C: I understand this IS Bolton.
O: (still with the fake mustache) Yes?
C: You told me it was Ipswitch!
O: ...It was a pun.
C: (pause) A PUN?!?
O: No, no...not a pun...What's that thing that spells the same backwards as forwards?
C: (Long pause) A palindrome...?
O: Yeah, that's it!
C: It's not a palindrome! The palindrome of "Bolton" would be "Notlob"!! It don't work!!
It's probably best if we only do cv-pls for Python questions in here. SOCVR accept general cv-pls requests, but they prefer to concentrate on priority questions (i.e., stuff in the official queues, and bad questions that are attracting bad answers). Also, they like cv-pls requests to conform to the SOCVR FAQ.
Fair enough. I generally don't cv-pls unless it's Python, and even then only when I think it's pretty obvious. This one just annoyed the hell out of me.
But yes, I will keep my rage bottled up inside in future, or divert it into shouting at the furniture :-)
@khajvah I don't really have one. :) But last time I had a real job I worked for a marketing services company. For the last 6 years I've been living with my elderly parents, doing housework and helping to care for the garden (it's a fairly large house & property).
@AlexBollbach Ok, It's not clear what you're actually looking for. Do you want to generate subsequences of a given string, with those subsequences obeying some additional constraint (apart from preserving order)?
@AlexBollbach OK! Now I understand what you're asking for. :)
You could implement that with a function that tests if one string is a subsequence of another string. Of course, you'll also need a suitable word list, eg the Sowpods wordlist from 3zsoftware.com/download
import re
import Levenshtein
with open('sowpods.txt') as f:
words = [ w.strip().lower() for w in f ]
initials = input('word> ')
pattern = re.compile('.*'.join([re.escape(c) for c in initials.strip().lower()]))
candidates = [w for w in words if pattern.match(w)]
sorted_candidates = sorted(candidates, key=lambda w: Levenshtein.distance(w, initials))
print(*sorted_candidates[:10], sep='\n')
@AnttiHaapala I can believe it; after all, regex is designed to do that sort of search efficiently. Still, in general, if a non-regex solution is clear, I think it's a good idea to at least compare the performance of the regex vs the non-regex solution, just in case the pure string-based algorithm is faster.
I've been looking for a part of the Google site for a few days, but I can not find it. Can you give me an HTTP link to which parts of Google I should contact? I am most concerned about the privacy terms of users. developers.google.com/maps/terms (9.3.c.i.A section) — juilcho54 mins ago
Does anyone know how to put a license code on a script. So that you will have to provide the costumer with a activation key, to be able to activate the code?
I found this so far, I am not sure how well it works. Still researching it. http://desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/10.3/analyze/python/access-to-licensing-and-extensions.htm
@SebastianNielsen It's not really possible with plain Python code. But you could put some essential functions of your script in a C library, and have license protection on that library.
I suppose so, but I don't know Cython. And it's not just a matter of appending license stuff to the compiled script. To properly protect the code it needs to be encrypted. The protection component has to decrypt the main code in such a way that a determined attacker can't easily intercept it and bypass the protection. This is a rather advanced topic. I'm aware of the general principles, but I certainly don't know the details of current best practice.
@SebastianNielsen But why are you asking about this stuff? Your Python skills are not yet at a level where you can write software requiring such protection.
Well, it's not that important to make it fully protected. My goal is to sell my code to a lot of people who doesnt have a lot of knowledge in the IT field. And just to make sure they don't resell it, I just want an activation code on it
They are @PM2Ring
My code is advance, but people are interested in buying it.
That facepalm moment when one noob upvotes / accepts other noob's almost-wrong / non-standard answer, just because it is easier than the right / standard answer.
Brendan Behan was supposedly once commissioned to write a slogan for Guinness, and after several months of apparent inactivity (except for drinking crate after crate that they sent him for free), eventually, after some pressure from the client, came up with "Guinness makes you drunk".
Then again, the slogan for the most popular beer in Bolivia is "it's beer", so maybe he was onto something.
newdata = [list(g)[0] for k, g in groupby(sorted(((int(row[0]), int(row[1]), row[2], row[3]) for row in (row.split() for row in src.splitlines())), key=lambda t: (t[2], t[3], -t[1], t[0])), key=lambda t: t[2:])]
At first I was like, "Why in the world row[0], row[1], row[2], row[3] - you could totally just do tuple(row). And then I realized it was int(row[0]), int(row[1]), and not the others.
Earlier tonight I fixed 2 typos for Raymond Hettinger, and got a nice response to a comment about the demise of the cmp function arg to sort / sorted:
@PM2Ring functools.cmp_to_key has a somewhat simple and low overhead pure python implementation and an even lower overhead (almost cost-free) C implementation. The functools.cmp_to_key tool was put in just to handle this sort of extraordinary case of a weird cmp-function. In almost every other case, cmp-functions are the wrong thing to do (three-way compares are generally more complex than boolean key-functions, and cmp-functions are O(n log n) as compared to key-functions which are O(n). SQL's ORDER BY clauses use key-functions and they solve a tremendous variety of real-world problems. — Raymond Hettinger2 hours ago
@PM2Ring Nice :-) Makes me feel slightly less guilty about my recent[''.join([a, '<>'[(o == "<") ^ (c == "T")], n]) for (a, o, n), c in zip(x, y)], too.
