Ahh I see. My main reason for doing this is it just seems much simplar that using a differt vertual enviroment for every project and more elegent.
vendoing seems like a good thing to look into. Thank you :)
P.s. I've just imporved the code so it's global. It was previously staded that it wouldn't work becuase they didn't have a folder called "JamesMcIntyre" on their computer and now it would.
IMO it's an ugly solution because import statements have to be rewritten (above you can see vendored cachecontrol importing from vendored msgpack, for example)
you still didn't handle the "cache hit" case where the module already exists in sys.modules. it means that the first time cv2 got imported, that version will win for later imports too.
@JamesMcIntyre Now what happens if projectA needs opencv version X and projectB needs opencv version Y? One of them has to import it from somewhere else
some other users already tried to explain this point to you but I don't think you understood it..
really what we need here is a major import system feature to be added into the language directly, I don't believe there is any acceptable hack around with the way sys.modules and python packaging currently works.
Ok, but that doesn't really solve the problem. Say you need exactly version 1.2.3 and you need it in both foo.py as well as in bar.py. Will you hard-code the version number twice?
I guess a workaround would be to do the import in a dedicated module and then import the module from there. Like from .imports import cv2, where imports.py contains import cv2 @ v1.2.3
Features we are currently missing that I want to see: - multiple distributions can provide the same import name - different versions of package can be simultaneously installed
then import system figures out which one to use. if there is a specifier which restricts to a version and/or a provider that is not currently installed, that can be an ImportError
So /.local/pipx/venvs/opencv-python/lib64/python3.8/site-packages is the virtualenv for projectA, and projectB's virtualenv is somewhere else? It doesn't say projectA anywhere in the file path, so how does that work?
so in the above example opencv (cv2) would be one module and there would be a second module imported.
cv2 in this case is in it's own vertual envrioment and so has all of it's own dependencies which don't afftect other modules dependencies (unless there is a cashing issue)
All of this doesn't solve the problem that most modules are not written with multi-versioning in mind. Unless a module is always used only internally, V2 will have to deal with its bizarro twin V1. Or V1.9, or V2.1, or V2.0.0.dev4
Versioned imports themselves could at least be done with an effect-handler-like import hook. You set a desired version and all consequential imports use that – e.g. with vimport.pytest >= 4.3: import pytest.
doing this kind of thing in third-party is how distutils/setuptools and pkg_resources got into such an unholy mess in the first place. it has to be owned by the language proper, otherwise it will be forever tangled up by the "needing to be installed/setup in the first place" conundrum.
sounds a bit too revolutionary for a steering council (saying this only based on my prejudice of councils; I have no idea how python's has been working)
Some of you guys don't seem to think that creating this public repo is a bad idea. Considering "Importx" is already taken. Any ideas for a name? [hovers finger over create repo button]
The easy way is to return the module object and require the user to use syntax like cv2 = PipxImport("cv2"). If you want just PipxImport("cv2") to magically create a variable named "cv2" in the calling scope and bind it to the module object automatically, that's going to be tricky
In some cases the language will flat-out refuse to acknowledge the existence of the variable even if you inject it with brute force. A lot of name resolution happens at compile-time, so if it doesn't see an assignment statement in the right place, it will assume nothing by that name exists
I found something unusual with Spyder/iPython yesterday through using logging that I now need to look up. Within Spyder, it's perfectly ok to have logger = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler (it even auto-completes for me) but running python my_script.py with exactly the same version of Python will fail; it only accepts from logging.handlers import RotatingFileHandler. Any ideas what Spyder/iPython is doing here in the broader sense?
I'm afraid I don't know much about loggers. I've only just come accross them recently when a coleage at work sent me a scrtpt to review which included them.
( I work in the automations department and we use an SQL table for logging outcomes of automations)
I do appricate the warning though. If my imports are going a bit squif then I'll try running it outside of Spyder
@MisterMiyagi Good God please no, not in the actual code. Better to have a version-requirements/dependencies file, in a separate file. (But then it comes down to what tool/build manager/package manager is supposed to enforce/update that)
@JamesMcIntyre there is (was?) an interesting behaviour where on spyder you didn't have to import scipy.optimize (e.g.), it was enough to import scipy and you already had access to its submodules. Now, this doesn't work outside spyder. Really good way to write broken code.
I'm really conflicted over my recent Spyder criticisms. It got me through so many years of learning and I still fire it up to answer SO questions because it is really simple to use. There's booby traps all over, but it is dear to me
Hello all, I am attempting to learn programming using python. While WWW3 schools is a great source for learning the concepts, does anyone know of any free tutorials where I can learn to develop an entire application using python
I personally think that W3 Schools is a poor intro to python because it has some inaccuracies. What kind of thing do you have in mind for using Python for?
I'm either missing something or they misunderstand the distinction between Spyder/Anaconda. I was foot-out-the-door for a cig when the ping hit, so I'll go ponder it for a few mins :)
wait_for(key=sys.argv[1], timeout=int(sys.argv[2])) is causing issues for me; I have never passed arguments to Spyder code, but it can be done (lol at the accepted answer here).
Command line args are not really related, can just hardcode "x" and 3 for arv1 and argv2 if you want. I'm more interested in the timeout handling and how their env has interfered with it. That user sees some crash in matplotlib, which has nothing to do with the code..
huh...co-worker just got mad at me because of the answer I gave when they asked how to use a CHECK constraint to see if a column references a unique value in a different table (my answer was "use a foreign key" for the record)
I know theres this rule that question must not be posted here if its not old enough, but please can I? I have a whole public server that depends on me, and if I dont get help soon, it might be dead