@AndrasDeak why so? is it because everything from the library will come with it? then, again, cherry picking out what's needed would still be better than aliasing. You wouldn't have to dot anything.
>>> {k for k in dir(numpy) if hasattr(__builtins__, k) and getattr(__builtins__, k) is not getattr(numpy, k)}
{'__spec__', 'all', '__package__', 'any', '__name__', 'max', 'min', 'abs', 'divmod', 'round', '__loader__', 'sum', '__doc__'}
there was a module in matplotlib called pylab which contained numpy and pyplot (with a bunch of submodule names too) in a huge namespace; it was eventually deprecated because it was too clumsy and not useful enough
at least I think it's de facto deprecated at least
the only reason I'm a bit insure is that pylab is still there and the module-level docstring doesn't mention deprecation (I'm too lazy to look at the online docs)
python has too many annoyingly named builtins. Trying to avoid shadowing stuff leads to annoying code like image.save(format_='png', file_=open('foo','wb')) :/
@AndrejKesely I have tried and failed to figure out where that data is coming from, but I can tell you that 75 is ascii 'K' and the German word for calendar starts with K and everything after '75=' is a date.
My uneducated guess is that any amount of horse tranquilizer would be catastrophic to a moth
Also true, you could just sacrifice a bunch of them. Still, I think it's an unpopular enough area of study that you're gonna have a tough time finding people to share their moth weight databases with you
or, what I really mean is, I couldn't find anything in a google search for "moth weight statistics" and anything more than that is too much effort
Moths are basically butterflies, very mainstream entomology. I don't see why you think it's such an esoteric thing to research. The issue is that people weighing moths are more likely to publish their findings in papers which are less likely to be indexed by google. Try some entomological journals
The oxford journal of insect science only has 5 articles on Actias luna, and none of them are about weight... And I think that even if there was an article in a journal about moth population weight statistics, it would probably be "The effect of X on ...", which would probably have a control group but I'm not sure if it would be useful for svm stuff