The question is why shouldn't that happen? is compares objects for identity. You can have to Potato() objects without them being identical.
you should only use is when you are looking for exact identity, which is typically against None or some specific pre-existing object you're looking for (you won't need this latter case for a long time)
until you're less of a newbie you can be sure that val is None and val is not None is the only case you have to use is for such a comparison.
I've recently realized that I've been using is too much. It really has very very little use outside of comparing to None, True, False and a handful of other builtin singletons
@LinkBerest the SQL tags are a burning garbage heap when it comes to Injection. It would be funny if there wasn't that bit in the back of your brain reminding you that some of these people are likely to be handling your info
I have a list of classes that I want to pass to only detect those classes that are mentioned in the list. The list for example is ['item1', 'item2', 'item3'] using tensorflow object detection api, how do I achieve that?
@AndrasDeak classification class, like a name of each object so there are multiple names so instead of calling them object names they are called classes but they are actually names like mentioned in that list.
How do you efficiently go backwards through a string searching for a character, stopping at the first instance of it, and return everything after that character?
@d4rk4ng31 Then yes, a given object has a specific id in its lifetime. But id can confuse you very easily due to memory reuse. I suggest that you forget about id and concentrate on is.
I'd say that identity is a thing you can have, but not something you can "point to". And the "object" is the thing that has the "identity". Something along those lines
i.e. "identity" is a feature of something else, it can't be by itself
@roganjosh I used to have one test for new DBA interns (& it was one of 3 for backend ones) which was basically "insert something into a database & select it out with a where clause". You only passed if you used preparestatements or an ORM correctly: I remember the failure rate on that was 7/10 :[
@AndrasDeak if he splits then it will return a list then he'll have to go through it find it and then go back to string and print, I guess that will be more time consuming.
On that theme, I thought Pulling apart a £339 anti-5G USB stick would boil my blood but it is so ridiculous in the claims, I reckon they could make a Futurama episode from it. I can even imagine the voice for the responses
Mind you - very confusing... if you read the book "The Cell" and then watch the film... like most King things - you're left wondering if whoever did the film actually bothered basing it on the book of the same title
I get the output as [{'id': 1, 'name': 'person'}, {'id': 1, 'name': 'person'}, {'id': 1, 'name': 'person'}, {'id': 1, 'name': 'person'}, after running this for getting classes [category_index.get(i) for i in classes[0]. Now I need to figure out how to pass only the classes I want to get them.
one of my favourite King books was "The Stand" (which ironically was based around a flu virus destroying most of the species and led to a conflict between good and evil and all that) - lent my copy to someone ages ago and never had it back - but oh well... once the 2nd hand bookshops are back open
@AshwinPhadke Please give an MCVE. I'm not sure why you're taking just the first index with classes[0] or why category_index.get(i) is giving a dict. There's too many unknowns in that
@AshwinPhadke It's kind of a requirement if you want complete strangers than know nothing of your problem to be helpful and constructive. If you can't isolate the problem, we're going to struggle even more
AFAIK CodeReview is for full-blown programs. If your question has a smaller scope, like "How do I do X? I can do it with these 10 lines of code, but is there a better way?", it most likely belongs on SO
(in that case the question is really "how do I do X?" and not "how do I improve this code?")
If I had a machine that was supposed to pack bags into boxes but it instead threw them on the floor repeatedly, I wouldn't say that "works". It runs but it doesn't work. (That's a common real-life issue in a factory btw)
I figured that out (its always "a" though): I used to use a classifier which looked for "br" occurances over 5 because it was a good (quick) way of seeing which old webpages needed to be updated - luckily this is rarely needed anymore
.....now I look for "table"
why do people insist on using online repls for things that need real computational power then complain about the speed?
There's a current proposal on MSE to make it more obvious when a question is self-answered: Make it clearer that a question is self answered. From the downvotes, it doesn't appear to be popular, but I think the idea has some merit. Disclosure: I wrote an answer to that question, but I'm not fishing for votes.
People downvote questions on meta sites because they disagree, not just because they think the question is bad. On most meta sites, it's not an issue, because it doesn't affect your rep. However, on MSE it does affect your rep. So posting questions there is a very risky business.
hmm...is that about Captain Canada's question. I'm of two-minds - I would like a small banner (like the locked banner) but the OP's wording and reasoning is .... a bit hard to follow
@JossieCalderon That's operator overloading for you.
After reading some more into that MSE thread, the reasoning of the OP seems really off. That example Q "from bad to good" linked would still have been close-voted if it were in my feed.
@LinkBerest IMHO, a banner like the locked post banner is probably too distracting. I think a self-answered indicator should be a minor thing, similar in impact to the blue bounty score box. It's mostly for the benefit of regulars who may otherwise downvote, or close it as a dupe. And of course, if a self-answered question or its answer are bad they should be subject to the usual closure & downvoting processes.
I game for anything that helps people understand why their question was closed as a dupe, how that actually helps improving searching, and helps us keep dupe targets up-to-date: so people can stop complaining about it
I don't hold out much hope for such a thing but I'm game
@Mierzen I tried looking at plotly once for a question on SO, it seemed to me that their documentation was accidentally replaced by PR Division Weekly Newsletter
I say that because there are two types of hyperlinks (well...two main ones): html.link is the first which is how you link to a sytlesheet (CSS) or external javascript library or somesuch. Whereas anchors (html.a) are the typical "clickable" version.
granted I think flask documentation is some of the best I've found but then have people I work with who think it is the worst so there's always a bit of subjectivity