Need to print the key and value based on jobid for each role.
database.yaml
---
company 1:
role 1:
post:[eng,dev]
jobid:[1101]
status:[active yes]
role 2:
post:[sql,c]
jobid:[1102]
status:[active no]
comapny 2:
role 1:
p...
database.yaml
---
company 1:
role 1:
post:[eng,dev]
jobid:[1101]
status:[active yes]
role 2:
post:[sql,c]
jobid:[1102]
status:[active no]
comapny 2:
role 1:
post:[qtm]
jobid:[na]
status:[active no]
Should able to print the data based on jobid: [1101] as a sentence mentioned below.
status is active yes if jobid is [1101] from role 1 in company 1
database.yaml
---
company 1:
role 1:
post: [eng,dev]
jobid: [1101]
status: [active yes]
role 2:
post: [sql,c]
jobid: [1102]
status: [active no]
comapny 2:
role 1:
post: [qtm]
jobid: [na]
status: [active no]
Should able to print the data based on jobid: [1101] as a sentence mentioned below.
status is active yes if jobid is [1101] from role 1 in company 1
I had tried the code below but it just printing all the status of each role
import yaml
def find(d, tag):
if tag in d:
yield d[tag]
for k, v in d.items():
if isinstance(v, dict):
for i in find(v, tag):
yield i
stream = open('database.yaml', 'r')
data = yaml.load(stream,Loader=yaml.FullLoader)
for val in find(data, 'status'):
print(val)
I want to implement a function like the one below, but it throws a type hint warning.
def test(flag: bool)->Dict[str, int]| Dict[str, str]:
a: Dict[str, str]| Dict[str, int] = {}
if flag:
a['a'] = 1
else:
a['a'] = 'hello'
return post_process(a)
I know the followi...
I don't know, I feel like we talked a lot before about how x,y,z type hinting is. Don't get me wrong, I do have things to complain about when it comes to type hinting, but they are useless to voice anyway, and would just unnecessarily flood the chat.
@WantingtobeanAndroidDevelor hm, perhaps not everyone can decide on a whim what language to use? Or could it be that there are more considerations than just one WIP feature in isolation?
@WantingtobeanAndroidDevelor it’s completely unreadable on the light mobile view. Just looks like a black box.
As soon as a language is not fit for use case just because they want to support some extreme nich type hint use case in numpy, sacrificing ergonomics for my use case, I have the right to complain right?
@WantingtobeanAndroidDevelor like, as a developer I care about my users use case. And they want to write Python and need tooling support for hand holding.
@WantingtobeanAndroidDevelor well, how? You have to write exactly zero type hints for working Python code. It has by definition the same ergonomics as not having type hints.