@AndrasDeak I appreciate the guidance sometimes I do admit to answering unworthy questions but mostly as a training exercise to learn, and then I end up going oh well might as well share , then it becomes welp i need a explanation which i usally just blurt out xD
@FélixGagnon-Grenier ty for the kind regards as well
How to create a zip file from python. The folder is located in different location. Create the zip archive in different location. Not in the location where the code is running ..
Yes ... I have a working code, but what it does is, if i give absolute path, the zip archive contains the folders of all the absolute path directories..
@TejasJoshi You write a little bit of Tkinter code to pop up a window with an Entry widget that the user can type the password into. Do you want the password to be totally invisible, or do you want the password chars to be echoed as asterisks (or some other anonymous char)?
@AndrasDeak It's mostly not an issue. Except when you want obscured / invisible passwords. Or you need to do your own stdin / stdout redirection. And then it's a PITA. :)
Another little gotcha for the newbies is when you test Tkinter code in IDLE, and it seems to do what you want without needing the usual .mainloop() call to set up the GUI's event loop. But when you run your script outside IDLE the program exits immediately instead of sitting there waiting for events.
It's not easy to provide a totally clean environment when the IDE itself is written in Python. And then there's the extra fun caused by Tkinter, which runs on Tcl, via Python.
IDLE also replaces sys.stdin, sys.stdout, and sys.stderr with objects that get input from and send output to the Shell window. When Shell has the focus, it controls the keyboard and screen. This is normally transparent, but functions that directly access the keyboard and screen will not work. If sys is reset with importlib.reload(sys), IDLE’s changes are lost and things like input, raw_input, and print will not work correctly.
It's easy enough to do. Even after decades of coding I occasionally do typos like that. But I spot them pretty quickly. :) Although I'm probably more likely to do the reverse, and use parentheses instead of brackets for item access.
All my early languages used round brackets for arrays. IIRC, using square brackets was one of C's great innovation... unless my memory is playing tricks on me. :)
My 1st language was a very early dialect of Basic, pretty close to the original Dartmouth Basic. I did learn Fortran, about 7 years later, but in between I learned PL/I, which also uses round brackets with arrays. It looks rather alien when I try to read PL/I code these days.
@jpp I don't think that assignment question is very relevant. It's more about the Python convention that mutating function calls / methods normally return None.
@PM2Ring, I don't think that Q&A is irrelevant, you should probably be able to infer one from the other. But, if it's not "trivial", I'm struggling to find a better dup.
@jpp I'm looking for a good match. This answer by mgilson explains the convention, but the question itself is a poor match. stackoverflow.com/a/26027714/4014959
> In most contexts where arbitrary Python expressions can be used, a named expression can appear. This is of the form NAME := expr where expr is any valid Python expression other than an unparenthesized tuple, and NAME is an identifier.
I mean, I can agree that there are semantic differences between lists and tuples, but... I'm not sure how you'd use that question to evaluate applicants, because there isn't really a wrong answer
@Arne I've looked at something similar with a code base I'm managing - there are sufficient differences between the two (esp. advantages of Paths over strings) that I think you should really consider more refactoring options than just string substitutions in the code
@AnttiHaapala I would like to avoid religious questions if possible
@PaulMcG I think I refactored it more or less appropriately, I was really just unsure if there was a difference between the two ways to open a file with pathlib.Path.
I'll actually go with open(p) and screw backwards compatibility since the project relies so much on dataclasses that it'll never be backported to to <3.6
this "how do I convert a list of strings to integers" question is closed as dupe of this "how do I convert a nested list to integers" question. I'm not happy with that situation. Is there a good reason why I shouldn't reopen that question?
Not a fan of that. Converting to int is far more common than converting to float, so I don't want to close the int question as dupe of the float question
@wim I don't think that's relevant. It's a useful question. It's not correctly closed as duplicate. What reason do I have to leave it closed? I don't care if someone adds another answer, but I do want to give people the opportunity to do that.
"It already has answers" is not a reason for closure.
I don’t think we need to figure out a way to close that question. The votes show that the topic is interesting enough on its own to allow its existance. And the answers are succinct enough that they can act as a quick reference.
@wim If we can find an actually good "how to list comprehension" question, then I wouldn't mind. But I've searched for one in the past, and never found one.
I don't care much tbh but at a high level: I see closing as a tool to ameliorate the floods of new/bad/dupe questions incoming. I don't really see it as a tool to go and deal with years old questions that have low views and are not harming anything by just existing.
Similar for re-opening, since new questions often get closed too eagerly or inaccurately
Well, I don't disagree, but by definition it's irrelevant how questions that don't harm anyone are handled... If I happen to find a question with low views on google, it harmed me, and I'll close it.
