workspace stringclasses 1
value | channel stringclasses 1
value | sentences stringlengths 1 3.93k | ts stringlengths 26 26 | user stringlengths 2 11 | sentence_id stringlengths 44 53 | timestamp float64 1.5B 1.56B | __index_level_0__ int64 0 106k |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
pythondev | help | Try installing the package from repo, during the installation make a list of dependencies and then uninstall the package. After that create a requirements file or maybe do manual install of all the dependencies. | 2019-04-09T06:46:15.968100 | Virgil | pythondev_help_Virgil_2019-04-09T06:46:15.968100 | 1,554,792,375.9681 | 17,721 |
pythondev | help | Does this work? | 2019-04-09T06:46:18.968300 | Virgil | pythondev_help_Virgil_2019-04-09T06:46:18.968300 | 1,554,792,378.9683 | 17,722 |
pythondev | help | ... seems little hacky. I was hoping there's a pip option to get the requirements of a whl file or to tell pip to install everything BUT the local whl from a repo | 2019-04-09T06:48:40.970200 | Tyson | pythondev_help_Tyson_2019-04-09T06:48:40.970200 | 1,554,792,520.9702 | 17,723 |
pythondev | help | If I’m going thru a list with the for x in y: and y is a list how can I get the list number of y | 2019-04-09T06:50:44.972000 | Rodrick | pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-04-09T06:50:44.972000 | 1,554,792,644.972 | 17,724 |
pythondev | help | Let's see if someone might suggest something, but AFAIK there is no such option. | 2019-04-09T06:50:44.972100 | Virgil | pythondev_help_Virgil_2019-04-09T06:50:44.972100 | 1,554,792,644.9721 | 17,725 |
pythondev | help | <@Rodrick> use
``` for index, x in enumerate(y):
``` | 2019-04-09T06:51:15.972600 | Virgil | pythondev_help_Virgil_2019-04-09T06:51:15.972600 | 1,554,792,675.9726 | 17,726 |
pythondev | help | K | 2019-04-09T06:51:31.972900 | Rodrick | pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-04-09T06:51:31.972900 | 1,554,792,691.9729 | 17,727 |
pythondev | help | <@Virgil> that doesn’t really solve my problem it’s not ur fault I think I put he question wrong | 2019-04-09T06:58:24.973900 | Rodrick | pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-04-09T06:58:24.973900 | 1,554,793,104.9739 | 17,728 |
pythondev | help | If I have list y I want to find what line string x is on | 2019-04-09T06:58:40.974500 | Rodrick | pythondev_help_Rodrick_2019-04-09T06:58:40.974500 | 1,554,793,120.9745 | 17,729 |
pythondev | help | <@Rodrick> please paste your code or a similar example code as a snippet. That would help me to understand the problem | 2019-04-09T06:59:14.975000 | Virgil | pythondev_help_Virgil_2019-04-09T06:59:14.975000 | 1,554,793,154.975 | 17,730 |
pythondev | help | <@Rodrick> `print([i for i, e in enumerate(y) if e == 'string value'])` | 2019-04-09T08:27:34.976300 | Chuck | pythondev_help_Chuck_2019-04-09T08:27:34.976300 | 1,554,798,454.9763 | 17,731 |
pythondev | help | <@Rodrick> if you don't know the complete string:
```
for index, item in enumerate(my_list):
if my_string in item:
break
print(index)
```
this is very similar to <@Chuck>'s approach, but this goes for partial matches, isn't a list comprehension so it won't give you a list of indexes back, and will stop on... | 2019-04-09T08:59:02.984200 | Ashley | pythondev_help_Ashley_2019-04-09T08:59:02.984200 | 1,554,800,342.9842 | 17,732 |
pythondev | help | <@Ashley> I think you need to be careful with `list.index()` -- it will throw an error if the value isn't in the list, so you would need this in a `try` | 2019-04-09T09:26:18.986600 | Chuck | pythondev_help_Chuck_2019-04-09T09:26:18.986600 | 1,554,801,978.9866 | 17,733 |
pythondev | help | Hi :slightly_smiling_face: Hope everyone is well :slightly_smiling_face: I'm looking for a reliable python packager, for mobile apps. Currently trying Buildozer with Kivy but it's hard :disappointed: Python3 on Mac btw :slightly_smiling_face: Oh and Android :slightly_smiling_face: | 2019-04-09T09:26:45.987200 | Erika | pythondev_help_Erika_2019-04-09T09:26:45.987200 | 1,554,802,005.9872 | 17,734 |
