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00:47
at most the top two are necessary, really
anyway, I spent an hour and a half modernizing our unlucky winner's project, making a pull request, documenting everything, commenting on SO etc.
01:38
First, let me just say that I do not envy the position of maintaining setuptools, and if this issue is at all burdensome, please ignore it :-)
this is commentary by a core dev who is also a major contributor to mypy
Regarding #4519, in the event that setuptools chooses to revert something (looks like issue is already top ten all time by emoji count), I'm wondering if there are creative ways to introduce this breakage more slowly
this is referring to functionality that has already been deprecated for about 5 years, but the sudden removal of which broke a bunch of users the last couple of days apparently.
Meanwhile, Pip can do tons of useless serialization and deserialization of cached wheels and nobody has cared to respond in months. And it's been years since someone proposed giving Pip the ability to install from local cache without checking PyPI for updates first. Among plenty of other basic things...
and they've spent years agonizing over whether to change a single default setting, or other possible ways to approach that problem. To say nothing of all the discussion on the Discourse about whether or how to mark sdists as user-(non-)buildable.
I'm really losing patience with... everything under PyPA, really.
setuptools is absurdly large and almost everything it can do is deprecated. pip is even bigger yet is still missing these basic pieces, while exposing nonsensical bits of functionality (like offering half of a build frontend). pipx has all the functionality needed to manage pip and venv intelligently, but deliberately locks a bunch of it away or makes it weirdly difficult to use.
And third-party stuff has its own issues. flit_core is supposed to be minimal, but the separate flit_corewheel vendors tomli unconditionally and includes the tests when it's only supposed to be used transiently to build an sdist from PyPI. Hatch is full-featured, but a full set of wheels including dependencies (in particular including uv) is bigger than the tarball for Python itself. uv, btw, is multiple times the size of Pip, for a fraction of the functionality (lol Rust).
 
4 hours later…
05:42
@KarlKnechtel I funny envy PyPA. They have to deal with a lot of users and the most vocal ones aren’t those concerned about proper software development.
Honestly, reading through that Q&A is just sad. There’s a feature deprecated since 5 years (!!!) and somehow it’s the fault of those actually doing that proper depreciation cycle.
06:10
How do I run unittests in the interactie shell? For ease of showing simple things?
I've tried to put this:
from unittest import TestCase, main
class TestTests(TestCase):
    def test_left_has_items(self):
        self.assertCountEqual({a: 1, b: 2}, {a: 1})
    def test_right_has_items(self):
        self.assertCountEqual({a: 1}, {a: 1, b: 2})
    def test_different_items(self):
        self.assertCountEqual({a: 1}, {a: 2})

main()
However that gives the following error: usage: pydevconsole.py [-h] [-v] [-q] [--locals] [-f] [-c] [-b]
[-k TESTNAMEPATTERNS]
[tests ...]
pydevconsole.py: error: unrecognized arguments: --mode=client --host=127.0.0.1 --port=52382
 
1 hour later…
07:25
@paul23 pydevconsole.py is part of intellij, so this indicates an issue with your IDE, not your code.
Note that the unittest docs ship with a basic example and the command line interface.
Those should work as-is.
 
3 hours later…
10:08
Somebody teach me how to deal with circular imports. I'm losing my mind
step 1) don't!, step 2) ???, step 3) profit!
@Aran-Fey I recall Eric Traut basically saying you should never have circular imports. I find having a 'base' class/protocol which I then pass around to concrete classes helps reduce the likely hood of circular imports.
10:23
That "you should never have circular imports" thing has always been BS IMO, and tenfold so now that type annotations are a thing. It's no coincidence that we got from __future__ import annotations
I agree
11:14
@Aran-Fey probably "put stuff in functions" and "put stuff at the bottom" and then "what Miyagi said"
11:30
@MisterMiyagi yes but that's not a live code inside the shell itself
that is a separate file that is being run and tested
11:44
Ah, sorry, I misunderstood what you were trying to do.
it's mostly for during a presentation I wish to give.. To show some things while I generate the code in real time
Have you tried whether it works outside of PyCharm?
 
