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01:10
So, have a large code base that has a double free leading to a python segfault (ref count error), code base has a few manual del my_variables. Whats the quickest way to track down the segfaulting line. segfault happens on last garbage collection...
 
2 hours later…
03:16
@Mikhail I have no idea from any gc/segfault expertise, but if there's just a few dels, I'd just put print statements before them, and see which gets printed before the segfault.
 
1 hour later…
04:17
I have asked this before, but can you tell me if using re here can escape the eval issue? github.com/Robin-Yadav/python_projects/blob/…
Line 39-46 basically
04:30
Try the input 3***1+2
@metatoaster It is not a valid input anyway
The regex passed
Hmmmm yes, it is something to take look into.
your first reaction to your gut reaction "it is not a valid input anyway" is to assume the worst, because what if your program accepted it?
Isnt my program per se, but I get what you mean. What about use of other stuff, like __import__, etc
04:40
but honestly, if you are building this calculator as a learning project, using eval in this case doesn't teach you how to process some expression into instructions
your GUI effectively firewalls the input to only the button input, it's a toy project so who cares really, but the point to never use this in real programs (and my previous note) still stands
@metatoaster Yea I get it, thanks :)
@CoolCloud You're welcome. If you actually want to learn how parsing a math equation might be done you might want to look at lexers - sly appears to becoming a nicer library compared to its predecessor ply, and I might suggest looking at the example writing a lexer then follow by writing a parser
this same technique is the foundation to building compilers for programming languages
naturally, this is not the only way, there are other methods out there, but that library and the fairly simple technique makes this topic quite approachable for beginners
@metatoaster Oh I did not know that, Ill take a look then :)
 
1 hour later…
06:08
@toonarmycaptain yeah so narrowed it down to a module, but it would be cool if there was a way to narrow it down to a specific object or class
@Mikhail You can't put print statements print('module x deleting y') to help id this?
Or put a bunch of break points around the dels are being called/being called from and step through until it segfaults?
Its a segfault in the gc, sometimes spurious, likely cause by a del on a dictionary element (although somehow, del on a dictionary element is valid?). Also code was cythonized.
06:33
@Mikhail You can't really get a double-free or anything like that with Python code. del name is not even even remotely equivalent to free. If you encounter segfaults, the error is in an extension module that does manual refcounting/memory.
Yeah thats what I was thinking but somehow don't have any of those, I mean we did use numpy but the line that isolates it is vanilla python
That it gets triggered by the GC indicates someone messed up refcounting.
Yep, but this time it wasn't me, I swear!
A GC collection can trigger an arbitrary chain of cleanups, so it can indeed be some object very far removed from what you think you are working with.
@Mikhail hard to believe
06:37
You might get lucky with the inbuilt CPython tracing, like -X showrefcount, -X tracemalloc or -X dev.
might be psionic emanations from C++ half-life, but once again no C++ code :-(
Especially vanilla python interactions should not segfault
So, its vanilla python compiled into cython called from vanilla python
Create an mcve and submit a bug report to cpython
Yeah, I got a reproducible but its not minimal :-(
06:39
@Mikhail remove cython and see what happens
oh welp, gotta complain about something else :-)
without cython its fine, but its hard to see if covering up the root cause, as memory errors can very with the gc's preference
I also can't tell how many python gc's are running, like if you have cython, it running its own gc?
@Mikhail without cython it's fine, but it's vanilla python with no compiled code
Does that sound right to you?
I mean, I do believe its possible to cause vanilla python to segfault
if you stick enough uninitialized __slots__ in it
you shouldn't believe that under "normal, reasonable" use.
@Mikhail if you can do that with sane code it's a bug in the interpreter
06:44
Yeah its pretty rare, I only ICE-d vanilla 2 times in 6 months
Feb 11 '19 at 19:49, by Antti Haapala
>>> eval('()' * 1000000)
[2]    3855 segmentation fault (core dumped)  python2
^ not sane code
thats python 2
@Mikhail Heads up: If you have an MCVE of plain Cython causing a segfault, the Cython folks will be interested in that.
07:09
cabbage
07:22
made my firsr answer for long time. hope it fill the so standard
0
A: TypeError: not enough arguments for format string python pymysql (Delete row)

Xavier Combellesql = "DELETE FROM tb_user WHERE CRTE_DT < NOW() - INTERVAL %s YEAR" delete_list = [3] cursor.executemany(sql, delete_list) connection.commit() column and table should rarely be variable.

