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02:07
@metatoaster I don't understand what you were talking about in PCR before deciding it belonged here... ?
what do you mean about "re-exports"?
02:37
@KarlKnechtel specifically the --no-implicit-reexport flag for mypy, which simply uses PEP 484 (for all files instead of just stub files) - that pep introduced this as a concept for stub files rather than unifying this re-export mechanism to the already existing __all__ that's been defined to list all module exports
most insultingly, PEP 484 does not mention __all__ at all, it's like the authors didn't know there already exist a mechanism
I would have originally chalked that up as mypy devs not really getting what Python already has (they've failed to implement support for __all__ originally after all), but given the existence of that PEP on python.org and the PEP itself not even considering existing features such as __all__, yeah, that's very inexcusable
 
4 hours later…
06:55
what does python -m does? Try googling it but it just strips the -m part
It executes a module. For example, python -m pip is equivalent to pip
(For some definitions of "equivalent")
07:14
@Ooker See the docs on command line options: "Search sys.path for the named module and execute its contents as the __main__ module. […]"
@Ooker if you ever need to use Google for command line flags that starts with - you should remove it from the search and quote it with the program, e.g. search for "python m" on Google will bring up this thread as the first result.
using "python \-m" bring this as the first result too: stackoverflow.com/questions/7610001/…
if I use "python m" it bring this as first result: docs.python.org/3/using/cmdline.html
 
6 hours later…
13:37
Looking for some input on Python on Windows... is the builtin curses library easily available? I know there's windows-curses on PyPI and WSL – but does the former run out of the box, and does the latter ship with python that bundles curses?
@MisterMiyagi I used it extensively on 3.8 (on Windows 10). You need to install windows-curses on pip (it's the only way), and then it usually run out of the box on Linux code that use the builtin curses module
I'm saying usually since the way windows-curses support unicode might differ from the builtin curses module (there an open issue on github about this, I forgot)
but it should be 1:1 aside from that
ah, I think there also a limitation on colored output last time I checked, but I'm not too sure on that one either (I think it's because of how Windows handle cmd colors). I think that's it
nice! B/W ASCII characters is all I need, so that should work.
yep, should work
btw, there a nice trick I picked up to not need to redraw text that does not change on specific part of the terminal: basically use a busy loop or time.sleep in a thread, and then you only need to draw it once. Might be useful for async-like behavior on curses...
because there a limit on what time.sleep can accept (think this is defined in some header in Cpython) I just used a while loop and something like 999999 or so
13:58
Hm, yeah check that out... neat:
>>> import time, sys
>>> time.sleep(sys.maxsize)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
OverflowError: timestamp too large to convert to C _PyTime_t
yep, _PyTime_t is what I meant earlier. I don't know how to get the value it represent from python, but there probably a way (didn't find one at the time)
Interesting that it's an int of nanoseconds. Would have expected a float of seconds.
Er, actually INT64_MAX == 0x7fffffffffffffff according to a quick google
It's signed.
0xffffffffffffffff should be INT64_MIN.
14:11
I was looking at this doc when I made that claim. It is entirely possible my search pointed me to the wrong place.
 
2 hours later…
15:52
A recent HNQ involves a somewhat surprising use of float by Numpy where you'd expect it to be using integer arithmetic. stackoverflow.com/q/76142428/4014959
16:29
@Ooker Try using a better search engine. For example, if I put python -m into DuckDuckGo, the first two results I get are stackoverflow.com/questions/7610001/… and stackoverflow.com/questions/50821312/meaning-of-python-m-flag
16:58
can confirm I also get the same two result on duckduckgo
17:08
google just doesn't xd
yeah, what I mentioned here was when I used google
@MisterMiyagi just wanted to clarify something: I did say "it's the only way" for installing windows-curses, but I did not test using built-in curses module on WSL. So maybe that would work too as an alternative
@PM2Ring When I look at C/C++ stuff, the amount of UB does surprise me. I do wonder how much is deliberately UB when a new feature is released and how much is discovered and then gets an UB flag slapped on it. Probably less in C, but still, it seems like an awfully big catch-all net
I forgot about backslashes
Less relevant in this case, since it's a known case of UB carried-over into numpy
@NordineLotfi Knowing whether curses works on WSL would be interesting (also if anyone else knows... wink wink). But it's enough for my case to know that Windows users can run the program somehow.
