I'm dealing with ~90GB of event data, maybe 150million json objects. The internet tells me it's not enough data for spark/hadoop, but the execution times of these queries tells me Postgres is not ideal - Has anyone had success with getting postgres to query tables this large in minutes and not hours?
@inspectorG4dget If you're not a fan of multiple points of return, it works just as well if you do
def iter_ways(x, nums):
if x == 0:
pass
elif nums == 1:
if 1 <= x<= 9:
yield [x]
else:
for i in range(1,10):
if i <= x:
for rest in iter_ways(x-i, nums-1):
yield [i] + rest
It's important that the for loop not execute if either of the first conditionals are met
it's not that I dislike multiple points of return. I seem to recall something about tossing in multiple sequential yield statements in the same scope (if block, etc)
@AnttiHaapala The queries are pretty varied, I'm trying to use jsonb and GIN indexes because the schema of the JSON isn't very stable, so unpacking it to columns is tough
We want a clean separation between the base cases ("there are zero ways to do this", "there are either zero or one ways to do this") and the recursive case ("there are possibly very many ways to do this")
the main place I'm running into time constraints is generating session ids, which requires window functions and aggregations on a big table - and I don't know how to index to help that out
Is there an easy way to pad a list to a certain length? Eg, I have a list that I need to always have 4 elements, but I don't care what the data in that list is.
@rp372 I was thinking that the force of the engine exhaust would drive the plane upwards, but now that you mention it, any engine that uses a fan or a turbine would be useless.
It would just turn into a metal jacket full of exploding gas.
...Maybe I was happier with the phasing sphere plane. -_-
Maybe this was actually some kind of subversive exercise designed to keep my imagination in good shape. If I view the question that way, it's much more satisfying. As well as easier to answer.
Oh wait no, Kerbal certainly does have drag of -some- persuasion, because it has parachutes. Parachutes which are useless in over-thin/under-dense atmospheres.
The parachutes function regardless of whether or not they clip into and overlap with each other, mind you, but still. Drag is drag. (Even when it isn't.)
I'm having unpleasant flashbacks to having to consult fluid dynamics tables to estimate the drag on different types of planetesimal in different regimes.
Yeah, they came up with a new aerodynamics model that included heat accumulation from atmospheric friction.
And all of a sudden, a lot of spaceships couldn't come back from space. <3
"S'all right, as long as I keep the narrow-end forward, everyone'll be fi-- WOAH WHAT EVERYTHING IS EXPLODING I AM IN A WORLD OF WIND AND DEATH WHAT NO NO NO"
And that is my tale.
They added customizable fairings, and that should have been a big clue. Oh well.
I often answer those with highly cryptic, but correct "there's no way a student wrote that" answers. Then I realize that others might come to that question in the course of researching their problem, and my answer would be totally useless. So I leave my "useless" answer in the comments
@inspectorG4dget Context is everything or nothing. If you're referring to my recent comment, it's about the question immediately above it here, not anything on the main site :-)
Yeah, I like things like that. And I know that's the correct usage. But "He who smelt it dealt it" is one of those things that probably hangs on into the most advanced stages of Alzheimer's.
Even when my memory deteriorates into nothingness, and my cognitive abilities rival that of krill, the thought and dream of your manhandling of my native tongue will live on. <3
After fiddling with pygame for a day and a half, the memory leak seems to be solved, and my framerate is... halved. I don't even know what order I installed the updates in anymore, and the version isn't being reported accurately.
I guess this is the point where I should pull everything out and reinstall it. -_-
Pygame's website is a nightmare. The "most recent download" points to their FTP, which offers 1.9.2pre, which is an older and less functional file than 1.9.1release, which is newer and corrects a B-list bug that I needed it to, but is missing parts.
There is a newer 1.9.2a0 on their Bitbucket thing, but it's kind of bits and parts and I don't think any of them are wholly complete.
Science, Tech, Engineering, Math - no reading/writing at all anymore and the focus is more on Java topics then actual useful CS/IT learning more often then not (well from a developer's perspective)
It's more like there are a series of msis in various versions and vintages (which are not at all consistent), and a raft of zips which I do not know how to handle.
