If I want to get hands on with async what is the way to start? Like I was told to thread in GUI apps so blocking of UI does not happen, what can I do to understand async? or is that an advanced topic for which I must understand something else?
The only way the election was ever run was by discarding Yvette's votes and rearranging people's choices, as STV does.
I believe people also downloaded the raw vote data and ran the numbers, finding that the outcome would have been the same even without discarding votes for Yvette. But that's kinda meaningless, since plenty of people had time to change their votes for Yvette after she withdrew. So speculating about who would have won if the situation was different is... silly.
@python_learner The async ecosystem hasn't really stabilised yet, so digging too deep into any specific lib/framework isn't worth it unless you really need it. For a general understanding, How does asyncio actually work? will give you the background to avoid various gotchas (e.g. why blocking on GUI is bad with async). ...
Is there some short way to append/prepend something to a Pathlib filename? I'm currently at blah_file.rename(blah_file.parent / ('blah' + blah_file.name)), which doesn't feel particularly ergonomic.
It's interesting that pathlib.Path(whatever) returns a WindowsPath or PosixPath. I wonder if there are any other types in the stdlibs whose constructors don't return an instance of that exact type.
@AndrasDeak short term, I'm just gonna stick with plotly.js to get this project out the door. But I just spotted this and immediately got reminded of this discussion. I think that encapsulates the state-of-play with the library :P
Returning something other than a T instance from T's constructor feels like it violates one academic rule of type safety or other, but I bet if I looked it up it will turn out to be merely weird rather than disallowed
__new__'s documentation in particular is fairly explicit about not caring much about the return value's type
> The return value of __new__() should be the new object instance (usually an instance of cls).
@Kevin Yes, many people's minds are blown by the truth of isinstance(type, object) & isinstance(object, type) == True. Having grappled with much the same situation with the SmallTalk class hierarchy I find it less surprising: I surmise such a truth should exist at the bottom of all typed object-oriented languages.
I think my aversion to a T method returning a T' is a throwback from my c++ days, where a forward class declaration would frequently foretell doom for me. It usually meant I was being too clever by half.
Well, since clever is your normal mode I guess you just had to dial it back a bit.
Wasn't it Ritchie who pointed out that debugging required more smarts than coding, so if you used all your smarts on the code you would have problems debugging it?
My code is usually boringly comprehensible and even unadventurous most of the time.
Brian Kernighan, if wikiquote is to be believed. "Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the first place. So if you're as clever as you can be when you write it, how will you ever debug it? "
Last week on a different site I got called a troll for asking follow up questions about a vaguely defined problem
Someday I will learn the secret technique of saying "please explain further" without implying "the explanation you have given so far stinks"
Alternatively I will become the divine emperor of all I survey and I can just outright say "the explanation you have given so far stinks" and the asker gets a free mandatory trip to a week long effective communication seminar
I imagine wise king Solomon spent most of his time sending people to the back of the line to come up with a better MCVE
Every part of that statement is true. Are people under the impression that asking questions is supposed to be easy?
Crafting a good problem statement is 90% of the work towards solving a problem, so it stands to reason that most hard problems are also hard to ask about
Last time I visited, the first question was "how do I do N nested for loops?", and I could not muster the energy to hammer it as the millionth dupe of "tell me about itertools.product"
Oddly, I have abarnert's profile open next to chat cos I was curious about when they were last online. I think they have some stuff to say about itertools :)
"I'll just help vectorize this easting/northing to lat/long question. We don't need that pesky PyProj slowing us down. Let's find the formula"... holy hell
Intern: I'm getting a build error "FoobarLib is not installed". Me: Sensible, as none of our projects have used FoobarLib for five years, so having it not be installed is the ideal state. Intern: be that as it may, I need this thing to build. Can you help? Me: if I want to be a reliable senpai, I am obligated to say yes.
I love to do exorcisms on dlls that should have moved on already ;_;
Ah well, better me than him. No intern of mine is going to suffer through cryptic build problems alone.
Me: I need the dll. Give me the dll. OS: Relax :-) you don't need the dll. It's safe and sound in my cache. Me: I pried open your cache with a crowbar and it's not there. OS: OS: OS: Relax :-)
File explorer: There's no directory named `c:/windows/cache/foobarlib` here, guy. Me: Visual Studio says it exists. File explorer: He's deluded. There's no directory by that name. Me: I can navigate to that directory with `cmd`. File explorer: Must be a bug, there's no directory by that name. Me: then you won't mind if I do `explorer c:/windows/cache/foobarlib`, then? File explorer: Oh, did you say _foobarlib_? Why didn't you say so in the first place? Here you go.
Me: Glad to hear it. Now I'm finally getting somew-- File explorer: [opens to C:\Users\Kevin\Documents, which contains no files] Me: ಠ_ಠ
Considering the nested function, it's the nonlocal scope. And you need the global/nonlocal keywords to assign to those values, even though you can read them.
try adding nonlocal x inside tests
Names are (usually) visible in a nested scope, so you only need extra work when you are trying to rebind a name in an enclosing scope.
Well, I'm on the "four spaces" side of the Great Indentation Wars. But I just copied your code into my ipython shell and saw a bunch of ^I escape characters and I'm struggling to introduce a literal tab on my own
But if you have a mutable container then you often don't have to use such a keyword, since you can readily mutate the original object
Try with x = [0] and x.append(1) inside the nested function. It will work with your original code.
What happened in your original code is that x = 1 defined a new local name in the nested function, which died when the nested function returned. Have you been pointed to the "python has names" page yet?
That explains the significance of mutability and name rebinding. If you understand that you can easily see how x = 1 will bind the new object to a new (local by default) name.
@PedroSpinola obscure version of the Mutable Presto-Chango ;)