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04:19
Hello world. I tried to run the example from the following repo after cloning: https://github.com/OliverLSanz/python-telnetserver/tree/master

I ran: `python examples/echo_telnet_server.py`

But I got a ModuleNotFoundError.

There are these *.toml. I am not sure how to use them.
$ git clone github.com/OliverLSanz/python-telnetserver.git
$ cd python-telnetserver/
$ mv examples/echo_telnet_server.py .
$ python echo_telnet_server.py
@deostroll ^ works for me (a bit of a hack, but eh)
04:39
Hmm. I did it a bit differently.
@deostroll you have to install the package before using it. Merely cloning it to your local disk is not rough for Python to know that you want to use that specific package.
Oops, I didn't see the pyproject.toml
I created a venv folder, and, activated it. Next I did a pip install build, and then a python -m build...which creates a dist folder which has a *.whl file. After which I had to pip install dist/*.whl...After that it worked!
You can just pip install the directory. There is no need to manually build a distribution to install.
Note that the package is on pypi so you don’t even need the local copy of the repo (which you don’t need anyway drive you can also install from remote repositories).
@smci sadly, I had literally 2 minutes after the model stopped running to dump the table in to the slide so even I couldn't check it. It illustrated a milestone in the process itself but I'd also introduced the bug on the last iteration
04:53
@Peilonrayz I usually have a separate class for sentinels, also to force a nicer repr. However, for typing specifically usually one doesn’t type hint sentinels as they are not supposed to be exposed - there’s usually never a situation where the sentinel is passed in or out of a function. It’s just a hidden default.
@MisterMiyagi I was overloading __missing__ to return a sentinel. (the example with the pseudo-dict.get is simpler) Normally you're right, a sentinel is not normally needed in a function, here I can't use None because None can exist as a value in the dictionary.
#discussion

I am a little confused how this works. https://github.com/OliverLSanz/python-telnetserver/blob/master/telnetserver/telnetserver.py#L297

How does it understand that a messaged type from the client console terminates with the '\r\n', but the bytes being received is 4096. For me a socket.recv(4096) will wait for that many number of bytes...
05:15
recv(n) reads at most n bytes.
Though I really wouldn’t be surprised if that scheme can lose or mangle data if only it comes in fast enough.
05:36
So how does it figure out when to stop reading?
My initial thought was that it blocks until it reads all 4096 bytes. At least that is what the docs say.
06:31
socket.recv(4096) doesn't block until 4096 bytes are available. It reads whatever data is available, up to 4096 bytes. ("The maximum amount of data to be received at once is specified by bufsize.")
Say, the peer sends 256 bytes and you recv(4096) then recv gives you the 256 bytes.
If the peer send 8192 bytes and you recv(4096) then recv gives you only have of the message.
Notably, if the peer sends, say, 16 bytes and then again 16 bytes and you recv(4096) then recv gives you 32 bytes.
07:06
@Hakaishin As Andras says, 3D plots in matplotlib are a bit of a hack. But you can reduce the excess whitespace a bit with constrained_layout=True. I rarely use matplotlib directly. I mostly use it via Sage, and Sage handles all the gory details. And although Sage uses matplotlib extensively for 2D plots, it uses three.js for 3D plots.
@PM2Ring Thanks, I kinda gave up on 2D plots, now I'm generating a bunch of 3D plots. Anyways there were a few more relevant dimensions than 3D, so I figured I need a better approach anyways
But here's some 3D stuff with matplotlib I did last year. stackoverflow.com/a/77329307/4014959 There's a link to a Sage version at the end, which looks much prettier.
If you're happy to work in JavaScript, three.js is pretty impressive. Sage only exposes a tiny amount of its power. OTOH, it's a 3D rendering environment. I wouldn't describe it as a graphing library.
@PM2Ring That does look and feel better than matplotlib, interesting
@PM2Ring Meh, I hate js like the pest
And anyways I have about 7 important dimensions, so I'm gonna need a bunch of plots. At first I thought I could do with only the 3 most important ones, but that quickly turned out wrong
Aug 23, 2022 at 18:11, by PM 2Ring
Here's some 4D graphics using three.js http://mikelortega.github.io/tesseract
@Hakaishin I can relate to that. When I spend too long coding JS, it makes me want to smash things and punch people. ;)
@PM2Ring Oh yes, very human design, love it :D
07:46
Hello, I tend to save configuration in python files because it enables functional calls, testing etc. I am currently looking for alternative way to load objects from a file under specific path to a variable.

