Hello, can I ask what is the best practice in inserting new data into my dataset on a regular basis to avoid messing up my dataset when problems occur? I am only working on solo projects so what I typically do is append data to a flat file (csv in my case) and just use something like read csv to import to a dataframe. I'm usually getting my data from a websites by making requests but i'm concerned the website might change something or encounter a bug and mess up the whole dataset
Looking into things like SQL but i'd want to check if it fits my needs before spending time to learn it
by "messing up my dataset", do you mean corrupting the data – e.g. due to an incomplete write – or or adding junk data – e.g. due to incomplete or malformed records?
If I am building an HTML string with data that has already passed through cleaned_data['field_name] which is called when is_valid() is applied on form submission, do I need to further "clean" such data? or is {{ HTML string }} enough?
Okay. Even if it's not intended for public use, I think it's fairly unlikely that it'll suddenly start returning data that you could mistakenly append to your csv file. Plus, since it's json, it's easy to validate whether the data looks like you expect it to. Check if it contains all the keys you expect, and if it doesn't, throw an error instead of writing it to your csv file
is there any better way in django to restrict user to edit others people post? right now I am using this "{% if user.id == post.author.id %}" in my html template so user can't edit others people post except his own post. is there any way to redirect user 404 page when he trying to go edit page of others people post.
@piRSquared If you're certain that all the values are hashable, sure. If not, probably something like all(thing == many_things[0] for thing in many_things)
@Aran-Fey cool yeah was thinking of this but just wanted to know if there a way people usually check since I tend to overlook things until things in actual application
@MisterMiyagi Yeah I guess I just have to be really careful on checking time to time
Played around with the various links above and couldn't get them working and then came across this really simple one which I adapted. http://code.activestate.com/recipes/498217-custom-django-login_required-decorator/
from functools import wraps
from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect
def a...
@piRSquared yeah I definitely should start doing that so I can reconstruct the dataset didn't think of that since I felt storage intensive but it shouldn't be a big problem for the benefits
Ok, I'm doing something... maybe goofy. I want a non-space intensive way to get the overlap of range objects. Like range(2, 20, 2) and range(3, 20, 3) This Q&A addresses a naive approach assuming the steps are 1 but I explicitly want steps greater than 1. I wrote this pastebin but wanted some feedback.
@roganjosh Yeah looks like something i'll look into. Not familiar with databases just read a few introductory concepts so I tend to create filters in code
@Pherdindy an awful lot of stuff can be passed-off to the db and do out-of-memory stuff (I don't know what you're doing). It's a good idea to push any obvious filters into the query
@roganjosh Basically, I just usually need conditions like the ID and date fields shouldn't be the same else it can be tagged as a duplicate. I usually use filters using dataframes not sure if i'll cause performance issues in the long run. Since I felt querying in databases and filtering dataframes seemed to be a little similar I guess
Since i'll probably keep adding thousands of rows to the bigger dataset I may hit performance issues and long calculation times surely. So SQL is better for that right?
@piRSquared I don't follow. We don't use python 2 anymore (at least I hope you don't), so looping over a range or checking if an integer is in a range is all done on-the-fly with some basic math. It would only be a problem if you did something like calling list on a range
I just track things i'm interested in but i'll watch over those over a period of time and make screening tools to see trends. Then i'll add new things to watch over so amount of rows is just linearly getting bigger
@Aran-Fey You are highlighting my deficient description, which I appreciate. Let me try again. the range object is O(1) for memory (not sure if I'm saying that correctly). If I wanted the overlap between several such objects, I could turn them into sets then take the intersection. If one range object represented a large number of numbers then I've lost the memory efficiency the range object had in the first place.
I happen to disagree that you can resolve these matters with simple math.
@piRSquared took me a while that your "space-intensive" is not about the code but about memory :P For what it's worth this is not an easy task, see github.com/numpy/numpy/blob/…
actually, Aran's solution uses O(1) memory, so you're good
And your task is harder than np.shares_memory because you want to find all the solutions to the Diophantine equation, and you have more equations in the general case.
Is it required that I create a perform_update() method in my ViewSet in Django in order to support it, or is declaring the URL in urls.py sufficient and Django magically does the rest?
I've been trying to read documentation/articles about this but it's not clear.
I did watch a presentation about how it's in aircraft. In my hypothetical scenario of a plane going down, I'd probably curse its lackadaisical approach to type-checking as my last words
@duhaime @duhaime This is for an app I'm building (not a website). The app should be able to modify an Illustrator File text and export it as PNG. I'm converting the file to SVG to be able to get access to the text level & modify the text. Then now I'm needing to export as png while preserving the text to complete the application. I've achieved to get this process but for some reason I'm not able to include the custom font when running the script in a docker image (but it is working locally).