@AndrasDeak I have a new Samsung tablet and went to install a PDF reader from the PlayStore, and on first use, it asked me to log in with my Google or Facebook login - I JUST WANT TO READ A @#!&#&#!@#$ PDF!!!
Hi everybody. I have a question which might be too basic for SO, but I can't find the answer using a search-engine: -- How can I find the time it takes for my Python app to load the different packages I use? --
I there anyway to trace what happens when during the execution of my app? Even only the correct search phrase to use on a search engine would be great help.
@Ideogram see this but I do think the timeit approach is broken. I've seen it mentioned a few times that the caching of imports cannot reasonably be negated to get an answer. To get around it, you end up doing more work than just the import itself so it's not easy to isolate the import time alone
@Aran-Fey 🙋 we replaced some PHP services with python but needed to keep the API. apparently, xmlrcp is popular in PHP. Can't tell you much about the security aspects though, it's a purely internal service, and we generally assume not to be malicious towards ourselves.
So coming to my question - i want to understand how pytest would work. For example if the pytest is run from d:\ and the pytest recursively searches for test_* files (or similar regex), and when it encounters a file/test, if there is a code like open('../somefol/somefile') in the test case, then how does python / pytest handle such path - with respect to working directory or directory that holds the test file?
@roganjosh Thanks, if that works, it looks really straight-forward. I hope it can help me decide if it's worth re-implementing some of these existing modules.
and you can configure what your working directory should be via the pycharm config. But some users dont know about this concept of working directory and current directory in python
@roganjosh Well,... I am porting an application I previously wrote in PHP to Python. I must say, I have completely fallen in love with the language, but I notice it is considerably slower. As in: 2 seconds vs. instantly response. I suspect the Sympy Geometry package is part of the problem.
@Ideogram Only if you were launching the python process from scratch each time. Which, given my supremely limited understanding of PHP, could be a pattern that you have become accustomed to. Imports are cached, and a web server will run continuously, so the import will only be incurred once
@Aran-Fey because when test is run from pychrm by right clcking on test folder/file, then the python is unaware of folders/files outside the test folder
# my projects usually look like this
myproject # folder that pycharm recognizes as "project root"
├── src # source code, gets packaged and distributed
├── tests # tests + fixtures, still in project root
└── pyproject.toml # or setup.py, that is configured to only look at src for the build
@roganjosh That would indeed be the PHP way of working. I now run the app using 'Werkzeug'. Each time time I refresh the page, I have to wait these couple of seconds. Should I look into how I use 'werkzeug' and leave the imports alone for the moment?
@variable and two more resources that explain in detail which setups produce the least amount of headache: hynek.me/articles/testing-packaging (quite old by now, but well written and still moslty relevant) docs.pytest.org/en/latest/… (pytest's docs on the matter)
@Ideogram Flask is the application layer on top of Werkzeug. I'm not actually sure how you'd use werkzeug directly to serve your content but I'm imagining that you're reinventing a pretty big wheel here
Potentially you are spawning processes on a per-request basis?
@metatoaster I was considering writing an "unless.. " part, but decided against it. I know that the scientific community of python still likes packaging tests with code
I am implementing an API without a GUI. So it's like www.my-api-project.com/?A=1&B-2&C=3 and the server responds with a SVG file that does something with these variables
because there are very good reasons to package tests as part of the package, but there are situations and setup that doesn't necessary warrant that, though in my opinion there may be other problems with that decisions that lead to this point, I guess.
@Ideogram I highly recommend this tutorial. You'll want to read a couple of the first chapters to make sense of the application structure, and then go to that chapter
I was wrong to say that file from antoher outside directory cannot be access if python file from an inner directory is run. What I said is true only from imports
Hello People Very Good Afternoon . I am working on churn model , where model interpret ability is very important. i came across a library call shap and in that there is a force plot which gives a intuitive understanding with other variables for every customer/instances . i want to know how can i have those numbers in a data frame which seen in force plot in shap library
@NabiShaikh You mean this? The data it already in numpy arrays that are being passed toforce_plot, so you just need to grab those arguments and put them in a df
Unless you mean the results of whatever transformation force_plot is doing, in which case you'll need to dig into the library itself and I'm not familiar with it at all sorry
I'm currently wanting to implement a feature where facial recognition is used. So when the student's face is detected, my python server will be able to detect which class the student belongs and hence send the name of the student to the lecturer thru email...
yeah face recognition, but after face recognition is done , the name is out, i want to write an algo that finds which class does this student belong to..
