It looks like I might not have to bother. I'm trying out FastAPI and was concerned that it wasn't going to allow me to call my sync functions but actually it can?
basically any async outer* universe calling an inner sync function is never a problem, as far as i know. compatibility issues only happen the other way.
I could write it in flask but I was interested in looking at its validators from pydantic and in theory it should also run faster given that it was written specifically for this task and not a full web framework
okay, there we go finally. the best section is at the end, which, amusingly enough, is also the section they suggest skipping.
> When you declare a path operation function with normal def instead of async def, it is run in an external threadpool that is then awaited, instead of being called directly (as it would block the server).
> If your utility function is a normal function with def, it will be called directly (as you write it in your code), not in a threadpool, if the function is created with async def then you should await for that function when you call it in your code.
so yeah, zero issues in either cases. actually i think their choices are rather sensible
ugh, I'm pretty sure that last time I read that section it wasn't an abomination. now I got to wade through the blame logs and find out who committed that crime
If diplomacy fails, you can always try to get them canceled on twitter for being ableist against people with reading disabilities.
"I'm having difficulty reading this, can you make a reasonable accomadation for me?", "No, because I don't have difficulty reading this, so therefore it is fine"
"humans tend to relate images better than letters" -- ah yes, which explains why written language never really caught on, and why we still use only hieroglyphics to this day
I think I would have preferred if the first reply was just "no, it's our culture and we're not changing it. [issue closed as not a bug]". I know a disingenuous "we'll wait and see" when I see one.
Unrelated topic. I've got two Python scripts that would like to send messages to one another, iff the user has them both open at the same time. What should I use for this? Sockets?
subprocess seems inappropriate because I'm not interested in creating new processes. It's the user's job to open the applications manually. If they don't do that, then presumably they're not interested in using the communication feature.
I can think of a couple approaches, but they're all a bit rickety in one way or the other. Sockets, writing to a common file, multiprocessing.shared_memory, win32 api hijinks... Race conditions and resource leaks abound
@AndrasDeak Perhaps. On a conceptual level it feels arbitrary to declare one of them to be the server and one the client, but on a practical level it's not harmful
HDBSCAN is infuriating to try and install on this Mac. I think I've finally learned how to spell "defeat"
#error architecture not supported
^
fatal error: too many errors emitted, stopping now [-ferror-limit=]
20 errors generated.
error: command 'xcrun' failed with exit status 1
there's something rather amusing about "fatal error: too many errors emitted, stopping now". As if even the program is too tired of throwing errors, and just wants you to stop.
"architecture not supported" would have been a helpful thing to see along the way through this battle but, if it was shown, it was completely buried in the stream of output it kept generating. At least then I would have seen my foe :/
If it's an architecture problem, it's odd that people suggest that I could potentially do it with conda, though. But it took an hour of installation to just get that error :'(
No, this was through pip but with --no-binary :all: and my laptop just sat for an hour on "installing dependencies" and all the fans fired up. No idea what it was doing
Maybe. I messed up my python installations badly when I first started with a Mac and I'm not confident to get things right a second time for just 1 library. I don't understand why pandas compiles when it requires Cython but this comes about because originally it throws an error about PEP-517
Ooo, I just picked that particular question from a google auto-complete and found a question with a similar (pervasive) error.... and now I see --no-use-pep517 as a suggestion. Maybe that'll work!
On a slightly different level, I don't think I even understand the error. It looks like it's just yelling at me because the package wants to enforce a different standard for installation rather than anything that's going to stop it compiling (the PEP is probably beyond me too as I don't really know clang etc.)
Good question. I was trying to find a way I could install that but brew can't find it, so I wasn't sure what else to try there because I don't have apt-get
I found something say that if I did brew install python then it would come with it. But I don't want to do that; I really want to try everything else before messing with python installations again
Part of the problem may be that I just don't have an intuition on what Mac actually does. I found Linux confusing at first, coming from Windows, but nothing like this. Everything I find seems to explain it in ways that linux distros can fix... and I can't find a working equivalent
Oh yay... have been asked if I would be up for doing a code review... turns out it's PHP so the answer is already "no thank you", but line 11 is array_push($srcerr, 'Prodcut feed source file not found!'); .... which I thought was probably just a simple typo, but no... reading down further (and PHP isn't anything I want to get involved with) it's entirely yam even from my understanding of the language...
}elseif($prodCnt==1){
}else
umm.... that sort of stuff manages to irritate me... is there actually meant to be something there!? :p
naming conventions are interesting too: foreach($priceData['PRODUCT'] as $priceDataa)
makes me wonder if the data had another level of nesting, if it'd be priceDatab or priceDataaa....
heh... if($priceDataa['CODE']==$priceDataa['CODE'])... rightio... yep... turning this one down... don't think I can get away with charging 'em for a two word report of "it's yam"...
@roganjosh I've just checked on my system. brew install python3 and XCode should be sufficient.
The only annoying thing about using brew for python is that venvs break if brew updates python. Though it looks like they fixed that now, keeping the old versions around unless you remove them explicitly.
This is why I didn't road-test the suggestions until I'd exhausted other approaches (which I think I have by this point but that didn't clear my fears :P )
uh... i'll admit to you i have no idea what your sentence means. but python type hints dont do anything, you could freely violate them if you wanted. You would need to use a static type checker like mypy if you wanted code types to be analysed and used, python and the type hints themselves don't do anything.
@roganjosh ....you're thinking that "Action" is correct. it im pretty sure this code base was trying to typehint that it's holding objects of the class Action
Random thought of the day: I wonder where the phrase "as far as I can tell" came from, and why nobody ever asks "How far can you tell?" as a follow-up question