by the first "set" there, do you mean, "assign a value to an attribute", or "make into a set", or something else?
I think we've talked about this in the room before. setting eq like`myClass.__eq__ = someFunc` doesn't work the way you think it might
Or maybe you mean "add the results of eq and hash to a set". Absolutely you can. their results are a bool and an int respectively, and both are non-mutable.
Or if you mean, "can you implement __eq__ by comparing the hash value of two objects?". I wouldn't recommend it. You'll surely get collisions.
It does seem strange that there are so many professors in the world who are very strict about not using builtin functions but are fine with students asking random strangers on the interwebs.
I understand forbidding builtins because it makes it easier to test the student's critical thinking skills. "Reverse a string without using reverse or slicing" is not practical, but you'll definitely find out if he can work a for loop.
Sure. For pedagogical reasons it's good to know how to build your own tools, but that goal isn't advanced (well, not much, anyway --ed) if you simply buy it at the store. Or free at SO. You know what I mean.
I love pandas but the problem is that it can do so much that I think I can do anything with it and then when I cant work out how to do something it makes me sad. #FirstWorldCoderProblems.
@Ffisegydd: soon you'll be able to contribute to pandorables, my supersecret expansion pack containing the functions I wasn't able to convince them to adopt!
BTW, at the risk of tugging on Superman's cape, am I alone in thinking that I prefer the OP's groupby solution to Martijn's here? It's simple, clean, could easily be generatorified if necessary, and you could compress it even more using zip.
@Ffisegydd: a while back -- maybe a year? -- I started trying to convince people to use "pandorable" as our "pythonic". Andy likes it, anyway. :^)
Is there an easy way to map a specific column in a dataframe's value based on a given function and the index of the entry? E.G. I have a dataframe df with index values [1..10] and I want to map column df['A'] to a string based on the index value and an .ini config file lookup. I'm having issues extracting the index in a for loop.
I don't understand any of that except "I'm having issues extracting the index in a for loop". Generally, instead of doing for item in iterable:, you can do for index, item in enumerate(iterable): if you need the index.
Is there an efficient way to call a member function on every element of a list that's better than a for loop? That is, is there something better than "for x in l: x.foo(bar)"
@Ffisegydd OK, that makes sense about the objects. Readability does count, but me not snoozing for 10 minutes while I wait for the program to run counts too :-)
Even if using map were 50% faster than using a for loop, if the loop time itself is dominating your runtime then pure Python may not be the right language for the job. :^) And if the method time is dominating (as it should), then the loop overhead itself should be irrelevant.
For questions of the form, "is there anything faster than this basic building block of the language?" My response is usually, "if there was, the devs would have replaced the slower version with the faster one already"
In [4]: %timeit for _ in range(10000): func()
1000 loops, best of 3: 1.84 ms per loop
In [5]: %timeit [func() for _ in range(10000)]
100 loops, best of 3: 2.02 ms per loop
func() just does 2+2. There may be some difference as func is a function when you're looking at a bound method (I think that's the term?) but I doubt it'll affect it much either way.
I never need to optimize, because when my program is too slow, I get sour grapes and abandon it. "It probably wouldn't have produced a useful result anyway..." kicks pebble sullenly
I managed to stick in pure Python for quite a while with a toy algorithm using pypy. Eventually I had to C++ify the whole thing but it was very useful as a test.
Actually, there's an in-house data library I wrote a Python prototype for which was never supposed to be anything more than a demo but it was so easy to add functionality to that it became popular and so is still around..
I find it much more useful to reduce the complexity of the algorithm, than to replace for loops with reduce or whatever. Just going from O(N^2) to O(N*log(N)) can get you from ten minutes to ten seconds.
Actually now that I'm looking a the code I think the slow parts are all the list creation/deletion I'm doing with lines like "l = [x for x in l if x.foo()]"
@davidism it seems like a lot of work to separate out the first paragraph and the code block from one single block of text. I suppose I just always thought it should follow the same layout we've got at the moment with the "details" showing both the block of code and a short sentence explaining it (both of these optional).
I don't mind really though, whichever you think is better.
I definitely agree that the main page shouldn't show the code blocks though.
@holdenweb: I have a recruiter anxiously knocking on my email door for a remote Python contractor for a SaaS company.
I'll see what he's so anxious about (interview slots tomorrow and Friday!); this specific recruitement company has 1 decent chap that knows how I work and doesn't bother me too much, and a new 'puppy' that is overenthousiastic and wants to prove themselves still, the email is from the latter.
