« first day (4969 days earlier)      last day (206 days later) » 

00:52
@roganjosh Oh i didnt know that either xD
Even so, I find the question interesting, I have had similar problems and I have not been able to solve them
01:16
@Simon it isn't at all obvious
See ths that gives you hints of how it actually works (there are other bits of documentation that'll complete the picture)
01:30
wow its a lot to read
Well... documentation tends to be like that. But the SQLA engine is actually really good and will save you from lots of issues around connections
01:54
@Simon I'm curious now about what "similar problems" are? I like the title of the question but I'm not sure I can answer it in the context it's being asked.
In the context of using the engine as an ORM, I needed to iterate over a Python list without overloading the server, especially if some queries take longer than expected
So something like, if the query is taking more tan X , just pause it and go for the other element
Sometimes i need to query on the production server, and the queries should no be really long or i can cause some issues
Ah, I don't know of a good way to do that. I think that's what the other OP is asking about but I'm not aware of a kill-switch on it.
The connection timeout won't help with query runtime. Also, if you're iterating a list, the runtime should be ~stable
At least with AWS I had to go into the platform and kill it when I did something stupid that was pulling literally trillions of rows
another question! Its bettter to use this sintax?
>>> stmt = select(User).where(User.name.in_(["spongebob", "sandy"]))
That's using the ORM. I don't see anything wrong with your syntax but I don't use ORMs
What's the alternative you're thinking of?
I just use the query as string, but i was wondering about that syntax
02:08
I think that will work?
Yes works too! but since you know a lot more about SQLA i was wondering about benefits
Oh
In the past I used the ORM but now I just use the engine. That query your wrote should be very simple for it to translate into SQL so there are no issues with it. I have issues with the objects it has to create with the results. But seriously you don't have to follow my lead on this one.
Unless you're committing to my library ;)
Tomorrow ill read about the engines, a lot to read
wich library
Internal ones at my old company. I was quite strict about some things
Taking data with an ORM and then passing it to a dataframe is tremendously wasteful if it's not done correctly
Do you mid if i add you to discord?
02:16
I don't use discord. I just hang around here
send me your github yto take a look into your library!
I can boil this statement down pretty easily anyway. a) I don't like wrapper methods like pandas.read_sql() or polars.read_database() because they change and I don't know what they're doing between versions. b) I just use SQLA for its engine, not the ORM which can add huge overhead for creating objects
But I'm far from the most knowledgable in this room and you really shouldn't take that as absolute advice. I get set in my ways on certain things.
so you just pass the query directly to the engine and then to dataframe?
Cool, im going to look into that. Thanks a lot!
i really appreciate it
03:03
@ABcDexter You would need to parse that non-Python source file and extract the Python code snippets from it and pass those to 2to3, and even then it may be hit and miss depending on how the Python code is formatted/structured.
03:18
duplicate on previously-3.x-only question (see comment) stackoverflow.com/questions/75616208
03:44
I've got a perplexing problem that I'm hoping is a common one and someone can help with. Basically, I've got a dataframe "keptdata", and

>>>keptdata.timestamp[82].time() > dt.time(9,30,0)

returns TRUE. However if I write

>>>keptdata.timestamp[82].time() > dt.time(9,30,0) == True

then it returns FALSE. Why?
(Trying to figure out how to get the code display to work in chat)
Because in Python, x > y == z does not mean (x > y) == z. It also does not mean x > (y == z). Instead, it chains the comparisons, as explained in e.g. stackoverflow.com/questions/28754726 (which also cites the relevant documentation)
To make (multi-line) code display work in chat, you must have only code in a given message, and only the indentation style is supported (not code fences) afaik
```
let me test this
```
Indeed, code fences do not work.
Thanks!
04:00
@KarlKnechtel this is covered in our code formatting guide
04:13
Well, it could be interesting trying to get back to the hotel from starbucks. God help me if I have a drink
Actually, alcohol might make that beast of word easier. It's all good
05:02
@Allure also, Python's duck typing means you almost never should check against True/False in boolean contexts
05:20
How would you handle a clause of the form "if condition == TRUE, then ..." ?
if condition:
And for the negation, if not condition:
That's certainly cheaper. Thanks
You should only use exact checks when you want to distinguish 1 from True or 0 from False or None or similar. Which is almost never the case. And when it is you'd want if value is True because True == 1.
05:48
Expected NumPy 2.0 release date: June 16
 
1 hour later…
07:13
@Allure From peps.python.org/pep-0008/#programming-recommendations Don’t compare boolean values to True or False using ==
 
5 hours later…
12:27
I just realised that the docs for function definitions say "If the form “**identifier” is present, it is initialized to a new ordered mapping receiving any excess keyword arguments, defaulting to a new empty mapping of the same type." (emphasis mine)
Does the spec actually say anywhere that we get a dict?
That quote doesn't even guarantee that the mapping is mutable!
Mypy doesn't complain if you mutate it, and that's good enough for me!
Revealed type is "builtins.dict[builtins.str, Any]"
hurries to the PyRight mobile
Yeah, if those two agree that's good enough for me.
I hope you learned your lesson. Reading docs is bad for you
12:53
Wasn't it the case at some poibt that dicts were unordered but kwargs were ordered?
or docs is just playing it safe
Or being friendly to non-c pythons?
There are non-c pythons?
13:09
@roganjosh Thanks for all the info! i misunderstood SQLA , going to check the engine!
13:26
No problem
 