pythondev | help | I have a really odd situation happening with `pyautogui` I have a function which has a try-except block in it to check use the `locateCenterOnSreen` and then `click` functions depending on what image it is there. And this works but when I call the function from another module, it works first time then the second time i... | 2019-04-09T09:33:29.991200 | Arturo | pythondev_help_Arturo_2019-04-09T09:33:29.991200 | 1,554,802,409.9912 | 17,735 |
pythondev | help | ```
def login_out_spes(want_offline):
try:
print("this is want offline")
print(want_offline)
print()
coord_x, coord_y = pyautogui.locateCenterOnScreen("img\\online_spes.png")
if want_offline == True:
print(coord_x, coord_y)
pyautogui.... | 2019-04-09T09:37:10.992500 | Arturo | pythondev_help_Arturo_2019-04-09T09:37:10.992500 | 1,554,802,630.9925 | 17,736 |
pythondev | help | Sounds like you are more in need of R. Python is good for analytical development however R is better for Data Analysis.
You will seldomly create classes for Data Analysis but much more for Analytical Development. Don't try and hit the nail with a saw, use a hammer | 2019-04-09T09:38:27.992600 | Erika | pythondev_help_Erika_2019-04-09T09:38:27.992600 | 1,554,802,707.9926 | 17,737 |
pythondev | help | <@Chuck> good catch. thanks! | 2019-04-09T09:53:14.993300 | Ashley | pythondev_help_Ashley_2019-04-09T09:53:14.993300 | 1,554,803,594.9933 | 17,738 |
pythondev | help | Hi, I am looking for a library that would help with displaying a PDF or image on the screen, allowing you to draw a field on it, and send back the field coordinates. Perhaps more a JavaScript question. I've seen a million implementations of it but I can't tell if there's a standard library people are using. Any suggest... | 2019-04-09T10:21:13.996300 | Fredric | pythondev_help_Fredric_2019-04-09T10:21:13.996300 | 1,554,805,273.9963 | 17,739 |
pythondev | help | ReStructured Text is driving me insane. All I want to do is define the beginning AND END of a code block so I can have a blank line in my code. I’ve been googling for like 30 minutes. | 2019-04-09T10:51:00.997900 | Carrol | pythondev_help_Carrol_2019-04-09T10:51:00.997900 | 1,554,807,060.9979 | 17,740 |
pythondev | help | isn’t it just a blank line? | 2019-04-09T10:52:11.998200 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T10:52:11.998200 | 1,554,807,131.9982 | 17,741 |
pythondev | help | Apparently not. Here’s what I have:
```
.. code-block:: python
from django.shortcuts import redirect
from hueydrfapi import TaskGroup
from myapp.tasks import my_task
def run_a_bunch_of_tasks(iterable):
task_group = TaskGroup()
for item in iterable:
task_group.add(my_task(item))
return redirect(task_gro... | 2019-04-09T10:53:28.998600 | Carrol | pythondev_help_Carrol_2019-04-09T10:53:28.998600 | 1,554,807,208.9986 | 17,742 |
pythondev | help | None | 2019-04-09T10:53:58.998700 | Carrol | pythondev_help_Carrol_2019-04-09T10:53:58.998700 | 1,554,807,238.9987 | 17,743 |
pythondev | help | that’s what Github shows | 2019-04-09T10:54:06.999100 | Carrol | pythondev_help_Carrol_2019-04-09T10:54:06.999100 | 1,554,807,246.9991 | 17,744 |
pythondev | help | I just looked it up - blocks are indent aware - you need to indent every line after your `.. code-block:: python` and when you dedent the code block is over | 2019-04-09T10:55:30.000100 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T10:55:30.000100 | 1,554,807,330.0001 | 17,745 |
pythondev | help | Thank you! | 2019-04-09T10:57:39.000300 | Carrol | pythondev_help_Carrol_2019-04-09T10:57:39.000300 | 1,554,807,459.0003 | 17,746 |
pythondev | help | Your welcome (also :taco: only works in comments with an @ mention) | 2019-04-09T10:59:26.001100 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T10:59:26.001100 | 1,554,807,566.0011 | 17,747 |
