Not precisely. There are lots of questions containing the terms [python] intersection column. However none of them are about not reading in the data, only the header row.
Hey folks when we want to take the intersection of n objects (unlike union), is there a more elegant code idiom than taking the zero'th object, then intersecting with the other (n-1)? Hence the ugly first line in the following:
"""Get set intersection of column-names of specified CSV files"""
common_columns = set(pd.read_csv(files[0], nrows=0).columns) # <-- how can we avoid this? only needed for intersection not union
for f in files[1:]:
common_columns &= set(pd.read_csv(f, nrows=0).columns)
@smci I did change a few style things in my answers along the way but I'm not sure I'd add too recent features. Writing answers that confusingly breaks for a lot of unknowing people defeats the purpose.
Guys what should we do with this question about clamping outliers? OP anecdotally says studd doesn't work or causes an error, but didn't comment on whether the answer they got solved it. Leave open? Downvote? Close for no MCVE/unclear? something else?
Hi. I'm trying to parse a webpage w/ beautifulsoup but I'm having some issue with getting the correct elements.
https://imgur.com/a/FhWGR4x I'm trying to get this element but I'm not sure how. I know I have to use .find but I'm unsure as to what to put as the arguments/parameters
I like things to complain by default, if we are allowed to supress complaints
But oh well, at least the option is there i suppose.
@Ducktor is that website created by you/under your control or no? Because the div itself seems to have no identifier, which will make it annoying to select when there's more than 1 divs present on the page. (which there most likely will be)
@smci How about defining a "universal set" object whose __and__ method yields the right-hand operand, and initialising to that before starting iterations?
class universe:
def __and__(self, other):
return other
sets = set("abcd"), set("ebcd"), set("deadbeef")
result = universe()
for s in sets:
result &= s
print(result)
what is the term for finding the angle between two vectors that is smaller so if the angle is 45° I want it to be 45° but if it is 160° I want it to be 20°.
I feel so stupid right now, not sure how to express this
Like it should subtract 180° if the angle is above 90°
and then fabs
that's the code, but I feel like this code has a term in math and is already implemented and I'm missing something obvious here
Basically
double angle2(const Eigen::Vector3d& a, const Eigen::Vector3d& b){
double result = angle(a, b);
if(result > M_PI_2){
result = fabs(result - M_PI);
}
return result;
}
I'd think of it (not being a mathematician) as being a reflection around 90. Values go linearly up to 90, then linearly back down again to zero at 180, correct?
Thanks. 30 hours a week, home-based, Lead Dev for a Python team. It leaves me time to pursue other consulting gigs, as I have a couple of clients for whom I work occasionally. Or to just not work.
Fairly low-stress, I am hoping. CTO'ing isn't always fun.
I'd recommend creating a helper that does the set intersect on arbitrary iterables.
def interset(iterable: 'Iterable[Iterable[T]]') -> 'Set[T]':
"""Create a set from the intersection of all elements in Iterable"""
groups = iter(iterable)
try:
first = set(next(groups))
except StopIteration:
return set()
else:
for group in groups:
first.intersection_update(group)
return first
I'm trying to parse a timetable website made by my university (I believe it uses Mytimetable by Eveoh) and I'm currently stuck trying to get certain elements. The main element I need to find it "class=wc-day-column-inner". It seems this is created at runtime via Javascript but I'm not sure and I don't know how to get it if it is, in the first place.
I also couldn't find any parsers online for Mytimetable either.
If it's definitely created by javascript, one approach is to use selenium, wait until the page loads completely, then access the element. This is typically pretty easy to script, but is relatively slow, let's say 1sec. Another approach is to load the page in your web browser and use developer tools to monitor all the HTTP requests, and find which one is returning the data you want. Then you can replicate that request with urllib/requests. This is typically more difficult, but runs faster.
