I'll probably be going to PyCon Canada again this year. Still haven't done much work with it over the last year, but it's such a fun and science-heavy community/event that it's always a good time.
I haven't been to Montreal in ~10 years so this is a nice excuse.
@AnttiHaapala The accepted answer in the dupe target says "if one or more objects with the same hash code is/are already in the set, these objects are tested for equality with the new object". I think it's important to mention that it happens in that order (first test the hash and then do the equality test if the hash already exists in the set / dict), but I guess Martijn covers that in his answer.
I like the new answers better, but I think the old question is a little better than the new one. However, my overall feeling is that we should make the older question the dupe of the newer one.
@MartijnPieters I guess it's hard for you to give an unbiased opinion on which question should be the dupe target. ;)
Fabric controlling docker. Still building the containers on each machine for legacy reasons (which largely defeats the point, to my mind), will deploy my much nicer 'build once, deploy many' version through dockerhub later in the week.
Hello!! I would like someone to help me. I can't find a solution for my problem and I'm afraid I will lose my time trying to resolve it without a good analisys which I'm not able to do :(
Not with this version - we get about 5 seconds of downtime and this was our internal tool. Will be adding that on the next iteration - mostly we're deregistering the celery workers and rebuilding, then reregistering them - the main app can be down for a few seconds while we restart for now.
I launch selenium by a celery task which have to be terminated if it takes a lot of time. (task.revoke(terminate=True)) which kills the python script which launch selenium, so selenium browser is not killed, just the parent python script.
@RobertGrant yes but I would like to disscuss a little. Not just make a question. I'm using selenium for scraping web pages with javascript. But I'm facing some problems with this method. I'm afraid that the problem maybe is not selenium, and maybe there is not a better solution for it.
I'm trying to use other scraping system because selenium is too slow, but I'm afraid that I will lose my time. Maybe selenium is good I just need to improve what it's already done. Terminating a task it's a problem, but if I don't, selenium will continue to run and use all the resources of the system
I'm a little loss, I don't know what should I do, fix celery, fix selenium, change tecnology etc.
well, maybe I don't understand the meaning of "scraping" I need to download form some pages some pdf but not all the request can be done with a simple request call, because I need to fill forms, select from combo boxes etc. and wait till javascript loads to retrieve the page info. I use also other tecnologies, not only selenium, but sometimes the others are not enought.
My manager suggested me to use splash, but I'm afraid I will have problems too with it. I have to learn that tecnology and lua language and I wouldn't like to lose time for nothing. there are not APIs. Yes it's ok, we just download what we can download manually but in automatic. We even have paid for it.
If you're allowed to do it and the page you're scraping is built in JS, i'd be more inclined to just work out the calls and get the info directly from their endpoints.
@ShilNevado my question wasn't about stealing (they shouldn't give you access to things that would be considered "stealing"), more about hitting their website hard with load. But if they are happy for you to do that then that's okay.
so if the page is calling /randomsite/stuffIwant/ it'll either have querystrings like ?filter|+matchtype&12345 or you''ll be able to see the headers (including, presumably the front end authorisation tokens, if they have them) in the network tab in your browser
long term that's going to be more sustainable than scraping web pages that change their layout all the time.
(relevant: I mostly work with an API that is almost exactly this setup, albeit a bit more convoluted)
On that note, i'll add in - if you're paying for this, just go ahead and ask for the endpoints. Reverse engineering them is a pain (as you're discovering) and they'll change them without telling you (this happened to us literally yesterday - a field we'd been getting a 0-5 range on suddenly started returning None, which broke a bunch of things. :) )
@RobertGrant yes, I don't like neither to hit the website, I need it up,i'm not doing many requests. Just what you can do manualy.
@Withnail I don't think they are interested in support this, it's not their work, and yes, they changed. If I want it I have to work for it. Some sites helped us, others not.
