stackoverflow.com/questions/625083/… ugh, this is awful. It's clearly too broad (two questions that are only related in the vaguest of ways), and the self half of the material is already covered by stackoverflow.com/questions/2709821/…. But we don't have anything nearly as good/specific for the __init__ half.
(Also, the code example in the question is utterly nonsensical)
OP's account appears not to exist any more.
but I guess it's hard to talk about __init__ without talking about self, since that's the thing being inited. :/
hi everyone, i am sending a searlized string through ajax how do i unsearlize it in python 😐 trying different method of unicode, decode, beautifulsoap nothing working
depends on what serialized means in this context, you just need to apply the reverse operation to it. so the question actually boils down to whether you know exactly what type of operations are happening to the string in question.
if you don't, one option is to just take the string on the python side and print it's repr. get a sense of what you're dealing with.
or maybe my problem is jut to display that string decoded, anything would work either decode and save it like that *this is a test string !@#$% hello* in DB then simply display it or save it like "this+is+a+test+string+!%40%23%24%25+hello" then display it in decoded way
found the solution, urllib.parse.unquote_plus(about_txt)
import collections
messages_by_tenant = collections.defaultdict(list)
for message in messages:
messages_by_tenant[message['tenant_name']['errors']].append(message['message'])
Getting - TypeError: string indices must be integers for
hey everyone, I seem to not understand why inside_print does not take "self" but inside_foo does, I understand how self works for the most part, but this just does not make sense to me
Good. Next part of the challenge: Your input is {'x': 1, 'y': 2}, and the output should be {'x': '1', 'y': '2'}
@Jake Strictly speaking, that's a bug. It should print the object. It doesn't because print is a builtin function, and those don't always behave like regular functions
I did try the same with itertools.accumulate and "self" was not passed there too, so the assumption / takeaway is builtins don't have self passed implicitly?
Ok, now you're ready for the final challenge: Input is {'foo': [], 'bar': ['hi']}, output is {'foo': {'errors': [], 'error_count': 0}, 'bar': {'errors': ['hi'], 'error_count': 1}}
Semantic nitpick: a typical text editor does not have web browsing capability. An IDE might, though.
I mention this not because I love Well Actuallying*, but because you may get better search results if you look for "IDE iframe whitelist" rather than "text editor iframe whitelist".
(*I do love it, but that is neither here nor there)
@duhaime Not that I'm aware of. Perhaps you could make one yourself, if you know of a few open source text editors, and can find where they keep their whitelists
like draft and quill and tiptap etc are libraries for building a rich text editor, but they don't give you like text-editor.min.js fully featured that you embed in your site; you use those libs to craft the UX you want
part of that is specifying whether you want to support iframes and if so from which domains, and we're looking to support a critical hitlist but haven't found such a list yet...
I thought the question was something like, "when a developer writes an extension or plugin for a text editor, if the extension is going to display content from the web, the developer needs to send a whitelist of urls to the editor ahead of time. Some editors save them some effort by having a global whitelist of urls known to be reputable, such as youtube. Where is this list?"
I'm a fan of "add domains to the list as users request them" but we're looking to streamline the process a bit
oh no, I don't believe such a list is specified in any lib; I'm looking for like the most commonly iframe'd domains in the web so we can pick from that list
I've been stuck on this for hours now and there's something I'm not understanding. I need to create multiple heatmaps and I want the x and y ranges to be the same (even if there's no data in the cells). It will happily accept np.nan and just leave cells empty. However, when I try to set the axis ranges, somehow it gets scrunched up and I don't know why
I've also tried it as in their actual guide which suggests ax = sns.heatmap(uniform_data) and not use fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 1, figsize =(8, 8)) but it has been the same for everything I've tried :(
Wait, no it doesn't :O. Now it has a nonlinear scale on the axes and just jumps from where ever it likes to the extreme value in a single tick
I officially give up. I'll just have to cope with trying to compare lots of heatmaps that are all on their own weird scale depending on whatever data is available for their category
If you put a sparse speckling of data at the extremes and that didn't work, try putting some hefty & hot fake data instead. Maybe the heatmapper is willing to snip out cold areas, but not hot areas
Point is, I don't think I should be doing any of this. I don't see what's unreasonable about being able to specify a set, linear, axis range. It's only just after I tried my fake data that I realised I was looking at a plot with a non-linear axis in the first place
I also think you should be able to specify a set linear axis range. And furthermore I think you shouldn't have to specify "linear" at all. If someone wants a nonlinear map, make them specify it.
