« first day (4480 days earlier)      last day (695 days later) » 

01:02
Hello. Anyone can solve this problem: stackoverflow.com/questions/75190407/flask-how-to-use-g
01:29
@Dante Welcome. Please read the room rules. Specifically, please do not ask about questions on main until they are eligible for a bounty, i.e., 48 hours after they were posted. Thanks.
02:21
any way to print a string with explicit whitespaces? so i can see tabs, newlines, etc., as \t, \n, etc., instead of actual whitespace
02:45
@shintuku Print its repr
s = "string with\nwhite\tspace"
print(s)
print(repr(s))
print(f"{s!r}")
@PM2Ring thanks!
 
16 hours later…
18:39
@roganjosh Hi. No problem, you've apologized before. I also apologize again that I misunderstood that you had suggested that I convert parts of my code to Cython, for some reason I inferred that, thinking you implicitly suggested that, I think the confusion came from the subject of compiling Pytorch (having finally some Cython related, but probably ends up being just C/C++ related) to make sure everything compiled properly, and I ended up extending that to all my code.
But in no way am I trying to justify myself, I'm just trying to understand why I unfortunately misunderstood this.
Well, thanks for your help, but luckily I'm making good progress on the total solution of the problem, the problem of running on more than one core has been solved, but I still can't tell if it was due to one or more things, if I can figure it out I'll let you know . But I still can't finish running the program, I'm still investigating the problem.
I don't know if you have understanding of PyTorch, but I use a DataLoader, which loads a lot of data (almost 360 MB) from an HDF file. Apparently there is a hang when trying to load this, it seems that the name of this is Data Starvation (willprice.dev/2021/03/27/…).
I'm sorry for taking so long to answer you, I really couldn't answer before.
18:59
a HDF file*
19:27
No problem on the delay to reply. Unfortunately I don't know the library though that amount of data should fit in memory so I'm not sure about I being data starvation. But, I seems you've already started exploring more in this space than I know
Ok, thanks a lot again!
In fact, this is just a suspicion (maybe it's not now that you've commented about it).
If I'm not mistaken, you also work with Machine Learning, right?
19:54
Looks like the GPU could be starving. This also happens to me. An example: discuss.pytorch.org/t/….
@Marco not really. It's on the periphery of my work and I have worked with neural nets but I generally work in more "operations research" than pure machine learning. I have a reasonable understanding, but by no means an expert
Oh, ok, great.
Are you actually using a GPU in any of this? My understanding was just that it was CPU-based
Yes, I also use GPU.
Any idea why memory is allocated to the GPU but the GPU is not being utilized? I checked it via "nvidia-smi" command.
I don't. CUDA is on my list to learn but I'd just be stabbing in the dark. The idea that memory is allocated to a GPU seems unusual to me unless you can see a cache being used created
20:32
Ok, thank you. I understand little too yet. I think I'll post a question here on SO.
This is what the "nvidia-smi" (NVIDIA System Management Interface) command shows in my case: dpaste.org/ptS1A
I don't know how to properly read that but "memory is allocated to the GPU" - surely it just comes with its own cache backed by hardware?
20:50
I didn't quite understand your question, but in the case of this GPU it has a High Bandwidth Memory type (16 GB).
High Bandwidth Memory = HBR (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Bandwidth_Memory)
Oops
High Bandwidth Memory = HBM*
I don't know why I made this mess, sorry.
21:08
Because you're human? I had a bad day and went over the top in my reactions a few days back; I really don't want you to feel like you have to apologise for every mistake. That's on me, not you, so please don't feel you need to analyse every mistake. I looked, and was, much worse than you
So, with that out of the way, hopefully someone can help but I don't think it's me (I just don't know this area). Just know that you don't have to tread on eggshells
Haha. In general, I like to correct mistakes whenever I see them, I do it for myself (I feel bad when I don't), in case it's not because I'm not bothering you.
Also, that acronym correction was really necessary, it was kind of rude haha.
And relax about what happened to our conversation day before yesterday (if I am not wrong), it's really all good.
any way to do something like:
a, b = list[0], [1]?
for when the 'list' name is super long
a, b = list[:2]
woah! cool! thanks!!
a, b, *_ = list  # or this
21:17
thanks people!
But probably without the name list since that's a builtin
noted
and probably don't take mine, it makes a full copy of the list, while josh's only takes the elements you actually need
funny pattern though
Arne, any reference for that? does *_ mean: whatever it already is after what's getting assigned to a, b?
*is left, yea
21:19
@roganjosh Ok, no problem, thank you very much again. But what do you mean by "I don't need to walk on eggshells"?
cool, thank you
you can put that anywhere, by the way. a, b, *_, c = range(10) -> a is 0, b is 1, c is 9
@Marco walking on eggshells is an English phrase meaning "being nervous about doing something in case it all goes bad". In this case, I mean you shouldn't be worried about making a mistake in case someone in the room gets angry
@shintuku you probably want to look up "unpacking" and the "splat operator"
Ok, I think I understand now (I know that phrase, but I didn't understand the context given by you). Thanks.
@roganjosh didn't know about these, thanks

« first day (4480 days earlier)      last day (695 days later) »