@roganjosh The actual units and conversions sound more like the job for separate configuration/database. There's little point having any and all future and past products welded directly into your application. Each company would by themselves add the products they can actually acquire, and mark the ones they cannot anymore.
@MisterMiyagi This reminds me so much of a post I read, that software should be treated as such and be allowed to change and that it's ok to have business requirements in the code, but I can't remember what it was called
Yeah, I want the software to be unit agnostic but it still has to make sense to the reader. I think the "freetext" unit name is the way to go (the admin creates kg, tonnes, pieces" etc to be in a dropdown). Ad long as I can take the abstract value and map directly to cost and profit margins I'm happy. In the past I've always built the solver bespoke so the software did kinda know the units
I might be an odd one out, but I love doing support work. It's fun to talk to customers and to see all the weird ways they use our system and to help them fix things and to just hear odd requests. I just had the oddest of requests, but a very cute idea :P
What's the easiest way to replace a few words in a block of text looping through a csv row by row? I've googled and looked around and I keep finding "how to replace items in csv". I want to replace words in a block of text.
This is from a different software, I have 12,585 .00t files in a folder (same folder). I need it to iterate through the list that is in a csv and increase boundary_1 each time (to boundary_2,3,4,...), increase priority=1.000000000000 by 1 each time, and change the name of triangulation='C:\Vulcan\GStrike\DeswikVulcanExport\blank_94_repair.00t' to the new name that is in column 1 in the csv.
Having a Poisson Distribution, I would like to modify it and use the Poisson-Gamma Distribution (unfortunately it seems that the link in English does not exist on Wikipedia), a probability distribution associated with a Poissonian random variable, Poiss(λ), in which the parameter λ is not constan...
I have a weird problem here. Dependabot wants to version bump one of my pip packages. However, this package seems to be a deeply nested dependency (i.e. I didn't ask to install this package, but some package that I do need must have this one as a dependency). Does anyone know of a tool that can tell draw me a dependency tree out of my requirements.txt?
I tried johnnydep yesterday. AFAICT, it will give me the dep-tree of a top-level package queried over CLI. It won't however, answer "which packages in requirements.txt require which other packages in requirements.txt?" :(
Yeah, definitely don't do it that way. Use pipreqs and point it at the top level of your package
Something like pipreqs . --mode gt --force from the parent directory
That way, it will only account for the parent packages you import and then won't pin any of their own dependencies that you don't directly install. Not only is it clearer to see what your actual dependencies are but pip can at least try resolving the conflicts with shared dependencies
update: pipreqs made my requirements.txt go from ~140 lines to ~120 lines. Interestingly, it lists werkzeug, which requests depends on. I installed requests, not werkzeug. So... it doesn't do what it says on the tin?
Mmm, something doesn't seem right here. It's spewing WARNING: Import named "xmlrpclib" not found locally on a much bigger project of mine. Trying to resolve it at the PyPI server. all over the place and I've never seen it do this. It looks like they bumped versions recently
@roganjosh pipreqs projDir. I didn't think --mode gt was consequential. I also removed requirements.txt prior to running, so --force was redundant. I just reran with those flags. I still see Werkzeug. I must be doing something wrong. I also see a bunch of warnings
I reverted back to 0.4.11 and the warnings went away but the reqs file for a much bigger project is 43 libraries, some of which I know I don't import (vs. 102 in pip freeze, though)
Running from the parent directory (with setup.py in it etc.) seems to pull in all sorts of crap (I don't know why) but I just navigated 1 directory deeper and ran it again and now it's only stuff I import. Once I have the requirements.txt in that folder, I'll just copy/paste it back up one layer further
I tried passing a relative path and didn't have any luck (I was rushing as I'm off out shortly) so you might have to jump around a bit. I did get it working here though as I now only have 19 deps from the original 102
ok the latter worked - down to 23 lines in requirements.txt. Interestingly, deleting projectDir/setup.py didn't help when I did cd projectDir && pipreqs .. The downside is this: I have a projectDir/main.py with an import that is not scanned/recorded. cd projectDir && pipreqs main.py does not fix this, but this does: cd projectDir && pipreqs src && mkdir temp && cp main.py temp/ && pipreqs temp --print >> src/requirements.txt && rem -rf temp
FWIW if you use the Compiz solution I'd bind against the class, not the name, WM_CLASS(STRING) = "code", "Code". You can check your local class using xprop.
for example when you use a tool like displayfusion to move it between screens, the maximized window will become a full-size (but not maximized) window instead
@Aran-Fey thanks to work I've come across remarks such as this one in Qt:
> Note: Due to limitations on some window systems, this does not always report the expected results (e.g., if the user on X11 maximizes the window via the window manager, Qt has no way of distinguishing this from any other resize). This is expected to improve as window manager protocols evolve.
There was a longer explanation somewhere else that I can't find right now. Basically some systems fake maximize by just making the window fullscreen. Although in practice I've seen gnome on RHEL handle maximization just fine, so I thought this was more of a legacy remark in the docs. Perhaps not.
CollectionNonSequence = Set[T] | Mapping[T, Any] | ValuesView[T]
CollectionNonString = CollectionNonSequence[T] | IO[T] | list[T] | tuple[T, ...] # probably some more
# IO[T] is probably wanted but has to be an AnyStr