while falling down a rabbit hole of questions about any and all, I determined that stackoverflow.com/questions/1342601 is a good canonical, and applies in this case
the other one is specifically about the for-else syntax which I guess is one way to approach the problem, but usually you don't want imperative code at all
(again a case of steamrolling: OP just wanted to know why the keyword used is else, which is not a good question anyway [POB]; but we ended up with answers about how and why to use the construct.
stackoverflow.com/questions/19104760 Do we have something better for "how do I approach the task of writing a list comprehension to address a problem?" - Is that too unfocused?
Is it normal that the python launcher for Windows (py) regularly stops working if the PC (or the user) is part of a Domain? Python installs itself into AppData\Roaming and shows up in the Start Menu as you would expect. But running py crashes with "Can't find a default Python"
Not 100% sure about this, but I think it goes kaboom every time you log out and back in. Even if it's the same PC
I think python doesn't work either, even though I ticked the "add python to PATH" checkbox during setup
I would be happy to stress-test Python on my domain-configured machine, but I think I bricked it by deallocating a seemingly useless zero byte Q:/ drive.
I don't really have a clue how the python launcher gets its list of installed python executables from, so I guess the easiest solution is to bypass it entirely and make my bat file search for the python executable in a handful of hard-coded locations...
Right click -> "unmap drive" gave me Access Denied, so I went to about a 3.5 on this scale
@Aran-Fey I did something similar on a computer that refused to update its default file association for .py files from python36/bin/python.exe to python37/bin/python.exe, presumably because the executables had the same name. Associate .py files to "is_this_a_different_enough_name_now.exe", and make that exe pass its arguments to python37/bin/python.exe
The thing is, it works fine after installing python. But then it breaks when you log out. So I guess our domain isn't configured to synchronize the registry?
maybe the domains change because of some arcane reasons when you log out. You could take a snapshot of the registry just after installing python and then logging out, and comparing the last one to the current registry
Ooh, you get more information out of py -0 if you first do set PYLAUNCH_DEBUG=whatever. Here is what it looks like on my computer. Of particular note: it's searching for py.ini files before it looks in the registry.
FYI your gists are all public. You can also link to secret gists, but public gists also get indexed by search engines and stuff. You probably already know this, just making sure.
when it comes to playwright, it says "Playwright was created specifically to accommodate the needs of end-to-end testing. ". Is that different to Selenium then?
I had heard that Playwright was like Selenium
i'm wondering if there's a tutorial that covers Playwright with less emphasis on its usage for "end to end testing", and more for, browser automation?
You're not supposed to, it's fine. Just practice code formatting in the sandbox, and when you have it figured out, ask your question again with fixed formatting.
It's mainly chat's fault, code formatting is weird. But with a little practice it's easy to get it to format a code block properly.
@Yen Chat rooms have different ways of removing messages from the main feed. This happens to be ours. As Andras says, you don't need to edit it there - we've moved it there to die. You have a chance to try again in this room
d=[]
b=[]
my_tuple = []
for i in range(count):
start_new = int(self.data.get(f'applicationruntime_set-{i}-start_new') or 0)
start_old = int(self.data.get(f'applicationruntime_set-{i}-start_old') or 0)
end_new = int(self.data.get(f'applicationruntime_set-{i}-end_new') or 0)
end_old = int(self.data.get(f'applicationruntime_set-{i}-end_old') or 0)
d.append((start_new,start_old))
b.append((end_new,end_old))
my_tuple.append((d))
for i in my_tuple:
my_result = [sub for sub in i if all(element >= 0 for element in sub)]
the problem self.data.get will give also none value , so i am giving optional zero to avoid nonetype, but then i am zero values and i can not do positive checking with zero.
There's no need to apologise, I just want to know what foundations we have here
It goes back to my observation of my_tuple.append((d)) where the additional brackets don't do anything - they don't make it a tuple, they're just ignored
So I'm actually not sure you do know what a tuple is. There's no shame in that, but you would be better-helped if you at least explain that part
@Yen just so I understand correctly: your issue is that you can't have int(None) when self.data.get() returns None, so you default to 0 in this case, but this interferes with your validation check later. Correct?
OK. Minor side note: if self.data is dict-like then you can pass the "default in case of missing key" as a second argument: int(self.data.get(..., 0)). Just FYI. But my recommendation is to change this part of the code anyway.
So I would recommend keeping None. Then handling None cases in the validation check. Unless you can use a better default at the start.
The problem is that it's not clear to us (me) what your validation is really doing, so it's hard to tell you how to change your validation in a way that works with the None case.
E.g. your error message says "Positive Start values and Positive End values are not allowed to be used in conjunction", but what your code seems to check is something very different
Another, more important note: if you do my_list.append(d) in a loop without changing what d is, you will keep accumulating the same list in my_list. This is never what you want.
>>> lst = []
... d = []
... for i in range(3):
... d.append(i)
... lst.append(d)
...
>>> lst
[[0, 1, 2], [0, 1, 2], [0, 1, 2]]
>>> lst[0] is lst[1] is lst[2]
True
@Yen I get that my_result seems to check if there are any items where both starts are non-negative. The end_new/end_old check is surprising to me. And there doesn't seem to be a simultaneous check for "positive start, positive end" which the error mentions. My point is that the code might not do what you want it to do to begin with.
But to come back to your question: you'll have to define what behaviour you expect when a start/end value is missing. Do you want to ignore that in the check?
It will raise NoneType error if you do things to a None that is not supported.
E.g. when you do int(None): that will have to be avoided
Instead what you can do (question is if this is what you want to do) is all(int(element) >= 0 for element in sub if element is not None)
So move the int conversion inside the check. Or, you could convert non-None cases to int manually, earlier. Then you know you either have an int or a None. Then you can do all(element >= 0 for element in sub if element is not None)
Again, whether this will do what you want it to do depends on what you want the code to do, which is not clear to me. This is general guidance in this situation.
@Yen I already told you what to do. Why are you typing in completely different, random things?
If you don't understand what I mean, say so and we'll discuss further to reach a common understanding. Ignoring what I say and doing something random and wrong doesn't benefit either of us at all.
@Yen of course! What I meant was something like this:
start_new = self.data.get(f'applicationruntime_set-{i}-start_new')
if start_new is not None:
start_new = int(start_new)
# now start_new is either None or an int
this ^ is "convert non-None cases to int manually, earlier"
whereas "move the int conversion inside the check" would just have start_new = self.data.get(f'applicationruntime_set-{i}-start_new') at the top
In that case start_new is either None, or whatever the type of the object is that's in that dict-like object. Probably a string.