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QUESTION
var Employees = [
{
"id": "382740",
"PayrollID": "8117817425",
"EmployeeName": "Bob Jones",
"StartTime": "15:15:00.0000000",
"FinishTime": "18:15:00.0000000",
"BreakTime": "45",
"TotalTime": 2,
"Comments": "Test",
"Rate": "19"
},
{
"id": "439617",
"PayrollID": "8117817425",
"EmployeeName": "Peter Pan",
"StartTime": "16:15:00.0000000",
"FinishTime": "21:15:00.0000000",
"BreakTime": "60",
"TotalTime": 4,
"Comments": "Test",
"Rate": "32"
},
{
"id": "201636",
"PayrollID": "5042289623",
"EmployeeName": "Bob Jones",
"StartTime": "09:56:00.0000000",
"FinishTime": "11:56:00.0000000",
"BreakTime": "45",
"TotalTime": 1.25,
"Comments": "Test Comments",
"Rate": "19"
},
{
"id": "799653",
"PayrollID": "5042289623",
"EmployeeName": "Clarke Kent",
"StartTime": "16:49:00.0000000",
"FinishTime": "21:49:00.0000000",
"BreakTime": "60",
"TotalTime": 4,
"Comments": "Test",
"Rate": "19"
},
{
"id": "951567",
"PayrollID": "5042289623",
"EmployeeName": "Bob Jones",
"StartTime": "01:49:00.0000000",
"FinishTime": "16:49:00.0000000",
"BreakTime": "60",
"TotalTime": 14,
"Comments": "Test",
"Rate": "10"
}
]
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-16 at 02:44In the Map, set the value not to the cumulative total time for the employee so far, but to a whole employee object that contains the total time inside it. Spread the first object found so as not to mutate the input.
QUESTION
I have a python code I know where is it used but want to know its meaning so that I can use it for my bigger python projects This is my python code
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-16 at 01:27I don't know if I understood your question, but this is what the code is doing:
var_list is a list with two elements [100, 2025]
.
slice1 and slice2 are being defined as (var_list + [None]*2)[:2]
. This expression adds the var_list to a new list of 2 None objects ([None] * 2 == [None, None]
). The result of this expression ((var_list + [None] *2)
) is the addition of these 2 lists, which is: [100, 2025, None, None]
Then the last part ([:2]
) is just slicing the first 2 elements of this resulting list and assigning it to the variables. And since, in this case, the first 2 items are the var_list itself, it will assign the first element to slice1 and the second to slice2.
QUESTION
I have the wackiest bug. Like....the wackiest! If any of ya'll want to put eyes on this, awesomesauce! I really appriciate it! I am creating a survey with REACT, Redux, SQL, HML, Material-ui, and CSS.
I've created a graph of information with am4charts using data from a database. Everything is working and will show up on the page......but not on page load. What I am seeing in my console is that the page will load, it fires off my get request but doesn't return with the data fast enough (I think). By the time that the get request loads, my graph has populated with no data.
Here is the code that I have for the page that I am rendering. What is really odd is that, once my code has run, I can cut a line of code (I've been using a console log). And then the graph will render and load.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 22:40Can you try this fix? I created new functions for some tasks.
https://codesandbox.io/s/vigorous-varahamihira-6j588?file=/src/App.js
QUESTION
Turns out you can't have comments in JSON files, and it's a bit awkward to have people refer to some documentation telling them what line to copy/paste in and where in order to achieve this.
I think I can make a python script to copy/paste in one of two package.json files depending on what flags they pass in, but that feels overcomplicated.
I think I can include both dependencies (under different names) but that would create a requirement for both to be available, which is not good either.
Looking for ideas/thoughts on a good way to accomplish this. I have a release and dev version of the same dependency and I often need to swap between the two. Would like to improve the workflow beyond just having a notepad on the side with the two lines pasted in it...
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 21:43yarn
and npm
already do this job, why not use them?
