Sso Names Ideas

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Orencio Suhag

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Aug 3, 2024, 11:10:12 AM8/3/24
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Thank you for the input. If I understand you correctly this idea has been brought up before and is also something you would have found useful in a project of yours a while back? And it is probably easier to implement now that CPython uses a PEG parser?

AFAIK there is no keyword that can ever directly follow ., so I think it should not be too hard to argue that . would force the following word to always be parsed as an identifier rather than a keyword.

For cases where there is no . before the identifier name, such as class attribute annotations as mentioned above, but also kwarg names at call sites (e.g. when constructing a dataclass), perhaps it could be allowed to use a leading . to likewise parse the following word as an identifier.

From personal experiences, it is close-to the only one I ever encountered. This is also supported by a quick count in the stdlib. The most common usage as an identifier is assert_, next is from_, followed by class_. The testsuite also uses import_ a lot.

DC01, DC02, EX01, FS01, SQL01, etc. If a server provides a function other than basic we use a little more descriptive name. For instance we have a customer that runs a POS app called DDI. So the server name is DDI01.

Abbreviated name of city (no more than four characters) - two letter state - then we append whether it is physical or virtual, the current OS (two-character), then two character function - DC in this case, then two digit iteration (in the event there is more than one).

Ice cream flavors, popular sports players, star trek season names, Egyptian gods, Roman gods, star wars character names, Lord of the Rings names, kitchen appliances, various food spices, and tons more categories

I struggle with naming things in a manner that functions for humans. as a hacker/programmer I have no trouble naming devices, groups, rooms etc... but when it comes to integration into the voice side, I (not really me, my GF) get frustrated with ID'ing a device or group and repeat ourselves as we argue with Alexa about a device existence.
Case in point:
I have two bathrooms. in HE I call the rooms Main Bathroom and Master Bathroom. Within that, I have a group of 4 light bulbs around the mirror called 'Main Bathroom Lights'. I have an outlet for the ceiling fan. This outlet is in it's own group called 'Main Bathroom Fan'.
I have a group called Main Bathroom which consists of the 2 previous groups, the lights and the fan.
If, at say 5am, I walk into the bathroom I get blinded by lights going on and say 'Alexa, turn off the bathroom lights'.
We get into a frustrating talk about there being more than one thing named Bathroom...' - after 3-4 back and forth's, I get the urge to drop the Echo Dot into the toilet... the GF shouts 'Alexa, turn the Master Bathroom Lights to 10% for f**ks sake'. (she's a morning person)

All joking aside, I've stumbled on ways in the past to overcome some of the weird dynamics with Alexa naming - Changing Bathroom to Bath Room for example, has impact. How are others handling this? Specific Alexa's having specific commands? Less Alexa enabled devices from HE?
Better rules to handle exceptions previously not thought about? Please take some time and write a useful explanation of your implementation!

(2) I do step 1 but I make sure there is an echo device in the physical room and in the alexa group. If you're in the master bathroom, and the lights are in the group master bathroom, and there is an echo in that group, you can say "Alexa, dim lights 50%" and she will figure out to dim the lights in the same Alexa group.

The Alexa in a group allows for an override sort of thing - THAT is clearly necessary to take advantage of and to solve this! In my defense, when I used Alexa groups they conflicted and confused things 2 years ago so I opted for just HE groups and I never looked back.

One issue I ran into last year when my mom visited. She likes to get up at 4. So she went down to the sunroom and told the Alexa in the room "turn on the lights." I neglected to include the sun room echo in the Alexa sun room group, so rather than Alexa turning on the lights in the sun room, she turned on ALL the lights. At 4am. So make sure all your echos are assigned to a group in the Alexa app... even if you need to create a dymmy group for unassigned echos.

It has been my experience that Alexa routine triggers are evaluated after she tries to make sense of what you are asking. If I create a routine to open the garage door by saying those words, I often get the response "Garage back door doesn't support that" (garage back door is a contact device known to her).

If I try to get cute and say "Open the pod bay door please Hal", she responds with her "I can't do that, Dave. I'm not Hal and we're not in space" even though those specific words are a routine trigger.

The only way to achieve success is to use words to trigger a routine that can't possibly be mistaken for anything else. To open my garage door, I use something along the lines of "Mambo jump feel in banana patch" and she opens it right up.

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