17:22
got you, makes sense :)
@MisterMiyagi if it's on github, I could help testing it if you want
@roganjosh Frankly, I find the concept of undefined on top of implementationdefined behaviour downright scary. It's one thing to say "something arbitrary happens" and another to say "the rules of the universe unravel and perhaps something arbitrary happens if you're lucky".
@NordineLotfi I'm afraid it's an internal project. It's just a very basic game for teaching purposes.
ah, then nevermind :P
@MisterMiyagi the latter I would be surprised about. I don't think the bridging is particularly good between the two, it's still mostly a VM until it's confusingly not and becomes a terminal
I could probably test that one. Uno momento por favor
I tell a lie:
josh@LAPTOP-REUKPJT0:/home$ python3
Python 3.6.9 (default, Nov 25 2022, 14:10:45)
[GCC 8.4.0] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import curses
>>> dir(curses)
['ALL_MOUSE_EVENTS', 'A_ALTCHARSET', 'A_ATTRIBUTES',
17:39
success!
Thanks for trying!
No worries. I have to pretend that that laptop still has utility so you helped me out :P
Always a pleasure.
@MisterMiyagi sorry if I rain on anyone hope, but I don't think this is the right output: gist.github.com/secemp9/ed5c9bca728793d96db92b6c5486a5c0
the Windows one isn't in WSL, so I'm guessing it might not work that much there
I was using WSL
yeah, that's why I'm saying that :)
in the gist above, I copied output from dir(curses) like you did, but both on Linux and on Windows (using windows-curses)
17:44
Well, the poor sods all have WSL installed since last lecture, so either works for me. ^^
welp, I don't have WSL set up, so I'll take your word for it...
@MisterMiyagi as you already know it doesn't work outside WSL
To my great sorrow github.com/inducer/pudb doesn't work because github.com/urwid/urwid assumes curses
Wait, you're on Windows now? D:
And WSL 1 is headless, and WSL 2 needs proxy hacks...
Thought you were firmly in Camp Linux.
17:49
@MisterMiyagi only when I get paid :'|
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні pudb looks nice, didn't know it
maybe you could just edit the part that check for curses, so it works with windows-curses
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I still think that's a very good reason to use Windows. ^^
I intentionally kept two-finger natural scrolling so I know I'm at work when it hurts
nevermind, it also require fcntl :/
I've had some real fun "git vs windows vs file permissions" fun these past couple of weeks
17:57
vs. Windows or you-have-no-power-here-lol-because-corporation-controlled-windows?
Just windows, although it's corporate controlled windows
Anyone know of an algorithm that shortens a string two-way?
I got to thinking back to the ways I've tried to get around Windows security in the past and setx came to mind. This is still plainly wrong and still the top answer:
Jan 22, 2019 at 15:57, by roganjosh
What do we do about things like this? I trashed my PATH only a couple of weeks ago from setx. This is the first result for me for "Windows add pip to path" and the top answers are just wrong.
I was thinking of converting them to the ascii code and padding them with 3 digits (0) then combining the numbers together... then divmodding by like 100 or something to get a much smaller string to store.
Wouldn't a regular ol' compression algorithm work for that?
18:10
Can I retrieve the original string with that?
yeah, that's how it works
user17135505
Good evening, learning inheritance... is this very wrong?
user17135505
class Parent:
    name = 'Smith'

class Child(Parent):
    def say_name(self):
        print(super().name)
Found zlib, nice
@learning_python_self You don't need super() there. self.name or type(self).name or __class__.name would all work
user17135505
18:15
Thanks indeed, I go to play with it
You only need super() if the child class overrides the parent's thing
@12944qwerty Yes. But those algorithms will output bytes, so if you need text as output, you'll need to base64-encode it, which will increase the size again
I'm serializing as json after compression, which needs text
In that case I think you can use bytes.decode('latin1')
Presumably there is a reason why you're compressing the contents of the json, rather than compressing the json as a whole?
