I just wish that people wouldn't upvote incorrect answers. I guess some people are more inclined to upvote a simple looking answer that they can understand than a more complex one. OTOH, inscrutable one-liners win upvotes too.
"If possible some regex characters:" was shamelessly lifted from my answer. Come to think of it, that happens a lot. Lifts something that was in my answer and calls attention to it when I don't
@Cleb I don't use Pandas, but I do know a bit of Numpy. So it is surprising / disappointing that a Python loop works faster than getting Pandas to do the looping for you.
But i am confused about the fact of Machine Learning as Every site has a different name, some forward for Tensorflow others for scikit @coldspeed
@Cleb https://github.com/smfai200/Python-for-Data-Science-and-Machine-Learning-Bootcamp/tree/master/Python-for-Data-Analysis/NumPy This is a full overview Notebook of Numpy, May be Helpful!
@PM2Ring it was coldspeed that blew that one apart for me too. To my knowledge he's the only one telling us that the string library is poop, and the timeit backs it up. I had also assumed that I was using methods that were faster than python loops until I spotted it in one of his answers.
if you have to look at solving a problem in terms of what tool to use, you're looking at the problem wrong
@roganjosh The problem is pandas handles way too many edge and corner cases. If you know your data is sane to an extent, you can bypass all those with a simple list.
@JafferWilson pretty sure the room rules suggest that you shouldn't be asking about new questions, precisely because I'm now going to say something here about the question which won't be visible to others on the main site
But it looks to me that they are normalised in isolation
@JafferWilson Welcome to the Python room! Sorry, but we don't answer fresh questions in here. You'll need to wait a couple of days. Please see the room rules for details.
@JafferWilson Maybe someone thinks it's not clear enough. I can't tell, I don't do Pandas. Or maybe they just didn't like that you said "Please help me". Or they're just in a bad mood. SO can be like that, it's something that affects us all.
Yeah, it's changed a lot in English. Being English, I learned no other languages properly so I don't know if it remains in other languages as something more similar
@tripleee It's not exactly the same problem as 'NoneType' object is not iterable, although it is true that the OP is trying to iterate over a thing that isn't iterable.
@roganjosh His text_objects function returns a Surface, but he's trying to unpack it into textSurf, textRect. I reckon it's probaly ok to just answer the question & not try to dupe close it.
I think it was a fair outcome. I didn't see the issue originating from unpacking when I was trying to follow the logic through, but I also don't use pygame
Umm, it definitely isn't very different to how I would say it. We have people here that say things like "skellington" instead of "skeleton" so it's possible you bumped into a bad example :P
@PM2Ring I spent some time in Melbourne last year and your road-crossing sounds were an endless source of entertainment for me. I felt like I was in an intergalactic battle
@AndyK I've crossed more than 1 dodgy road in my life. I'm only commenting about the sound that lights make when it's safe to cross there. Our lights just have a boring beep :/
@roganjosh Yes, our pedestrian crossings in New South Wales also have sound effects. I'm pretty sure they're standard across the whole country. Most of the road laws here are unified across our states. They were always pretty similar, but most of the variations were eliminated a decade or so ago. There are still a few minor variations, though, IIRC.
In Dubai, the driving isn't as crazy as other places, but their attitude to crashes is very bizarre
I was one in a traffic jam and everyone was beeping. Turns out it was to get round a woman with very-obviously broken legs trying to get out of a smashed up car and they were beeping to get around her. That was the point that my relocation package was declined.
Also the fact that I could be arrested for what I just said :P
@PM2Ring looks like they got a good pygame answer in the end. Glad it wasn't closed :)
Looking at the question and the answer makes it seem solved. Looking at comments and the chat link therein suggests that you have a very different problem
@Cyril Welcome to our room, please take a moment to read our room rules which can be found at the top right hand corner of this page or here . Your question is fairly new still, maybe give it some time for people to read it ? If you can't wait, have you tried reading this post, specifically the comments seems to be helpful. stackoverflow.com/questions/14488601/…
Not sure who starred that post. While it's nice to get a star and I'm thankful for it but i don't think the post needs to be on the star board. -pst- RO please use your star scrapper.
