hi everyone (again because I joined this room a few days ago) and I need help with this thing: stackoverflow.com/questions/65836344/… Making a pygame and sounds are weird
Cbg guys, I kinda stumbled upon a problem. I was creating a folder based on song album name(with python) but the name contains ':' and hence windows cant name a folder with ':' in it. So i was making a list of invalid characters but then found out that I cant include '\' in it, as \' gets flagged as an escape character. Anyway to overcome this?
Yet another barrier. Is it possible to remove all mentioned items from a list? Like using list.remove(x) only removes the first instance right?
The loop doesnt loop through the duplicate entries
invalid_char = ['/','\\','.',':','*','?','""','<','>','|'] def checker(name): x = list(name) for item in invalid_char: if item in name: x.remove(item) print(x)
print(checker('////123')) #expected '123'
Is it because item is just present once? I think looping should be avoiding and I should choose recursion?
The indentation is just messed, ugh, sorry, check this:
def checker(name):
x = list(name)
for item in invalid_char:
if item in name:
x.remove(item)
print(x)
return ''.join(x)
print(checker('////123')) # expected '123'
a quick solution would be name = name.replace(item, '') instead of x.remove
there might be faster / better options
yeah this should do return ''.join(x for x in name if x not in invalid_char) make invalid_character as set instead of list and its the best I can think of
is there a reason globals and locals are functions? calling then gives a dict so why have functions that take no args? cant they just be globals and locals?
@python_user locals produces a different dict depending on where you call it, and often has to create an entirely new one. As for globals, there's consistency and I guess the PyPy people are pretty happy that the language does not dictate how modules work.
Plus, these really are not important enough to warrant keywords.
@MisterMiyagi And globals are only global to the module whose namespace they inhabit. The closest thing to a true global namespace is __builtins__, but those who tweak that risk awakening dragons.
>>> dir()
['__annotations__', '__builtins__', '__doc__', '__loader__', '__name__', '__package__', '__spec__']
>>> __builtins__ = None
>>> dir()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not subscriptable
it's not 100% the same, e.g. it won't see the PATH changed and such. But it will use all libraries as per the venv; a well-behaved Python program should see no difference.
Directly calling the executable will not set the environment variables PATH, PYTHONHOME, PS1, and will not create the deactivate function
user13727121
1:59 PM
I have a question regarding the len() function in Python. Say that I have three elements in a list, list_1 = [11, 12, 13], and I want to loop over the elements using while loop and have them printed in three separate lines. Would it be better to give literal value like while i < 3: or should I use while i < len(list_1):
user13727121
Is the latter more appropriate to use if I have like hundreds or thousands of elements in a list?
That's the answer to X. As for Y: don't use magic numbers. Use the length of the list. If it's fixed, you can check it once before the loop.
user13727121
@MisterMiyagi no, not really, it's just for a practice to use index and while loop, I came across this example and was wondering if I should be using len() rather than giving the literal value in a list that has more elements than the one I specified.
I wholeheartedly recommend using len. Do not hardcode things unless that is your explicit intention.
If you want to learn "how nice things work", building your own listiter as a generator (or class!) wrapping around while can be rather educational.
user13727121
2:36 PM
@MisterMiyagi Understood. I always try to avoid overcomplicating things but sometimes I found myself analyzing a piece of code with no understanding of its functionality, I do that hoping I might pickup something new.
user13727121
@MisterMiyagi Might have to look that up. I think I might stick around loop lesson longer than the other lessons. It's...it confuses me a lot, frustrating even, sometimes, to understand how things work, especially when it combines with some other codes inside a loop. Also, thank you.
@Arne legacy FOSS project. I'm in the midst of transitioning -- practically rewriting -- every single test case into pytest. But at this point, it's still using unittest. Or nose2, to be exact.