pythondev | help | :taco: <@Carrol> | 2019-04-09T10:59:39.001500 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T10:59:39.001500 | 1,554,807,579.0015 | 17,748 |
pythondev | help | taco rules and regulations, per the taco overlords
:taco: <@Clemmie> | 2019-04-09T11:01:26.002500 | Carrol | pythondev_help_Carrol_2019-04-09T11:01:26.002500 | 1,554,807,686.0025 | 17,749 |
pythondev | help | wasn’t it Hipchat or IRC? | 2019-04-09T11:39:58.003000 | Rivka | pythondev_help_Rivka_2019-04-09T11:39:58.003000 | 1,554,809,998.003 | 17,750 |
pythondev | help | You can test if the `response` is returned and if its value is the expected…
```
assert "Terminated" = terminate(id)
```
If the response is the client instance with a changed state, it will be more tricky. But you can also test if the state was changed to the expected value
```
terminated_client = terminate(id)
ass... | 2019-04-09T11:54:29.003300 | Rivka | pythondev_help_Rivka_2019-04-09T11:54:29.003300 | 1,554,810,869.0033 | 17,751 |
pythondev | help | I need delete all button on Tkinter window | 2019-04-09T11:59:06.004000 | Brittany | pythondev_help_Brittany_2019-04-09T11:59:06.004000 | 1,554,811,146.004 | 17,752 |
pythondev | help | but keep a combobox on it | 2019-04-09T12:00:11.004500 | Brittany | pythondev_help_Brittany_2019-04-09T12:00:11.004500 | 1,554,811,211.0045 | 17,753 |
pythondev | help | anyone can help? | 2019-04-09T12:00:16.004800 | Brittany | pythondev_help_Brittany_2019-04-09T12:00:16.004800 | 1,554,811,216.0048 | 17,754 |
pythondev | help | None | 2019-04-09T12:00:35.004900 | Brittany | pythondev_help_Brittany_2019-04-09T12:00:35.004900 | 1,554,811,235.0049 | 17,755 |
pythondev | help | Hi, can anybody help me make a plot time vs temp that compares the curve for different h (step sizes)? Thanks! :slightly_smiling_face: | 2019-04-09T12:09:32.005200 | Doretha | pythondev_help_Doretha_2019-04-09T12:09:32.005200 | 1,554,811,772.0052 | 17,756 |
pythondev | help | Hi everyone. Is there a decent library or some solution for handling converting date strings of varying types to a consistent type? Specifically I'm pulling news from <http://newsapi.org|newsapi.org> and their timestamps vary ... some are in `2019-04-09T16:09:46.8946424+00:00` format, some are in regular `2019-04-09T16... | 2019-04-09T12:32:33.008200 | Frankie | pythondev_help_Frankie_2019-04-09T12:32:33.008200 | 1,554,813,153.0082 | 17,757 |
pythondev | help | I'd at least take a look at Arrow <https://arrow.readthedocs.io/en/latest/> | 2019-04-09T12:40:03.008700 | Joette | pythondev_help_Joette_2019-04-09T12:40:03.008700 | 1,554,813,603.0087 | 17,758 |
pythondev | help | parsedatetime <https://pypi.org/project/parsedatetime/> | 2019-04-09T12:41:45.009100 | Joette | pythondev_help_Joette_2019-04-09T12:41:45.009100 | 1,554,813,705.0091 | 17,759 |
pythondev | help | thanks. fwiw they are all UTC time so I do know that | 2019-04-09T12:53:59.010000 | Frankie | pythondev_help_Frankie_2019-04-09T12:53:59.010000 | 1,554,814,439.01 | 17,760 |
pythondev | help | the issue is I don't know what format it will come in. I think even w/ arrow I will need to have a bunch of conditional logic to decide which function to use. | 2019-04-09T12:55:01.010700 | Frankie | pythondev_help_Frankie_2019-04-09T12:55:01.010700 | 1,554,814,501.0107 | 17,761 |
pythondev | help | Probably yes. In arrow anything that isn’t an ISO-8601 (and possibly some that are) will need the format provided. | 2019-04-09T12:57:52.012300 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T12:57:52.012300 | 1,554,814,672.0123 | 17,762 |
pythondev | help | Time is hard - the real answer is to get in touch with newsapi and push for them to normalize their timestamps | 2019-04-09T12:59:00.013900 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T12:59:00.013900 | 1,554,814,740.0139 | 17,763 |
pythondev | help | When would you use Flask (or Django) over just using CouchDB?
