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02:07
import asyncio

async def hello(i):
    print(f"hello {i} started")
    await asyncio.sleep(2)
    print(f"hello {i} done")
    return i

async def main() -> None:
    asyncio.create_task(hello(1))
    coros = [hello(2), hello(3)]
    gen = asyncio.as_completed(coros)

    a = next(gen)
    res1 = await a
    print(res1)

    b = next(gen)
    res2 = await b
    print(res2)

asyncio.run(main())
Could someone tell me when is control yielded back to the event loop? Im wondering where exactly hello(1) starts execution, and resumes execution?
 
3 hours later…
05:15
is Sara Chipps still at Stack Overflow? Apologies if this is a taboo topic
 
2 hours later…
06:57
@astralwolf only at the await asyncio.sleep(2), await a and await b lines.
07:10
@MisterMiyagi Ive been told that await coroutine() yields control to the coroutine object returned by coroutine(), not to the event loop? So how would something like await asyncio.sleep() work?
08:00
asyncio.sleep implements an __await__ method, which can finally pass control to the event loop.
The simple answer is that asyncio.sleep(0).__await__ basically is this:
def __await__(self):
    yield
There's… horribly fancy asyncio scaffolding around it, but that's the magic at the bottom of it all.
await corresponds to yield from. The async framework is responsible for implementing such __await__ methods that actually yield at the end of "yield from" chains.
08:15
Is there any issues when you do something like this:
def word_concatenate(keyword):
    concatenated_word = keyword + keyword
    return concatenated_word

concatenated_word = word_append("Hello")
In pycharm it would warn of shadowing a variable from an outer scope but sometimes I tend to add an extra string to make them different but might be error prone
It doesn't use keyword
Sorry bout that edited. working from console and pulled up the older items
Wonder how it would be best to name them
I don't see any issue with what you've posted. It's possibly an erroneous flag being raised
Yeah it doesn't have an error but it just warns that the variable used locally in the function is also being used outside the function's scope and was wondering if it isn't advised to do something like this generally
It possibly is worth taking it seriously as your minimal example has had multiple edits - first the fact it didn't use keyword and also that your function is called word_concatenate but you're calling word_append. I'm not trying to be facetious; your example could well not be representative
08:26
Okay right really my bad there hah
In other words, can you make a runnable MCVE (runnable in your environment at least) that still raises the same warning?
def word_concatenate(keyword):
    concatenated_word = keyword + keyword
    return concatenated_word

concatenated_word = word_concatenate("Hello")
Since i'm only using the same object once, in this case, df_unique_word I was hoping to keep it simple and use the same name which is why there is a warning
Do you have def df_unique_word():?
There's nothing inherently broken about using the same name in multiple scopes, but it can make code unnecessarily hard to understand.
Even if you had a function with that name, I don't think I understand why pycharm would complain here, but it's the only vaguely-sensible issue I could think of
08:34
@roganjosh It's more of talking about re-using the variable name df_unique_word outside the function scope nothing to do with another function in this case
Sure, I understand what it's saying to you, but I'm just suggesting that it would only really make sense to me as a warning if it was shadowing a function name, which would then potentially bork any calls inside the function scope. Otherwise I think it's being pedantic
@MisterMiyagi I see what is a better way to name it? I tend to see people using trailing underscores to differentiate them
Ideally, it would have a different meaning in each scope to begin with, and thus a different name as well.
But keep in mind that these kinds of warnings are for code-health – that's something to worry about in a library, not necessarily a data crunching script.
@roganjosh Oh right I get it. Not sure as well since they did go out of the way to put it there made me question how I named it
Though it often be addressed the other way around: Don't put all that stuff in the global scope in the first place!
What you currently have at global scope can most likely just as well reside inside another function.
08:47
Right I don't understand how scope works well enough that I question how I name my variables. Will have to go back to the topic
Starter for 10 on your scope research:
x = 1

def my_func():
    x += 1
    return x

my_func()
Thanks gonna have to refresh on scope and namespaces been doing work stuff so not able to practice as much as i would like to
There's also the nedbat presentation which might be useful
Great will check it out now
09:26
@MisterMiyagi Does this yield statement in __await__ pass over control to the event loop?
@astralwolf Yes. Just like a yield in a regular generator passes control back to the outermost loop.
Aah, gotcha
Thank you mr miyagi
09:41
import asyncio

async def hello(i):
    print(f"hello {i} started")
    print(f"hello {i} done")

async def main() -> None:
    asyncio.create_task(hello(1))
    await hello(2)
    await hello(3)

