Hi, does anyone have experience with Python SMTP for Gmail. I have tried less-secure apps and also 2fa with the app password and both returns an error. Error: (535, b'5.7.8 Username and Password not accepted. Learn more at\n5.7.8 support.google.com/mail/… b7sm25632476pfl.195 - gsmtp')
with smtplib.SMTP_SSL('smtp.gmail.com', 465) as smtp:
print(config['EMAIL']['user'], config['EMAIL']['password'])
smtp.login(config['EMAIL']['user'], config['EMAIL']['password'])
smtp.send_message(msg)
context=ssl.create_default_context()
server = smtplib.SMTP('smtp.office365.com', 587)
server = smtplib.SMTP('smtp-mail.outlook.com', 587)
server = smtplib.SMTP_SSL('smtp.gmail.com', 465)
server.ehlo()
server.starttls(context=context)
server.ehlo()
server.login(config['EMAIL']['user'], config['EMAIL']['password'])
server.sendmail(sent_from, to, email_text)
server.quit()
Ah okay, got the format down, could an admin help me delete the previous message?
Hi, I am using FastAPI. I want to send emails to users which will contain links which will auto-authenticate them on my website, so they don't need to log-in manually.
I saw python package which can help me with generating such links but I forgot its name.
@Aran-Fey I looked at the docs, but how is this better than using typing.Union I mean I am writing one version of the function for each type it can get, isnt it WET?
Unlike Union, overloading lets the type checker know that if you pass in a slice, a list will come out, and if you pass in an int, a single object will come out. And sure, requires more typing, but I wouldn't call that WET
Earlier today, I spent an hour or so in escape sequence hell, trying to inject a string from Python into JavaScript. Sage has this general show() function, which gets used to display 2D & 3D plots. It can also display MathJax. And HTML & SVG fragments or files. So a Sage / Python script can create output as an HTML page, complete with JavaScript.
However, formatting Python data so that it's compatible with JS can be a bit fiddly... I eventually realised I could use json.dumps to do most of the work, but I still had to tweak it a little for it to handle quotes correctly.
@AlexandreMarcq I hardly use my computer these days. I mostly use my phone. It's kind of fun being able to write & run Python on the phone. :)
I already had a similar program for making MathJax tables, and I thought I'd quickly hack it to do Markdown. But I ended up mostly writing it from scratch. That didn't take long, but then I decided to add that JavaScript button...
@AlexandreMarcq Some recent additions to Python are directionally ambiguous. Some people think they're advanced, other people think they're retarded. ;)
@AlexandreMarcq I haven't created many Markdown tables so far, but I'll probably use them more often now that I have that script.
It's great that Python's becoming even more popular, but there's a downside. There are now a lot of people teaching Python who don't know it very well, and who are more comfortable teaching Java. And so they can end up teaching Python as if it's some distorted version of Java.
Was thinking about that the other day, I don't know if Python is appropriate as a first language. I mean, it's "easier" to get familiar with, but maybe people can get bad habits ?
On the other hand I really suffered learning C as a first language in my first year.
@AlexandreMarcq I love Python, but I've often worried that it's not necessarily a good choice as a first language. OTOH, JavaScript & PHP are probably worse choices. I don't know Java well enough to have a properly informed opinion, but it seems overly verbose and "fussy" to me, since everything needs to be in a class.
And C isn't a good 1st language either, mostly because of the pointer issues. And its lack of OOP, which is pretty old-fashioned.
I thought Java was a great compromise because I see it as a step between low-level and high-level. But again, I don't think I have enough experience with programming.
I wrote C for a couple of decades before learning Python, but I rarely use it these days, and because I'm so rusty with it I find it a bit harder to read, especially compared to Python.
I am putting some log data on cloud (Digital Ocean) using python code which has import boto3 and the code works fine and logs file gets uploaded to the cloud successfully, but same code when I encrypt it will give the following error: global name 'boto3' is not defined
On the early Amigas, there was no memory protection. So if your C / assembler program crashed with a seg fault, the machine would crash and you'd have to reboot. Of course, crashing is preferable to having your rogue program silently corrupt another process's memory...
@AlexandreMarcq I never used TI-Basic, but I did use many dialects of Basic. At one stage, I was using 3 slightly different Basics on the same day. :) Despite its limitations (or maybe because of them) Basic is a good first language.
@MisterMiyagi That's a fair point. OTOH, although I love that Python doesn't force you to think about datatypes all the time, or worry about low-level memory stuff, it does concern me that kids learning Python may not get a proper understanding of datatypes and memory, etc.
But I guess they can learn that stuff when & if they need it. Still, going from Python to a C family language could be a bit of a shock to the system. ;)
@PM2Ring I agree with that – seen it often enough. What I think Python has to offer here is that, for a mainstream language, it's meta yet easy enough to actually walk people through implementing some of these things themselves.
Admittedly, I've rarely seen courses take that route...
