@Ffisegydd it's looking a somewhat better primary than last year... whether I stay 3rd for the actual election phase though... that's going to be completely different...
@AnttiHaapala text handling is a big issue, but with six and future that burden has been lifted to a great extend. Mostly it is legacy code bases not separating binary and text data properly.
@AnttiHaapala C extensions are harder to handle but not nearly as visible on Stack Overflow.
I think poke nails it from a general point of view, though no doubt from a purely technical point of view there are specific issues like Martijn mentions.
Please don't just re-ask your question a few minutes later, especially posing a long code example when the rules specifically ask that people add large code blocks in a dpaste.
@RobertGrant pyramid acls do work, though they're not always obvious if you do not have context objects, and if you do then they are better match than ziggurat
@MartijnPieters stretch target: make the total of the votes for people who are regulars in this room surpass the total of all the other nominees' votes :)
or how you call it "not knowing where to go/what to do next and stunned"
I'm just asking for proof why a b-spline is the same as a cubic spline (When several answerers said I should use a b-spline as it is more generic than a cubic spline - I know a cubic spline has the correct mathematical properties which I actually need). But all comments are just stating "they look the same, test it".
@JRichardSnape Hmm guess that's true - but there they would then look weirdly at the "python esque" thing. I know they are NOT mathematically equal. I justdon't know why they tend to give the same results in this case (maybe under certain circumstances B splines transform into cubic splines)
@JRichardSnape And that would also be the answer I get at math.stackexchange: "no they're not equal", except if you do xyz. which then points me back to the library: is it really doing XYZ, can there be proof?
They are not mathematically equal is one thing. However the maths guys state a couple of times in different questions "And the important point is that any piecewise polynomial (i..e. any spline) can be written as a b-spline.". They tend not to make those kinds of assertion lightly, although I can't see a rigorous proof of that in the answers. I'm not an expert on the maths here so can't give you that myself
@MartijnPieters has it been financially worth it to create so many thousand accounts to upvote your answers and thus be able to charge so much on codementor? :)
I could rewrite the algorithms easily - but not fast enough for my needs :/. The speed up under the hood for matrix solving that numpy provides (using cuda/C) is way above my knowledge (and I don't have the time to get to know that)...
@paul23 If you can rewrite the algorithm, but need the numpy matrix processing - why not rewrite but using numpy? Or are you saying you don't have time to get to know the numpy/scipy matrix manipulation toolboxes?
@JRichardSnape I won't (as in taking the time to implement them) be able to use the specific shortcuts for these applications. Such as the fact that the solution matrix will be sparse. But yes doing that now, it just feels silly knowing that there is a function with the exact name I need, but that doesn't provide the statistical data.
@paul23 Sure - can see that. A quick browse through the code suggest scipy.interpolate.spltopp might give you what you want (piecewise polynomials from cubic spline representation you already have). Have you been down that road already? My other thought is - is there another way to achieve what you want? Maybe if you post the underlying problem (i.e. I want to estimate and integrate this curve...) rather than a problem with exact method you might get some bites.
@JRichardSnape Well that latter is just silly - I know that by using cubic splines I get a n^2 as much accuracy as using linear approximation. So that let me do only sqrt(n) tests. I can't really start doing something different in a program/function than what I proved on paper right?
@JRichardSnape First thing is something I could indeed still test, can't remember that function
Though I have to go in 30 mins so I'll do it later
@paul23 "b-spline is the same as a cubic spline". Not exactly. A plain cubic spline is a degree 3 equation of y in terms of x that passes through a given pair of points, with the derivatives given at both those points.
Whereas a cubic Bézier spline is a pair of 3rd degree parametric equations of x in terms of t and y in terms of t (with t runnig from 0 to 1). It's determined by 4 points. It passes through (x0,y0) & (x3,y3), and is tangent to the lines (x0,y0)-(x1,y1) and (x2,y2)-(x3,y3), with the "velocity" of the curve at the endpoints determined by the lengths of those tangent segments. So a cubic B-spline has more freedom than a vanilla cubic spline.
@paul23 Well - I think silly is a bit strong - I have no idea what your underlying problem is, so can't comment on whether your method is good or bad. If you're convinced that it's what you have to do - fine. I hope the function I mentioned can help you.
B-splines are groovy for drawing stuff: you can even make them do loops with a suitable choice of control points ((x1,y1) and (x2,y2)). But you certainly wouldn't want to use them to do interpolation of a polynomial in x.
@paul23 I take it you've looked at the tutorial too and it doesn't show what you want? docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/tutorial/… It appears to show integration of function interpolated using cubic splines.