I still need to access the keys of each. I feel like it would be worse to compress and uncompress the json over and over again... instead of just doing it once for each set of strings
@Aran-Fey but I can't store bytes in json
18:31
That's why you're decoding them into text
He didn't suggest you storing bytes
Where are you passing this JSON? Between what; servers?
no, just storage
Storage in a database?
No, json file.
So what difference does it make that you need keys uncompressed since the whole JSON has to be parsed anyway before it's a valid object?
18:35
Compressing individual values definitely sounds like more work than compressing the whole file
Which is better, parsing JSON and uncompressing just one value, or uncompressing everything then parsing the json
Which is possible? You can't selectively pull out values from JSON without parsing the whole structure
You're only accessing one single value? O.o
Uncompressing everything and then parsing the JSON will be better in all but extremely pathological cases.
Ok, I think I get what you're getting at, but the whole storage mechanism seems pretty expensive. Is there a reason for settling on JSON for this in the first place? Also, why is compression an issue here; are you expecting a lot of data?
18:39
I am expecting a lot of data, especially as time goes on. I'm using json for the keyvalue, but atm the json file for testing.
FWIW, if you compress/uncompress the entire JSON, that's much easier to refactor in later on as well switching it on/off (even for individual files).
If the values are compressed, that will leak much deeper into your application.
What do you mean?
@Aran-Fey well, 3...
What if, for testing I just create different json files instead of storing them all in one?
Wait, can we take a step back here? It doesn't look like you are actually familiar with compression, so are you sure you even need it?
What's your current (projected) space requirement, and how much do you (plan to) have available?
The data I'm storing will start getting really big, even from the get-go. I want to make sure that my storage does not increase exponentially.
If that's what you're worried about then you should definitely compress the whole file and not just parts of it
18:53
Compression will only get you a factor of relief, such as making each file half as large. If your projected increase is exponential, compression won't safe you.
I have 10GB, maybe more as I fund. but I do plan to recycle old data
nvm, 75GB if I use nosql
@12944qwerty This is a major question. As I alluded to before, you have to parse the whole JSON object before you can do any search on it. So, compression or not, your lookup performance is going to degrade terribly. That's your trade-off with this approach
How nested is the JSON for a start?
There are people that say/think "I can use JSON for an MVP and worry about scale later" and I think that's a terrible idea. You get deep enough that retro-fitting a better backend storage mechanism is horrible.
So, I should start immediately with a database?
I would always suggest that. I cut corners on lots of things just to get a project over the line, but the cost/benefit on this particular case never works out
I might be stuck in this habit because of replit ugh
19:06
Case in point, only today, I joined a project last week and the meeting this afternoon and the client wants to move to their AWS account. Tough luck that the people that built this hellfire I've been dropped into have used S3 transfer from their own buckets rather than a database. I can't wait until that breaks the entire package because our buckets will be inaccessible. I can't even say "I told you so; build around a DB" because I just got dropped into this situation
This folly exists on all levels :'(
"and the meeting this afternoon and the client" -> "and at the meeting this afternoon, the client". I guess I'm riled up enough to forget how to English, sorry
19:47
@roganjosh "MVP"?
"Minimum viable product". Something that you can expand on
so like a POC except it's a product?
In a lot of cases, you can get away with crappy code. But the JSON/SQL balance just doesn't work for me because it becomes so pervasive and you never go "MVP" -> "Relax and refactor for 2 weeks" -> "Next stage". Just set it up with SQL from the start, even if it takes a couple of days to figure out the SQL (if you don't know it) for SQLite3 at a minimum. It will pay dividends
@NordineLotfi Yes. A POC would be to see whether an idea could fly. An MVP would be to see whether a product could fly. At least, that's how I see it.
