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09:44
Guten Cbg
10:07
@IljaEverilä Guten Kohl!
Guten Kohl. Helmut Kohl.
10:28
Does anyone have any insight in why we are supposed to write:
with open(path) as f:
content = f.read()

instead of just content = open(path).read()?

I mean Python has reference counting so it should immediately close the file again after read is completed in the one-line-case.
I don't think the with is necessary in that particular case, but there are so many scenarios in which the with would be necessary that it's just a good idea to always use it
For example, if you ever assign the file object to a variable, you already need a with
Ok, I lied. If you assign it to a variable in the global scope or any other place where it isn't immediately garbage collected, you need a with. So instead of going through a 5-item checklist to determine whether or not you need a with, it's easier to just use it all the time
10:45
Also depending on the GC mechanics... immediately closed might not be the case - it will get colllected/closed at some point of course, but with a with, you know it'll definitely be closed at the end of the with block
@smci um.... while that's one thing they're doing wrong... the rest of the question is so wrong - I'm not sure that's a useful dupe
@Nils Because today your code might simply have an unnamed open(path).... call chained to read(), but tomorrow someone might refactor that into lines, assigning the result of the open() to an intermediate variable.
@JonClements Yeah, I didn't have the strength to wade through the rest. You could vote to close as something else if you think that's better.
11:13
@Nils also, if code like that gets executed in a loop, python will try to open a new file handle while the old one might not yet be closed. It's just an unsafe pattern that you should try to get rid of.
@Arne I doubt this if ref counting applies:
for _ in range(100):
open(something, 'a').write(something_else)
of course the example is nonsense but I would expect that it opens and closes the file every time bc we do not keep a reference to the file handle
I think that falls under what Aran mentioned about being in the global scope? if the loop is in the global scope?
I am interested in this question as well :D
@Nils well, I can't really say. I always use with when I open files, so I never run into the issues it's supposed to save you from. Did you already run into this post regarding an explanation?
11:29
@Nils But you are relying on an implementation detail. On pypi, for example, reference counting isn't used.
Even under CPython there is no absolute guarantee that the object will be reclaimed immediately after its reference count goes to zero.
And in fact the language manual is careful to make few promises about object lifetime (which is why nowadays __del__ methods are frowned upon).
@holdenweb you mean pypy?
I did, correct.
But also Jython and IronPython. Couldn't say about other implementations.
@holdenweb Think I'd already mentioned that ^^^ :p
Sorry. Before my second coffee I can tend to be an output-only device.
9
@holdenweb no worries... I appreciate the back up :)
11:44
There was a quite insightful blog post by some microsoft garbage collection developers that nicely argued that as long as you have memory, the best garbage collector does literally nothing at all.
I imagine that was in regard to releasing memory back to the OS... but that's more memory management rather than garbage collection
12:05
Ouh so the Python standard does not guarantee ref counting, thanks @holdenweb
I would argue though that ref counting is superior :D
thanks for your answers @Arne @holdenweb!
Now I think that probably PyTorchs handling of tensors would break w/o ref counting.
Imagine large tensors on the GPU not getting deleted when they are no longer used.
@JonClements Nah, it was for actual GC. The TLDR is: The goal of GC is to ensure you have free memory. No point doing any work if you already have more memory than you will need.
yup... no point freeing then reallocating... you generally keep something in the freestore that you just mark as re-use... so if you've ended up allocating and have N available, that you can re-use then you do that, but at some point (and it's a little tricky to decide when) is when N is too much and you can release some of it back to the OS
(otherwise, the mem usage can grow to the largest object you've had during run-time, so while you may never need to allocate anything additional - at some point you have to realise you should give some back)
12:29
Since that "giving back" happens at program termination anyways, for short-running program they could show such a GC was indeed pretty good.
Not that useful in general of course, since halting and stuff.
I am looking for some reading material regarding 'how to' metadata storage for text based notes... any pointers?
what do you mean by "metadata" in this case?
12:49
I mean context for personal notes...
For instance, the body of a note might be: `Python is a great language to manage notes on ideas and other stuff.`