2 hours later…
13:45
Today's one of those days. First I tried to install a GUI for ansible, only to have its .exe tell me "this is a console-based application", and then I find out that ansible doesn't work on Windows because it needs fork(). This program that does nothing but connect to other PCs and tell them to execute commands needs efficient multiprocessing for some reason.
@Aran-Fey ansible at it's best :D And it's syntax is horrible :D
14:20
late morning cabbages, folks!
@Aran-Fey For what it’s worth, the Windows support for Puppet outside of the standard library is also pretty lacking. System management tools and Windows don’t seem to like each other much.
Or system administrators, perhaps.
@Aran-Fey I’m wondering, do you have an example of your circular dependencies? Usually your use cases are pretty different from mine.
It's complicated and I don't have access to the code right now, but roughly: Prefix requires Unit requires Quantity. Quantity requires both Prefix and Unit in its __str__ function. And to make things extra bad, there's also a __init_subclass__ method that registers every Unit subclass in a UNITS_BY_SYMBOL dict (i.e. there's code that runs at import time)
Any chance to throw them all into the same module?
I guess that would be ok. None of those classes are super long, if I remember correctly
Shouldn't have named the language after a snake, maybe then it wouldn't force me to write spaghetti all the time
Me: I'd like to organize my code like this
Python: https://i.imgflip.com/4sc1sr.jpg
14:37
@Aran-Fey you could move imports into __str__()
I tried, but it wasn't enough to solve the problem. Don't remember why exactly
Why would Unit require Quantity?
Because it's a unit for a certain quantity. Hour is a unit of Time, and so on
I can't even flip it around (like, store a list of units in the Quantity) because the Units need to be generic over the Quantity
@Aran-Fey probably because there are 3 links in the chain
But Time isn't a quantity because it's not numeric? In my head, they're entirely divorced concepts. FWIW in my MRP system I have been developing, units live in a table like this and users can create their own custom units too
14:51
I'd also be curious about a full example because this sounds solvable
Sounds like Prefix <- Unit <- Quantity could work if imports are moved inside the method, so just need to fix the remaining issue.
@roganjosh Hmm. I feel like I kind of get where you're coming from, but at the same time I don't. But anyway, it's a bit complicated because each Quantity actually needs to be defined in 2 steps: class TIME(QUANTITY): pass followed by Time = Quantity[TIME]. I wanted to reduce the users' interaction with the ALL_CAPS quantities as much as possible, so now creating a new Unit goes like hour = Unit(Time, 'h', 3600). That's pretty much where the connection to Quantity is
Calling a Unit also returns a Quantity, like t: Time = hour(2)
IMO that's not the correct use of the "Unit" name. I'm not exactly sure what would be better, but 'h', at least to me, is the "unit" and what you're building is basically a "Measurement" or something, which is another object composed of those three components
Would a class variable being named just __ be name mangled? Or not?
@paul23 try and see
My guess would be "no"
It's faster to test than ask here
15:06
I think our objectives are slightly different, though, because I have the luxury of pulling three different tables together on the backend, while you want some distinct object for the user the play with
I've googled the terminology half a dozen times and never found a conclusive answer. I basically threw the words "unit", "quantity" and "measure" into a pot and drew my 2 favorites
In physycs you'd call "2 h" a quantity and "h" the unit of said quantity
Another FWIW is how it comes together in my system (which would be how I'd ultimately want to interact with your library). Definitely not saying this is typical. The interface and the units (which includes "units" as in individual items).
Apparently "quantity" is a proper term in this case, as weird as that sounds - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_quantity
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні That means I got it right! 🎉
Actually, that's not the whole story. There's also the all caps QUANTITY, which I really need to rename but don't know how
15:18
TIL that "quanta" only applies to energy in physics land
@Aran-Fey Not sure if it solves your issue of defining Time twice, but IIRC Python typing supports self-recursive generics like CRTP.
class Base[T]: ...
class Derived(Base["Derived"]): ...
Indeed it does (p>0.05)!
It's been too long since I designed this thing, I don't even remember why I need it twice
@Aran-Fey Do you have the code on GitHub? I think the solution would change greatly depending on the existing structure. Which sounds a little complicated.
Unfortunately not, since I'm in the middle of redesigning the whole thing. Github has an outdated version of it
Fair enough. If the new code appears on GitHub I'd be willing to have a little look over.
15:29
I'll publish it as a branch when I come home
 
