hey guys, is there a way I can do this looping by some groupby/transforms in pandas?
for ratio in [1/2,1/4]:
for i in range(1,10):
df.loc[(df['t']==i) & ((df['a']==ratio)|(df['b']==ratio)),'funcout']= \
function(df.loc[(df['t']==i) & ((df['a']==ratio)|(df['b']==ratio))],ratio)
that ratio ratio list and a i range here are place holders for entire set of values that occur in their respective columns
basically this part I'm not sure how I could handle the grouping for in particular: (df['a']==ratio)|(df['b']==ratio)
True. There is plenty of time. Something about doing them during the season is nice. One day I'll have time to go back and actually learn how finish the ones I can't originally.
@JoelHarmon If I remember correctly you were quite good
If you're interested in taking that route, the subreddit has a megathread for solutions for any given day, many of which come with explanations.
"quite good" is a relative term.
I had a somewhat amusing conversation with a former coworker who I found out was excited to try and beat my score for any day. Less than an hour before that, I was thinking the same thing about trying to beat a friend of mine.
Really, the biggest thing is being able to make time to attempt at release time. IIRC, last year there were a few thousand active users at that time. There's almost no way to break the top thousand if you start late.
To deal with the midnight starts you basically have to take a whole year's worth of vacation time during December, love being up all night, or not live in the middle of America.
West coast of the US would be pretty optimal for me; 9PM is early enough to get to bed at a reasonable time, but late enough to be after dinner and done with most other obligations for the day. Sadly, that's not where I live, so I end up making poor life choices.
Now I wonder how many bosses would allow later starts for a month if it was for a good cause.
We are developing a platform, for which several scripts need to be running in the background. I'd like to make a script to run those scripts automatically. My question is, is there a preferred way to do this? E.g Is there any difference to do it with python (with import...) vs a bash script?
@John If you have requirements, it is very important to give an accurate sketch of them. E.g. should that checking occur at regular intervals, or exactly on-change?
If you are on a UNIX box, inotify plus some scripting language sounds appropriate.
I generally recommend not to use bash for anything but the most trivial of tasks.
From what you have said so far, I'd go for a Python script that uses inotify to watch the file, and runs the other scripts via subprocess.
Anybody have an opinion on an OOP design matter? Would you create a class for every page when using a web framework such as Flask? Like class HomePage, class About, and so on. I know Flask encourages the use of functions, but I want to make it the OOP way.
@MisterMiyagi It's a relatively large website, and it's kind of more organized with classes.My question is more of an OOP question in that if it makes sense to use classes like that.
Or maybe there should be only one Page class that generates page instances (Home instance, About, etc.)
@multigoodverse It's hard to give a good answer to this question, best is to ask somebody senior in your organisation, because he knows the requirements better. If there is nobody just start and dont be afraid to refactor, for this you need tests ofc. Then over time you will realize what is good design and what not by seeing how hard something was to refactor
I suppose im a bit confused, what's the actual desired behaviour for you?
You'd want to make sure you outline that clearly first, and then proceed. You can manipulate most things to give you a result you need as long as you're clear on what that end result needs to be.
travel.stackexchange.com/questions/161396/… How is the answer to this question not obvious to the asker? Like I can't understand how somebody can not understand the concept how long something is valid and still be able to use a computer to ask this question?
I read that commend and I mean I get that, Serbia where my parents come from has the same system. But clearly if it says valid till it is not valid after. Like that seems so incredibly simple that I find it weird it has so many upvotes and is on hnq instead of being at minus something votes.
@Hakaishin the obvious solution is that you are missing something. So rather than dumping unconstructive off-topic finger-pointing here, find what you're missing or go yampost elsewhere.
It can be as simple as "lets doublecheck" and "better safe than sorry" type of deal. So, even when one resource states something that might be obvious, it's not unfair to verify from another.
@python_learner There is a Settings link at the top that lets you select how you're displayed, and Anonymous is the default. You may also be interested in googling the term "Advent calendar" specifically, rather than "Advent" generally.
@MisterMiyagi same here... I've never been quite sure when you buy a "day" ticket... eg... you're going somewhere at 3/4pm and you're not going to get there until 6/7pm, and you know it's likely you're getting the last train back at ~2am - whether that's actually considered a "day" or not
so i read on a SOF that to prevent sql injection in python we just need to do this sql = "SELECT * FROM table WHERE name = %s" arg = (name) cur.execute(sql,arg)
how is it different from writing the arg into the query to passing the arg as a second argument
@Aran-Fey i mean how the statement would look after compiling the argument passed separately in the cur. execute, can i see the query before/after exec in python ?