The metadata might be: `from Jon Clements, suggested in sopython room6`
Stuff that is not the main idea, but helps understand and relate
that's not really metadata though if the term it's generally used for?
Isn't that just more a case of another column?
Yes, I agree... This is also why I am looking for some reading materials, to help me clarify my thoughts. This is a domain I don't know much about.
I was thinking of storing files withthe same name, but different extensions... but I think maybe I am trying to reinvent the wheel.
I need a bit more depth of knowledge to determine what to do.
I'd suggest not thinking about technical terms and implementations until you work it out... let's just say it ends up being "metadata" - what do you want to achieve and for what purpose?
gimme a quick mo'... need to take a call
I want to separate the core data - say a collection of ideas - from its source, relationships, circumstances, etc. so it can be searched, and manipulated without worrying about the rest.
some sort of a text based personal data/notes repository.
I am not sure it is a serious project, but at this time I want to learn a bit in that direction, and explore what the options are.
13:07
@ReblochonMasque Would your metadata have a simple, flat structure with the same well-defined fields (e.g. 'text', 'source', 'date', 'references' [dict/list of URLs], 'notes', 'cited_by' etc.), or would it have arbitrary fields and/or be nested? Seems like the difference to me between flat columns (like Jon suggests) vs. full graphical database or other arbitrarily complicated thing. (I mean, you can make it as a complicated as you want, but what's your intent? ...
... if it's searching, matching, filtering et al on sections, then flat columns should be fine. Or viewing it in some custom viewer that you write.
I did not think that through yet, but probably something like a flat structure with defined fields. The data consists of text files. I was not planning on using a database other than the os file system, and some sort of reverse index.
I was thinkingof placing the "metadata" part either at the top/bottom of the file, of adding a layer with another twin file with a different extension, then I thought that there were likely some well defined ways of doing this...
and here I am, asking the pros :)
@holdenweb "[You're] Shipping Up to Boston"...
@python learner, what happened to your run for AOC?
You were doing great, then dropped out?
13:35
That's exactly how my first AoC went as well
so... had some fun with BeautifulSoup... - turns out I had a "gotcha" with storing Tags in a set as how they hash and they do an is check and how they do == etc...
whoa! that's really unintuitive
hey puppy! is that a diamond next to your name? does that make you a diamond in the ruff? (sorry (not sorry))
@inspectorG4dget oh... they're doing a few bits with the chat system... (just styling as far as I can concern though) - try to make it more obvious mod/not etc...
they're getting there... I think it's been a long running request that it'd make it more obvious someone is a moderator if they have a diamond and in blue, but there's still the thing to sort out where not being a room owner or something - they shouldn't appear in italics or something
13:52
... unless their name is ilene, I suppose
given how easy the styling change was made - I'm a bit confused why it wasn't made ages ago
could have avoided a lot of questions about "why is your name in blue!?" kind of stuff
maybe they were looking to add this experiment to their blueper reel?
oh! how go the stremlit trials?
@inspectorG4dget haven't had time yet... probably going to be either 1) a New Year thing or 2) something I'll rediscover and go "oh... this might be worth looking at" - you know how it goes Doc :)
true. Might I recommend just throwing it at some any-project you've got going on?
indeed... just not practical right now I'm afraid
(I have a small project that's non-mission critical - I can try it out on, but for now, it has to remain a "look at later")
14:07
that's fair. FWIW, my first streamlit project was a youtube downloader
14:17
rbrb
14:49
https://stackoverflow.com/q/65342935/198633
Hi guys, is there any tool to open and edit pyc files? When I search google, all I see is decompilers.
Something like this? Could find nothing in google, and notepads spells out gibberish.
that's just a hex editor
@Aran-Fey Wow, thanks alot
@smci Not me, mate. I work from home!
15:06
@Aran-Fey But how can we edit this file?
Im trying to prepend the file with some "magic numbers" unfortunately.
It seems there is no replacing option or something.
No idea how to do that with a hex editor. I'd probably just do it with a python script
I did find a script for that online, but its just gives different errors.
@ReblochonMasque well I went till day 10 and later all the problems seemed more complex :/, I picked a concept to learn and I ended up where I am now
with open(path, 'rb') as file:
    data = file.read()

