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01:45
@Aran-Fey What may need to be recreated each time is the closure, if there is a nonlocal declaration.
 
1 hour later…
02:48
@Aran-Fey or similarly with the name of an ABC that is created specifically to document the requirements for the parameter.
 
4 hours later…
07:00
@Horiatiki this would be quite an undertaking for me to debug HTMX and learn django at the same time (your question is set out well but it's still further unfamiliarity for me). The reason being that I'm not entirely sure this even can be achieved without dropping into AJAX itself. If I get it working in flask, would that be sufficient?
Although I have never used HTMX (so it'll be a learning exercise for me there), I'm 95% convinced that it's little-to-nothing to do with the backend here
Actually, given my last statement I've just rubber ducked myself into realising that I can just use your existing code for most of it anyway, so it should translate directly to django. I'm interested to see what HTMX can do :)
07:45
I know when I'm defeated. This example is pretty worthless because the display value of the second dropdown has to match the actual value. I can't find any way to set them separately without rendering another template, which defeats the point of your question. It would probably take me forever to determine whether it even is possible let alone how to do it sorry. Interesting question :)
 
3 hours later…
10:23
Is it possible to make two Literals that share some values incompatible with each other?
HardwareKey = Literal['Shift', 'LeftShift', 'RightShift']
SoftwareKey = Literal['Shift']

hw_key: HardwareKey = 'Shift'
sw_key: SoftwareKey = hw_key  # I want this to be an error, can't assign HWK to SWK
I do get an error from that, Incompatible types in assignment (expression has type "Literal['Shift', 'LeftShift', 'RightShift']", variable has type "Literal['Shift']") [assignment]
Oh neat, mypy does it right. There's no error in VScode
Do you have type checking enabled in VSCode though?
Not in strict mode, but yes
nvm, it is from mypy
10:33
Aaahh, vscode ignores my type annotation and treats the variable as a Literal['foo']. Kinda neat, kinda annoying
@Aran-Fey What's weird is that if you split assignment not even mypy will catch the error:
hw_key: HardwareKey
hw_key = 'Shift'
sw_key: SoftwareKey = hw_key  # No error
Heh. The delayed assignment narrows the type of the variable to Literal['Shift']
Kinda weird that assigning on the same line changes the type of the variable though
I can't decide if I should use Literals or Enums...
11:20
If you want them to be distinct even if the value is the same then Enum is appropriate.
Yeah, I know. But it's not so much the values I care about than it is the types. It's fine that 'Shift' can be assigned to both HardwareKey and SoftwareKey. But if a variable is explicitly annotated as HardwareKey, then trying to use it as a SoftwareKey should lead to an error
Type narrowing is kinda ruining that part
Enums are probably the safer choice, but I wish they weren't so boilerplate-y (SHIFT = 'Shift') and long (my_library.HardwareKey.SHIFT)
Why can't you just alias it in __init__.py?
Same as what numpy does in my answer here. The only reason to link that answer is that I have never found a better term than "hoist" the imports
11:41
Hoist what where, exactly? The members of the enum directly in the module, like my_library.SHIFT?
Let me test something out
11:59
Ok, I made this super-quick but something like this?
It's also possible I have grossly misunderstood
Well, HardwareKey and SoftwareKey would have to be 2 separate enums, otherwise I lose the type safety. But more importantly, I don't think the hoisting really achieves much? If we just want to turn the HardwareKey. prefix into a HW_ prefix, we can just rename the class to HW. Then we can write HW.SHIFT (instead of HW_SHIFT)
The point I was trying to make was more against the "boilerplate-y" more than anything. It takes a bit of effort in the library itself, but it needn't do anything to your interface for actual users?
Or even internally to the library itself once you alias it somewhere
But indeed, I guess I misinterpreted this one sorry
As far as I can tell, it makes a minor difference to the users (HW_SHIFT instead of HW.SHIFT or HardwareKey.SHIFT) but doubles the boilerplate for each key. Because in addition to the definition in the enum (class HardwareKey(Enum): SHIFT = 'Shift') there's now also the hoisting (HW_SHIFT = HardwareKey.SHIFT)
Although the hoisting could be done with some metaprogramming, like globals().update(vars(HardwareKey))
12:19
Just asking but aren't you looking for a sentinel ?
If so, you might find this answer usefull
Not exactly. It's more like a bunch of sentinels that are of type HardwareKey and another bunch that's of type SoftwareKey
As far as I know when using instance1 is instance2 returns false. But I might don't understand the issue.
The more I look at this from a UI perspective, shouldn't this work the other way around? More like import Shift and then using Shift.HW and Shift.SW?
12:35
I think that just leads to less useful intellisense suggestions? Say I have a function foo that takes an argument of type HardwareKey. Now if I write foo(, all the suggestions will be HardwareKey.<SOMETHING>. But if I have to write the <SOMETHING> part first, that doesn't work
Oh, and to clarify, HardwareKey and SoftwareKey have some members with the same name (like SHIFT), but they don't share all of them. SoftwareKey.LEFT_SHIFT isn't a thing, for example (but HardwareKey.LEFT_SHIFT is)
What about the keras layers API which was the first that came to mind, but I'm sure there are loads of other APIs that follow this
They all take different arguments but are grouped under tensorflow.keras.layers....
I don't have time rn, but I'll take a look later
No worries, I just think it's worth consideration
12:53
@Aran-Fey What about this Q&A ?
 
