@AndrasDeak you mean std::cerr... and also how'd you redirect in python?
if you really want to redirect all of the stuff that goes to standard error, then you need to open a new filedescriptor and os.dup2 that over the descriptor 2.
messing around with sys.stderr is never going to affect anything besides python.
user17921218
Can anyone help me with what classes answer? If you go up a little higher in chat you will find my chat message with the question link. Thank you
@holdenweb We use EYAML for encrypting secrets and make good use of YAML references to reduce duplication – so the JSON subset would not suffice. Using JSON syntax for problematic values is what happens eventually, but usually only after messing it up once.
the only positive thing yaml's got going for it IMO is that its relatively common to kebab-case keys. which of course has nothing to do with yaml in particular.
Arbitrary Code Execution [0,5.4) Not available 26 Jul, 2020 Arbitrary Code Execution [0,5.3.1) Not available 02 Mar, 2020 Improper Access Control [5.1, 5.2) Not available 19 Feb, 2020 Arbitrary Code Execution [,4.2b1) Not available 28 Jun, 2018
@MisterMiyagi Presumably your own intentional code, not arbitrary injected third-party code. What was the final upshot of log4j-Gate for open-source packages in general? I missed seeing a clear summary.
You mean if the world manages to get to 2023... what with viruses/volcanos/fires/tornados/floods etc... I think the planet might not want us around for too much longer... :p
Hi guys I have problem with white background on my PNG image. This is my code pastebin.com/dQdGcNrW The image "paste" but instead to be transparent I get white background. I read some solution when you have two PNG but can't find nothing when one pic is produced by Python. Can someone help me with this?
@Pijes I don't know where the white color comes from, but I notice you never specify any transparency. All your colors are 3-tuples, which sets the RGB but not the A
"I read some solution when you have two PNG but can't find nothing when one pic is produced by Python". I suggest trying that solution anyway. After PIL opens a file, it should behave identically regardless of whether it was originally a png or something produced by Python.
You need to specify the image as the mask as follows in the paste function:
import os
from PIL import Image
filename = 'pikachu.png'
ironman = Image.open(filename, 'r')
filename1 = 'bg.png'
bg = Image.open(filename1, 'r')
text_img = Image.new('RGBA', (600,320), (0, 0, 0, 0))
text_img.paste(bg, ...
If I change your code to Image.Image.paste(bordered, myImage, (30, 30), mask=myImage) as that answer suggests, I get a correct result. (If I understand the goal)
@Huzaifa The approach is just plain broken. It doesn't give the probability, it gives 36 divided by the GCD of 36 and the number of combinations. That's a borked attempt at representing the probability as the inverse of an integer – which doesn't work for probability such as 5/36.
Sometimes google completely ignores not in a query. Especially if many people search for how to do x, searching for how to not do x will only show results for how to do x
Interesting dilemma here. OP posted screenshots of code, and was promptly admonished to post text instead. However, had the screenshot of IDLE not been there, it would have been more difficult to correctly diagnose the problem.
It could have been done, but probably only after a couple rounds of back and forth with the OP.
Right, but what are the chances the OP would copy the sys.version string from the very top of the REPL? I'm not at all saying the question would have been unanswerable had they just used text, it just would have been more difficult.
I remember a post along the lines of "I'm getting an error". I asked, "please share the error message". They replied, "how do I find that?". I replied, "copy it out of your shell or command prompt". They replied, "I don't know what those are"
After five minutes of this, I'm convinced they're coding with their eyes closed. I relent. "Ok, just, post a screenshot of your screen". They oblige, and the error message is evident in their IDE, in distinct red letters. The error itself is easy and I write an answer in ten seconds.
So there are indeed scenarios where a screenshot makes it easier to diagnose the problem
I just did some digging into the existing vehicle routing solution that one of our customers uses. This is one hell of a login page :D. I didn't think this kinda thing even existed on the interwebs any more!
