I have three dropdowns and they are all dependent between them. The first two dropdowns work fine, while the third dropdown doesn't work: it's empty with nothing inside. The first dropdown is called trip_selector and it correctly returns for example Spain, England, France. If I select Spain, then...
I'm probably going to give half the room a heart attack with this thought, but I wonder how much popular typing has to become until python will get macros
*args and **kwargs aren't cutting it anymore in the world of static typing
I'm not into typing and annotations, I feel like there are some cases where they do make sense, but in general they don't. But it might be me and I just don't know the reasoning behind it.
I know I'm not really one to talk, since I was on the fence about typing for quite a long time, but I recently remembered something that happened when I was still a newbie. I was used to C# and Java at the time, and when I got into python, there was a moment where I thought... "This is the level of support I get from my IDE in python?". But I kinda just shrugged it off and got used to it. Now I almost feel like I was brainwashed for the last few years.
All those red and yellow squiggles where the IDE tries to warn you that you're doing something wrong? Those actually mean something now.
(I mean, not always. But I can't just completely ignore them anymore.)
There are definitely scenarios where typing doesn't work very well, but stuff like : int or : list[str]? 1 thousand billion percent worth it.