Anyone can help me out on toggling the same button for it to change the icon upon clicking it. I'm trying to change the icon of a play and pause button when the user clicks on it, and the song should ofc play and resume.
This is just a part of the program: https://dpaste.org/c4SE
I only managed to let it play and repeat, which it shouldn't, it should resume not restart...
the variable music_paused is False initially, so I thought of declaring a variable and work with it. So if it's False, the icon should change to pause icon and the music should be playing.
No, that's not why. There are only 2 cases. Either the music is paused or it's not. It makes no sense to have 3 if branches there
I don't know why it's restarting, and judging from the pygame docs it looks like your code should actually crash with an AttributeError, but there's also this problem:
self.music_paused = True
mixer.music.play()
self.music_paused = False
mixer.music.pause()
Did you assign a Sound object to mixer.music somewhere?
Oh never mind, the pygame documentation is just terrible
@Aran-Fey Let me rephrase that. It does make sense to have 3 branches there, but not if you're checking a boolean value. You need some other condition.
I changed it to this, but ofc it keeps restarting
def toggle_play_pause(self):
mixer.init()
mixer.music.load(self.music_file)
mixer.music.play()
if self.music_paused:
self.unpause_music()
else:
self.pause_music()
def pause_music(self):
mixer.music.pause()
self.play_button.config(image=self.icons["play_pause_icon"][0])
self.music_paused = True
def unpause_music(self):
mixer.music.unpause()
601th day in stackoverflow and its been one of the greatest experience in life, all the learning that has happened here was greater than what I had in school. Definitely the best Q&A platform :P
Hmm, I have a question about the interaction between dundermethods and descriptors. When python looks up a dundermethod and notices it's a descriptor, it invokes its __get__ method. But... __get__ is also a dundermethod and a descriptor, so now we're back to square one. Why doesn't this cause endless recursion? What's the exit condition?
Hey Everyone, I'm trying to find an awaitable condition in asyncio. I have an external MQTT program, which takes commands in one topic and sends the response after doing its thing into a different topic - the command and response can be correlated later with a message id, which I have to do on my side. Since I'd like to abstract this behavior away in my code, I'm currently doing this:
from asyncio import sleep
class MyCode:
_pending = {}
async def doThing(self, id, **options):
self._pending[id] = None
self._sendToTopic('/command/', json.dumps({**options}))
# SMELL: there must be a better way to do this??
while id not in self._pending:
sleep(0.1)
response = self._pending[id]
del self._pending[id]
return response
def on_receive(self, msg):
self._pending[msg.id] = msg.payload
Of course, I can easily find the point where it stops making a difference if I do get(instance) or call_dundermethod(get, '__get__', instance). But I don't know if that's the correct point to stop. How does CPython do it?
@MisterMiyagi Okay, look, it's about calling a dundermethod. Someone executes foo(). Python finds the corresponding __call__ thing, notices it's a descriptor, so it has to call its __get__ method. Now you're back to square one: You want to call a dundermethod, but in order to do so, you must call another dundermethod. Where does it stop?
@MisterMiyagi I see... asyncio.Event seems to be the way to go. Now I found docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio-sync.html to read more on. Thanks for the help - wonder why I didn't find that page before...
@JonClements Sorry Jon, missed this one. We've already got enough material for the early access edition, and we're scheduling (about) a chapter every two weeks and a publication date late 2022/early 2023, hopefully the former. Let me inquire of our editor how to get you early access ... ping me if (when) I forget!
@Aran-Fey I've restructured the code to your example, but the `await future` is never resolved. I've looked through the documentation: https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio-future.html is creating a coroutine or task a precondition to be able to await a future - or that everything runs in the same event loop? The library that ultimately calls on_receive() is starting its own loop at the moment.
But so are all other synchronization objects, like Events or whatever. You really should run everything in the same loop if possible. Otherwise polling is the only solution, I think
Good to know - the library is a bit strange to me. I would have expected that I'm able to set the event loop from the outside somewhere. But the docs just say to call a "loop()" method regularly... so I guess I start the event loop outside the library and call it regularly with a recursive loop.call_soon()?
See, I want to tell the program reflect the red vector around the orange vector (and flip it, so you get the right orientation), but I don't quite know how.
If anyone can suggest what I'm possibly doing wrong, or a better way to reflect/bounce the ball, that would be great.
The program is indeed doing what is intended:
it rotates the red vector by twice the incoming angle to get the new direction, but the problem is, it's not doing it with respect to the orange normal vector
This is what happens when I try to rotate the orange normal vector instead of the red incoming vector:
It rotates it the wrong direction ...
You may ask why can't you just rotate it the other way? But the problem is, that would be an ad-hoc fix. If I force it to rotate the other way for just this "red wall", who knows what other manual fixes I'll have to add for the other bounces.
The only documentation I can find for diff_angle is "diff_angle(A,B) = A.diff_angle(B), the angle between two vectors, in radians". Doesn't say anything useful, really
You're assuming that it returns the smallest angle between the two vectors. Meanwhile, I'm pretty sure it returns the angle in a counter-clockwise direction.
So evidently diff_angle does always return the minimum angle. So then the question is how the rotation works, and I'm not really willing to figure that out
Today "progress" for me means going from "undefined symbol: _Py_ZeroStruct" to "undefined symbol: _Z11cblas_dgemv11CBLAS_ORDER15CBLAS_TRANSPOSEiidPKdiS2_idPdi"
and I don't seem to be the only one: https://github.com/mossblaser/aiomqtt It's hard to find an mqtt client that is properly supported and not a dead project. Well, polling still feels wrong, but I'll stick with it for the moment. And I take from your helpful comments, that I need to take some time to create some experiments to get some more in-depth knowledge of asyncio and it's ecosystem. Thanks for your help!
The meaning I was going for was more like "It's not easy to combine a callback-based library with asyncio", but if your takeaway is "I should learn more about asyncio" that's fine too (:
If my download fails with an aiohttp.ClientPayloadError, is it reasonable to retry after a few minutes or does that indicate more of a permanent problem?
I can imagine that (3) can happen if the server decides "this dude's been sending me too many requests, I'm gonna stop sending him data". But the other 2? Not so much
@AndrasDeak I was actually going to mention that earlier, but I guess I got distracted. Ooooh, something shiny!
When I'm building libraries on my own, I tend to statically link them. Yeah, it makes them a lot bigger, but I have disk space to burn and I hate dealing with errors like you're seeing.