a=[1,2,2,3,3,3,4,4,4,4,5,5,5,5,5,6,6,6,6,6,6]
b = []
c = []
for elem in a:
if b.count(elem) == 0:
b.append(elem)
elif a.count(elem) > 1:
c.append(elem)
d = b + c
print(d)
But my main concern is that I'm not able to solve these problems fast, it takes me 1hour+ to just get a brute forced solution working. How am I gonna get a good job man fml
I doubt anyone's getting an internship at Google as a freshman. Don't worry about how big the company is, worry about if you feel comfortable with the people.
I'm using Ctypes to make certain variables compatible with a shared library, and I need to make an unsigned char * array equal to the size of another unsigned char *array that has been filled with bitmap data
The function needs to take in a bunch of parameters. one of which is an unsigned char* array filled with raw bitmap data that the program has read. This has a certain size.
Another parameter should be ANOTHER unsigned char* array
of the same size as the other one
but empty, as it will be written to in the function
It's an image filtering function. Using BMP files.
Python 3.5.0 (v3.5.0:374f501f4567, Sep 13 2015, 02:27:37) [MSC v.1900 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32
Type "copyright", "credits" or "license()" for more information.
>>> import asyncio
>>> eval('asyncio.async')
<function async at 0x0000006850A831E0>
public void AddDefaultSettings(string controlPath)
{
Control currentControl = (Control)Page.LoadControl(controlPath);
settings.Controls.Add(currentControl);
}
public Control AddCustomSettings(string controlPath)
{
Control currentControl = (Control)Page.LoadControl(controlPath);
settings.Controls.Add(currentControl);
return currentControl;
}
The problem with Moore's Law is that whenever I read something like this from more than three years ago, I can't figure out how much of a big deal "1.2 GB" was at the time unless I bust out a slide rule.
Are we talking "only early adopters with a lot of disposable income have this", or "only IBM has it, and only one, deep in their secret underground research facility"?
Or possibly "reasonably priced to consumers but come on it's a toaster so in this context it's still ridiculous"
> During the mid-1990s the typical hard disk drive for a PC had a capacity of about 1 gigabyte.
In that case I'll grade it as "affordable but not an expense you'd want to make regularly"
I just got nerd-sniped by this question in the transcript.
from itertools import groupby
a = [(1,2),(1,3),(9,1),(3,4),(3,1),(3,10)]
b = [list(g) for _,g in groupby(sorted(a), lambda t: t[0])]
print [u for v in sorted(b, key=lambda t: -len(t)) for u in v]
Although I'm tempted to do that last line like this (but it's not so efficient, IIRC):
Being nerd-snipped means getting caught by a question that's relatively easy to explain / understand but that doesn't have an immediately obvious answer. You generally end up spending more time than you intend / expect. And the point isn't to come up with a nice answer, but with one that shows off your cleverness, a bit like code golfing.
@AleksandrKovalev BTW, that's the semi-readable version: the unreadable version's one line. :)
I guess I'm still recovering from writing this answer. Mind you, I don't condone overly-condensed cryptic code, as I explained in this Meta SO answer... but it's fun to do from time to time. :)
Trying to decide whether Comparing two lists item by item rejected my answer because his lists contain unhashable items, or because he's secretly getting us to do his homework and isn't allowed to use anything "fancy"
I feel like if it was the former, he'd be more forthcoming about why he can't use sets
"intersection" is a long word so I did & instead :-)
Boy I sure hope they do the same thing.
"But using & is less efficient because you have to convert b into a set, unlike with insersection", you say? This is true, but it doesn't impact the complexity* so I am content to leave it.
Time to read some more Discworld. I'm reading them all, in order. I'm pretty sure this is my 3rd Discworld "marathon", reading nothing but Discworld books, but I originally read most of them as they were published, and some of them I've read 4 or 5 times.
75% through The Long War and the many disparate plotlines haven't merged into anything coherent. I have a feeling that all the conclusions are going to be saved for the next book.
At this point I just want to get through it so I can move onto something else. An attitude which is unfortunately not conducive to fast reading.
Next up is Catcher in the Rye. I look forward to determining whether it's a classic because it's actually good, or because everyone says it's a classic and if you don't say it's a classic then you get kicked out of the literature expertise club.
The Long Earth is a very interesting premise and on an abstract level I'd like to learn more, but without clear conflict I don't get a burning desire to read "just one more chapter" until the sun comes up.
I am just a little spoiled on the plot of Catcher because many months ago I read this short adaptation where the main character is replaced with Batman's Robin.
All I clearly remember is the kid asking to try on Robin's mask, which I'm guessing is a rather liberal interpretation unless the actual main character also wears a mask.
Is there a way with WXPython to pass an event to the original handler after you've processed it? For example, I'm binding to the on-click of a grid, but it doesn't select the row and fire my event, it only fires my event.
I can just call .SelectRow(event.Row) (which is what I'm doing now), but I'd love to know if there's a better way.
In most event-based frameworks I've used, you indicate whether you want the event to continue bubbling up by returning a particular value from your callback. I wonder if WXPython is like that.
Try returning True from your function, and if that doesn't work try returning False, and if that doesn't work never mind.
Beware flattening to the point where you can no longer unambiguously restore it to its original state, if restoring to original state is something you need to do.
please is it possible to use django-allauth and a custom Model that links to django's User Model, and still have django-allauth do it's thing of users having to confirm their emails or having social integration without wrecking the original source code of allauth?
i've seen so many answers but they are not quite what i want, they mostly talk about using groups and permissions but i want to have the extra details stored in another database table because i have different types of users, then the login details can be stored and managed by django and allauth
Having to do a lot of rearrangement of data like that may be an indication that your design needs work at a higher level, although not always.
user559633
3:43 PM
@corvid do whatever is fast enough and does the work correctly. you might be trading off difficulty for transformation/consumption when it comes time to put those values back in the original object/store though
Reminds me of a program I wrote last week where I had an aspects_by_name dict and a names_by_aspect dict. I really should have made a Bijection class instead of duplicating data like that.
For me I was working on a solar system emulator - everything was clustered in large tree like data structures to keep track of what object revolves around which object. Becoming quickly unmanageable.
In the end I gave all object an "id" - and only used a tree with ids, while keeping the data seperatelly in a flat structure.
user559633
@DSM Awesome! I bought nerdcop.com and started working out the overarching episode guide/list and will be soliciting contributors next week -- work will be done out of this repo github.com/nerdcop/nerdcop
"sort of" linear. It's like each step can have a "parent" step. For example, making soup. There will be a step for cutting vegetables that will have steps. There might be steps for cutting an individual vegetable. Should be arbitrarily nested, but able to be iterated linearly.
In mongo's defense, it does make tree-like structures a bit more manageable. given that they don't have any nested arrays. Okay I take that back mongo is a dumb
btw how do you guys handle long-long lists of "constructor properties"? - when you have like 20 properties that need to be known to fully construct something?
I recognize that there are situations where this isn't possible though. Ex. You want to model a planet and you need mass, position,velocity, rotational velocity, magnetic field strength, list of satellites...
@QuestionC An orbit yes, but a planet has much more than only an orbit: mass, radius, gravitational parameter --which has much higher accuracy than the mass or universal gravitational constant--, Jvalues-map (accounts for oblateness etc), rotational velocity, Sphere or influence, atmospheric altitude, max surface altitude. And then I didn't even model everything yet.