I have been making requests at a certain website for months now, but for some reason the proxy provider I was using suddenly couldn't make successful requests anymore after. It's like a 100% failure rate
@Pherdindy oh, now I know why your user was familiar. You were struggling to get around the safeguards on lazada.com.ph to scrape what they didn't want you to scrape
I read their terms and they didnt seem to mind especially i do it reaally small scale it's not conclusive yet they blocked it maybe just an issue with the proxy
The proxy still checking it out but i'd happily comply if there was any issues with my usage
Does "didn't seem to mind" here mean "the terms specifically say it's allowed" or does it mean "the terms specifically disallow it, but I tried a little bit of scraping and I didn't get immediately banned, so I assumed they weren't being serious"
It isn't something you would normally ask if they allowed it. Most of the time they would just say no to most things if they're unsure. There also really isn't a team you can ask directly about these things
I think big companies usually do have a person who's solely responsible for determining exactly what their rules are, and explaining them to interested parties
If it's something that exposes them to legal liability, you can be dang sure they know exactly what their policy is, and it's not something they came up with on a whim
Honestly, I think most terms and conditions are a bag of hot air and I'm happy to ignore them unless the company is infamously litigious. But I'm still not very interested in thinking up bot-ban-circumvention techniques, because it sounds like it would be unpleasant guesswork.
Unrelated topic. My attempts to parse csv with regex is partially successful, but stymied by the fact that "csv" isn't a real data format with a single conventional specification.
Somebody came in the other day asking if it was possible to parse a line of csv that had multiple kinds of delimiters.
csv itself can't do it, and their attempted use of re.split failed because it didn't skip over delimiters in quotes.
The knee-jerk reaction is to say that regex can't parse any sufficiently complex grammar. This is often true. For example "any number of left brackets, followed by the same number of right brackets" is beyond the power of the re module. But I suspect that csv is just barely un-complex enough to be parseable.
@Kevin IMHO, if they use multiple kinds of delimiters they have no right to call it csv. OTOH, I guess it's ok to have one kind of delimiter to separate fields, but another kind that gets used to create subfields within a field.
FWIW, I still get upvotes from time to time on this post about using regex to parse HTML: unix.stackexchange.com/a/181264/88378 People seem to like it, even though I try to discourage them. I even linked to the famous bobince post.
Yeah it was basically a frankenstein format that resulted from an undocumented black box with funny ideas about serialization
I'm going to go out on a limb and declare that regex can correctly capture all of the href attributes belonging to an <a> tag inside a well-formed HTML document
CSV is fine for tabular data. If that table wants to extend into the 3rd dimension (or beyond), it might be a Good Idea to consider a format with a bit more structure.
@Kevin Yeah. You can always parse little well-defined chunks. It's when people try to parse whole arbitrary HTML documents that things get nasty. But, eg , parsing the HTML of this chat room is pretty straightforward.
Or maybe I'm mis-remembering. ;) I once wrote a parser that lets me read chat in the CLI, but I think I parsed the transcript for that. OTOH, I did write a little script that tells me who's currently in the room.
@AlexandreMarcq I see from your profile that you used to play bass. So did I, many years ago. (I can barely play guitar these days: it's too painful on my joints). You might enjoy this clip of an early Stevie Wonder funk / soul classic: I Was Made To Love Her The visual is an anim of James Jamerson's sublime bassline.
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη Flag one, and put the links to the others in the flag comment.
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη If you tag those with the generic python tag, we can dup-hammer them.
I wonder if that bassline visualization is objectively correct based on sheet music and/or spectrogrm analysis, or if the graphic designer just put down squiggly lines by ear. Not that there's anything wrong with that.
@Kevin I'm not 100% sure. In some places, the notes look like they're going the opposite direction to what they sound, but maybe that's an illusion. :)
I don't think you can cleanly map chords (which definitionally contain multiple notes) to a 2d graph, but I'd be satisfied with some lossy algorithm as long as it's consistent. "map only the chord's root note", for example
@Kevin The bassline is almost always one note at a time. Sometimes you play the note & its 5th or octave. So it's perfectly legit to just graph a single note.
Early jazz basslines were played on tuba (or euphonium), and were mostly root & 5th of the chord, with occasional connecting notes. String bass also follows that pattern, but makes it easier to play little scale runs interconnecting the core root & 5th notes.
Possible explanation for the line traveling in seemingly wrong directions: whenever the actual bass plays middle A and then descends to low G, the visualization draws a line from A up to G. Modular arithmetic!
It takes stamina to be a good bass player. Not only because the strings are so large. Doing a lot of that root + 5th stuff can be a strain. It's less stressful when your hands can "walk" over the fingerboard a bit, rather than playing the same repetitive pattern, over & over.
Some of the classical composer played around with inversions like that. Either Bach or Mozart wrote a duet for pianos where the score for the 2nd piano is the score for the 1st piano turned upside down.