CouchDB has a REST api and a NoSQL database built in.
(Seeing if there is a reason to convince my teammates away from CouchDB) | 2019-04-09T12:59:11.014100 | Annabell | pythondev_help_Annabell_2019-04-09T12:59:11.014100 | 1,554,814,751.0141 | 17,764 |
pythondev | help | When you want a relational database | 2019-04-09T12:59:52.014700 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T12:59:52.014700 | 1,554,814,792.0147 | 17,765 |
pythondev | help | pg has a rest api option for it, but to be honest, the inclusion of that in a prod project gives me the chills | 2019-04-09T13:00:06.015200 | Hiroko | pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-04-09T13:00:06.015200 | 1,554,814,806.0152 | 17,766 |
pythondev | help | pg? postgresql? | 2019-04-09T13:00:35.015700 | Annabell | pythondev_help_Annabell_2019-04-09T13:00:35.015700 | 1,554,814,835.0157 | 17,767 |
pythondev | help | also, <@Clemmie> has a point. if your data is relational and structured, stick with a RDBMS | 2019-04-09T13:00:42.016100 | Hiroko | pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-04-09T13:00:42.016100 | 1,554,814,842.0161 | 17,768 |
pythondev | help | <@Clemmie> : D true. Maybe just use Django at that point and its ORM. | 2019-04-09T13:01:05.016700 | Annabell | pythondev_help_Annabell_2019-04-09T13:01:05.016700 | 1,554,814,865.0167 | 17,769 |
pythondev | help | Also often your rest model _does not_ map cleanly to tables | 2019-04-09T13:01:25.017200 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T13:01:25.017200 | 1,554,814,885.0172 | 17,770 |
pythondev | help | so a built in rest view is nice, but you end up implementing another set of rest endpoints in a different stack | 2019-04-09T13:02:13.018000 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T13:02:13.018000 | 1,554,814,933.018 | 17,771 |
pythondev | help | Gotcha.