@Withnail We are also using scrapy, my teammate uses it. It depends on the situation. Sometimes I willl need to use selenium because I have to 'click' on the webpge ^^ There are many technologies u.u too many choices. I'll read a little about it. Thanks.
have you ever used celery signals? I don't understand official tutorial. I tried to used them but it didn't trigger all the signals :( If you know some good tutorial online would you mind to give me a link? I searched for it but found nothing.
well. I was using revoke terminated=True but it made problems with process still running after it. I read about SIGKILL too but they are monstrous solutions. There is instead the option of trigger a signal and then catch it in the task. I tried using docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/userguide/signals.html using decorators in task, but task_revoked wasn't catched by the task
others signals like failure were taken. I have never used signals :( that's maybe the problem.
I tried to read documentation, examples etc. but I didn't find a got tutorial to understand the logic
Yeah... this really feels like a problem of trying to solve a difficult problem that's two steps removed from your original issue. If you go back to what we were saying earlier, about 'work out the endpoints and use those', then you won't have to run big, complicated celery tasks to drive selenium that time out, that you then have to handle properly by using signals.
You're making your life way more difficult than it needs to be. :)
my original issue is other, they are related in some way, but not necessary. I told you I'm in a mess XD If I fix these signals of celery I can manage not only selenium but all the tasks in a clean way. I need celery, I need its queue management.
I'll now open a ticket stackoverflow asking for a tutorial :P
We don't have to be inclusive of other planets because they're not on the Internet. Nobody wants to foot the bill for a billion mile long ethernet cable.
@Uriel Yes, I was referring to Wim. IME, he likes code to be as obvious as possible and disapproves of cute tricks that impact readability. Of course, what's readable partly depends on what you're used to... Last time he chastised me was for using a boolean as an index.
Haha I was out for a meal recently and two of the (non dev) guys said they've used SO before, but they're scared to ask now because their questions get closed
I said well, I know some moderators, and I'll get them banned if they ever cross me
@RobertGrant Well, not everything that needs to define __eq__ needs to be hashable, so it makes sense to separate those concerns. Of course, if two objects are equal then they probably should have the same hash, but Python doesn't enforce that, since there are situations where it's useful to bend that rule. So we define an object's equality criteria in its __eq__ method, and usually the definition of __hash__ will be consistent with those equality criteria, but it doesn't have to be.
@DSM For reasons that I'm unable to fathom, JSON permits an object to have multiple identical keys. One way to handle that in Python is to create keys that look like strings but are actually custom objects with a hash method that returns the object's id.
Hi all, I am finally taking the step to put into practice OOP coding instead of just procedural. However I thought it might be a good idea to read through the Flask repo to see some code and see if I can understand/play around with it locally on my machine. Question is where do I start, should I start with the tests?
@Kevin Cool thanks, as I was trying to have a look earlier at the different files and code, but was getting very confused! So do you recommend looking at the tests, and using them, then start to change stuff around?
I think the best approach to learning varies from person to person, but one thing that's always valuable is a willingness to try new things. Given that, I think it's most constructive to just dive in in whichever location and manner you thought was best on your first impression
Makes sense, I just confused at first looking though as I did not know how stuff linked to each other. But guess will make a start with the tests and see how I get on. Thanks for the help : )
OP seems perfectly happy with his injection-prone answer and given that he hasn't supplied an accept after thirty minutes I expect he's not coming back. Don't think we're going to win this one
Not sure why the commenter was acting like the library was a big mystery when it says MySQL right there in the question
I wonder if the kid with the Tkinter Label wrap question will post a MCVE, or just go away thinking "those mean SO people don't want to help me" stackoverflow.com/questions/46913088/…
@mp252: not really, I'm afraid, because my mind doesn't learn by diving into new codebases. I like to read a thematic overview followed up by examples. :-)
@DSM this is how I normally learn as well, but everyone keeps saying its a good habit to learn other people's codebase, but I have no idea where to start!
I gave that kid my top-shelf A+ psychic debugging attempt. I was confident enough that I was composing a proper answer in Notepad, just waiting for his comment to drop saying "that fixed it!" so I could smugly copy-paste it in
I think experts can pick up things better than I can just by looking at code, but if I were an expert I wouldn't need to be reviewing the new code in the first place! Anyway, if it's about something fundamental like OOP I definitely think it's worth going the tutorial route.
