I've just been totally shocked at how bad I am at matplotlib. I've not used it for the last few years beyond debugging and just dumping x, y data that only I need to understand to graphs. As much as it pains me to say it; JavaScript plotting actually makes more sense to me :/
Ah, right, I see. So the older API is called "pylab" and it was even more state-machine based than the current one (pyplot), which has a state-machine per object. Whereas pylab had a global state machine.
but yeah, it's still similar to matlab, so that's why they have the weird state-machine thing in the first place.
But, now I think about it, I seem to remember having issues doing from 1.x to 2.x, so I've only just realised we're on 3.x.
@Azsgy Funny how it disappears from mind. I used to be doing geofencing in basemap and a couple of years on, I forget how everything fits together. It does seem a bit alien :)
Hi there. I'm still working on speeding up my code (massively) using expressions, but I'm still getting used to slices. I have a 2D (numpy) array of data called "omega" and a list of indices I need to visit called "u_neg_ind". I also need to iterate "omega" one point to the right of the indices in "u_neg_ind" (i.e. u[i + 1, j] ). Dumb question, but how do I add 1 to all of the x coordinates in the u_neg_ind array? Thanks!
@roganjosh Hi @roganjosh. Thanks for the quick reply. I don't think np.roll works for this situation, since "u_neg_ind" is essentially just a list of points (x, y) in the omega array that I need to visit, and I also need to visit all of the points (x + 1, y). Does that make any sense?
Not for me, but maybe for others. I take "visit" as meaning from_name and to_node, in which case, the offset will work if you're using it to reference a matrix
Roll, or shift, the index to align the origin and destinations that can be used as an index for something else. but I still don't really know what we're talking about because there is no MCVE
@Sam No worries for the delay, it's worth it for an MCVE, but I've literally just got in bed an set my alarm (past 1am here sorry!). Thanks for responding to the feedback, hopefully someone else will pick it up for you
@roganjosh Not a problem. Creating the MCVE gave me a good space to play with the problem, and I was able to get a solution that should be good enough (unless someone here flags it as a problem): indices[:][1][:] += 1 . Thanks again for the help!
If you have a specific question in mind, go ahead and ask it. Note that regardless of your urgency, you may not get a response quickly, as people have their own priorities to cater to as well, and only assist others here in their spare time.
Make sure you go through the room rules as well before posting.
in other news, ugh off-by-one problem desciption for AoC >:|
@Sam welcome! I don't have time right now to check, but [:][1][:] seems suspicious to me, I'll get back to you when I've had time to look at your problem
@NalinDobhal you said I first have to save Article before I can save a related model. The problem is, create_images_from_tags returns the new HTML. Do you know how to handle this?
@wim IIRC there was a package for scalability-curve investigations: it automatically did multiple runs with logarithmically-scaled parameter values, timed them then graphed the different series (log-log or linear-linear axes). So you could see what was overhead vs big-O asymptotic behavior. Anyone remember the name? I gave up trying to find it.
A very unusual understanding of the language. I'm guessing they got thrown in at some deep end where they were told they needed to mash some python script into a process
@wim I think np.eye is always a dense array, doesn't switch to sparse even when the O(n^2) space requirement becomes a pain, I don't think you want to do that. What if you directly create scipy.sparse.eye()?
@PM2Ring Yeah I mean I doubt @wim wants to test how the O(n^2) space requirement of np.eye() degrades performance as n scales, so why not just instantiate a scipy.sparse.eye() already?
@IvoMerchiers I agree it's more readable, for those of us who are used to it. But I'm happy enough with the previous version if the writer is more comfortable with it, especially while they're still getting used to the core features of Python. And extra especially if it's their 1st language, so they're also just starting to learn the fundamentals of programming.
@MikaelKen It should scan the list the same way, & do just as many tests as your version. It may be slightly slower, but there's a trick to speed it up a little.
return not(any(True for node in self.tree if node['from']==v))
I ought to mention that if you truly have a tree structure, it may be worthwhile creating a Node class, and writing some methods for it. But it's ok to use nested dicts for trees, if you want.