So a couple weeks ago I started watching this TV show taking place in a vaguely medieval fantasy setting and I was impressed that they were introducing so many novel concepts to the viewer without insulting their intelligence by taking a lot of time explaining each one. I finished the last episode yesterday, and while searching to see if there was another season, I discovered that I had been watching the second season, not knowing the first existed.
Now trying to decide if I want to watch the first season, with the very real possibility that they're going to take a lot of time explaining every novel concept that I was already comfortable with after thirty seconds of S2 viewing.
It was pretty enjoyable but I did have to do a lot of "these people are talking like they're old friends so I guess I'm supposed to accept that they're old friends"
@Kevin if you learn why, do share. Also about 3 weeks ago you told me to try uninstalling Python and stuff on my work computer so the weekly clean up wouldn't yield me an ear full. Turns out they have logs for what you install :\ but thanks for the try
I gues that make sense. I don't hear st. PAT-Tee day, rather st. Pad-dee day.... always thought it was just people slurring their words cause they were drunk....
Not sure whether calling it "St Patty's Day" is truly an annoyance to the general Irish populace, or if it's just pedantry from the loudest decile. The people with the opposing opinion of "it doesn't matter" aren't likely to feel strongly enough to register and design a website to make their voices heard
Just like the online review conundrum. The 90%+ people who are happy with the working product is too busy with other things or too lazy to leave a position review. And you end up with mostly negative reviews because those are the rare cases where people want to voice their opinion on something that isn't working
hey, does this makes sense: I have a loop in which I do exactly two things: I randomly (ie random.shuffle) choose, say 100 elements from around 600 mils. Then I run some sort of a lookup function on these elements, nothing very complicated. What seems odd to me, is that when I use tqdm to estimate the time it should take, the time seems to be increasing with each iteration
@idjaw Weird. AFAIK, any rep changes on an answer get reversed if the question is deleted, unless the question is old, and the answer's score is sufficiently high (+3 upvotes, IIRC).
I don't know what tqdm is, but successive iterations of that loop shouldn't be any slower than earlier iterations.
Except by random chance, ex. the first iteration just happens to do the lookup very quickly because all the items just happen to be near the start of the list
"Return a k length list of unique elements chosen from the population sequence or set. Used for random sampling without replacement." That "without replacement" is the sought-after quality we're seeking after soughtfully.
Unless you mean you want to not get the same elements in a single iteration of the loop, but don't mind getting the same elements between loops, in which case I'm not wrong
@jjj In that case, there's not much point using shuffle, just call sample on each loop. That will be much faster than shuffling the whole huge list on every loop.
@PM2Ring @BhargavRao here is the question in question. It's low quality and answered in the beginning of my rep collection journey :P But...as you can see no upvotes or downvotes. I just can't figure it out
choices looks quite handy. Every couple of months I'd see people asking how to randomly choose from a sequence in a weighted manner, and this will do some of the heavy lifting for them
Although actually choosing which weights to pass to the function might still prove a challenge, because the question-askers are usually not entirely clear on that
My life is too short to ring infinity bells, even if I create a swarm of nanobots that consume already-rung bells to increase their numbers and exponentially ring more bells
Just create a small team of androids to ring it for your after your long gone. Bonus points if the androids can fix and populate themselves. Just make sure you don't allow 'memory' transfer between them. :D
Also give them the capacity to space travel or figure space travel, to collect more resources to continue the chain. Some parasite style, until all the universe's resources are all sucked up because of your desire to ring some infinite bells....
@jjj If the list you're sampling from is just a range of integers, you don't even need to build a list in memory. From the docs:
To choose a sample from a range of integers, use a range() object as an argument. This is especially fast and space efficient for sampling from a large population: sample(range(10000000), k=60).
If only there were a countably infinite number of bells, I could arrange a rube-goldberg-esque setup where each bell causes the next bell in the chain to start ringing. But the bells are isomorphic to N-tuples of reals, so they're uncountably infinite and thus probably arranged in a manner unfavorable to such a plan
@MooingRawr Second law of thermodynamics confirms this. Our only hope is finding a universal escape hatch a la The Last Question.
Only if the bells were countably infinite. But they aren't, unless we want to limit ourselves just to bells that are made up of conventional matter and thus have an integer number of atoms.
And round down positions of atoms in 3d space to the nearest planck length. But that's cheating if you ask me
Let's ask what-if :D but IIRC he doesn't like answering infinite style questions
New plan, let us set out to answer those unanswered questions on this bell issue, in hopes we (as humanity) can solve it.
I think that might be harder than the original problem, this hole keeps getting bigger..... I know we should keep digging ourselves into a deeper hole, at one point we will pop out on another side..... or melt at the core...
question, did we invent those heat-resistant astronomer, if so can we employ them to dig this hole ?
so a few days ago, someone was hoping to type(0.132) to be >int now someone wants to turn type(custom_class) to be >some random string OP created I wonder if there's a prof out there that made a silly challenge to their students to change type()....
hmm I seem to am thinking stupid again: if I have a list comprehension like: [foo(x) for x in y] And foo can throw a certain exception, can I "ignore"/"skip" those elements? Other than rebuilding it to a forloop?