Thanks for the information. | 2019-04-09T13:02:53.018500 | Annabell | pythondev_help_Annabell_2019-04-09T13:02:53.018500 | 1,554,814,973.0185 | 17,772 |
pythondev | help | thanks guys. I'll deal w/ it for now I guess. I agree non-normalized timestamps are annoying as hell though | 2019-04-09T13:03:24.018900 | Frankie | pythondev_help_Frankie_2019-04-09T13:03:24.018900 | 1,554,815,004.0189 | 17,773 |
pythondev | help | hello, anyone experienced with wtforms? | 2019-04-09T15:03:04.024800 | Mario | pythondev_help_Mario_2019-04-09T15:03:04.024800 | 1,554,822,184.0248 | 17,774 |
pythondev | help | I wonder about the first parameter (u'Full Name',...) for example | 2019-04-09T15:04:43.024900 | Mario | pythondev_help_Mario_2019-04-09T15:04:43.024900 | 1,554,822,283.0249 | 17,775 |
pythondev | help | what does the u stand for? I couldn't fnd it in the docs, and the examples vary, some are written with u some without | 2019-04-09T15:05:20.025800 | Mario | pythondev_help_Mario_2019-04-09T15:05:20.025800 | 1,554,822,320.0258 | 17,776 |
pythondev | help | here it is different | 2019-04-09T15:06:29.025900 | Mario | pythondev_help_Mario_2019-04-09T15:06:29.025900 | 1,554,822,389.0259 | 17,777 |
pythondev | help | <@Mario> it indicates a unicode string (opposed to a to byte string) in python2. If you are using python3 (and you should be) ~don’t use it~ it is meaningless. | 2019-04-09T15:18:57.029100 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T15:18:57.029100 | 1,554,823,137.0291 | 17,778 |
pythondev | help | If that documentation is on the wtforms page I would open and issue/make a pull request if I were you, according to their test setup they don’t support python2 anymore | 2019-04-09T15:19:10.029400 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T15:19:10.029400 | 1,554,823,150.0294 | 17,779 |
pythondev | help | ok thanks | 2019-04-09T15:19:41.029700 | Mario | pythondev_help_Mario_2019-04-09T15:19:41.029700 | 1,554,823,181.0297 | 17,780 |
pythondev | help | I am using v3 yes | 2019-04-09T15:21:47.030200 | Mario | pythondev_help_Mario_2019-04-09T15:21:47.030200 | 1,554,823,307.0302 | 17,781 |
pythondev | help | perfect | 2019-04-09T15:22:20.030600 | Clemmie | pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-04-09T15:22:20.030600 | 1,554,823,340.0306 | 17,782 |
pythondev | help | FYI I ended up finding a decent way to handle multiple time formats | 2019-04-09T15:29:49.031100 | Frankie | pythondev_help_Frankie_2019-04-09T15:29:49.031100 | 1,554,823,789.0311 | 17,783 |
pythondev | help | None | 2019-04-09T15:31:28.031900 | Frankie | pythondev_help_Frankie_2019-04-09T15:31:28.031900 | 1,554,823,888.0319 | 17,784 |
pythondev | help | Feel free to critique if you see any way to make it better but it works well so far for handling all the formats I've come across :slightly_smiling_face: | 2019-04-09T15:33:04.032800 | Frankie | pythondev_help_Frankie_2019-04-09T15:33:04.032800 | 1,554,823,984.0328 | 17,785 |
pythondev | help | Hi! Is there anybody who uses behave? I need to find the way how to parametrize Example based on environment I use. Something like:
```
@use.with_stage=develop
Examples: Araxas
| name | birthyear |
| Alice | 1985 |
@use.with_stage=integration
Examples:
| name | birthyear |
... | 2019-04-09T17:19:02.038900 | Mi | pythondev_help_Mi_2019-04-09T17:19:02.038900 | 1,554,830,342.0389 | 17,786 |
pythondev | help | <@Clemmie> :taco: :taco: :taco: :taco: :taco: I appreciate all the help | 2019-04-09T21:23:13.000600 | Demetrice | pythondev_help_Demetrice_2019-04-09T21:23:13.000600 | 1,554,844,993.0006 | 17,787 |
