@CodyGray-onstrike I was talking about chat traffic in this chatroom. Most of the mods are not posting, the people who usually have conversations with them aren't much either, and I don't see many new-user posts, or walls of code. No I don't expect new users would randomly stumble upon this room. Like Narnia.
@CodyGray-onstrike I was talking about chat traffic in this chatroom. Most of the mods are not posting, the people who usually have conversations with them aren't much either, and I don't see many new-user posts, or walls of code. No I don't expect new users would randomly stumble upon this room. Like Narnia. I imagine the main Python queue is full of garbage by now, in which case the mod will have made their point to SO mgmt.
It certainly is, but strict design patterns and types are certainly in Java, for example
I guess it's just the hot topic in the programming world (and I am actually on that hype train). It just seems odd that it should be the impetus for people to change how they write python programs given all the established languages that cared about this stuff for a long time. It's not like rust and python are kindred spirits; they're so utterly different
Java is typically verbose and filled with boilerplate code from my (old) experience - I think Rust is like Python in that regard, you can do more with fewer lines of code
But yeah, the crediting better Python code due to Rust doesn't make sense to me - unless these folks didn't realise some of the stuff they should have been doing all along
@roganjosh I must admit that Rust is hands down my favourite "practical+typed" language, mainly due to its very good tooling. Definitely a good choice to pick up when coming from a language such as Python.
On the other hand, with Python's limited type impact (aside from verification) I don't think Rust conveys any deeper understanding for Python typing than, say, C++.
Most of the nifty Rust type tricks have no equivalent in Python at all.
For example, the Mutex+Value design just doesn't work in Python because there are no lifetimes/mut.
Rather, one would use a proxy that automatically acquires the lock and optionally allows to keep the lock for an entire context.
@roganjosh Pydantic V2's core logic is being written in Rust. It's somewhat interesting to see more libraries shift away from using C under the hood to Rust (see also pola.rs). I think that being able to write Python bindings in a safer/saner fashion than C is one of the biggest reasons you see a lot of Rust hype in the Python world.
Oh, I definitely understand the reasoning why libraries are changing their backends to rust. In polars in particular, there are a lot of reasons why that has grown in popularity, not just the fact that the base implementation is written in rust. I use polars exclusively now. But that's different, right? My point was just that "oh, we have rust now and I like it, better think how to restructure my python code" seems like a non sequitur
Or install type stubs for that module. If the function parameter is properly annotated as a list[Literal['get', 'post']], your IDE will warn you about misspellings
Hello anyone, is anyone here faimilar with XPATH selection?
I'm trying to get Selenium to work but it's been a pain in the behind. I have the code set up, I have the correctpath but it's not clicking the checkbox I want.
Here is the code. ```from selenium import webdriver from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options from selenium.webdriver.common.by import By from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import WebDriverWait from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC import time
# Create Options object options = Options()
# Set the headless argument to avoid unnecessary UI options.add_argument("--headless") options.add_argument('--ignore-certificate-errors') options.add_argument('--ignore-ssl-errors')
As you can see above, its suppose to click the tutorials.point website, click the Automation-Tester button, and then close the browser afterwards. It is not doing this, and I have used ChroPath and XPATH to help with the relative Path. Regardless, it is not working. Any ideas from any experts here?
Unfortunetly, the CSS selector does not work for the code. Sometimes the webpage does not have a CSS selector as well.
This is the CSS selector code I have gotten from the website as well main.bg-light.pb-4:nth-child(4) div.container-fluid.mt-3.px-3.px-xl-3 div.row.g-4 div.col-sm-12.col-md-8.col-xl-6.rounded-3.tutorial-content:nth-child(2) tbody:nth-child(1) tr:nth-child(6) td:nth-child(2) span:nth-child(2) > input:nth-child(1)
So it is active and clickable in the browser, but it is not clicking with Selenium. Selenium XPath should work, and that should be the correct path
I've updated the code with this and its still not working ```from selenium import webdriver from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options from selenium.webdriver.common.by import By from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import WebDriverWait from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC import time
# Create Options object options = Options()
# Set the headless argument to avoid unnecessary UI options.add_argument("--headless") options.add_argument('--ignore-certificate-errors')
It looks like CSS may have to be the one I use. No matter what I do with XPath, it does not work and another code using ID has worked. The problem the website im using does not have an input by id in it, which is why i've been using XPath instead
@MisterMiyagi I mean, in this case, it's like you want to create an API endpoint without even trying it once, which would highlight the issue? I'm not a big person in testing, but such a typo would never get through, even if I'm rushing and writing shoddy code
Sorry, "you" here is obviously not you personally. The "royal you"
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні It's been raised and should be unfrozen soon. I fell victim to the **** chat interface that it suddenly stopped showing up for me
Silly me for thinking that "search" was the way to get to rooms rather than going through my history
Anyway, that aside, I have a serious issue. In a lot of the code I write, I dump CSVs of the data so I can inspect them visually. If I forget to remove df.write_csv() before I push my code, it turns out that it can blow our lambda functions up because it tries to write to a read-only filesystem. I actually need those CSV outputs, but it also explodes the deployment. Is there a neat way around this?
Pre-commit flags are probably beyond me and I don't have the luxury of playing around with them :( I just wondered whether people have faced this before and have an established approach
Thank you. It will be interesting to see how that plays out. I can't make a deployment myself but I will raise tomorrow as a test to do and report back when I can
I can always remove it at the end and do a proper clean-up but, right now, it's all hands on pump and it's yamming annoying when it goes through a 15 min deployment cycle to find out that I forgot to delete one of the writing functions in some module
@Mihai8 yes and no, you can technically create 3D-like (closer to half 3D) animation in tkinter, but it'll be extremely slow. Example in video: youtube.com/watch?v=Ca8nKtICYMk Although you could use numpy to make this slightly less slow, but it will still be slow compared to using real graphics: pypi.org/project/tiny-3d-engine