1 hour later…
16:47
Code is here: https://github.com/Aran-Fey/u
I remembered why I need the double-definitions: For compound units. With this system, `meters(3) / seconds(2)` can return a `Quantity[DIV[DISTANCE, DURATION]]`
Although... If Div were a subclass of Quantity, returning a Div[Distance, Duration] would also work, I guess
17:11
@Aran-Fey Nice and simple code. Makes a change from Code Review questions! I'm having a think about the code now.
18:02
@Aran-Fey Yikes, no chance with recursive types for Quantity. Nice piece of code!
Feels weird to have my code praised in a project where I'm wrangling with the type checker and stdlib at every turn...
Then again... maybe that's what I do best
I think the cause of the circular imports is the `import u` in `prefixes.py`, `quantity.py` and `unit.py`. You can move `from .quantities import *` to the top of `u.__init__` by removing the circular imports with the following dependency tree:

quanitity_caps -> prefixes -> _utils
quantity -> {quanitity_caps, _utils}
unit -> {quantity, quanitity_caps, _utils}

All the other dependencies either can be behind `if t.TYPE_CHECKING:` or located within a function. Generally imports anywhere other than the top of the file are bad... but I think we just have to accept the situation here. You have c
(see full text)
18:32
I would definitely just throw the core classes into one file. I would rather split the code along class versus data boundary; e.g. class Prefix in one file with its siblings but kilo, mega and friends in another.
This should be especially clear considering some of those are overloaded. For example, kilo is 10^3 in the SI sense but still 2^10 in some data contexts.
Might want to add namespaces for the various different unit systems.
19:23
@MisterMiyagi the thing is, they actually didn't, more or less. They noticed that something had been deprecated forever and removed it. There was a deprecation warning, but there was not a planned-in-advance schedule for removal. But more importantly, people didn't see the warning unless they a) were devs; b) manually upgraded Setuptools with nothing forcing their hand; c) used setup.py test locally.
Two major pure-Python projects were affected: Requests and Celery. In both cases, the offending code in setup.py was completely irrelevant to current developers - even disregarding the fact that these projects shouldn't need a setup.py at all any more.
(because they run their tests with things like Tox, Makefile targets etc. Personally I think the Pytest command line is already just fine)
Additional useful detail: github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/4520
19:53
@Aran-Fey side note: AssertionError: assert '30.0 dm²' == '3m²' is wrong, 30 dm^2 == 0.3 m^2
Wait, what's wrong with how the code is currently, i.e. strategically placed star import in __init__.py? Isn't that the right place for some minor ugliness?
20:12
There isn't a right place for such ugliness in my experience. It always comes back to bite you
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Where is that? I can't find a test like that O.o
FAILED tests/test_conversions.py::test_to_string[value3-3m\xb2] - AssertionError: assert '30.0 dm²' == '3m²'
@KarlKnechtel Hm, interesting background. I’ve long since pondered if a "deprecation library" would be useful. Looks like a lot of damage could have been avoided with better automated warnings.
let's hope those automated warnings are not DeprecationWarnings
@KarlKnechtel Naively, that looks exactly like what scheduled CI would catch. Interesting that even big projects got caught by this.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Oh yikes, that's a bug in the __str__ function. As if it wasn't complicated enough yet...
20:25
if "scheduled CI" didn't happen to pin a Setuptools version, or build without isolation (or reuse a container that already had an old Setuptools), maybe?
@Aran-Fey but it sounds like the calculation is wrong as well as the choice of base unit for stringifying... ?
like, an failed assertion of assert '30.0 dm²' == '0.3m²' would suggest to me that the __str__ doesn't work as expected, but at least the math works.
@Aran-Fey ah yes, there's another parametrization instance which has "kkm"
@KarlKnechtel Yes, but all of that is part of the __str__ function :D
um... that doesn't sound like a great idea IMO. I'd expect the internal representation of the value to be normalized all the time.
but maybe you don't have a clear way to determine the "base" unit...
... except the stringifying logic would have to choose one anyway? not like you can supply an argument there... x.x
kg, s, cd, A, K, mol, m(, rad, sr). BOOM
btw you might enjoy this video youtube.com/watch?v=Zg7xe8MkJHs
speaking of units.
21:33
is dependency injection not pursued enough in python for any reason? what are some good libraries for that? I went through this thread: stackoverflow.com/questions/2461702/… but wanted to know what this group thinks.

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