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01:09
oh nice, looks like we just hit read-only as I sent that
 
4 hours later…
05:28
stackoverflow.com/questions/58844337 stackoverflow.com/questions/59351371 Any ideas why multiple people historically might have gotten IndentationErrors from Selenium? Is it possible for example that some older version had mixed spaces and tabs that worked on 2.x, 3.x installs used 2to3 automatically, and 2to3 failed to fix the indentation? Is that a thing?
 
2 hours later…
07:47
@KarlKnechtel Having looked at the 2018 and 2019 changes I can't see any where if self.w3c: lands on line 715. -- github.com/SeleniumHQ/selenium/commits/…
 
1 hour later…
09:06
@roganjosh I wonder how Java does it, ever since I saw the Java syntax where a function can just throws <some_exception> I wished for the same to exist in Python, then it's as easy as collecting all the throws in a given code piece. But your idea with going over the docstrings might work too. Any idea why the Java approach wouldn't work for Python?
@GaryOak Also I just had to leave work, nothing personal about you. Although saying that you don't see the practical application of somebodies question is not the nicest thing, plus I didn't feel like explaining it at the time. The idea of why I want this is to catch the most narrow set of exceptions possible and not catch too many with an except Exception piece
@Hakaishin I feel like that's too rigid for Python duck-typing approach
@matszwecja I can see that, but I have always wondered how people achieve narrow exception handling scope? I have so many except Exception lines in my code, because I don't know all the possible things some library or piece of code can throw at me, so better be safe
> No, please no. We do NOT need checked exceptions. -- Rosuav \<source>
@Peilonrayz That kind of concept works fine when it’s error return values (make sure you handle every error or pass it up the line), but the entire point of exceptions is that you do not have to do that. Could you explain that? I don't get it. Is it just that narrow exception handling isn't that desirable? Or is there another way to achieve it?
I might not understand something about how to work with exceptions properly
09:13
I don't get it either. What difference does it make whether you return or raise the exception?
Also thanks for teaching me the term for the concept I had in mind: checked exceptions. Now I can go read up on it :)
the problem with checked exceptions is that you must handle the exception in the caller.
I feel like the point is, if you have specific behaviour for specific exceptions, you need to know each of them. If you have same behaviour for every thrown exceptions, you might just except Exception as well.
@MisterMiyagi or pass up the stack, right?
use global try except, Okay?
09:15
Say KeyError were a checked exception of dict.__getitem__, then every single time you run some_dict[foo] you must have an exception handler for KeyError.
@matszwecja That's my point, if I would know the exceptions I could handle them more specifically. Like if there is an TimeoutException I can just retry, whereas if I get CPU_is_on_fire_exception I will not retry. But currently since I don't know all the possible exceptions and their severities I just handle every like it's cpu_is_on_fire
O(∩_∩)O哈!
@MisterMiyagi Or annotate your function as "can raise KeyError" or slap a # type: ignore on it?
If you want to propagate checked exceptions, then at every layer you must catch and reraise them.
@MisterMiyagi why and? It's either catch/handle or reraise
09:17
@Hakaishin tbh I've not read the discussion so don't really know. But I wouldn't be suprised if people are opposed to having to put T ^ KeyboardInterrupt ^ MemoryError as every return type, and if you have a function which adds to the raises you'd have to type more boilerplate. I can imagine some other 'issues' but I personally think most issues are solvable if you just accept you don't have to handle the exceptions.
@Hakaishin The largest bulk of my exception handlers are far away from the calling code. Checked exceptions don't handle that well.
@MisterMiyagi That seems like odd design no? Locality is a good principle at least for me, handle things locally if you can. Or what is the benefit of it?
@Hakaishin Well, often I can't.
@MisterMiyagi When you say don't handle well you mean, are annoying because I have to pass every exception trough a dozen functions, right? Which I totally get, just wondering if I understand correctly, or there is more to don't handle well
@Hakaishin Yes, you have to explicitly pass them up the call chain.
09:20
I see
FWIW, this is specifically for what Java understands as "checked exceptions" (and how the term seems to be generally understood). It would be possible to have other checking strategies, e.g. that a function just "inherits" all checked exceptions it doesn't handle.
Sort of like type inference.
I was just about to ask about that. The topic was "static typing for exceptions", not "every exception requires an error handler"
Java does have unchecked exceptions as well which are not required to be handled.
Good morning, I am not really a fan of fragmenting project to big number of small modules. Do you normally set up separate module just for logging setup?

