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04:15
Hello. I have a question about mypy. I'm working on a personal project, and have tried making it in many different languages. Each one had something about it that eventually annoyed me so much I started over in a different language. To my surprise, I'm trying Python now. My fear is that even with MyPy, the type system and static analysis errors won't be good enough, like a tacked on thing, compared to a compiled language. What do you think of it?
 
4 hours later…
08:29
what was the term to say something is "properly" a subclass? (so no change of types in members)
@still_dreaming_1 Python's type system is surprisingly good. It certainly still has some problems that stem from it being new and tacked on, but it also has some cool stuff like Self and ParamSpec and Concatenate
I almost lost my mind trying to achieve the equivalent of python's -> Self in TypeScript once
@paul23 Is there a word for that? Changing the type of a member is a bug, isn't it?
Unless it's read-only I guess
yeah, in a strongly typed language it is
But I mean like a "square is not a subclass of a rectangle"
even though one would assume it is
But a square isn't defined by width + height so it wouldn't be a proper subclass.. There was a word to describe that. (well I'm mostly looking for an article that described this, having a word makes googling easier)
Are you thinking of LSP? Liskov Substitution Principle?
Oh yes
Thank you
I'm starting to realize that mutability really does cause a lot of issues. Functional programmers would probably be like "Of course a Square is a subclass of Rectangle, what the heck are you talking about"
08:41
so would dynamic (prototyped) languages
08:53
@still_dreaming_1 I'm pretty happy about it. The type system fares quite well against most contenders and I'd take it over systems like Java's any day. IMO only some of languages really built on types, like Rust and Haskell, really get an edge from actually using their type system and not just doing sloppy verification with it.
@Aran-Fey There's some extensive literature on that, actually. But the TLDR is that it's your old friend "variance" all over again.
09:20
There’s also the angle that subclassing expresses shared invariants, and that is much simpler if invariants are enforced to begin with.
 
2 hours later…
10:58
stackoverflow.com/questions/77931106/… was reopened, any opinions or reactions?
I sort of agree with the original closer that the question is fairly pointless but I hesitate to start a reclose war
@metatoaster you need 20k rep to delete vote, so you don't see the delete button; but it's there (once there are enough downvotes)
It should have remained closed IMO
"weirdly enough, python optimized my test code and hence the factor is only 2.8, in reality if python hadn't optimized my test code, this could have been well around 100." Err, meaning, if python wasn't python it would run slower in python?
weridly sopython.com/canon has nothing about short-circuiting
I think you should have editing privileges if you want to add it? If not, I can add
I think it's fine to open
No need to go through the effort to close it, it has a valid answer and just leave it at that?
I agree that there's no point re-closing post hoc but the question is whether it should have been reopened in the first place. We can see what other answers it has drawn since
Well, actually, maybe I don't agree since the dupes give way more information than the only sane answer on that post
11:16
I do have sopython privs, just under the impression it's not used or maintained much
I was hoping to recruit Karl to help with it but I believe he was skeptical too
It isn't tbh, I think a lot of people gave up years ago when SO blew itself up from every possible controversy it could get itself in
5
@tripleee Oh right I didn't know that's the case for answers
or that I forgot, it's been a while
In the back of my mind he has some other system for tracking dupes but it's a very hand-wavey memory
@tripleee I've reacted on the question itself. Clearly a dupe as it has been answered on those other questions.
sigh This is why I'm fed up with SO.
12:17
also @tripleee, while you are here, this answer you gave doesn't actually type check, I think remove that whole second part involving Literal[list(op.keys())] might be better as that is wrong.
@metatoaster thanks, you mean everything after "what would make more sense"?
@roganjosh yup, I've been participating there from time to time, though not recently
what's the typical speed for generating/going through the range 1e13? Is there any official way to calculate it beside iterating over the range and timing it?
I know it would be too slow in Python, and I already managed to do it in C in 3 hour or so, but was just wondering if there was a way to calculate the speed generally
12:39
Asking about generating it doesn't really make sense since you'll get a generator anyway that is lazy?
yeah, I meant the overall way to calculate the timing once it get fully "consumed".
Otherwise, can't you just do a couple of runs of smaller loops and do back-of-envelope calcs to extrapolate up? That's what I do
yeah, I did that, but I recall someone here or on SO mentioned once a way to calculate this beside using first few iteration to calculate hmm
maybe I'm just overthinking this, I guess this is good enough
If the calculation tells me "a week" I'm not really going to quibble about whether I have +/- a day in there... that's probably too long
yeah, true
12:44
As to someone mentioning an approach, I don't know. The only thing I can think of is how not to do it with timeit whereby the generator is exhausted in the first run and then every other run blitzed through the generator because it keeps giving an empty list. I've seen that mistake a lot
yeah, I know what you mean. I saw some answers that did that on SO too. I usually only use time.time() two times, although I know there is the decorator...
time.time() is different to timeit or am I misunderstanding your point?
I mean, I know they are technically similar: stackoverflow.com/questions/17579357/… but I just mean that I usually prefer using time.time() directly instead :)
ah nevermind, that's not true anymore for 3.X+
Ah, no, I definitely advocate timeit in general but it gives totally false results if you pass it a generator it can consume
I'm on my phone, let's see if I can find an example I pointed out
13:20
@roganjosh Thanks :) Yeah I didn't know the part about MySQL, but what you said in your answer about list comprehension vs numpy/panda reminds me of that one thing I did onc e before: gist.github.com/secemp9/16a65c98d8c15be858ed2276015047f1
it's not really unlikely that it happens, but as I said once here, it did have varying speed difference between numpy/pandas and Python version, so yeah
 
