@matsjoyce: heh. Usually up, I'll admit. It's not even that I want to get extra points -- maybe being able to redistribute points from answers which are right but are too highly voted to answers which deserve more points than they've got would suffice. Probably there's no way to make it work, but still.
well to be honest high vote answers are usually very simple ... complex answers do not have enough people who have that problem or understand the answer
Yes, it was added in version 2.5.
The syntax is:
a if test else b
First test is evaluated, then either a or b is returned based on the Boolean value of test;
if test evaluates to True a is returned, else b is returned.
For example:
>>> 'true' if True else 'false'
'true'
>>> 'true' if False ...
If you were to invent a language and get people to use it with the sole intent that you get lots of SO points, but the language turns out to be useful, you'll get the most awesome posts on meta about it.
But I guess that's the point: it'd be nice to move some of that unearned rep to answers where it really belongs. I'd even be willing to pay a penalty for it.
@Kevin: I remembered that question too, mostly because I remember my description of what I mean by "clever" there. Using that pattern you can answer the OP's question in two reasonably-clean lines.
If we want to do something practical, I still like my idea of each of us writing out lines from the Zen.
I built python3.4 and created an alias using:
echo alias py="/opt/python3.4/bin/python3.4" >> .bashrc
and I work ok with it but when I try to use urllib3 it says it is not istalled, so I tried
sudo pip install urllib3
but when it has finished you can not use it with python3.4, so I tried ...
@Kevin Wow. Some of those answers are insanely complex. That's about five lines of Ruby, without trying to make it compact. It's gotta be about the same in Python.
Five sounds about right, if Jon's recipe isn't disqualified as "complex"
I'd probably do it like
result = []
for group in [#insert jon's recipe here]:
if len(group) == 1:
result.append(str(group[0]))
else:
result.append("{}-{}".format(group[0], group[-1]))
I tend to write grouped = complex_recipe/for group in grouped: rather than for group in complex_recipe. For some reason I don't like for lines with much logic in them.
And of course you can go crazy with compactness by doing result = [str(group[0]) if len(group_ == 1 else "{}-{}".format(group[0], group[-1]) for group in [#insert jon's recipe here]]
@DSM I see where you're coming from. I try to keep generator expressions outside of my for conditions. Ex. for x in [y **2 for y in range(10)] looks weird. Too many fors.
this didn't work in this instance โ YK2 19 mins ago
@YK2 Did your computer explode? Did monkeys fly out of the screen? Did the house melt? What does "This didn't work" mean? โ Adam Smith 18 mins ago
the code that you suggested โ YK2 14 mins ago
@YK2 You need to be more specific than that. What did not work exactly? โ ILostMySpoon 11 mins ago
but thanks for your help anyway โ YK2 6 mins ago
I thought I had a handle on this question until they started talking about primitive generators. I don't know what that is, but I'm guessing it's not a fancy name for "integer"
@Kevin Just for fun, here's how you might do it in Ruby, abusing the #slice_before function. It's a little bit obtuse, but I wanted an excuse to try out #slice_before:
line_nums = [ 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10 ]
last = line_nums.first
ranges = line_nums.slice_before do |e|
begin
!last || e != last + 1
ensure
last = e
end
end.map do |a|
[a.first, a.last].uniq.join("-")
end
p ranges # => ["1-3", "5", "7-10"]
Then, starting at the start node, you traverse the graph, adding letters to your output as you move across edges, until you come upon the terminal node.
I'm looking for an efficient algorithm able to find all patterns that match a specific string. The pattern set can be very large (more than 100,000) and dynamic (patterns added or removed at anytime). Patterns are not necessarily standard regexp, they can be a subset of regexp or something simila...
Is there a level of downvotes that causes a post to be deleted or closed. Before the 30 day mark, I know the rule on no answer + negative score, but can't find if their is a downvote cap on any day.
@JGreenwell also, once a question receives a certain number of downvotes, 10K+ (or maybe 20K+, I forget) users see a delete option along with close, flag, etc., making deletion of extremely poor-quality questions that much easier.
@davidism ah, thanks. Saw a post, clearly off-topic and probably spam, but it had so many downvotes by then I wondered if it would be better to flag or just wait. Seems waiting as its gone now.