pythondev | help | hi can i ask for django help here | 2019-04-09T22:59:00.001300 | Nickole | pythondev_help_Nickole_2019-04-09T22:59:00.001300 | 1,554,850,740.0013 | 17,788 |
pythondev | help | I can't help with django, and I think you'll be fine asking here, but fyi there is also a <#C0LMFRMB5|django> channel! :slightly_smiling_face: | 2019-04-09T23:12:56.002200 | Marth | pythondev_help_Marth_2019-04-09T23:12:56.002200 | 1,554,851,576.0022 | 17,789 |
pythondev | help | Why 5^2 equals 7 but 5**2 equals 25 in python?I thought the answer to be 25 for both the cases. | 2019-04-09T23:18:05.003400 | Scot | pythondev_help_Scot_2019-04-09T23:18:05.003400 | 1,554,851,885.0034 | 17,790 |
pythondev | help | What does '^' mean in python? | 2019-04-09T23:18:29.003800 | Scot | pythondev_help_Scot_2019-04-09T23:18:29.003800 | 1,554,851,909.0038 | 17,791 |
pythondev | help | It's the exclusive-or (XOR) bitwise operator. So `0b0101 ^ 0b0010 == 0b0111` in binary. | 2019-04-09T23:24:40.004900 | Sasha | pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-04-09T23:24:40.004900 | 1,554,852,280.0049 | 17,792 |
pythondev | help | Thanks <@Sasha> | 2019-04-10T00:24:57.006100 | Scot | pythondev_help_Scot_2019-04-10T00:24:57.006100 | 1,554,855,897.0061 | 17,793 |
pythondev | help | I am having problem in understanding how the assignment of variables are taking place,what value is assigned in a and b throughout the iterations. | 2019-04-10T00:49:04.006500 | Scot | pythondev_help_Scot_2019-04-10T00:49:04.006500 | 1,554,857,344.0065 | 17,794 |
pythondev | help | The comma is essentially doing two assignments at once, so `a, b = b, a+b` is equivalent to:
```temp1 = b
temp2 = a+b
a = temp1
b = temp2```
But note that it's not quite equivalent to:
```a = b
b = a+b```
because you don't want `a` to be altered before its old value can be used in the second part. | 2019-04-10T00:59:26.009100 | Sasha | pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-04-10T00:59:26.009100 | 1,554,857,966.0091 | 17,795 |
pythondev | help | <@Sasha> :taco:
Great explanation | 2019-04-10T01:05:35.009500 | Cori | pythondev_help_Cori_2019-04-10T01:05:35.009500 | 1,554,858,335.0095 | 17,796 |
pythondev | help | Last line
b=b+temp1 | 2019-04-10T02:34:48.010000 | Petronila | pythondev_help_Petronila_2019-04-10T02:34:48.010000 | 1,554,863,688.01 | 17,797 |
pythondev | help | hi how can one display graps in frontend/GUI using python | 2019-04-10T02:36:22.010800 | Malika | pythondev_help_Malika_2019-04-10T02:36:22.010800 | 1,554,863,782.0108 | 17,798 |
pythondev | help | like is there any python package and all? | 2019-04-10T02:36:45.011400 | Malika | pythondev_help_Malika_2019-04-10T02:36:45.011400 | 1,554,863,805.0114 | 17,799 |
pythondev | help | depends on your frontend but sure | 2019-04-10T02:38:04.011700 | Leida | pythondev_help_Leida_2019-04-10T02:38:04.011700 | 1,554,863,884.0117 | 17,800 |
pythondev | help | stuff like <https://www.qt.io/qt-for-python> | 2019-04-10T02:38:36.011900 | Leida | pythondev_help_Leida_2019-04-10T02:38:36.011900 | 1,554,863,916.0119 | 17,801 |
pythondev | help | <https://plot.ly/python/> | 2019-04-10T02:39:00.012200 | Leida | pythondev_help_Leida_2019-04-10T02:39:00.012200 | 1,554,863,940.0122 | 17,802 |
pythondev | help | matplotlib, Seaborn, ggplot, Bokeh, pygal, geoplotlib, Gleam | 2019-04-10T02:41:04.013200 | Leida | pythondev_help_Leida_2019-04-10T02:41:04.013200 | 1,554,864,064.0132 | 17,803 |
pythondev | help | Yeah, you can formulate it that way too. | 2019-04-10T02:50:34.013600 | Sasha | pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-04-10T02:50:34.013600 | 1,554,864,634.0136 | 17,804 |
pythondev | help | I'm experiencing a weird discrepancy; I try to import a class in "data_prep.py" but only
