@coldspeed But how are they the needs of the greater good? Users might get misled into concluding they need to install HAMT just to delete an item without leaking memory. I think retitling to "Delete key from dictionary without modifying the original, to return a copy" and adding a one-liner in the question body *"The standard way to delete a key/item from a dict is del d[k] / d.pop(k), per this answer...
...which is much shorter and much clearer. The root of the evil with the former question is it piggybacks a harder non-standard question ("Additionally, how can I delete an item from a dictionary to return a copy (i.e., not modifying the original)?") onto a basic and misleading question "Is there a way to delete an item from a dictionary in Python?"
That should not be allowed. It's designed to mess up both readers' minds and search engines. The simpler question "Is there a way to delete an item from a dictionary in Python?" should be deleted, since it's well-covered. Or we could just link The standard way to delete a key/item from a dict is del d[k] / d.pop(k)
@smci 99% of user queries will be resolved by the answer to the question in the title. For the remaining 1%, there are answers (including a note in the currently accepted one). Really, it seems pointless to muddy the question with more. But that's just me.
@coldspeed No, not at all. 99% of incoming queries will be people simply looking to del d[k] / d.pop(k), which merits a three-line answer, but instead they get essays about HAMTs and deep copies... very unwelcoming to new users.
If people want to ask about GC, sharing and reuse of keys between deep or shallow copies of dicts and how deletion affects that, then let the question clearly say so.
I'm busy but let me reframe my thoughts on Meta someday. This should at minimum be referenced in the first line of the former question, and probably be reopened and stand alone. Anyway, later.
I don't think it is right to have people find their answer in the question, as you seem to suggest. Also, the first answer (nay, the first few) all answer the question (as stated) concisely and to the point. The essays are further down, for the interested few.
I'm afraid I agree with smci on this one. coldspeed's edits from 2018 onward all made a terrible mess of that question
Now it is asking two questions, and the answer section is a dogs breakfast because it's not clear whether they are answering the question that was originally asked, or the somewhat unrelated question that was edited in later
@wim Perhaps. But I cannot believe that it will become any better were the question to be edited again. My edits from 2018 preserve the original post, except making it clear that there are two questions being asked and answered in parallel. If you insist on changing it, I will recommend rolling it back to pre-2018. Anything else will just make it worse, IMO.
Happy to go with the majority, but really dredging this up again serves little purpose.
text = 'Each and every line of text should be printed but wrapped automatically to never have a line longer than the specified length. '.split(' ') num = 0 last = -1 line = ''
for word in text[last:]: if not len(line) > 96: line += text[word] else: print(line)
Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:/Users/Hunter/PycharmProjects/Canon-Operator/print.py", line 10, in <module> line += text[word] TypeError: list indices must be integers or slices, not str
@Arne You need to supply a globals dict. See stackoverflow.com/a/46852244/4014959 and Antti's answer that I linked in the last comment on the question.
@HunterGuimont Word wrapping is tricky. You need to check if the desired line length will be exceeded before you append the current word. And you need to decide on a strategy for words that are longer than the desired line length.
@Arne There's no shame in not knowing how to use exec or eval, since you should rarely need to use them. ;) And you shouldn't need explicit exec or eval to do timeit stuff. Give me a minute & I'll find an example of timing expressions.
$ python -m timeit -s "from itertools import permutations" -s "keys = tuple(''.join(p) for p in permutations('abcdefg'))" -s "exec('from dataclasses import dataclass\n@dataclass\nclass C:\n __slots__ = {}\n {}'.format(str(keys), '\n '.join(f'{k}: int' for k in keys)), globals())" -s "c = (C(*(1 for _ in keys)))" "for key in keys:" " getattr(c, key)"
aka are big dataclasses noticeably slower than big dictionaries?
The dictionary test was a lot tamer by comparison:
$ python -m timeit -s "from itertools import permutations" -s "keys = tuple(''.join(p) for p in permutations('abcdefg'))" -s "a = {k: 1 for k in keys}" "for key in keys:" " a.get(key)"
Might be cargo culting on my part, but the post which taught me about timeit claims that executing it from the command line produces more reliable results
The timeit docs mention that when you do multiple timeit runs, the run with the minimum time is the run to pay attention to, the other runs just give you an indication of the variance under the current system load.
If you're really keen, do your timeit tests with minimal system load. That makes a big difference on my old single core 32 bit machine, it's probably not such an issue on multicore machines. But when I run timeit tests, I turn off my music player, and if I'm really serious, I close my web browser.
