fit/fit_transform, I've been working with a bipartite network that has 51+91 nodes (142 input nodes as a biadjacency) but I have no idea why it returns 284 results on a fit transform
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη The wrong direction? Are you saying soup = BeautifulSoup(page.text,'html.parser').encode("utf-8") is not a bug? There's no way that works, right?
@TheNamesAlc The two usual antipatterns come from java: 1) pointless getters and setters and 2) pointless classes
user10984358
we were the first group of students to which they thought python, till then they were teaching java, so they just changed the syntax I guess, you are right, they had me write classes for everything
user10984358
I have been looking into decorators, see if I can incorporate them more into my code
Is there a chatroom where I could find experts to deal with my windows booting problem? (I know this is not quite the right place to ask, but please help if you can)
It is language-specific, but as far as I know most high-level languages behave the same way in that regard. I'd honestly be surprised if PHP really did that
Umm... why would wiki do that...? You'd have thought they'd put it as actual content in the table but then just do the actual styling in the css... weird
I've a note on my internal dashboard from google that wiki masked some columns within tables due to privacy. specially with trend things. the real reason behind the scene that some science is based on that info which is still unconfirmed 100% such as recent travel history and status
if you going to track the HTML page, you will see that some values is keep changed during the day. such as recovered got died. and has travel history from no to yes. and so on
Hi, I'm trying to draw a star on the screen, writing the following text:
self.screen.blit(self.image, self.rect)
Why do I need self.image and also self.rect ? isn't self.rect enough?
@YoelZajac I googled for pygame blitting and in the first three SO questions I saw an image arg first passed as .blit...so it seems business as usual. I'm not sure what you're asking.
@JonClements what I really need is a "remind me in 2 days" ;)
Hi all, I tried searching online but can't find an answer, therefore thought I ask here. If I have a nested dictionary and I instantiate one of its child dictionary to a variable, is there a method call to return the parent of the child dictionary. For example, in JavaScript object.parent always returns the parent value, so wondering if there is a similar thing for python dictionary?
sorry. real link is https://tio.run/##K6gsycjPM/r/P60oP1chOT8nv6i4slghM7cgv6hEy7ooPSm@JD8@I6eYCyKkAJT9X56RmZOqEFJUmmrFxVlQlJlXooBQqKGVmVdQWqKhqfnfoMLYWEfBoMLMDERaWnLBmDABAA
Your values are way, way outside the bounds of the colorspace.
From the docs:
Coordinates in all of these color spaces are floating point values. In the YIQ space, the Y coordinate is between 0 and 1, but the I and Q coordinates can be positive or negative. In all other spaces, the coordinat...
I was expecting RGB input to be in the range 0..255
@sergiol OK, so 1. start using python 3, 2. don't squeeze the input() call inside the other function call. Read the input on a separate line, and protect only that with the check for EOFError (if you can't decide in advance how many lines there will be).
It's an "inspired" approach but... it's one of the first questions I've seen today where they've actually tried printing stuff to work out what's going on instead of just going "what's happening here!? helpz!"
IMHO, this could have a big impact on getting improved questions reopened. I'm a little sceptical of the new proposals here: Upcoming Feature: New Question Close Experience, particularly allowing a "substantial" edit by the OP to single-handedly reopen a closed hidden question.
Wow... have gotten bored of depressing news on the radio so having a jump about in music collections... Can't believe Eminem's Marshall Mathers album is coming up 20 years old!
just zip the whole folder, that way someone isn't exposed to the sys._meipass issues at all
and that way, you don't have to deal with the cwd changes either
But yes, if you wish to do it the hard way, and keep it as a one-file option, it's definitely possible. no issues that i can think of
just, simplest approach: even if you're tempted to use relative paths, just name a global variable called ROOT, set to your cwd during development, and construct the full paths from this ROOT
when it comes time to making this exe, switch out the ROOT for the sys._meipass dynamically, and you;re done.
because otherwise relative paths with one-file will point to the wrong directory.
haha, no worries! yep, can be done. easier: don't use the one-file flag, code normally. slightly harder: if you wish to use one-file flag, make a ROOT global folder variable*, construct all paths (that would have otherwise been relative) from it. That's the tl;dr
@ParitoshSingh Might be an antipattern, but an insurance I've used before is early in execution I have a line changing the cwd to where I want it to be, and have a handler generating abs paths from rel paths where that's needed.
I've never bundled into an .exe, but I don't know how having os.chdir(sys.path[0]) or whatever you want the ROOT set to, early on in execution, then having a handler for key paths, would go wrong when bundled to an exe?
@ParitoshSingh Oh ok. So more or less if you pin down at runtime what the cwd is (when bundled as exe), you should be ok configuring the paths relative to that?
if you write out a config file at install time then you're obliged to figure out what to do at reinstall/upgrade time (overwrite it? preserve it? what if there were backwards incompat changes or deprecations)
@wim That seems like a problem for internal defaults as well. If an internal default changes, do we just silently run with an old configuration that didn't use it, even though it results in different behaviour?
Not writing out the config file doesn't free one from making such decisions, it just silently makes some of them implicitly, no matter if they are correct or not.
optimally, you'd just never introduce changes that break backwards compatibility. and if you do, create a new config (with the version in it's filename) that picks up valid non-default settings from the next oldest one.
I like the way the povray raytracer handles configs. It's a CLI program with a huge number of settings, which can be given via plain text config files or command line args, and almost all of them have sensible internal defaults. The priority is internal < config_file < command_line. And one of the command line args tells it to write a config file with the current settings.
@Arne in practice you often need to override config from CLI and/or environment variables
@MisterMiyagi so what I do is I still parse and use it in one minor point release, but I'll warnings.warn that it is deprecated and will be ignored in the next point release (along with a short description of the replacement, if any).
1) it's common 2) having them send via command line means they are visible in the process list 3) having them in a file feels more risky - an env is more user/session bound
there might be a better way to phrase the last point