So you can write some horrible SQL query, full of joins and whatnot, as a view definition, then when someone does select * from my_view it will run that horrible query to populate the view and show you the results
Then you can do select * from my_view where bob=1, etc. So it can simplify the use of certain complex queries, as you can just access the query results as though you're querying a normal table
@poke (had to go tend to sick gf, sorry for delay) Maybe this will sound like me trying to move goalposts, but I do consider it an implementation detail. Perhaps it's an implementation detail in database theory, but it's incontrovertible to me that there is no natural ordering of e.g. {"book", "member", "loan_date", "return_date"}
@ZeroPiraeus If I define a table schema with the attributes (Name, Type, Salad), and I get a result tuple ("Foo", "Bar", "Cabbage"), then the order does matter.
Seriously, I'm prepared to drop it, but if you keep coming back ... I have database theory people telling me that relations are definitely unordered tuples (which is a contradiction in terms IMO), and also that they're definitely ordered and that's definitely fundamental to their nature.
@poke Of course it isn't pure theory! I could easily work things so that you get the result {"Name": "Foo", "Type": "Bar", "Salad": "Cabbage"}. That's a straight-up implementation choice.
@Zero I disagree. At some point you have to stop calling something “implementation” otherwise you will have to start with algebra als your implementation detail.
Ah, so now we're redefining the word "order" as well as "tuple", are we? Stands to reason – nowhere in real life does the word "relation" mean anything close to what database theorists say it does ;-P
"We're reducing spending on road maintenance. Incidentally, I now have shares in every car company that makes an SUV, because you're going to need one."
It's just the phrase, "Reduce Spending" rings patriotic and true in American ears. Even if meaningfully identical phrases like "Cut Social Security" are spooky and terrifying.
You shouldn't build tuples (or strings) in a loop by concatenation: it's very inefficient. They're immutable so a new tuple (or string) has to get created every time you add a new member.
@AnttiHaapala I think the point of comparing things to GDP is that it lets you scale comparisons to other countries. Like, if you were to compare America and Australia's health care spending it has to be a percent of something.
Nah. What doesn't say anything is what we had before GDP... which was nothing. The concept was invented in response to the great depression because it seemed like we were just walking around in the dark.
Maybe GDP isn't sufficiently *nuanced* for modern economics (I have no idea), but it's not without value.
People talk about it on the radio, so I assume it's a big deal.
"Non-market transactions – GDP excludes activities that are not provided through the market, such as household production and volunteer or unpaid services."
Underground economy– official GDP estimates may not take into account the underground economy, in which transactions contributing to production, such as illegal trade and tax-avoiding activities, are unreported, causing GDP to be underestimated
Quality improvements and inclusion of new products– by not adjusting for quality improvements and new products, GDP understates true economic growth. For instance, although computers today are less expensive and more powerful than computers from the past, GDP treats them as the same products by only accounting for the monetary value
@PM2Ring which is why I suggested a long time ago that maybe OE should switch schools :D
"GDP counts work that produces no net change or that results from repairing harm. For example, rebuilding after a natural disaster or war may produce a considerable amount of economic activity and thus boost GDP."
^ this, one sure way to boost gdp growth is to start some wars :D
I just do not understand why do you take sicp so literally there? :d
for python
"Before SICP, the introductory courses were almost always filled with learning the details of some programming language, while SICP focuses on finding general patterns from specific problems and building software tools that embody each pattern"
yet you are programming scheme in every programming language :D
in my opinion what goes within 1 function is its own problem...
@overexchange Ok. I guess there's at the theoretical level there's some logic to learning about immutable sequences (tuples & strings) before you start playing with lists. But practically speaking, Python without lists is somewhat inefficient. And as I said earlier today:
@overexchange: antti's 2nd example is doing what I said earlier: building a list & then converting it to a tuple. His previous example is better, but it uses a generator expression, which you might not have learned about yet.
@QuestionC As I said earlier, there's some logic to learning tuples before lists - lists can do unexpected things, due to mutability. So it's harder to shoot yourself in the foot if you're restricted to tuples. :)
Those GIFs show the engines after they've already made a bunch of stuff, but their starting configs are much simpler, eg this is one way to stabilize the basic switch engine with a single block to create a glider-producing switch engine:
@AnttiHaapala In this code why I do not require nonlocal keyword
def map_tuple_recursive(func, tup):
"""Applies func to each element of tup and returns a new tuple.
>>> a = (1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> func = lambda x: x * x
>>> map_tuple(func, a)
(1, 4, 9, 16)
"""
length = len(tup)
def new_tuple(count):
if count == length:
return ()
else:
return (func(tup[count]), ) + new_tuple(count + 1)
return new_tuple(0)
I'm not an expert on Life theory, but I've spent a fair bit of time building fancy patterns from components that other people have discovered / invented.
