I've got a question: how can I assign colors to numbers? More concret, let's say my minimal value is -22 ; my maximum value is 46. I'd like to print objects with higher values green (46 should be green, 16 more green than red), and objects with lower values red. I know this works using colormap; but how exactly? I didn't get it yet :(
You could automatically calculate those values too, you should probably use HSL values then. You could use a fixed S and L, and then just have a linear function that decides on the hue.
For example green is HSL(120, 100%, 50%), and red is HSL(0, 100%, 50%). So you would map -22 to a hue value of 0, and 46 to a hue value of 120.
So for a number i (that’s between -22 and 46), you would get a hue value of (i + 22) * 120 / 68
General formula being (i - minIndex) * (maxValue - minValue) / (maxIndex - minIndex) + minValue
So that gives you the hue, combined with the fixed saturation and value values, you could use the colorsys module to get an RGB value if you need that.
@MartijnPieters yeah, I watched almost 20 recipes, since it is "fictional" it is very hard to decide which one is the "official one"
:)
but for what you have linked was the plan B
(I heard there is an official "two broomsticks" in the US, where they server "the official butterbeer", and people kept saying the huffintonpost's recipe is the closest one to that)
I was just working with some old code which had everything as list comprehensions... Was wondering if it would help replacing those with filters... Hmm... looks like not much of a use... thanks anyway!
Well, if you wanted to filter out vowels or something, then filter(set('aeiou').intersection, 'the quick brown fox') will a string without you having to do vowels = set('aeiou'); result = ''.join([ch for ch in 'the quick brown fox' if ch in vowels])
I'm currently creating an open source community website in Django and part of this has a page where people write tips/advice for things. I'm trying to figure out a good way of keeping track of revisions in case I need to roll back spam/vandalism/etc and I was thinking it might be a good idea to leverage an existing version control for this. Has anyone used something like git to do something like this? Good idea/ bad idea?
Oh and this information is stored as markdown which is rendered later, in case that's relevant.
Well, chicken's generally good as you can have a roast, then make a salad/sweet and sour from it, as well as some sarnies, then boil the rest to make soup
(well, stock for soup anyway, then throw in left over chicken and veg and stuff...)
Right now it's all very much integrated into an existing Django app. I could try to break it out into it's own project. I almost always go for GPL licenses though.
I think that breaking it out would be a good idea as it fits in with a few other project ideas I have.
I might get started on that today and put it up on github or something.
@Arden I imagine I'd only want to make something that's a library thing like this under a GPL license. I don't have any issues with people making money off such a product or integrating it into their own product but I don't like the idea of people not pushing changes upstream.
Why exactly would you need this part of the code to be BSD?
There's an answer in that question with the bool misunderstanding stackoverflow.com/questions/27205611/strange-error-in-python3 that I'm curious about. Is there a performance/readability difference between if bus not in {"5", "6"}: and if bus not in ("5", "6"): that should lead me to use one form over another?
@shuttle87 my understanding was bsd was similar to gpl in the sense that you have to push changes upstream. I want to have the option to use a plugin without having the obligation of making my program open souce (which gpl does), mainly because i'm not sold on the opensource business model right now. I like open source alot and have started turning parts of my program into reusable open source api snippets. for one it helps me right better code but it also gives back to the community.
@shuttle87 had friends come over before sorry about the delay
@lramos15 what are you trying to acheive? Normally there is a better way, you would use the builtin eval function