If you have an MVP, you better be sure you know how to bring it forward if you have a sponsor/investor
And JSON -> SQL is just an overbearing burden that you could just avoid from the start by actually starting with SQL. It's a fallacy that JSON is easier once you learn a bit of SQL, even just enough to be slightly functional
I should clarify that point - It's a fallacy to think that JSON storage is easier than SQL storage. JSON definitely has its place, but it's not this case
20:59
@roganjosh that's an intuitive description :o Thanks
What does poc stand for
Proof of concept
21:16
I can think of an anecdote (but it's an anathema to me). You can set up a scraper for a site and realise you can scrape any page by adding the page ID to the URL. That's a POC; you know you can do it now. The MVP would be to allow users of your service to search for the page titles. You're storing each page's content in JSON, and scanning for the title
Later on, you want to search the page body, but you keep pumping all that into a single JSON object. Your POC and MVP is working, but the more pages you scrape, the worse the user experience becomes, so your MVP is built on quicksand because it gets worse the more data you pull in
 
1 hour later…
22:26
Has anyone ever tampered with __traceback__ of an exception?
I want to remove (at least) the most recent line from the traceback
If at all possible, poison your POC in such a way that it can't just become the MVP. POC is for the Proving of Concepts, not for being a rough draft of the finished product. Make it intentionally limited in some important way. One might even suggest that using one big JSON file is a way of doing this - obviously no MVP would deploy with such a rickety underlying storage.
But so far, I only figured out how to remove previous steps with __traceback__.tb_next = None
@finefoot I have tampered with tracebacks in my pyparsing package. But I don't think what you are asking for can easily be done.
The most recent line of the traceback doesn't really exist until you raise the exception. At which point it is out of your hands.
Basically: I want to raise an exception with a custom traceback raise exception.with_traceback(my_custom_traceback) without that raise call showing up in the traceback
@PaulMcG Yeah exactly. :( That's where I'm stuck right now
I'm pretty sure that raise alters the traceback, which makes this impossible
Hmmm, actually, it might be possible by catching, altering, then re-raising with a bare raise
22:30
Short of bytecode and call stack tampering...
@Aran-Fey But as soon as you call raise, won't that raise show up as the last line in the traceback?
^^ trying this now...
def fn():
    try:
        1/0
    except Exception as e:
        e.__traceback__ = None
        raise

fn()
This does not show the raise statement, nor does it show the 1/0 statement. Just fn().
Setting e.__traceback__.tb_next to None does nothing discernible.
Huh
I'm on 3.9 and it's exactly the other way around for me
3.11
    Python 3.9.2 (default, Feb 28 2021, 17:03:44)
[GCC 10.2.1 20210110] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> def fn():
...     try:
...         1/0
...     except Exception as e:
...         e.__traceback__ = None
...         raise
...
>>> fn()
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 3, in fn
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
>>>
22:35
Try doing it in an actual .py file instead of from the REPL.
I did
Same
With 3.11, running as a .py script, I get this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Users\ptmcg\AppData\Roaming\JetBrains\PyCharm2022.3\scratches\scratch_63.py", line 8, in <module>
    fn()
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
$ python3 test.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/home/user/desktop/test.py", line 8, in <module>
    fn()
  File "/home/user/desktop/test.py", line 3, in fn
    1/0
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
$
@finefoot It shouldn't. Re-raising with a bare raise isn't visible in the stack trace AFAIK
@Aran-Fey Yes, that's true
I misunderstood what you were saying. I overlooked the "bare"
22:39
Messing with exception tracebacks is like stepping off the path through Mirkwood.
That's what I tried before when I modified tb_next
> Special writable attribute: tb_next is the next level in the stack trace (towards the frame where the exception occurred), or None if there is no next level.
If you don't want to show the 'raise' statement, then a bare 'raise' should do what you want - question mark?
Yes, but as far as I understand the bare raise raises the "current" exception. How do I replace it with another one? Or, alternatively, how do I modify the "current" exception's traceback to not show the last few lines?