I can see they're using jQuery from back in 2013. That's the best pin I can put on its age
I found a page with a very Web 1.0 aesthetic while I was exploring my health care options: njfamilycare.org/default.aspx
Virtually every government-owned or affiliated healthcare page besides this one has a nice modern format, sleek and well funded. Then there's this guy with the Geocities-like navigation menu and the hot dog stand color scheme
I hope so, because as far as I can tell, it's impossible for an NJ resident to view their healthcare options without passing through this page at least once. It's the ultimate bottleneck.
@AndrasDeak I am using jupyter, but what if I have to use sum() function (without doing sum = 0) in more than 2 different user-defined functions? For one function, it is okay, but when i make a new function, it throw this error
Each time I restart the kernal, it work for the first my-made function, but for the next function, it output the error
Like in one function, I am calculating AT content of a DNA sequence, it work fine. But in second function, I am calculating GC content of DNA, and it output the error.
def AT(seq):
at = sum(seq.count(x) for x in ["a", "t", "A", "T"])
try:
c = round(at / len(seq), 2)
return c
except ZeroDivisionError:
return 0.0
This works fine
def GC(seq):
gc = sum(seq.count(h) for h in ["g", "c", "G", "C"])
try:
y = round((gc / len(seq))*100, 2)
return y
except ZeroDivisionError:
return 0.0
The error is self-explanatory: you are calling an integer. If you did 5(), you'd get the same error, you can't "call" an integer with (). So somewhere in your program, you have set sum = <some integer>, or you took it as a parameter to a function, etc.
If you're unwilling to give up Jupyter entirely as Andras suggests, then perhaps you could at least try running your code in a non-Jupyter environment whenever you encounter a strange error. Then at least you'll know if it's a Jupyter-specific problem or not.
@Huzaifa are you familiar with Biopython? It has all this sequence analysis stuff built-in. Sequences are objects, and you can do all sorts of cool stuff with them.
You can use notebooks in a way that won't bite you in the butt, but it needs practice and if I have to convince you for 10 minutes each time that you're using it wrong then it will be a very frustrating experience for us both.
@Huzaifa jupyter is a perfectly fine programming environment. However, since you are tripping yourself up, it's easier to debug in a more linear programming environment, like a typical python script.
Unrelated topic: how should I organize my various projects, beyond just having them in a big directory named c:/projects? If I'm looking for something specific I made, I often can't find it unless I picked a really memorable name the first time around
ipython is in between the vanilla python REPL and a notebook (jupyter notebooks used to be ipython notebooks). But there's only one cell at a time, so you are forced to have a linear-ish history.
@Huzaifa a lot of development works like this. You just need to invoke python from a shell, and you can do the same in Windows (as Andras says, with cmd)
It might not work for you, and you really don't have to give up jupyter, but be aware that it's easy to tie a knot in your kernel and then you spend half an hour tracking down a bug that's no longer there, because you did something in a cell three screens below that no longer contains the same bug.
Maybe I could put a file named metadata in each directory, and put things in it like a list of tags, and a human-readable description, and a completion rating... And I could write a little scanner tool that can run queries based on that info
Perhaps a full-fledged IDE like Pycharm with the ability to run your code with a keyboard shortcut could work better for you. I never liked IDEs very much, and I'm not a real python dev so I can afford not to use one.
Spyder is an IDE that contains IPython. I used to use it a lot but I also used to get bitten by names hanging around in the kernal. I don't use IPython at all these days
If by "project" I mean "something that another person might find impressive", I have KevinScript and Animations and a couple Advents Of Code. If by "project" I mean "any program more complicated than one source file" I have like a hundred
I found something unusual with Spyder/iPython yesterday through using logging that I now need to look up. Within Spyder, it's perfectly ok to have logger = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler (it even auto-completes for me) but running python my_script.py with exactly the same version of Python will fail; it only accepts from logging.handlers import RotatingFileHandler. Any ideas what Spyder/iPython is doing here in the broader sense?
