@idjaw: I'm tempted to post a one-line answer to the question as asked, which would be "issubclass is just another function -- patch it too", but the freezegun approach is probably better..
@DSM You could probably put that in there if they were looking to keep using the existing package they are using. At first I thought they were unittesting and that package was part of the code being tested.
@enderland Was just curious... last year a guy with a pathetic nomination, no actual moderation that they could do as a user, managed to gain a lot of votes...
I generate a column with cumsum() of groups. I want to take last line of each group (basically it gives me the line with final cumsum of each group). I did ` agnost_last = ag_no_st.groupby(['team','InstrumentType','Symbol','ExpiryDate','StrikePrice','OptionType'])['qty'].cumsum().last()`
it gives me TypeError: last() takes exactly 2 arguments (1 given)
Initially I added a column like this ag_no_st['position'] = ag_no_st.groupby(['team','InstrumentType','Symbol','ExpiryDate','StrikePrice','OptionType'])['qty'].cumsum()
which works fine
But I want to last line of each group
because it contains the final position of that group
@mini: your reputation will be re-calculated based on your posts. So all your posts are put together on the same profile and the votes for those are re-counted.
I use df3['team'] = df3['TradeSeller'].map(team.set_index('id')['team']) to get team by mapping to id. Sometimes TradeSeller can be NaN, in that case i want tradeBuyer to be used.
df.apply(formula(x),axis=1) how do i send the row to the formula and then use it as row.column in side formula. I know df4.apply(lambda x: -x.TradeVolume if math.isnan(x.Trade) else x.Volume,axis=1) uses x as row item
but since my formula has multiple conditions , i cant use it as lambda
I used it like df4.apply(lambda x: formula(x),axis=1) is this a good way
I have a column with date like 21-JUL-2017 10:15:00 and so on. How do I group by 1 hourly buckets ... i tried df4.groupby(['gp1','gp2'],pd.Grouper(freq='60T'))['col3'].describe().astype(int) how do I tell grouper that it has to group based on time in the column that has date time like 21-JUL-2017 10:15:00
is there a way to take certain rows of a pandas df based on type of the index? Basically I have a df with a load of integer-indexed rows and then a couple of rows with string indexes, and I want to pull out a df with just the integer-indexed rows
right now we're split between python (2.7) and matlab - but they've recently announced we're ditching matlab and everyone has to move to python... I imagine there'll be a shift to python 3 probably some time after 2020
Man, every Python job around me either wants Django/T.Flow/Pandas and or numpy... :\ Guess I should pick up one of them instead of just being a Python float.
no, it actually works. This is the first solution I've found that actually works.
it's not like it overwrites the original my_module either. I can do sys.modules['original_my_module'] = sys.modules.pop('my_module') instead of del sys.modules['my_module'] and they're different modules
basically I have a python/lib folder that holds all my self-made modules. I want my_module to be in there so I can import it. But I'm using git, and I don't want to have the .git folder inside of the my_module folder
So I've decided to put my_module somewhere else and just have a fake my_module in python/lib.
I'd have used a symlink if I didn't need this to work on windows
and then there's also just munging your PYTHONPATH
if you're using the linux subsystem for windows, you can make the junction and I'm pretty sure the subsystem respects it as a path. Fairly certain it will for a hard link
Another problem with a symlink/hardlink/junction is that my backup program is going to back it up twice... I don't really like any of my options atm :/
symlinks should be ignored by backup programs, or configured anyway
So... just to make sure I've got this straight...
You write some programs and you stick them in /path/to/python/lib. You want these things to be available to your other applications that you write. So you might have something like lib/something_cool and lib/another_thing, and you'll do something like...
And you don't want to have something_cool and another_thing in your git history for whatever this new mythical project is, right? Cause they're unrelated and that would be dumb.
and I can't have my .git folder in python/lib cause I have multiple projects in that directory, and they'd end up using the same .git folder. So I need to have my module in /somewhere-o/else-o/
Then yes, you want to package something_cool and another_thing - i.e. have a setup.py
if you're looking to the future, you want to package them up as wheels and stick them in a directory, e.g. python/wheelhouse and then you can use pip install --no-index --find-links python/wheelhouse something_cool another_thing
whether that's pip install --user to install it as your local user, or you use something like pipenv to manage your python envs...
(which is a lot healthier if you plan on letting other people use your code)
also as an added bonus, if you desire you could build your new package, and have pip download and build all the wheels for you and just give someone a zip/tar file with all the dependencies for your project and say, "here, extract this folder and then run pip install --no-index --find-links /path/to/extracted/files/ and you'll have my app installed!
@LangeHaare depending if your other stuff rely on y. IE if you only want other stuff to run when Y fails, the put it in an else. if you want other stuff to run no matter what put it as the latter
I'm afraid I don't really get it, but... I'm starting to understand. I think. Up until now I've always had exactly one version of my modules - there's no distinction between "module for development" and "module for use". If I understand correctly, you're suggesting I make this distinction?
Yes, probably. So you'd have something like projects/foo, projects/bar, projects/spam and each one of them you could package up, and if you have a dependency on foo and bar from spam then you'd actually specify that in spam's setup.py
Anyway, this was/is a very informative conversation, just one question: when do you know that something deserves another dir in projects? I'm not very experienced, but the boundaries between "packages" sometimes seem a litlle blurry. @WayneWerner
He also prides himself on his teaching "style", which is generally unhealthy and condescending, but since targetted at noobs, they don't realize they are being talked down to
Other advice: "Don't use a debugger, use print statements"
What he means is "I didn't want to bother learning a debugger, so I get by using print statements, and if it's good enough for me, it's good enough for you, newbie"
And yes, the whole "Turing Incomplete" nonsense is just classic - the dilettante who expounds beyond his own knowledge, then blusters that those who dispute his position are conspired against him
I always wonder with people like that if they've actually written major software in Python. Either they are way better at using print statements than I am, or they don't have to debug applications that have a ton of state that's hard to replicate outside of that context.
I think it's mostly the latter. For instance, David Beazley mostly just uses print statements. He also teaches more, and the stuff that he hacks on are usually pretty focused.
That being said, he's also behind the curio project, I think it is.
I don't know if he's released any other big things
and I mean technically speaking a debugger is just print statements...
You may be thinking of pdb - graphical debuggers that have live watch windows and active display of local vars are very much more than just print statements
But they are often an investment in learning how to use the features
okay - as far as the cwd, thats a mess up while me trying to come up with a snippet. There is a large requirement to switch working directories, as you will not know (of-course i didn't say) as its irrelevant here. i question still remains on how to archieve and move into a new directory. Focus on the issue and not on the butt. Else just read and move on — OK9994 mins ago
thanks, that is what I am going to do, with DV and CV
I have these values: 2. x-box horizontal position of box (integer) 3. y-box vertical position of box (integer) 4. width width of box (integer) 5. high height of box (integer) 6. onpix total # on pixels (integer) 7. x-bar mean x of on pixels in box (integer) 8. y-bar mean y of on pixels in box (integer) 9. x2bar mean x variance (integer) 10. y2bar mean y variance (integer) 11. xybar mean x y correlation (integer) 12. x2ybr mean of x * x * y (integer) 13. xy2br mean of x * y * y (integer)
Those values are either consistent with some image, or they're consistent with none. If they're consistent, you can find a solution. If they're not, you can't.