Tag the dev versions when you release them
QUESTION
How do I get the URL of the current tab in the background service worker in MV3?
Here's what I have:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 21:40You function getTab
seems not right, you are currently trying to query on the url. Not on the query options. The following function should work.
QUESTION
Sorry if this is a noob question!
I have two tables - a movie and a comment table.
I am trying to return output of the movie name and each comment for that movie as long as that movie has more than 1 comment associated to it.
Here are my tables
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 20:19Something like this could work
QUESTION
I'm a student learning about database design and currently learning about the relationships of - one-to-one, one-to-many, many-to-many. I understand the concept well enough, but feel like I'm lacking experience/information on how it would be implemented in a real production scenario.
My question is this
If I have a blog website with a Blog Post as an entity and comments for each blog post, how would you handle the comments in the database?`
Would you use a one-to-many relationship and just store all the comments in a single table. Then link those comments to each blog post and user who created it?
What if each comment had a sub-comment? Would you create a separate table for sub-comments and link it to a single comment? Would that cause too much overhead and confusion within the DB itself?
I get the concepts and all, but don't understand best practices for handling what seems like basic stuff.
Thanks in advance!
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 16:06The simplest solution is to stick with a one-to-many relationship. Use one table and store one comment per row, with references to the post and the comment author, and a timestamp so you can sort the comments chronologically.
You seem uncertain about whether you need a "threaded comment" hierarchy. This is more complex, so if you don't need it, don't bother.
If you do need to show comment threads, then you should learn about running recursive queries in MySQL 8.0: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/with.html#common-table-expressions-recursive
You still only need one table. Don't create a second table for sub-comments. Just store comments like in your one-to-many example, but each comment may link to its "parent" comment when it is a reply.
Another solution that many sites use is to skip implementing their own comment system, and just embed a comment service like Disqus. That's likely to be much more reliable and safe than yours. But if you're doing this as a learning exercise, that's worthwhile too.
QUESTION
Yet another question about the style and the good practices. The code, that I will show, works and do the functionality. But I'd like to know is it ok as solution or may be it's just too ugly?
As the question is a little bit obscure, I will give some points at the end.
So, the use case.
I have a site with the items. There is a functionality to add the item by user. Now I'd like a functionality to add several items via a csv-file.
How should it works?
- User go to special upload page.
- User choose a csv-file, click upload.
- Then he is redirected to the page that show the content of csv-file (as a table).
- If it's ok for user, he clicks "yes" (button with "confirm_items_upload" value) and the items from file are added to database (if they are ok).
I saw already examples for bulk upload for django, and they seem pretty clear. But I don't find an example with an intermediary "verify-confirm" page. So how I did it :
- in views.py : view for upload csv-file page
ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-28 at 09:27a) Even if obviously it could be better, is this solution is acceptable or not at all ?
I think it has some problems you want to address, but the general idea of using the filesystem and storing just filenames can be acceptable, depending on how many users you need to serve and what guarantees regarding data consistency and concurrent accesses you want to make.
I would consider the uploaded file temporary data that may be lost on system failure. If you want to provide any guarantees of not losing the data, you want to store it in a database instead of on the filesystem.
b) I pass 'uploaded_file' from one view to another using "request.session" is it a good practice? Is there another way to do it without using GET variables?
There are up- and downsides to using request.session.
- attackers can not change the filename and thus retrieve data of other users. This is also the reason why you should not use a GET parameter here: If you used one, attackers could simpy change that parameter and get access to files of other users.
- users can upload a file, go and do other stuff, and later come back to actually import the file, however:
- if users end their session, you lose the filename. Also, users can not upload the file on one device, change to another device, and then go on with the import, since the other device will have a different session.
The last point correlates with the leftover files problem: If you lose your information about which files are still needed, it makes cleaning up harder (although, in theory, you can retrieve which files are still needed from the session store).