Another useful trick is to put a function call or expression into a lambda, like this: stackoverflow.com/a/7523810/4014959 I'm sure I've posted examples using that technique, but Google's not finding them
@JonClements Run away! That's a pretty clear case of "Lacks minimal understanding". They need some one on one tuition before they'll be capable of doing online coding challenges.
I'd like to see a skit in the vein of Monty Python's Penultimate Supper skit, but as a dialogue between a programmer and their high profile corporate client.
I cant seem to find any docs which explain the `filehandle` parameter of this export function: https://anytree.readthedocs.io/en/latest/exporter/jsonexporter.html#anytree.exporter.jsonexporter.JsonExporter.write. How would i go about finding this?
@Paz Removing items from lists is possible, but it's a bit slow because all the items after the removed one have to be moved down to fill the gap. That's tolerable if the list is fairly short, and you're only removing a single item, since the move down gets done at C speed. It's not so good if you're removing multiple items, since the move down happens after each removal. So it's very common in Python to just build a new list like roganjosh said.
I also thought I should point out that by complexity I was referring to time complexity and not space complexity. It's possible you might be limited by memory.
If you don't know the indices of the items you want to remove, then it gets even messier, since you have to search for the ones you want to remove, and if you aren't careful you may not remove the ones you expect because removing stuff from a list your looping over messes up the indices (unless you iterate backwards). That's another reason to build a new list instead of trying to modify the existing one.
When I print the new list, they're dead to me. I don't care about the specifics of how I got there :P (well, actually I do and it is a totally valid point)
Actually, in most cases, I guess I should be advocating that since I guess it's more common to want to work with the filtered list and not keep the old one
I'm not focused enough to actually read what you guys wrote, Basically I'm making a chat and have a list of connected sockets. When a user disconnects, I'm removing it's socket from the list.
There's an interesting dichotomy in saying that you're not reading the extra information we provided and then adding extra information, but anyway. It's Friday and focus is in short supply :)
Umm... I just wrote an answer with a regex that appears to work... didn't think about it much - just wrote it... but now I'm sitting and thinking of explaining it... I've no idea...
@JonClements It'll probably help if you show how the thing works step by step. Fire up a REPL and show what the value of split is, show what the result of split[1::2] is, show what zip(split[1::2], split[2::2]) does, etc
@AndrasDeak My learning so far has been that adding a comment explaining why the information given is incorrect, or even harmful, is not wise though. No matter how objective you try to be. My last round of serial downvoting a couple of days ago was reversed though, thankfully.
It depends on the mistake of course. If it seems like an honest mistake I'm likely to leave a comment, and I've seen a lot of positive response. If it's a crap answer with "try this: <wrong code>" there's no way I'm going to argue
That's mostly just weasel-wording :P There was one comment where I told a clueless asker in genuinely polite words that they're asking wrong, shortly after the "clueless noob indicator" was introduced. That got deleted very quickly and I was unhappy. Since then I just downvote and close vote.
I don't think I've ever got into bohemian rhapsody or stuff like that... but things like "you're my best friend", "too much love" and "these are the days" etc... just absolutely loved... mind you - a personal fav. is definitely "don't stop me know"... I remember they use to play that on TV for snooker stuff
Is it just me, or is this question hopelessly unclear? The cryptic meaning of the list fields is not explained, the title has nothing to do with what's going on, it could probably be done better with two one-line list comprehensions anyway, whatever is going on is not reusable or generalizable, and it just gives me a headache.
@roganjosh The cryptic extra '14' is somehow coming from the OP's cryptic fields about some ranges of hours involving pharmaceuticals. But it's not explained and the question is a train-wreck.
@ParitoshSingh Ask away; this and the R rooms are as good as it gets. CrossValidated is for stats and modeling end of things. DataScience.SE is a wasteland.
@ParitoshSingh What do you mean, please give an actual example. Does "too big" mean "too many samples"? "too many periods"? "physically too big for memory/DB"? something else? Please give specifics.
my first reaction to having an input layer with 150000 points to predict one output, with 4194 total such chunks however.... makes me sweat. there's no way that's working out of the box.
(Although that would merely be a waste of a good nuke.) @Jon the problem is the tsunami of new users asking repetitive garbage questions. The real problem at this point in time is the job market rewards any Java or SQL coder who unilaterally pronounces themself a data scientist.
@smci that's fair... I've seen plenty of people saying they're "data engineers" or... well, just "insert something here" that sounds trendy but is backed by nothing except complete incompetence.
@ParitoshSingh But what specifically are you trying to predict? say 15 seconds of earthquake signal at 1ms intervals, given the preceding N seconds? or else what?