`loaded = SourceFileLoader("", file_path).load_module()`

The above works when I add or modify variable, not when I remove it. The `loaded` object still contains variable even though it is no longer included in file_path.
Do you have similar need? If yes, how do you solve it?
I experimented with from importlib import import_module, reload but it does not play well with absolute paths
I would exec the file content. You're not interested in having a real module after all, it seems.
When you say you are not interested in .. it seems, I have a feeling I should be :-)
08:11
I mildly recommend against treating configuration as Python code, but I strongly recommend against treating configuration as Python modules. Especially if you want to reload them.
@PM2Ring if you feel that way, I wonder how I should feel when trying to make sense of some deobfuscated js code...I feel like it's worse somehow
Why is it bad to treat them as modules? I understand there is some complexity around reloads. I tried to delete the object before but it has not helped.
I guess it can compromise current namespace?
@roganjosh I've done worse myself... the perils of last-minute tweaks
08:27
@aeiou Well, mainly because... it isn't a module. You'll get some artefacts when treating "file with code" as "module", for example your reloading troubles.
class X:
    y = 2
exec(open("file.py").read())
raise
X gets overwritten if contained in file.py
You might want to read through the answer a bit. Especially the parts about globals and locals.
08:49
Thanks, will do. (I also came across stackoverflow.com/a/59937532/19363912)
09:49
I'm making a library that includes 2 command-line scripts for developers: 1) creates a new project based on a template (so will likely be used outside of virtualenvs) and 2) executes your code (so will usually be used inside of virtualenvs). My problem is the directory where pip creates these command line scripts often isn't actually on the PATH, so users won't be able to use them after installing my module. How to packages usually deal with this problem?
Do I have to make a separate installer a la poetry?
10:18
@Aran-Fey Are you specifying the scripts in pyproject.toml? stackoverflow.com/questions/63326840/…
I don't think installing via pip itself can help you there.
Either its install path is in PATH or it isn't.
So when new project gets created I suppose new pyproject.toml is generated for that new project and developer has to pip install -e .
I wish there was an established "project generator" in the python ecosystem. Like, I would simply register a new project template during installation and then the user could do something like python create --template=arans_template
Is there a generic "do not typecheck nextline" comment in python? I know # noinspection PyTypeChecker works for pycharm, however in our company we use multiple ide's (and I"m the only one using pycharm, as per contract), so adding pycharm specific comments is bad
10:27
@Aran-Fey Does Cookiecutter work for your usecase?
@paul23 You can use # type: ignore to ignore the current line/expression. There's no generic ignore prelude as far as I am aware.
pycharm ignores that it seems
@MisterMiyagi It's a bit too involved to set up and use IMO. You need to install pipx so you can install cookiecutter and then you have to remember a stupidly long command like pipx run cookiecutter gh:aran-fey/arans-project-template. That just can't compete with a simple arans-project new
The target audience is data scientists, so... the simpler, the better ;P
hisses and hides in the shadows
@Aran-Fey Are you targeting a specific OS?
All of them :(
"Illegal Struct member key type. Got: Puppet::Pops::Types::PTypeReferenceType" Gosh, and people complain about Python's typing...
@Aran-Fey Per-OS terminal scripts, then? :P
10:38
Could I theoretically do that in a setup.py? I could, right?
...and would someone want to stab me if I did?
If I don't publish any wheels, then pip will always execute my setup.py during install, right?
@Aran-Fey I would probably distriibute the script itself which then takes care of installing your package, not the other way around.
So users would do pip install arans-installer && python -m arans_installer?
Nah, they would always run arans_awesome_thingy.sh and it does all the installing and running and whatever behind the scenes.
Ah. That's definitely an option, but if I can do it "automatically" in setup.py then I'd prefer that
11:26
@Aran-Fey ouchie
Fwiw I think we used to have project templates in git (that's a thing isn't it?).
Not in git
in many git server software it is
12:11
Now I'm back at my desk, it seems git does allow for templates
 
2 hours later…
14:00
At the present time, Is Terraform's CDKTF technology popular and/or stable?
14:35
Any idea how I can click the tight layout button programmatically? I mean I don't have to actually click it, just achieve the same effect in code. I tried fig.tight_layout(), but that doesn't do the same
15:05
@Hakaishin I think you were close with tight_layout, which seems to have some optional arguments: geeksforgeeks.org/…. There's also plt.subplots_adjust
plt.subplots_adjust(left=0.1,
                    bottom=0.1,
                    right=0.9,
                    top=0.9,
                    wspace=0.4,
                    hspace=0.4)
Great thanks :) Funnily enough the subplot tool still shows the wrong values, instead of the used ones, but the plot looks right by adding the values manually. It is fixed for my screen in this way, but that's a totally workable solution :)

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