But, as I say, I haven't got a handle on your problem really and this is doing things "under the hood", so if you want to see the spline coefficients and integrate yourself, this might not suit. I'll have to go now
@paul23 I'm not familiar with scipy, but I assume from a brief look at the docs that it uses a plain cubic spline in .interpolate.interp1d(kind='cubic'). And your problem is that it doesn't give you access to the coefficients of the cubics it creates, so you can't do an analytic integration of those cubics.
OTOH, you can do a numerical integration on the resulting interpolated function, and if you use Simpson's rule to do the integration the result will be identical to an analytic integration, since Simpson's on a cubic is exact, as explained at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simpson%27s_rule#Error
@PM2Ring hmm simpson's 3/8 rule, that is indeed something I could do - though speed is a major concern (a single functions consists of roughly 800*1000*300 datapoints in 3 independent dimensions). As it would require me to test more points than the three used for cubic interpolation. Anyways I g2g going to test several methods later today (I guess the answer is: "sorry the api doesn't provide the interface to get the factors").
@Cinch The lvalue / rvalue distinction is independent of language, but how it manifests depends on the syntax of the language. It's especially important in C (and it's close relatives), since variables can be assigned to inside an expression (eg with stuff like i++); but other languages (like Python) don't let you do that sort of thing.
@Cinch: Also bear in mind that variables in Python work quite differently to how they work in C. In C, a variable is a named location in memory, and you can modify the contents of that area in RAM. In Python, we have objects (that may or may not be mutable), and those objects may be bound to a name, but they don't need to be.
@Cinch I missed stuff like that when I first started in Python (after over 20 years writing C), but I soon got used to it. And see the point of avoiding that type of messiness.
@Cinch Stuff in Python that uses C-based code to do the time-critical stuff can be almost as fast as pure C code. And heaps faster to develop. You probably wouldn't try to write a bleeding-edge game with it; OTOH, even then, Python could handle a lot of the basic "housekeeping" tasks, and you could just use C/assembler (and a good GPU) for all the high-speed graphics stuff.
I'm giving this to cphlewis but just wanted to let you know that it's not because I value his answer more, but because it's the minimum I'm allowed to give after already giving out 50 pts.
Half-baked story premise: every ten years during the celestial alignment, it becomes possible to communicate with the dead for one day. They honestly answer any question about their lives. This society is quite different from ours, since nothing stays secret forever.
@Kevin or you have people employed to quickly ask a pointless question of them every 10 years, before the police can. Do that five times and you're free :)
Martijn Pieters's answers
A question is asked and receives some very good answers. The asker then flags this question and asks for it to be deleted because having it up will cause them trouble at work or school. Do you delete the question?
Questions plus answers make a collective work...
Late, but I've been very very busy last night and this morning.
To make things more difficult for the mobsters and politicians, what if a spirit could appear in multiple places at once? I imagine them more as recordings or echoes of the personality and memory of the living person rather than a free-willed entity, so there would be no problem with replication then.
All it would really mean is that since killing people would not guarantee silence, the mob (or any organization intent on keeping secrets) would end up having lots of prisons where they keep people that in the normal world would probably have just been killed.
Probably the first thing politicians would do, is pass a law saying that the testimony of ghosts isn't permitted in court. Although cops would still find it useful, if they employ parallel construction.
@InbarRose Yeah, I imagine lobotomies and comas would be much more common over there.
> Wanted: Somebody to go back in time with me. This is not a joke. P.O. Box 91 Ocean View, WA 99393. You'll get paid after we get back. Must bring your own weapons. Safety not guaranteed. I have only done this once before.
When installing a Ruby gem (Ruby's equivalent to a pip package), anything in the gem's bin directory will be added to the user's path, so that after installing the gem, they can run that executable. Can a pip do something like that?
@MattDMo I saw you used Sublime, may I asked what Python linters you use (if any) - can't find a good one that'll work with a virtualenv and allow me to add to the pythonpath?
We've talked about that on here before sometime :)
From here: "When topdown is True, the caller can modify the dirnames list in-place (perhaps using del or slice assignment), and walk() will only recurse into the subdirectories whose names remain in dirnames; this can be used to prune the search..."
@MartijnPieters just thought - you'll be able to clear up all those pesky tag synoynms that have been hanging around that not many people can vote on...
Hypothesis: Everyone is going to think "Martijn is a shoe-in, everyone will vote for him, I'll give my vote to someone else" and Martijn won't actually get diamonded.
ah thank you Robert Grant. So, I am trying to work with git hooks... you can use python for a basic after add git hook, right? I'm just trying to run a jshint type thing on all js files
Do you wonder whether operator.itemgetter does something nearly magic? It does not. It returns a tuple (of length two in this case) and then sorted does The Right Thing with that. — Lutz Prechelt1 min ago
Er.... what's this guy trying to say?
user559633
is 'figgin' an old-timey british isles term for testicles?
(sidenote: lol, just got a salescall from verizon wireless in which a salesbro tried to hustle me onto a new plan and hung up when i called him out on it)