@roganjosh yeah I have been getting some db locked errors lately, wanted to take all steps I can to avoid that
it actually turned out that my cron script interval was so low that the previous script was still running when the next job gets triggered and hence the error, or that is what I have rounded it to
I am doing a query on plastic with python, gathering a big query, data stops at some point, I think it is getting cut at some point(because query stops at some point like in the middle of the query), how to get the data from plastic like channeling or part by part?
i need a bit of help, i'm reading some image data that i need to convert to rgb values and draw to the screen, but i am confused about why i get this error: `_tkinter.TclError: invalid color name "#4649464946"` https://pastebin.com/mrNHtfJf
Ah yes, the good ol' "I'm using these 4 technologies. Now please write my code for me" kind of question. No code, no information about what those 4 technologies are used for. Just 4 names and a vague description of the goal. And yet somehow it still gets an upvote :|
I really have no idea what the problem there is. Do you know how to add widgets to a kivy gui? if no, go read a kivy tutorial. Do you know how to send messages via socketio? If no, go read a socketio tutorial. Then put the two together and you're done.
@JayGadhvi "I have a car, and it's running just fine. Now I want to add matter condensers and use the confubulator to ferkle the doings for extra speed. Can someone help me?" is not a simple question to answer, so most people will just think "no" and move on to something they stand a chance of helping with.
Following those tips will help you write a good question which will be more likely to attract good answers. Also, be sure to make your question as specific as possible---this will lead to more, and better answers. Try to figure out some parts of your question yourself, and only ask a question where you actually get stuck.
It's a common issue, don't worry. Perhaps take it step by step - show some kivy code and describe how adding a new checklist is supposed to work (nobody knows how many cheecklists you have or how they are organised). Then deal with the popping up bit later, for example.
@JayGadhvi Your question is essentially like "I'm using an axe and a saw. How can I chop down a tree and cut it into pieces?". If you knew how to use an axe and a saw, you wouldn't have this problem. So go learn how to use them. What do you need other people's help for?
And now how is socketio related to this? What kind of message do you intend to send via socketio? "Hey, please create a new checklist with the name X for the user Y"? Or "Hey, a new checklist was created, please reload all checklists from the database"? Or "Hey, I just created the new checklist with the ID X. Load it from the database and add it to the GUI please"? Or what?
And who is sending the message to who, anyway? Who are the two actors who are talking to each other via socketio?
@Aran-Fey user makes the checklist which is being stored in the database. when user logs into the application he'll be able to see all the checklist he created before but when he creates a new one it should enlist below the existing list
Either way, I don't see what you need socketio for. If it's a web app, you send a HTTP request and then update the GUI with JS. If it's not a web app, you update your database and then the GUI. Again, you plan to send messages from where to where?
@AndrasDeak I ended up going with this github.com/abarker/camel-snake-pep8, converted 2 files so far, the project I work with is not packaged well so it doesn't seem to recursively convert all files as the module claims
probably write some shell / python script to hack it
I'm developing a checklist application in kivy python using dynamoDB for database storage.
Whenever user adds a new checklist it should pop to the screen in real time.
here is the code where i'm getting data from the dynamoDb and binding that data to widget and adding it to the screen
class HomeS...
@AndrasDeak ohh, I notice it now from the docs, should be an easy job then, need to make sure "Warnings and theory" is something I dont have in this code base
@JayGadhvi So... you know that you can write python code to create kivy widgets and add them to your GUI. I know you know this because you've already done it. And now you're telling me you unsure if it's possible? What? I don't get it.
So instead of writing python code that updates the GUI, your plan was to write python code that uses socketio to talk to itself, and then when it receives a message from itself, then it updates the GUI? How did that happen?
no sir @Aran-Fey as i told you i did tried searching few articles if i can update my GUI when user is done creating the list but i couldn't find. thats the reason i was thinking to use socketio to make it real time
@Sect0r its a compression algorithm for an image format, if you could call it that. i'm currently trying to store the data into a bytes array so i can do stuff with it, but i dont know what it puts inside that array because if i try to print it my visual studio code crashes.
I started 100% home working (again) a year ago September. Before that I did a couple of years working three days a week remotely. A short office-only consulting gig reminded me why I preferred home working. It is becoming more common.
user13727121
May I know what method does the sort() function uses? Is it alphabetical or numerical? For example, addresses = ["220 Baker St", "1500 Pennsylvania Ave"] and when I sorted them, 220 Baker St comes before 1500 Pennsylvania Ave. How is that so? The example contains items that are not individually categorized as strings or numbers, it's mixed, hence my confusion.
Correct, but @Aran-Fey just pointed out that they sort as you expected. For strings Python compares characters one by one. If they aren't the same it proceeds to the next character, if they aren't then the smaller character denotes the smaller string. ("Smaller" meaning "having lower ordinal value").
user13727121
1:00 PM
@holdenweb and this is all related to lexicographical ordering, right
I have the below assert in python: assert scenario_result.get_details()["scenarioRun"]["result"]["outcome"] == "SUCCESS"
Is there a way to add another parameter to the left side? actually I want the assert to stay the same, just add more info (in my case it's the scenario["name"])
The point of an assertion is normally to verify that program conditions are as expected in some fairly important way. Error messages indicate that some assumption you've made about the program state are false.
