@smci Sure, I definitely won't burn out over it, I'm done putting in the 18 hour days from a few years back. At the risk of sounding sensationalist (though I can't find a better way to describe it) it hurt me on a personal level. It goes beyond cargo-culting; this is thousands of lines of code that I've been trying to knit together only to find that the person then brazenly states how good GPT has been in generating their code and I've spent all that time mopping up after it without knowing
That's not a good use of anyone's time, let alone a contractor hired for a specialism. What an exciting new world we live in... :/
The point I was trying to make is that it usually isn't an issue and wouldn't be considered a memory leak. I would probably question the design if a dict would swell to enormous levels of redundant entires. I guess tkinter could be a different kettle of fish given that its very nature is to run continuously but I'm still dubious about whether there really is a "memory leak"
What I was trying to say earlier was, yes, the dict was a good point, but we're not dealing with just a Python dict here. There is a tcl interpreter, etc. I don't know as much in tkinter as Thingamabobs, so I was just going off from what I noticed on my end myself
It's hard to constantly reproduce, down to the exact timing a memory leak. I remember once noticing some on Linux with XWindow, and it would only be noticeable when you used VNC or leaving XWindow running for a week+ (in that case, the pixmap weren't cleaned correctly, so it kept rteference to destroyed window/etc)
I think that was on an older version of XWindow anyway, so that's probably a bad example.
Either way, I agree it might be completely useless for me to say anything further on that point, since I do not have an MRE (or further proof). If the MRE also require a long time of execution, then it might be impossible for anyone to agree unless they're a tkinter dev or have been working with it extensively (or just trust you/give benefit of the doubt). I don't think anyone would want to run an MRE that need X houyrs or X days to see a memory leak...
@roganjosh I mentioned this GPT-fueled nightmare on MSE. I hope that's ok.
GPT can be downright dangerous if you think you're using it responsibly but you don't understand what it's given you. One of the SO Python Room Owners was recently hired as a consultant for a software project in a field in which he has considerable expertise. The code base looks good on the surface, but it seems to be riddled with flaws. — PM 2Ring19 hours ago
That's absolutely fine :) It's an unfortunate reality now and I don't know how to tackle that. You take it on good-faith that the functions they write are actually thought-out and maybe you need to mentor the person a bit more on how to get everything integrated. The idea that you can get something writing functions in isolation to build actual software is folly
That, I think, is the core of the frustration. That person isn't learning anything because they didn't put the thought into it in the first place. It's just handing over a pile of AI-generated garbage and then it falls on me to try make it work. I'm actually benchmarked against that; if I can't get it working together then it's on my head and I might lose my job
@MisterMiyagi There's lots of things bundled into this one and I think it'll just get worse. My job is in quite a technical arena so I didn't think it would bite so quickly. In my previous role as Lead I could have shut it down immediately but now I'm in a position where it's "ok, I guess this is my new reality now"
@nnekkitt Normally we'd kick questions that aren't 48 hours old, but since this appears to have been written by a fallible meatbag, it's a refreshing change. AttributeError: 'Task' object has no attribute 'comments_found' well, that is very true - it doesn't exist in your model
I feel like it's not even misusing it that's the problem. Misusing something stems from how you see it. So the main problem is how people see it and over-glorify it
you can thank all the marketing and buzzwords for that I guess
it is an asynchronous library, and working with it I need to send queries to the database, but I still need to use asynchronous queries with the asynchronous library
I have already reviewed all the guides, everyone works, mine does not work. True, they have session.query, but since the session is asynchronous it has no query method
I'm afraid that I'm not familiar enough with the new ORM to be of any more help here. I could write you the SQL query, but I can't get it into the ORM. Your code actually looks pretty sound to me (in that I would also probably expect it to work)
Well, apart from iterating through the tasks. I'm talking just about the query part
If you're interested, I found a solution to the problem, which was to write return results.execute().all() instead of return results.all().
@roganjosh Strangely enough, but the solution in the documentation did not find, but there I got some ideas and I groped my way to solve the problem ORM way )
Oh... knew some people were signing it early... didn't realise it had definitely gone live properly yet and I've been sitting in the discord channel lol
I don't think they care. They don't care much about feedback in general, they have the "brand", you are just using it. There is a saying in germany "The cow is milked until she gives no more milk".
@Thingamabobs What does she do after that? She signs an online petition.
Also, it's "rot" from the head, btw, not "stink" :)
Shut my mouth, apparently "stinks from the head down" is also a phrase. I can honestly say that I've never heard it, and it seems odd to me. But I was wrong there, sorry
Well, for this saying, it's kinda hard to pinpoint a smell, and the smell is only indicative of the problem. "Rots from the head down" makes sense to me, but "stinks from the head down" - well, no, the fish just stinks. I don't investigate whether it's the head and maybe I'll keep the body for dinner :P
If a human posts 10+ answers every hour, then they'll be generally short and clearly bad (or they're likely answering dupes, or similar). OTOH, ChatGPT answers are quite detailed and are easy to spam. Them being allowed incentivizes users to post as many of them as possible, as downvotes are -2 and upvotes are +10. So you only need one or two to sound plausible for a net rep gain (unless a mod suspends you, that is)
Humans can be wrong, of course. I know I've been wrong, for sure. But... when I'm wrong, I'm not posting 10+ wrong answers every hour, and depending on how wrong I am, I'll either edit/delete the answer. That is... not the case if someone is trying to game the system to gain rep
Ok, I'm starting to get the picture. Sure would've been nice if that open letter included some kind of explanation/rationale/evidence, instead of simply just equating AI = fabrication
@Aran-Fey because it was another gpt answer, which was banned. The ban doesn't apply to only blatantly wrong answers. Exactly because it's too much effort to tell if it's wrong.
> float64 values have more precision and require more bits to represent, so the processor can perform fewer operations on float64 values to achieve the same level of precision as float16 values
FWIW I find genetic algos wasteful and slow; I'm yet to see them deployed at scale. The cost function has to run over the whole result of each child, and it needn't be that way. I suspect the reason that you're asking about accepting negative fitness values falls more under simulated annealing, to avoid local minima, and that doesn't give a hoot how you move from one state to another, and you can accept bad moves based on a "temperature" profile
@roganjosh I don't know much about this, but I have a feeling, while it's less versatile than a neural network, it works faster for certain problem than training and doing inference on a neural network
I'm not an expert in genetic algorithms, but I'm sure handling the negative values are entirely dependent on how you implement the roulette selection algorithm
I find experimentation rather than theory helps a lot with that, but that's just me
because that's what is usually used? I mean I know there are other ones, but that's what I used last time. If they use a different algorithm, maybe they need to mention that :/