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04:03
Woooow! I'm late on this conversation. @zoomingspeed: please realize that while you might best learn with methodA, there is no expectation or requirement that anyone here is an actual teacher that can tailor a teaching method to a specific user. We are all here as a volunteer community and do the best we can. Not to mention that in programming practice, it's only a matter of time before you reach a problem that requires you to Socratic yourself (this sometimes referred to as the Rubber Ducky method). As a really easy example, even if you were able to articulate a very valid question, you mi
In [23]: L = [1, 2, 3, [], 4, 5]

In [24]: for i in L:
    ...:     print(1+i)
    ...:
2
3
4
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
TypeError                                 Traceback (most recent call last)
Cell In[24], line 2
      1 for i in L:
----> 2     print(1+i)

TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'int' and 'list'

In [25]: try:
    ...:     for i in L:
    ...:         print(1+i)
    ...: except:
    ...:     pass
    ...:
2
3
4

In [26]: for i in L:
and with that, I'm out. Gotta get at least /some/ sleep tonight
04:24
man, I'm finding some truly awful old questions tonight
sure is fun to be the first downvoter, 8+ years later, for junk like stackoverflow.com/questions/34675555
I think I've had enough dumpster diving tonight
@s4D_t0y "I implemented the tab functionality and everything works, but when I click on the second tab it shows the second div underneath the first. Why?" - you first: what do you think should happen instead; and what is your reasoning for expecting that result?
Also: did you try to check the HTML that you actually get on the served page? Is it as you expect? And - is this clicking functionality supposed to be JavaScript driven, or are you expecting it to be something built in to HTML and/or CSS?
 
2 hours later…
06:30
oops sorry for no update, I fixed this a couple hrs ago
anyway, I thought that, when I switched tabs, the new content would show up in the exact same spot as the old content
obviouslly, that didn't happen even without any of the usual culprits, like margin, padding, or something like that; btw, it was supposed to be twitter bootstrap5 powered
Any CTKInter heads here? my button press will only run my function once.. even though I have implemented command= lambda- trying to figure out exactly what my issue is so I can solve it... would it be that I am catching return values from functions into variables and then using if loops to connect to my button and label? so the lambda function is rerunning if loops but not resetting values?
07:09
@user24556897 It's hard to tell what the problem is without seeing your code. Can you create a MRE, eg on Pastebin, or a Github Gist, and link to it here?
I don't know what you mean by "if loops", since if statements aren't loops.
When a GUI function does run properly once but then stops responding, that can indicate that you have some misunderstanding of how event-driven programming works. So your code is trying to do stuff that would work in a non-GUI imperative program, but which isn't appropriate in an event-loop environment.
It takes some practice to get the hang of writing event-driven code. I find it best to start small. Write a very simple GUI program, and gradually add little features. Don't try to do anything too complicated while you're still learning.
07:43
I assigned an instance of StringVar to the textvariable attribute of the Label widget- and I added the lambda function to the CTKButton- I think the issue is lines 164-167 as I am catching the return values of the functions- so although generate() is looping, the values are remaining the same?
It did previously work just with numgenlabel.set(snumlist) under def generate(): but when I added the if loop to account for my different checkboxes it stopped working
08:02
@user24556897 I've never used customtkinter, and I haven't done any Tkinter stuff for a few years, so I'm a little rusty, but I'll take a look at your code. Even though it's not exactly Minimal...
08:20
@user24556897 I'm sorry, but there are serious problems with your control flow. In an event-driven program, you set everything up, and then you finally call root.mainloop(). Then your program sits there, in the loop, waiting for events to respond to. Any imperative statements after the .mainloop() call won't be executed until after the loop is terminated. And usually in a GUI program that doesn't happen until the main window is closed.
I also noticed another issue. In Tkinter, the widget layout methods like .pack() return None. I assume customtkinter has the same behaviour. So checkbox1 = CTkCheckBox(master=frame, text= "Random", ...).pack(anchor="w", padx=(25, 0)) doesn't save the CheckBox widget as checkbox1.
It creates & packs the widget and just assigns None to checkbox1
08:38
Here's a small example of using StringVar stackoverflow.com/a/38792997/4014959 Here are a few more. Some of them may be helpful examples. ;) stackoverflow.com/…
08:53
@PM2Ring What would be your suggestion to improve control flow?
The checkboxes all function well- I am running into an issue with numgenlabel.set() it works once but doesn't work if you press the generate button a second time- but it did work before I implemented the if statements- so I think it is where I set the values that is breaking things? e.g. pbsnumlist_new
09:19
generate only contains ifs and elifs. In the else case, the button doesn't do anything.
09:40
@Aran-Fey There is no else!- I will add in an Else for Errors etc. but I am not getting any issues- in the if statements, I can switch between options and it works, I just can't do the same option twice
@user24556897 You need to move your processing logic into your callback functions, or into functions that the callbacks can call. Remember, your program is sitting inside the mainloop, eaiting for events. None of that code after that mainloop call can run (until the user closes the window.
I recommend putting your main program aside for a little while. Build a simple minimal version, without the polars stuff, etc. Just make a couple of simple widgets & labels, and try to get them to behave how you want. If you get stuck, it will be a lot easier for us to help you with that minimal program. Once you understand how to do that, you'll be able to apply those principles to your main program.
On line 115 you have pbcount. That doesn't look very useful...
10:00
@PM2Ring It is for a loop to generate a longer series of numbers from the data- it is a bit redundant in the current state but I left it in so I can extend the numbers if needed :)
Fully agree with what you said about the minimal version- I did the minimal version prior- this is the step beyond that- it was all fine until I added the if statements in generate
@PM2Ring I think one of your linked examples will solve it for me- my brain doesn't function well at this time so I will have to run over it again in the morning. I feel very close to solving it!
10:55
Hi,