Hi, In the following code does anyone know what use of {} means please? Google-fu is failing me. I am used to {} as a placeholder e.g. with f-strings
def add_reverse(num, max_iter=1000):
i, nums = 0, {num}
while True:
i, num = i+1, num + reverse_int(num)
nums.add(num)
if reverse_int(num) == num or i >= max_iter:
break
return nums
in fact, syntax for that whole line seems odd to me
I don't think it is, or that it helps with clarity at all, since they are not related. I thought I might find it mentioned in PEP8 but I'm yet to locate it
Hi. Anyone could point me inthe right direction here: pastebin.com/kK3Qabii ? I have a list which contains two list. If an element belongs to first list, i want to append the corresponding one from the second list.. but it looks like for me it is wrong
@QHarr No problem. One gotcha here is that something = {} would not create an empty set. That would create an empty dictionary. If you want an empty set, you'll need something = set(). It's purely because there's an item in it when it's instantiated that we can see it is a set, so it's no surprise that you'd find the syntax hard to pin down
@Dair I have seen it. It's a usability thing; I just wanted to dump some things into a graph for someone yesterday but struggled to get the error bars correct. All my actual plots these days are embedded so I've just got used to JS libraries; if I use matplotlib, it's literally just dumping graphs for my own debugging use
@IvoMerchiers I've asked the same here many times before. Yes VtC is appropriate to signal to the OP that it isn't reproducible; if/when the OP makes it reproducible I will happily reopen. They still haven't done that, we don't know func1, func2. Also the meaning of the fields res, url1, url2 woud be useful, maybe it's better to precompute df[col].str['bool'].all() for the three columns res, url1, url2. Also the OP hasn;t added any print statements to help them debug...
...Anyway this approach of dispatching df.apply(test_func) an intermediate function which computes multiple dispatch to func1, func2 seems like a pain to debug. Better to precompute df[col].str['bool'].all()so we know up-front which func is supposed to be called on each row. Maybe func1, func2 can be merged, we can't know till we see func1, 2. So the OP still has a lot of work to do before I'd consider it reopenable.
@roganjosh @QHarr : I'd say i, nums = 0, set(num) was much better coding style, unambiguous what it's doing. At first I thought it was creating a dict.
Hi have some strange problem pastebin.com/UTZS0UxF With this code I wanted to get 10 files with 50 entries but I get just one with the name test_9.txt I am new in Python so clearly I make some mistake with code. Can someone look and give me some directions?
The first issue is that the with block is not indented to be within the loop, and you're not making any attempt to partition the output into batches of 50
[1, 2] + '\n'
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<ipython-input-48-b3b6811bf953>", line 1, in <module>
[1, 2] + '\n'
TypeError: can only concatenate list (not "str") to list
@Pijes I am asking for you to please give an example of words. If I don't see a small example of what it looks like, I'm not going to start trying to drag it out of you. It is not what you say (think) it is, and I can't help with the other problem (and I understand the overall problem clearly, so you did a good job of communicating that) without knowing this
If someone else want's to help me when I put print (words) I get 500 domain names line by line. I just want to write that domain names in 10 files with 50 entries. The code is fine except the part I show you.
You have file.write(words + '\n'). Immediately before that, just stick in print(type(words)) and report the result back
Tis the season for me to give it one last go at fixing this for you. None of us can help without knowing what I was asking for, though. To debug problems, it's very important that we take things in particular steps so that we're all on the same page. So, we need the exact output of print(type(words)) before we move on to the next stage
I can't delete nothing. My boss give me that code and told me to do what I need to do. That's all. I can't show you because of my contract but thank you for all help today. I learn all from you and your friends here. Cheers
if my understanding of sqlalchemy is correct, that's backend agnostic right? This one seems to be specific to mysql as well
Oh, this reminds me, tangent but i recently found out pandas uses xlrd to read excels. And apparently xlrd is not being actively supported anymore and they themselves recommend switching over to openpyxl.
@ParitoshSingh Correct. But it looks like it was being developed in 2015 so I'm gonna go with the impression that it was before things were properly unified with flask-sqlalchemy (which has its own issues)
Still, I think moving to flask-sqlalchemy would be an upgrade. I didn't even know flask-mysqldb was a thing until it just came up in a question... it's only afterwards that I found it looks superseded
Agreed, it seems to have been last updated on Jul 15, but taking a closer look reveals it was a fairly superfluous patch too. I suppose a library that's essentially acting as a wrapper to a single backend database doesn't need to do too much.
Actually, I was somewhat surprised when I found out it's an actual dish in India (and other places). Like, spaghetti bolognese isn't Italian, it's just something the Brits made up based on their cooking style. I assumed rogan josh was something similar.
Both. Korma is authentic, but you're also definitely ordering "half-lies", or in any case, many places will slightly modify dishes to account for local tastes. So it would not quite be exactly the same as the same dish in India.
[link](https://flaviocopes.com/javascript-unicode) suggests javascript deals with utf-16. > JavaScript strings are all UTF-16 sequences, as the ECMAScript standard says: When a String contains actual textual data, each element is considered to be a single UTF-16 code unit.
..apparently ive completely forgotten how to add links. and i swear i did this earlier today