There is no clear delineation of what is new/changed and what is the same among the "updated" code of conduct announced on May 31, 2023. What was changed/added?
@smci There, and then I rallied people in here for some issues I was having. I was pretty furious after thinking about it last night but I've calmed down now sorry. I didn't think GPT stuff would get to me so soon but finding out that the problems I was tackling come straight from a machine, rather than a person I thought was working on my side, is not how I operate.
I think I might take Paul's lead and upload a character. This is Professor Mori-artemisinin from my old not-to-be PhD days. A confused antagonist for Shirlock Holmes given the fact he's the root cure to hundreds of millions of malaria cases each year
How can I get this code to work? how do I point that the specificy where the first "attr" is coming from? Its a pyspark dataframe: fb.select(expr(stack_expr)). \ filter("value IS NOT NULL AND value != ''"). \ join(a, attr == a.attr, "inner")
@PM2Ring This is in fact the case where I currently try to pin a name on. I hope that further reading in the wiki will let me feel comfortable by naming that feature.
@NordineLotfi Had exactly the same thought before, but it kinda felt too abstract to me. But a good suggestion as well, thank you.
@roganjosh Just to note a copy of all display images you've used are kept so if you did want an old one back and you can find a friendly mod - they can dig it up for you...
Much appreciated! I could have grabbed one myself but I just took the plunge. I've come to live with this icon. Much better than I did from losing roganjosh for my real name
Saw something the other day that kind of made me chuckle ('cos I have too dark a sense of humour)... "Do you think it's okay to kill off characters in my book?" - "I guess so - what kind of book is it?" - "My autobiography"
@roganjosh if you haven't seen it... try and find a 3 part program called Ambassadors with Mitchell and Webb... it's disappointing it didn't go further as really enjoyed it
Well it is a generic function that calls after in tkinter over and over again. The exact implementation isn't final yet. What's for sure, the ordinary technique of tkinter.Widget().after(ms, repeat_my_function) is not a really efficient way. So I'm implementing a feature that does that, but better and as an intended way of doing this. Now my biggest problem seems to name it.
@Thingamabobs that's something I also wanted recently, since I had a feeling it might hit a recursion limit like in normal Python (or at least waste ram)
I though about after.recur but that is clearly wrong. So I searched for a intuitive and technical correct name for it. So now, I think I end up calling it after.cyclic
@roganjosh No I don't use a infinite loop, neither I mean by better the frame stack. Tkinter creates a new frame, where a local wrapper function is computed and registered in the tcl interpreter. Calling after.(ms, repeat_this_function) is at least a memory leak, even when it's small. I intend to fix that in my project.
The memory of that name, as far as I understand the matter, I belief it was about 8 bits so not a big deal, will never be freed. Also since there is a unique name for each after call the strings increase. It's not that big of a deal, just a little improvement and a intended way of doing this.
it does say the same thing on the surface, but if you try it yourself, and use .after extensively, you will notice yourself a small but growing memory leak
I don't know if this affect all version, but I know this affect mine at least
Well, the meal is very tasty, it's just me that's a shambles :P
Still, I've now read that answer thrice. It's not a memory leak, it just expands the memory footprint by the page size? It might get there incrementally, but it's not unbounded?
ah, I admit it's hard for me to explain/prove my point when I don't have a small MRE
I think you can only notice what I'm saying if you use .after and monitor the memory externally (use a subprocess to launch the tkinter app, and use psutil and matplotlib to monitor the memory)
you also need a decent amount of time too. You won't notice it right away AFAIK
well, I never implied the memory leak would crash yours (given I know you have more computing power than me)but generally speaking, if I know it'll waste say, 1GB after X hours running, then I'll think it's a waste and want to prevent that (this is an example)
either way, you made a good point. It's good to make MRE too, for making sure it's happening, etc
I have to thank this room though. Thanks to everyone here, I managed to greatly know how good MRE are. I made a dozen of POC and MRE on my gist.github, so I think I got it on that point
it's great for rubberducking, you can also find the answer to your problem by yourself since it's in a smaller form and easily debuggable, etc
@roganjosh Dude, don't burn out, esp. if you're "but a contractor". There was organizational folly and cargo-cultistry aeons before GPT. There will be some organizations where people get ahead with AI-based corner-cutting... some will succeed, some will blow up, some will end in tears...