I bet one could make assumptions about c-defined standard library types. The question is whether the python core devs find that to be a useful effort considering impact on runtime.
Having to determine that 0 is an int and a is an int and then figuring out applicable optimizations would probably lose you more than what you'd win. We're still talking python. a**4 is not your bottleneck.
In any case, I don't think there are runtime optimizations. Code is compiled to bytecode during compilaton, and then the bytecode is executed.
For the record, PyPy does type inference for built-in types since these are immutable. There are also some changes for CPython 3.11 (?) that allow for hot paths for built-in types. Those types are the minority, though.
I guess it's difficult to understand how this type information would not be known at the time that that particular line of code is being executed, which makes this trivial.
@CodyGray nope, not going to either. its a strength, but not unique to python. and honestly it's the kind of strength you dont actually need for 90% of the use cases
So it's not like I'm just approaching this from the perspective of a static AOT compiled language, as Andras is implying, although I freely admit that I think those are far superior in nearly every way.
but yeah, re Cody, it still means that on the very first execution, you'd still generate the code as usual.
its only because theres a hot path that subsequent executions got optimized. which im sure you can do in python too if you want to. i half suspect if pypy does it or not.
Maybe it's JS' haphazard origins, but it strikes me as the kind of language that can do some very cool things, which happen to fail spectacularly in 0.001% of cases because you tripped over the hole where they stuffed all their pigeons
we really didnt get performance matching our hardware level increases, because we chose to fill it with abstractions, essentially. What's curious is how much of that was deliberate, and how much just accidental.
This is not true. Because even a reasonably proficient machine code programmer cannot generate code that is anywhere near as efficient as a modern optimizing compiler.
@CodyGray let's put it this way: this was an issue recognized in hindsight. free abstractions were not always a priority, and so a lot of abstractions that exist arent like this
I've been listening to a guy (he does like ranting a lot, so beware) but it's still fun to listen to his perspective on it. (had to google the name, oops) Jonathan Blow
Actually, I take it back. Machine code is an abstraction too. If you're not calculating the interaction of electromagnetic fields, then you're not a True Coder ;-)
Ideally you'd be calculating the vibrations of 16-dimensional superstrings that cause electromagnetism, but the theoretical guys are still working on that
But yeah, while Jonathan Blow takes an extreme stance on why modern programs aren't as good as they should be, i think there's some wisdom in his annoyance with the state of things. His core argument is that we could "get away" with more inefficient code as hardware became more powerful...and so we did.
How many programmers looked at their code at 4:00 PM on a Friday afternoon and thought, "maybe 1000 times slower than the theoretical optimum is good enough"
Sure, though unfortunately it's not like sloppiness was intentional. deadlines, time pressures, inexperience. a lot of our modern infrastructure is built on a pile of rock and rubble, stuck together with duct tape.
I see it more as practicing good "hygiene". You develop and follow best practices to ensure that you aren't writing pathologically inefficient code for no reason. And because you're following those established practices all the time, you aren't reducing your productivity.
Okay, sure. let's put it this way then: IF someone were to expect that one must be perfect about best practices before being allowed to code, we wouldn't have any new coders come up
best practices existing wont make them universal, ultimately each new person still has to start fresh, and there's just a lot to take in
At best, it increases the barrier to entry, but that's not entirely a bad thing. And, in reality, I am not sure it does, because once patterns and practices become established, they should just be learned along with everything else, like the syntax.
@CodyGray Python's classes are regular objects, as instances of metaclasses. That allows to create types that are a logical contradiction, and that allows anything to happen. So that int that the type system inferred for a variable might actually be a rabbit. That's not an issue with runtime types, since it is just a regular runtime error like all the others then.
I wrote Python programs for like five years before I learned the whole syntax. If it also took me that long to learn all the patterns and best practices, I probably wrote a lot of junk before the window of opportunity closed.
I like to think that coding is still a young craft, compared to carpentry or glassblowing or advertising. I wonder how long after the invention of gunpowder it took them to discover the best ways to not blow up your laboratory.
Hey roganjosh. Is this code better to prevent SQL injection:
while True:
try:
inp = int(input("Please type the roll number of the student whose marks you would like to see: "))
except ValueError:
print("Please type a valid input.")
continue
else:
break
if inp not in roll_no:
print("There is no such roll number.")
elif inp in roll_no:
name_of_inp = stu_df.loc[inp,"Student name"]
print()
print(name_of_inp)
q1 = "SELECT * FROM %s;"%name_of_inp
df0 = pd.read_sql(q1, con)
print(df0)
@RandomPerson if youre making an a string yourself (using sting formatting), instead of letting the sql library do it, you're not using a parameterized query.
