« first day (4939 days earlier)      last day (236 days later) » 

05:37
Do we have a good dupe target for "update on a hashlib hasher object is for streaming data to hash, not for computing individual hashes"?
06:05
5
Q: Strange python's hashlib.md5 behavior, different hash each time

Mikhail F.I've faced some really strange behavior trying to calculate md5 hash of string. Returned hash is always wrong (and different) if I pass string that was result of concatenation. Only way to get real hash I've found is to pass string that wasn't modified in any way after creation. Python 2.7.13 (v...

That looks good! Thanks.
while at it, here's a dupe that I don't have the python-3.x hammer for stackoverflow.com/questions/53723619/…
Hammer applied.
 
3 hours later…
09:21
means = [nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, nan, 0.692323603997432, 0.7859046968489375, nan, nan]
baaaaatman xD
 
3 hours later…
12:10
I'm trying to implement units, and the static typing is... a challenge. Is it possible to achieve this?
t: Time = Minute(10)  # Valid, "Minute" is a measurement of "Time"
print(t.to_number(Second))  # Valid, outputs 600
print(t.to_number(Time))  # Invalid, Time is "abstract"
I don't understand. Why would you call a function and pass just a type?
IIRC recent typing knows the difference between "type" (like int) and "type form" (like Number). Not sure if that's released already, though.
@roganjosh In order to convert a Time to a number, you need to specify a unit. Do you want seconds? Minutes? Hours?
Even so, what would one expect t.to_number(Time) to give?
An error, that's why it's invalid :D
12:17
Or is that a shorthand for the typing issue rather than actually how it would be called?
Oh man, t in Seconds would be a neat syntax instead of t.to_number(Second), but the type checker veto'd it :/
huh, that would indeed be pretty neat for type conversions
FWIW, practically I would use a union here, since you need to implement each conversion anyway. But that's probably not useful for your concrete usecase?
I think the syntax would be "as" not "in" but it would be nice syntax
Can you have a separate protocol for concrete types? Presumably, if you go for automatic conversion they need some metadata such as how many base-units they express.
The abstract type won't have that.
@MisterMiyagi Ideally I'd like to make it possible for users to define their own units without too much boilerplate, so I'm trying to make the code as reusable/generic as possible. But yeah, a Union is indeed starting to look like a good idea
12:26
class P(Protocol):
    factor: ClassVar[int]

class Minutes(P):
    factor = 60

def to_nums(seconds: int, unit: type[P]) -> P: ...

to_nums(100, Minutes)
to_nums(100, P)  # Argument of type "type[P]" cannot be assigned to parameter "unit" of type "type[P]" in function "to_nums" "P" is not a concrete class type and cannot be assigned to type "type[P]"
This works for PyRight at least.
MyPy also does it right. Only concrete class can be given where "type[P]" is expected
FWIW if you're using units like "Second" then my favourite approach would just be to make it unitless. (I mention Second in particular because it looks like you don't know the precision needed). Jsprit (the vehicle routing library I worked a lot with) does this - your application sets the reference time unit when you call it
IOW you could have every time integer being 1 second, 1 hour, 1 day, whatever. It's your responsibility to keep your units consistent in your code that calls into the library. It just sees "10" when it gets passed to the solver
@MisterMiyagi Interesting idea, I'll play around with it
@roganjosh And thus the user defined leap was born. ;)
I'm kidding, of course. No idea how you folks manage to deal with real clocks.
@roganjosh This is for situations where the units actually matter. Like time.sleep() for example. You wanna sleep for 5? 5 what?
Ah, yeah, then it's totally different if you have to make system calls that another library understands. Outside of that, though, I loved the flexibility of the jsprit idea of just making things unitless for the solver. I had multiple different systems running, some in units of seconds for fast-paced, high-density delivery companies, and others running in minutes for long-haul. Same library, just a flick of a Config param in my own code. All it wanted was integers
12:37
@Aran-Fey 5 chicken drum sticks, please!
@roganjosh Yeah all code should be unitless for sure. We assume SI units everywhere and note it in the variable name if it is not in the appropriate SI unit
That's literally how you blow up rockets.
@MisterMiyagi Well only if you work with people who stubbornly cling to stupid standards :)
SI units are super practical for everyday life, but they are by no way always the correct unit.
@MisterMiyagi True
12:44
As a genuine question, do you think that typing could have stopped the rocket explosion? I think no. There is an off-chance but any number of numerical mistakes could have been made in the process
The only reason I can see for other units to be used is for numerical precision, which would make very small or very large base units necessary
Are there other reasons?
International collaboration
@roganjosh I don't understand?
That's what the SI units are for
@roganjosh Typing can't fix every problem. But so far it has been very good at catching my footgun science projects.
But I don't think the presence of an elaborate Enum or strict typing checks alone will ever fix the issue
@Hakaishin I mean, that's your ideology. Our US counterparts might not quite agree that SI is the best unit, or one they would naturally code in
12:51
Meh, if the whole world is ok with writing english code even though english isn't their mother tongue, then the 'muricans can handle using SI units
@roganjosh Lol calling SI units an ideology is so unhinged that I don't think we should continue talking
There's a slight problem in the fact that the UK still uses miles as a measurement of distance, and mph in measuring speed. (And pints at a bar, the consumption of which helps confuse things futher) :P
@Hakaishin ok
13:08
If people insist on using kiloseconds, a pint of cool ale is exactly the right thing.
Am I doing something wrong here or is this a bug in pyright?
type is covariant, right?
I'm not comfortable with the V-words anymore.
Yeah, on second thought, the variance shouldn't matter. I think.
You want def __contains__(cls: type[Unit], unit: Unit) -> float: ... there.
Otherwise T has to decide between Minutes, Seconds, Minutes | Seconds, Unit, ...
Madness lies that way.
Huh, curious
So I guess with this design I can't do anything about nonsense like Minutes() in Meters then
13:14
You might need something like CRTP if you want a single metaclass to work for multiple separate types. Does Python support that?
class UnitMeta[T](type):
    def __contains__(cls: type[T], unit: T) -> float: ...