Thinking whether to do that or just subscribe via `import logging; logger = logging.getLogger('whatever_name')`.
@MisterMiyagi Probably the most sensible solution. Being able to know what errors to handle when calling an unknown function is helpful. Having the information on hover like the rest of the type system would be cool.
09:24
@aeiou I usually have a central logging module in my applications to define a few "topics" for logging (as actual loggers) that everything else in the applications uses. Having actual loggers is simpler than magic strings IMO.
@MisterMiyagi Thanks, will do that then
Generally if modules are independant enough separating them is a good thing.
@Peilonrayz yeah pretty much that
@matszwecja Also yes, Java doesn't force you to handle every exception
@matszwecja I agree yes. Thanks. My reasoning here was that logging setup is just 15 LoC and felt a bit unworthy for decoupling from main. But modularity ftw.
 
1 hour later…
10:42
@Hakaishin if you know how you'd handle certain exceptions, handle them specifically.
anything you don't anticipate bubbles up and is handled where you're prepared for "CPU is on fire"
In most situations you don't want to continue what you're doing when an unexpected exception happens.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні That's our current approach, which works ok, but there are quite a few places which just have generic exception statements. What we've been doing is just log those and then in a next version catch the specific ones we saw in production. This is alright, but since we have certification it can take months for a version to get released, so it would be nicer to be able to do this specific handling ahead of time
months being 6-12months :'D
11:25
I agree that good documentation should contain list of possible exceptions, at least ones raised directly by called method
12:24
@Hakaishin how many of these are you actually logging though? In my experience the surface area for most libraries is relatively narrow (http requests springs to mind as a counter example) and of the remaining ambiguity, good docs generally would have a "Raises" section at the bottom of the docstring
Just checking to be sure but you do have other specific handlers before except Exception in cases where you feel there's ambiguity? You're just catching what fell through?
Because the counter argument to this "up front" work would be that if you didn't anticipate it being thrown, you probably don't know how to handle it anyway, so you'd still have to figure that out and push the change in the next release anyway. It's just a shame your cycles are so long
12:41
@roganjosh Yes
@roganjosh A few http, sms, email
@roganjosh Yeah if I feel like it I will check the docs and try to catch specific exceptions :P but sometimes I to lazy to hunt it down and just catch all. I read up on: discuss.python.org/t/extend-type-hints-to-cover-exceptions/… which has a few interesting articles and I now understand the benefits and drawbacks better and looks like the drawbacks are bigger
I don't know how practical it would be and I've never used it but maybe you could use some kind of fuzzing in at least some places
@roganjosh Yeah I read about that and it's on the list of things to do when in pension xD
On a serious note I know that for i in range(len(datas)): is an antipattern, but is there a better way to operate on the objects in a list instead of copies?
something like for data in originals(datas): or for data in references(datas):
12:59
You lost at datas :P
Iterating over a list doesn't copy its elements though
If you want to mutate the object in the list, for obj in datas: is enough. If you want to replace the object in the list with a different object, you need for i, obj in enumerate(datas):
13:20
It's probably the usual rebinding vs mutation confusion in the loop body
You shouldn't modify the container you're iterating over, but it's ok to mutate the contents (if those contents are mutable).
seq = list(map(list, 'abcd'))
print(seq)
for u in seq:
    u[:] = 2 * u
print(seq)
@PM2Ring mutating is fine in my opinion, changing the size is not
# Output
Eh, it's perfectly cromulent to iterate over they .keys() of a dict to modify items. Iterating the indices of a list is the same idea, just frugly.