From my point of view, else has fewer possible consequences than elif. A code block with an if and elif clause can have three possible execution paths: one where the if passes, one where the elif passes, and one where neither passes. A block with an if and else clause has two possible execution paths. That's 33% better :-)
inp = int(input("Please type the roll number of the student whose marks you would like to see: "))
I changed it to:
while True:
try:
inp = int(input("Please type the roll number of the student whose marks you would like to see: "))
except ValueError:
print("Please type a valid input.")
continue
else:
break
And if you end up using something other than read_sql to talk to the DB, then whatever function you choose will probably also have a params argument. It's very widespread.
ah. as i said earlier, this might be an unfortunate example, because i think table names had the limitation of being not being suitable for parameterization.
@ParitoshSingh I disagree that's a "win win". Now, someone has to maintain the comment, it could easily get out of sync with the code, etc. If anything, make it an assertion.
@CodyGray i am... not sure. i think its because im happy to use an assert to verify stuff that needs verification, but in this case i never set out to need to verify this information anyways, the if else construct already did it for me
ie why assert when you're in the else branch of an if...when the if already ensured what the else branch would have
@ParitoshSingh Arguably, if you're using an assertion to verify stuff that needs verification, you're doing it wrong. :-) If it needs verification, that means it might fail, so you should be explicitly checking and handling it, not asserting it. Assertions are for things that logically must be true, which means this is a perfect case. As you said, the failure to execute the if branch guarantees that the else branch must match the logical negation.
@CodyGray ah yep yep. okay, let me try that again.. i think if else is such a fundamental construct, that if im asserting that, im really putting no faith in the very basic building blocks of the language itself
@ParitoshSingh Yeah, that's true. Other than if you wanted it for documentation purposes (the same reason you were considering writing a comment). Otherwise, I agree, you almost certainly would never write it. (Although, as a programmer, it pays to be skeptical of everything. I often have assertions to guard against failures in some very basic building blocks. They have at least once failed. Guess how much easier the problem was to fix that way than the other way?)
Actually, the program which I am working on is student report card management. That's why I am using many tables.. gathering data of one student from different tables will be a hassle
@CoolCloud kinda.. it's my term 1 project. I might be having a similar project for term 2. I see that you are from India (in your SO profile). So were you an IP student in the past?
@RandomPerson have a look at sqlshack.com/sql-multiple-joins-for-beginners-with-examples - it's got a 3 table design similar to what Kevin has suggested and shows you how to do a join... (it's focused on SQL Server - but the same principles apply to all RDMS...)
Then if you want to find the score of all second monthly exams of any student named Alice in any Maths class, you can do select exam.scores from Exams exam where student.name = 'Alice' and subject.name = 'Maths' and exam.month = 2 LEFT JOIN Students student on student.roll_id = exam.roll_id LEFT JOIN Subjects subject on subject.subject_id = exam.subject_id
If you're thinking "wow all of these joins look like a pain in the butt", that's why ORMs were invented :-) Then you can do something like exams = ExamTable.select(lambda exam: exam.month == 2 and exam.student.name == "Alice" and exam.subject.name == "Math")
select student.name as student_name, subject.name as subject_name, exam.* from student join exam on roll_id join subject on subject_id where roll_id = <whatever your input was>.... (or something like that - spinning a few plates at the moment...)
@Kevin join is short for "inner" join... so joining two tables... you only get a result set of actual matches between both... if you left join... then you get all rows on the left hand table but with NULLs for the columns from the right where it didn't match...
Let's see, I'm selecting exam.score from Exams, and I don't want that to be NULL. And I don't care about exams taken by null students or taken in null subjects, so... left join all the things?
@CoolCloud oh.. ok. I am glad to see a fellow Indian student in SE/SO.. it almost feels like I am the only student in the SE community I participate in.
@roganjosh I was trying to decide how to handle students that missed an exam. My initial instinct is to just not have a row for that in the Exams table, although I could perhaps be persuaded to put one in with a score of null.
@Kevin missed an exam? In which case you'd have fake grades or it nulled out... or you treat the exams as "exams taken" and just don't have it... depends....
@Kevin It's only really a heuristic for deciding the base table. But I'd assume that the complete set I really wanted was the student names vs. (say) a disembodied exam result
@roganjosh so you'd have the _id's in the exam table as actual proper foreign keys... so you can't have anything in that that without it properly in the other two tables...