class TimeUnit(metaclass=UnitMeta["TimeUnit"]): ...
Never heard of it, so my guess is "no"
Consider my mind blown.
What are they going to think of next? Killer lizards? Higher order types? Readable syntax?
13:57
Oh, I just realized that "TimeUnit" is supposed to be a forward reference, not a literal :/
Using strings for type annotations was truly one of the implementations of all time
14:20
I'm gonna have to list Miyagi as a co-developer on this one. I got very very close dpaste.org/UNMPK
Now to implement compound units (m/s, etc) and hope I won't have to throw out 99% of the code I just wrote
If it helps, I have no idea how your UnitMeta works without a class-scoped T.
Well, the function takes a type[Unit[T]] and a Unit[T] as input, so essentially "two units of the same type". The value of T doesn't even matter (it is a Union, but it could be literally anything)
14:36
Which exception would you throw if a user tries to call foo.bar() where bar computes something from a list inside foo? Exception("list is empty") or is there a better one?
ValueError is common for empty containers.
Compare max([]).
15:14
Cabbage. What to do when conda list shows that I have a certain package installed, but when importing the package, "module not found" occurs?
15:33
@Marco Make sure you actually run the program in that environment.
I did it
Are you sure the package name is the import name? For example, the distribution package pillow is imported as the package PIL.
It's the simple numpy
I'm creating the conda environment from scratch unfortunately to fix it
thanks
@MisterMiyagi yeah, I know the case of PIL for example...
It all started after a package installation with pip, when you do this the chances of breaking conda env are high
Right after this installation via pip some conflict errors occurred. I believe that the ideal would be for pip install to work as a transaction, if an error occurs, the user can revoke the transaction.
16:20
@Marco I never broke conda through pip installs, so I wouldn't call the chance "high"
What were the conflicts?
@roganjosh Well, each case is different
@roganjosh Wrt some packages, I don't remember which ones now
I'm not sure how I can help on the basis of that info
I already solved the problem, reinstalled the entire environment, thanks!
Much easier than trying to solve the problem. But the issue was simple, I had numpy installed in the conda environment and it was not being imported. This is weird.
@roganjosh conda env I meant
16:36
My comment still stands. I have seen all the warnings and never yet hit a problem (I don't have to worry about it for a few years now, though)
We did solve a major bottleneck today by applying a fix for an issue that officially affected neither our kernel nor middleware version. So I'm all for "good thing it's fixed, let's hit the pub" today.
17:29
Ah, crap! I didn't mean that, sorry
It's moved to MetaPython now. I genuinely didn't meant to move it to Ouroborous, it was just muscle memory in selecting a room. I'm not going to engage you there anyway, because I don't care to (you have frustrated me beyond reason before), but you can pick it up there
@roganjosh Ok, I'll answer to your last message there, then it's up to you to answer or not.
is this a good place to ask random python-related questions?
17:45
Yes, sure
@RocketFriday Hello :) Generally yes, but we do have some room rules
so, I'm using discord.py, not sure if it's really unique to that tho.
there are events like
```py
@bot.event
async def on_ready():
```
and some have args passed.

I've been tryng to make custom ones and I've gotten it to work
but not with args.

using → bot.dispatch("my_event", a,b,c)
if I do:
```py
a, b, c = await bot.wait_for("my_event")
```
from within the on_ready block, it works.
but
```py
@bot.event
async def on_my_event(a,b,c):
```
this doesn't get called.

but... if I fire the event without args
it does fire, but then obviously I have no access to the args (that weren't passed)
how can I pass args and get them from an @bot.event and not from manually awaiting an event
cant edit msgs :/ sry bout the lack of formatting
 
1 hour later…
19:28
Seems my VS Code is having a moment
What's the environment set as in the bottom right?
@roganjosh 3.11.8 ('venv': venv) -- a restart fixed things. Thought all the red lines was kinda funny. :)
 
4 hours later…
23:31
@Peilonrayz I found funny! :)

« first day (4939 days earlier)      last day (236 days later) »