As a whole-project, probably not. As for the individual components that you want to put together, almost certainly yes. The first thing you need to do is break the problem down into component parts, think about how they fit together and then research your way through them in stages
If you start with a basis of hoping to find a guide that will result in the whole project being done, you will inevitably fail. It doesn't work like that
If this is a school project, facial recognition is way too advanced. It's an expert domain. Unless you've been specifically instructed to do this, I would suggest a simpler project
@Permian are you asking how you’d implement a linked list in python? I’m assuming it’s because “My uni has asked me to implement linked lists in python for my algo / ds course”
- "... It will probably Fail. It doesn't work like that" "But my school works like that"
However I do agree breaking it into components is the best way to go if you absolutely need to face this level of complexity in a challenge. But understanding face recognition systems and being able to extract the features and link it to a database and associate a name to it sounds really challenging. Plus making the code send emails to the professor. It sounds like a full stack data science job :B
looking up in a DB and sending an email seems trivial among that
user10984358
12:24 PM
Is object detection the same as face detection? Every different face is a different object? Or maybe the algorithm to detect face uses eye position nose alignment etc to enhance?
user10984358
If the answer to the first question is yes then you can look at TensorFlow’s object detection api. Which is relatively easy to train stuff you want to detect. If it’s not then someone can tell me how it differs ELI5
@variable in case you are talking about values, the answer is no. types in python are annotations, so they have no influence on the behavior or actual types at all.
there are third party libraries that do read type annotations in order to introduce a validation step after/at the end of __init__ though, like pydantic. They support a @pydantic.dataclasses.dataclass class decorator which exposes an interface very similar to namedtuple in case you want to try it out.
@VentusZXC You'll need to provide a couple of more details. What specifically do you mean by "a set of data"? What specifically do you mean by "name matching"?
And only use Word or Excel to create your data file if you absolutely have to. Start with something simple like a plain text file, or a csv file, both of which are very easy to read, with no extra Microsoft baggage.
Get "name matching" (whatever that is) working, then add in the Excel or Word stuff.
@PaulMcG Let say I have 2 names (Jane and Mike) in Class A and the names and class are stored in an excel file, so i want my python server to match the names in the excel file and execute some function, if the names r unmatched, nothing will happen
@VentusZXC - did you miss the part where I said "start with something simple like a plain text file"? Excel and Word files have lots of extra bits in them for formatting, fonts, margins, etc. Use notepad (NOT wordpad) and just create a plain old text file to start with.
Are James, Lily, and Mike elementary children, where they are in a single classroom all day long? Or are they college students who may be in different classrooms on different days?
So before think about Word or Excel files, think about what would be a good data structure for this. Let's assume these are elementary children, so we just have to associate each child with a single classroom. What would be a good way to describe that Jane and Mike are in Classroom A, while Lily and Severus are in Classroom B?
I just like typing and typing and typing, I have nothing better to do...
Before even thinking about data structures, it may help to solidify the project requirements. Imagine that you have just hired a diligent yet rather dim intern. He has never worked in your industry and knows nothing about it. You want him to do this task. You tell him "I need you to scan names and check them against this file". Do you think that's all the instruction he will require?
Or do you think he'll ask "what does 'scan' mean? What file? How do I open the file? What parts of the file should I be looking at? How often do I need to do this? What do I do if I find a match?"
Ideally, all of these questions should have an answer before you write a single line of code
(Proponents of the agile development process will tell you it's fine to jump out of the plane and build your parachute on the way down, but let's focus on the fundamentals before doing cool stunts like that)
If you're saying "yes, I do expect rather dim interns to use my program", then perhaps I have not communicated my metaphor properly. The dim intern is not the person using your program. The dim intern is your program.
@VentusZXC You have said twice that "[your] python server" does the matching. Are you talking about an actual, separate server with a long-running Python process to which the input files are uploaded to trigger scanning?
I think we are talking about something very simple, like a homework assignment that asks you to model students in classrooms. If this is for a college course, one would hope the attendees would be familiar with the classroom-to-student relationship.
Oh, the heck with it. This one-sided socratic method is tedious. Just make this text file:
Yesterday I saw a database question where there were two tables, class and student. One of the tables had a gender field. You'll never guess which one.
I assume it was an intentional design choice to give each class a gender, since the sample data had one class with only typically male names, and one class with only typically female names. I wasn't aware that kind of school actually existed. If you're going to accept students of any gender, you may as well let them mingle, right?
