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    Welcome!

    This is the community forum for my apps Pythonista and Editorial.

    For individual support questions, you can also send an email. If you have a very short question or just want to say hello โ€” I'm @olemoritz on Twitter.


    Time to release a new version to App Store

    Pythonista
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    • ?
      A Former User @Matteo last edited by

      @Matteo Like this? https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/stable/releasenotes/3.4.0.html#append-images-to-gif

      And for siri, we can get weather from different resources. Or we just roll the dice to make a decision.

      cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • cvp
        cvp @Guest last edited by

        @lpl said:

        for siri, we can get weather from different resources

        Sorry, I don't understand what you want to do with Siri

        ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • ?
          A Former User @cvp last edited by

          @cvp
          -- Hi, siri how is the weather?
          -- Here are some reports from different resources.

          -- Hi, siri. Should I go with her?
          -- I roll the dice. The answer is yes.

          cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • cvp
            cvp @Guest last edited by cvp

            @lpl I think you can do that with the beta version, isn'it?

            You have even Examples/Roll Dice.py

            ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • ?
              A Former User @cvp last edited by

              @cvp yeah. I'm using this.

              cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • cvp
                cvp @Guest last edited by cvp

                @lpl you can use requests to get internet info in Shortcuts, even in background mode

                #!python3
                import requests
                import shortcuts
                def main():
                	if shortcuts.is_shortcut():
                		#shortcuts.set_tap_action(shortcuts.ACTION_SHOW_RESULTS)
                		url = 'https://www.google.be/search?client=safari&q=meteo+local'
                		r = requests.get(url)
                		html = r.text
                		shortcuts.set_html_output(html)
                if __name__ == '__main__':
                	main()
                
                ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ?
                  A Former User @cvp last edited by A Former User

                  @cvp Sorry, I don't like shortcuts and it is hard to debug on shortcuts. But I think I'll try this, that sounds interesting. Do you have a documentation about this module?

                  cvp 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • cvp
                    cvp @Guest last edited by cvp

                    @lpl It is a standard module of the beta version.
                    Thus you find documentation by the normal way:

                    • select the word shortcuts in your edited script, choose help, as usual.
                    • Or the ? In the console part, then "Whatโ€™s New in Pythonista"

                    Edit: shortcuts is not the Apple app Shortcuts but a module added by omz in the beta, thus is not difficult to debug. In background mode = without running the full Pythonista app.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • cvp
                      cvp @Guest last edited by cvp

                      @lpl you can even run a Pythonista script with Siri without using the new Shortcuts module:

                      #!python3
                      import ast
                      import requests
                      #import shortcuts
                      city = 'Waterloo,be'
                      url = "http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather?q="+city+"&APPID=beb97c1ce62559bba4e81e28de8be095"
                      r = requests.get(url)
                      dict = ast.literal_eval(r.text)
                      for k in dict:
                      	print(k,dict[k])
                      

                      Edit: you can run and thus test this script in Pythonista normal mode, then configure as a Siri shortcut linked to a sentence, like "get my weather"...

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • ccc
                        ccc last edited by ccc

                        for key, value in requests.get(url).json().items():
                            print(key, value)  # or
                            print(f"{key}: {value}")
                        
                        cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • cvp
                          cvp @ccc last edited by cvp

                          @ccc I knew there was something better ๐Ÿ˜€

                          Edit: print(fโ€{key}: {value}โ€) Refused

                          Edit: invalid double quote

                          	print(f"{key} : {value}")
                          
                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • ccc
                            ccc last edited by

                            Thx. Fixed inline above.

                            ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • ?
                              A Former User @ccc last edited by

                              @cvp try f-str
                              f"http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather?q={city}&APPID=beb97c1ce62559bba4e81e28de8be095"

                              cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • ccc
                                ccc last edited by

                                import location, requests, speech
                                
                                loc = location.reverse_geocode(location.get_location())
                                city_country = "{City},{Country}".format(**loc[0])
                                print(f"Weather in {city_country}:")
                                url = "http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather?APPID=beb97c1ce62559bba4e81e28de8be095&q="
                                weather = requests.get(url + city_country).json()
                                for key, value in weather.items():
                                    print(f"{key}: {value}")
                                speech.say(f"It is currently {weather['weather'][0]['main']} in {city_country}.")
                                
                                cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                • cvp
                                  cvp @ccc last edited by

                                  @ccc if you want to use Siri shortcut, you can, instead of speech, use

                                  shortcuts.set_spoken_output(f"It is currently {weather['weather'][0]['main']} in {city_country}.")
                                  
                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • cvp
                                    cvp @Guest last edited by cvp

                                    @lpl yes, for me this is ok and better than my ..."+city+"... thanks for advice

                                    city = 'Waterloo,be'
                                    url = f"http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather?q={city}&APPID=beb97c1ce62559bba4e81e28de8be095"
                                    
                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • Matteo
                                      Matteo last edited by ccc

                                      @lpl ok yes you are right sometimes it is not possible to do something with current versions of some libs in Pythonista, the only thing I can suggest is to try searching alternatives in Python world, you should search for some pure-python libs that can help you about your specific task: trust me, in Python world someone thinks something, and it already exists at 99,999% (python is so famous...;-))

                                      @cvp @ccc and many others, thanks that you continue to share useful info and propose code with which many other users can experiment!

                                      Bye bye

                                      ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • ?
                                        A Former User @Matteo last edited by

                                        @Matteo But the performance is terrible. Try lxml.

                                        Matteo 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • Matteo
                                          Matteo @Guest last edited by

                                          @lpl Hi, sorry but I don't know lxml library, never used it. But I'm agree with you that a c compiled library is faster than a pure python equivalent code. However I'm not completely agree with you about "terrible" performance. In my opinion I would consider with "terrible" performance a pure python code that runs for some hours instead of some seconds of an equivalent c compiled code. Which kind of test have you performed to state that the performance is terrible?

                                          In other words, with practical example: let's suppose that an algorithm has time complexity O(n^3) and you write a pure python code and the equivalent C code that both execute the algorithm. Well, based on the input (that, simplifying, can be 10kbyte, 100 kbyte, 1000 kbyte and so on), how much time the execution of the pure python code costs compared to the C one if both are executed on same machine and in the same conditions (machine with same X% free RAM and CPU power)?

                                          Thank you
                                          Bye

                                          ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • ccc
                                            ccc last edited by

                                            @lpl What exactly are you trying to do in Pythonista where XML performance is a showstopper? It would be good to have real world use cases to use in trying to convince Apple to be more reasonable in its app reviews.

                                            ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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