@Ffisegydd Apparently there's no gif of this that I can quickly google, but I wanted to respond with a clip of David Mitchell ranting on an episode of QI about eating bread and milk being "Demonstrably FINE"
@tzaman: one of my all-time favourites was a guy who took pictures of his exam with his phone and asked a question during it. But before he sent the pictures he signed his name to the exam sheet. I gently suggested to him in the comments that he might not be suited to a life of crime.
There are a couple of small optimizations for your version. By reversing the roles of True and False, you can change "if flags[i] is False:" to "if flags[i]:". And the starting value for the second range statement can be i*i instead of i*3. Your original version takes 0.166 seconds on my system. ...
@DSM I'm a...what's the opposite of soft-spoken? I'm one of those. I was once told by a teacher in high school that if he were going on a covert operation, he would not invite me along.
I have a question. Suppose I have two different functions for a given class and I use the output list (say list A) of the first function as the input list to the second function whose output is list B. Then how should I use the list A I got in second function? I got an Attribute error for using the list A in function2 . It says the class has no object 'list A'
def Set_of_subsets(self): self.SOS = [i.split(".") for i in self.my_input.split("+")] return self.SOS
def reduceS(self): self.aSubset = [x for x in self.SOS if not any("~"+x in self.SOS)] return self.aSubset TypeError: cannot concatenate 'str' and 'list' objects
i am just getting a string from the user and splitting wherever '.' and '+' occurs. Hence it becomes a list, now if [[~x,x,y],[b,c]] is there, it should become [[b,c]]
Maybe it would be easier to see the problem with your logic if you weren't trying to cram everything into one line. Try something like for sublist in self.SOS: if (condition) do stuff, and think about what the condition should be.
(Okay, I know it looks like I crammed everything into one line there, but that was just how the paragraph went. :-)
>>> my_sop = 'a.b+b.~c+y.~y.z+d.~d'
>>> my_sop = [set(i.split(".")) for i in my_sop.split("+")]
>>> my_sop = [x for x in my_sop if not x & set(i[1] for i in x if i[0] == '~')]
>>> my_sop
[{'b', 'a'}, {'b', '~c'}]
And I'll say this plainly: She needed to be guided to be using sets. If this is an electrical engineering course, it's probably not actually about the Python. The best way to show using sets is to actually use them in a relevant way. If she turns out to be a help vampire, it will turn out that I'm wrong and I won't go any farther.
Also, I'm still on drugs so I'm not fully responsible for my behavior.
@davidism you are right. I just wanted guidance. I can't get anywhere, if I don't even ask doubts right? and @PatrickMaupin thank you, and yes you are right, I still have 3-4 steps to do
agreed with @PatrickMaupin in this case and in general. People begging for help above and beyond is a pain, but someone providing that help shouldn't be discouraged. "Write my code" this was not.
@Belle if you need help with homework, you should talk to your teachers. Getting code written for you by other people is doing yourself a disservice.
user559633
I definitely see where davidism was concerned here, give context. I think the above code sample is cool and I'm very happy that Patrick said he'd taper off the help if it turned into a garlic fest.
@tristan Yeah, the thing about Python is you can correctly implement fast data structures much more quickly than in many supposedly faster languages.
user559633
@PatrickMaupin Yeah -- I'm using a shallow skiplist, but it's still amazing to say "on a batch of 0->xx,xxx rows, process o(n), then take that skiplist for all next lookups, then get xx,xxx+1->xxx,xxx batch and use the previous skiplist"
@Belle Glad you got it working! Obviously, you can make it work with lists, but when you get more proficient, you will find that this sort of thing is often better done with sets, both from a performance standpoint, and -- perhaps even more importantly -- from the standpoint of reasoning about what is going on.
@Belle "faster" is relative. Sets have O(1) lookups, which make some things (like intersections or many many lookups) much faster to do with sets than with lists
user559633
sets are faster for membership lookups, slower for iteration (and insert, iirc)
Sets also take longer to build than lists do, so often if you're just doing if element in some_group_of_only_a_couple_things it's faster to just use a list
Anyway the other reason for sets I was discussing is the reasoning about them. For the given problem domain, with lists, you might be writing something like [i for i in x if i in y]. With sets, this becomes x & y
And for regex, suppose if we use re.compile() , how should we represent the stuff within (). I initially tried that and it was full of r(?.* '%s''%w')etc etc...someone told me it was based on foo?? and bar??
@AdamSmith Speaking of which...I was looking for a dupe target, and I ran cross one of your answers where you answered a Python question in Golang. It was pretty funny
Since the question asker doesn't seem to want to clarify, I'll answer in Golang since I'm practicing it lately!
package main
import (
"fmt"
"math"
)
func isPrime(n int) bool {
if n == 2 {
return true
} else if n%2 == 0 || n <= 1 {
return false
} else {
...