I think this might be a "having your cake and eating it too" situation. If you want your data to be sent with the application/x-www-form-urlencoded media type, then all the ampersands and equals signs in your xml will be interpreted as delimiters for the parameters' key-value pairs. If you use a different media type, then I expect Flask won't be able to automatically parse the paramters as a dict
Possible solutions: 1) abandon the parameter-based design, use a different media type, and send only the xml data by itself; 2) keep using parameters, and percent-encode your xml before packing it into the foo=... parameter
Confidence that I'm not missing a simple and easy third option: 30%. I don't often play with this layer, so my opinion has as much weight as anybody else with access to Wikipedia and five minutes of prep time
@Kevin P.E. classes tend to be gender-separate. Also the middle school health classes where they teach about you-know-what are also usually gender-separate.
developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Methods/POST tells me that multipart/form-data and text/plain are valid alternatives to application/x-www-form-urlencoded. Not sure which one is idiomatic here. text/plain seems promising, since it seems like it wouldn't meddle with the content.
@PaulMcG Eurgh, then those classes would have either "male" or "female" in their gender field, and ordinary integrated classes would have null. What a pain; booleans are twice as hard to work with when they're actually boolean-plus-one
@Kevin I created an MCVE for a question I have now I hope it is sufficient. I have the following nested dictionary and I want to loop through the value2 dictionary and get the maximum value. Here is the dictionary. Here is what I have made but it does not work.
Not sure about the usefulness of dupe closing on meta .. sometimes it seems used to shut down a discussion, and it doesn't really have the desired effect of moving a discussion over to the dupe.
My name is Teresa Dietrich. About a month ago, I joined Stack Overflow as Head of Product and Community. During my years as an engineer and technology leader I saw the impact this community and site has on people across the world and I am very excited to be here. While I have personally gotten a ...
This literally screams it's a PR move because why now and why not when the train was on fire? Why wait until a bowl full of mods are out the door? I don't get the reason behind doing it now.
@PaulMcG I mean sure? better late than never? but the damage is already done, to me it feels like the fire is burnt out, just ember chars remind, and now they are throwing water to try and save what's left... when they could have threw water while it was on fire..
It would all be very nice and encouraging if it weren't for the fact that we already had long-term employees who argued to listen to the community, only to be sacked on the spot
Once again yea, they brought in someone neutral I guess, but im pessimistic on this. feels like if something goes south shes to blame, if something goes right then great. I guess any other job is basically like this :\
yeah seems like a slap to the face. "hey we want you to listen to us please or we are leaving" SO/SE: "okie good bye, oh we hire this other person who want want you to tell us what we need to improve, please fill out this form while you are leaving, so we can have your good ideas one last time"
I personally wouldn't enjoy doing her job... but then again I'm not qualify to be
Anyways I'm curious on what would happen next from this company, if the mods will be coming back / employee being rehired (doubt it) and if codidact actually takes off.
@MooingRawr It would be very difficult for codidact to get loads of people easily; Right now, their idea of Free and open-source software is only what I see has advantage over SE.
oh come on, they presumably use jira or similar internally, there is no way they use meta as their only issue tracker
my point is that to really engage with the community desires making issue tracker public, at least for projects such as the website, would be much more useful for that "community engagement" purpose than stuff like the loop and the blog (which I think many users don't care about much)
My point was that they could use meta as a public issue tracker (or at least a public mirror of sorts) if they wanted to. I agree that it could help with social relations (although it would involve hella amount of work)
An issue tracker would have to be objective. Meta still raises the issues and has very emotive feedback, but it's still mostly ignored or paid lip service. I doubt it would be any more effective
It's the age-old frog-in-a-pan situation. The company mentality is set internally. A fresh face appears, finds the issues, posts, then just gets beaten down by the internal dialogue of the company. They'll fall in line and give up caring in the end just to survive in a job
The python interpreter in my head crashed at face_color += (128,128,128) with the error "can't concatenate list and tuple"
And I know you don't want to hear this, but your code has a serious case of spagetthi. I'll be quite surprised if someone can find a bug in that, considering how hard it is to follow everything that's happening. You need to put some (or a lot) of that stuff into functions
If anyone in data analytics is bored. Today has been coming up with the most elaborate data analysis and graphs (they don't need to be useful) I can think of for some data (there is a point). All our machine operators fill in a form on their issued ipods when their machine has to stop; recording the issue category (a fixed dropdown), the start time and end time of the event that took the machine offline, their name, the department and the machine name.