@overexchange Generally speaking, you only need nonlocal if you are assigning to the name in the inner context. You don't need it if you're just accessing
>>> def min_element(tup):
""" Returns the minimum element in tup.
>>> a = (1, 2, 3, 2, 1)
>>> min_element(a)
1
"""
length = len(tup)
def find_min(count):
if count == length:
return min
else:
min = tup[count] if min > tup[count] else min
return min
if length > 0:
min = tup[0]
return find_min(1)
else:
return None
The difference between your 7 hours ago code and your five minutes ago code is, you need nonlocal min because you're doing min = in the inner context; and you don't need nonlocal length because you're not doing length = in the inner context.
If you assign to a variable, it is considered local to the scope. Scopes are established before running the function. So when you then try to return min, you haven't assigned a value to that local variable yet.
By declaring nonlocal or global, you tell it that even though you're assigning in this scope, it's actually defined higher up.
@XavierCombelle am working on recursion whenever I get chance because before I get into tree and graph data models or complex game algo that work on recursion I need to be comfortable
@overexchange: Also, don't use min as a variable name: it's the name of a built-in function, so using it as a variable name "shadows" the function: it makes the min() function inaccessible in that scope. And it's confusing (and annoying) to anyone else reading your code.
@Ajoy OK - I'm "listening" (i.e. watching). What's the problem you have? When you say format - do you mean you have to print them prettily, or in your code?
@overexchange Whoever wrote the tutorial you're following must be confused. When you take the cartesian product of two sequences each with length 2, the result should be four items long, not eight.
They're making the exercise a lot more complicated by requiring both (1,4) and (4,1)
#Otherwise, you could do it in three lines.
for x_item in X:
for y_item in Y:
yield (x_item, y_item)
@overexchange Sorry, I haven't been following it closely, and it's getting very late here. But my first advice: Avoid recursion when simple looping can do the job. Use recursion when it's appropriate to the problem domain, like traversing a recursively-defined structure, eg a tree. Some languages encourage use of recursion, but Python isn't such a language.
@overexchange so try with a tree or data graph model or game algo or whatever fit well with recursion but not a toy project (a good try is to insert/find a value in a binary search tree) that will certainly help you understand better than find the min of a tuple
@XavierCombelle @BhargavRao I might not have been clear before. But what troubles me is whether I should leave the code as it is or add spaces to align the colons!
I guess it's ok to use recursion on things like finding the min of a tuple, as a learning exercise in recursion. But it can also be confusing. And it could teach you bad habits in practical Python programming. :)
@Ajoy I mean stop repeat yourself in the code: you could replace it by something like `{k:user.__dict__[key] for key in "id email fullname phone img is_active".split()}
More than one space around an assignment (or other) operator to align it with another.
Yes:
x = 1
y = 2
long_variable = 3
No:
x = 1
y = 2
long_variable = 3
@Ajoy I'm going to have to bow out. I don't think there's a rule. A certain Python Ninja left it formatted with no alignment in a PEP-8 answer, so... stackoverflow.com/a/24247706/838992
Besides, others more familiar with PEP-8 than I are now in the mix...
> If you do not award your bounty within 7 days (plus the grace period), the highest voted answer created after the bounty started with a minimum score of 2 will be awarded half the bounty amount.
That's great! I have only recently started following guidelines. Most of my code conforms to the general guidelines, but this was the tricky part. I was meaning to post a question on SO, but thought I'd ask here first. I have my answer now.
No matter how odd it might look, no extra spaces for alignment. Thanks @AdamSmith, @davidism, @JRichardSnape
Umm.... can't get my memorable word reset on the phone without - guess what - identifying by providing two letters from the memorable word... this wasn't amusing to start with - even less so now...
considering manually calculating the spline (instead of numpy's C library doing it) is too slow. Yet without the ability to get the numbers I can't do anything with it.
I suspect that it didn't, and that the question changes every time just so it's hard to enumerate all possibilities this way. It probably went from "third and fifth letter" to e.g. "second and eighth letter" long ago.
@Kevin Close voting - and especially the downvotes that come with it - often happens to new people. Those don't make mistakes on purpose, but by accident.
@Kevin personally != everyone :P - and just that is my reservation
With posting links here (or on the meta) by anyone but the question owner
That happened dozens of times to me: my question was getting downvotes for "not sure what is being asked here". And then I go to the SO meta site -as I'm not english expressing myself is quiet difficult at times- to ask for advice how to improve the question, only to get many more downvotes.
SO is very very unforgiving to those who have difficulty with the english language, and for whom reading a manual is actually a literal nightmare (all words start jumbling around if I read etc).