@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні The feeling is mutual. I've gone cold turkey from SO and sadly chat is on the same login. So I'll be gone for a while but I'll sorely miss y'all, folks.
Didn't we have a similar problem a few weeks ago? This one looks cleaner but still follows the same idea - TypeVars bound to unions of mutually parametrised types.
@NordineLotfi If duplication becomes a concern, a deduplicating file system like zfs could be of help. Though it might indeed be nice if pip could maintain a separate storage and access location.
@Aran-Fey is that asyncio's task set or are you tracking them yourself? In the latter case, how are you tracking them? I’ve found callback based cleanup very reliable for manual task tracking.
@KarlKnechtel 2.7 is often faster for simple, single threaded code because of gil/threading differences and lighter feature set. The various tools that produce lists instead of iterators are also a walltime advantage.
I’m kind of stumped there isn’t some tooling or best practices for this. I imagine a lot of docs need to get the practical details across efficiently without compromising on correctness.
I would really like the simple case to be the only/primary thing people see. If I can’t find a way to describe the complex case without muting it somehow I would rather not document it at all.
@Aran-Fey The simple case is "pass in asyncio.Lock if you want no duplicate computation". The complex part is describing how an asynchronous contextmanager is digested by an asynchronous data descriptor that emulates but dies not implement del.
I'm looking for some advice on (sphinx) docs. I do have a function with a rather complex feature but with a very simple standard usecase. How can I document this so the complex case is covered but does not drown out the simple standard usecase?
@KarlKnechtel I've added an answer to clarify the misconception(s). I'm afraid that people will ask such questions even if makes no sense, and otherwise will follow the cargo cult.
In CPython, the list object has a pointer to a dynamically allocated array, which in turn holds the list content aka pointers to the elements. The initial pointer-to-array allows reallocating the backend array when the size changes.
@paul23 This may be a language thingy, but at least for me "a list" is pretty well-defined from day-to-day usage. Python's list is actually pretty close to that.
@XavierCombelle Even if Python does not enforce it (though it does optimise for it) the set of attributes of an object are generally considered static (even if Python isn’t statically typed, everything has a type). Attribute references are syntactically always code, I.e. static, whereas string keys are data, I.e. dynamic.