Element for element replacement is safe and easy to reason about
13:23
[['a'], ['b'], ['c'], ['d']]
[['a', 'a'], ['b', 'b'], ['c', 'c'], ['d', 'd']]
Then again, for lists I usually have a list-comp that then replaces the original.
@MisterMiyagi I can imagine wanting to replace a single element that first matches a condition. List comp would be messier there. So rarely, but I think it has its idiomatic uses.
True that.
What Andras said. But if you do need to modify most of the list items, using a list comp & replacing the original list is generally cleaner & more readable. OTOH, if the list is huge, you may not want to do that.
13:36
What mechanism makes this piece of code print True for input "1"?
print(input() is '1')
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні but I have lots of datas xD
@Aran-Fey hmm that is actually a good point. The replacement needs data[i] = something_new, but data[i].foo = True doesn't. But because of the replacement issue I just had the shorthand remembered that if modification is needed I need data[i] which isn't even true. Oh well this solves my concrete problem I have, but the general question is, is there something where "for data in datas:" where data could behave the same way as data[i] ?
@matszwecja string interning or whatsitsname
I'm always confused between interning and caching
It is interning, but I wasn't aware it is done for strings too
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні that's my use case :)
Try this:
a = '1'
print(id(a))
del a
b = '1'
print(id(b))
13:42
@PM2Ring The list is huge :)
I'm trying to find some specifics on its limits, I've tested on 14 char string and it wasn't interned.
but not huge enough to warrant a proper vectorized solution
@matszwecja I think it has to be a keyword. Space or weird chars break it.
Length might not matter
Has somebody tried: github.com/scidam/django_matplotlib/tree/master/example Is there an easy way to get matplotlib full functionality in the browser? We use highcharts but there you have to use highcharts special syntax. It would be nice if there was a way to just integrate matplotlib into the browser or at least a large part of it like zooming and moving around in a plot
Strings that are legal identifiers are preferentially interned. But the code I just posted works by simple recycling, not interning.
13:45
That or compile time optimisation
@Hakaishin It must be possible, since Sage uses matplotlib, and SageMathCell runs in browsers, via ipython magic.
Right, s/keyword/identifier/
@PM2Ring and they are interactive not just svgs or pngs?
@Hakaishin I think I've seen interactive matplotlib stuff in Sage. OTOH, Sage doesn't expose the full power of matplotlib. And it normally uses three.js for interactive 3D stuff, not matplotlib.
For 2d stuff plotly is also an option, but it's a lot worse in terms of documentation
13:53
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I'm looking into plotly right now I have there is an matplotlib -> plotly script or something
Maybe I'm mis-remembering. I've done a couple of 3D plots using matplotlib, but they aren't interactive.
Do you have a small chunk of interactive matplotlib code I can test?
But it has a 2d renderer so it usually has weird artifacts. Unlike three.js.
@PM2Ring bit dated but e.g. stackoverflow.com/questions/47835726/…
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Yeah. 3D plots in matplotlib are fairly ugly.
13:56
Question shows such an artifact
hmmm weren't svgs zoomable in the browser? I have a vague memory of saving a matplotlib plot to a file and then opening that file in the browser and it was a little interactive
Tool for converting matplotlib to html
Never used it though
@matszwecja looks promising. I already have plots in html from matplotlib, I'm after the interactivity, but maybe this library has it
I'm pretty sure it does. I recall a question about this on [python] recently
14:00
-1
Q: Embedding matplotlib plot on a HTML page with python

KansaiRobotI am writing a script to embed a matplotlib plot in a html page generated by python using dominate. Now I have done it in two ways: First way import matplotlib.pyplot as plt from io import BytesIO from dominate import document from dominate.tags import * import base64 # Sample data for the plot ...