@Kevin personally, I organize like so: mycompany/<project>, mycompany/playground/<descriptive-name>, mystuff/<project>, mystuff/playground/<descriptive-name>
so anything thats a 'real' project gets a directory in mycompany/ or mystuff/, and random one-off tests or whatever all go into their own dir in a playground directory.
I make a similar mental distinction beetween "real" projects and random one-off stuff, myself. Things become muddled if a one-off thing turns into a real project, though
well then I just mv and then hop inside and git init
Last night I was testing speeds of various ways to GET a 300MB file, requests vs curl vs aiohttp, and with varying chunk size parameters. Scripts to test that are now in mycompany/playground/filesize-chunking-speeds
I've got a directory with, among other things, 97 files matching foo*.py. Some are numbered up to foo67_...py. But I never really planned to revisit these.
ooh I used to keep track of my stack overflow answers in a directory..back when I used to answer things on stack overflow. never knew what to name the folders--that was actually difficult
I keep all my SO code files in one main folder, with each file named after the question number. If it requires more than one file, I just make a folder. That way I don't need a comment in the file with a URL to the question, it's in the filename.
I've made quite a few deleteme directories over the years. I like the name better than "tmp" or similar, because I can be confident that I can erase it without even looking at its contents. A "tmp" file might be temporarily useful; a deleteme file has zero value from the instant it is created.
lol yes :D "If you truly love someone despite how much toxic they are, don't leave them. rather change your way to treat them" :D So, i am sticking to jupyter
Hey Room6Folk! I have another pyparsing website for you to try out. ptmcg.pythonanywhere.com/showq It scratches an itch I've always had with IMDb, that you can search for an individual actor and see their acting history, but you can't enter two actors and see movies that they were in together. You can enter a string like "cruise and kidman" and it will search for the highest-frequency actors by those names, and show the movies they were both in. Also, try the "+" sign buttons.
sum(c in "GC" for c in seq) will also give you this number, without building the Counter. A little obscure maybe. A little clearer might be sum(c=="G" or c=="C" for c in seq)
@PaulMcG or possibly between the two... something like: sum(1 for ch in seq if ch in 'GC')... is sometimes easier to read than the sometimes not apparently bool conversion/summing
Oh, is this processing gene strings? I've found that often these strings will contain other characters also, such as N, so tally_of_GC + tally_of_AT is not necessarily equal to len(seq)
The second one, generally, as well as "it doesn't matter for the purposes of this example". There are a whole bunch of other abbreviations used in sequencing, like A or T, C or G, ATC but not G, etc. etc.
Oh great... think the API I'm trying to get into has a big bug and no one will be around to fix it tonight as it normally takes 'em 48 hours to just respond they're having a look anyway.... sighs
Omit a field (even though the docs say it can be omitted) and it says "Field can't be NULL".... so send an empty string instead and get "Field can't be empty"... but everything not null always returns that the field can't be empty...
...although curiously if I send it an integer - I get "Field must be a string" - some serious yam validation checking going on there going completely bonkers
Some "fun" API design can be found with vroom. They break it regularly (like, totally break it) but if you want to use "skills" you need to make sure that every job has a skill (necessary or not) or it'll just ignore your API inputs
My API binding in python is half just a rant in the comments about how stupid everything is that I'm having to do. It was cathartic at the time...
I got given another customer project just to myself, so I'm back up to 4. That wasn't really in the role description, so I can't say that anything materially changed tbh. We have the Q4 Sales push to clear, then I might get a better sense of what I'm supposed to do
I want to park beatroute, my vehicle routing wrapper, for a bit and start on ex_machina which will be the machine scheduling library, but I can't do poop when I keep getting customer projects that I have to lead. I guess I'll push my mental timelines back
From experience... sounds like you're in for an "interesting" 2022... even when I was managing a department of 50 or so... I was still the most senior programmer so was still training up junior members, trying to do management stuff, getting it in the neck from the directors - had my team trying to rip off one arm and the directors of the company the other... sighs - the good ol' days :p