Some users want to use these tools to re-organize all the historical data into some kind of tree or graph. But it's too blunt a tool to be used in such a way, and they are wasting their time IMO
It's folly. All this data doesn't need to be organised (that's the yahoo model, which eventually failed), it just needs a powerful search (that's the google model, which was/is successful)
Another update on my memory madness. I think it's the frozensets (of which there are many) allocated here https://bitbucket.org/mchaput/whoosh/src/a16ebac/src/whoosh/reading.py#lines-819 I still don't know why the memory isn't freed, but I'm going to replace it with a regular set and see what happens.
@wim or patch their code (in the source or at runtime), or add a filter to the logging
@AndrasDeak well having changed it to a set it still doesn't show up in pympler tracking, so maybe it's not that. Unless sets also have special memory reporting as well?
@wim Storing plaintext passwords in a log sounds like bad password storage to me. Sure, the logs aren't exactly intended to be data storage, but those passwords are still sitting there.
of course it's a bad idea. they shouldn't be logged in the first place.
Their [https transport](https://github.com/cackharot/suds-py3/blob/master/suds/transport/https.py#L30) is just a [thin subclass](https://github.com/cackharot/suds-py3/blob/master/suds/transport/https.py#L65) around their http transport, which logs everything: https://github.com/cackharot/suds-py3/blob/master/suds/transport/http.py#L77
@wim If I'm reading that correctly, all the requests only get logged when you're logging at debug level, right? So I guess they don't see it as an issue, since you wouldn't be running in debug mode on real data.
@Aran-Fey Getting the accept on a zero score answer isn't unusual, but when that happens regularly when there are several other positive scoring answers it does feel a bit odd.
Most important thing to remember is that the vast majority of people doing the voting are those that frequent the tag. Your lack of votes is most often is a judgement of those who see many answers and were not inspired by the content of your answer. While on the other hand OP decided to pick yours. Often times, the OP doesn't get it right.
However, many times, people upvote higher rep users simply because they assume they are right and OP tried the answers and liked someone else's answer better.
Kind of. I have a userscript that semi-automatically improves low-quality questions. I still have to manually click "edit tags" and "save edits" though.
I actually tried to make 100% automatic, but failed. If I just use JS to edit the tags and press the "save edits" button, it doesn't work reliably for some reason, and I couldn't figure out how to send a correct "edit the tags pls" HTTP request
OK, the desired result is for "candidates" to produce the tuple (1, 41)
b_primes has all the primes from 1 to 50
and a_coefficients has all the odd numbers from 1 to 50
so anyway, the script is supposed to sort though a_coefficients and b_primes to find which of the two coefficients produce primes once you've fed a number "x" from range(0,50)
I was planning to use this for logging assertions (I want to assert *events were logged, in order, but there may or may not be other events in between the *events)
what I was wondering ^ but might still work for filtering subsequences
@daOnlyBG yes, that's what I meant
Now if there's any x where you don't get a prime, you break the innermost loop and never enter the "else". If all the x gave you primes, you enter the else block
@wim Sorry, I didn't look closely at what you're trying to do. I just saw an in test on an iterator, and alarm bells went off. You want it to return True if items in s1 occur in the same order as they are in s2. Any element of s1 not present in whatever remain in it will exhaust the iterator & return False, and I can't think of any corner cases where it will fail to perform correctly.
@vaultah what if you have s2 = [s1_0, other, s1_1, other, s1_2, other]? (where s1 = [s1_0, s1_1, s1_2])
@daOnlyBG see if you have false positives or false negatives. In case of false positives check why the loop didn't break. In case of false negatives check why the loop broke, i.e. the combination of a, b and x that went inside your breaking if, see if that makes sense
you will only be able to debug if you get specific about the "not working"
Wow, Hacktoberfest really attracts awful PRs (even if I have yet to see spam/nonsense this year)...
Dunno if I'm too strict with invalid on that since he probably did the PR in good faith, but I really dislike the idea of someone getting free swag for making a PR that case code that doesn't work at all
I mean I wouldn't mind too much someone submitting a PR for that issue without testing it in the application itself. It's pretty straightforward. But having code there he could have easily tested in the python repl?!
Also, I'm not too familiar with the code base as a whole, but the only real valid way to check an email address is to send a test email. Maybe you can do a regex for .+@.*\..*
actually sending an email is not really OK unless it's actually for setting your own email ;) (and trying to send an email without actually sending it, during a bulk import, might very well get your IP blacklisted on mail servers)
It's not too hard to get used to new layout, IME. After 2-3 weeks of practicing with Ninja Cat and Zombie Dinosaurs, I started using colemak as my everyday layout
just fork his repo, clone that locally, make your changes on a feature branch, push it to your github repo, and the "make a PR" button (/banner/link/whatever) will appear automagically