@holdenweb: I rather not sick them on you if you are not interested, I'll inquire about compensation..
I'd say it's also over engineered and removes the ability for the asker to learn the fundamentals of something like a "string replace". — Eugene K4 mins ago
That's l like saying that a dictionary is overengineered when you can just build your own hash table.
OP seems to have leaned the fundamentals of replace just fine, judging by his comments
@MartijnPieters No it's like saying a defaultdict(int) answer is over-engineered when the user could just if key not in dict: dict[key] = 0. — Eugene K48 secs ago
Not sure what he's getting at there. That sounds like a perfect time to use a defaultdict.
(Although a Counter would probably be better ;-) )
I mean, I'm not saying you have to use a prepackaged solution every time. Sometimes I don't use a defaultdict if I'm in the middle of a big file and don't want to lose my place by scrolling up to the import section so I can add collections
(expected reply: "get an editor that can bookmark lines, you rube")
Is the joke that it's harder to drive a manual vehicle on left-side-of-the-road driving countries, because you have to shift with your non-dominant hand?
user559633
it's not hard. i did merge into traffic once in the wrong lane -- it's only a little confusing when you're really lost on the road direction isn't obvious
user559633
18:15
@Kevin not a joke, it does take a little getting used to because you are using your non dominant hand and shifting in a horizontally flipped layout from what you are used to
The closest experience I've had to that is playing the Gamecube version of Zelda: Twilight Princess, because everything is flipped in comparison to the Wii version, which is what most guides are written for.
A technical compromise which amused me greatly. Link is left-handed in all games that don't use motion controls. Rather than flip only his character model so you can play right handed with the wiimote, they flipped the whole world.
It's not an easy transition. Uh, spearmint tastes different. Wikipedia is really failing me on drastic examples of differences in properties of chiral molecules with their mirror counterpart, but I'm sure there's some important ones.
user559633
i once made a great batch of meth and was concerned about chirality (to keep my house from getting raided, no, i didn't do actually do this. it is a chirality joke)
Well, this is no good.. if one of us posted a few moderately popular stories on ff.net back when he had more time on his hands, now he won't be able to admit it!
I would judge you. I would judge you hypocritically because in my younger days I once tried, and failed, to write some ff for....censored. I'd judge you nonetheless though.
I understand the allure of writing stories with already established characters. I'm pretty sure if I wrote fiction, and used only original characters, they would all sound and act like me.
user559633
And how would they sound and act @Kevin? (opens so_python/people/kevin/personality.txt)
I spent an hour this morning being interviewed for a supporting film on (Monty) Python's influence on culture. THis may result in up to fifteen seconds of me ont he screen, if it happens to fit in with whatever else they've recorded.
> When “Monty Python Live (Mostly)” finishes its 10-show run at London’s O2 Arena on July 20, the world probably will have seen the last live performance from England’s hilarious, eclectic, intellectual, silly, often naughty group of sketch absurdists.
:<
user559633
Last Monty Python show? well, yam... what language are we all switching to when Python goes away?
Is there some trick to jsonifying a single django model object rather than a QuerySet?
I have the templatetag for jsonify that I found on djangosnippet. That works great to get an entire query set. But if it is a single item within a set (like inside of a for each loop in the template) it seems like it is trying to call __str__ the object rather than turn it into json.
except for the sentences explaining the truth/lie situation, and any sentences recursively explaining themselves. Those are always true regardless of who says them.
if I set the current time, then add an hour to it for my minimum time, then compare current time to minimum time, the current time is always going to be less than the minimum time
[Aside, to audience:] Now that he's implemented this algorithm, I can enact my elaborate plan: trigger the camera with something innocuous, like a small animal. Then I have one hour to loot his home before the next batch of images is broadcast.
I have a huge dict of image histograms with the filename for the key and the histogram-array for the value and want to compare them to find dublicate images using the RMS of the histograms
rms_map = {}
duplicates = {}
for key, value in filename_map.iteritems():
rms = calculate_rms(value)
if rms in rms_map:
duplicates.setdefault(rms_map[rms], []).append(key)
else:
rms_map[rms] = key
You have some filename_map dict which maps filenames to histograms. You have a function calculate_rms which computes the rms of the histogram. The final output will be a dict with a list of filenames that are duplicates of a first filename.
I guess I was thinking that the underlying problem was to recognize two pictures which were duplicates (in that they were effectively the same) but may have a bit of noise. But that's entirely my reading into the backstory.