cbg, the reason I got when I asked when is setattr and getattr used in a code was "it is for highly dynamic code", can anyone tell me what is highly dynamic code?
Doing well. Covid has just messed up so many things and I haven't been coding much and have kinda forgotten my python family )-:. I was working on a project that I started searching for answers and I thought I'd pop on and say hi.
@AndrasDeak nah... cool kids now use graph databases - get with the times! :p
(mind you - they're awesome - but generally misused for things)
I still wouldn't use one for main DB storage - that'd still be an RDMS, coupled with redis for some other bits and cache and all that... but they're nice
(sometimes throw into the stack some elastic and a graph DB - lovely jubbly)
(keeping everything in sync. is a right pain though but...)
well I suppose it depends what you need to do - I've got the UK postcodes stored for instance with lat/lon (central) and the GEO functions from redis.io/commands work great
I'm not sure how you're translating postcodes to lat/lng from what you linked. You must have loaded a database?
Ok, I think I've got myself confused. It's not redis that knows the coordinates, you loaded it from something. I'm curious about what that source is
I've tried a few different libraries and I've got to the point of biting a bullet and using the Google maps API in something I'm working on. The translation of postcodes to lat/long has been, frankly, crap with the libraries I've found
well... I have from a client that has a licence for the PAF that's updated weekly which I can access, but obviously can't share that, but there's a few not too shabby online sources... gimme two ticks and I'll look those up
That's why people insist on adding braces in if-then or for loops, even when the enclosed body is a single line. This was in the mid-90's (the scars have yet to fully fade), perhaps modern IDE's would have helped catch this.
The other curse of braces is the "where do you put them?" debates. I was on a team that spent two weeks debating this. I was so happy to see that Python didn't need them, makes that whole fruitless discussion moot.
Ironically, our team settled on this style, which I've only seen a couple of times since, and which, also ironically, in retrospect actually looks kind of Pythonic:
if (some condition)
{
do something;
}
I think this was for coding in PL/1, which was really a nice language to work in. Kind of like a verbose C, with exceptions (predated C++ and Java, so this was a big forward step).
Unfortunately, PL/1 was a sort of "everything but the kitchen sink" language. Bloat included features that were pretty niche, so if you ever used them, everyone in the code review said, "I've never seen that keyword before," with the predictable added maintenance problems ("um, I think this might be the problem, but I have to look up that keyword again" - plus no Google at that time, remember). Maybe a cautionary tale for Python.
What is a good way to learn PyQt5? Is there a place I can find several worked examples? I've been reading the docs and some tutorials but i'm having a hard time understanding how it works. They seem be bundled together and all with class inheritance and I get confused on their precedences and all
The docs are comprehensive in doc.qt.io/qtforpython/PySide2 but it seems it will take me ages to get even familiar with all the functionality and their relationships to each other
Not sure if anyone here is working on image recognition but what are usually the limitations to it? Data is usually messy with quite a few rows that are not significant to the analysis so it can be usually screened by looking at a photograph. But the issue with photographs are that they are noisy as well so I don't think programs can screen accurately. Currently I am using manual labor to actually screen thousands of rows 1 by 1 based on an image so it is definitely a lot of resources
I've came across some "learning" of a program when it gets fed images and it learns to distinguish over time but how accurate and accessible is the technology to individuals?
There are various ready-to-use frameworks available, google should be able to give you a list. Image recognition should have little trouble with noise, but rather with biases. E.g. if your images of pythons are much more noisy than your images of anacondas, then image recognition might associate noise itself with pythons.
Finding the right one and knowing what to modify needs the same domain knowledge. Unless you have a standard problem, like OCR.
@Pherdindy in the hands of an expert existing libraries are awesome. Depends on what you have to do. If you want it to recognize that there's a coffee maker in the image it's harder (needs classification). If you just want to segment "the one photo" in a larger photo it's easier.
Yeahh I get it I wasn't really having high hopes on getting any image recognition for my needs. I am currently paying someone to screen thousands of rows day by day but it's probably the thing i'm going to stick with for a while
@Pherdindy the alternative is probably paying an expert to write the equivalent code. Compare the amount of money they'd ask to do it with what you're paying to the human.
text_tokens = word_tokenize(text)
tokens_without_sw = [word for word in text_tokens if not word in stopwords.words()]
filtered_sentence = (" ").join(tokens_without_sw)
text = filtered_sentence
this section is really slow while compiling the huge dataframe with 179108 length
Currently I'm trying to build Caffe which is a python wrapper around a large deep learning framework. I noticed in the instructions it mentions being able to install all the dependencies in apt using the flag build-dep but " it requires a deb-src line in your sources.list". I'm confused since those instructions are literally the entirety of instructions about that.
Sounds like they're suggesting to let apt install every dependency for you (without installing the actual package via apt). For which, presumably, you need deb-src in your /etc/apt/sources.list which defines what repos are used by apt
yea, when i started reading about deb src on the debian website the examples it gave seemed were limited, is deb src like a repo you reference in sources.list that then you pass your library (like caffe) to and then it builds the dependency list and sends instructions back
Probably yes. But you should probably understand the exact consequences before meddling with your sources.list (I don't). And always make a backup of the original file first.
I want to how to write multiple linear regression. I mean, if I have for an example three or four features in train vector how can I mathematically count the prediction?
or just give me an example of such a model in code. I will check it on my own.
I'm not familiar with the exact domain you're asking, but from personal experience with related (non-ML) problems I'd try figuring out two-dimensional cases.
it even covers the case where sometimes you are not explicitly dealing with functions proportional to x (like in your case its k times x is related to y) and instead it deals more broadly with the meaning of linear that underlies linear algebra. Linear is a bit of an overloaded term and what you've described so far is actually a "Simple linear regression"
this is a case where I think you should read up on the math a bit more and then come back before trying to implement code. online.stat.psu.edu/stat504/node/216