Example:
def f(): g()

def g(): h()

def h(): raise Exception
>>> f()
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in f
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in g
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in h
Exception
>>>
I think that's what happened for me with Python3.11. Testing with 3.10 it's the same behavior as you are seeing with 3.9:
PS C:\Users\ptmcg> py -3.10 C:\Users\ptmcg\AppData\Roaming\JetBrains\PyCharm2022.3\scratches\scratch_63.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Users\ptmcg\AppData\Roaming\JetBrains\PyCharm2022.3\scratches\scratch_63.py", line 8, in <module>
    fn()
  File "C:\Users\ptmcg\AppData\Roaming\JetBrains\PyCharm2022.3\scratches\scratch_63.py", line 3, in fn
    1/0
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
PS C:\Users\ptmcg> py -3.11 C:\Users\ptmcg\AppData\Roaming\JetBrains\PyCharm2022.3\scratches\scratch_63.py
I think that makes sense, right?
And when I modify tb_next:
>>> try:
...     f()
... except Exception as e:
...     e.__traceback__.tb_next = None
...     raise
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 2, in <module>
Exception
>>>
So it's exactly the opposite of what I want
22:49
don't know much about traceback, but I found this answer interesting: stackoverflow.com/a/58821552/12349101
and there also what jinja is doing internally: github.com/pallets/jinja/blob/main/src/jinja2/debug.py
@PaulMcG Huh... interesting. I guess I'll have a look at the change log.
Thanks for the help everyone :) I'll continue with this tomorrow
Has anyone done any playing around with Twilio? Or other SMS work? I am trying to send a lat-long through an SMS message so that my phone will treat it like a "tap here and see it in a map" link.

If I send it as a full `https://maps.etc./@lat-long`, Twilio accepts my API call, but no SMS ever arrives at my phone.
I'm trying to write a simple panic button app for my next door neighbor. I have a working AWS Lambda I can send requests to, and it uses Twilio to send an SMS to my phone. It works as long as I don't ask it to send a URL.
(Might be a limitation of using the Twilio free service tier - cheap so-and-so that I am...)
There is this post. But it points to a message being too long (mine isn't), and a subsequent answer says that limitation has been lifted.
This post suggests wrapping in CDATA tags, but my initial attempts at this also fail (Twilio "accepts" the message, I get a nice 200 response status, but no SMS actually sent.)
23:05
I never used Twilio (or AWS Lambda) but did you try this guide on the official doc?: twilio.com/blog/…
I looked at SNS, it was not quite as nice an API experience. But if I have time (this is all purely spare time stuff) and/or I get tired of not having a clickable lat-long in the text message, I may revisit.
Documentation? Who reads that stuff?
that means you already tried it, got you
No I didn't actually, I was self-deprecating myself.
That page points me to the actual REST endpoint, so that might be worth trying. I'm using the twilio client API.
@PaulMcG wait, really? and here I thought this was sarcasm
my sarcasm meter was all over the place...maybe it's broken
I did something similar about 8 years ago, but with my own REST server running on a tiny EC2 instance - Lambda removes a lot of the headaches (one I got past the hurdle of pip installing twilio, because AWS docs leave out the crucial piece about adding 'PYTHONPATH=/opt' to the Lambda env vars).
But it might be that the twilio API is doing something to prevent my sending a malicious URL to someone's phone. Honest, I don't have a malicious bone in my body!
23:14
@PaulMcG that might be a good hypothesis: stackoverflow.com/a/73244166/12349101
Ah, there is a separate parameter to the create_message method, "media_url"...
yeah, I saw that too a couple minutes ago here: twilio.com/docs/sms/tutorials/how-to-send-sms-messages-python but I didn't say anything because I thought you already knew
I actually wanted to use Twilio about a year ago but never tried it yet. For some reason, I still joined the Collective they set up on SO
Hm, docs are not encouraging on this tack:
> media_url – The URL of the media to send with the message. The media can be of type gif, png, and jpeg and will be formatted correctly on the recipient's device. The media size limit is 5MB for supported file types (JPEG, PNG, GIF) and 500KB for [other types](https://www.twilio.com/docs/sms/accepted-mime-types ) of accepted media. To send more than one image in the message body, provide multiple media_url parameters in the POST request. You can include up to 10 media_url parameters per message. You can send images in an SMS message in only the US
maybe it's for preventing spam? not sure
And there is some doc on using the Twilio link shortener.