Thankfully it's seemingly only the last tick where it truncates the range to get to the outlier but it still gives a skewed view of just how much of an outlier the points on the perimeter of the plot are
In happier news today, I found out about SDKMAN which neatly gets around a lot of sudo restrictions I have in workspaces. We're not to be trusted with such power
And here we have the problem with seaborn. Why have they packed so much logic in? "If True, plot the column names of the dataframe. If False, don’t plot the column names. If list-like, plot these alternate labels as the xticklabels. If an integer, use the column names but plot only every n label. If “auto”, try to densely plot non-overlapping labels."
Setting it as not"auto" still gives auto behaviour because you're taking a pivot table and nowhere does it tell me that I need to auto-pad the dataframe with missing intervals to make it sparse
So in the end, the tick length gets misaligned with the index values :/
If I get chance I'll put a PR in for that and try disentangle that parameter and then reindex the pivot table so that at least it will lose the "auto" behaviour if you specify an integer tick interval
I rarely ever try to do something with plots other than eyeballing tbh, so normally it's just some crude matplotlib plot spat out and I hand the code off to others to get it pretty for reports etc.
A big part of the problem here, which is what wasted most of my time, was assuming it was my misunderstanding of matplotlib because I don't have a good mental image of how that library actually works. I should have just jumped to the seaborn source and I'd have spotted that straight away
"it's just some crude matplotlib plot spat out and I hand the code off to others" sounds pretty awful behaviour, actually. I mean to say that normally I'm just handing off an algo for others to play with and I only need to check it does what I think it does :P This one I need to get the plots for a customer report directly
Yeah, not at all. The stuff I plot isn't even things that the other people I pass off to will be plotting, either. I'm just looking for algorithm correctness in the solvers I make; plt.plot(x_vals, y_vals); plt.show() usually suffices. I have a renewed appreciation for those on the front line that make some pretty spectacular reports.
They're all in the graphic design group chat, betting on whether you'll hand this project off to one of them
"Based on the profanity coming from his office, he's trying to do an axis aligned heatmap series. Little does he know that this is the #1 newbie pitfall in all of Seaborn"
Ok, then I definitely wouldn't have guessed that "that" referred to this room. It's a place where you can discuss python things a bit more informally than the main site, which should be straight Q/A. We have room rules that might explain a bit more
@roganjosh Yeah, a few packages. Mostly stuff of our science infrastructure tooling that we make available to the community, plus some utility libraries that hopefully someone out there can make use of as well.
I do wanna push for a vehicle routing library. This is a fantastic library that the guy actively maintains/develops but it's general-purpose and I want to strip some cruft. Plus I found non-contiguous matrices yesterday and it's hardened my resolve
Billions/trillions of lookups going through that :'( But we've failed to get it integrated fully through the API we've slapped on it, so I still have major work outstanding that I need to feedback first before I start complaining about nested Vecs
@MisterMiyagi I already have beatroute internally. Still my favourite name. That's the name of my python interface to a whole raft of backend solvers in any language
Not sure how it holds up if you're not a native speaker, but it's pronounced "beetroot" - the vegetable - but it's "beat (your) route" in meaning. It's great for confusing new people to the company, where I can say "I bet we could get beatroute to solve that, but we'd just need to tune a few parameters" and watch their confused expressions for about 30 secs before I explain
Would it be a paradigm shift not to mark a question as a duplicate just because a question of the same content already exists? Reason: the previous question was not comprehensive enough.
question age has nothing to do with it. Duplicate links are supposed to be directed towards the best version of the question, upon sober second thought.
however, for two very popular questions like this, I will not impose my will, without community consensus.
well, normally it's easier to use the older question as canonical. Firstly, it had a chance to establish itself, in the time between the two questions.
and some people are not in agreement about the policy, yes.
I've asked this before to no response but maybe I'll catch a different group this time. Is anyone familiar with psychopy (psychopy.org)? I have a question related to how clocks work with screen flips, and their dedicated forum has not been the most helpful.