@Marco this is such a common issue with machine learning questions on the site. Often it's not possible to make an MRE for such complicated cases because it'd end up being hundreds of lines long. However it does seem that they detailed the API usage enough that someone might be able to check it against their own implementations to see whether it reports different values
I feel like there's a canonical on meta about why data science questions just don't work on SO somewhere but I've not had my morning cup of tea yet so I'll hunt it down shortly :)
@Marco That's a new rep-25 user. First tell them what an MCVE is and that they need to add it (more "welcoming"), instead of just closing it without warning. I added a comment saying that.
@roganjosh Well anything where a full MCVE would need 20-1000 lines can be painful to generate MCVE for. Esp. in this case they're only asking about why the logging syntax seems to mismatch, not the model, parameters, accuracy etc. itself.
@roganjosh The power of tea ☕️. Douglas Adams would have approved.
foo[2:2] is a slice containing the 3rd element, so now you replace a slice with another list -> you replace the (single-element) list that contains the 3rd element, with a new list containing [7, 7]
Depends on how you look at it. You can certainly argue that it means two different things, but then a also means two different things depending on which side of the equal sign it's on
a on the left side of the equal sign means "store the value here". On the right side it means "get this value"
Same thing for lists. On the left side a[2:2] means "store the values between 2 and 2" and on the right side it means "give me the values between 2 and 2"
Alternatively, 2:4 refers to the slice between indices 2 and 4. On the right side of the equal sign it means "give the values there", and on the left side it means "overwrite the values there"
It's better this way. You know for a fact that the operation some_list[x:y] will return a list, and not just a single item, no matter what the values of x and y are