@MoinuddinQuadri Sure - didn't want to deride your work or effort in anyway... it's just normally, in a lot of cases, nothing's new under the sun for what one would think is a common task :)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ yes, verified for list with 1000 items. List comprehension is way too slower that list.insert. I should have thought about why List Comprehension gave better result earlier. :D
@AndyK computers internally store letters and other characters as numbers. The character a has a different number than the character b. This is not specific to python.
please don't ping people out of the blue, that's inconsiderate (and possibly against the rules)
just ask your question, if someone can help they'll get back to you eventually
> 3. Especially don't use @username notification unless that user has already told you it's okay to ping them; that's like jabbing someone in the shoulder and saying "Hey! Answer me!", and will quickly mark you out as someone to be avoided.
I'm actually gonna order it by len(the_object.entry_set.filter(entry_date2__gte=make_aware(d.datetime.today()-d.timedelta(days=1)))) so I better read all the docs :D
yeah, that's quite likely, and anyway I knew that there should be an integral way
but I was also sure that I can pull this off, and that there was an indeterminate amount of thinking involved in other approaches :P
I've never seen 2d space parameterized this way, and I have seen various non-rectangular coordinate systems, so I was strongly primed to do it the way I did
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ that is another matter, but read the close reason more thoroughly
> While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers.
typos are only obvious once they're pointed out, so it's not the same kind of "off-topic" as the rest of the off-topic reasons which OP could realize on their own
debugging questions are on topic, and these are debugging questions with narrow scope and trivial solutions
"lot of people on the network click on it and upvote" more often than not implies triviality. Sometimes it's genuine brilliance or interesting tidbit, but that feels like the minority
Is there a way to get total value counts of select columns ( say columns 3 to 5)? I found something which applies value_counts to the entire dataframe: df.apply(pd.value_counts) , but I want the total value_counts of only three columns.
I literally saw the -1 on my answer and subsequent +1 on the other. Then, a comment "Don't get why this is downvoted" on my answer by someone else and it just spiralled out of control from there.
But you could attribute just about anything to it.
^ I was there to confirm on that. All this fire was due to some random anonymous user. And then the chaos started. Then both the answerers started showing off all the possible solutions :D
@MoinuddinQuadri Yes... and I'm a little peeved about the fact that Willem Van Onsem's added a "defaultdict" solution which came from my dict.get answer.
But that kind of stuff happens all the time... People who are seemingly "inspired" by your answers
The 0, 1, 2 is specific to OP's problem where a list/tuple would work (as Willem's answer showed), but a dict is the only thing that can work for any generic case, even non-integer keys. For example, if you had keys -100, 10000, and 3.14.
@Rawing Thanks... and yeah, that surprised me too, seeing as I (and of course, many others) have written answers much better than that, but not nearly as well appreciated
@Simon It's better IMO, because at least you're only praising yourself. "If I down-vote you your question/answer it is doomed" sounds like you enjoy ruining other people's efforts