@KevinMGranger Unhelpful without knowing what kind of zombies. Are the dead rising from their graves independently? Is the infection spreading radially from Patient Zero's position? How do their strength of endurance rate, on a scale of "below human baseline due to decay" to "resilient to the point of defying laws of physics"?
"Numerous $EMPLOYER associates have reported zombies rising from their graves and entering $EMPLOYER facilities, as well as appearing in neighborhoods where $EMPLOYER-ers live. They could be anywhere -- from the break room to your mailbox. "
"As with any developing threat, $EMPLOYER ISAAC is your source for safety. Emergency response personnel are being dispatched to neutralize the zombies. In the meantime, associates are advised to stay informed by monitoring ISAAC Alerts (like this one) and following the ISAAC Zombie Outbreak Map."
@Uriel Yeah, that kind of thing. I can't remember what the exact example was.
@Kevin Dani's now posted some relevant code, but it's certainly not a MCVE, so I think I'll leave it to Bryan & Ethan. I'm sick of spending time adding all the extra stuff needed to make non-MCVE Tkinter code runnable.
My shield of apathy is usually impenetrable but it's hard to maintain when I only need to crap out a dozen more answers to lowest-common-denominator questions before I hit 50k
Whoops, chided an OP for not defining all of their names, and it turns out that it was a built-in function -_-
In particular, callable.
I could give the lame half-excuse that it wasn't a built-in in Pythons 3.0 and 3.1, but I think I'll just let the comment stand as a monument to my (ignor|arrog)ance
I can't immediately come up with a use-case for it where I would not be equally comfortable with simply trying to call the object and letting it crash spectacularly if that isn't supported.
Pronunciation trumps spelling when it comes to deciding on a/an, or else the particle preceding "herb" would be consistent across all regions instead of the mess that we have now
@Kevin I suppose callable could be useful if you're evaluating a stream of operands and operators, like in this RPN code I wrote recently, but with the actual functions in the stream instead of their key strings.
@Kevin That's only a mess because people who are wrong complain about that, when they should "Just stand there in your wrongness and be wrong and get used to it."
@AndrasDeak There is a csv module in the standard library... Sure, it does have some limitations, eg in Python 2 it doesn't understand Unicode, so if you need Unicode support you have to explicitly encode & decode, and remember to open your files in binary mode, but that's no big deal. But in Python 3 you're supposed to open the CSV files in text mode, so it's tricky writing such code that runs smoothly on both versions.
Hehehe. I convinced the missus to install firefox dev edition. Now she's happy that it's all so much faster. I persuaded her to install the tab counter add-on..... 864 tabs :|
If you setup the fixture code well, then the tests just read like pseudocode even though they're really testing what they say they're actually testing.
The number one thing you don't get in unit test is the dependency injection through fixtures
you can fake it, by using mixins, but it's very ugly, and you gotta be careful with the mro
class MyTest(SetupThisTest, SetupThatTest, SetupTheOther, TestCase):
...
unittest approach is to have a million different assertThing methods , that are really just assert statements with the context duct-taped on
another really powerful thing with no good parallel is that fixtures can depend on other fixtures. You can't easily get that simplicity and elegance with the guarantees on the order of setup and teardown by using classes.
@pytest.fixture
def my_fixture(fix1, fix2):
# if you are here, fix1 and fix2 have already been setup (in that order!)
# fix1 name here is bound to whatever object fix1 function *yielded*
# my setup goes here
yield something
# my teardown goes here
# fix2 will be torn down after me
# fix1 will be torn down after that
@DSM pypi.python.org/pypi/pytest-randomly is cool too. that runs your tests in random order (and printout the seed if a particular ordering causes issue). really great to make sure you're not relying on import ordering anywhere, or accidentally causing mutable state or coupling between tests
Making assert a function during the version changeover would have been considerably less painful than doing the same thing to print, since ideally it never shows up in production code anyway