If it is a problem that sessions might end or change because users clear their cookies or change devices, you could consider adding the filename to the UserProfile
in the database. This way, it is not bound to sessions.
c) At first my wish was to avoid to save the csv-file. But I could not figure out how to do it? Reading all the file to request.session seems not a good idea for me. Is there some possibility to upload the file into memory in Django?
You want to store state. The go-to ways of storing state are the database or a session store. You could load the whole CSVFile and put it into the database as text. Whether this is acceptable depends on your databases ability to handle large, unstructured data. Traditional databases were not originally built for that, however, most of them can handle small binary files pretty well nowadays. A database could give you advantages like ACID guarantees where concurrent writes to the same file on the file system will likely break the file. See this discussion on the dba stackexchange
Your database likely has documentation on the topic, e.g. there is this page about binary data in postgres.
d) If I have to use the tmp-file. How should I handle the situation if user abandon upload at the middle (for example, he sees the confirmation page, but does not click "yes" and decide to re-write his file). How to remove the tmp-file?
Some ideas:
- Limit the count of uploaded files per user to one by design. Currently, your filename is based on a timestamp. This breaks if two users simultaneously decide to upload a file: They will both get the same timestamp, and the file on disk may be corrupted. If you instead use the user's primary key, this guarantees that you have at most one file per user. If they later upload another file, their old file will be overwritten. If your user count is small enough that you can store one leftover file per user, you don't need additional cleaning. However, if the same user simultaneusly uploads two files, this still breaks.
- Use a unique identifier, like a UUID, and delete the old stored file whenever the user uploads a new file. This requires you to still have the old filename, so session storage can not be used with this. You will still always have the last file of the user in the filesystem.
- Use a unique identifier for the filename and set some arbitrary maximum storage duration. Set up a cronjob or similar that regularly goes through the files and deletes all files that have been stored longer than your specified maximum duration. If a user uploads a file, but does not do the actual import soon enough, their data is deleted, and they would have to do the upload again. Here, your code has to handle the case that the file with the stored filename does not exist anymore (and may even be deleted while you are reading the file).
You probably want to limit your server to one file stored per user so that attackers can not fill your filesystem.
e) Small additional question : what kind of checks there are in Django about uploaded file? For example, how could I check that the file is at least a text-file? Should I do it?
You definitely want to set up some maximum file size for the file, as described e.g. here. You could limit the allowed file extensions, but that would only be a usability thing. Attackers could also give you garbage data with any accepted extension.
Keep in mind: If you only store the csv as text data that you load and parse everytime a certain view is accessed, this can be an easy way for attackers to exhaust your servers, giving them an easy DoS attack.
Overall, it depends on what guarantees you want to make, how many users you have and how trustworthy they are. If users might be malicious, you want to keep all possible kinds of data extraction and resource exhaustion attacks in mind. The filesystem will not scale out (at least not as easily as a database).
I know of a similar setup in a project where only a handful of priviliged users are allowed to upload stuff, and we can tolerate deletion of all temporary files on failure. Users will simply have to reupload their files. This works fine.
QUESTION
I need help uploading a file directly from an HTML form to an API. I've seen this being done for remote URLs, but I don't know how to do this for local files? I tried writing this, but its not working:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 09:58The request.files['file']
is an instance of a FileStorage class. refer to api, you cannot use with open(uploadmedia, 'rb') as file:
.
try using stream attribute :
QUESTION
I'm facing a weird behavior in my Java code using List.
The code is very simple, I have a List of Object called AccessRequest
which comes from a database and I'm using this first List to create a new one but with a filter to select only a few objects.
Here is the code :
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 09:28Your method getCommentsListProcessedManually
modifies the list you're passing. I believe you're operating under the assumption that passing the list as a parameter somehow creates a copy of the list, whereas what is actually happening is that a reference to the list is passed by value.
There are several ways to solve this, but the easiest is to simply create a copy of your input list at the start of your method:
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