from models.policy import Policy
works in VSCode and only
from .models.policy import Policy works in flask | 2019-04-10T04:02:48.014400 | Junior | pythondev_help_Junior_2019-04-10T04:02:48.014400 | 1,554,868,968.0144 | 17,805 |
pythondev | help | Hello. I'm building virtualenv3 with python3 for my restapi project. But when I start it with `python3 index.wsgi`, return error
```
File "index.wsgi", line 5, in <module>
from app import app as application
```
How to resolve this? | 2019-04-10T04:18:10.015800 | Cinda | pythondev_help_Cinda_2019-04-10T04:18:10.015800 | 1,554,869,890.0158 | 17,806 |
pythondev | help | so all files ran by the `python` executable, needs to end in `.py` | 2019-04-10T04:22:39.016200 | Mica | pythondev_help_Mica_2019-04-10T04:22:39.016200 | 1,554,870,159.0162 | 17,807 |
pythondev | help | not `.wsgi` | 2019-04-10T04:22:47.016500 | Mica | pythondev_help_Mica_2019-04-10T04:22:47.016500 | 1,554,870,167.0165 | 17,808 |
pythondev | help | pretty sure `wsgi` isn't a file format either? :thinking_face: | 2019-04-10T04:23:02.016900 | Mica | pythondev_help_Mica_2019-04-10T04:23:02.016900 | 1,554,870,182.0169 | 17,809 |
pythondev | help | rename the file to something like `wsgi.py` | 2019-04-10T04:23:13.017200 | Mica | pythondev_help_Mica_2019-04-10T04:23:13.017200 | 1,554,870,193.0172 | 17,810 |
pythondev | help | the project has already runned on Python2 | 2019-04-10T04:36:38.017300 | Cinda | pythondev_help_Cinda_2019-04-10T04:36:38.017300 | 1,554,870,998.0173 | 17,811 |
pythondev | help | <@Cinda> are you sure? what does the full file look like? | 2019-04-10T04:37:41.017800 | Mica | pythondev_help_Mica_2019-04-10T04:37:41.017800 | 1,554,871,061.0178 | 17,812 |
pythondev | help | Of course, it's running. I have to switch environment from python 2 to python 3 (with virtualenv env). here is is's content:
```
from app import app as application
if __name__ == "__main__":
application.run(host='0.0.0.0')
``` | 2019-04-10T04:39:12.017900 | Cinda | pythondev_help_Cinda_2019-04-10T04:39:12.017900 | 1,554,871,152.0179 | 17,813 |
pythondev | help | it runned on Python 2 env well, but when I run it on python3 env, got above error! | 2019-04-10T04:40:16.018100 | Cinda | pythondev_help_Cinda_2019-04-10T04:40:16.018100 | 1,554,871,216.0181 | 17,814 |
pythondev | help | is there a full stacktrace for the error? | 2019-04-10T04:45:27.018600 | Mica | pythondev_help_Mica_2019-04-10T04:45:27.018600 | 1,554,871,527.0186 | 17,815 |
pythondev | help | ```
$ python3 index.wsgi
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "index.wsgi", line 5, in <module>
from app import app as application
``` | 2019-04-10T04:48:00.018700 | Cinda | pythondev_help_Cinda_2019-04-10T04:48:00.018700 | 1,554,871,680.0187 | 17,816 |
pythondev | help | here you are | 2019-04-10T04:48:06.018900 | Cinda | pythondev_help_Cinda_2019-04-10T04:48:06.018900 | 1,554,871,686.0189 | 17,817 |
pythondev | help | I guess none of the files have changed since switching to 3? | 2019-04-10T04:50:12.019300 | Mica | pythondev_help_Mica_2019-04-10T04:50:12.019300 | 1,554,871,812.0193 | 17,818 |
pythondev | help | yes, no file changed, all file keep origin from when it runned success on python2 | 2019-04-10T04:54:42.019500 | Cinda | pythondev_help_Cinda_2019-04-10T04:54:42.019500 | 1,554,872,082.0195 | 17,819 |
pythondev | help | In python3, I’m seeing some syntax like `request.[use]`, what is this called? Where can I read about it? | 2019-04-10T05:23:19.020900 | Neta | pythondev_help_Neta_2019-04-10T05:23:19.020900 | 1,554,873,799.0209 | 17,820 |
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