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06:27
discuss.python.org/t/correlation-matrix/31261 I feel like this sort of exchange is useful feedback for people who write error messages.
07:02
The next time I feel like I'm having a bad day, I'm going to remember this poor woman. Given the snake involved, I'm trying to think of a suitable python programming analogy for such mayhem coming from no where
07:16
@KarlKnechtel I keep on being surprised by how people absolutely refuse to read what error messages say. The "truth value is ambiguous" is my personal pet peeve, but every "you did X. X is problematic. Do Y or Z instead." seems to go straight to /dev/null.
@roganjosh Ah, the first time of encountering the new ExceptionGroup in production!
ExceptionGroup("only in Texas", [HawkException(errno.ENOSNK), ExceptionSnake("dropped")])
The perfect analogy! :)
 
1 hour later…
08:28
Daily asyncio pet peeve: got Future <Future pending> attached to a different loop because one created a synchronisation primitive in __init__ outside of a loop is really annoying. Late-binding FTW.
Every other language: Our asyncio event loop is implicitly always running if you need it
Python: EXPLICIT IS BETTER THAN IMPLICIT
A little bit of magic sometimes does make live easier...
FWIW, IMO asyncio is pretty mature now and could do well as a default event loop.
Though that would probably be a future compatibility nightmare...
step 1: check for punny name on PyPI...
@MisterMiyagi "sync to the future"? or STTF for short (probably too explicit though)
08:49
Surely it would have to be asynchrotron?
Less punny, but loaded with context if you developed it on-site
evil scientist voice "Behold the asynchronomicon!!" thunder flashing
hi guys
while using csv module to read columns from a csv file and print to a file
I'm using something like this:

f.write('<Order transactionId=\"' + row["iccid"] + '\">\n <CreateSubscription iccid=\"'+ row["iccid"] +'\" imsi=\"'+ row["imsi"] +'\" cardProfile=\"' + row["profile"] + '\" initialState=\"INACTIVE\">\n')

supposing I want to give row["profile"] a default value if it is empty

how do i go about that ?
row.get("profile", default)
(row['profile'] or default)
I think since the data is coming from a csv file, the key will always exist. So get won't work
True, if "empty" also means things like the empty string then Aran's approach is the way to go.
08:54
so can I repave it's value if it is ""
something like
if row["profile"] == ""
then
row["profile"] = "NoProfile"
fi
but in python syntax
just generally sprinkle : after block statement headers and remove the shell keywords and you're good to go.
Sorry, I'm too used to filtering out empty values. Filtering out myself now...
the setdefault method also works while only a limited amount of lines in huge csv actually have emty profile ?
09:10
I don't see how the number of lines is relevant. It either works or it doesn't, and I'm fairly sure it doesn't
@MisterMiyagi see, I would say that, except it really comes across to me that somehow, for some reason
people are not actually able to translate "the default value of Y in Z is deprecated" into "when you use Z, it assumes a default value for Y right now, but it won't in the future"
maybe they don't know what deprecated means
I'm going to follow up on that one, actually, probably
09:33
I don't really think there's anything to follow up. People see something unexpected -> "best get someone to explain this to me". You won't change that behaviour.
to be clear: your position is that if a computer says something, people will think "I require someone to explain this to me", and will not try, but will understand even the most straightforwardly-derived explanation that is actually given to them by any other source?
... but they're also perfectly willing to ask ChatGPT?
The point at which I lost all hope: when I was doing my engineering PhD I used to supervise Masters students in the lab. One day, this particular student was working behind me in a fume cupboard and all I could hear was mini explosions and loud hissing. By this point I'd lost all hope on them, so I waited to see what happened
They came running over. "I don't think this is correct, can you take a look?". They had put a flask on the hot plate, set it to 400 deg. C and then put a water condenser on the top. They'd piped the bottom of the condenser to the tap, but not piped the outlet back to the sink, so water was just pouring all over the hotplate and immediately exploding into steam.... they needed an explanation on what was wrong with the setup
And that memory, my friends, is where your soul goes to die.
(... hot plates are that powerful?)
09:39
That was a lot less scary than I anticipated after reading "mini explosions" and "loud hissing" :D
@KarlKnechtel It might have been 400F now that I think about it, but this was an industrial beast. I was less concerned about that at the time, only that it was on full power
But still, I have newfound appreciation for the fact that software can't do you physical harm, no matter how hard you screw up
@Aran-Fey I mean, we also had someone video a microwave reactor explode to the point that it embedded the entire steel container in the top of the fume cupboard. They had time to grab the camera but not to hit the power switch before taking up the filming position
One of my favourite quotes from that era - someone came back into the office holding a lump of quartz. She'd managed to melt a quartz weighing boat. "Yeah, it was a bit toasty" :D
@Aran-Fey quite a few more of my electrical labs involved the mains supply, than were really necessary for demonstrating the concepts involved
I did shock myself with a knifeblade switch once >_<
and once plugging an old-fashioned plug into an old-fashioned socket that was hanging down from overhead for some reason
or, I think something like that?
except I'm pretty sure that time I was somehow able to attempt it one-handed
09:46
Playing with single mode microwaves was always the highlight. Invisible death rays; lots of things exploded, probably a 50/50 mix of intentional/accident. They were powerful enough to blow holes through concrete bollards simply through residual vapour expansion
>Melting point 1670 °C (β tridymite) 1713 °C (β cristobalite)[3]
what on earth
@roganjosh To be fair, I'd probably also stay the heck away from that thing... I'd rather be at recording distance than unplugging distance
was thermite involved or something?
@KarlKnechtel Yeah, some could only be operated inside shipping containers because they were under warning about the potential to knock out the national phone carriers
@KarlKnechtel As far as I can tell, "ChatGPT" often falls into the "people" category for many people. It is perfectly sufficient for the "let someone explain the scary thing again" feeling.
09:49
I've been trying to figure out ways to make error message less scary, and more natural-language phrased (without an LLM, I mean)
user17135505
Hello, I received a feedback on https://codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/286415/generic-logging-setup-that-enables-context-information/286428#286428.

