the actual magic of copying all those commits around without them stepping on one another's toes is still beyond me, but I guess there's some optional editing involved when there are conflicts
In pandas, if I have some dataframe df I can do df1 = df[(df.Vg == 0)] to only take rows in which column Vg has the value 0. Does anyone know how I can do something like df1 = df[(df.Vg in np.array(0,1,0.1))] ?
@user129412 When in doubt, use an MCVE. In this case take a 1d numpy array instead of df.Vg and a different, short one for your other array, and see how you end up with a boolean array the same shape as the first
and as I said, beware floating-point arithmetic
if you add columns containing 0.1 and 0.2, don't expect the result to equal 0.3
it'd be really nice if every single time that MCVE was posted in chat it automatically linked to the SO mcve example, regardless of whether you do this or not...
> Python 3.5.4 will be the last "bugfixes" release of 3.5. After 3.5.4 final is released, 3.5 will enter "security fixes only" mode, and as such the only improvements made in the 3.5 branch will be security fixes.
@EnderLook I figured it was time to learn because I keep seeing it crop up on ads for internships. I usually google once I'm more settled with what I'm learning, or if the documentation doesn't have a real answer for my question.
But when I start off I'm like a deer in the headlights.
Anyone here every used Cython? I've just read about it, and find the concept of writing Python, translating it into C...weird as hell. I can't understand the reason behind it existing. I read that it can make things more efficient, but I don't see how the extra step of translating Python to C helps efficiency. There was mention of being able to use C libraries, so I guess that would save the time of writing a Python library that does what an already existing C library does.
I answered the original question. OP accepted and saidi it is not the answer they're looking for... later I've received a downvote on it because it is wrong...
@BhargavRao if you're around, you could blast this room chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/150112/… - that was autocreated from comments for a q that was deleted, so much fail.
Upvoting is for expressing your agreement with a post, and to signal that it's useful. Upvoting users instead of posts goes against how Stack Overflow works. Votes should be an indicator of post quality alone. Besides, if you upvote a user a lot of times, it will automatically be reversed.
The short answer, or TL;DR
Basically, eval is used to evaluate a single dynamically generated Python expression, and exec is used to execute dynamically generated Python code only for its side effects.
eval and exec have these two differences:
eval accepts only a single expression, exec can t...
But I live in a complex and there are common, open parking spaces. A few months ago two geniuses installed their own parking-space-protector thingies on their own accord, for their private use
@AnttiHaapala well, there are owners, and there's an employed "common representative" who runs the house, i.e. pays the bills, organizes gardening, stops people from stealing parking slots, etc.
We own everything, the problem is that it's one owner against the other. I can cause damage by removing their parking-block, but that would be akin to stealing from a thief; it's still wrong
and the "common representative" doesn't give a yam, but that's a chronic problem
that's why I'll try to incite my fellow owners on Monday :P
the standard procedure would be that the representative forces them to remove their parking blocks, or they have it removed and charge it to the owners in question
i use ffmpeg in my python code using skvideo. I have to explicitly kill ffmpeg object after the thing I've done processing in jupyter because jupyter keeps variables until I shutdown the kernel or explicitly del them. Is there a work around to this? May be an extension. with keyword didn't help me either. I opened ffmpeg object inside def. it didn't work too....
A Read–Eval–Print Loop (REPL), also known as an interactive toplevel or language shell, is a simple, interactive computer programming environment that takes single user inputs (i.e. single expressions), evaluates them, and returns the result to the user; a program written in a REPL environment is executed piecewise. The term is most usually used to refer to programming interfaces similar to the classic Lisp machine interactive environment. Common examples include command line shells and similar environments for programming languages, and is particularly characteristic of scripting languages.
...
“Hey, currently logged-in user, please enter your password again for me in clear text, so I can verify that you are really the currently logged-in user” - doh
“I promise I will not use the password to change it for you to something random!”
And even if the programmer doesn't intend to do anything shady with the password, the fact that the program asks for the password indicates that the programmer doesn't know what the yam they're doing, and I tend not to trust software like that. :)