@Martijn sounds awesome, where and when? My training has been finishing around 4.30 though it's meant to finish at 5 technically. I can probably be by Regent's Park around 5.30.
So .. my python application is littered with errors like `(sql_version) list index out of range` and `'bool' object is not subscriptable` .. they are all over the place, and yet the script works just fine and does what it is supposed to do..
Anonymous
should I just ignore it, because I can't find any answers anywhere..
@Ffisegydd Well, mostly backend stuff. So we have like 3 different python applications. One that serves as an API, the other serves as a batch processor, and the other one is more experimental, used for finding patterns in stuff.
Although I'm changing this job, and going to another one.
@MartijnPieters I need somewhere intense. I started at this job, but it turns out that I have to basically debug crappy code all day. So, I'm changing jobs.
FizzyCorp is going really well. Working on some interesting data visualisation problems at the moment, also got a spare bit of time to do some Kaggle competitions.
And because I'm going to the conference on my own money/time, not for FC, I can't really afford a hotel so am instead travelling to Bristol and back Sat and Sun.
It's only 1.5 hours by train each way, but still tiring.
I'm not saying I find it logical, especially that päivää seems to mean "time of day" according to some wiki stuff, but my language is also not the epitome of logic:D
@AnttiHaapala that's right, very slavic
Russian is kapusta with cyrillic, so no surprise there
but as I said, almost all of the words in the list linked by bereal are slang terms, you wouldn't use any of those in academic writing, besides the ikkuna and kanava
I'd vaguely heard of the Moomin stuff but never actually seen it. OTOH I remember reading Pippi Longstocking as a kid, so generalizing from my experience Swedish literature >> Finnish literature.
though in any case, Jansson was Swedish-speaking as her first identity, somewhat like French-speaking Canadian - they've got perhaps a slightly different culture from the rest.
It couldn't complete test_socket: in verbose mode it hangs on testRecvmsg (test.test_socket.RecvmsgUDP6Test). Also, test_asyncio test_asyncore test_ftplib failed.
@AnttiHaapala Cool. So I should just go ahead and run make install? Should that be make altinstall, or don't I need to worry about that because I did ./configure --prefix=/opt/python3.x
f-strings provide a way to embed expressions inside string literals, using a minimal syntax. It should be noted that an f-string is really an expression evaluated at run time, not a constant value. In Python source code, an f-string is a literal string, prefixed with 'f', which contains expressions inside braces. The expressions are replaced with their values.
@PM2Ring but again, python is falling behind ecmascript-to-be
@PM2Ring btw you can execute something like sudo apt-get build-dep python2.7 for apt-get to install all the dev packages needed to build python(2.7 yes, but the same libs should be ok for 3)
$ python3
Python 3.6.0a0 (default, May 9 2016, 02:54:33)
[GCC 4.4.5] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
TAB completion available
>>> {2,3,5,7,11}
{2, 3, 5, 7, 11}
@Ffisegydd :) I read about monads in Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!, and thought "Hey, they aren't that hard". But then when I went to actually write some Haskell code using a monad I realised I'd hardly absorbed any of the stuff I'd been reading. :)
@PM2Ring and as Crockford says: when you finally understand them, you will also lose the ability of properly explaining them to a someone who didn't understand them yet.
@AnttiHaapala: yes, "much". Everything you can do with itemgetter you can do with a function, and there's basically only selection you can do with itemgetter, so.. actually, I'm trying to think of any way in which "much" doesn't understate it.
@AnttiHaapala It is? I assumed itemgetter is more efficient than a "hand-rolled" lambda, but I didn't realise that it's significantly faster. FWIW, I generally use lambda, mostly just to avoid another import.
In [10]: %timeit sorted(l, key=lambda x: x[0])
10000 loops, best of 3: 186 µs per loop
In [11]: %timeit sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
10000 loops, best of 3: 119 µs per loop
In [12]: %timeit sorted(l)
10000 loops, best of 3: 27.7 µs per loop
where
l = [chr(i) for i in range(1000)]
%timeit sorted(l, key=str)
actally that is still a bad benchmark. new object creation. asec.
In [15]: l = [(i,) for i in range(1000)]
In [16]: %timeit sorted(l, key=lambda x: x[0])
10000 loops, best of 3: 151 µs per loop
In [17]: %timeit sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
10000 loops, best of 3: 86 µs per loop
In [18]: %timeit sorted(l)
10000 loops, best of 3: 48.1 µs per loop
@MorganThrapp Even PostScript uses square brackets for arrays. It uses parentheses for strings, double angle brackets for dictionaries, and braces for executable arrays aka procedures. Actually, since it's a RPN language, the various opening brackets are all just synonyms for the mark operator, and only the closing bracket type determines the type of the collection.
That's a little weird, but this line ImportFiles: Array[0..2] of String = ('ValuationHeader.txt', 'ValuationDetails.txt', 'ValuationLand.txt'); just hurts me.
Also, you don't need parens on a zero arg function call which leads to all sorts of fun when you're reading the code.
"Is that a variable? Is that a function? I'd know if the autocomplete would ever open".
@AnttiHaapala The core of PostScript is a fun little language, if you like RPN. OTOH, I mostly ignore all the DSC crap that got added onto it. :)
@AnttiHaapala Well, the traditional random number function is rather ancient: you get 32 bit unsigned ints. More recent versions may have something better, but my PS manual is from 1990.
@QuestionC Oh well. It's nice to be able to algorithmically generate documents, but these days I'd be more inclined to do it with Python + SVG, although I still like to write stuff in PostScript from time to time. And I think it's good to learn languages that are radically different from what you normally use.
I'm trying to do some functional testing for a script I wrote (already has unit tests). My plan is to call the script using subprocess, then check the returned stdout/exit code, and run unittest assertions against those.
@bereal I mean I'd like to test the behaviour of the script. Ie, if I run the script, does it talk to my mock redis instance properly. Does it print an error to stdout if the config file is unreadable. Etc.
right, so my original idea was to wrap calls to my script using subprocess and check the return code, output, etc. Then run unittest assertions against it... is that the right way to do it?
when I unittest I never like running things "for real". In other words, if I am testing a method foo, and method foo, makes call to (to use your example), redis. I will mock redis.
I don't want anything "real" happening. I want to test the behaviour of THAT method
It's sort of a tragic question because there are arguably legitimate use cases for printing a value's name. Like if you wanted to write a debug(x) function that outputs data about the x object.
ofc then the million dollar question is, "If I do debug(23), what will it say the name is?"
I have a lot of sympathy for the the question, it's understandable but embarassing to realise the python operator for turning variables into names is ".
I had an idea to iterate up the call stack, inspecting the local names in each context to check if any are bound to a value referentially equal to x. But I don't know if it's actually possible to find names that way, except for the current context and the global context using locals() and globals().