I've been listening to My Brother My Brother And Me lately and it's pretty funny but there was one question they had where I thought "hmm, this is something I could picture myself asking in slightly different circumstances" and they spent the next thirty minutes implying the asker was a deranged potential serial killer, which hurt my feelings for a while
@PM2Ring I got you now. One more question, For myList = [1,2,3,4], if myList[2:-1:-1] is equivalent to myList[2:4-1:-1] then what does myList[::-1] equivalent to?
> Slice indices have useful defaults; an omitted first index defaults to zero, an omitted second index defaults to the size of the string being sliced.
Or, hmm, stop being -1 in that context may be different than passing in -1 as the parameter for stop, since this might occur after the preparatory step of turning negative parameters into positive ones
@J.Stahl Keep tracking the latest question, and try to answer the questions to the best of your knowledge. Also read the answers of others which will help you gain more knowledge of the subject. With time you'll gain knowledge and reputation comes along with it (when you start answering the question)
My jimmies are moderately rustled that I couldn't find this information in the documentation.
You can infer what the behavior is from the tutorial but if you're reading it strictly as written, behavior of negative strides is not explicitly described
Not that I think the tutorial ought to be muddled with information that's incidental to the main topic, but it ought to show up somewhere
Actually I've only been looking in the 2.7 docs. It'll be funny if it turns out the 3.X version is perfectly descriptive.
It takes a special kind of laziness to dive into the source code to avoid clicking on a dropdown box in the browser
Update: the 3.X version is not perfectly descriptive.
@Kevin Not lazy, just no faith :D you believe that the docs in the latest versions will not have the information so you skipped it and went straight into the source where you know it's guarantee there. Not lazy at all.
The address of the object that someString[x] evaluates to is typically not the address of the xth character of the someString object, because string objects require more data than just a pointer into a char array.
And by "typically" I want to say "never" but I'm not familiar enough with the memory model to say that for sure. But that's what I'd bet on
Ffisegydd is right that you almost never need to actually care about this distinction.
The mystery of CPython's string interning algorithm is not meant for us mere mortals.
Whoops, three messages up, I meant 'And by "typically not" I want to say "never"'. Leaving out the negative there rather changes the sentence, doesn't it.
I'm not 100% sure how the slice object class interfaces with the string and/or unicode object class, so returning the same instance could either be trivial or fiendish
if (i == 0 && j == Py_SIZE(a) && PyString_CheckExact(a)) {
/* It's the same as a */
Py_INCREF(a);
return (PyObject *)a;
Been a while since I read AG but I seem to recall them introducing a number of secondary characters without revealing their true identities until later. Not surprised that ep. 1 could leave people with quesstions.
TWF you have to order your minions (and I quote) "AND UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHOULD YOU WORK ON WEEKENDS TO MEET AN EXPLICITLY UNDERESTIMATED TIMELINE"
In this day and age of binge watching, perhaps shows feel more comfortable leaving the watcher in the dark, since the majority of them can just click "next episode" right away rather than feel puzzled for seven days
@MooingRawr: who knows what the future will bring? But I'm this (holds fingers together, almost touching) close to getting their VPN access disabled on the weekend, I don't want to see weekend commits. They should go outside and play.
outside ... and play... that reminds me I have to pick a summer event that my company is hosting/providing: Jays game, Canada Wonderland, hiking/zip lining, arts and craft, gofting, or watching horse races... :( I didn't realize how much of an anti social person I am when none of these interest me, but I have to pick one....
Folks, I'm very new to Python (although not all that new to coding).
I need to read a CSV file, then do an Fourier transform (FFT). I've figured out the FFT part (thanks in no small part to this thread).
But what would be a good way to read the CSV? Do I need to do it th hard was and read line-by line? Is there an function for importin CSV (I know Matlab has got one)?
(If it matters, this is a quick&dirty computation job I'm doing. This ain't production code.)
@MooingRawr pssssh, there's no reason to not bring your electronics. Unless it's just a really really out of the way place then you probably have totally fine cell coverage.
@NickAlexeev in that case you'll probably be using numpy arrays as your data structure (that's what scipy will probably expect) so look into numpy methods for reading csvs. That link I posted will be a good place to start.
@MooingRawr I think I have to wait a bit in order to achieve that. My new project is mainly on JS, PHP, JQuery (with HTML, CSS as add-ons) and I was knowing nothing about these until last week. Now when I started exploring about these technologies, I miss Python even more. But I don't see much of Python work coming at least for next 2 months.. SAD :(
My friend, over the weekend, was trying to convince me that Python is a dying language in the professional field and will be replaced with something newer like GoLang or something...
@MooingRawr And I am sure that you were able to convince him that it is not True. Specially when machine learning and data prediction are the emerging technologies, and Python is master in those fields.
In [1]: x = 42
In [2]: y = 42
In [3]: id(x)
Out[3]: 4297625248
In [4]: id(y)
Out[4]: 4297625248
In [5]: x = 420
In [6]: y = 420
In [7]: id(x)
Out[7]: 4378903472
In [8]: id(y)
Out[8]: 4378903856
>>> s = "This is a very long string and so it is not likely that it will be interned, because it is very long and cpython does not intern very long strings."
>>> s is s[:]
True
>>> s[0:len(s)+1] is s
True
>>> a = s[:-1]
>>> b = s[:-1]
>>> a is b
False
user6845426
Anyone watch the Anthony Joshua fight on the weekend
>>> x = "YoullFindThatCPythonReallyDoesntCareAboutTheLengthWhenDecidingWhatToInternAndTheDecisionIsActuallyMadeBasedOnWhatKindOfCharactersTheStringIncludes"
>>> x is intern(x)
True
"Someday someone will explain to me why people find the implementation details about when immutable objects are reused so fascinating. (And many people seem to.)" (DSM, 28 Aug 2015)
@DSM I think it's because understanding how the interning works often arrives at the same time as understanding other things about how the object model works in general. And why pass by reference / pass by value is not a useful analogy in Python. It's an "aha!" moment
>>> x = "ThisShouldBeACorrectTest"
>>> x += "LengthPaddingLengthPaddingLengthPadding"
>>> intern(x)
'ThisShouldBeACorrectTestLengthPaddingLengthPaddingLengthPadding'
>>> "ThisShouldBeACorrectTestLengthPaddingLengthPaddingLengthPadding" is x
True
Okay, that one actually shows Python reusing the interned string. The previous one would have shown True even if Python didn't originally intern the string, because without an existing interned version of the string, intern would have just interned and returned the string it was given.
I think there was once or twice I was able to figure out what a problem was a lot faster because I saw the OP was using IPython and so might have been using pylab mode.
Anyone know if its possible to bind/configure text in a pyqt Qplaintextedit like you can in tkinter.Text widget ? Not finding answers on google. Maybe im searching for the wrong stuff.