I have to say, this is actually a good question. OP explained what they are doing, showed the code, showed the structure and exactly what they are trying to do
Granted a very new programmer, but that does not matter. The question itself is put together nicely.
kids started skating yet? (I always assumed that Canadians are born with a hockey stick in their hands and just play street hockey before they skate so I won't ask that question ;)
@WayneWerner Yep. I almost feel like telling OP they wrote a good question :P ugh...and now someone just put together a really useless unnecessary answer to just throw confusion in there
@JGreenwell haha...My son had a hockey stick before he was two...the skating not yet...I'm starting this year with my son.
The reason I am suggesting this is because, he is trying to get only couple of values. If he is printing every key-value pair, the simple solution above would work. Otherwise, the above solution given is buggy. — Prabhat Ranjan1 min ago
I had to answer back to that...
it is just so flat out wrong I could not leave that hanging there.
I wonder if I'm being extra hard on people right now (I typically get really hard on CS students around the start of the fall semester cause I just get bombarded by requests for help that show no effort)
I think your mind is just trying to prepare you to be more selective since you will be overloaded with too many questions to handle that you need to make sure you give the right ones attention. :P
do I give up? This is getting ridiculous
I do understand how to access data in a dict. Check my solution, did I not access data in similar but more dynamic way. Although, I do get your point here that for beginners its confusing. — Prabhat Ranjan1 min ago
today I got asked about 12 times and 4 different ways to write a foreach loop for a student, after a lot of time working on this concept with no effort on their part.
Then I realized the code he was using already was plagarized and this person was non-chalant about it ("who cares? I won't use this again")....
so I wrote the code for him, using someList.ForEach((temp) -> { do stuff; }); instead of a for loop over an array which is what it was suppose to be, and sent a note to the professor letting him know to make the person explain the code and that extra work should be assigned to this person if he is allowed to continue
I also told the kid not to use my code (it was just an example for him to "learn") and to change his other code so I gave him a chance - we will see (not much hope there)
@JGreenwell I tell people to basically write in english logically what they wanted to do, I found that people who can't do this can't code at all, but those who could figured out how to write the english almost always immediately figured out the coding side
gosh the recent python questions are... bleh
was hoping to find one interesting enough to look at
Uncle Bob talks about how the number of programmers doubles every 5 years - thus we are in a perpetual state of noobness. Since Python is increasingly a first language, I wouldn't expect the average quality of the questions on Stack Overflow to improve without a change in the system.
They'll learn not to write bad answers when they get downvoted and contradictory comments - then they'll either fix the answers or delete them. But they'll learn.
@DSM haha that rather sounds like "aww, now how sad it is to hear that", better just say: "Otan osaa" for "I partake (in your sorrow)", i.e. "my condolences" :D
There are couple of issues.
As mentioned in comment, always call <ClassName.FunctionName()> not vice-versa.
Second, either you have write constructor/initializer in class or you have to define all methods in class as staticmethod. Please go through this link for Object Oriented stuff.
For stati...
Yeah, the problem with OP's code is that there is no actual class. There are just 3 functions in a class body with no apparent reason for being bundled together. — Antti Haapala8 secs ago
@IljaEverilä you should make the exit, exit being recursive portmanteau of everilä exit.
cat_method1.Cat() NameError: global name 'cat_method1' is not defined
one problem per question and since that is the first and foremost problem, and it is a simple typo/brainfart, then we close it, as it has been shown in the comments and answers how to do it
hey guys...new to python from Java background...how do you document functions? Am using PyDev plugin in Eclipse. Usually putting /** "before" function and hitting Enter used to auto populate essential doc comments like @param @return in Java. I read that we do triple double quotes inside functions. But I dont find the eclipse environment auto-generating any doc comment markup like @param , @return in case of Java.
Are we supposed to write all on our own inside """ ... """. Also is their support for some kind of html inside """ ... """. In Java we can have <ul><li></ul> inside /** ... */
Is sphinx is about "generating" docs? I was looking for something which will allow me to have Java like behavior. Put comments with @param and @return and then when I use that function, it will show up those stuff in popup
I mean when I do functionName. (putting dot should show the doc)
The best bit for me was that I've 'discovered' more and more features as I've got better at coding and wanted to do more stuff. I had a prospecting dig a few weeks ago, and had a lot of "OH, WOW" moments. Should probably have rtfm at the start tbf.
Thanks @AndyK I'm trying to update a simple application on EB.
It consists of a Dockerfile, requirements file and a Flask hello.py file.
All I'm doing is changing the text from 'Hello World' to 'Hello, Cruel World' in hello.py, but I keep getting version errors. I'm not sure what the fix is.
I have tried to ask a question about plotly: plotting big tables of datasets with it, but it seems no one has addressed this issue before. The problem is that if I try to plot the dataset from a .csv with over 4000 lines the resulting .html generated by Plotly does not run in browser. Maybe anyone here is familiar and can give me a tip on what am I supposed to do about it? Or if there is an alternative.
@Mahesha999 I use Eclipse for Java IDE, and it works quite fine to my taste, but PyDev is just horrible. PyDev can be mentioned in a same sentence with PyCharm only if the sentence has the structure "PyDev, unlike actual working Python IDEs such as PyCharm..."