It seems obvious that learning an instrument with your non-dominant hand makes things more difficult in the short term. But I'm curious if there's much of a distinction in the long term. Can you simply train all the clumsiness out of your non-dominant hand? Or are there inherent unchangeable factors?
It's tricky to gather data about this question because you can't just point at a non-dominant player and say "look, this guy is really good, so there must be no long-term difference". For all we know, maybe that guy would be twice as good now if he had chosen to play with his dominant hand, N years ago.
I wonder if piano players can usually get their hands to indistinguishable levels of dexterity... Or does the left always tend to make more errors than the right, no matter how much they drive down the average error rate?
@Kevin Well, with most instruments that require two hands, both hands need to be fairly dextrous, but the dominant hand is generally used for the stuff that needs the most dexterity. I'm sure that learning to finger single notes & chords on guitar with my left hand improved its dexterity. But its the right hand that mostly controls the exact timing of the note, especially the initial attack of the note or chord, although the left hand can be used to "hammer-on" notes every now & then.
Take a look at Billy & Bryan playing the Tony Rice song Freeborn Man. Their left hands are doing amazing things, but the precision in the right hands is phenomenal, especially towards the end when they're seamlessly trading licks.
FWIW, Bryan was one of Billy's teachers. He's just doing a guest appearance there, he's not a regular member of the band. Sorry, the sound quality in that clip is a little muddy, especially near the start. There was a more recent version of them doing that song, posted a couple of months ago with even more incredible playing, and crystal clear sound, but I guess it's been taken down and it'll resurface in a commercial form.
@Kevin I believe the answer is yes, you should be able to train the clumsiness out. i might be able to answer that for myself. i play the piano (well, keyboard really) but im a left hander. however, i learnt with a harmonium first (which is keyboard-like, but played with one hand). So i played with my left hand for a few years
naturally, when you switch to piano/keyboard, you don't get the luxury of using your left hand for the right hand portions. So i had to learn to use my right hand (my weak hand) after having learnt to play a different instrument with my left. I think today, my right hand is capable of playing melodies just fine, perhaps even better than my left.
So yeah, bit of a subjective experience, but i essentially had to pick up how to play the right hand after having the luxury of using my left for melodies on a harmonium for a very long time.
@Kevin I was going to say that the human brain is very good at rerouting pathways, should the need arise. I guess the question is whether you can have a need great enough without actually losing your dominant hand.
Dang, the backwards piano already exists. youtube.com/watch?v=Eepuu6H7Ylc confirms that there's at least one backwards piano in the physical world, and a number of electric keyboards have a "reverse" feature.
He goes on to say that playing a normal song on a backwards piano will produce interesting yet pleasant results. I would have liked to listen to an example.
oh no, it's uh.. not the fact that you can't flip the keys. it's that a scale is not actually symmetric. so if you just flip centered around the C key, everything becomes... "wrong".
if you're not familiar with music theory, basically, theres a white key, then 2 group of black keys with whites in between. then theres a 3 group of black keys with whites in between. that's one group of tones.
I have a passing familiarity with music theory, to the extent of what I can absorb by reading Wikipedia articles. I usually get flummoxed trying to determine which properties of music are objective, and which are subjective, and which are cultural
aye. i recently learnt that the scales we take for granted aren't the only music "systems" out there, and that there's some systems with more than 12 notes even
I'm also thinking of how the human voice is quite complicated when objectively analyzed, e.g. with a spectrogram, as illustrated at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_voice. But if you ask a random person on the street to describe someone's voice, they might boil it all the way down to just "deep"
I speculate that there's a good chunk of auditory processing going on in the brain that's specialized for human voices, and a lot of it isn't consciously accessible
Yes i remember trying to read up on the principle of text to speech, or vice versa, and boggling at the mechanics of it
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formant gives some interesting insight on why we can distinguish vowel sounds even when the speaker varies the pitch of their voice
"The information that humans require to distinguish between speech sounds can be represented purely quantitatively by specifying peaks in the amplitude or frequency spectrum." -- now this is the objective information that I crave
I don't completely understand the explanation of the genetics involved, but it's not so much "this usually vestigial feature sometimes re-activates in modern humans" and more "the chemical process that combines pigments for cone cells ran longer than usual and now we've got a fourth combination"
And that combination must necessarily be a weighted average of the pigments, so it can't lie outside the normal boundaries that everyone else has
I have a question: Is there a way to set the line spacing for a dataframe? I'm exporting a dataframe into a word table and I was wondering if there's a way of setting the line-spacing between the rows of the word table?
@roganjosh I ended up using pandas, and export the dataframe directly into word
It works great. The only thing I would like to add is to change the spacing between the rows of the word table and make it smaller...You have any suggestions?@roganjosh
I vaguely know it has to_html 'n' stuff. Anything that I don't need to pass off to pandas (SQL queries, HTML tables, etc...) I really don't. Interesting to know this worked, though :)