Richter 10 is a 1996 science fiction novel by Arthur C. Clarke and Mike McQuay. The protagonist is Lewis Crane, who develops a hatred of earthquakes due to a major earthquake hitting his house when he is seven years old, killing his parents. The book's title is a reference to the Richter scale, on which 10 was considered (when the scale was devised) to be the most power an earthquake was likely to ever have.
The plot deals with predicting earthquakes months or years in advance, and eventually banishing them forever from earth by stopping all tectonic activity.
== Plot summary ==
There are four...
@JonClements (It's been an issue since the site went live, the ratio of signal to noise is just way too high. It's not salvageable. Think of the flamethrower scene in Aliens, that's what moderating DS must be like. The only reluctant solution is the twin combination of CV(CrossValidated) is where people ask stats questions, SO where we ask programming questions. I've had some questions on CV closed for being "too programming", but that's the price we have to pay.)
@roganjosh lol sorry. given a group of recordings at fixed time intervals, making a set of 150000 recordings, predict 1 value, that is some continous number.
@ParitoshSingh sure, but that's sort of an anomaly detection problem, you need to find features that aggressively reduce dimensionality (presumably sliding windows of frequency-domain features, or whatever). You shouldn't just construct a truly enormous CNN and start shoveling Terabytes/Petabytes of raw signal data into it, then complain training never converges.
@smci bingo. I will fully admit, this is all uncharted territory for me. This essentially is the problem i was trying to think through in the "alternative" approach
@ParitoshSingh if the reading is of the same feature and you only have one output then, at least to my current understanding, there is literally nothing to be gained by aggregating the data
@roganjosh oh you'd be surprised. the key difference vs a normal "time series" problem in how i understand them is this: i am not predicting values off of a lag. i am predicting "something else" that has a relation.
@ParitoshSingh Yes it is. There is no indicator because the signal is the same feature and you don't have any way of representing the temporal side other than making each time stamp a feature
sure... I'm just checking it's been asked and addressed appropriately - "my" site is SO and apart from sci-fi which I enjoy perusing (and very rarely have a not too bad answer) - I don't actually "really" (and shouldn't have to) care about the rest of the stack.
I'm not sure I'd be surprised. A time series analysis alone would not do anything, but it would provide the features needed to actually make a prediction
Earthquakes aren't my thing, but look at any frequency-domain features computed over time windows of various lengths (10ms, 100ms, 1s, 10s, 100s etc.). Power-spectral densities, things like that. Look at some basic literature and see what people in the field actually use. Usually on Kaggle competition that's very domain-specific, people start threads discussing introductory papers, which libraries to use etc.
I haven't yet looked at the kaggle competition but this is no different than algorithmic trading. Take a time series analysis, get your indicators from that, and then trigger something. Whether that's a buy/sell indicator or sounding an earthquake alarm is irrelevant
@smci Thank you. yeah, i am frankly amazed by how indepth people get with these things. its been really useful so far.
Yes, all the current approaches work off of the "aggregation" methods. Most of my current work is based off of the excellent kernels labelled under "beginner/introductory". I suppose the main issue i have right now is coming up with something that gives me a more intuitive understanding of alternative things to try.
Suggest you start writing your own EDA notebook with your thoughts (no matter how rudimentary) and visualizations, then post it for competitors' feedback. Their opinions will be 10000x more valuable than ours, because they're actually working on that task and dataset, unlike us.
does anyone else remember that Iceland volcano going off? (can't remember it's name) - apart from that everything else was fine - depending on the time range, that'd seriously bias stuff
When I'm writing a test should I store the value of an expression when I'm only testing something about the expression itself and not the end result? Compare
thing.baz[0]
assert thang
# with
_ = thing.baz[0]
assert thang
@ParitoshSingh That's cool, we all start somewhere, just don't be afraid to post something (in that competition's kernels) and ask for comments. Some Kaggle users are rude, but ignore rude comments and downvotes - some of the expert guys are quite helpful. That's how we learn.
Haha, that's definitely fair. :) I think im getting to that point with programming by now, it took me a while to actually join SO too. I suppose its the same thing to do with kaggle next.
I remember it because it grounded my planned 21st birthday present to myself, which ended up being a good thing because the day after my birthday I was told by uni "don't expect to be having a holiday in April because of the design project" and I happened to be too incapacitated on my actual birthday to book it :P
@ParitoshSingh Because it's business. Staying on top of approaches is worth millions to industry
And the people that enact it are worth a lot of money to said businesses
Funnily enough, that was one reason i picked the earthquake one. Rather than go for something that helps people just make more money, perhaps we can apply ML to making a bigger impact on something perhaps more "noble?/altruistic?" (foolish?).
