@Nick wiki doesn't mention anything noteworthy about mental issues with Heath Ledger, just substance abuse. Nothing a good vacation and some sport wouldn't have solved.
@desertnaut I'm pretty sure this post you edited is AI generated (the code is identical to the deleted AI generated answer) with a spam link added; the spam link is also in the comments. I think flagging as spam is a better approach.
@NathanOliver Maybe the wrong reason. It's true that they don't need a solution any more. But, IMO, if they still did want a solution the question would be far too broad ("Any clue on way to handle that?"). So, maybe we should close it for that reason instead.
@GertArnold yeah, we really don't care if the OP still has the problem or not, someone else might. I could get behind a too broad but to me the problem is well described and they ask for a solution. They don't mention any libraries or other DBs so seems reasonably constrained to me.
@NathanOliver Yeah, but the solution to their question isn't trivial at all and the exact direction would depend on specific needs. For some of them I could find appropriate duplicates, but without any more details I'm empty handed.
I say "canonical", but I mean "highest-scoring actually-relevant result when I copy and paste the important part of the error message into site search"
but almost everything is very clearly the same question
quoting the accepted answer: "The exception is raised because your X and Y have different number of samples (rows) and train_test_split doesn't like this."
@KarlKnechtel I am afraid the root cause of the problem here (interchanging the train and test data variables) is not the issue in the duplicate target, where the command is correct
I'm not really sold that the cause matters at that level of specificity? if there's a question at all after debugging, it's either "what am I supposed to pass?" which is idiosyncratic and requires thought, or "what is wrong with the input?", which is that the numbers of rows don't match. Perhaps it could be expanded by explaining why the algorithm requires a matching amount of input
I said the question was due to a typo, as the OP had used X_train,y_train,X_test,y_test, instead of the correct one X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test, and the answer correctly addresses this. The cause in the target duplicate you have pointed to is different
All in all, I disagree with your choice and I think it is misleading and misses the point, and I am leaving it there
Sorry, I actually reopened it - as said, it is not a duplicate