Python

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Oct 8 17:00
Wax on, Wax off, while I'm gone... ;)
Oct 8 16:59
@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.
2
Aug 30 05:30
I hear you. Maintaining typing support for my library lately has not been fun.
Aug 30 05:24
Might want to post it on GitHub on their bugtracker, this looks like it should work.
Aug 30 05:23
I'm guessing something blows up trying to resolve a recursive relation there.
Aug 30 05:23
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.
Aug 26 07:36
@Liondancer Maybe if you would cut it down to an MRE. Most of the code really isn't needed for what you are asking...
Aug 21 07:41
@AshwinPhadke if there are separate sections in a function, inserting a comment line to summarise the next block is IMO better than just white space
Aug 13 10:37
@roganjosh You must use edit instead of rollback to add a message. It's for very good reasons, I'm sure.
Aug 13 10:34
There's a meta Q&A on that: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/327502/5349916
Aug 13 10:33
If you already rolled back, you cannot change the edit message anymore. :/
Aug 13 10:29
@roganjosh In the edit history, click edit of the revision you want to roll back to. Then enter the comment as the rollback reason and submit.
Aug 12 08:59
Speaking of no-GIL, has anyone here tried it already?
Aug 10 10:15
@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.
Aug 10 10:11
@Aran-Fey try callback tracking as for example here: github.com/MatterMiners/tardis/blob/…
Aug 10 06:11
@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.
Aug 7 08:30
@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.
Aug 6 12:24
Having multiple paragraphs on one edge case of a parameter is kind of out of proportion, but would be needed if I wanted to document it in full.
Aug 6 12:22
Most of my docs are just a few sentences how the parameters interact. Do it’s pretty common to see 3-6 function docs at once.
Aug 6 12:20
It’s way too much volume.
Aug 6 12:01
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.
Aug 6 12:00
Hm, perhaps the better question is how to handle both expert and practical information.
Aug 6 11:59
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.
Aug 6 11:54
Any opinions on using tooltips or collapsing notice boxes for something like this?
Aug 6 11:34
@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.
Aug 6 10:56
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?
Aug 6 10:36
If you don't care what types the keys will have, annotate them as Any.
Aug 6 10:29
@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.
Aug 6 10:27
Because the function could mutate the typing.Dict[str, float] by adding an int key, preserving the function's invariant but not the data's.
Aug 5 21:48
Optionally manifest exceptions are pretty neat, actually. It's forcing people to document and handle every exception that has problems.
Aug 5 19:59
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.
Aug 5 19:58
Proof that humanity didn't need ChatGPT.
Aug 5 19:57
That answer is a hodgepodge of semi-correct information twirled liberally with deflector shields of reversed polarity.
Aug 4 21:25
FWIW, Python's list is a dynamic array. The stuff that C++ and friends would call a vector.
Aug 4 21:16
@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.
Aug 4 20:46
I'm of the firm conviction that JavaScript is no true scotsman!
Aug 4 20:43
Oh my, how did that get there? 🤔
Aug 4 20:42
Honestly, I'm wondering if there is actually a language where "array" means "list" or if it's just the cargo cult equivalent of a Stable Time Loop.
Aug 4 20:11
Hm, I usually subscribe to the "fixed size sequence of uniform element type" interpretation. Admittedly, mutability may also fit into that.
Aug 4 20:03
Erm, isn't bytes literally an array of bytes already? oO
Aug 4 15:50
Well, I guess for most topics we technically know the most today.
Aug 4 13:16
@paul23 Even in the cases where the latter has meaning, it does not represent a tuple: "A parenthesized tuple of expressions after the colon indicates a set of constraints (e.g. T: (str, bytes))."
Aug 4 10:49
@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.
Aug 2 20:54
That's your chance at 15 upvotes of fame!
Aug 2 20:42
Like, them sciency folks just EOL'd RHEL7 from a few hundred datacenters. If a major player does that, it's going to be visible.
Aug 2 20:41
Yes, that's what I mean.
Aug 2 20:39
@KarlKnechtel Pretty suspicious that this coincides with the Linux numbers dropping. I'd guess something got deprecated there.
Aug 2 20:13
is that service going to be the only thing accessing the DB?
Aug 2 06:49
Well, they aren’t equal…