Greetings, @Toren. This is a chat room, not a forum. And Stack Overflow is a Question and Answer site, not a forum. But anyway... Normal dicts in Python are ordered based on the hash of the keys, so they aren't sortable. But if you convert the dict to a list then you can sort the list. Eg,
d = {
('a','b','c'): (1,2,3,4),
('a','d','b'): (1,2,3,5),
('g','d','b'): (1,1,1,8),
}
a = [(k, v) for k,v in d.items()]
a.sort(key=lambda (k,v): v[-1])
print a
i wanna find the postion of a string in a bigger string, i could use find, but one of the characters of the smaller string alternates, so its not a exact match.. is there still something "out of the box'
Unfortunately there cannot be a library for every single individual's smallest use-case built into the stdlib.
regex is an incredibly powerful and generic tool that can solve a multitude of problems. By learning to use it you will be getting a very powerful tool for the future.
any body please help in this Error: GtkWarning: IA__gtk_table_attach: assertion 'child->parent == NULL' failed self.table.attach_defaults(self.slider, 1, 2, 5, 6)
@Anes You can't add the exact same widget (self.slider) more than once.
I'm not sure what you're trying to do, but get rid of caja_principal.pack_start(self.slider, False, False, 0). You do need to call show on the slider widget, but there's no need to pack it into caja_principal since you're putting it into your table.
class Test_empty_tree_constructor(unittest.TestCase): def test(self): self.assertEqual(type(Tree()), None) does that make any sense to you guys? just checking if empty constructor returns nothing? I mean it should not create any object
@M_T No, such a test doesn’t make sense to me. Unless you overwrote __new__, but the initializer __init__ will always end up with an instance of the object (since it doesn’t actually return anything), and only an exception can cancel that (in which case you should test for an exception)
When i run python unit_tests_1.py and the class tested ( eg. Test_non_empty_tree_constructor) is passed why don't i get any info about that? python unit_tests_1.py E. ====================================================================== ERROR: test (__main__.Test_empty_tree_constructor) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Traceback (most recent call last): File "unit_tests_1.py", line 13, in test self.assertEqual(type(Tree()), None) TypeError: __init__() missing 1 required positional argument: 'new_value'
@PM2Ring For the purpose of “constructor tasks” (i.e. things you would usually do in a constructor), it’s better to see __init__ as the “constructor” though since you shouldn’t usually override __new__.
Hmmm. I agree that it's really desirable (or necessary) to override __new__. OTOH, thinking of __init__ as the constructor is a bit misleading, but I guess it's a reasonable approximation for people coming from other OOP languages.
@M_T That means that your class inherits its __new__ method from its parent class. Which is probably the __new__ method from the object class. That's generally adequate.
It doesn't really seem like you need a test at all here. You don't want the user to be able to create a Tree by passing it zero arguments; and they can't, because a TypeError occurs if they try.
Do you also want to create tests that ensure that the user can't create a Tree by passing it ten arguments? How about 11? 12? 13? 14? 15? 16? 17?
That said, if you're dead-set on testing that the initializer rejects an empty argument list, how about: self.assertRaises(TypeError, Tree)
@Kevin I hope so. I feel for the LIGO people. It must be unpleasant to invest so much time (& money) on a detector that hasn't been able to detect anything.
user559633
Of course there's gravitational waves -- how else would the Silver Surfer be able to shred in space?
There are some machines that we should be happy don't detect anything. The "how many times has the universe been catastrophically split in half by uncertainty paradoxes" indicator from Rick & Morty. Seismographs. The "to what extent has the timeline been altered by time travelers with nefarious agendas" detector from Steins: Gate.
We've had reasonably good indirect evidence of gravitational waves for decades, in the form of the decay of the orbital period of a pair of neutron stars: PSR B1913+16. But some direct evidence would be nice. Of course, there might be some other explanation for the orbital period decay, but loss of energy via gravitational radiation is the simplest explanation, and the measurements are a good match to what General Relativity predicts.
@Kevin If you like that theme, you should read Greg Egan's stories that feature the Qusp
Just before I started my current Discworld marathon I re-read all my Greg Egan books, plus a bunch of stuff I found online. Quantum uncertainty is a key element in his novel Quarantine, which has an interesting cyberpunk meets film noir feel to it.