@HabibRehman execute probably looks at the arg part before formatting it into the sql string and either 1) throws some kind of error if it thinks there is an attempt at injection in one of the args, or 2) escapes all meta-characters in the args, which would definitely make an injection impossible
If you find one, there's probably an attempt to follow up with a second command or something. As always, their coverage is probably a lot more robust than what you or i could come up with on the spot
@Aran-Fey is this a "positively surprised" surprised? :P
@ParitoshSingh no, negatively surprised. Why would I want an error there? Just throw the damn data into the query, I don't care if it looks "suspicious" by whatever ill-defined metric
@AnttiHaapala yea my project was very small so i thought using raw would be of less load on the application, i'm new to flask will try sqlAlchemy on next project of mine
Say i want to initialize an AVL tree with number 0 to m. We know that insert(x) will be log(n) where n is the current total number of nodes in tree. What will be the total runtime of the function?
I wonder if These Unprecedented Times have made contract work more lucrative, or less... More demand for people that can work independently and remotely, but less demand for people you've never met and have been god knows where and touched who knows what
Hire somebody who looks good on paper, then it turns out he licks subway poles on the weekends for fun, and now he's laid up for a month, and there goes your deadline
Anyway. @Dwadelfri do you know which module LangDetectException is defined in? You may need to qualify it with something like except lang_detect_exception.LangDetectException:
raise LangDetectException(ErrorCode.CantDetectError, 'No features in text.') langdetect.lang_detect_exception.LangDetectException: No features in text.
I see that my crystal ball correctly guessed the second half of the qualified name. What happens if you try except langdetect.lang_detect_exception.LangDetectException:?
raise LangDetectException(ErrorCode.CantDetectError, 'No features in text.') langdetect.lang_detect_exception.LangDetectException: No features in text.
During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:
Traceback (most recent call last): File "test.py", line 71, in validateSite except LangDetectException: NameError: name 'LangDetectException' is not defined
cbg - anyone here work in the cyber security space? I'm trying to make sense of a few data sources offered by opendata.rapid7.com but failing miserably
In the sense that the resulting class inherits from a new class
class MyClass(A,B) -> class MyClass(A,B,C) (or class MyClass2(A,B,C))
user13411047
Hello, I've been trying to fix the bug from this script all day without any luck. The bug happens on the second iteration of append_dict. On the call to get_idx_list_dicts.
@AndrasDeak Yeah I need to do it at runtime from a module so I get a class like MyClassDeclaration = getattr(MyModule, "MyClassDeclaration"). Then, MyClassDeclaration.appendClass(OtherClassType)
Depends on how ClassA's __init__ is implemented, but there's certainly a high chance of that happening
The only way to go from class MyClass(A,B) to class MyClass(A,B,C) is to create a copy of MyClass with the new base classes. You can't retroactively insert C into the MRO, nor can you achieve the same effect by creating a new class that inherits from MyClass and C
The other provided answers are advisable if you are not bound by the constraints mentioned in the question. Otherwise, we need to take a journey into mro hacks and metaclass land.
After some reading, I discovered you can change the mro of a class, using a metaclass.
This however, is at class cr...
Now that I read fastapi.tiangolo.com/advanced/websockets some more, I don't think you need a separate thread to handle web socket communication. If you make the method async, then FastAPI's event handler should be able to run it in parallel with other web requests, without you having to make any new processes or threads or anything.
Hmm, so I tried a different strategy, instead of appending classes I think its much easier to just append member functions
But now there is a wackier problem. For example, setattr(MyClassDeclaration,"some_function",some_function) will actually nuke some_function across the entire inheritance hierarchy. Gotta figure out how to settattr only on the current (most derived) class
Yeah but its not clear how to loop over in the case of multiple inheritance. This is actually the failing case: [getattr(cls, "__getstate__", []) for cls in self.__class__.__mro__]
because after "setattr(getstate", "getattr" now returns the same thing for all classes
So, another weird question, is there a way to count at runtime the number of shadowed attributes. So in my case if I have class C(B) class B(A)` but every one of them implements the same method, I want to count the number of times the method is shadowed (3 times). Basically I have some hack for my previous question but it basically works only when the function is shadowed once (aka store the old name).
@Mikhail Out of curiosity, why do you need all this? So far I've only seen "I need to do it at runtime" which doesn't matter at all for class declarations. They always happen at runtime.