I need line 3 to run before 5. But if line 4 fails I dont wont to run line 3. Is it a way to do that?
print "Print ME"
try:
print "1)Only print if try go through"
print 1/0
print "2)Only print if try go through"
except:
print "Fail"
What I think the OP really needs is to be writing to a buffer, and only output the buffer at the end when everything is hunky dory and decided. But I can't tell for sure from that question.
I like to save "typo" for posts where the OP thought the right code but wrote the wrong code. If he actually thinks that & is correct, then answering is fine.
I add it to my messages when I think my tone is too demanding. "I can't diagnose your problem without an MCVE" is a bit more harsh than "sorry, but I can't diagnose [etc]"
When I want to make sure the tone is right, I say things like ":-( Unfortunately I can't help until you X" or something. I think it comes across more like I'm sad.
Hmmm. I'd be tempted to explore the complications... data arrives in burst, you may want a low-pass digital filter to keep it from being too jiggly, etc... but I don't know if I'd go through the trouble.
I've seen people use the language-specification comments to post just a "Yes" or "No". Usually that gets a lot of upvotes from people who haven't seen the trick before.
My method is to add subsequent terms to a list, then when it reaches the desired total, remove everything back to the next term that could be broken down, and repeat from there
I can barely even understand my solution to #31 (and all of my code is beautiful and pure). I don't think anyone can easily identify problems in your code. It's just a weird double-loopy problem that is hard to reason about.
Have you tried printing `li` every time you perform `total += 1`? That should give some info.
@QuestionC Hehe, well that's some consolation at least. I have been adding extensive print statements that I removed from the pastebin for brevity (and because most of them probably aren't actually all that helpful)
I think I might've narrowed down the problem though
It seems I'm not properly adding the final term in
So when it's something like 10 that can get broken down further, it's not and just removes the last two terms instead of just that one that could get reduced more
If you're spending weeks I think you're going about debugging your answers the wrong way. Brute-forcing a smaller example to see exactly what you're missing is often a handy approach.
I tend to just let the computer do the work on those kinds of problems. [combo for n in range(TARGET//biggest_coin_val, TARGET//smallest_coin_val) for combo in itertools.combinations_with_replacement(coin_values, n) if sum(combo)==TARGET] then go take lunch while it works it out.
@John I'm awful with recursion. That code I wrote literally enumerates every possible combination of coins (with replacement), then checks after the fact to see if they HAPPEN to sum up to 2 pounds.
I'm not sure if there's a worse way to get the answer
but it's faster for me to know that solution, type it in, and get it running than for me to try to figure out how to implement a recursive solution that finds it quickly
so in terms of raw time for one run -- mine is quicker (for me!)
I have been using scikit learn in a text classification task. I am adding features in order to see what happens when I remove or add some sentences. For this I am creating several datasets. When I add some new feature my baseline dataset I got:
Traceback (most recent call last):
test.py", line...
Stupid question: suppose I have a list lst = [2, 3, 4, 5]. What does lst[::-1] even mean? I know what it DOES, and the meaning of just one colon is quite intuitive, IMO. But I have no idea what two colons do.
There is no built in reverse function in Python's str object. What is the best way of implementing this?
If supplying a very concise answer, please elaborate on it's efficiency. Is the str converted to a different object, etc.
in brief: slices are defined as [start_index:stop_index:step_amount]. By leaving start and stop indices empty and defining a step of -1, you're saying to start at the end, step by one element each time, and stop at the beginning
@JoranBeasley Right. The point I was (ham-handedly) making is that for my use case, I don't have to write recursive algorithms often enough to be able to just whip one out. Therefore it's usually easier for me to write a solution that I know takes VASTLY longer than is necessary, because I can write it EVEN MORE VASTLY faster.
If it takes 20 minutes for that list comprehension to run, that's still less time than if I'd spent 45 minutes testing the recursive function I barely understand :)
def best_change(due,coins):
if due <= 0.001:return []
next_coin = max([c for c in coins if (due-c) > -0.001])
return [ next_coin ] + best_change(due-next_coin,coins)
print best_change(2.03,[0.01,0.05,0.10,0.25,0.50,1.00])
I think my first reaction to recursive solutions was something like: "Well, they're generally slower to run, but much faster to write if you know how they work. How about if I just don't learn how they work, then learn iterative solutions that much better?"