A recent question asks, "how do I do <reasonable thing> without using <language element that you definitely don't need to use in order to accomplish the thing>?" I commented "... Why would you use that element to begin with? Please show us your code where you use that element and we'll advise you on how to remove it". If they reply with "oh, I don't have any code, I just wanted to make sure that the code you write for me doesn't use the element", then my jimmies will be thoroughly rustled
Three people fell over themselves trying to give OP the codes and now they've gone silent, so I guess I'll never know.
Hmm, I'm thinking about making a class BadWidgetList(list): pass, which behaves identically to list. The only reason I need a new type is because a function later on needs to distinguish between a list of bad widgets and a list of good widgets, and type inspection is the easiest laziest way to do it. Somebody convince me this is a bad idea.
@Kevin this is a bad idea. You want to check List[BadWidget], not BadWidgetList. Just wait, oh, 5 more years until IPv4/6 dualstack is no longer a hassle and Python can do that out of the box.
pastebin.com/84AzbGhE. My goal here is to perform validation on objects to confirm that they conform to a particular structure. I can verify that an object is a certain type, and has certain attributes, and I can recursively validate the values of those attributes.
MisterMiyagi's crystal ball is particularly clear today, since he guessed that I'm doing type validation
AnyOf and ObjectSchema are pointless subclasses of list and dict respectively. I use them instead of regular list and dict, because is_valid([1,2], x) should have a different result than is_valid(AnyOf([1,2]), x)
That seems fine, actually. I think the problem here is that you've stuffed everything into the is_valid function - your code would be more extensible if you moved the relevant if-branches into the respective classes (AnyOf or ObjectSchema), at which point they would no longer be "useless"
What I'd really like is a way to define schemas for ast objects without actually having to hand-craft every ast type in the hierarchy. If I could define "df.isna() and df.notna() are valid, everything else isn't" as "df.<isna|notna>()", that would be great
and "df.str.contains is valid, but only if the first argument is a string, and the na keyword argument is a boolean, or not supplied" as "df.str.contains(<str>, <optional: na=<bool>>)"
Ugh, since when does gail have "autocorrect"? I started seeing transient green dashes a few days ago and now it replaced my Hungarian text with an English word.
@Dair I'm trying to supplement pandas, I guess. This is all just a revisit of the idea I proposed during this discussion, about how one could create a whitelist-based sandbox in order to safely call eval() on suspicious user input
The validator I wrote at that time was both very ugly and incomplete. Now I think I could write a solution that is complete and merely moderately ugly.
> GUI stuff is supposed to be hard. It builds character.
Jim Ahlstrom, at one of the early Python workshops
Ah, so the neglected-stepchildness of Tkinter is a feature, not a bug
The founders could not have forseen the invention of Stack Overflow, an ingenious tool that transfers suffering from those that need it to me
"you have done me the favor of underestimating my ignorance"... "Another approach is to renounce all worldly goods and retreat to a primitive cabin in Montana, where you can live a life of purity, unpolluted by technological change" ... "now that there's absolutely no reason to continue with this, the amount of my life I'm willing to devote to it is unbounded"... These guys are totally ripping off my personal brand!
Tim Peters, meet me in the parking lot behind the Denny's and we'll settle this
I'm thinking of plagiarizing the <0.9 wink> syntax used in those quotes, as a replacement for my usual "half serious suggestion:" annotation, since the ability to use any decimal number between 0 and 1 will give me much finer granularity of sincerity
"0.9 serious suggestion" doesn't parse very well
Unrelated topic. Yesterday I saw a commenter say "there's only thing that should appear after if __name__ == "__main__":, and it's main()". Discuss.
I rarely bother to write a main function, as doing so increases my line count by 2 without much of a practical benefit. On the other hand, there's something to be said for making it crystal clear which variables in your code are intended to be global
#program1.py
#not shown: f and g's implementation
if __name__ == "__main__":
x = 23
f(x)
g()
#program2.py
#not shown: f and g's implementation
def main():
x = 23
f(x)
g()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
In program2, you know with complete certainty that g will not try to access the value of x, because x is not global. In program1, you can't be so certain. It would be pretty cruddy design if it did, but it's still possible so you have to keep that possibility in the back of your mind
@Kevin umm... not sure I see the "which variables in your code are intended to be global" side - just more whatever's there that might execute - probably shouldn't do so without it being the main module
@MisterMiyagi Yes, being able to put main's definition right at the top of the file is an attractive selling point. That was the commenter's primary argument, incidentally.
