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04:33
I was too hasty on this... could I get a dupehammer? stackoverflow.com/questions/3592693
05:03
@KarlKnechtel what’s the dupe target?
05:20
Per the accepted answer, it's an "I'm getting an IndentationError. How do I fix it?" dupe
and it needs to be cleaned up because neither q nor a meet standards
05:46
Just delete it, honestly
05:56
it needs to be closed before it can be deleted.
Yeah, but it doesn't need to be cleaned up
 
3 hours later…
08:35
@KarlKnechtel I've closed it
 
5 hours later…
13:18
Does anyone know why a VPN might stop a splash screen to log in to a public network? For example, my local pub or the train requires me to sign in to use their Wifi, but it doesn't seem to load that modal if I forget to turn my VPN off first. Is there a fundamental header they can check for on their side or is it just a basic blacklist of IP addresses?
Actually, I don't even think it would be a header since it's not a GET request to the router in the first place?
14:01
I never understood how those sign in pages work
my totally unfounded guess was that they just capture and redirect every network communication from your device until it is signed in.
Android shows you a notification like "Login to network", so there must be some way to tell
The stuff I can find is about a DNS something something but it doesn't make sense. If you sign in, you can re-activate your VPN and everything works fine. I just can't get it to trigger the modal to sign in in the first place :/
There's also some info on how detection works, namely by checking if you are not behind a captive portal.
Neat, thanks! I was missing the terminology to search properly
14:16
@roganjosh My guess (cont.) is that both the captive portal and VPN try to connect your device to a specific target and won't let you proceed until success. So your device is effectively deadlocked in a limbo of endlessly looking for a friendly face but only encountering an unfriendly guy not letting them pass until the heat death of the universe...
On a totally unrelated sidenote: Is anyone aware of best practices or THE LAW of handling Contextvars when manually managing tasks? Who "owns" variables in a context? Can I, say, completely wipe out the Context for a new Task in an asyncio application without stuff blowing up?
14:35
I've always avoided contextvars because I find them confusing, so this might be stupid. But I would consider simply storing the variables in a dict[asyncio.Task, T]. Dicts are easy to reason about
I have a web app in PHP...I want to convert it to Python...besides doing it manually is there a quicker more efficient way to do it?
Almost certainly "no"
So going manually is the only way to do it....
anyway....
In my opinion, yes. What are you thinking for the backend?
The backend currently is in PHP....and this must be done in Python either now or later
14:46
I understand that. That wasn't what I asked
I mean going forwards for the python transition
Django....if this is what you meant
Ok, that's quite an involved framework to work with. Can I ask why you need to change, in general terms? What are you hoping to achieve?
to be honest there is not an important reason to do it - currently....but there are 2 reasons...cleaner syntax AND most importantly....it is probable that the site scales and I think PHP is not the best language for big projects...I am not sure though....there are some projects which are big and are made with php...these are the exemptions though and not the rule
Having spent two years of constant work to change our infra for web deployments, you better have a stronger impetus than that because it's painful to switch such fundamental things. Do you think your infra will be overwhelmed? You need a strong argument
It doesn't matter how the code works if the business won't follow you
15:03
well....these are strong arguments I am going to consider....thanks for the feeback
@Aran-Fey Yeah, that's usually how I approach the use-case for my own needs. But writing general-purpose building blocks for asyncio I've now got this on my plate and no idea how to handle the non-standard cases.
 
5 hours later…
20:20
@matszwecja I think I messed up __eq__ and __hash__. Probably wouldn't do anything to dicts.
20:46
cbg
Has anyone else ever needed a Python 2 cmp()-like comparison operator on e.g. list of strings (or arbitrary object)?
63
Q: How to use cmp() in Python 3?

BenFireI cannot get the command cmp() to work. Here is the code: a = [1,2,3] b = [1,2,3] c = cmp(a,b) print (c) I am getting the error: Traceback (most recent call last): File "G:\Dropbox\Code\a = [1,2,3]", line 3, in <module> c = cmp(a,b) NameError: name 'cmp' is not defined [Finished in 0....

@AndrejKesely I genuinely don't follow this code at all
That would leave me utterly baffled if it's in a codebase
21:02
@roganjosh Sure, but it's what the OP explicitly asked for in the question. I'd leave a comment on the question "this style of coding with side-effects will be confusing in a codebase; clearer to use separate assignment and expression chaining". Oh I see now you did
(walrus abuse...)
I pray I never come across this in the wild
If you didn't like that, you're really not going to like this (I searched for walrus abuse):
1
A: List comprehension with an accumulator

user21365874Here is a concept to abuse the original intent of the := "walrus operator" introduced in Python 3.8. It assigns variables as part of a larger expression. My impression of the intent was to save the user from calculating something in the test portion of an if and then have to calculate it again ...

It's not big and it's not clever :'(
I guess df_imag is now a fully-fledged variable in its scope? I can't test atm
@roganjosh Let's assume the OP only wants to make a temporary copy for debug, and would not leave that in production code.
@roganjosh Yes, you can do, e.g. df = (df_imag := df.assign(new_var=100).div(2)).div(10 / len(df_imag)) (I sometimes use walrus in pandas apply functions)
21:18
@AndrejKesely But why use walrus in pandas apply functions? We're trying to say this has many downsides and no upsides. (unless you're trying to debug or print the internals of a pipeline or apply)
I use it when I'm too lazy to come up with full fledged function, so I do everything in lambda. But I agree with @smci In production code is this most certainly not needed.
Ok, well the OP has commented that they would prefer something other than the walrus operator at least
 
2 hours later…
23:08
I feel like that question has to be a dupe

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