Basically what I am trying to do is given 2 functions of similar shape, line up them up on top of each other based around one zero
For instance, you have 2 similar quartics. One starts at x=1 and the other x=13. They both in
They both have zeros at their points of inflection. That is where I want to line them up
So I was thinking maybe I can have my program find where the zeros are on both graphs are, scale both graphs, then put them over each other lined up based on the zero found by the algorithm.
@AshishNitinPatil Do you prefer a initial large long text of some lines firstly that can take innecessary space on the chat? Cause that is gonna how it'll go with my question.
@AshishNitinPatil Well, nevermind, I finally founded a way to do it
Is there any reason one could say "Understanding SQL injection is on of the standard things I do during my job"?
Yesterday at the local bar someone came up to me and tried to "impress" me with his job, "I do a lot of sql-injection...". - I was kind of flabbergasted, wondering "why".
Exception in Tkinter callback Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Program Files (x86)\Thonny\lib\tkinter\__init__.py", line 1550, in __call__ return self.func(*args) File "D:\Tkinter_Final\Secure\Password_Final.py", line 160, in save text = self.textty1.get(index1) NameError: name 'index1' is not defined
This one: Exception in Tkinter callback Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Program Files (x86)\Thonny\lib\tkinter\__init__.py", line 1550, in __call__ return self.func(*args) File "D:\Tkinter_Final\Secure\Password_Final.py", line 160, in save text = self.textty1.get() TypeError: get() missing 1 required positional argument: 'index1'
I'm writing a Python3 Dependency Injection container, before I leave alpha I'd like to get input on the API layer which is mostly documented in the README. Any thoughts? Presently I don't support kwargs but it might be a good idea to do so. github.com/incognito/brap
@davidism I was super happy that I got to watch the start of SGDQ with my game of the year being beaten by one hand. Apparently one of my friends knows the guy who ran it... ( I don't :D ) I can't wait to see the Pokemon and TAS bot section of the event.
@khajvah Thanks for sharing your thoughts, it's important to me to get perspectives if I'm going to make something for other people. I'm going to ponder the string ID for a while.
I mean it has his name in the URL and was clearly once his personal blog or whatever, but when I went to it now it's been replaced with a squatted link farm type page
I looked on a user's profile (who was active on SO), and followed the link to what looked from the URL like it would be their blog. It turned out to be a link-farm type squatted blog. The domain registration had clearly lapsed.
What would be the best way to contact this person to let them know t...
FYI @Incognito If you look to the top right where the chat is described, the link I posted matches the domain there too. It's our site providing helpful information and all that.
>>> range(3,nongluten_free=True)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: range() does not take keyword arguments
This is why Python will always be advertised as is. We give you the no shenanigan, all natural, non-hipster injected language you know and love. PYTHON. The alchemists choice for the best snake oil out there. Get yours today.
call now and get a free fortune telling from Andras.
Today I have to get these two methods agreeing. The old one returns five Series when I think it should return six, but the fifth is all zeroes and NaNs. On the bright side, the first four series seem to agree.
It's weird to have an entire day of my time scheduled to solving a single concrete problem!
TBH I think the zip answer is the better answer - the question itself (aside from the example) is phrased in a general way that makes it seem like the "first list" won't always just be the index of the second list - further proved by the fact the questioner is asking what about if the lists are of different lengths
I joined another chat and almost every message begins with @(person)... like there's strings of 10 messages back and forth between two people and they keep pinging each other
@LangeHaare as I see it, there are multiple discussions taking place at the same time
using directed replies is the proper way to ensure that everyone can follow their respective discussions
of course it can be a culture thing too, but if the room usually hosts a lot of people with concurrent dialogue, it's not hard to develop habits like this
Is there an elegant way to iterate over a string like "AbCdEfGhI" and and get overlapping windows such that you get something like ('A','b','C'), ('C','d','E'), ('E', 'f', 'G'), ('G', 'h', 'I'). I've been playing around with itertools but haven't been able to come up with a working solution
Now, now. When you think about it, it is kind of cool. That kind of crossing of the code/data boundary can be surprising if you're used to a strict separation.
@PM2Ring will remember this era, but I still remember the first time I was playing a game on a BBS and it crashed, and I dropped to the remote console. Mind = blown.
I can confirm that newbies to dynamic languages get excited when they discover eval
I might have used it in my early days with MATLAB, in the context of dynamic var*mumble mumble*
somehow this didn't come up with perl, but perl has associative arrays
most objects in MATLAB can only be indexed with integers (except structs but those have a slightly esoteric syntax for dynamic access), so eval is fiendishly tempting there
often you can handle the exception and can continue regardless
and knowing the context you might be able to give a more meaningful error to the user, rather than TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not callable from somewhere deep within a stack
for example if im writing a code to process data and i know that there might be a data set where it does something like 1/0 and i want to ignore this fake bad data, I would catch the exception and tell my code to ignore it and keep going.
silly example: say, you don't know what version of a library you have access to. You can try calling a new method in the API, and if it fails because that doesn't exist, you can fall back to an earlier, more complicated/slower method
import sys
try:
f = open('myfile.txt')
s = f.readline()
i = int(s.strip())
except OSError as err:
print("OS error: {0}".format(err))
except ValueError:
print("Could not convert data to an integer.")
except:
print("Unexpected error:", sys.exc_info()[0])
raise
note the "raise" in the final generic except block ^
see also the note in the tutorial
> The last except clause may omit the exception name(s), to serve as a wildcard. Use this with extreme caution, since it is easy to mask a real programming error in this way!
if you don't know what to do with a kind of error, don't catch it
typical example: you're doing some simple calculation which involves a division: you should possibly add a try/except block watching for ZeroDivisionError, and handle that case appropriately
really, read the tutorial I linked, there are really good examples there (not that surprising)
if os.path.isfile(f) and f.lower().endswith('mp4'):
unrelated to your problem, but you can spare a level of nesting
so... you're not actually replacing rubbish anywhere, and you should probably be testing new vs y, not f
as it stands now, for each element in rubbish you're doing the same thing: converting to lowercase (which makes the filename unequal to its original name)
if it did change something, you would probably run into problems because the first replacement would rename f, so the second replacement wouldn't find it
I suggest first doing all the replacements in the file name you want, then renaming it once
y = f
for element in rubbish:
if element in y:
y = y.replace(element,'')
new = y.lower()
if new != f:
# then the filename actually changed
os.rename(f,new)
something along the lines of
then again the test for element in y might be superfluous; I don't know if that could lead to more work than calling .replace each time
note that once you turn the filename to lowercase there's no chance you'll find your non-lowercase rubbish inside
but matching lowercase-converted rubbish might lead to false positives getting deleted
Human brains are pretty good at noticing patterns. If something's really off you'll notice quick, if something subtle's off you'll still likely notice.