07:39
Hi! If I have a enum class with elements that are lists representing RGB colors, how can I check equality with lists?
class Col(enum):
    RED = 255, 0, 0
how can I check Col.RED == (255,0,0) ?
Col.RED.value == (255, 0, 0) ?
sory I forgot about .value
thanks
08:00
"how can I check equality with lists", not sure if you made a typo, but that is a tuple not a list
my mistake
@CătălinaSîrbu you should have instances of that class
Well how are you using this class?
i store constants in it
to make the code more readable
or at least I think so
08:15
@AndrasDeak Taking a look at the docs, it seems like the docs disagree? am i reading this correctly? link
hmm, I think I got confused, sorry
disclaimer: i haven't really used enum before
@ParitoshSingh yeah
fwiw she made a typo at the enum part, it should have been Enum or enum.Enum
What I had in mind was color = Col.RED and later color.name == 'RED' etc
Still not what she seems to do, but not instantiation
color == 'RED' might work too
I've only used IntEnums
08:18
@CătălinaSîrbu use named tuple
@XavierCombelle no
no
enum is fine for this, makes more sense than a namedtuple
Yup, assuming they are all colours but that's what the name suggests
@AndrasDeak Have you figured out any solution for the MSVC question I asked?
@ShreyanAvigyan no
08:20
(ofcourse, do as i say, not as i do :P looks around, hides all the dictionaries i was using)
I'll have to install windows first
I still have a problem regarding Col.RED.value
gives me a tuple ((0,0,255),), and I was expecting (0,0,255)
@ShreyanAvigyan I have a money-back guarantee :P
@CătălinaSîrbu are you sure?
Show your real enum code
Did you do BLUE = (0, 0, 255), ?
enum was not a thing of python last time i used python
08:22
Note the trailing comma
class Col(Enum):
RED = (0,0,255),
GREEN = (0,255,0)
dang AD, your crystal ball is on point
@CătălinaSîrbu note the trailing comma. And that's blue, not red
I was focusing on the enum problem :)) thanks
No problem
08:26
It's ok, thanks!
looking at the docs, how would one use the in operator with an Enum? trying something like 1 in Color gives a TypeError, using an Enum on the RHS does work but I dont see the use
1 in Col.__members__
This should work
Enum type has a members variable that is iterable
ok, but I am wondering about the usecase for using in, not in making it work
Hmm. That I can't tell. I never use Enum neither in Python nor in C/C++
.
I've got a question about Python PEG Grammar. What's the difference between & and && in the grammar? I know what & means but not sure what && means. Can anybody help me with this?
I don't see any &&s in the grammar spec
08:34
@python_user using in with an enum seems unintuitive to me though. If i understand correctly, enum is more so for code readability, the idea being that you're "usually" looking to replace a literal "magic number" with an enum attribute instead. Perhaps in is more so a side effect of making it iterable. (again disclaimer, as i don't use enums much, this is a guess on my part)
hm, i dont think i've ever encountered && in code anywhere, is there some context where && is valid?
@ParitoshSingh that makes sense, I have only used the basics of Enum so I dont really use it either
@ParitoshSingh That is what I'm asking
@Aran-Fey Did you find it? Line 178 PEG Grammar
@ShreyanAvigyan Hmm, weird, the grammar in the official docs doesn't have that
08:38
@Aran-Fey Exactly
And it seems Python PEG grammar specific
This is not listed in normal PEG grammar specification. (Like Python PEG uses | while PEG uses /
@ShreyanAvigyan That's a lookahead
&& is just a lookahead to a lookahead. Guess it's a typo.
@MisterMiyagi What's a lookahead in this context?
Lookahead such as &":" means "followed by :", but doesn't consume the :.
@MisterMiyagi Ok. What's the benefit of a lookahead to a lookahead?
&&":" is kind of crazy. Why do we need such lookaheads?
But it's strange that they use it multiple times. That makes it unlikely to be a typo. :/
08:50
Yes
It's not a typo
The PEP has no && operator, and it's not a standard PEG operator either.
Exactly
It's something Python Internal Grammar specific
It's not in the docs, PEP or "the internet"!
