We failed the last one hard. Loads of the students went down the main stairs rather than the fire escape and thus burned to death when the huge bottleneck occurred.
And so they had another one 2 weeks later, and because people were so jaded from the last they didn't even bother leaving their offices until the Fire Wardens bollucked them.
It was the Fire Warden's fault a bit though, as every Wednesday morning they test the alarm by buzzing it for N seconds, but you're not meant to leave as it's just a test. They had the drill at the exact same time, so lots of people also thought "oh it's just the test"
But I imagine as soon as I find something I can do in it, then I'll use it more and more for different things. I need that first thing that makes me fire it up every day.
Just answered a question and wanted to test my code against Ashwini's. There is a %timeit magic method which is just beautiful
In [103]: %timeit x[~np.in1d(x,y)]
10000 loops, best of 3: 35.3 µs per loop
In [104]: %timeit np.setdiff1d(x, y)
10000 loops, best of 3: 86.7 µs per loop
@mario23 Pick a project and do it. The best way to learn is by doing.*
but yes, I found that being in a project helps a lot; and I think it's more fun than doing a course, though you may find yourself doing things a bit awkwardly or missing things here and there
in any case, you can always come back and clean up
@Ffisegydd Thank you! I will try. But I feel like lacking something always like being thrown into wilderness @Jerry Exactly. That insecurity always demotivates me, like sometimes, make me to think why am I even doing this.
@Ffisegydd Sorry for not being clear. yes, Natural language processing. In our lab most work is in Perl and Shell script. But, I am feeling like a left-out fellow without knowing languages like Python or Java or C++, although I have studied(shallow knowledge) all these in College
@mario23 I guess that's how you learn. I don't mind first getting the 'main' way to do something and consequently learn tricks around or more elegant ways to do the same thing. I find that making something work as needed comes first, and performance/efficiency of the code shouldn't be too much of an issue since you know it's the first time you're doing something like that.
@mario Well I suppose your first thing would be to at least familiarise yourself with nltk.org as that is the de facto NLP package for Python AFAIK. Then maybe look for projects around it.
@Jerry Thank you mate! That is a good insight:) Is it possible to learn Python within a weeks time, since I want to , as @Ffisegydd mentioned and you may also agree, I want to get my hands in the REAL tasks.
If you already know the basics of programming (what a loop is, how if statements work) then you can learn enough Python to get by in a day. Within a week you could pick up pretty much all of the medium-level bits and bobs.
@JonClements I'm sorry if I offended you guys. I just want to reach a state where, given a task, I won't be shaking with diffidence whether this can be completed or not, within the absurd timeframe that project leaders say. IMHO, I think, being a master requires you to be spending every waking moment thinking in Python.
Those typically happen when a daemon thread wakes up at an unfortunate
moment, finds the world around it destroyed, and raises some
random exception *** while trying to report the exception in
__bootstrap_inner() below ***. Quite an explanation!
@RobertGrant I thought like that. But, chaps here are so humble and eager to help out guys like me, despite being so knowledgeable and talented programmers.
@mario23 oh, I haven't been able to learn much python yet, things keep coming my way and... yeah... programming isn't my main focus, but it's here and I keep it in the back of my mind
every newb has a certain fixed amount of newb credits with me... they do replenish, albeit slowly... but if you happen to use them all too fast you will not get more, ever :D
I learned programming from the books... for a long time I didn't have anyone to ask from, but when I could it made me better. If you do it right, you do ask but not too much :D
It's the final test, it's matching the ending full stop.
At the moment I'm using rstrip to remove any accidentally matched full stops. I don't mind doing this too much as I'm matching urls and they should never have an ending full stop, so I won't accidentally remove part of the url.
Still learning python so please excuse the lack of correct vocabular. I'm trying to test a simple web application (using webpy) that uses session data. The application is running as intended but I'd like to write an automated test. So far I'm failing miserable with everything that needs session data.
In the test I have this: resp = app.request("/page")
app is from the application and app = web.application(urls, globals())
/page "goes to" class Page(object) in there I define GET: def GET(self):
Email from tech support this morning: "so is your problem resolved?" Uh, no, because you didn't do anything.
This is more like grief counseling than troubleshooting. "Your admin rights aren't coming back, and the sooner you move past it, the better off you'll be"
(devil's advocate: "the Needs Code Sample reason ought to be used only for problems that ask 'why isn't my code working?', but this question is more like 'what do I need to do to my working program to get different output?', which is a slightly different category")
I'm willing to accept huge code samples, as long as it runs.
I'll take "ten thousand lines that copy-paste-run on the first try" over "five lines, but it has to read from proprietary_data.txt and access www.skeezyLookingSite.com and I've removed all the import statements for clarity"
I wish I was allowed to get my figures as wrong as the government... Osborne thought we'd be borrowing £37 billion this year, but ended up borrowing £91 billion