not sure I understand you but in that case why not use a list? (for the rates->GBP key)
@HarryBeasant might be a better idea to write up a good question and post it. As either I don't understand your question or your making a, fairly standard, mistake about dictionary use
"i have no idea, maybe programming is too hard for me after all" : Don't be down hearted. Usually the first few mistakes are misunderstandings about how things work / what the intention was and you won't make them again.
For instance - what Robert is saying here is that it sounds as though you might have loaded the huge CSV file into memory before processing it, rather than processing it one line at a time. Two different strategies - often (usually) the latter is preferred and especially when using big files / datasets.
Argh - now that's a wrongly spelt name and 2 mismatched brackets. I'm going to be (rightly) thrown out of here. My deepest apologies @AnttiHaapala - from Rcchard ;)
just.. came here a couple of days ago.. thought i could solve it.. was recommended the codeacamedy tutorial (13 hours of material) and i really understood that and did every assignment.. back to my problem and again .. nothing :)
For instance - yesterday I spent quite a few hours tinkering with a graph I was making. Isolated the line that was failing, worked out a solution. Came on here talked about it, within 1 minute two people had said "ah yeah - that problem - here's a solution", both of which were more elegant than mine
i do this udacity course, and i write in their forums.. they never tell me how to improve it or give me a link to a tutorial or something ... all i ever get is " think about...."
The stuff in your pastebin looks like a reasonable approach. I have a 74MB csv sitting here - and will try it out (I'm no guru on how the csv reader code within the python modules works under the hood
You can, but you'll probably want to test it with a small file, so you know exactly what you're getting passed into the get_the_type function from the file
@StephanKetterer One thing I do notice in your pastebin example. The second argument (variable in brackets) that you pass into your function is named lower case fields, but you use uppercase FIELDS in your loop. These are not referring to the same variable.
this is really melting my brain, since your function in the current form would not help it either, because it would never yield an integer , since i could convert all strings that are really integers into floats
Well you might need a few, but that's a useful thing to experience, because at some point you'll learn about code organisation, and if you've only had one function, then you won't get why it's useful
And as a more general point: one huge function bad. Two (or more) useful, reusable functions better.
@StephanKetterer yes - the return should have been indented. Also - I can verify that your file input function works find on a huge file - with a 78MB csv, it never uses more than 3MB memory. So your problem is not there (barring the fields vs FIELDS issue I mentioned above.
I'll leave you and @RobertGrant to discuss the conversion of strings to ints / floats where appropriate, but the approach he's suggesting seems reasonable to me.
@StephanKetterer Sure - and that's why it works. But, say you want to re-use your function with a different fields list. You don't want to rely on a global variable called FIELDS - it's bad practice. You're already passing in an argument for that. I'll demo
(names not important - I've just changed them to make the difference clear.
if you call your function with audit_file('your_file.csv', FIELDS) but then use fields in the function - you can then call the function with audit_file('my_other_file.csv', my_other_fields) when you want to reuse it
Yeah - variable type is less confusing than filetype. So, I guess now all you need to do is do the right thing with the various types and you're there.
You don't need to prototype functions in python - see stackoverflow.com/a/25341254/838992 . It's very different to C. However, you do need to define it before you use it
Oops - sorry @Robert - put a comment in the middle of your explanation
Sorry - my define it before you use it was badly worded. It needs to be defined in the file where you use it is right. i.e. you need to give it a name. Not it needs to go before it's use in the file
@StephanKetterer I think it'll run through your code top to bottom, but until you try to actually run anything, it'll forgive calls to functions that aren't there yet.
@StephanKetterer Hmm - rethinks strategy for trying to make tasks seem accessible. You're right - 'just' is all relative. My advice always - start small - even directly in the interpreter. Make a small set. Add a couple of members. Try and add a duplicate, see what it does.
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@StephanKetterer This might help you think about it - you need to add something (the type) to the same set on each iteration of the loop. You need one set per member of FIELDS. Do you need to create the set(s) before, during or after the loop?
@StephanKetterer Sure. Well if you set it up with keys from FIELDS and empty sets for values - you can just access those sets in your inner loop and work on them before you ultimately return
@StephanKetterer Very nearly there. You need to think of two things. 1. Where do you set the dict up with one set per field name (hint: you don't - so where should you?) 2. Do you want to set the value of fieldtypes[col], or .add( to it? As you suggest, one will overwrite, the other...
You need a setup loop, before you enter your processing loop , it will hold the first line of what you pasted above. The second line would work if it said addand rightly belongs in your processing loop.
@StephanKetterer Well - your code runs fine for me except your audit_file() doesn't return anything and should return the fieldtypes you have so carefully constructed :D
Are questions asking to explain code written by someone else on-topic? The code in question uses an unspecified module, but I think I've tracked it down. stackoverflow.com/questions/29795516/…
That script I posted a few weeks ago does the right thing. :) It signifies room owners with `*` and mods with `◆` (of course). Eg, Martijn Pieters ........ 21:36:23 04/22/15 355646 * ◆
@poke It'd be nice if the OP verified that I've identified the correct module that contains the Problem class. And made it a bit more clear what they don't understand.
Is it appropriate to test inequality of booleans using is not ? I'm inclined to think it's ok (but I think ^ is better). See here stackoverflow.com/a/29790806/4014959 for context.
@Kevin FWIW, I hadn't noticed it before, either (or if I had, I'd forgotten :) ). OTOH, I'm not a room owner... :)
@PM2Ring the docs guarantee that "[bool's] only instances are False and True", so theoretically, is is safe to use. I don't consider it idiomatic, however.
There's some danger in thinking that an expression has a boolean result when it doesn't. For example, (a or b) is (c and d) may have surprising results if a,b,c, or d are not booleans.
In that case, it's possible that a or b has the same truthiness as c and d, but the expression evaluates to False anyway.