@python_user I've only seen similar for validation. You pass a colour string and that gets enumified. What if you pass 'potato'?
> * Add to the peg generator a new directive ('&&') that allows to expect
a token and hard fail the parsing if the token is not found. This
allows to quickly emmit syntax errors for missing tokens.
good find Miyagi
08:57
The linked to BPO has some handwaving that && is different from ~&, but I don't understand their reasoning.
@AndrasDeak yeah that seems like a valid use case
So basically && is kind of like & except it has a performance improvement, right?
Ugh, I already suspected that PEP 617 wasn't particularly accurate, but such obscure amendments are frustrating. :/
There is not even a What's New for this.
@ShreyanAvigyan A regular & not matching just fails the current rule, allowing the parser to try alternatives. The operator && commits to the failure, so no alternative can be tried and it's an instant syntax error.
I just don't see how it differs from ~&.
Yam, it's good to finally talk about another anime.
There's a ticket for the initial PEP 617 parser that clarifies ~ acts purely locally. It is basically an optimisation to hint to the parser when it can dump the packrat cache.
So, ~& is a local failure restricted to the current rule, whereas && is a global failure that instantly fails all parent rules as well – thereby triggering a SyntaxError when not matched.
09:19
Should that not be documented?
It's an addition. Additions are usually not documented
But at least it should be in the What's New
@ShreyanAvigyan like the hundreds of "new in version x" notes? :P
@AndrasDeak I've only found the PEP as documentation. Having re-implemented most of it, I have to say it's rather vague. Seeing that there are undocumented amendments isn't much of a shock.
The grammar in the python.org docs is more like an abridged version anyway.
@AndrasDeak Yes the hundreds of "new in version x" notes
I sometimes volunteer in Python to improve docs, fix bugs and I'm baffled by the "Building C and C++ on Windows" Python docs. It still mentions about Borland Turbo C++/
Python docs need instant fixes and improvements though no one seems to have enough time to look into this
There's the Full Grammar specification, but it explicitly "omits details related to code generation and error recovery".
09:27
ah
so it's not a docbug, it's a docfeature
I've heard from another Python volunteer that error handling was specifically removed from the grammar docs
Due to some reason?
I don't know why but it has been removed for some reason
either because it's already unreadably complex, or because it's considered an implementation detail
you could look at the blame of the grammar file and check discussion around the PR that added that note
Looking at the grammar, there are indeed many parts that are useless unless you maintain the parser.
There's only one error handling that's pending to be removed from the docs. It's invalid_primary.
Like "match this weird thing to emit this specific error"
09:30
Someone noticed that invalid_primary still exists a few days ago
That's the only one pending
And while we're on the topic, I just want to ask a quick FAQ. What does bitwise_or mean in PEG? Is it the famous left recursion or the less famous bitwise or operator in Python?
It's the actual "bitwise or operator" aka |.
Nested in a huge precedence climbing tower, it seems.
10:03
rank[i] = rank[j + n] = A[i][j] = rank2[find(i)] + 1
how are the ='s evaluated here?
Left to right, but why does it matter?
i dont understand the code im reading
You mean you've never seen an assignment like a = b = 1 before? It assigns the same value to all targets
so all of rank[i], rank[j + n] , A[i][j] are equal to rank2[find(i)] + 1?
yeah
10:08
thats more like right to left
That's because you can't assign a value to a variable until you actually calculate that value :P
But assignments happen left-to-right:
>>> foo = foo[0] = [0]
>>> foo
[[...]]
@Aran-Fey Don't forget to call gc. This is a reference cycle :P
yeah i know that
It's fiiiiine, python will clean up reference cycles when it feels like it
Usually just in time to prevent your program from hitting 1GB memory usage, in my experience
I wouldn't be surprised if recursive structures were special-cased by the gc
10:22
@AndrasDeak Python has a GC for recursive structures only. They are known as reference cycles. Like this one right here :-

A -> B -> C -> B
Pro tip: Use assignment expressions for right to left assignment! foo[0] = (foo:=[...])
hides
./gasp
Bashing on assexprs is never gonna get old, is it.
It'll get old once we realize that a significant amount of people uses them unironically (not sure if that's already the case, but I'm sure it will be sooner or later)
But for now... I'm calling the police to make them arrest MM for crimes against humanity
@ParitoshSingh Not until we get case expressions, I'm afraid.