I know that the unittest module has a verbose mode that prints the name of each test that passes, but it's easy to tell the tests apart there because they all have unique method names
It's weird that JUNIT doesn't print the method name
@arielma Can you clarify what information you want in case of success?
Usually, your unit-tests are well-defined so it is clear what happened if they pass.
Your output "tests_project.run_test_CI.test_scenario_run[scenario0]" suggests the test is parameterised. Are you looking for a speaking description instead of the technical "scenario0"?
I have the below test_dss.py file which is used for pytest:
import dataikuapi
import pytest
def setup_list():
client = dataikuapi.DSSClient("{DSS_URL}", "{APY_KEY}")
client._session.verify = False
project = client.get_project("{DSS_PROJECT}")
# Check that there is at least...
One way to construct the necessary parameterised tests would be to generate a list of (inputs, setup_list_result) pairs, then pass that to `pytest.mark.parametrize.
Hey if anyone has experience with synology + python 3.8. And/or manually installing pip (which creates a problem with virtual environment creation as ensurepip isn't created by manually adding pip).
In the interest of not getting an XY problem: the goal is to create a virtual environment on synology dsm, so no apt-get, where pip is working.
However this gives the following error:
$ python3 -m venv new_venv
Error: Command '['/volume1/docker/builder/new_venv/bin/python3', '-Im', 'ensurepip', '...
@Aran-Fey I'm really really reluctant to do that, especially since the python package is core of the synology dsm (OS). Don't wish to break some hidden tool from synology.
If you know it won't break stuff I'll add it: but then what happens if synology package manager once again updates python with a new install?
I don't see how that could break anything. The worst thing that I can think of is that a future version of python will include ensurepip, and your package manager will complain that it already exists
You don't even have to drop it in site-packages if you want; you can also place it wherever you want and modify your PYTHONPATH accordingly
Does it? The one used is the one on PATH unless specified otherwise (which since you're using venvs, the one you use to invoke venv will be simlinked in that venv so if it's activated it'll refer to the correct one each time)
You said "everything gets iffy" and I meant "does it really get iffy?"---I just mean, it's not like it's non-deterministic. You type python and it uses the first one on PATH.
I mean it gets confusing with all the automation scripts and "updates": where some newer would use a custom python install and directly call those (can't add that custom python to the PATH variable lest I might break some custom synology program). While others use the system python version.
So any update to either the scripts or the python version has to take into account those things.
It's clear when you run the script manually: but not when things happen because automated systems, which might even run on elevated users (which hence have their own home directory etc).
I don't really follow since I'm not privy to what automations you are talking about nor do I really understand what the problem is. If stuff works as is, then installing a new version of Python, as long as it's not first on PATH, should break nothing.
For maximum non-breakedness, don't rely on the system to magically have what you need. What you need to run smoothly is to install the proper dependencies, which means your script installation process should do that (including the Python versions). Additionally, executing your automation should create an environment where the code can run without problems. Otherwise you're just crossing your fingers that things will always work.
Otherwise you'll always be at the whim of people executing things wrong, which you can't prevent. IMO this has nothing to do with Python. It would also be the same of say, dynamic libraries in a compiled program.
Well with that reasoning we shouldn't use shell executables either - but the world is full of those for automated tasks (and basically I was in the process of moving all shell tasks to python to improve readability).
I work on systems that are fully reproducible so....yeah, I agree, it is best not to assume specific versions of shell executables either. OTOH bash is pretty static comparatively to Python. But if you wanted to use some new feature on the newest version of bash that wasn't normally installed...you'd have the same problems. If you don't want to be holden to that, then don't use new Python features :P
Is there any decent guidance on when package objects are getting too high up? For example, if I have a package called beatroute and the top-level __init__.py contained:
from beatroute.core.errors import (ProblemError,
LocationError,
TimewindowError,
BreakError)
To me, that's rather convenient because I don't expect any of those names to clash with something you'd want to define in the code using the package. But I do constantly see errors modules in the API of packages when it comes to imports
I've gone through PEP8 but I can't get a sense of "wait, you've gone too far in hoisting these objects up to the package level"
I personally like to have an errors submodule because I dislike ending all my errors with Error or Exception, and then it's not always obvious that a class is an exception. Or other times, some exceptions have very similar names to the exceptions of another module (or builtin exceptions). For example, instead of creating a TimeoutError I would just work with my_project.errors.Timeout instead
Well, I suppose my 2nd point is irrelevant because you could just do my_project.TimeoutError, if there was any chance of getting my TimeoutError mixed up with another similar-sounding error
So I guess all I have for you is "I prefer errors.Timeout over TimeoutError"
I think that's still worthwhile feedback tbh because I'm looking at that __init__.py file now and thinking "I bet this is too cluttered/gonna shoot me in the foot with the API down the line"
Is there some trick to catenate python imports? In this example, both of them would go to `util`
import library.util as util
import another_library.util as util
I've been reading about IPC and im trying to pick the best way to send data like dict, list, set, etc between 2 applications. Currently im testing with multiprocessing.connection Listener/client but having to pick a port and then store that somewhere so the client knowns how to reach the server bugs me. I dont think I can send objects on a stream but I could change the way I handle the data. Any recommendations?