a couple of rows have a bit of non-uniform spacing. Like if I import into excel and I choose to use spaces as my delimiter I can control for the screwed up spacing
i have like 25000 files where ill be analyzing data rom so Id really like to cull them from 300 columns to the 8 i need
>>> import numpy
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "C:\Python27\lib\numpy\__init__.py", line 170, in <module>
raise ImportError(msg)
ImportError: Error importing numpy: you should not try to import numpy from
its source directory; please exit the numpy source tree, and relaunch
your python interpreter from there.
>>>
a severe disease that causes an itch that cannot be cured by conventional means, thus you'd have to invent your own remedy. Also known as the NIH syndrome
i am using Cython to package some of the cpp class into Python. I have create a shared library
Say mixed.so. After exporting the path, I can import in the Python console directly.
However, in the next step, I am trying to create a generic Python package. In the init.py I said import mixed
Then Python complains that cannot find the package mixed. I find that I can only make it ok if everything I fire up a Python console I manually copied the mixed.so into the location.
here goes nothing... If the question is inappropriate I will retire from this room
How can I go about asking Python if it recognises the following as a list of tuples or a list of strings? a = [('GroupA', 2),('GroupB', 2)] b = ['("GroupA", 2)','("GroupB", 2)']
it's pretty annoything tbh, postgres gives me output B but I want it to look like A, so I have to fiddle in python as my understanding of postgres is dire!
If you expect others to do your thinking for you, you quickly become a help vampire
please don't do that, that's harmful for everybody involved
this might explain your original concerns about you asking things
Asking things is OK as long as you make an effort to solve your problem first. Leeching on others with every single step of a problem is a whole different thing, and is not sustainable in the long run.
I wouldn't tell you this yet, but your preamble worries were a red flag:)
okay, a better question, what's the best way of searching the internet to find out if your version of python would support a module and what an equivalent module might be? I am having trouble sourcing the information myself
FWIW, it's easy enough to parse those strings "by hand". Using ast.literal_eval is easier, OTOH, it may be safer to do it by hand so that it fails if you get a string that doesn't contain the representation of a tuple of ints, since in that case you probably don't want it to be converted silently.
Here's a simple example. Note that int() copes with whitespace in a string argument.
def parse_tuplestring(s):
return tuple(int(u) for u in s[1:-1].split(','))
data = ["(1,3)", "(4, 5)"]
newdata = [parse_tuplestring(s) for s in data]
print(newdata)
OUTPUT
[(1, 3), (4, 5)]
As I said, it's just a simple example. It doesn't check that the string is bounded by ( and ), so it will also happily convert "[1, 2, 3]" or even "{1, 2, 3>".
How can I go about asking Python if it recognises the following as a list of tuples or a list of strings? a = [('GroupA', 2),('GroupB', 2)] b = ['("GroupA", 2)','("GroupB", 2)']
of course you can spice up the parser, I just wanted to note this
@JonClements :) hey. Pretty good. Getting things re-organized since I came back from my trip last week. Tearing through the jobs backlog I couldn't get to. :) Only a couple left.
@AbhishekBhatia str is a type. You can use it in two ways. You can use it to construct strings, eg str(42); and you can also use it to test if an object is of string type, eg isinstance('hi', str) or type('hey') is str.
@AbhishekBhatia len is a function that invokes the __len__ method of the object you pass it. For Python's built-in container types, the __len__ method simply returns the object's attribute that stores its length, so it's very fast. However, a class may define a __len__ method that computes the length of the class instance, if you really need to do that, but it's generally more efficient to keep track of the length and store it in an attribute.
@idjaw the internet says "We've had several situations where people barbecue under an overhang on their porch and ignite their house with convective and radiant heat"
I hope the missus listens to the internet at least (that's where credible sources live)
@AbhishekBhatia A callable is simply an object that you can call. All function objects are callable, but not vice versa. An example of a callable that you should be familiar with is a class object: when you call a class it returns an instance of the class.
@idjaw FWIW, my dad has a BBQ under cover, but the roof above it is steel, and at least 2 metres above the BBQ plate, with plenty of clearance, in a fairly breezy location.
@PM2Ring our deck is not closed off. So it's fairly open. The awning is material. I would say it is about just under 7 feet for where we were thinking of putting the bbq
I'm a bit confused about types and classes in Python. For e.g. the following REPL conversation confuses me:
>>> class A: pass
...
>>> a = A()
>>> type(a)
<type 'instance'>
>>> a.__class__
<class __main__.A at 0xb770756c>
>>> type([])
<type 'list'>
>>> [].__class__
<type 'list'>
>>> type(list)
<...
From the 2nd link: "Since Python supports inheritance, all classes can be used as templates for additional classes, which means that all classes are in fact types.
This is especially true since the advent of "new-style classes," derived from object, which unify the type hierarchy of user-defined classes with the built-in types. Classes were always types, but now they are the same kind of types as the built-in types."
FWIW, you can use the 3 arg form of the type constructor to construct new types / classes on the fly, which can be more convenient than using a formal class MyClass: definition. I guess it parallels defining a function with lambda instead of a def.
@idjaw Ok. Don't risk it. Fabric tends to burn at a lower temperature than steel. :)
g is an empty dictionary, so it has no keys. Most of your code doesn't do what you seem to expect it to do. I think you need to go and re-read the relevant sections of your textbook / course material. — PM 2Ring39 secs ago
@AndrasDeak Exactly. I first saw the os.path.isfile(d) != True, and thought "Ah, a common newbie error", but then I saw him trying to get the file size withsys.getsizeof(d) and thought "How strange". And then it just gets progressively worse. :)
@WayneWerner Yep. It's definitely programming by magical incantation. At least cargo-culters can read the code they're ransacking well enough to cobble chunks together in a vaguely coherent fashion even if they don't fully understand how those chunks work. But not this guy...
I've got to the point where now when I have a problem involving iteratables/functions I tend to go look through those modules to see if they have what i want
@DSM True, although you can get pretty functional without itertools. Here's something I wrote the other day but didn't get a chance to post because the OP self-deleted. And the question wasn't really interesting enough to bother getting it undeleted.
#Print all non-decreasing subsequences of a given length of digits in an integer
def non_decreasing(s):
return all(u <= v for u, v in zip(s, s[1:]))
def all_nondecreasing(num, n):
numstr = str(num)
it = zip(*(numstr[i:] for i in range(n)))
return filter(non_decreasing, map(''.join, it))
@JohanLarsson and other electric blues fans: Soulive featuring Warren Haynes & Derek Trucks - The Thrill Is Gone
@DSM Yes, we're only looking for contiguous subsequences. The question originally didn't make that clear. Once the OP clarified that point I started writing code, but by the time I'd finished it the question was dead.
I'd be very impressed with the attention given the SO chat if "@other electric blues fans" worked.. (although it'd be a little creepy if they were datamining our social networks to that degree..)