There's nothing really foolish about your efforts to use data for altruistic purposes. What might happen to the approach and how it's used is out of your hands.
Thats very true. thankfully im definitely years away at the minimum from coming up with something groundbreaking, so i dont have to worry about that personally :P
The boiling frog is a fable describing a frog being slowly boiled alive. The premise is that if a frog is put suddenly into boiling water, it will jump out, but if the frog is put in tepid water which is then brought to a boil slowly, it will not perceive the danger and will be cooked to death. The story is often used as a metaphor for the inability or unwillingness of people to react to or be aware of sinister threats that arise gradually rather than suddenly.
While some 19th-century experiments suggested that the underlying premise is true if the heating is sufficiently gradual, according to...
Data science is just so ridiculously vast. There's so much that's already been done, and even understanding just some of it would probably take years
@roganjosh ah, in that context, yes. technology in general has been advancing at an insane pace, but it doesn't really register until we look back to 10 years ago and compare.
And the people embroiled in that tech race cannot be expected to perceive everything going on. There is nothing wrong with new ideas and approaches being injected into the mix vs. people going down the paths they are used to
So really, if you actually wanna make a project for yourself out of this Kaggle competition then you should have no concerns about your intent and every comment about your approach is advisory
I remember when I first started my "career" at 16 - with no "computer science" or any other degrees under my belt... I just learnt on the job... and these days I just take it as it comes, read up on stuff, try to understand, experiment a bit, and well, while I couldn't name algorithms or concepts or all that kind of stuff, I get a job done.
still get those little "sods" outta uni. that because they've spent 4 years learning about linked lists and hashmaps and what not value it more than some decades of actually doing it... but... c'est la vle
@JonClements You get them in Uni too. With my Design Project I mentioned, which is compulsory in Chemical Engineering to get a Masters, I was told by one person that the supervisors would "laugh in my face" at what I did. She didn't have much to say when I got the highest mark and she was contesting her 2:1. This happens everywhere
@Dr.Marc no sorry - the rate restrictions are in place for a reason... it's great to have you here and that you have a question, but 80 minutes isn't too hard a time to wait out is it?
@JonClements its weird, i think this is probably a culture thing too. Where i am, most of the uni folks are just scared shitless we learnt nothing useful and wont be able to work. (and frankly, its not exactly wrong, minus the "wont be able to work" part. You just have to learn on the job)
@Dr.Marc Try to debug your own code, and narrow things down. run things line by line if you can. Reduce the problem. Assume for a sec no one can "bail" you out, what would you do? Take a second and read this . Reduce the problem, narrow it down.
@ParitoshSingh in the world as it is now and how things work, I imagine it's f*ing scary. I don't need a degree, I don't need whatever, I can say I've been doing it for 20+ years.
I don't know what it'd be like if I was going for my first job
It absolutely is. The barrier to entry is really the main problem. Almost everyone is capable of learning on the job itself, but its the "first job" fear, that's pretty rough to handle.
@ParitoshSingh Many fields are growing faster than we can keep abreast of. Don't be intimidated. On each Kaggle competition, pick a small but achievable objective for yourself. Also, what helps enormously is find a few teammates at your level of experience, especially reliable ones who are local and can make a time commitment to get together and discuss. e.g. for this one, it would be great to find someone with any signal-processing experience, or someone who knows anomaly detection, ...
..but really anyone suitable with curiosity and who is committed will do. Pro tip: on Kaggle never form a team with people until they've demonstrated that they can write code, and keep to their commitments (because once you join a team, you can't remove them). Give them a small task and see if they complete it.
@ParitoshSingh What country and city are you in? Try to find teammates at any hackerspace, data-science academy, Meetup event, whatever. That's what I did. It works.
@ParitoshSingh No problem. e.g. Python and Machine Learning Meetup, Noida. Meetup doesn't seem to be very big in India, I guess try Facebook, IEEE, ACM or other things to find data-science events.
@ParitoshSingh also maybe 91springboard Gurgaon"a vibrant coworking community of freelancers, startups and established small to large businesses.". My tip is go to talks, typically at the end you can stand up and announce yourself and tell them your one-line summary of what/who you're looking for.
@roganjosh sometimes people do disclose killer features. But also, after competitions end, the top-10 competitors often do post writeups in that competitions forum, with working code, visualizations, explanations, what features they tried. etc. [Paritosh] So look at the previous signal-processing competitions. There are several.
@smci That may be, I haven't actually ever submitted anything to Kaggle. But I would be a bit shakey trying to develop something that isn't using my local tools