There's a lot of dark humour in Egan's work. Eg, there's a scene in Quarantine where the detective protagonist is interviewing the sister of a missing woman that he's trying to track down. In the the background, her kids are playing the latest video game craze: Tibetan Zen Demons on Acid vs Haitian Voodoo Gods on Ice.
@PM2Ring Reminds me of Jason Shiga's Meanwhile, where the main character causes uncertain events to collapse the way he wants them to by employing a machine that kills all intelligent life in the universe if its detector doesn't meet some condition.
Then by the many worlds theory and the anthropic principle, the only universes containing intelligent life are the ones where the condition was met.
"destroy the universe unless this coin flip results in heads" -> in all observable universes, the coin flip results in heads
Eventually he opens an ice cream shop and uses it to improve his profit margins. "destroy the universe unless atoms happen to assemble themselves out of the vacuum in the form of an ice cream cone in my hand" is a valid condition for the machine.
One of the oldest "destroy the universe" stories I read was a short story about a machine that took you to alternate universes. The protagonist couldn't figure out why he was unable to return to his home universe. It turned out that the machine propelled itself to an alternative world by annihilating the one it was currently in.
From certain moral standpoints, destroying all intelligent life is a morally superior method of forcing favorable waveform collapses than ordinary quantum suicide. "I'll kill myself if this coin results in tails" means that in half of all universes, your children become orphans and your mother cries etc etc. By using a universe destroyer, nobody becomes an orphan.
Current working title is IdWithLabelViewModel which describes pretty well what it is. It is a view model that contains two properties: Id and Label. It is basically only for giving an id a label.
Well, I mean, I showed you how to move files using Python code. If Python code isn't suitable for your problem, you're going to have a hard time finding help in the Python room.
what is the correct english phrase for "establishing my future at some place" or "this was my investment into my future at some place"? (or something like that... :P)
Could someone point me towards some reading material that would help me begin to understand what I'd need to do in a django application to track people that buy a product on my site, where they are when they buy it. As well as people who access the site but don't buy something
It works on HTTP requests which are pretty independent of framework of choice. What's probably more important is the database you're using. Django uses Postgres, right?
You want to track people that buy things, and you also want to track people that don't buy things. It's funny to me that you'd post your question like that. "How do I track people wearing hats, and also people that don't wear hats?" would have been equivalent.
(more charitable interpretation: he's saying "I want to track people that buy things. I also want to track people that don't buy things, but I recognize that tracking will necessarily be less precise for them since I don't have their payment information, and they are a secondary concern to me anyway so I'll still be mostly satisfied even if I can only track the first category")
@Kevin, I'd like metric related to the two though. Like how long they were on the page. If someone accesses the website and clicks away in 2 seconds they haven't digested enough to really formulate an opinion like "I don't want to buy this thing"
Hi, i learn something about webscraping, but when i use requests.get it works good but on one site it does not work and raise_for_status prints error 404, not found for url. Anyone knows why on this site it does not work?
@corvid If I’m collecting all good questions and all bad questions on SO, I am collecting all questions, but I still have them in separate sets. And that separateion makes it useful; not the summed result.
> You may ask your question without a preamble. > For example, you do not need to say “anyone here know Django?” before asking a question about Django. Even if you do, the Django experts in the room might not step forward until hearing the actual question. They may not wish to commit themselves to help until they know how much effort it will entail.
I guess the downvotes would fall under "does not show research effort", since the documentation on percent-style formatting tells you exactly how to escape percent signs.
From printf-style String Formatting: "The conversion types are: [...] % - No argument is converted, results in a '%' character in the result."
> Note: The formatting operations described here exhibit a variety of quirks that lead to a number of common errors (such as failing to display tuples and dictionaries correctly). Using the newer str.format() interface helps avoid these errors, and also provides a generally more powerful, flexible and extensible approach to formatting text.
Pretty damning that the documentation for printf-style formatting basically says it's inferior to format. :-)
Just got an email from a headhunter/recruiter with the following at the top:
> One of my friends has put together an interesting ranking of Stack Overflow users based on quality, not just quantity of their answers, using the Elo rating system and the Stack Overflow public API. Your profile comes out as one of the top rated answerers globally (given your reputation this may not come as a complete surprise, but it’s worth noting your rating ranks you significantly higher than your reputation!).
Jeeze, if I knew that I could get job offers for having a good rep/answer ratio, I'd spend more time bugging clueless users to give me an accept already.
The only downside to str.format I know if is that style of formatting requires a really OO approach to things, but that's just a requisite, and it's fulfilled so who cares?