Or rather, the consistency follows some arcane calculus I haven't broken yet.
@JGreenwell Sorry, we devolved from "Reading, 'Riting, 'Rithmatic." to "Standardized tests and CS" so from my viewpoint we weren't discussing post-high-school things...
oh, high schools vary massively by area here in the US but I have noticed a tendency to skip "straight to coding" without covering any basic, core concepts (like data structures and algorithms).....which gets people involved but at the cost of so many script kiddies
@JGreenwell Wait, explain how? You mean they didn't know that stacks are LIFO and queues are FIFO, or something lower-level?
I'd love to be in charge of picking the analogy used in a 101 class to introduce that subject, by the way. This semester, stacks will be laundry hampers and queues will be pinball machines launchers.
yep, guy knew how to "manipulate an array" (except he should have said list) but "oh, I never learned what a stack queue is - the professors said that 'that type' of terminology wasn't important"
Question: I've recently restructured my program to run in multiple processes. The processes connect to a website, take the HTML, parse it, put it in a dictionary, and put the dictionary to a queue (there are some operations done on the HTML; searches, loops, and the like)
I'm running 6 processes, but things seem to be crawling
The Jenga data structure needs to have a metric for fragmentation that it recalculates after each element access, and if it exceeds some threshold, it destroys all references to itself and is garbage collected
eh, I've gotten jobs and I've gotten passed over - shrug, move on (this just happened today and was for a really good job offer soooo I'm betting it is still a little fresh.....esp. after he completely missed the stack/queue question)
@JGreenwell What's the difference between a stack and a queue? In my head I visualize a stack as being LIFO and a queue as being FIFO, but I don't actually know if that's the case.
@AdamSmith I was just pointing out an issue I noticed about this type of policy - I really do not know much about the K-12 grade levels - it only really bothers me at the college level. For the record, I learned by building a BASIC game where a monkey threw bananas at people
@AmagicalFishy I'm not sure why you're not seeing larger CPU usage. Multiprocessing is a strange and magical beast. Parallelism in Python in general is something that is usually just done by wizardry as far as I'm concerned~
Hm, damn. I'm explicitly defining processes via the multiprocessing module—and things definitely move faster than they would w/o my having done so (in fact, a lot faster)
I'd recommend profiling the code to see what's taking the longest. Step back from the parallel processes for a minute and just try to get the tightest algorithm you can
Are you talking about how, e.g., if I add A, B, C to a queue, nothing else that I add will change the fact that they'll come out in that sequence - but with a stack, I could pop one of them and then add something, changing the sequence?
if you're going to go async, though, I strongly recommend you have a process that makes the async request and hands it off to another worker process. That at least gives you some degrees of separation between I/O and CPU.
Can you explain that a bit more? (I've just started dealing w/ multi-processing/threading a couple of days ago). Right now, all the processes draw from the same multiprocessing.Queue() (which is process-safe)
specifically, what do you mean by the "async request" ?
main process hands a URL to the HTML process. HTML process makes the network call and hands the result to the Parser process. Parser process parses and does stuff and hands the result back to the main process
Ah! In part, that's what I'm doing now (the one worker making the network call and operating on data), only because I thought that storing all that HTML in the queue would take up a lot of memory
(since it ends up w/ about 10,000 pages) -- or is that something I'd just have to time correctly? Like... if the queue is of a certain size, stop the URL -> HTML process until there's space
alright. so here's my plan so far: 1) profile everything (i should have done this in the first place)
2) further separate HTML + parsing processes
... I've already gathered all the data overnight yesterday, and honestly don't have much of a need to keep doing it (not for another month or something, at least). BUT IT NEEDS TO GO FASTER >:(
The actual question btw. was the standard how to evaluate a string equation mantaining the order of operations. With a follow up about reverse Polish notation. Quick version of my answer: loop, build stack and output remembering to evaluate the order of operation based on last and take into account parenthesizes. His answer was "use eval"
I've read that, to install a whl, all I should need to do is type pip install <filepath>. But I guess I have to import pip first. Okay, cool. Still nothing.