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02:28
@aeiou You may want to have a types only module where it defines all the classes, main module could just import that, and other module can also too. This is one way to break the circular dependency, and generally is a good practice to whether or not type hinting is needed or not.
 
11 hours later…
No. If a loop always divides the variable by 2, then it's executed log(n) times
How did it get slower?
You're still counting the loops n times instead of log(n) times
T(n) = c1 + (n+1).c2 +n.c3 + n.(n+1).c4 + (n.n).c5 + c6.log(n) + c7.log(n)
Total cost = c1 + c2.n + c2 + c3.n + c4.n^2 + c4.n + c5.n^2 + c6.log(n) + c7.log(n)

time complexity analysis = O((n^2)log(n)
13:23
The first loop is easy, that runs log(n) times. The inner loop is trickier, because it runs log(j) times for each j. If we simplify that to log(n), we end up with log(n)^2
how many times does c5 work ?
Approximately log(n)^2 times
Also log(n)^2 times
c2 and c3 n times
13:29
No, log(n) times
(Strictly speaking log2(n) times)
j := floor(j / 2). How many times can you divide n by 2 until it becomes 1? log2(n) times.
ok i understand,thanks a lot:)
13:48
Total cost = c1 + (log(n)).c2 + (log(n)).c3 + (log(n)^2).c4 + ((log(n)^2).c5 + c6.(log(n)^2) + c7.(log(n)^2)

time complexity analysis = O(log(n)^2)
btw, when you have enough time, could you give me your opinion on the answer I did here? (eg: running it, etc). Just curious @PM2Ring
Anonymous
Is there any nicer way type hinting subprocess.Popen?

Class definition:

class Popen(Generic[AnyStr])

Type hinting:

process: Union[
    subprocess.Popen[str],
    subprocess.Popen[bytes],
    subprocess.Popen[Any],
]
Anonymous
"process: subprocess.Popen[AnyStr]" does not work, as the generic need one of str, bytes or Any.
@Aran-Fey When log n is n = 5 then log n is 0.6... It never goes into the loop. Should it be n.log(n) ?
The value of log(n) doesn't matter. Complexity analysis is about examining how much slower the algorithm gets the larger you make n. log(n) tells you that it grows logarithmically.
14:05
ok i understand better now
Thanks a lot.
@Warcaith I don't understand what you're trying to type hint. If you're trying to say "process can be any kind of Popen", that's just process: subprocess.Popen
Anonymous
Yeah, but VSCode gives me this error if I use "subprocess.Popen":

"Expected type arguments for generic class "Popen"
Anonymous
That's why I did as I did above, haha. :(
Anonymous
Some warnings are kind of dumb sometimes
@Warcaith that's actually something I wanted to do once but I only used isinstance and type instead. Nice
14:10
Weird, I don't get that error in vscode
Warcaith, are you using any plugins/extensions on vscode or only default installation?
Oh, right, I've turned off linting
ah, nvm then
Anonymous
Yeah, if I have linting turned on, I get the error.
@Aran-Fey I remember you mentioned this the last time we discussed type hinting
didn't know you actually did it :D
Anonymous
14:23
Btw, how do I make vscode see auto generated methods that, for example, "attrs" library generates?
Anonymous
"attrs_post_init", "attrs_init" etc.
@NordineLotfi Ok. I don't feel like booting up my computer right now, but I'll run it in a day or two. The text of your answer is good. It's clear, and the grammar is almost perfect. I suppose the except... pass stuff is ok for that example, but it would be better if you used named exceptions, and if the except block printed out useful info when exceptions occur.
@PM2Ring I see :D Thanks for looking at it. I guess I'll be patient for you to try it since I made some effort to make it interactive. I also thought of using named exceptions, but didn't because I wanted to post the answer in a small enough format, and fast enough. I guess I'll try to edit it later today and add named exceptions though if it makes it more detailed.
@Warcaith there this, but this isn't a Python solution (use the vscode's extension/config API): stackoverflow.com/a/69426422/12349101
Anonymous
@NordineLotfi Oh, alright. I don't get it, does people not care about seeing the generated methods when they use a library like attrs or do they just ignore all the errors?
@NordineLotfi What exceptions do you expect there? Is it just ValueError: invalid literal for int()... when int(to_do[0]) etc , gets bad input?
14:36
@PM2Ring yep, that's basically it
Ok. Then it would be helpful to print that bad input.
@Warcaith I feel like it's a bit of both to be honest. Btw, here is the related github issues on pylance's github: github.com/microsoft/pylance-release/issues/226 I think they might have already started adding support for what you want, but not 100% sure
@PM2Ring yeah, you're right. Will do this today (hopefully)
Cool. There's no rush. ;)
Anonymous
@NordineLotfi I'm probably moving away from attrs and just defining my classes the ordinary way. I think it's better for our requirements, as I don't want to have to ignore errors in the whole code base to not get warnings.
Anonymous
14:57
If we have an internal process class, like this:

class Process:
    _process: subprocess.Popen()

    def start(self):
        self._process = subprocess.Popen()

Would you make "_process" have the type hint "Optional[subprocess.Popen]", as it will only be set once you call start?
Anonymous
"Optional" sounds so dumb here, as it's not really optional... :')
Anonymous
Should all attributes that are initialized "some time after init" be set as Optional?
Premise 1: The attribute doesn't always exist
Premise 2: You want your IDE to warn you if you access an attribute that doesn't exist
Conclusion: You need to tell your IDE that this attribute doesn't always exist
Anonymous
So Optional is the way to go, right?
Anonymous
I guess so.
Anonymous
15:09
I like the word "Nullable" better for some cases, lol
Anonymous
Optional sounds like "this thing is not required at all"
Yeah, I don't like it either
 
1 hour later…
16:21
Does anyone know which colormap the above image is?
looks like the default matplotlib one, is it not?
jet I think it's called
@PeterT Yup, thank you :)
I've got an array like [1, 2, 3, 4]
How can I take the last half of the array and make it into a second column?
Like [[1, 2], [3, 4]]?
I tried np.reshape, but it makes [[1, 2],[3, 4]], which looks ok at first glance.
Oh, I see my mistake!
16:37
Hey!
Anyone knows pysimplegui?
16:47
@animeshchaudhri I mostly use tkinter (which is what it use/support internally) so I think I could still be of help
17:17
Good ol' "Can someone help?" *leaves*
17:52
yeah...
 
5 hours later…
15 reps 35 dollars damn this is good deal, better than my daily wages
yeah, saw that one earlier too. Not the weirdest "job" you would see on upwork, but still plenty weird
the more years pass, the more upwork just feels like a craigslist clone, to be honest

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