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11:47
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I just noticed I was hand-waving again when explaining...my bad :)
12:10
@NordineLotfi PyPy detects which attributes are always set during construction of instances and automatically creates internal slots on the class.
Interesting, I guess that explains it
The term is "hidden class" and other JIT engines (for other languages) such as V8 use similar concepts.
There's an old writeup in the PyPy blog.
Thanks for the link, didn't know about that :D
 
3 hours later…
15:23
Hello everyone:) I have a question about the insertion sort algorithm in knuth's book.(volume 3)
https://github.com/learnergthb/InsertionSort
My question: What does it mean to compare K and Ki?
example : R[] = {9,8,1,76}
R[j] okay.
(removed)
Is K a separate array ?
Step 2 says "Set K <- Kj"
K is the key. What does Kj mean?
Is it an element of the K array?
If I understand correctly, Kj is the "sort key" of the value Rj. Let me whip up an example
values_to_sort = ['100', '53', '88']
key_func = lambda value: int(value)

# R0 = '100'   K0 = 100
# R1 = '53'    K1 = 53
# R2 = '88'    K2 = 88
"Remember that, throughout this chapter, K_j denotes the key portion of R_j."
So in the first iteration, K = K0, then K = K1, and so on. It's a stupid notation because they're using K for a value and for the array simultaneously
I'm so glad I'm out of university and don't have to deal with this kind of rubbish anymore
They should just write 5 lines of pseudocode instead of drawing 3 diagrams and writing 2 paragraphs explaining what everything is and does
15:40
yes my algorithm analysis lecture at university.
i will send the elements to array K. Elements of the K array Kj Kj+1 Kj+2
I understood thanks a lot. :)
The algorithm doesn't even update the K array, pffft
Here's a python implementation of the algorithm (with that bug fixed)
16:04
link does not open
works fine on my end?
Hey, I have a main script with class and submit its instance as argument in function imported from another module. When trying to type the other module, I get circular import. Shall I take this as a clear indication my code shall be structured differently, i.e. the class be part of the module rather than in main (or module merged in main)?
what did you name your import and file/module?
I'll create a sample, give me a min
-- main.py --

from other.py import double

class A:
    self __init__(self, x: int) -> None:
        self.x = x
        self.xx = double(self)

a = A(1)


-- other.py --

from main import A  # needed for type class below

def double(z: "A") -> int:
    return z.x * 2
(It is not called main)
import typing

if typing.TYPE_CHECKING:
    from main import A
16:21
Thanks, it works. But it seems pretty heavy, just for typing one argument in other.py.
Would it be heresy to type everything in project except for this function argument?
So to keep selected stuff untyped.
Is "selective typing" considered a bad practice? I guess main purpose with typing is to make it easier especially around complex constructs. With class instances, it seems quite useful actually.
Do what you want, but I'd probably just throw in those 2 lines of code and be done with it. Why reduce the quality of your type hints when the solution is so easy?
I see, consistency matters
--
Linting aside, are there any tools that analyse the code quality in terms of composition? For instance, suggesting to merge some modules or split others?
For learners, this could be pretty useful I figure
Or maybe the standards are more relaxed, and code is ultimately a matter of personal preference / style?
pep8 does not seem to have many rules, which feels kind of nice
16:37
before asking any question about what you should do with type hints, first ask yourself: what is your goal in applying type hinting?
Python often feels very ambiguous because you can but do not have to do many things. Your question is a good food for thought.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні wat

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