Python

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Sep 2, 2021 15:10
well yes, every story is somebody's everyday experience.
Sep 2, 2021 14:59
Hi
 

 Python Ouroboros - The Rotating Knives

Messages from the Python room that didn't meet our standards o...
Sep 2, 2021 15:09
@roganjosh OK, sorry. I am accustomed to chatrooms where people enjoy a story with an unexpected ending, even if it takes more than two lines.
Sep 2, 2021 15:08
the decorator turned out to come from a profiling module, so not essential for the function to run, so I decided to comment it out
Sep 2, 2021 15:07
and at the end, I decided "I don't care, this is Python - I can go into the source code of pdfminer on that computer and do an import or something"
Sep 2, 2021 15:06
the whole Python environment on that computer is a mess of Anaconda with some packages installed on top of it with pip or whatever else managed to get through the proxy, so I spent quite some time on what I was thinking must be the Python version of a DLL hell
Sep 2, 2021 15:05
when I googled the error, it seemed that it has never been seen before, at least not in conjunction with that library
Sep 2, 2021 15:04
it was stumbling over some decorator
Sep 2, 2021 15:04
not only that, but it was failing to import pdfminer, a well-written third-party library
Sep 2, 2021 15:03
But two days ago, I had to come into the office, and suddenly realized that my code is not running on my official computer
Sep 2, 2021 15:03
my employer is not a software company, so the infrastructure is not very developer-friendly. Also, it's corona times. So I mostly develop from my private computer.
Sep 2, 2021 15:02
So, I'm working on a program which reads information from different documents and uploads them into a data warehouse
Sep 2, 2021 15:01
I am relatively new to Python, and wanted to share a story of a weird problem I was having - maybe it will brighten someone's day to learn how it got resolved :)
 

C#

General discussions about the c# language, Squirrels | gist.gi...
Jun 17, 2021 12:14
Eh, I wouldn't worry too much. If it happens all the time, it is an important sign that you have to develop self-motivation skills, and a great playground to train those skills without pressure. And if it happens rarely, then probably the project wasn't that important for you and played out its role before it came to finish, and you can just leave it alone.
Jun 17, 2021 12:09
OK, art block would be a different reason, I guess - I must have jumped to assumptions here
Jun 17, 2021 12:08
It happens when you start a cool project, and at the time you have done enough of it to know exactly what it will look like when it is finished, you lose interest in it and don't finish
Jun 17, 2021 12:08
@Freerey This is a common thing. Surprisingly, the best name for it I know comes from knitters - they call it "Second Sock Syndrome".
Jun 17, 2021 11:51
For me, it is an ideal tool for rapid prototyping. I can just open it and start writing, without caring about projects and architecture and stuff.
Jun 17, 2021 11:49
@Wietlol I didn't even know that VS has a repl. Linqpad is a third party software, very convenient - but obviously made with fewer resources than VS.
Jun 17, 2021 11:47
if this happened before, it explains why I thought that ToList is not the correct solution
Jun 17, 2021 11:46
and it stopped re-evaluating and started behaving like a List
Jun 17, 2021 11:46
then I commented out the line that changes the Action, ran the code again, then enabled that line again
Jun 17, 2021 11:45
I intentionally used an IEnumerable again, then added ToList() and it kept re-evaluating
Jun 17, 2021 11:44
Ha! When I have problems programming, I usually assume it is my fault and not a bug. But now I might have ran into some kind of LinqPad caching bug after all.
Jun 17, 2021 11:32
This is getting dangerous - the bot could cost me several work hours!
Jun 17, 2021 11:31
!~cat
Jun 17, 2021 11:22
If R has a construct that does this kind of thing (it probably does, it has a library for everything, I feel!), I have never had the need to use it.
Jun 17, 2021 11:20
@Wietlol I have briefly seen something similar in Python. But actually I code mostly in R, with nice well-defined dataframes, and rarely have to care about this kind of behavior.
Jun 17, 2021 11:19
I actually recognized that the reevaluation must be happening, too. But for some reason, when I tried to stuff the results into a List, I didn't see the needed results. I must have done something wrong there.
Jun 17, 2021 11:17
Yes, I know that kind of lazy loading from other languages - I just never stopped to think that this might be what a Linq expression is returning.
Jun 17, 2021 11:13
@Wietlol so is the IEnumerable some kind of exhaustible generator? I must admit I didn't look too deeply into the different kind of collections.
Jun 17, 2021 11:10
I was using a for loop with an int counter and trying to update an element at some position, and kept getting the error that the index is out of bounds
Jun 17, 2021 11:09
I actually had the problem even before reevaluating it through the Dump(), I first recognized it when my code threw an error
Jun 17, 2021 11:09
@Wietlol thank you, I didn't realize that this might be happening.
Jun 17, 2021 11:08
As for the whole thing I am trying to do, I have been sitting on it for several days, and it is several hundred lines of code already. I certainly don't want to stick it into a single Linq expression, even if that is theoretically possible.
Jun 17, 2021 11:08
@Squirrelkiller oh yes, certainly, fully with you on this one.
Jun 17, 2021 11:06
@Squirrelkiller yes, that's indeed a problem. Really, the one piece of the puzzle I was missing was how to stop this re-evaluation from happening. I realize that this stupid reduced example looks like it could be solved in different ways, but since my actual problem is more complex, there are reasons why I am going exactly this way.
Jun 17, 2021 11:02
"prevent reevaluation of the pipeline"?
Jun 17, 2021 11:02
again, any suggestions what terms to use so it will be discoverable?
Jun 17, 2021 11:01
Now that I went through all the trouble to create the example, maybe I should record it on the main page as a self-answered question
Jun 17, 2021 10:58
List<Record> allRecords = new List<Record>();
for(int i = 1; i <= 10; i++)
{
	allRecords.Add(new Record() {recordId = i, action = Action.NeedsChecking});
}

allRecords.Add(new Record() {recordId = 1, action = Action.NeedsChecking});

// in reality, here would be code which recognizes duplicates before marking all but one of them as "ThrowError". Just marking one here differently so the situation is more like real life, where not all records have a NeedsChecking.
allRecords.Last().action = Action.ThrowError;
Jun 17, 2021 10:58
If anybody is interested, here the reproduced example
Jun 17, 2021 10:56
@Squirrelkiller I actually thought that, if ToList doesn't change it, then I must have misunderstood how ToList is intended to work.
Jun 17, 2021 10:55
@Squirrelkiller I never said it was a bug in the framework :)
Jun 17, 2021 10:53
at least it gives that behavior in my minimal example, maybe I have to look deeper into the real code
Jun 17, 2021 10:53
The strangest thing is, I tried it before I came here to ask!
Jun 17, 2021 10:53
ToList() indeed gives the behavior I wanted
Jun 17, 2021 10:52
I'm absolutely stumped now
Jun 17, 2021 10:08
I am now writing a smaller example to reproduce it
Jun 17, 2021 10:08
@Squirrelkiller I also thought that .ToList();is creating an entirely new collection, but apparently I was wrong