Does 2to3 tool not refactor the deprecated functions of the string module?
Huh, I didn't know the string module had functions in it
 
4 hours later…
14:58
@Aran-Fey I remember string.Template (technically not a function) and string.translate (appears to be gone 3.8.6) being super helpful.
15:40
@ABcDexter 2to3 only handles a few transformations. it does not cover everything.
but most importantly, it's been deprecated for years. don't rely on it anymore.
Anyways, the string module is not listed as part of the fixers.
16:05
does anyone think that this is a really good question? personally, i think the warning is self-explanatory
16:23
@s4D_t0y "A really good question"? No. However, please do not tamper with that one
yea, never would! :)
This is from the lead maintainer. And, no matter how many times I say it as caveats in my answers, people just ignore it anyway. Whether they'll see that question (the upvotes indicate people do) it can only help a chronic problem
16:35
Oh god, I've just scrolled down
@MisterMiyagi Thanks :)
What are some things to keep in mind for refactoring from Python2 to 3 then?
 
2 hours later…
19:09
I'd run modernize on the codebase, then pyupgrade (or rather ruff with the pyupgrade module selected). and then fix whatever is broken manually, remove any six usage, etc.
19:51
@ABcDexter That list of 2to3 fixers that Mister Miyagi posted covers most of the things you need to keep in mind. But it glosses over a few issues.
Python 3 has much better handling of Unicode. It makes a clear distinction between byte strings and text. Python 2 blurs that distinction, and its Unicode handling has some fundamental flaws.
2
So Python 2 code that deals with Unicode may contain odd hacks to try and deal with those flaws. It may not necessarily behave correctly in all cases. And it may behave quite differently if you try to run it in Python 3. In some cases, it won't run, and you'll get an error message. But it might run and do wrong things, resulting in mojibake. So you need to carefully test such code and inspect the output.
20:09
Another issue is that many functions & methods that return a list in Py2 return a generator in Py3. Eg, zip(). That's usually an improvement, unless the code indexes into the list, since you can't index into a generator. The simple solution is to convert the generator to a list. But that wastes RAM, so it's preferable to modify the code to avoid indexing, if possible. Another option is islice, if you only need 1 item, or a subsequence.

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