Oh, basically I overwrote some classes in a large project which resulted in some breakages with pickling. The underlying issue is that the base classes implement __setstate__/__getstate__ which changes the behavior compared to the original implementation. But its weirder than that. The base classes pickling methods are written using pybind. Also issues with mixing slots/dictionaries. Ultimately I plan to inject my correct __setstate__ methods over the ones supplied by the base classes, etc.
I believe the proper solution would be to update your pickle file for the new classes, rather than try to make the classes compatible with the old pickle file
Well I have to support pickling the entire class hierarchy. Half of the problem is that way the C++ bindings work. For pickling they implement __setstate__. This means that any class that inherits (in Python) will call __setstate__ potentially missing the members added by the derived class. Thats not good at all :-(
In an ideal world, __setstate__ would have some kind of default recursive implementation rather than leaving it blank. By leaving it blank, the base class takes over which is not desired. Maybe write a PEP about this :-)
And they would do so by defining a __setstate__ that takes care of that? Unless there's something magical about __setstate__; I've never met this method
@Aran-Fey Yeah this is kinda what you do to fix the dictionary/slot mixture issue. (Might have a bug if you have a single slot defined by a string, will loop over the letters). Now, imagine that you have a base class that already has a __set/__get. So right now I'm renaming it to something like __set_old/__get_old. But if I had more time i'd build a list of old __set/__get guys.
@Mikhail okay, sure, then instead of return state do return state, super().__getstate__() and in __setstate__ call super().__setstate__(state[1]). Still no reason to rename the methods
Ah yeah, so it depends on how you want to use this Pickable class. I have some weird case where I can't inherit from Pickable (which is less interesting for general discussion). But yeah I think you guys understand the problem :-)
Yeah, although right now I don't quite have any question. Mostly just cool if all classes implemented a functionally correct __set/__get state pair by default. For example, like what Aran-Fey posted.
Come to think of it, super(class, instance) behaves differently from super(class, class), right? I wonder if that can cause issues if you use super in a metaclass...
I guess it probably checks if the 2nd argument is an instance or a subclass of the 1st argument and acts accordingly
But then what if the 1st argument is type... hmm...
Here is an example of how super() can give you a proxy that points to a class that's not part of the current class' MRO. In particular, C isn't in B's MRO, but super().trace() inside B still calls C's method
Quite possibly everyone reading this is already well aware of diamond inheritance wackiness, but meh
I was hoping there was a super().next_class attribute or something so I could make it even more obvious that control flows from B to C, but you can basically see that happening anyway unless you assume the existence of more magic than necessary
you could for instance build a dict for each class that specifies the index of each item in its mro
Unless I'm confused (which isn't unlikely) super(class, instance) would amount to type(instance).__mro__[type(instance).mro_index_mapping[class] + 1] give or take index errors
Basically what I had in mind when I proposed caching magic
user13411047
I've done a script to reduce the waiting time when getting data from a rest api. The script selects different proxies and apikeys with a round robing method storing them in a dictionary with a datetime to check the last time they were used. For some reason the api is hitting the limit anyway and I don't know how to approach the debugging. How can I see why the script is using proxies or apikeys before waiting the appropriate amount of time for them to be reused?
Not sure I understand what you mean by "why the script is using proxies". In principle, the answer to "why is the script doing <thing>?" is always "because it's following exactly the instructions given to it by the programmer"
My gut is 50/50 split between "the server has a different opinion on how much time has elapsed compared to your client" and "your time delta measurements are correct, but you're not sleeping long enough"
For the former possibility, consider a scenario where the server rejects requests that are less than 100 time units apart:
t=0: client sends request to server. <2 time units elapse as the packets travel through the network> t=2: server receives request and prepares response. t=3: client receives response. t=100: client observes that 100 time units have elapsed since the last request was sent, and sends another request. <1 time unit elapses. These packets are faster for some reason. Greased electrons, perhaps.> t=101: server receives request and rejects it because only 99 time units have elapsed since the last request was received.
One solution would be to make the client measure the time since the last response received rather than the last request sent
Galaxy brain strategy: calculate when the server received the request by multiplying the speed of light by the geographical distance between you and the server
user13411047
That's right I hadn't had that into account.
user13411047
10:48 PM
And the download times are about 2 seconds so I don't know how I could pass that up.
user13411047
I'll update the datetime after calling the download function instead of before then
@Arturo So is Open Street Map but they get used in disaster relief efforts. It doesn't mean that their terms of service permit it, and indeed you're cycling API keys. I definitely can't take the high-ground on the overall approach, but please be, at least, mindful of the fact that being able to do something doesn't automatically translate to it being something they condone
mmm, if I'm juggling the importance of Doom servers working and potentially crashing a free API being using in disaster relief.... That's a tough call! :P