Basically, the senior mgmt forced all of the operators to fill these forms in over a year ago. They're coming in around 1 every ~5 mins. It transpired in a meeting that they had forgotten that they made everyone do this and all the data was being binned. They're now planning on buying a ~£30k system to do exactly the same thing because it shows some pretty graphs. It's all meaningless because they can't interpret them. Instead, I'm just replicating the whole system with existing data
So, a 3D graph showing meaningless attempts at correlation are welcome, because they've wasted all the operators' time filling out a form for zero benefit, and the supervisors on the shop floor, who actually wanted to see this data, have just been blanked by IT
(I have actually started making useful graphs for the supervisors based on all the effort their teams have been putting in). Now I just want overblown analysis
Well, I have a lovely bubble chart already of mean time down against the number of events, where the bubble size and colour is proportional to how many machines in the dept. have the reported issue
I just need to get the spectrum of colours to scale proportionately to be alarming for all departments (some have been more diligent in obeying the complete waste of time they were compelled to take part in)
I could probably do that. There's ~25 reasons for downtime, so I could probably have two charts side-by-side with a dropdown on each so you can compare pairs of issues
I struggled with that one. 3 of the reasons involve "engineering" like "Waiting for engineer", "electrical engineering problem", "mechanical engineering problem", so I could go down that path but it wouldn't look impressive enough
But then there is also a "custom" downtime reason, so I started doing some word-frequency analysis for the free text, so I might be able to do something similar from that if I hard-code the hierarchy of the issues
Probably a little late, but equipment downtime accounting has been a huge effort in the semiconductor industry since the early 90's (the equipment is so expensive, that the depreciation exepense for the fab equipment makes up about 1/2 of the wafer cost). Plus there is a delicate balance between maintaining uptime vs. scheduling important maintenance (else your "uptime" is just making low-yield wafers).
There was a push to come up with 2 or 3 dozen different "reasons" for equipment to be down, and the realization (only after suffering in the field with a complicated state model) was that more than about 8 were just too many.
@PaulMcG Oh, please don't get me wrong. I understand fully what the importance of this is. What I am not happy about is that the SMT has forced operators to do this for the benefit of the SMT, who actually forgot they made them do it, and denied access to everyone on the shop floor from seeing the output. The people on the shop floor actually want to see this
I didn't take your intention that way at all. I was just offering a cross-industry benchmark that might give you some ideas on grokking and presenting such data.
So I have some simple Pareto analysis that tells the supervisors which machines are suffering from particular issues. It's absolutely to help them. It's also so that, when the SMT introduces the new system (which also relies on machine operators going through hoops), the supervisors can make them look silly by saying that they already had the system
What became most-painfully obvious when I was talking to the SMT about the fact they already had the system was that they had zero (I mean zero) appreciation that people on the factory floor might actually want to make use of this analysis. Their view is that the SMT cares, and the shop floor is a bunch of units that magically make the targets they set for them
E10, E58, and E116 are the related SEMI standards in this area. The standards themselves are behind a ($$$$) paywall, but if you google for "SEMI E10" etc., you will probably find some online presentations from SEMI conferences.
@AndrasDeak I've decided this is the priority for the morning. It's supported by plotly.js so it should be about 30 min work. I'll report back with pics, thanks :) PCA will take a bit more time, but that's definitely on the list.
For a numpy question what's going on with memory here? I'm inclined to believe the OP in the comments, despite the fact that I can easily throw MemoryError
But I can't run it on a 16GB machine with no memory restriction. I don't know what "lack of swap" refers to, though? numpy won't dump to disk when RAM is exceeded, will it? I thought that was why dask exists
@Neo if I recall correctly your current state is the result of an hour's struggle, and the code you're trying to use was handed to you, maybe twice. I see another hour's struggle trying to explain this new problem...have you read some tutorials?
mmm, then we're coming at this from different angles. Numpy 1.18.1 is flat-out rejecting even trying to build the array for me before it even tries. In the past, I've definitely thrashed memory. At this point I don't know whether it's an OS thing or a numpy version thing. I'm assuming swap is a Unix thing that implicitly spills over into disk storage, but that wouldn't explain that question (unless the 16GB machine is Unix and the bigger machine is Windows)
@AndrasDeak Looks like you guessed it. I didn't even know that a swap partition was a thing, so TIL. Thanks
On Windows, I'm at the mercy of the OS on swapping, but maybe that's something I can configure. It didn't cross my mind that this could be a thing until now
def flatten_json(nested_json):
"""
Flatten json object with nested keys into a single level.
Args:
nested_json: A nested json object.
Returns:
The flattened json object if successful, None otherwise.
"""
out = {}
def flatten(x, name=''):
if type(x) is dict:
for a in x:
flatten(x[a], name + a + '_')
elif type(x) is list:
i = 0
for a in x:
flatten(a, name)
It's still surprising if the macbook version "runs perfectly fine". I bet it has an SSD so thrashing is probably not much of an issue there, but they should not have 64GB+ of swap lying around...
(surprising in the "I'm somewhat skeptical" sense)
@Neo "finding this cool function" is how you will never learn to write code on your own. You're asking a very similar and fairly basic question yet again, which is a bad sign that you're down the path of cargo culting. I suggest that you set aside what you're trying to solve for now, and spend a week actively working through python tutorials. It will be an investment in your future as a coder.