I knew the answer to a question, but the OP had "also, how do I do [completely unrelated thing that Kevin has no clue about]?" on the end of the post, so I spent twenty minutes deciding whether to answer at all.
Reading the previous questions, they don't seem great, but the ones I looked at don't seem actively trollish. Wonder how the OP convinced himself of that one.
confusion between file names and file objects seems to be a very common problem among new programmers
They can usually puzzle out the issue on their own, but their code is forever riddled with poorly chosen variable names. file = "myfile.txt"; f = open(file)
When you tried a smaller string, what was the result? If it worked, try a string larger than that one but still smaller than your original one. If it gave an error, try an even smaller string.
@davidism: sometimes it's tempting to link to various PRs you've had accepted to a package, not to prove that you're necessarily right, but that someone should at least hear you out. I think I've only given in to that temptation once or twice..
Finally figured out what that user was asking about Flask-User. It's surprising how many answers boil down to, "you wanted to know how it worked, so I looked at the source and here's how it works". :-/ stackoverflow.com/a/28882657/400617
I like questions that require source diving, because most fast gunners don't want to bother
Which means I have lots of time to answer, unless Martijn beats me because he just happens to know off the top his head what file to look in. Which only happens like 20% of the time.
I think that may be this guy's problem. he creates a variable in his walk loop and returns it outside the loop. This would cause a name error if it doesn't walk anywhere.
user2555451
On a side note, why would os.walk allow you to give it a file name?? How do you walk a file?
Replying to my comments using complete sentences with less than a five minute turn around time automatically adds twenty IQ points to my perception of the OP ;-)
I don't understand why people are so interested in understanding the implementation details of when Python reuses immutable objects and when it doesn't. What does it matter? Why is everyone so obsessed with calling id on everything? Am I just cranky?
The Help queue is supposed to be for the "needs improvement" questions from Triage, but they're all blatantly close-worthy questions so far. Triage is definitely not working as intended.
just us / that works for all os's in python and doesnt need rawstrings or escapes but either path=r"C:\test" or path = "C:\\test" or path="C:/test" will all behave correctly, path="C:\test" will not
I guess it's because most of the time, if your programming language behaves in a way you don't expect, that means that your understanding is wrong and you'll inevitably write code that doesn't work as a result. So when someone discovers that id does something surprising, they want to understand what's going on, even though it doesn't actually matter in this particular situation
@JoranBeasley I bet that would have been a lot easier to figure out if OP had told us what he was typing for the command line arguments in the first place
Remember, these are users that came to us with relatively good questions on their first or second try.
Large Data Set | Can't Create Foreign Key (queue)
How to fade-in text when a button is clicked on in adobe edge? (queue)
How to generate Java Class from Data Base to use Hibernate 4 (queue...
> I no longer have a desire to help or improve in this queue. :(
I run sudo apt-get install python-dev, and it seems good. I then do . bin/activate within my environment directory.. then I run sudo pip install Scrapy and I get that Python.h error
That said, I don't think the fact the user's account no longer seems to exist is a valid close reason. A really good, on-topic question would continue to be really good even if the user immediately rage-quit and was disassociated from it.
hmmm it showed up as a reason so i voted to close :P ... i guess you convinced me ... retracted... still not sure if i would call it a "good question though"
I say "not as fast" but that really doesn't matter at this point. Just write your program, worry about profiling later if you think there are actual performance issues.
lookup on a hashed structure (set, dict) is faster than on an indexed one (tuple, list), so if you're going to perform that check many times a set will perform better
Membership testing in sets and dicts is O(1). In lists and tuples it's O(N). So in all but the smallest cases (or most expensive hashes) sets are on par with lists, and in other cases they can literally be millions of times faster.
@davidism: hmmph. Kevin's not around, so it's your turn to beat me to things now?
I can't find the conversation, but a while ago I think @Martijn showed that initializing a set was just as fast as a tuple for a static structure at compile time, so you don't even need to worry about the hash overhead for creating the set.
Hello, I'm trying to understand [martineau's comment ](stackoverflow.com/questions/28884581/…) on "working with big datasets". I thought I understood tdelaney's comment, but martineau is making me think I missed something. Anyone care to enlighten me?
@OliverW.: I think he's just saying that the overhead involved in doing os-y things can be big, and so you want to minimize things like opening and closing.
@DSM, so why does he say I am talking about premature optimization then? Keep a reference to an opened file, create a buffer, enter the for loop, append to the buffer and every so often flush the buffer to the file. At proper ending of the loop, the file would have to be closed of course. That would put the load only on a single check inside the loop. Read/write operations would be kept low, no? I feel I'm still missing the point of his comment?
@OliverW. perhaps it would be better to explain what you're talking about in an answer with code, rather than trying to justify it here?
@MikhailTal since it sounds like you have a C++ background but not a lot of Python experience, consider becoming more familiar with Python before asking questions here
@OliverW.: there are two separate lines of thought here. One is: "open the file once or many times?" answer: once, and it sounds like you agree. Then there's your lines about buffering for the "really big stuff", which looks like it's meant to be replying to something tdelaney said but doesn't seem to. There's really no need to implement your own buffering.
@davidism Im really familiar with python. Worked with tkinter and all. Thing is, due to limitations I havent used it almost at all for comeptitive programming. Since the support was installed a few days ago, I'm now a very valuable resource for my competitive team since I can do the first exercises fairly quickly
@davidism, you're right, it sounds like I'm justifying here. The thing is that I'm not sure I understood the comment, considering big data is not my field of expertise.
In particular, if I have a really big file (say several 10s of gigs) I'm not going to be able to assemble a list in memory and write it out. But if I can work line by line, I might as well -- there's not much cause to write a separate chunking level.
@DSM, the reason there's no need to implement my own buffering is because the write method buffers automatically right (and as long as you don't force a flush..)?
And this conversation has already lasted longer than the time you'd save by trying to be clever and tweaking the buffering level on modern hardware. ;-)
@JoranBeasley thank you. Suppose it is just a method: can I return the first attribute of the object I pass to it without knowing the name of this attribute ?
@davidism: in Python 3, when using a set literal ({...}) with an in test the set literal is replaced by a frozenset() object stored with the constants.
Just like in (...) and in [...] results in a tuple object being stored like that.
It irks me that two of my answers have been downvoted. The common factor is that the same user has participated in both posts. 12 I think both those answers are good, and his answers are less good. Maybe I'm jumping to conclusions.
The is operator does not match the values of the variables, but the
instances themselves.
What does it really mean?
I declared two variables named x and y assigning the same values in both variables, but it returns false when I use the is operator.
I need a clarification. Here is my code...
@Jon: I'd have used .loc[[0,1]] instead of reindex, just out of personal preference, but looks fine to me. I can't think of anything slicker offhand, anyway.
Well, I just realized that the Python script which I wrote a year back was making a minimum of 1 lakh requests and it takes 9 hours to complete. It actually makes 2000 req first, processes data and from that it makes around 1 lakh reqs.
So I am thinking of setting up a Producer-Consumer model. and then I found the following in the threading docs
> If you want your application to make better use of the computational resources of multi-core machines, you are advised to use multiprocessing or concurrent.futures.ProcessPoolExecutor. However, threading is still an appropriate model if you want to run multiple I/O-bound tasks simultaneously.