Anyone know how to move the terminal cursor to after all the info I printed after the program ends? I'm using blessed and currently C:\Users\user\python\> always covers up the second line since I cleared the entire screen
"how to get the thing I'm controlling to change the way the thing I'm not controlling to behave after the thing i'm controlling no longer has control" is what I just heard...
sure you aren't just missing a newline at the end of your embedded script?
I don't know anything about Blessed....but if you did some python equivalent to manipulating print('abc', end='\r\n') the original terminal may have a hard time based on it's logic for carriage returns.
Interesting library though...truly, Python libs are getting out of hand for functional abstraction :D
Is there any nice tool/library for making simple html dashboard? preferably something I can combine with Jinja2, and it doesn't need much interactivity
@matszwecja Yeah, I can recommend Dash as well. It is very powerful. If you want something for quick prototyping that is easier to get started but less flexible/customizable, have a look at streamlit.
I've used dash a bit recently and you still end up using bootstrap. All said and done, it felt just like I was writing the HTML anyway but it's all just in python which might give people the fuzzies
What would you name a callable that should be used as a filtering condition? The "filter" method that exists in Python has a argument named "__function", which is not that good of a name.
I know that there is a word for this type of callable, but can't remember what it is.
@Aran-Fey i and j are relations, not a tree, but yeah
would it be better to instead, make bar something like create_and_return which then creates the instance and returns the instance once the relations are done?
subprocess.Popen(
stdout=?
)
How would a method look that can be assign to "stdout"? A simple use case, if I would have a method called just "print_stdout", how would it look to make it useable in the pipe?
subprocess.Popen(
stdout=print_stdout
)
I know that I can do it like this, but wondering how to make it able to set it directly as an argument:
process = subprocess.Popen(
stdout=subprocess.PIPE
)
print_stdout(process.stdout)
General question... I'm wondering how folks here are tracking (Python) version specific workarounds in their projects. As context, we're still bound to support Python 3.6 but that means we add more and more stopgaps that become obsolete the instant we drop Python 3.6 support.
Anyone know how to affect the value of a dictionary when I do val = dictionary.get().get() ? I know that .get returns a copy so is there a different way to do that?
So far I've started collecting such workarounds in a mega issue, but those need maintaining as well. Are there any in-code solutions for Python, say specific comments to mark version dependencies?
@12944qwerty .get doesn't return a copy. Do you have a practical example?
@MisterMiyagi I actually wanted to do something similar, so I could support every major python versions. I don't think I found any public codebase that did this (yet) though, so I think I might have to do this from scratch (or maybe use 2to3 as a basis or something)
I don't know if you do this on your end using marshal/bytecode or ast, but yeah
We don't have workarounds really isolated. It's mostly stuff like backports needed as dependencies, not using modern operators/operations (think dict's |), not using dataclasses, using outdated asyncio APIs, that sort of thing.
:55654602 How would that work, in practice? The code is implemented like this now (kind of):
if something:
self._attribute = Class(
...
add_this="Hello"
)
else:
self._attribute = Class(
...
)
I think linter's problem with raise Exception('XYZ') is less about it not telling YOU anything, but rather not telling PROGRAM anything.
As in, you can't except this specific error without a) using generic except or b) parsing error message of each exception and reraising it if it does not contain 'XYZ'
I was trying to zip 2 values and then append them in a list.. one of which gets incremented in a loop. I am getting this error TypeError: 'float' object is not iterable
This is what i have written : DUT1_zipped.append(list(zip(v_avg1, v_dut1[v]))) Can anyone help me out?
Hello, I have a question. I am trying to create a function that produces random variables of exponential distribution, but in what was given there is something that confuses me. The function has as arguments N (nr. of random variables), tau(which is present in the exponential decay),tmin(lower boundary) and tmax(upper one). My question is, why do i need tau here?
I can easily produce random variables with exp. distribution, without the need of tau
@imbAF This sounds not like a Python question, but Mathematics. What I read: "I need to create a function that produces random variables of exp dist...I have done so. What does Tau do?"
@Elysiumplain I read the link. The thing is, that what is described there gives me random variables with exp. distribution withing the 0-1 interval. All I need is that but to change the interval values