You said 1. python version works, 2. JS version doesn't work, 3. "I'm pretty sure the JS is the problem". What else could be the problem when you have JS that doesn't work?
I mean there are differences between making a request server side and client side--I'm not sure if I need to add something special to the url on the Python side to allow the JS to send the PUT successfully
Lord god, if one adds the ContentType attribute and send the PUT request with requests, you get a 403. But to send the PUT with JS one needs to add the ContentType attribute. Then one can:
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('PUT', url);
xhr.onreadystatechange = () => {
if (xhr.readyState === 4) {
if (xhr.status !== 200) {
console.log('Could not upload file.');
}
}
};
xhr.send(f);
I got to edit a Flask template file for a test app today - boy, the PyCharm integration for that is pretty nice! (Auto-complete in the html template corresponding to values defined in the .py file - how does it know?)
Off-topic: some interesting HN discussion on optimal strategy for Wordle, and a prime-number-based copycat 'Primel' news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30023286
I mean pip can only ask the package. And there's no way a package released in 2019 would say that it's compatible with a Python version that will have been released mroe than 2 years later. I mean I guess it could, but there will be no wheels. I don't know if pip can build from source, and even if it did then something like PyQt5 could easily not build with an unexpected Python version.
(But I wouldn't know, I'm not a PyQt5 nor spyder user)