12:11 AM
@wjandrea Don't be unkind, just gently help the OP, they have good intent, we were all in their position once. Re "confuses lists with arrays", Java programmers generically say "array" when talking about what would be a list in Python, simply because the fundamental data structure in Java is an array. They're not referring to Python arrays.
^^ (what would be the rough equivalent of a Python list, i.e. O(1) lookup. Java arrays are obviously not a linked-list.)
I went looking for a good answer to "Print/format/convert-to-string a list without spaces between list elements" (list items are not necessarily string, ideally with enclosing '['..']', and possibly with custom separator, and almost noone nested lists), and I found a big mess. I found these:
Printing lists in python without spaces Not general, unnecessarily conflates with OP's use-case of inputting and checking for valid base-7 digits.
Print all items in a list with a delimiter asked back in 2010 under 2.6/2.7, so answers don't mention f-string
How to concatenate (join) items in a list to a single string ok but again, pretty old 2012 answers, no f-strings
2018 asking, user confuses print
sep
argument with end
, please close as typo. Display list items with custom separator using print() function
Closed "How to trim spaces between list elements in an f-string?" -> Print all items in a list with a delimiter
I also found this interesting one from 2021 Hook into the builtin python f-string format machinery to override/extend built-in
__format__
methods
So I guess our reluctant canonical is Print all items in a list with a delimiter. The code-example phrasing of the question is bad, but the answers are good, but they need some bringing up to date/
1:03 AM
1:15 AM
@smci Ah, I don't know. For me, I only get involved in the canonical discussion when I'm looking to close a new question. (which in the above case was stackoverflow.com/q/78321550/4518341)
1:34 AM
@wjandrea Uhuh, would apprecuate your very quick opinion; even if you say "It's a lost cause trying to curate on SO for Python 3.x on an answer-base that still can be mostly 2.x". That's teh creeping feeling I get, 99% of the time I just give up on something unless it's very fundamental and broadly applicable.
4 hours later…
5:07 AM
Note on "custom sorting in pandas [dataframe]" this can mean one of several things from the following, and it depends on whether the column(s)/indices are int, Categorical, string, date etc: a) sort on a custom order of the index b) sort on a custom order of one column
df.sort_values(...cmp=)
c) sort on a custom key derived from >1 column e.g. (first 10 letters of lastname, age (descending), zip5).
No single question covers or mentions all of these use-cases; plus the pandas maintainers deprecate some of the functionality. I did find this about sorting a categorical series.
« first day (603 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (11 days later) »