@AndrasDeak Yeah, so basically the solution was to manually create the union in the __init__.py. Every day we stray further from Guido van Rossum's light.
@NordineLotfi I can see why that got downvoted. It's not clear at all what you're asking. You seem to be asking "How do I implement <thing>, because I couldn't find a python implementation?". Normally you look up the algorithm. If that fails you might try looking at some implementation, trying to figure out what that does. But that's a lot more difficult and error-prone usually.
@AndrasDeak but there not even a single working implementation, i searched before i asked!
the only one that exist publicly is made in netrexx, but it seems to not work for some reason
I do understand, like half of it, but can't wrap my head around the letters used in the spec
and afaik, no one made any implementation of that encoding on github either...at least the search result didn't come up with anything (tried many keywords)
the one i looked at (for Chen-Ho) yes, it did. But as i said previously, i only understood like half of it, but didn't understand *the rest* _because_ of the letters used.
eg: I can't seem to imagine what the output would look like on an example string like 23456 etc
OK, looking at the wiki page this seems straightforward enough
(Assumptions follow.) The boldface letters are placeholders for "any binary digit". The ones and zeros are fixed, slicing out a subdomain in the binary pattern.
>>> print >>output, "wello horld"
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for >>: 'builtin_function_or_method' and 'str'. Did you mean "print(<message>, file=<output_stream>)"?
@CoolCloud Right, the programmer in this case are you. If you want to catch and handle the error, raise it. If you want to tell the user that something went wrong, print it.
You might get extra marks by offering the option to print debugging information, in a way that clearly explains the user probably doesn't need it unless they are a developer? Or perhaps condition the debugging information on some DEBUG flag that the regular users wouldn't set.
Maybe check out multi-tier architecture. The idea is to separate the code into one part that's responsible for the business logic, one part that's responsible for the user interface, etc
I need a bit of help with python. i'm trying to read some image data in order to generate a pallet for it in the form of a dictionary, i'm trying to remove all duplicates of colors in it expect one. But i seem to get an error.
`RuntimeError: dictionary changed size during iteration`
You should describe your goal, because it seems that you're creating random 8-character names for your colors and praying that no duplicate name is ever created
dont modify containers while iterating over them. a dictionary already has unique keys, so your requirement isnt very clear to me from your statement
but if you meant to say, no duplicate values, but you dont care about the total number of items in the dict, then you could always simply create your dict, then create a reverse of this dict (aka values become keys, keys become values) That operation will get rid of value-dupes.
@ParitoshSingh that's the problem, the keys are randomly generated... so if you generate a duplicate, you end up overwriting something you shouldn't have overwritten...
So what do you need this dict for? Why do you need to map each color to a meaningless key?
If you've written a daemon process in Python, you might want to process the HUP signal and interpret it as "re-read your configuration file and continue operations." That's a fairly common requirement.
[daemon = run\s in background, detached from any console].
ok cool, thanks. I've used atexit before in Python, but didn't realise that it's like a wrapper around catching the KeyboardInterrupt exception raised by a sigint signal.
See if the example towards the bottom makes sense.
The usual strategy is to have your signal handler set a flag that the other logic examines periodically.
@Alper Between seven and nine, normally—thought I don't stop thinking about work just because I step away from my desk, so I allow some of that as working time too. Why do you ask?
Note: The functions registered via this module are not called when the program is killed by a signal not handled by Python, when a Python fatal internal error is detected, or when os._exit() is called.
about atexit, so it can't be used to handle sigint?
Asking you because you are very experienced and you are from the USA(guessing). I think America is highly competitive(guessing). I don't think I work very efficiently more than 3-4 hours a day.
As I said, you're on the wrong track. atexit is used to register functions that will be called when your program terminates, to allow you to (e.g.) release operating system resources and so on. Simiarly, you register a signal handler (a function to be run when a specific signal is raised). But Python doesn't handle all signals, so the docs are warning you there's nothing you can do about those.
jupytext.paired_paths.InconsistentPath: '/var/lib/jenkins-slave/workspace/10098-detaiku/CICD_for_Bundles/dev/DSS_Infra_Jobs/TEST_FOR_YONI/CI/Fixed_Zip/' is not a notebook
Does anyone know how to do this: re.findall('\w\n' * 5, string), but without the * operator? I mean like how to use a regex pattern to multiply the \w\n pattern a number of times. Thanks!
@jigglypuff The fact that CTRL/C raises KeyboardInterruptError is because Python does handle that signal. Whether your signal handler would override the standard one is beyond my knowledge. You do NOT need to use atexit to catch CTRL/C. Simply try ... except KeyboardInterruptError: ... at the appropriate point in your logic.
It seems you still mistake the purpose of atexit, whose registered functions get called whenever the program terminates - even if it calls sys.exit, or simply drops off the end of its logic.
@Nagendra_databee please don't ask for help here with fresh questions on the main site as per our rules. You asked that 7 minutes ago. Maybe wait a bit more to see if you get answers on the main site.
Depends on who's asking, I'd say. Ultimately, code that isn't working isn't adding anything useful to a Q&A pair. So if you trust the OP to have done their homework, they don't necessarily need to include their failed attempts
@python_user that much upvote on SO sounds weird yeah. Even with decent question and failed attempt, i always see either 0 upvote or 1 rarely. (unless the question somehow get high traffic)
@MisterMiyagi I kind of hate working with json, especially when trying to scrap specific sites, and they end up changing the json syntax slightly every 1 week or so
@MisterMiyagi well... often times I receive files that are JSON - they're not... and it's a bug in their export system they're not in control of... so just have to live with it
I finally have a hypothesis why I prefer " over '. I think it's because I use a swiss german keyboard layout and the ' key is more awkward to press then the " key. Can other german keyboard users confirm this preference? Because universally I see people prefer ' instead of " and I wonder why that is
I would like them to include this question, like which do you prefer and why in the next SO dev survey, it will be like the spaces vs tabs wars just for zoomers
Well... in some languages they're completely different things and not interchangeable anyway... C's ' is only for single characters... and in PHP - they affect if a string gets interpolated or not
Ugh Ros got all the style guidelines wrong for python and some for C++. CamelCase whaaat. Hanging intendation how ugly, line length 100, and single quotes over double quotes, meh :D
@NordineLotfi ofc, but that seems less common the @Aran-Fey case
can anyone let me know how to run python exe or py file uploaded on google drive
actually i want to make user to run python script that will be uploaded on my google drive from any py file that i will share them. actually i dont want to give my that py script to users that is uploaded on my drive
@AndrasDeak You meant "should not use them," naturally.
@Hakaishin There's only one black.Do what black does, kids - better still, integrate black into your commit hooks to program as you like and still use formatting standards.
@Aran-Fey JSON has a lot of variants which are not exactly valid JSON. For e.g. JSON doesn't allow trailing commas nor comments, but both of these variants are supported by a wide variety of parsers. Programs which use JSON for configuring settings often support both of these since lines may be added/deleted at will, leading to potential hanging commas as well as sometimes needing inline docs/explanations
For e.g., my project local .vscode/settings.json supports both and the filetype detected for syntax highlighting is "JSON with Comments"