@GauthamSK There isn't a big difference in syntax between the two versions. For beginners, the larger problem is that some functions got renamed (ex. raw_input became input, and 2.7's original input function was removed entirely), and some modules got renamed (ex. Tkinter became tkinter).
For someone with less than, say, two weeks of experience, they're not going to be able to copy code from a 2.7 tutorial and paste it into a 3.X environment and get it to run. Expect many ImportErrors and NameErrors and AttributeErrors.
But after the initial growing pains, it's pretty easy to convert between the two. "why isn't my program working? Oh yeah, it's because reduce got moved from the built-in module to functools. I'll add an import statement and it will work"
@poke yeah I always reply. Depending on the style of the recruiter it's either "Please take me off your mailing list immediately" or something more polite.
This guy actually mentioned a few things in the email that are personal to me, so he must have taken at least 20 seconds to read up and type them in, thus putting him significantly ahead of a lot of other recruiters.
I wonder what the ratio is between "interviewers impressed by one's high reputation" and "interviewers turned off by the fact that you spent so much time on SO instead of doing something productive"
This is probably a silly question, but if you have a regex like (?:\r|\n|\r\n|\n\r)+, and you have a string like Question?\n\r, will it match from the \n\r or the \n and \r separately?
@corvid Parsers will always use the first matching thing first; and if they can match the full word while doing that, then yes, that’s what’s happening.
The alternative would be to backtrace although you already have a match to figure out whether you get a “better” match or not.
I.e. that would always test every possible combination.
Leading to non-terminating programs for infinite combinations.
In language parsing, you usually optimize your grammar so you find common prefixes. So a ab|ac would be changed to a(b|c) so there is only a single path to go for the a.
>>> tests= ['''str(var).lower()''', """'true' if var else 'false'""", '''('false', 'true')[var]''', '''"ftarlusee"[var::2]''']
>>> for t in tests:
print(t)
timeit.timeit(t, setup='var=True', number=10**7)
str(var).lower()
2.0251760863469173
'true' if var else 'false'
0.1957775932758068
('false', 'true')[var]
0.2893688383524591
"ftarlusee"[var::2]
1.0433897286171714
I have to admit: I’m a bit surprised that the last one is that good.
Morning. I am trying to write a client(python) which keeps an open connection with server. So planning to go web socket route(or if change my mind, go to autobahn). My server is nodejs. Do i need to use web socket there too or can i work around without doing too much.
Note that answer.lower() does nothing to answer. It returns a brand new string with some characters changed. You didn't assign it to anything, so it just gets discarded.
@davidism I’m just a bit hesitant to delete a question that gathered 9 upvotes, 4 stars, and an answer with 12 upvotes. Apparently it did help other people too, so leaving it there is likely more valuable that deleting it.
A question being closed does not imply it having to be deleted too imo.
@DSM for the ones I've been focusing on, it was a lot of opinion based stuff about "which framework is better" that was either wrong, outdated, or just opinion
the one poke pointed out probably should just be edited, now that you point it out
If I use a file open and a read in a function call anonymously, can I be confident that it'll a) be GC'd, and b) be closed? i.e. func(open('fizzy.file', 'r').read())
Actually I don't really care about the GC, just the closing.
>>>> for i in range(100000): b=open("defs.hh").read()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
IOError: [Errno 24] Too many open files: 'defs.hh'
@DSM are you gravitationally happy? (That was intended to be asking if you're happy with the gravity waves announcement, not that you are so gravitationally strong that it could be described as happy)
I did see a cool explanation about how FTL works, and it's really obvious, we've already read about it. They jump to cognitive and emerge somewhere else.
"Mr Sanders, in your opinion, what impact will the Alcubierre space drive have on immigration?"
Many Americans are worried about the diaspora occurring among the zognoids of Alpha Centauri. What sanctions, if any, should be imposed on zognoids seeking to become naturalized citizens?
I remind the candidates that zognoids share a single hive mind, and eat 90% of their young.
But dyson sphere construction has a detectable impact on the spectrum emission of its host star, which will attract the attention of every type II society within a hundred light years of us.
Corvid doesn't know how he does anything. He works purely by instinct. If he thought about what he'd do then he'd suddenly realise he knows nothing and be rendered useless.
> My whole being exists in a formless void. My senses are idle. My spirit, free to work without plan, follows its own instinct. In short, my program writes itself.