1 hour later…
14:56
>>> isinstance(datetime.now(), date)
True
>>> datetime.now() > date.today()
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: can't compare datetime.datetime to datetime.date
This is fine :)
Let me just sort a Iterable[date]... *kaboom*
15:18
@Aran-Fey Everything is fine?
Yes! Especially me! I'm fine black powder in the shape of a person's silhouette
@Aran-Fey yeah the built-in date and time support is honestly pretty awful
15:34
@Aran-Fey :o :(
15:58
chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/57379664#57379664 wrote a bash script which does the parsing and runs 2to3 and puts it back.
Thanks everyone for help
 
2 hours later…
18:00
Comment of the day:
    // The root component keeps track of the correct overlay size. Take it
    // from there. To heck with what the parent says.
First sentence: programmer. Second sentence: thief. Third sentence: rebellious teenager
Awesome haha
 
1 hour later…
19:09
stackoverflow.com/questions/13215716 Any of you on Windows? Is this reproducible in modern Python versions / on modern Windows versions?
19:20
That's a no repro from me
I ran the code twice (because I got False as output first time) and no repro 3.10.7 Win.
can repro it if I set hidden attribute to an hidden file (with a dot in front of the filename): stackoverflow.com/questions/19622133/…
I think this also work if there is no dot on the filename thanks to the attribute
(Win10, 3.8)
Whoops, I didn't pay close enough attention to notice the thing with the hidden flag
19:40
Do any of you use pypy or similar to make your Python code faster? Which do you recommend the most?
PyPy is suggested as an alternative Python implementation on the official Python website: python.org/download/alternatives
@Marco I've only used CPython. I've seen questions on CR where the user is using MicroPython -- the limitations are pretty interesting. You should give PyPy a go and see if you like the interpreter. 3.10 is still fairly modern, but isn't bleeding edge like CPython.
Ok thanks, when you say '"bleeding edge like CPython" do you mean versions above 3.10 or CPython in general?
Like CPython 3.13.0b1 where 3.13 isn't officially released yet.
19:56
ah, ok
But are you comparing in terms of speed?
Nope. I never care about speed with Python. (Ok I do, I like playing the game of micro-optimising on CR sometimes. But never seriously.)
By the way, I remembered when you mentioned version 3.13 that it has the option to disable GIL :D
@Peilonrayz ah, ok
@Marco Yeah, sometimes playing with the new toys is more fun than speed :)
but I said it because disable GIL can increase speed :p
I hope you enjoy your journey into speed, you'll probably have fun learning and testing things. But don't be surprised if people are a bit jaded about the topic :)
20:12
yeah, ok, thanks!
I wonder if one of the goals of Python core devs is to one day reach the speed of languages like C and C++.
Because that would be awesome!
No. It never will be
Incidentally one of the core devs built cython, though
Hmm... It was great to remember Cython
@roganjosh why not?
20:32
I can't wait for all the new and exciting questions this will unleash
no problem
@Marco Python's design is not speed, when you need speed you write code in C and call the code from CPython. If you'd like C speed you'll need to use C or another language with the purpose of being fast, like Rust or Julia.
I see
Do we have any Julia extensions?
Or, at least, where Julia is being employed to some extent. I feel like the language really didn't gain any ground
I've only seen Julia be advertised as "Python but doesn't suck 'cause is fast lmao". Never looked further :(
20:43
I think it just got blown out by rust. Which makes me happy as I had a bet against my Director on this kind of state of play and I went "Rust" :P
I'm using Python 3.9 in a project, will I experience certain speed gains in general when upgrading to Python 3.11 (the maximum version I could use)?
It is worth it?
Oh, ok, thanks
@Marco I occasionally use PyPy. But admittedly it's for a pretty niche usecase; most of the time, there's a C-extension that speeds up the happy path sufficiently and isn't compatible with PyPy.
Python made some changes to their fundamentals and made things faster, but you could already be jitting or anything. I don't get the impression that you take this stuff seriously, and you kinda have to if you want speed
20:48
@roganjosh I don't think Python extensions written in Julia have much point. Julia with its JIT rather targets the same frontend/glue use-case as Python instead of backend languages like C, C++ or Rust.
@Marco You should test to see. We can't guess what you'll see. If you're using only NumPy and Pandas you'll probably see no change. But you need to test yourself.
@MisterMiyagi hmm, nice, thanks
@roganjosh Yeah, "C but safe*" is more interesting than "Python but fast" IMO.
@roganjosh Why do you think I don't take it seriously?
@Peilonrayz ok, super fair
Yes, I use JIT
Is it possible to convert any Python code to Cython?

« first day (4969 days earlier)      last day (206 days later) »