Looking at the example of the python module, he places 6 url's in the urls list. The result is the following: [<Response [200]>, <Response [200]>, <Response [200]>, <Response [200]>, None, <Response [200]>]
Now, this is fine when working with a small amount of requests. However, what if there are 1000 requests to be sent. I won't be able to 'map' the request to the response value.
@KevinC I don't think there is any way to work with a trillion lines efficiently. Even if by trillion you mean Tera, not Exa, that's way more than a list can hold or a stream process in a reasonable time.
The question could be extended to; what is the best method to print the match between the response and the url in the list. using zip seems a bit counterintuitive. I assume the module itself has a method of returning the url per response, right?
I had a look at the source code and it turns out that the None you get in the output is actually the return value of the exception_handler. So there you go
haha, yeah the project reminds me of when I tried to find my pw in a pw hash dump file. In the end I just let it run over night. It aint pretty but it worked :D
Taking a big list as the source file. The grequests module takes simply a list, and sends all the items in the list as a requests at once. So, having this big list of URL's would make no sense, as it would overload my memory and most likely the server(s) as well. What would be a pythonic approach to solve this?
Well now we're comparing apples to oranges. All this time you've been sending HTTP requests, so why are you suddenly talking about websockets out of the blue?
I tested this, it doesn't take that much time to place the string in front of it. In the end, I could indeed always use something like sed to prepare the file before processing it with python
@Aran-Fey Iff we are aiming for reading several TB of data from a single file, it will be a significant bottleneck. As in, doesn't-matter-what-else-you-are-working-with bottleneck. If reading and splitting the data takes several weeks, then whether the requests also take weeks or seconds isn't the only thing to worry about.
The general problem is just that when you're dealing with Tera-counts, you need to be able to (trivially) parallelise every step.
Well, but there's nothing you can do to optimize the actual reading. Reading from 2 files isn't faster than reading from 1 file, is it? The only thing you can optimize is how the data is distributed to the workers. Is that really worth worrying about?
Well, if a request is 0.1s, or 0.01s, it would make a huge difference.
Well, I'm just looking the most efficient, most effective, and most pythonic setup and writte python code to achieve my goal. As I'm working on this project, I believe I'll re-use the code in the future as well. Meaning, yes, somethings are valid to worry about.
Again, i'm not an expert in the field of python programming. That's why I'm asking it here
@Aran-Fey If we're talking single HDD, then yes we're yammed – probably not just because of the HDD, though. SSD scale pretty well for concurrent accesses, and multiple HDD are decent depending on the filesystem.
Either way, I'd hope we're not just talking about doing this on a single macbook…
Well, I tested already parts. It seems that the reading/writing text isn't the problem. The problem lies most in the single request which is send/received everytime from the servers
My macbook/SSD can handle everything without issue.
It's that the reply from the server isn't that fast, it's about 5 requests per second.
Depends on how you want to use them. Concurrency depends on your code as much as it depends on the libraries.
The simplest approach is just to add threads on top. grequests/gevent should feel similar to threads, but shifts slightly towards efficiency vs simplicity. If you want to go all in, you'll need some async library.
Are there any guidelines on how descriptors are expected to cooperate? I've written a custom descriptor for wrapping e.g. classmethod and expected that I have to call __set_name__ of the wrapped descriptor. Apparently, that's not the case. Many dutiful stacks lost their livetime that day…
Reading docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#object.__set_name__, it sounds like your descriptor should define its __set_name__ so that it calls __set_name__ on the descriptors that it wraps. But I'm guessing you tried that and the outcome was unexpected.
I get the impression that __set_name__ is kind of like __matmul__ in the sense that most stdlib types don't implement it, and the language doesn't have a strong opinion about what it should do
Perhaps standards will crystallize somewhat in the near future, since evidently some man-hours are being put towards support for nested descriptors. Granted, The commit that makes nested classmethods work changes only a single variable, so the number of man hours might be 0.01.
@Kevin Looks like selection bias got me there. The only stdlib descriptor I looked at lately was functools.cached_propery which does use __set_name__. :/
It seems as if only descriptors that actually need the name use have the method.
The nice thing about open source is getting back from holidays to find the awesome new features you wanted have been implemented, praise the people volunteering :)
They created 300 interstate roads and put one car on each, and they all got to their destinations in a reasonable time
On my interstate, even if those 300 cars aren't anywhere near me, they will still be gently nudged off the road using powerful fans installed in the median
For those of y'all who don't hang out on reddit, check out this masterclass of trolling. The OP has better python skills than everyone in the comment section combined
Only the guy at the bottom of the comments section I'm convinced is 100% clueless. The ones that ask "are you joking?" are at least suspicious, and I half-suspect the long effortpost guy is knowingly playing the "book-smart yet oblivious" role
I'm not well-acquainted with type annotation syntax, so I couldn't deduce much about the program's behavior until I ran it and experimented a bit. Negative one quatloos to the one guy who dismisses it as having syntax errors without running it.
I've also had a related epiphany recently. One day I thought, "wait, parameters before a *args can still function as keyword arguments?" and the answer is yes, yes they can
"Your prayers are ineffective because KS' code is housed on unhallowed ground, but it's still a reaffirming therapeutic exercise, so go ahead and pray anyway"
My sophisticated Thompson-Kevinson hack works without a compiler, and it's so undetectable, it has no observable impact on physical reality whatsoever
A bit of googling reveals a github repo with a proof of concept for this pdf vulnerability, designed specifically to target ImageMagick. So much for my usual strategy of shrugging and saying "maybe nobody will bother to exploit it?"
I wish I had learned about tension before I transferred out of mechanical engineering. Or if the horror stories I've heard about statics are true, then maybe it's for the best.
Hello I have a problem trying to run a local python server from pycahrm CE with FastApi. It says typeError: post() missing 1 required positional argument: 'path' at the route operation although I have set a path to it (that would be called from a html form).