I have almost ready an application in Python & PyQt5. There are several issues (time delays) to be fixed. I thought to use QThread in any single operation (create report, import to database,...) to decrease the response time. Anyone who can help?
For example the application now opens and ready to use in greater the 15 minutes. It's a huge time if you meter the time to open MS Word.
have you tried running without these? Idk much about pyaudio but I would guess it does something CPU intensive, in which case would explain the load time
ok but most of this is based on my assumption, so as many users here would suggest, you will have better suggestions if you can come up with an MCVE
One problem may be that in every new class i create from main_self i pass main_self (self) as an argument.
Hmm, i cut the mixxx process.
Now app open much faster
$ time python "Papinhio_player.py"
real 0m15.713s
user 0m0.000s
sys 0m0.015s
Now with the mixxx process it open ~ in 4 minutes.
Χρήστος@Chris-pc MINGW64 /c/python/scripts/Papinhio player/src/main/python_files
$ time python "Papinhio_player.py"
real 4m47.304s
user 0m0.000s
sys 0m0.000s
Hello can someone suggest running .py(moviepy code) on pypy or some other suitable interpreter. Pypy - scipy installation failed tried many times. Normal python interpreter takes a more time. I am not yet compared with any other because unable installation of scipy in pypy.
@Harry That's like asking "How to find points of interest on a map and store them in a json file?". What on earth is a "feature" supposed to be and how exactly do you want to save them?
@Kwsswart have you tried looking into Django middlewares? - https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/topics/http/middleware/#process-view - https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28329965/using-middleware-to-add-arguments-to-view-functions-in-django
@MisterMiyagi Thanks Anaconda also tried but pypy /pypy3.6 itself not able to install as per their docs. anaconda.org/conda-forge/pypy. Now i am trying with the wheel.
cbg, I have a flask server that will just download files from a SFTP location and return it in the response, currently the view responsible for this creates a new connection to the SFTP for each request, should I instead start the connection when the application starts and use that connection?
I am using paramiko for the SFTP stuff, for context
In our scope (not flask/web) we usually have a utility function to handle connection pools. Code just requests a connection, and the utility function takes care of creating/accessing/cycling the pool. A single pool that has to live for the entirety of an application can be a headache.
that looks like a nice idea, when you say "requests a connection" you return a connection object from the pool and let the function do stuff with that?
isnt this the same as what I do now? minus the pool stuff
@Andie31 please wait one more day before asking here as per our rules. If you tag your question with the main python tag that should help with visibility.
But if you come back tomorrow and ask again, you should avoid spending 40 minutes of everyone's time trying to figure out what you're really trying to do, only to end up posting what you already have in your question.
We can't just copy whatever reddit does, we've got to innovate
You can't throw a rock around here without hitting three web developers, our UI should be a heartbreaking work of staggering genius
But seriously. Comments on SO and comments on Reddit serve different purposes, and so we shouldn't expect their interface to be identical. In particular, the ideal SO comment is ephemeral; we want it to get deleted once the underlying issue is resolved. [citation needed] [subjective]
Hmm, just got a text message from a reputable source saying "here is your [work email provider] verification code: [...]. If you did not request a verification code, please reply with 1". As I hadn't requested anything, I replied with 1. Glowing in the satisfaction of a cyberattack well-foiled, I checked my work email... "your password is expiring soon. A verification code has been sent on your behalf to your mobile phone"
Dang. I was hoping that there would be a nice clean JSON-y API for fetching response data, which the responses tab would hypothetically use to populate itself. But the AJAXy calls it performs invokes requests along the lines of GET https://stackoverflow.com/ajax/users/tab/953482?tab=responses&sort=all&page=2&StartDate=2021-07-27 16:19:06Z&_=1627402768796, which returns HTML and not JSON.
So you're basically no better off if you forgo scraping the whole page and just scrape the result of the ajax query. You'll still be wading through obtuse HTML to find the data you want.
Semi-relatedly, I might end up writing a scraper myself soon... the website I'm interested in has an API, but it has precisely 0 lines of documentation.
Googling "<the website> API" reveals two posts from DenverCoder9, saying "hey, I noticed that <thewebsite's url>/api/v1 just prints "Controller not found: ApiDocs" now. What gives? It used to show documentation"
Skimming the site's TOS to see what their bot policy is, I notice that I have already agreed "Not to intentionally block, remove, or otherwise obstruct the proper functioning and view of advertisements". Oops, i guess I'm a criminal.
Take him away boys, he won't be downloading cars where he's going
I wonder if "I guess I'm a criminal" is actual admissible evidence... Maybe I meant I'm a criminal because I jaywalked the other day, you don't know
I notice the law seems to have some "bro, we know what you meant" stipulations when it comes to arguing semantics at the most basic levels
user14492304
Do you have a solution for that?
user14492304
When I try to log in to my gmail account with selenium, I get the message "This browser or app may not be secure" And I did not find a solution for it in stackoverflow
@Kevin This is why it's important to speak in code
Judge: Do you admit to blowing up the bank vault and stealing the money? You: No your honor, I most certainly did not use a tar bomb to extract the payload from the money archive.