I'm sure the government will soon stop his sinful hand
user13727121
10:42
Hi, I just need a quick clarification of understanding class, object, and instance. So I saw an analogy of using a house/blueprint to understand these three and the way I understood was: A class is a blueprint of a house and the objects are the materials needed to build the house, while an instance is a house given by someone in which all the materials (objects) are already used to build the house.
user13727121
Am I understanding these three right?
objects and instances are the same. the definition of instance is the correct one for objects and instances.
I'd leave out the objects, since they're a more general thing. But you're about right.
If a class is a blueprint of a house, then an instance is a house
house analogy doesn't seem helping enough though
10:44
And objects and instances are exactly same
Classes are objects too, so...
That's not helping :P
user13727121
@Aran-Fey So that means, blueprint is the class and instance is the house after it's completely built?
@MisterMiyagi Classes are actually instances of C structs. Though this is an implementation detail.
Kinda stopping myself from saying the meta-word here. :P
10:46
@CoreVisional correct
user13727121
ohh okay, thank you, and the object is the materials used to build the house, right?
@CoreVisional I'd rather say classes are blueprints while houses built from that are instances or objects
before this discussion i was all good, now i remain confused.
@ShreyanAvigyan Erm, so are instances (when talking about CPython). They're all various extensions of PyObject.
@MisterMiyagi Of course they are
10:49
@CoreVisional Uhh... I guess you can look at it that way? But I'm leaning towards "no" tbh. This whole "building a house" analogy doesn't really fit
@PIngu If you're trying to get a practical understanding, just ignore everything I have said or tag along discussions.
@MisterMiyagi i am staying domain independent, i can find peace there
That's the spirit!
user13727121
umm, okay, what about if it's a number. Say 100, I only now that the number 100 is an object. Is the data type of 100 an instance?
@MisterMiyagi Instances are not exactly extension of PyObject. They are extensions of PyTypeObject. Indirectly they are related to PyObject but they are directly related to PyTypeObject.
10:52
100 is an instance of int, if that's helping.
@CoreVisional No, instance == object. They are the same.
Int is a class while 100 is an instance or object
user13727121
@MisterMiyagi ohhh, so 100 is the instance of the data type Int, and the number 100 is the object?
Both 100 and int are objects. As said, "object" is an entirely different category.
user13727121
@ShreyanAvigyan Can I use this term interchangeably since you said that it is the same
@CoreVisional Yes
Instance of a class means an object of the class
10:54
Maybe forget the "blueprint" analogy and think about it like this: Computers are stupid. They don't know anything about the world. You can't tell a computer "build a house with 3 floors and 2 bathrooms" because computers don't know what a "house" or a "floor" or a "bathroom" is. So before you can build a house, you have to teach a computer what a house is, what it looks like, and what it can do. That's what a class definition does.
class House:
    def __init__(self, num_floors, num_bathrooms):
        self.num_floors = num_floors
        self.num_bathrooms = num_bathrooms
I can't help but say OOP's
This tells the computer that "House" is a thing that exists, and that every house has a num_floors and a num_bathrooms attribute
@ShreyanAvigyan Instances are not extensions of PyTypeObject. Only types are. But the point is that everything is ultimately, be it directly or indirectly, compatible with PyObject.
@MisterMiyagi Yes
Also please don't confuse beginners by going to them and saying classes are objects
It would just confuse them
Classes are not objects. They are structs
There are no structs in python.
10:56
Classes are C structs
You mean in CPython? So what? Who cares?
@ShreyanAvigyan But classes are objects.
That's actually a very, very important feature of them.
@MisterMiyagi They are struct pointers. In Python they behave like objects but they are heap structs
In the end these are implementation details
No!
classes being objects is not an implementation detail.
structs are, but that doesn't make what you say about classes and structs correct.
are we in the end game alteast now
11:00
Think of classes as objects. The struct part is implementation detail
@PIngu Yes :) I atleast hope so.
user13727121
@Aran-Fey ohhh, i think i understand it better it now. As you said, I can just think that a house already exist and a class is the existing house. Inside the house, it has the attributes which you've listed. Those attributes are objects/instances right?
user13727121
@PIngu had to bring it up again, sorry. Just wanted to understand these object-oriented terminologies
user13727121
I'm seeing different definitions about instance and object and that they are different while the other half says that it's the same...