I think, more formally, you'd LEFT JOIN on the table that contains the set that you want to be complete
In this case, it wouldn't make sense to have a score with no associated name (other than, perhaps, for calculating a mean), but it would make sense to have a name with no exam score because you have a complete roster of pupils, and not all of them would have taken the exam
Lazy solution: use an auto-generated blind key for Exams, and don't bother enforcing uniqueness on student-subject-month combinations. "Alice has two math scores for January? That's because one was a retake"
@Kevin If you're going that far - you might as well go the route of having an ExamSchedule table which joins to the types of Exams and then link the Results against the schedule... that way you've also got a diary table handy for other bits :p
no the c and d are gonna be changed I'm not sure what they are so that's why I'm using regex, only thing I know is A and B I just want to get the text under it
That's fine, but the idea of having a global index of all class instances is questionable. It's something beginners do all the time, and pros almost never
awesome @Aran-Fey! I'm using unique_index exclusively for naming purposes: the algorithm outputs some of those instantiated objects as a result, and I'm just making sure I won't have duplicate names.
Yeah as you know I'm a novice programmer, and just recently I had to refactor this gigantic of algorithm of mine to use classes because keeping tab of data was getting very messy and error prone. It's not SOLID at all, and I still have this gigantic class with 31 methods with a bunch of responsabilities. I've been reading some blogs about how to proceed in separating this class, but it's hard to separate the responsabilities: you have shared functions and data for some of them.
Even though it's nowhere near perfect, it's much better than before: from 3600 lines to 2800!, and data flow/debug is much easier now :D
I'd wish I had the experience/knowledge to do perfect abstractions, but it's just not my current reality, particularly for such a complex algorithms with a lot of different branches of execution and wide variety of input :P
yeah I started thinking functions would suffice, but it got really messy eventually. I'm pretty sure a pro would use classes for this case.
@Aran-Fey true lol
it's also hard for me because of my mindset: I started this thinking I would need only to program a simple mvp. 16 months later and it's gigantic and I had to learn a ton of new things lmao
but I don't intend to become a pro in programming. I'm a business guy
people around me are calling me a programmer already :P
but god I hate having to get so deeply focused and for so long. it's really harsh on me
I can't just sit, fix a few issues, read the news, get back to it, etc... When I sit down to work, I have to be here for at least 6h, and 100% focused, or I will do great mistakes. I know this is not the reality for a lot of programmers, but for such a complex project, being done by only 1 person, it's the only way.
sometimes I'm just unable: I'll just don't work for 3 or 4 days, and after that I'll work 14 to 16 hours a day to catchup
do all of you go through that, btw, in some manner, or it's just me?
There are probably as many ways as people. Some focus like that, some work on and off. Everybody makes mistakes, the real skills are debugging and foresight.
It helps if you learn to write tests, because then if you find a bug you can write a new test that will ensure it doesn't come back. And if you have working code you want to refactor, a detailed test suite can make that feasible without fear of subtly breaking everything.
Problem with this current project is that it's double-complex, because what I'm doing is implementing a scientific model developed by my partner, which is very complex, but it has also changed a lot through time: a lot changed, and a lot got added. So if I write unit tests and everything, like I'd like, the next week he could be asking me to change a single detail and so I'd have to do a lot of rework. I hope he's done with that now, ffs.
@SurpriseDog I have seen a lot of videos and blog posts about refactoring, but almost all of them were regarding code logic that's nowhere near the complexity of my model, most being web stuff or some simple POS system.
Also, I've seen a video by Arjan yesterday about SOLID principles and it REALLY sounds to me like he's making a greater mess after all that refactoring than before. The way I see it, these principles simply don't apply to projects like mine where the code is not public, and will never be, and also because it's experimental: you HAVE to make changes on your way. True innovation is always experimental.
@lupus I have to agree, Arjan's tutorials are in a weird spot where you kind of get the impression that he knows what he's doing, but at the same time he really has no idea what he's doing. I watched his video on the factory pattern recently, and it's a prime example of overengineering and using the wrong tool for the job
@Aran-Fey nice to know those are your impressions. do you think I should try other contents about SOLID regarding this project of mine, or you think I'm right in saying it doesn't sound very useful (not even considering if it's doable because of time constraints)
@SurpriseDog didn't even know about pylint gonna take a look at it. What is your project?
You guys know that feeling when you wrote a new piece of code that you're excited to use, but you really really shouldn't because it's responsible for downloading/moving/copying data and it would be really really really bad if it doesn't work 100% correctly?
I have lost results due to hastily issued broken shell commands though... but that is kind of the opposite of "new piece of code that you're excited to use"
In other news, I still haven't gotten into the habit of making micro-commits. I have months worth of changes, and the only reason why I'm committing now is because I'm likely gonna break something. My commit messages refer to the future instead of the past, because "committing now before I break everything adding feature Y" is more descriptive than "I have no idea what changes I made over the last 8 months"