@Withnail It does not say anything. The file doesn't run at all. I tried creating smaller tables and they seem to run okay, but at some point after a certain number of rows it stops working.
WFT-II was the only British software company that could be mentioned in the same sentence as such major U.S. companies as Microsoft or Lotus. The sentence would probably run along the lines of "WFT-II, unlike such major U.S. companies as Microsoft or Lotus ..." but it was a start.
I want to call method of class like class_object.metric_name.save() where save is method of some class and I want metric_name to be dynamic based on some kind of array vaue
and the best thing you can do is to a) make a detailed question with all the information and b) your best attempt at doing that along with the errors that you face and then ask it at stackoverflow.com
I've always try to solve my own problems but since I'm here, I've taken a tougher stance , to exhaust all possible solutions before calling you. Guess what? It works. In the same time, my questions are not very sophisticated yet ;)
Webscale NoSQL databases and whiskers on kittens, weakly typed server languages and warm woolen mittens, brown paper packages served up with express.js, these are a few of THE WORST THINGS EVER.
with app.open_resource("C:/Users/10613527/Desktop/wsg.JPG") as fp: msg.attach("C:/Users/10613527/Desktop/wsg.JPG", "C:/Users/10613527/Desktop/wsg.JPG", fp.read())
@Anarach I don't know Flask, but from msg.attach("image.png", "image/png", fp.read()) it looks like the 2nd arg of msg.attach is the file's mimetype. So why are you calling it with a filename in that arg position?
My friend who I watched it with described it as "the most one-sided game he's seen since he last saw the Harlem Globetrotters play and just as comical"
even Phil Kessel decided to tweet which he rarely does mentioning something like he feels he had something important he should have been doing last night
yeah, all the papers in Chicago and Minnesota were pretty livid about the fact that the US didn't make the pre-lims (first time in almost 30 years)
....just realized that when he says "all the papers" he means "the online news articles from newspapers cause he hasn't picked up a paper in 10 years" and boogles
@Anarach please don't take this personally, but it is usually encouraged to first learn the basics of a language before using frameworks built upon said language. You'll find it's much easier to find your way like that:)
If the answer is "because I'm storing an amount of money in a float and I want to display the full number of cents", then [insert lecture here about how limited-precision data types are inappropriate for storing money values]
For money: integers if all the money values are full cents, decimal.Decimal or possibly fractions.Fraction if there can be fractional cents. For physics precision calculation types: I don't know what those are, but if they aren't money, probably float.
I really really wish I could find the example - it was all additive/multiplicative operations on non-zero positive floating points and the result was zero
I like using fractions cause they are precise but it's not always possible or at least not always as easy as using float or decimal if I know I only need a certain level of precision
decimal's documentation confuses me because it mentions "precision" which implies it isn't unlimited precision, but then I can do decimal.Decimal("0.1")**10000000000 no problem.
Guess I have to go back to all the times I glowingly recommended Decimal as the solution to all one's problems and add "... Provided one sets the precision to an amount appropriate for your use case"
ah, well pay attention to everyone talking about precision then as this is a big "when to shift from using float to using float64 or complex even in physics, decimal, fractions, or other solutions" indicator
When I want lots of precision I usually use mpmath. Decimal is ok for simple arithmetic, but not if you need fancy functions: Decimal only supplies the basic 4 operations, and sqrt, IIRC.
And was I speaking mistruth all the times I said "Decimal(f) will show you the exact value of a float without the usual rounding that goes on during display"?
A Python float gives you 53 significant bits (it actually only stores 52 bits, since the first bit is always a 1). 2**53 = 9007199254740992, which is just under 10**16, so you can get (up to) 15 valid decimal digits out of a float, subsequent digits can be printed, but should be treated as science fiction. :)
Those digits aren't random: they are an accurate representation of what you get when you convert the binary float data to decimal, but they result from the rounding error of trying to represent a non-binary fraction in binary.
To be clear, floats are a bad choice if you want to get very precise.
@JGreenwell I'm giving the benefit of the doubt and assuming that he's talking exclusively about numpy arrays. Then his mysterious mentor's advice makes a little more sense: numpy array manipulation functions are probably a lot more efficient than iterating through the array yourself, since the former is likely all in C.
@AndyK You will often need some way to represent non-integer numbers. The standard float is adequate for many purposes, but you need to understand a bit about how floating-point numbers work, otherwise you can do things with them that will give results that aren't mathematically valid.
@AnttiHaapala Not "at least", "at most". When a float is initialised from a string or int, it has those 53 bits of significance, but once you start doing arithmetic with it you're bound to lose some significance, even if you're careful. And if you're not careful, you can get catastrophic cancellation.
In this case though I think he is trying to point him to vectorize which from the docs is:
> The vectorize function is provided primarily for convenience, not for performance. The implementation is essentially a for loop.
Yes! next comment is pointing towards vectorize, I knew it. Everyone is so used to numpy being based on C (which is cool btw) they never consider somethings are just for convenience :)
@AnttiHaapala Yeah, ok. You still only have 53 bits, but that can give you lots of valid decimal digits if & only if the number is actually an exact binary fraction.