@CoreVisional The class is not a house. The class is what tells python what a house is. The attributes are objects/instances though, yes
11:15
@Aran-Fey I use OOP languages for a very long time and I was never told objects are attributes
I'd say a perfect example would "Blueprint is the class. Houses built exactly as the blueprint are objects/instances.
It's like class is a barebone structure and objects/instances are structures built using the class.
Objects aren't attributes. Attributes are objects (for some definitions of "attribute". For other definitions, the value of an attribute is an object)
@Aran-Fey Is this correct then "It's like class is a barebone structure and objects/instances are structures built using the class."?
Uh... that analogy doesn't work for me, but if it works for you, it's all good
user image
14
@Aran-Fey Needs mcirosecond precision.
I can do that, as long as you volunteer to keep it updated? :P
11:28
if users & {"Kevin", "MisterMiyagi"}: return 0
user13727121
@Aran-Fey So class is something like an existing apartment complex, but Python doesn't know that, so we define a class and tell Python the name of the apartment, all units have doors, and each unit has multiple bathrooms/bedrooms, etc..right?
That should cover most cases. :P
user13727121
or is this correct: Class = contents of the attributes, Attributes = objects/instances
if you wanna talk analogy, class is usually thought of as the blueprint. so like..if you made the complex's information on paper, without actually doing any construction, that's a class
morning cabbages, folks
11:32
@CoreVisional No, there can't be an existing apartment complex before you define an ApartmentComplex class. Defining a class is like teaching python a new concept. First you explain what an apartment complex is, and only then can you create one. Or two. Or zero.
using that blueprint, you could make as many actual apartments as you liked
but yeah, no apartments exist before their blueprint has been finalised. and the blueprint is the class. essentially.
class is to teach python how to make an ApartmentComplex. ApartmentComplex() is getting one off the assembly line (analogy worked with cars when I taught it)
Maybe the blueprint analogy works better than I thought...
user13727121
umm...so the blueprint anology is correct right except for objects/instances part
We started with blueprints, then I said "forget blueprints", and now we're back at blueprints
11:38
@CoreVisional just forget the "object" part. It's fine if you stick to classes and instances.
user13727121
oh okay, so Class is the blueprint since we are introducing a concept to Python, and we tell Python these are the materials(objects/instances) to build the apartment.
class is the blueprint. When you supply the appropriate ingredients, you get an instance.
user13727121
@MisterMiyagi I see, alright then, it's just that when I learn about this, they were using objects and then instances but never really tell us the differences, hence this discussion
As mentioned earlier, object is a much broader category. You basically only need it to separate "things" and "not things" – for example, a for loop is not an object.
user13727121
@MisterMiyagi So say that I'm making cookies, we know the recipe is class and then the egg is instance, right
11:42
the recipe is the class. each cookie is an instance.
#            v class
cookie = Cookie(eggs, sugar)
# ^ instance      ^ ingredients/arguments
Yam. It's too many microseconds since I last made cookies. Do you actually need eggs to make cookies?
Egg, milk, all sorts of goodies. Internet connection too :P
user13727121
ohhh, I see why it's call Instantiation, it turns a class into an object, which in this case is cookie. And I guess the ingredients are just arguments of the class, right?
yep, or you could hardcode the ingredients. i wouldnt worry too much about trying to take the analogy too far
Put the ingredients into the class, and you get an instance back.
11:47
as long as you understand that a cookie, an actual physical cookie, is a "realization" of the cookie Class, the intangible "concept/recipe" of the cookie.
@ShreyanAvigyan that's funny
user13727121
ohh, so coming back to blueprint analogy, it's apartment_a = ApartmentBlueprint(cement, bricks) -> In order to build apartment_a, here's the blueprint and the required materials?
user13727121
in order to build apartment_a (instance)*
user13727121
YES, finally.
11:54
Is it like thinking of a collective buildings inside a compound as class and each building as instances of those class?
that's kinda like a list of instantiated class objects
the point of analogies is so that they help understanding
Hmmmmm I see
Hmmmm
Talking analogies too literal might lead to wrong conclusions.

Normally it's more like appartment_instance = Appartment(floors=2, bathrooms=3, name_of_owner="me")


If you have a real blueprint then each instance would be identical.