2 hours later…
15:47
2024-02-03 15:44:38.191 Python[15538:7108820] WARNING: Secure coding is not enabled for restorable state! Enable secure coding by implementing NSApplicationDelegate.applicationSupportsSecureRestorableState: and returning YES.... well that's a new one
Seems to be a fun issue with tk and MacOS. What a strange warning. Luckily I don't use tk and rarely use matplotlib but that was definitely a "wut?" moment
 
1 hour later…
17:01
@roganjosh I don't think this has anything (directly at least) to do with Tkinter. See here: github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/issues/…
possibly the clang version, but I do not have macos (although I could spin a docker macos instance) so cannot test it
Yeah, I originally saw something with tk and matplotlib plots in a tk window, but it does look like a deeper issue with compilation rather than tk itself.
also I think by default, matplotlib do not always use Tkinter, and usually use QT. Since Tkinter is not part of the installable libs on most Linux distros and MacOS, you have to install it separately.
or if you compile it from scratch, you can just do it directly with Tcl dependencies installed
I still don't actually know what the warning means, but I think it's the first time I've seen something like that. I just copy/pasted some code from an SO question into my editor and it got upset
yeah, I didn't know what it was about either, but I think based on what I found, that it is related to this: developer.apple.com/documentation/appkit/nsapplicationdelegate
probably to protect user-space or something? not sure
<adds to shelf of curios> another day, another surprise. I don't care to dig any deeper to be fair
17:08
that's fair yeah. I don't do macosx dev anyway...
The use of ! caught my attention, though :P
yeah, me too :D seems weird
NSApplicationDelegate.applicationSupportsSecureRestorableState looks more like Java or C#
Ah, Objective-C I guess. It's thrown at the OS level
yeah
I saw that error on Swift stuff too so that explain a lot
you can also call their api in other lang though: gist.github.com/andsve/2a154a82faa806b3b1d6d71f18a2ad24
user22676652
user22676652
Using this code, I keep getting this error:

unterminated string literal (detected at line 300)
You can't make multi-line strings like that
            file.write(f"{msg.created_at} -
                         {msg.author.display_name}:
                         {msg.clean_content}\n")
Either use triple quotes or multiple strings
            file.write(f"{msg.created_at} -"
                       f"{msg.author.display_name}:"
                       f"{msg.clean_content}\n")
user22676652
thanks
18:31
Maybe I shouldn't have been so dismissive of that warning. On reading further it's a real security issue
18:50
@roganjosh Ouch!
19:37
@tripleee Essentially, because your sensible approach is not supported by the Literal type, the mapping will have to be defined with repeat elements anyway. I came across this while dealing with sqlalchemy Enums which your particular reference to get_args was useful
 
2 hours later…
21:43
@roganjosh ah, I guess I was right when I guessed this was for protecting user-space :o
 
1 hour later…
22:54
@MisterMiyagi That's not what's meant by coercion. "I shall hev to arrest yuu, fer abusing dis perrot..."

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