asyncio.run(main())
Is control aslo passed to the event loop at await hello(2)?
Better question, is control ALWAYS passed back to the event loop after every await statement?
I presume hello(2) would be executed first, and then as a final step control is yielded to the event loop
Ok, ignore those questions, I think I got it. Im just substituting await with yield from
@MisterMiyagi actually, sorry, coudl you clarify on the questions? 😬
10:02
@astralwolf No. await only makes it possible to yield to the event loop. If there isn't anything at the end of an await chain that actually does so, the event loop does not gain control.
10:25
@U12-Forward why did you not try go find the dupe first, which is an identical problem instead of answering and then wiki'ing?
10:36
You know, there are people sitting here with 🍿! I demand drama! Don't keep us hanging like that…
This question. It's getting really frustrating chasing U12's desire to just post answers to everything when it's against the point of SO having established canonicals
@U12-Forward Are you aware of roomba? Refraining from answering dupes is not just about reputation, it's also about automatic cleanup.
@roganjosh I hear you. I've mostly given up trying to fight the uphill battle that is SO curation these days.
Picking up a few interesting question's here and there, but mostly just accepted that the swamp is here to stay…
I've mostly given up too, but they're a regular here and quite prolific at doing this, so I figured we could at least try to correct some part of it
That's the spirit!
We'll never win stackenblochen with SO, but one can try :P
10:59
Anyway, I have a bit of downtime now, so can think about planning the virtual meet-up that we were talking about @holdenweb
Others wanted to join too (everyone welcome!) so I'm thinking of pinning something for w/c 11th Oct and we'll see what day works best?
what is w/c? googling tells me it is water closet which I am sure its not
"week commencing"
thanks
No worries. I can imagine that being an interesting google search :P
well I did learn what a water closet is now, so yeah :D
11:13
Room meet: In the past, we've had some virtual meet-ups between room members and they've been a good way of networking and getting to know the people in the chat room. One good thing from covid was to normalise zoom/google hangouts, so I'm proposing we have one in the week commencing 11th October. This is open to everyone in the room. I'm going to kick off with a suggestion of the 13th Oct at 6pm UTC and see if we need to move due to availability
10
you could try adding that dynamic link that shows when 13 oct 6pm UTC is in local time
I can't edit it now :'(
ROs get some powers - editing after 2 mins is not one of them
ahh, mod only features then
@JonClements puppy can probably do it
11:39
If I have a dict that has a single element, how can I get it? (I don't know the key)
just like how you tried in your recent answer ;)
any other ways without making it a list?
next(iter(your_dict.keys())) not sure how readable that is
thats even more complex
I'm gonna stick with list(dictionary)[0]
If you don't mind destroying it, you can dictionary.popitem() it.
11:42
that's a good one
best one
You can also use item, = dictionary.items() or the related (key, value), = dictionary.items() to unpack it.
Mind the comma.
How much rep does it need to edit a post without getting approved
does it need rep or something else
1.5 or 2k I guess
2k it seems.
on the plus side, you can get +2 rep for approved edits
11:49
yeah
but I think the last 5-7 edits of mine isn't getting approved some reason
that's why I got curious
Then they're either in a queue, or not good suggestions.
There are currently 424 suggested edits in the queue.
all of stack overflow?
Yes.
And tons of these are just brushing up turds…
ahh.. a edit of mine just got eccepted
im like: what?
11:57
Totally no relation at all…
??
I get it
cause another one did right now
@roganjosh huh?
12:25
I think he's humbly requesting the use of your editing powers. In particular he wants the pinned post on yonder starboard to have a link to that one website that tells you what 6 PM UTC is, in the user's local time zone
Kevin'd
Does anyone actually remember what that one website is, specifically?
I can't find a good source; I assumed from the suggestion that there was a standard approach but it seems not
How about this one? https://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?iso=20010101T1430
The date is not correct, as you might guess from the year
On balance I think most people can convert from UTC reliably to understand my proposed datetime
12:32
timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?iso=20211013T1800 There, I typed in the right number this time
I know what math operations are necessary to convert from UTC, but I don't remember the offsets for eastern (standard|daylight) time
But I have the meta-knowledge of both "how to look up time zone offsets on Wikipedia" and "how to make google convert time zones for me", so it's not a practical problem
I still don't understand how questions are shown in white and yellow
what does the color indicate
As in, "what's the difference between chat messages with a yellow background, vs a white background?"? Yellow messages are ones that you wrote.
Of course, on my machine, it's my messages that are yellow rather than yours
no not messages
@WalidSiddik The colour indicates that it's a question asked with a tag that you're following
Oh, on the main site?
12:45
questions
^^ yeah, it's the tags
@roganjosh oh that's helpful
that's really helpful
13:09
Current musing: I'm baking our salt pot because salt is hygroscopic and it's got clumpy. Why should it by "hygro" and not "hydro"?
Sounds like you're just being "salty" about it - I'll see myself out...
Tis for the best :P Etymologise or bust
If I went just by en.wiktionary.org/wiki/hygro- and en.wiktionary.org/wiki/hydro- I'd say that hygro pertains to moisture and hydro pertains to H2O specifically. But perusing through related terms, I think it's basically "first come first served"
"I invented a cool moisture-detecting machine, but darn, even in these olden times the name 'hygroscope' is already taken. I guess I'll trademark 'hydroscope' instead"
I wonder if the ancient Greeks had the same aversion to hugrós as we do "moist"
Ancient treatises on words nobody likes to write down or read... Surely a rare document, for self-explanatory reasons
13:23
Ha. A self-fulfilling prophecy. It's perhaps loud by its absence
why is there a comma tag
with 1 question
I guess that guy really wanted to ask a question about a comma
anyone can make a tag?
it needs 1.5k rep right?
what that guy doesn't have
shrug
hmm
there isn't any edit also
13:31
Can you please post in complete sentences? And rep doesn't translate very well to capability
it's a chat
It's quite possible that someone has the rep to start a new tag, and that tag is pointless. you can raise that on Meta if you choose to brave that place
@WalidSiddik it's a chat with rules, one specifically against "stream of conscious" posts
"reputation"
I'm gonna use it now
I have no idea what that means
means I agree to you
oh.. there's not 1 question
embarrassing
I was really close to adding a meta
14:24
@roganjosh this was what I had in mind, on hindsight this is more of a poll though
14:57
@python_user feel free to take the organisation over. I only wanted to start a debate on days but it's a community thing, so I'm happy for others to run something better :)
ohh laurel, I just suggested that site since that was the one inspectorG4dget used last time
quick question, if a function I want is available as a rest API and also as a library that wraps the rest API (among others), which should I prefer? I have no plans on using the other features
context : using the azure-blob-storage python library to upload a blob vs using the rest api directly to achieve it
toss a coin
:D, if I dont get other suggestion I might as well do that
 
8 hours later…
22:55
Anyone know the default full path to nvidia-smi on Ubuntu?

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