I just got pinged on an answer from 2014, telling me that it doesn't work on Python 3. I'm slightly surprised that anyone wants to use uuencoding these days, instead of base64 (or base85). stackoverflow.com/a/27419217/4014959
I am trying to retrieve and serialize users from my database, but I'm having trouble getting more than one user at a time. This is my serialize method:
def serialize(self):
return {
'first_name': self.first_name,
'last_name': self.last_name,
'email': self.email
}
...
@Ishmael everything's "old" because the answer hasn't changed: stackoverflow.com/questions/5022066/…. Either do an absurd amount of work to generalize serialization of complex models, or use something like Marshmallow to describe the format you want.
Definitely don't pickle the query object, that's not what you want and is unsafe if you're accepting from / transmitting to others.
dataclasses aren't about schemas, really; you can still put whatever data you want into them regardless of the typing. They just simplify a lot of boilerplate you'd otherwise have to write if you want to use a class as a little data bundle.
@DSM I am, but the OP isn't. I have occasionally made my own translation tables manually, but that was mostly in Python 2 days. It's a bit more work in Python 3, unless you just want a table to do deletion.
@wim I was going to call him "No mess Charlie", but I figured you might be too young to remember those ads. :)
>>> from random import seed, choice
>>> seed(42)
>>> d = {i: i*100 for i in range(10)}
>>> [choice(d) for _ in range(10)]
[100, 0, 400, 300, 300, 200, 100, 800, 100, 900]
I just went to upvote this comment on a dupe target, and then noticed that I wrote it. :)
Each entry in the resulting xs dictionary will have a reference to the same a object as its value, whether or not a happens to be mutable. But of course the problem in the OP only arises when a is mutable and you mutate it. — PM 2RingJul 5 '16 at 7:55
@Arne It's definitely wonky. But yeah, it's choosing a number k at random from range(len(d)) and then using that to get d[k].
I've finally got a model implementation that I like in my SO API library. Need to figure out some way to manage the client object that makes requests without passing it around to every object.
Considering either using LocalStack from Werkzeug or something like SQLAlchemy's sessions.
@wim - The above-linked post was written for questions, not answers. There isn't anything egregiously bad with their code formatting, and following them around to downvote them about this doesn't look good. Please don't continue to do this. — Brad Larson ♦50 mins ago
There is a moderator accusing me of "following around to downvote" on Ajax1234 content ..
back to pytest after a long hiatus. IntelliJ/PyCharm has added a LOT more support for it now. For example, you can Ctrl-Click on a test parameter and it will jump directly to the corresponding fixture.
@wim Ajax is such a prolific answerer that it's hard to avoid his answers. And so many of them are below par. At least he does respond to constructive criticism, when he understands what you're trying to tell him.
@wim I'm more diplomatic. :) But I certainly don't have a 100% success rate with him.
I just found a great dupe target written by Tim Peters. Unfortunately I didn't find it fast enough to stop a certain person from posting an answer... stackoverflow.com/questions/51680154/…
I've always been unsure - is it still called "garbage collection" if an object was deleted by ref count decreasing to zero and the gc was not involved?
(because those are collected even if gc is disabled)
I usually don't call that gc, just ref counting, but in Tim Peters' answer he seems quite happy to refer to that as garbage collection all the same
@wim I agree it's a little confusing. "Garbage collection" does seem to be the general term, but I'd be happier if it were only used when the gc machinery is involved. But what do we call what happens when the refcount goes to zero? :)
@AnttiHaapala that's also the one i stumbled over, with no clear idea why they dont make use of it. Maybe noone complained yet and they are comfortable with their white spot on the wheel-shame-list.