A class is more like a blueprint with some parameters and an instance is build something with the blueprint after having chosen some parameters.
user337598
12:07
is there still a Selenium chatroom? I have a query about the python wrapper and wht sendkeys() under the hood just happens to call os.path.isfile(*value) as a rather dirty pattern to determine if input text is in fact a filename not a vanilla string. There used to be a selenium hangout, i cannot find it , sorry.
user13727121
@AndrasDeak yes I agree with that, I find that, say understanding for loop, I can just try it out without going too deep into the concept since I can see the result of it. But when it comes to these terminologies, I try to understand it because when it starts off with something like "..takes a class and turns it into an object" and then after that, "..returns a class that the object is an instance of", that's where I'm confused about objects and instances.
user337598
Objects are the templates, instances are "filled in" templates. Yes the usage of words like class and template does differ depending on the programming language.
@ConradB Doesn't the behavior simply depend on what kind of element you're sending keys to?
user337598
thanks @Aran-Fey , in selenium 3.141 (the latest official release version sadly) send_keys() source checks to see if the text value sent to the field is a local filename and if it is, it attaches the file.
user337598
I want to set a field to the word "test", but i happen to have a script called test in my working folder, so things blow up.
12:16
That's... depressing
user337598
yeah , LOL
user337598
I'm hopeing to find the selenium fanclub again, and get their guidance - this is the old github issue github.com/seleniumhq/selenium-google-code-issue-archive/issues/…
user337598
I'm pretty sure I can find a workaround, it's just I've had a fun day so far already.
@ConradB
So as a workaround you coukd chdir into an empty directory.

Didn't know about this but very good to know because sooner or later I would have fallen into this
user337598
I'm going to try that approach, at least for now.
12:20
I think you might be able to bypass that behavior by sending a non-string key along with it. Like send_keys('test', Keys.ARROW_DOWN)
if that works it would be even better but you had to change every send_keys() statement
user337598
Ahhhh, will try that, that sounds like a smarter way. I only call send-keys in a few places because I use page objects already.
send_keys('test', '') should also work
could you perhaps rename test.py to testing.py?
At least if I understood this gross three-liner correctly
12:24
List map lambda? @PiR does browser automation now?
Now, now, don't bully him too much
True, [*map()] is more his style ;)
You can't bring yourself to format that as code, huh? :P
it might mislead people
user337598
I only have "test" in my working folder because we have a test.bat. a test. (bash script) which is the launcher wrapper. Which gets called from out Jenkins job, so renaming is not an option, but change directory or appending a non-visible character will do the trick.
12:27
send_keys('test', '') is (if it works) probably the most elegant solution to say (almost) explicitly.
Pls don't check for files.
Is this not a pretty bad API?
Certainly. I'm a bit surprised to see Selenium make this kind of blunder, but not too much
well I would not implement it this way. For me its way too magic! But if this is what selenium does at the moment then we don't have a lot of choice without customizing / monkeypatching selenium
@AndrasDeak Think of it as reaping zombie children proactively.
you could redefine send_keys to auto include the non-visible character
12:30
I always low key think of that
user337598
I already monkey-patched one of the selenium wrapper functions, the _upload() one I'm so tempted to do the same thing again, since I am patching the _upload() function I can call it directly anyway.
monkeypatching works well as long as you don't mix your code with somebody else's selenuim code that depends on sending keys that are stored in a file. except you mokeypatch temporarily or you manage to subclass.
user337598
LOL
In your context however it might probably be the 'nicest' solution
Today I'm asking thousands of PEG questions. Here goes another. What does bitwise_or mean in PEG grammar? More accurately, there are lots of bitwise_or in contexts where it's not even parsing for | yet there are occurrences. Does bitwise_or serve any other purpose in PEG other than being the | in Python?
user337598
12:36
I do want to upgrade to Selenium 4 someday, so I don't want to do this monkeypatch thing often. I'm also not a real python guru, yet...
@ShreyanAvigyan I have deja vu
3 hours ago, by Shreyan Avigyan
And while we're on the topic, I just want to ask a quick FAQ. What does bitwise_or mean in PEG? Is it the famous left recursion or the less famous bitwise or operator in Python?
@AndrasDeak That question was about what does bitwise_or mean in PEG. Now I'm asking is if it serves any other purpose in Python PEG not Python.
