@Thorsen you store the x and y values you want to plot in a list, then use matplotlib to plot y vs x. But looking at that code you shouldn't be using dicts with keys 'x' and 'y', you should use 2-length tuples instead. Then you can do things like x_new, y_new = old_position etc. It would also make unpacking a bunch of such tuples simpler, using a single zip instead.
Does anyone knows an algorithm for that? Given a positive integer n, 0<n<1000. Find the smallest positive integer m such that the product nm has all digits in increasing or decreasing order and algorithm works in a modern laptop in less than one second.
What does "has all digits in increasing or decreasing order" mean? Does it mean that all possible digits, i.e. 0-9, occur in that order, or that only the digits present are in that order?
I'm still stuck, sorry. My timestamp is a int at the beginning but I transform it to a datetime. But as soon as I do this, as I said, its defaulted to 1970 which is not correct
@MisterMiyagi Yes, one can regulate the "origin" in the code; which is usually set to 1970, so far so good. But I tried to change it in different ways, which gives either an error or remains at 1970..
The rest of the arguments for datetime is not needed in my case (referring to pandas.to_datetime(arg, errors='raise', dayfirst=False, yearfirst=False, utc=None, format=None, exact=True, unit=None, infer_datetime_format=False, origin='unix', cache=True)[source])
Also when I alternate the UTC argument it stays at 1970
Well now I don't understand the question at all anymore. I though the goal was to find an integer m so that 101 * m becomes sorted. But there's no m so that 101 * m = 110
@Aran-Fey Just read the question carefully. 101*11=1111 and 11 is the smallest positive integer n such that 101*n has digits in increasing or decreasing order.
Jaakko's question is interesting... The straightforward approach works fine for the first thousand Ns or so. Then it hits N=1089, and churns indefinitely. I let it run for five minutes before I terminated the program.
This reminds me of the Project Euler question that asks you to find the largest number in a Hailstone Sequence with starting value n. The straightforward approach works great, until the thousandth N or so, at which point the result is too large to fit in a four byte int. Not a problem for Python, big problem for C and its descendants.
It does, but it can get hairy if you've got a big denominator, and/or floating point decides to be extra imprecise that day
You could implement a perfect-precision long division algorithm, if you can figure out how to stop when you enter a cycle. Caffeinated Kevin can do it, but Baseline Kevin can't.
The non-problematic cases on the other hand run for a couple of dozen milliseconds at most. One could write an ugly solution that first finds the 9-repdigit solution, then spends the rest of the one second looking for smaller solutions. If there's none found in that time frame, return the 9-repdigit :P
@Kevin the straightforward (as in brute force) solver will take a lot longer to reach 9182736455463728191. Couple of heat deaths of the universe, I think.
Possibly useless observation: if X evenly divides a 9-repdigit, then X/9 evenly divides a 1-repdigit. For instance, 1089/9 = 121, and 121*9182736455463728191 = 1111111111111111111111
Hi. I have a shared folder in Google Drive that works fine with Google Colab. But I want to use Jupyter Lab (by Amazon SageMaker Studio Lab to be precise). However I failed to find relevant information that how I can upload google drive data to my account? The files are very large (3.5gb).
user17416440
if someone can help me out I would be grateful
user17416440
The only solution so far is to download all data to my PC and then reupload it on my studiolab account, which can easily take my 2,3 days
I have two dataframes with variables = ID, From, To, Value1, Value2, Value3 (length data). if I have one ID that is repeated in both dataframes with not all overlapping intervals but some, how do I tell it I want to use dataframe 2 to update only the overlaps (even if they come in the middle of an interval).
what else can I do when OP has already found the duplicate, claims not to understand how to apply the duplicate, but the reasons given for not understanding (or for thinking the situation is special) are clearly nonsense?
If it's a clear dupe, leave it closed as a dupe. If you feel like being helpful try to explain in comments, or invite them to chat. Otherwise just move on.
@roganjosh we are trying to automate a python workflow, I know how I would do it in SQL, trying to figure out how to do it in python. If i have to do multiple passes, that's ok