Self taught developer
Previously known as @yourstruly@dataterm.digital
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- 14 Posts
- 25 Comments
Dict keys are case sensitive in python. In your code I can see the key you’ve used has a capital M in Amarok. Maybe that’s the issue here
ishanpage@programming.devto Python@programming.dev•Help trying to extract some dataEnglish2·1 year agoThis is strange. I tried your snippet with your file and it works for me:
(env) ➜ testing cat x.py from mutagen.id3 import ID3 tags = ID3("myfile.mp3") print(tags["TXXX:FMPS_Rating_Amarok_Score"]) (env) ➜ testing python x.py 0.78
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•First year CS student currently on vacations looking for programming course to follow.4·1 year agoThis is the best option. I recommend Nand2Tetris to everyone! It’s an incredibly well designed and executed course
ishanpage@programming.devOPto Programming@programming.dev•Blogging with Jupyter Notebooks in Hugo2·2 years agoOoh, I hadn’t heard of Quarto before, but it looks really good! Thanks for mentioning it!
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•Bringing the Unix Philosophy to the 21st Century31·2 years agoWhile jc is a great tool, and I’m definitely a fan, I believe the real solution to the overarching problem lies in a paradigm shift: see nushell
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•What are your opinions on in-person conferences?3·2 years agoI wanna go to one so bad! But they never happen in my city…
ishanpage@programming.devOPto Programming@programming.dev•The Ultimate Interactive JQ Guide5·2 years agoI agree that from a completeness point of view, the official manual is better (I’ve linked it at the bottom of my post as well), however I’d love to hear your specific thoughts about why you feel this particular article is not good- I’ve tried to include fully interactive examples for the most common tasks I find myself doing with
jq
everyday. This feedback will help me improve my own skills as well, so I would appreciate it very much.
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•what's the highest increase in salary you've had or seen?6·2 years agoIt is possible to live on that, there are people who live on less than it. Personally all of it went to supplementing my Mom’s income so we could survive.
There are plenty of entry level jobs in India that offer those kinds of wages. There are more that offer less.
Yes, it’s exploitative.
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•what's the highest increase in salary you've had or seen?7·2 years agoI’m from India so these numbers might be a bit weird. My yearly comp has basically gone like this from 2017 to 2023
$0.7k -> $3.6k -> $4.8k -> $20k
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•What would it take for you to move away from Github?English31·2 years agoHave you seen all the people just stuffing their profile README full of random graphics and stats and badges
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•What programming languages aren't too criticized here?1·2 years agoOhhhh, this site is a great find. Exploring all the articles right now. Thanks!
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•What programming languages aren't too criticized here?English6·2 years agoUnfortunately, no one can be told what a monad is. You have to see it for yourself (then you won’t be able to explain it to anyone)
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•Programming the Kernel with eBPF3·2 years agoeBPF is something that I’ve been exploring recently for work. I was quite blown away when I realized the true potential. I did find it difficult to get started, and while this article is a good introduction, some example code or hands on would be nice to have
ishanpage@programming.devOPto Programming@programming.dev•Dear past me, use the flagsEnglish5·2 years agoThe scenario is not ficticious. It’s taken straight from my first job, but I had to leave out specific details. The application being developed had something to do with DRM, so that might explain the weird requirements.
The lesson is that sometimes business will require you to force users to update their version, and/or enable specific features for specific subsets of users. So you should have such a mechanism in place before it is required, otherwise you will end up doing hacky things like breaking the server to do what needs to be done.
Systems such as these are actually fairly common in enterprise, but since it was my first job, I had not planned ahead for this because I had no idea.
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming.dev Meta@programming.dev•I can't log into pd in jerboa?English2·2 years agoI had this same problem, after clearing my Jerboa data it worked fine. Hope that helps
ishanpage@programming.devto Docker@programming.dev•Does somone knows a good sql web interface, that i could run in a container?English1·2 years agoI use Adminer and PGWeb interchangeably
ishanpage@programming.devto Programming@programming.dev•How often does branchless programming actually matter?English151·2 years agoHow often do a few nanoseconds in the inner loop matter?
It doesn’t matter until you need it. And when you need it, it’s the difference between life and death
ishanpage@programming.devOPto Programming@programming.dev•The secret life of .well-knownEnglish3·2 years agoI’ll be sure to read it when you do :)
ishanpage@programming.devOPto Programming@programming.dev•Programming "with the grain"English3·2 years agoOTOH, the more pythonic one will probably perform worse, but I’m not familiar enough with Python internals to make that claim without benchmarks.
I’ll try it out and add the data in the article
This is a FastAPI feature - Autogenerated documentation using Swagger.
You can turn it off by setting
docs_url=None
In your linked main.py:
app = FastAPI( title="IslabTweet", description=__doc__, docs_url="/", # change this to None to disable the docs version=VERSION, )
Hope this helps!