@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Thanks. It renders, but it's not interactive.
Or is that also static
fig.savefig(buf, format="png")
Bummer
yeah, that's what I have now
but I wonder why I remember svg being interactive, but the one I just generated is not. Maybe if it's only 1 plot instead of 3, it's worth a try
hmm, nope still not interactive
hmm too many different libraries, I guess I'm gonna go forward without interactivity and see how far I get and how hard I will have to squint :D
@matszwecja I'm bookmarking this, thank you. It looks promising, the examples they have have the zoom functionality and the code is not too convoluted or long
14:12
I recently learned that we can kind of use interactive SVG on Stack Exchange. You can't use JavaScript (of course), but you can do stuff like the final example here: physics.stackexchange.com/a/648786/123208
Same I don't get it. It's just a red square with a black dot, or is there more to it?
Nvm, it's on click and then duration
I think the point is that you see more vivid colors because it contrasts with the other color
@matszwecja Sounds like normal color stuff :D
Just read the text in the answer?
@Hakaishin Red? It should be yellow!
14:19
the one on SageCell is light blue->red
SVG one is yellow->blue
I did say "the final example"...
the svg one never changes from yellow for me, I use FF
Did you click on it?
a bunch of times
hmmm curious it works in Chrome
now I wonder if that is the reason my svgs are not interactive
@PM2Ring That's technically not Stack anymore though. You're on gist.githubusercontent.com by then
14:26
ok nope, still no interactivity with svgs even in Chrome. But the color example only works in Chrome I wonder why
@matszwecja Yeah. Here's a fancier one. Click the green square to start, the red square to stop.
Here's the Python code I used to generate the SVG:
hmm, so it looks like interactivity should be possible using only svg, at least in chrome, curious
14:44
At least SE (main & chat) supports plain SVG animation:
15:49
Thanks for clarifying. Don't worry about it.

Sorry for coming off as rude, I'm not a clever man.

I'll keep lurking.
16:29
@Hakaishin I can't get such interactivity in Firefox, and had no idea the svg standard provided for such
honestly I don't want a graphics format to be interactive
17:20
I can't believe it's only today I heard about raincloud plots, they seem like the best plot ever
I wonder why don't more papers use these plots
17:46
Wait until you hear about sliced bread
18:14
Cbg (?)
@KarlKnechtel hmm. That's a worrying position for me because I've basically taken it as a given that chrome and Firefox would support the same things. I obviously test before release but I can imagine this throwing me into a ditch at that point
Not that I've used animated SVG but that'd be a stark example where my assumption just breaks down. Maybe it's less-sure than I imagined
18:45
My firefox animates is just fine
Oops, no, that was opera on mobile -> chromium
Will check fox
I'll check once I get back on my laptop. It could be some defaults the browsers choose?
If it goes down to changing browser defaults it's still going to get an "UNWORKABLE" red stamp over the code because it'd be near impossible to try convey the changes needed to users, often with really restricted rights on their system. Certainly food for thought for me
@roganjosh the animation works just fine, on PM's example. I just don't get clickable green/red.
I see stuff like begin="go.click" end="stop.click" in the svg source; are those supposed to have hard-coded meaning? or are they supposed to refer to some JS somewhere?
because I don't see any corresponding script.
19:00
@PM2Ring Once I enable JS clicking on the buttons works fine for me in Firefox.
19:22
When I click anywhere on the svg it opens in a new tab; then - oh, do I need to whitelist raw.githubusercontent.com for that to work?
no, that doesn't appear to make a difference. Hm.
Are you on a VPN?
@KarlKnechtel I 1. Click on the image -- get redirected here. 2. Temp trust raw.githubusercontent.com in NoScript 3. Click green button.
FWIW I'm running 120.0.1 (64-bit) on Arch Linux
20:07
oh, it works now? maybe I hallucinated, or misclicked
actually I didn't need to whitelist it in noscript this time, either. /shrug

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