&A format of the main site
I actually took the day off so I could relax by doing exactly what I do every day (but without having to answer pertinent questions, I guess). I normally work with Flask
I only ask because you mentioned earlier that you've mostly worked alone (which I have too) but career progression always seems to move you away from coding. I did, however, catch my boss with 4 pandas tabs open in one of our meetings where he shared the screen
Sometimes I enjoy it, sometimes I don't. We've just come through a period of fixing bugs in a system implemented by a contractor in three months. He then left before final testing, and we effectively put a prototype into production, so I've been visiting the escalation board requently and talking with customer service a lot.
Coding is much simpler!
Now we've got the worst of the bugs cleared, so for the first time this week I was able to get to Sentry, pick up a bug that manifested itself (at a low level) two months ago. The fix goes into production next Tuesday without a single customer report. That feels better - more like we're on top of things.
My (limited) personal experience has been mixed on this so far. ive seen both good and bad meetings, and i can pinpoint the ones where Im a part of the meeting for absolutely no good reason.
Where I'm at, the HR team just pulls people from a lottery and builds groups. Someone in the group then has to find time in a calendar to make a "coffee meet" (I actually only drink tea, thank you very much). It's then a 15-20 min block to just chat to people
There's another guy who just picks people at random and drops 15 min meetings in their calendar with no warning
Both of these are remarkably effective in getting things started, vs. meeting with agendas
In some way, it's better than the old way. I've met a few directors talking about how their dog is the star of the call, or something silly. Thing is, every agrees to put aside time for the unknown, I guess
I've had good experience with asking for a "mornings only" rule for all regular meetings in my groups. With that in place, I'll at least have the afternoons for coding.
Nothing drags me down more than looking at my calendar for the next day and seeing 8 hours of meetings
Yes, time management can help. Though as a manager I have to be more available, as I'm basically channelling all outside influences for the team, letting them do the executive work.
cbg , I was working with my flask app. Whenever a user provides correct "username" and "password" in the admin panel , flask should render "dashboard.html" which is in my templates folder. But instead I am redirected to /login endpoint . Actually the admin panel is loaded in /login endpoint only . But after sign in the user should be in "/dashboard" endpoint. Below is my code for "/dashboard" endpoint.
@app.route('/dashboard', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def dashboard():
if ('user' in session and session['user'] == params["admin_username"]):
return render_template("dashboard.html", params=params)
if request.method == "POST":
# redirect to the admin panel
uname = request.form.get('username')
password = request.form.get('pass')
if (uname == params["admin_username"] and password == params["admin_password"]):
# set up session variable
session['user'] = uname
Sorry the admin panel is actually loaded in /dashboard endpoint not in "/login" . And after filling the required details flask should render "dashboard.html".
By using an established library like, say, flask_login. That's the point I'm getting at. Why are you rolling your own when a) a library exists and b) you admit to not knowing about this stuff
Not knowing is fine, but surely you see that rolling your own is folly in this case?
Because the code is hacked-together and awful. I actually loved his vids when I was learning but there's plenty of problems that have come-to-light afterwards
I feel like going full-keyboard-warrior on that. The room rules don't allow me to swear but it's outrageous. Please stop watching that. Unless he's playing a long game and saying "we could do this", it's nonsense
@TanishSarmah I don't speak any other language than English :) I learned French and Latin at school but that doesn't help me much. My name is misleading
Vikas Rai vor 4 Monaten I am getting an error UnboundLocalError: local variable 'username' referenced before assignment. if anyone know how to solve plz reply
Throws me back to the days when comp.lang.python was a sensible forum. I used to look at the Microsoft forums and wonder how long it would take for c.l.py to reach the same stage.
@Hakaishin Ah, modded minecraft. I was never able to play FTB itself because my computer wasn't up to snuff, but I did enjoy quite a few of the other packs in that genre
If we're not comparing things based on timings, I don't know what else we can do. I'm reasonably sure there will be dark corners for both approaches, but I'm not sure they can be anticipated
The name escapes me. It was a skyblock map with the typical Ex Nihilo start, then opening up into thaumcraft, bees, magic flowers, that really complicated multiblock digital storage thing, and either IC2 or IC2's competitor
Since we have a few minecraft players here, how hard will it be to get a) minecraft running on a raspberry pi, and b) run a local server on another Pi (or other machine if necessary). Asking for my grandson.
An artist I admire said on one of their Youtube streams, "programming is easy, you just google your problem and copy the code you find", and I took 2d8 psychic damage
Minecraft is written in Java, in case that was a serious question
man, sarcasm and determining if something is some convoluted joke or not are soo much harder on the internet, like i'm 3 meme levels deep trying to find the joke to later realize it was a simple question :D
also I too often assume things I know is common knowledge, like I told my roommate about minecraft a few days ago and he went, minewhat? I thought he was messing with me, but he actually never heard of it, well the world is big
It depends on how you measure it. For instance en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_video_games puts Tetris at #3 because it counts each different version of Tetris separately, so only the mobile port by EA makes the list
Goals for aging: - don't gain a "kids these days >:-(" attitude - try not to freak out when I act like my parents - retain as much hair on the top of my head as possible
All of the older men in my family made it to ~70 with only a two inch diameter bald spot centered at the crown, which is one of the less embarrassing patterns IMO. The genes are in my favor.
And none of them say "kids these days". Not sure if that's inheritable.
It's OK to acknowledge that young people are idiots, as long as you also acknowledge that every previous generation were also idiots when they were young, and most of them continued to be idiots for their whole lives
Even though Linus is Swedish-speaking he's very much Finnish in that he'd just rather be at home in bathrobe by the computer and getting #pantsdrunk. Almost everything he does professionally is to make that possible.
@Kevin just remember to come to Europe proper and not that North American island or otherwise KevinScript will be something horrible...
"Lerdorf was born on Disko Island in Greenland and moved to Denmark in his early years. Lerdorf's family moved to Canada from Denmark in 1980, and later moved to King City, Ontario in 1983." Hmm, technically he's learnt all that tshi from Canada.
Ideally I'd also like free health care and a cabin whose closest neighbor is ten miles away. Sunlight during the winter is optional, I'll be on my computer either way
@TanishSarmah please follow the Flask mega tutorial. I broke my own rules by commenting on the awful vid tutorial that you've been following. I wish I could burninate it
@Kevin oh no, sorry, I made an error. You can't get a cabin whose closest neighbour is ten miles away. You'll have to settle for one where the closest neighbour is 16.09 kilometres away.
also I am not sure if you really want to have it 16 km away, because getting electricity there could be a bit tricky. You could use solar power of course... .. if only the sun were visible during winter...
@Kevin well, my appendicitis started manifesting itself on Easter Sunday, or the night before and I went to hospital in the morning and got to bed in the evening because they were having a rush there. And it wasn't free. I had to pay something like 150 € out of my pocket by invoice later on.
I tried to look up answer `imsave` of scipy depreciated now, I need more answer to this https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19764042/save-image-without-rescaling
"deprecated" pops up in google auto-complete, but you can actually type letters to search for what you want. If you are serious, you need to be specific
user13415013
Yes, other suggested to use pil and imageio, but imageio.imsave requires image to be normalized. But i want to save it unnormalized image.
I use from PIL import Image to use to convert to png , still it needs image to be normalize
user13415013
If you've got ideas to do it, please leave more answer to that question. https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19764042/save-image-without-rescaling Thank you
It's hard to take requests seriously when obvious sources of information like a web search for "scipy imsave" whose auto-complete offers to show you the replacement are ignored. Perhaps you'd like to do that search?