5 hours later…
17:59
polars seems to have precipitated a major shake-up with pandas. "We need to get our arse in gear" is all that says
18:37
@Thingamabobs That's not a problem for me, fortunately. All my "sentinels" are of the same type, after all (and that type isn't object, which also helps)
19:13
@roganjosh I'm afraid I don't understand how this relates to my problem(s). Could you elaborate?
19:26
@Aran-Fey I realised later that it doesn't a few hours after posting. For now I'll just bow out and pipe up if I can find a better example of what I'm thinking of. Apologies
No worries
By the way, is it just me or do the problems I bring into this room always drag on for much longer than other people's?
Not really. I don't find them problematic in the slightest; some go over my head and that just prompts me to research more
Hmm. Maybe it just feels longer if it's your own problem
That's a very real phenomenon when I've gone back over my problem discussions the next day. I waffle a lot but when it comes to problems, I feel I've dragged on. Until I look back
19:42
I never thought I'd have to look up the word "waffle" in a dictionary, but here we are
Some British slang for you. It's not the breakfast variety :P
Well, I learned something new today. It'll probably be forgotten by next week, but what can you do
Is it safe to conclude that the British don't like waffles?
Errr, tough call. They're on some menus. I don't know how "to waffle on" as in "I/she/he waffles on" came to be
No special feelings about waffles, noted
In any case, I do believe there is an Enum example somewhere in the back of my brain, but it might be in HTTP protocols now. I will have to look tomorrow as I've been rather unhelpful so far
19:55
@Aran-Fey The issue is VS Code overwrites the type to Literal['Shift'] in all cases. If you pass hw_key as an argument to a function you can get the error you expect. (I am running VS Code in strict mode, sw_key gets an error too)
def test_0() -> None:
    hw_key: HardwareKey = "Shift"
    sw_key: SoftwareKey = hw_key  # no error for hw_key

def test_1(hw_key: HardwareKey = "Shift") -> None:
    sw_key: SoftwareKey = hw_key  # error for hw_key
I don't think there's much that can be done about the long names, to be honest. It's pretty much a given that they'll look like module_name.EnumName.MEMBER, or maybe slightly different like module_name.PREFIX_MEMBER. I'll just have to decide if I can live with that
I guess a less boilerplate-y way to define the enums would be nice though. Maybe I'll do some metaprogramming? We'll see
@Peilonrayz True, type narrowing only takes place when you (unconditionally) assign a constant to the variable. But it's hard to predict how often that'll happen in real-world code. I think I'll just have to try it and see how it works out
20:25
@Aran-Fey You'd have to define your constants like HW_SHIFT = cast(HardwareKey, "Shift"). Which would affect my opinion on Literal vs Enum.
20:45
My users definitely won't be doing that! Besides, it's a bit silly. Type annotations are supposed to help you avoid making mistakes, so if you have to take care to write your code "correctly" to let the type annotations do their job, that's kind of redundant

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