@Aran-Fey There are tons of packages in Python and R where the documentation is not useful, merely a collection of pages with low-level summaries autogenerated from a docstring. Not a quickstart/ getting started/ vignette/ user guide on how to do a certain task e.g. plotting, summarizing, esp. For such packages, often best to rely on third-party summaries/ cheatsteets/ github gists. There are third-party companies which make a living out of that, or use them to generate leads/ inbound inquiries
user22676652
Hello, does anyone here know how to handle multiple errors at the same time?
@zoomingspeed You mean code throwing multiple exceptions? Show us an example line of code and the exceptions. Do you want to catch the first exception, print it and raise the second?
user22676652
No, I want the code to detect ALL errors at the same time, and handle them. I didn't figure this out but I figured out how to handle one error to get rid of the rest
I asked which errors? Show us an example line of code and the exceptions, and we'll take it from there. Until we see that we don't know what you mean by errors.
Ugh, Chrome has seemingly trashed a part of my app. It seems to stop me opening a file upload dialogue box now on my site. I just checked on Firefox and it still works. Has anyone else noticed this issue?
nm, whatever they did must have been a temporary glitch because a further update has made it all work again. Thanks, Chrome, for sending me down a path of git blame on myself. It always feels shameful with that name
It wouldn't hurt so much if that one feature hadn't taken literally days of dedicated effort as I was fiddling with image compression and getting the upload to scale properly in the preview box. "Oh man, what have I done?!" when it suddenly stopped working across multiple pages.
I'm having issues with mojibake. I have a piece of data with an unknown encoding, so I try a bunch of different ones until I find one that can successfully decode it. The problem is that sometimes the text gets decdoded "successfully", but the output is garbage. I know the text is supposed to be german and the problems are usually caused by umlauts (äöü). Is there an easy way to check if the decoded text is "valid" german?
I should add, my data is essentially a serialized dataframe, not just text. So ideally I'd like to avoid working with bytes. I'd prefer to decode it and then run some sort of sanity check once I have the data as a string
@Aran-Fey I'm pretty sure a number of NLP have language detectors. Depending on the output you make be able to check if the output is in the Latin Unicode blocks. You can possibly strip non-{Latin and white-space} characters and see if any words are in a German dictionary.
Oh, here's an idea: all(char.isascii() or char in "ÄÖÜäöüß" for char in text). Let's see if something explodes, but I think that'll be good enough for my purposes