I have all my own server so what ever I want, was just think about saving the code and popping a nuke on the os and just starting over with a fresh pallet
I don't know I was using rails for awhile but didn't like all the you can't do thats about it so I was trying this on for size... hmmm oh well sooner or later. The templated pages and everything else work great... just trying to get the db stuff down. So frustrating when I just pop open a terminal and try the SQL in and works fine then trying to get database interface to work with same sql ... different story.
Ive used postgres in docker ... its pretty straight forward ... but you typically run it in its own container with ports exposed
at least thats what Ive found ... if i installed it inside a docker image (ubuntu14.2 for example) it would never start so I just used docker-compose and the postgres image with the port exposed
@JoranBeasley yeah. i just realised my mistake. i forgot to put the command conn.commit()
its very different from the postgresql docs. Theirs assumes data is available even before conn.commit() so got confused there. probably it isnt on a docker environment.
So python -m pip loads the pipmodule from the Python module search path, then runs that as if it is a script. A if __name__ == '__main__': test would pass.
Using that means you don't have to have the script installed in your path for the module to work.
The pip module uses that to detect that you want to use the module as a script behaves exactly as if you ran the pipscript (which would also load the pip module).
Sure, if pip install pymongo works for you, then use that.
python -m pip works too.
The advantage of -m pip is that a) you can choose what specific Python binary to install for and b) it works for more people (only the python command has to be on the path).
@MartijnPieters ah i see. ok. thanks for the advise :)
@MartijnPieters i see you are a very established programmer. Just wanted to ask your advise. I'm trying to transition into programming but I'm not from a programming background. How long would it take for me to be employable. I'm looking to get into data science.
20 years ago I bluffed my way from college to a part-time job as web developer by having built 1 webpage and read one photoshop book. I did grow up with a computer on which I hacked before that though.
I don't know what core stuff to focus on for data science, sorry.
as a general programmer? should people focus more on learning libraries very well, or learning the actual language very well. if you had to choose either.
In the meantime, keep hacking on stuff. Read Stack Overflow answers on questions that interest you. Try to solve the questions yourself and see what answers were posted after.
Not to disagree with my esteemed colleague (:P), but if you're looking to go into Data Science then you need more than just coding. You need to have a firm grounding in mathematics and statistics.
You also need to have some experience in data visualisation. Not just the coding of visualisations, but also the design of them.
You also need to be able to write and present reports/presentations (similar to the designing data vis part).
In fact the more general thing would be: you need to be able to present and report on your data in whatever format is most appropriate for that scenario.
@Ffisegydd yeah. agree to on that. but i find now, the programming part is the hardest. because data science involves not just the programming, but the database, grabbing data, streaming data, storing data, then only analysing data with scipy etc...
It's also helpful if you can work with clients/customers in a more consultant role sometimes, being able to talk to them confidently to better understand their real problems (which might well be very different to what they say the problem is).
You need a wide breadth of skills. And importantly you need the ability to get going on things that you don't know too much about. To do that requires a strong base, but not necessarily too much in-depth knowledge on a particular subject (at the start of your career anyway).
I'd say the most important thing is the ability to pick up new skills/libraries/etc quickly on the fly.
Which sounds a bit wishy washy.
For example, I recently had to do a lot of work using Apache Avro. I'd never used it before. Had no idea what to do, what it was, how it worked. So I learned.
It depends on what you need to learn quickly though.
Say you need to learn a programming system quickly, a foundation in programming will obviously help. If you need to learn a mathematical theory quickly, then a foundation in maths will help.
For example, "I'm going to learn the most in-depth things I can about machine learning". Great. Good for you. You can make a fantastic ML model. Now sit down next to these engineers and make a usable system out of it. Wait, what? You don't understand what git is? You don't know how to work with other programmers and build a system? Your code isn't documented because you don't understand the basics of best practices? Then your ML model is useless.
That's a bit of an extreme example, I admit.
Chances are the engineers could take your code and implement it for you in a usable production system. But it would make you very unpopular and not help your career if others are having to do the actual work to make your work usable.
Yes, absolutely. At this stage in your career it will stand you in better stead than anything else.
It'll make you versatile, mean that you can work on different projects and learn new skills.
And as time goes on, you can get more advanced knowledge in what you want.
And as Martijn said earlier, always be learning.
If you're on a project and you're not learning anything new, you should be looking to change. Either change within the project onto something new, or look to change projects (if you can, within business needs, etc)
You should also be reading about technologies in your spare time and doing research. You don't need to be reading academic papers, but keep up to date with blog posts on the latest emerging technology.
I'd not expect juniors to know about metaprogramming. Knowing about the basics of concurrency, load balancing, yes. Working in Python not knowing about decorators would be slightly disappointing, since there are a lot of decorators in the standard library that I'd expect you to be able to use.
Yeah. But it goes back to my original point, I might not be able to write a concurrent app right now, but I know a bit about it, I know what it is, I could name some of the issues that might come up.
instead I've been doing one documents for one tender, and at the same time been consulting an official in how to make a good RFT and sorting out responses to ITT.
Also, hi @Peque, not sure I've seen you here before so welcome. Posting recent questions is against the room rules here - see sopython.com/chatroom for why and a few other rules of the road.
so at the same time I am trying to close all loopholes in one set of legal documents while trying to exploit all loopholes in another set of legal documents :D
@ShaharNacht Also, if your code sample is a literal copy / paste - you have a typo. true is not the same as True and in general, true will not be defined.
OK, read the docs. To my understanding, since keys will not have instances in my code, any time I want to change a variable inside a method of keys, I call keys.right=True.
@ShaharNacht: but as long as you want to modify those values, if you are using a class, I would rather create instance attributes, not class attributes (which means you do need to instanciate the class and, in case you want to have a default set of attributes in the class, you should use the init method)
or, if it is simpler for you, you can always create a class with an attribute that is a dictionary (then you don't need to inherit from dict if you don't know how to do it)
@ShaharNacht: you'll have to read the full page I shared with you in order to understand that :-)
but Python gets its name from Monty Python which of course happens to be a proper noun, and there's no reason to translate it since, well vietnames uses latin letters, and py + thon is not even hard to pronounce at least somehow correctly :d
Surprised nobody has gone for the low-hanging fruit of Is it the right output?. The laziest answer is "remove the parentheses in the print statement"
Maybe the usually-opportunistic answerers have come to learn that answering a question with 5+ downvotes will usually earn you a downvote, even if your answer is technically correct. There's no profit in it.
(Hmm, not sure if that reference makes sense outside of the MTG community. Within the community, "Iron Man" refers to a variant of play where you rip your cards in half when they die in the game)
user559633
(jk, every time i try to quickly close tabs, if you came back later and asked me what i had learned, i'd say "something about yoghurt?(?)")
Remember last week when you forgot we're not living in the narrative of The Shawshank Redemption? You crawled through ninety feet of putrid sewer to escape the room. we kept telling you the doors weren't locked.
Hang on, is that even a Stephen King book? Or am I thinking of the Green Mile.
It's easy. You look at the loops in your program, then you [action which is impossible to describe due to the lack of richness of language with respect to internal mental state], and bam you have the complexity.
Slowly improving my model. I think I'll get a better result when I get on my Mac and can use a separate classifier that you have to compile (that I can't easily get going at work)
I was looking at the issue @DSM reported, getting a 404 when logging in to the "What tutorial should I read?" page. Looks like it might be unfixable because Werkzeug is really aggressive about unquoting special characters in urls.