Oh, I think that is very likely.
Ok, I don't really expect to need the lat-long anyway, as my neighbor is pretty much housebound. If it comes up again, I'll look into the link shortening feature, and failing that, delve into SNS.
23:24
their help center give some more details, but don't know if it's relevant (US related): support.twilio.com/hc/en-us/articles/…
I think you might also have some luck asking on their Collective. The intel/MS one wasn't too good based on a couple answers I saw a week ago, but Twilio seems decent for some answers I'm seeing
Both. Yeah, once I need to configure an "organization" and register for additional services, that exceeds my threshold of interest. What I have now is adequate for the current situation - if I need more, I see that there are options. Last thing is to slap together a Kivy app with a button labeled "Don't Panic!" that my neighbor can load up on his phone.
23:39
I remember playing around with Kivy and python-for-android (which is what Kivy is based on, among other things). I went back and forth between Kivy, python-for-android, and another project, pyjnius
I'm gonna admit, it's not the most documented set of projects to use. It's also a pain to set up, but once you get some things working, it makes you proud (somewhat).
Kivy used to have a vdi image on their main website, but I see they removed the link (you can still get it on the wayback machine, but I think this is probably outdated). Hopefully, it's less of a pain to set up Kivy and Bulldozer for compiling Kivy to APK...
I used ChatGPT to generate code for Kivy and Beeware - yet to be run, but they look reasonable. For a little project that I really don't want to invest a lot of time in, ChatGPT to rough out a basic template was more approachable than Googling, sifting through junk answers, and then finding much the same code, with the same level of required customization.
I wonder if ChatGPT will end up being 10X cargo-culting, resulting in 0.01X actual learning by junior devs.
one thing I thought of at the time was to make a Kivy/python-for-android/pyjnius repl to explore undocumented features. I never did that yet, but I did find this at the time: github.com/kengoon/PyJniusTester
Oh, and on the free tier, Twilio already does some mucking with my message body, prefixing it with "Sent from your Twilio trial account - ". But the rest looks pretty much verbatim from what I sent. This page looks relevant (and is essentially Twilio saying "we send it, if it doesn't go through complain to somebody else).
it's a bit buggy, but if you ever feel as desperate as I was, it might somehow be helpful. Maybe not. Anyway, I think Kivy used to also force you to use an older python version, given python-for-android had the same problem (I think they were stuck on 3.6 if I recall right).
@PaulMcG I feel like as long as you don't glorify it (which too many people sadly do) it's not as bad as some random blog on the internet or anonymous advice on [forum name here]
Well 3.6 would be sufficient to show a button and send an HTTP POST request. I can forego the sexiness of 3.7 and beyond.
23:49
@PaulMcG yeah, that message get removed once you get a paid tier AFAIK
I saw it mentioned on one of the part of their docs at least
@PaulMcG yeah, should be :) just was saying this in case you wanted to use third party packages
I had a lot of headache with this a year ago, so yeah
I'm already paying 40 cents a month to store the Twilio creds in an AWS-managed secret.
But I like the part where the API key is not in the actual source code.
@NordineLotfi Since I expect that I will be the only recipient for these messages, I am happy to be reminded that I am receiving them at no cost.
At my last job, when I was doing QA automation, and running tests that ran for hours and hours, I was just about to the point of starting to drop in Twilio text messaging with status updates. But then the company went out of business, so my motivation went out of business too.
This message and answer deserve more upvotes - was the missing piece that I did not see in the AWS docs (i.e., defining PYTHONPATH to /opt).
Its environments like serverless where the package-in-a-single file (like pyparsing used to be in 2.4.x days, and like littletable is now) makes it easy to just drop in a package along with your app code, instead of having to fight the serverless environment's particular incarnation of pip.
@PaulMcG yeah, It looks good enough that I might try it sooner or later

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