I know Python, but not as a statistics workbench. Moving from R, how do you do basic stuff like find out the dimension of your dataset, subset your dataset, etc.
Is that part of base Python, or part of a package?
@Heisenberg numpy arrays are general N dimensional arrays. I suspect you want pandas Dataframes. They allow the features you'll want.
Named columns. Pivoting. Groupby. Etc.
Pandas is built using numpy I believe. They're both members of the so called 'scipy-stack' which is a set of packages built for this kind of stuff that all work with each other.
I am Python programmer having little experience with web development. And right now I am looking for contributing to some opensource projects. From where I can start ? Any guideline ?
@corvid well, I guess that is, what programming is all about => slicing the big problems into smaller ones, and repeating that task, until you have atomic problems/solutions and then you have to implement that
you can start with this tutorial, it's a good "up and running" kind of start. He also wrote a book, the result of which is in this git repository. Bit of fair warning: with flask you can do stuff quite differently than how he chose to do it.
Well, didn't get the bounty for that question because my answer was posted before the bounty and the op never awarded it. Poof, 100 rep disappear into the ether.
After using the Triage queue for a few days, I've marked many questions unsalvageable. However, I've always used a close reason; I have not run into anything that should be flagged.
Right now, voting to close requires five steps:
Click Unsalvageable
Find "Should be closed for another reason" ...
@Jon, yeah, that's why I cut it off and suggested he go it alone for a while. If you go back to the original revision of the post you can see his full code dump - there are a bunch of try/except blocks that he can get rid of to debug properly, or at least make more specific, but it shouldn't be too difficult a job for someone with the ability that he's demonstrated by writing the code in the first place.
Just the newbie - wrote a load of code without understanding quite how it all works, then a bit stuck as ways to fix it as too much is borked in one go... we've all been there :)
Wow... a 3gb compressed SQL dump... this'll be fun
I was expecting 30k rows from a specific table... I'm guessing someone couldn't be bothered to just dump that single table :(
Wonder why linux is choosing to use 17mb of swap, when it's still got 15gb of physical spare... seems a slightly bit odd
@corvid For the love of Guido PLEASE take my advice on the question you just posted a few minutes ago about running PHP from Python on Heroku. Those mysql_* methods should be folded, spindled, mutilated, and destroyed, as there are major security issues with them. Even though you're not getting user input or anything, you still shouldn't use them. Generating a PDO object will take slightly longer (code-wise, not time-wise), or you can use mysqli_* methods.
then your teacher should be reprimanded - just send him a link to the docs and ask him to read the lovely pink box at the top :)
for the most part I think you can just add an i after mysql in the methods you're calling. He might not even notice, and if he does you can diplomatically explain that he's a chowderhead.
@MattDMo I had to downgrade a php install because I ported it to one system and it had mysql_* everywhere - I wasn't being paid to fix that, so I wasn't spending time on changing them all to PDO
sorry, @Jon. And people wonder why we still have SQL injection exploits through PHP, god knows how many years after the issues were first publicized...
although remarkably painful to do at the time as it wasn't even well written PHP... more just lots of unrelated stuff smashed together and copy/pasted into other files with a couple of bits changed and... sighs
/me mutters to himself... don't think about it... don't want nightmares again, don't want nighmares!
That's one of the major reasons I've tried to stay as far away from PHP as possible - it's just too easy to write everything declaratively, and mash 100 unrelated things together. Of course, having your logic embedded in your presentation code and template contributes to this. Then there's the "user-contributed notes" in the docs, with no moderation system or reply-to capability. And then there's...
continue ranting for hours without running out of steam...
LOL - this didn't even use a template or routing framework... loads of .htaccess re-writing urls, html building dynamically and embedded CSS, no centralised SQL, it got repeated in several places including connection strings etc.. etc.. etc...
It goes OK, I guess. I was hoping to get some work done for work, but I'm on a laptop which I can't really do real work on. (I basically inherited this computer from my wife, and her user input sensibilities are vastly different than mine.)
Ahhh... sounds like me when I boot up an old windows laptop - that short of typing a document or flicking through SO - isn't really good for much and it's frustrating...
@Ffisegydd Not really fair ... the typical MP works very hard and takes a lot of abuse for a much lower salary than they could get elsewhere, out of a belief in public service. Whatever your opinion of Salmond's politics, I've never seen him accused of laziness.