Sometimes I have a method that will have an optional parameter, but None is a valid value that might be passed in, so I can't make None the default value. In that case, I'll instantiate an object like "arg_omitted = object()", and then declare the arg as "def fn(arg1, arg2=arg_omitted):"
Then use "if arg2 is arg_omitted" to determine if a value was passed in or not.
I just got mired with a bunch of "Use is this way!" "That isn't Pythonic!!" stuff a while ago and it left me a little confused. So! I made it Chat's problem~
is there a recipe to smoothen series data? For instance, if I have some time series data, and some of the values just don't exist in that data (I'm downloading some dataset), then is there a recipe/canonical_way of filling in those missing values with the linear interpolation of what's on either side?
Which I mention here with the expectation that someone will tell me if that is a dumb way of going about a thing (in a situation where obj is known to be in pair).
Trying to compile something, and I'm getting this? checking for python-config... /usr/bin/python-config checking Python.h usability... yes checking Python.h presence... yes checking for Python.h... yes checking for PyArg_ParseTuple in -lpython... no configure: error: Unable to find a suitable python development library
What is PyArg_ParseTuple and why does my python supposedly not have it
Python 3.4.3 (default, Oct 14 2015, 20:28:29)
[GCC 4.8.4] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> print "asfg"
File "<stdin>", line 1
print "asfg"
^
SyntaxError: Missing parentheses in call to 'print'