I used "__main__" for the first time in a long time recently. I'm reimplementing some R code to use inside a Django project and needed a way to run my code without firing up the full Django environment.
My program architecture varies a lot depending on the scale/seriousness of the project to be honest... The scale goes from "a script that I'll run one time, then delete" all the way to "a project that I'm planning to use a lot and maybe eventually release for public use", and the higher a project lands on this scale the harder I try to properly separate everything into individual units
@Aran-Fey Pancake 1, the pizza is out of the oven. I repeat, the pizza is out of the oven. (I almost dropped it afterward on the floor, with emphasis on the "almost")
@JonClements PHP was fine in its original incarnation as a database substitution system. Then it started to get fancy ideas about being a programming language and six versions later it's an odiferous programming language.
@holdenweb I am generally in favor of very late replies because if they were forbidden then I would only get 25% as many interesting math facts from PM 2Ring. Thanks to our differing schedules, the window of opportunity for "your message reminded me of this cool thing" replies in real-time is pretty small.
I must be worth at least a microCerf on any Internet reputations scale.
@Kevin There are schools of thought on that. Some people appreciate the instant responses (myself included when I have a question). I suppose what I'm saying is I respect this channel enough to go back and look at what it's been saying while I was busy (sometimes).
I like the Usenet-ty aspect, which is that the channel happens when it happens, and sometimes you have to be there. But I also like to inject the occasional mental fart as I head toward my dotage.
In Hungarian we have a saying that "old man: not an old man" which makes more sense in Hungarian because it contains two different words for old. Ultimately implying that having many years behind you doesn't handicap you
a bit similarly to how "the blind leading the blind" contains two different words for blindness in Hungarian :D
That sort of reminds me: @Arne, I've finally realized why your new avatar is off to me. It reminds me way too much of Charlton Heston laughing like a madman
Past Kevin has written some shoddy code that I've had to deal with and I'd definitely challenge him to a fistfight in the Denny's parking lot if I could. But not even my trademark move, The Lightspeed Punch, can reach him. I'd need a Faster Than Lightspeed Punch.
Past Kevin thinks thoroughly about consequences, he just gives 10000% weight to consequences that will occur in the next thirty minutes, and 0.00001% weight to anything farther out
I harbor a certain fondness for any tech that can get you from an empty file to "Hello, World!" in thirty seconds, and IIRC cgi qualified for that category. Python is in that same category.
In the blog with Joel - "Joel: The big picture there is, the school system should have given up on trigonometry and calculus a long time ago and started teaching statistics and probability. The discrete math is a lot more useful." I find that statement quite jarring :/
my major bug bear is that systems in PHP - it seems that most people don't use a framework differing between templates and executable code... (admittedly this is quite an old system, but still).
You're watching a commercial on TV. "Our competitor's product is three times more likely to cause serious side effects than our own product". Perhaps the average watcher thinks "wow! How is it even legal for a product to be so dangerous?", and the prob/stat-savvy watcher thinks, "so... I'm guessing it's a difference between a 0.003% chance and a 0.001% chance? Why did you even bother mentioning it?"
Mind you, I think the only reason PHP is still a thing is because of WordPress, and I have suspicions that while I quite like ruby, it's only getting there because of the Ruby on Rails momentum...
If the purpose of schools is "educate everyone well enough that they can operate in ordinary society and hold down an unskilled job", then you really don't need trig and calc. If the purpose is "give everyone a shot to discover what niche skill they have aptitude for", then trig and calc is essential if we want anyone to enter the STEM pipeline