with open(path, 'wb') as file:
    file.write(b'magic numbers go here')
    file.write(data)
for some reason when I see a code I end up memorizing it in my attempts to trace it and that isn't really learning till I can know the flow
15:31
@Aran-Fey This will prepend the magic number right? What about the time stamps? Should they be written separately?
This new concept is eating my brains off xp
Time stamps? What time stamps?
user13727121
As a beginner, is it better to learn Python through GUI development or console?
@Aran-Fey The only knowledge I have off this is from here and they mentioned some kind of time stamp.
Ok, I have no idea
@CoreViSional I learned python basics and all, through GUI development, doesn't mean its what everyone can follow. It depends on your interest and your skill set. Maybe you would go better with web dev. BTW im still at a mess.
@Aran-Fey Lol, now we are in the same page xp. I think its referred as dump and not time stamps.
user13727121
15:37
I had a lecturer that taught us VB net and it was stressful as we only had a month or so to develop an electric billing system, not to mention that the whole class was new to programming. I had to learn as much as I can in a little time as a beginner and some of the codes inside my program were copy-pasted... So right now, I'm afraid that if I learn through GUI development, I'll be missing out even the basics of Python since I also need to learn about the GUI toolkit
user13727121
I'm currently learning Python through the console and created several mini projects for every lesson I've learned.
Streaming Advent of Code day 17! twitch.tv/davidism
GUI libraries come and go. Console is 4eva
is it possible to have a stream history in twitch? I would very much watch davidism's stream once I am done with what he is solving, to avoid spoilers
@python_learner I solved the first puzzle from advent of coding and later lost track and forgot about it xp.
user13727121
15:46
@CoolCloud I've also learned the basics of HTML and CSS and developed a small website as part of my assignment. Not saying that I'm not interested in becoming a web developer, but the whole designing part, I am just terrible at it, so I guess web development is out of the window for me. But, I will try to give it another shot.
the same thing happened to me only 9 days later, I still read the questions :D @CoolCloud
@CoreViSional I learned everything trough tkinter.
If you already know some language and it could be better if you can relate and learn
take some project you have already done in a language you know and reimplement in new language, so you dont spend time on logic but on syntax etc
this worked for me, YMMW
if you dont have projects and you can always try implement things like stack queue trees etc
@CoolCloud Once upon a time I wrote some code to compile Python modules into a database and import them from there. It was cool, but like so much of my stuff totally ephemeral, but I know from experience that it's possible to create importable objects. nedbatchelder.com/blog/200804/the_structure_of_pyc_files.html will be helpful.
@CoreViSional Everyone's terrible at design to start with. Refactor mercilessly!
I'm trying to get the top voters of a site:
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import requests
res = requests.get(f"https://puzzling.stackexchange.com/users?page=1&tab=voters&filter=month")
soup = BeautifulSoup(res.text, "html.parser")
info = soup.select(".user-details")
Why does it return the data for this link https://puzzling.stackexchange.com/users?tab=Reputation&filter=all instead of this link https://puzzling.stackexchange.com/users?page=1&tab=voters&filter=month?
user13727121
16:01
@CoolCloud Woah, very similar to what I learned in my web development class where I need to position, such as the button and labels, to create a comprehensive GUI. I'll be sure to try out and maybe create a simple GUI with it
All the best :D
user13727121
@python_learner I do, just, beginner projects, I'm only gonna create projects from the lessons I've learned so far, otherwise, I'll get lost using functions or methods I haven't learned when I haven't even completely understood the use of dictionaries, for example.
user13727121
@CoolCloud Thank you :D
user13727121
@python_learner wow...I haven't thought about that, that's actually a terrific idea. I was actually done with the projects I did because it was hellish, so it didn't really cross my mind while I was mindlessly searching for simple projects to do, thank you
user13727121
@CoolCloud thanks :D
16:08
@AnnZen Looks like an anti-scraping measure, it works if you send a User-Agent header
@Aran-Fey Can it be done through a python script?
requests.get(url, headers={'User-Agent': 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:83.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/83.0'})
@holdenweb Oh yes "A marshalled code object." makes it better to udnerstand.
@Aran-Fey Thank you so much!
16:24
is it possible to change the color of the default pic? I got this cool hat and that is green as well :/
I so wish that I could know the reason a secret hat was awarded to me
I visited your profile and I got that hat as well O_0
17:00
Just remove the colon on the Walrus and everything will be OK — Aven Desta 10 hours ago
if only... if only
17:13
but then The Egg Man will get lonely
@holdenweb @JonClements: this made me think of you... even though it's Australian
Guys can someone explain this syntax to me:

{c['person']: c['partner'] for c in relation_list}
I want to google that
but what is that called?
dictionary comprehension aka dict comprehension
thanks!
answer = {}
for c in relation_list:
    answer[c['person']] = c['partner']
thanks for that too :)
18:12
So it looks like you can get the Mariachi hat by getting 3 stars on a chat message. Can anybody help a brother out?
18:32
sing us a mariachi song, Matt!
♫Ai, ai, aiai, dada dum dada dum dadaaa♫
6
I just played you my harmonica, while I read that :)
online collaboration at its best
18:52
@MattDMo Rats! One star short!
@holdenweb Never fear! my oversized hubris has arrived
 
1 hour later…
19:58
poll: is it unprofessional to swear in my code? Not swear in the comments/docs of my code, but to (say) use a very specific four-letter variable name
try:
    something + something else
except Exception as yams:
    print(yams)  # though not exactly yams,
Probably. You could always creatively misspell it, though.
20:14
I did in fact check in yams... they won't know, but I will
How about swearing in a different language? You're in Canadia, use merde :)
(that's the only French swear word I know...)
c'est bon!

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