@OTLT-LCar Hey, you might have a legitimate reason to be using Kali Linux, but it's hard for us to know that. Kali is a distro aimed at security experts who are already very comfortable using Linux. But tons of kids without the necessary knowledge try using it because they think it's cool.
So on Stack Exchange we tend to be a little cautious when a new face pops up asking for help with Kali. Please see unix.stackexchange.com/questions/399626/… for further details.
I am actually trying for interviews "again" when I was in college was using C++ for online coding rounds, Some companies just didn't like it if you wrote code in anything except C++ or Java
I'd say, when dealing with python, only "loosely" associate it with C++, but don't try to dig into finding exact same functions across languages, the exercise quickly turns from beneficial to harmful
@AAB What do you mean? The standard Python list.sort method sorts the list in-place. There's also a convenience function sorted, which builds a list from an iterable and then sorts that list in-place.
If you're programming games for example, you'll probably never get anywhere serious in most companies using python. So, it depends on "where" you're applying
@OTLT-LCar Sorry, I'm not a security expert. I just wanted to let you know the reasons underlying our policy about Kali. There's a whole Security Stack Exchange where security experts hang out.
@PM2Ring yes python does have but C++ had something like sort where I specify the start and end index and it would sort till only that all in place no new array was just seeing the similarity between the 2 tats all...
The last entry level position I interviewed for, all the questions were language-agnostic. I guess they figured as long as I knew OO principles in general, the actual syntax involved was just window dressing. I got hired, so I guess it worked out OK.
A company "wants" something, regardless of what language you used to work in. If the company specifies a language, they expect you to use that language. Depending on the position, if it's entry level, it's pretty, well, entry level. But It really depends on the specific company what they expect when it comes to language specific questions and expectations.
This is not a programming question, it's just a case of being flustered by the languages. There's no reason to work yourself up here about that; you've submitted a CV that shows what you've done in the past, and (I presume) the language. So if you need to pseudo-code, do it in the language you're most-comfortable with
Also, you need to narrow down your "field of view" so to speak. The questions will answer themselves automatically if you can make up your mind. Are you seeking guidance on how to join "that one specific dream company"? If yes, then essentially, your path is clear. find out how others did it before you.
If you're instead asking "how do i get a job in general". Then the language question itself disappears instantly, because there's always jobs for most major programming languages. You can also narrow it down based on "what kind of work"
What becomes more important is being familiar with the interview process itself. See if you're comfortable with it or not. Sometimes watching youtube clips of mock interviews can help
Before we just get stuck in cyclical advice; you should probably be more concerned about the algorithms, and getting the correct answer, than what language you're going to pseudocode in
@roganjosh yes I have been practising a lot. I still get super confused in Dynamic Programming and some Binary search application problems but I believe I am making progress
an interesting problem I had recently was to generate an unused file name from a template (like %artist% - %album% - %title% (%tags%)) in such a way that you can fit in as many tags as possible. Ended up having to write a local search algorithm for that one
it's probably just that Series.map gets to work on a single type, and more importantly, it knows its input is either a dict or equivalent, so it can even use the C API to do all the work in C
there's no way to truly optimize a method that eats generic callables (without jit)
Aye, i assume in any case map is able to optimize for specifically knowing the kind of operation it needs to work with, since it's a much smaller subset of apply.
What AD said sounds pretty reasonable, i'd be surprised if it wasn't the case
Also, if i was a pandas dev, i'd make Kevin a pandas dev.
@AndrasDeak From my understanding, if you want to multiply the array, you can load the instruction set for multiplication once into the CPU and it just ploughs numbers through.
@roganjosh I thought that there's few operations that the CPU can do at the same time, and the real kicker is playing nicely with various levels of caching
but compiled C code and vectorization are different concepts
it's just that the former tends to be the prerequisite for the latter, because there's no way to play nicely with the cache from a high level
at least that's my (admittedly limited) understanding
Given link in source code for pandas, im actually not able to figure out where the super call is going. Where are these being imported from? What am i missing here?
regardless if there are any other implementations that would count as serious, I don't see why it should not work in any hypothetical, conformant implementation.