Guido once posted a screenshot of a generic headhunting email he got - "Hi Guido, it looks like you have a lot of experience with python. Would you be interested in a position [...]? How much experience would you say you have in python?"
umm... all of them?
12:42
@AndrasDeak Can you help me with this?
@ShreyanAvigyan no
Can anyone else help me figure out this?
user337598
@ShreyanAvigyan At this rate thousands of questions are not going to get answers. Hmmm
The problem is if I post it in direct stack overflow then some users downvote for no reason. And then stackoverflow wouldn't let me message for 2 days
user337598
yeah, I totally get that.
user337598
12:47
it's still a good question though.
user337598
I'm a language generalist, so I tend to keep my opinions to code-reviews type forum only.
Ok. I'll post it in the forum then.
@ShreyanAvigyan As mentioned before, it's that way due to precedence climbing.
user337598
13:02
@Aran-Fey Oh, the +ARROW_DOWN on my send_keys selenium problem is at least good enough workaround for now. Had a tea break and decided not to monkey-patch.
Huh. Would better fit as an answer. Please post your answer here - stackoverflow.com/questions/67620891/…
@MisterMiyagi Pika? Chu!
@AndrasDeak It's pretty cute, but runs like a slug.
Talking about Pikachu from Pokemon?
Perhaps a humorous reference to this footnote in MisterMiyagi's second link: "Such use of left-recursion is only possible due to bootpeg’s Pika Parser. Regular PEG parsers do not support such grammars/rules."
13:14
I blame science. They came up with the pun.
@MisterMiyagi I think you're thinking that I'm talking about | in PEG. I'm not talking about | in PEG. Instead there's a parser token in Python named bitwise_or
I'm talking about that
If you're afraid that people are confusing the "|" in Python and the "|" in the PEG, why not ask your same question, but using a different token not represented by "|"? For example, bitwise_xor, whose token, "^", does not have a special meaning in EBNF.
FWIW I think MisterMiyagi is not confusing the two
There's a special usecase of bitwise_or that other tokens don't have
Interesting, because the PEG rules look near-identical to me
bitwise_or:
    | bitwise_or '|' bitwise_xor
    | bitwise_xor
bitwise_xor:
    | bitwise_xor '^' bitwise_and
    | bitwise_and
What special use case do you have in mind?
Not here. Look at the use cases in github and you'll where it's used. It's used even in error handling in PEG.
It looks like as if there is some other purpose it serves
Wait. I'm Looking at MisterMiyagi's answer on my question
13:27
Ok, what I'm hearing is "there must be a difference between bitwise_or and bitwise_xor, because python.gram has 46 instances of bitwise_or, and 4 instances of bitwise_xor"
FWIW, bitwise_or is not a token. It's a grammar rule and reference.
I'm inclined to chalk this up to the relative precedence of the two operators. If you look at docs.python.org/3/reference/…, "^" is just above "|", and "|" is just above "in, not in, is, is not, <, <=, >, >=, !=, ==". If you're building a precedence climbing parser, this means that bitwise_xor only needs to appear once in the rule for bitwise_or, and bitwise_or must appear in the ten rules for the ten operators below it.
That appears to be what github.com/python/cpython/blob/… is doing
@MisterMiyagi Thanks. Now I understand. I've marked your answer as accepted.
@Kevin Thanks to you too
I'm happy to have any excuse to look at the Python source code :-)
8 more reputation and I can finally comment!
13:36
So the answer is what Miyagi said the first time the question was asked? Huh.
Not quite. It wasn't informative but the answer Miyagi posted on my question solved all my doubts
It's the answer to "what does bitwise_or represent semantically here?" but not necessarily "why does it show up all over the place in python.gram?"
@Kevin true
Yeah I think I mistakenly linked them together
In addition to my existing explanation, I think bitwise_or shows up in a lot of places because there are a handful of contexts where Python allows you to put only certain kinds of expression. For example in list unpacking: [*1|2] is valid syntax, but [*1 and 2] is not. (Never mind that [*1|2] produces a TypeError, the parser doesn't care about that)
So every context that wants to allow "limited expressions" (a term I just made up) has to refer to bitwise_or specifically in order to capture the correct slice of the operator precedence table
01:00 - 14:0014:00 - 22:00

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