It says "passing in a logger is just weird. Please reconsider that decision. Typically a logger is part of the global (or module-level) environment."
user17135505
Would you do something like logger = get_logger() inside of main idiom or outside of it?
I recommend reading through the logging HOWTO, for your case specifically the linked section.
Your setup_logging function also looks suspiciously like it does what logging.basicConfig already does.
user17135505
10:20
In setup_logging, there are many handlers defined. Would it be common to do just basicConfig at global level but define handlers later on, e.g. inside of main as one of the argparse parameters affects how program runs and its value is part of log file name?
11:01
In addition to MM's link, I suggest that you also follow it up with the poster of that answer since they cannot see any of this discussion
 
3 hours later…
Anonymous
13:40
What would you guys name an argument with the type "Type[AnyStr]"?
Anonymous
13:55
Currently it is name "stype"
What does it do? Usually the type is not indicative of the usage and having annotations means you don't have to repeat the type in the name.
Anonymous
The argument should be use to pick which type to return from the method
Ah, so if it's str then that's what is returned?
Can't this be inferred from the other arguments? re does it that way.
Anonymous
Exactly, so basically:

def function(stype: Type[AnyStr]) -> AnyStr:
    ...

value_as_str = function(str)
value_as_bytes = function(bytes)
Anonymous
Well, in this case, we need the developer to be in charge of which type to be returned.
14:03
I would be tempted to go with cls in this case.
Anonymous
Doesn't that refer to a class?
Anonymous
Like, when you use @classmethod
Anonymous
numpy uses their own "dtype" for these sort of things
@Warcaith Well, yeah. That's what str and bytes are, after all.
I'd probably use return_type or result_type
No reason not to use a long self-documenting name if it's a positional argument
Anonymous
14:16
Hmm, you can force position argument by using a "/", right?
Yeah
Anonymous
positional*
16:05
Evening asyncio pet peeve: The path to madness is doing await task and checking whether CancelledError killed the awaited task or the waiting task.
16:25
Still looking for the magic in this:
try:
    await task
except asyncio.CancellError as ce:
    if <check if ce is for us and not task>:
        raise
16:35
I think something like this works
try:
    await task
except asyncio.CancelledError:
    try:
        task.exception()
        print('We were cancelled')
    except asyncio.CancelledError:
        print('Task was cancelled')
Give me a sec, I'm new here :D
There we go
I definitely wouldn't want to be in a situation where I have to check that though
17:01
I'm honestly not sure if that handles both tasks being cancelled, which is currently my main pain point.
But only because it's basically a round-robin of pain points.
Round-robin or python-dropping-hawk
17:58
Oooh, if both of them get cancelled then you're screwed
18:29
@MisterMiyagi does it make any sense to wrap task with something that modifies the exception?
/is it possible
18:43
Hm, probably. One could build an awaitable out of an iterator (instead of generator) which can’t propagate exceptions.
Digging around a bit, this is possible by attaching a separate event/future to the task: stackoverflow.com/a/55424838/5349916
The future cannot be cancelled by anyone but the creator, so it is safe to await.
Still feels like a lot of work for something that should just be possible...
the risk of cancel culture
 
1 hour later…
19:53
One thing I do love from the main feed - <something something> "It works perfectly, but it doesn't do X". <thinking foot>. I forgot how much I missed this dichotemy

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