I thought that one of the get() or put() methods might not be safe, and two processes were putting something in the queue at the same time, causing a weird double-entry error or something
(i added a lock.acquire and lock.release before and after every get/put method and ran it again, but apparently this won't help :( )
the putting process stops doing anything w/ that dictionary once it queues (it starts working on filling the next dictionary), but there are a couple of threads that get from that queue whenever something's put there
two processes aren't dealing w/ the same dict, no (just the same queue)
OK, not sure about multiprocessing queue with multiple threads. If you think there may be an issue there you could dedicate a thread to pulling stuff off the multiprocessing queue and stuffing it onto a process-specific queue.queue.
I've just plopped something into the code to see if it's just an HTML issue (where one page is just very weirdly formatted or something), but I will try that next in case it is a queue issue
it's always two threads that have the problem at the same time, so that could mean that two links are bunk, or it's something regarding their interaction (one that they shouldn't be having :( )
@TigerhawkT3 I ran it through command prompt I keep getting errors pastebin.com/FVZECJdf I am doing something wrong. Thanks for you efforts mate. I was looking through your program and found that you are using all of PEP 8 rules nice and all those commenting great job :)
that frustrates me. I had some scripts I ran periodically to check updates on some sites (they don't have rss feeds so...) and it was working until they installed new firewall
The filter at my last job allowed pretty much anything - the only time I had trouble with it was when I tried to look up lyrics to a song once, and found that it was blocked as "gambling."
I was considering putting the puzzle itself in a Toplevel when I was having Canvas issues, but then I resolved the Canvas issue (and by "resolve" I mean "destroy") and left it as it was.
yea, it's better to destroy the whole toplevel window plus the canvas and all widgets inside before creating a new one if you don't want weird stuff occurring
It is still not working for me @TigerhawkT3 if fell they are blocking it at my company :)
I just answered a question on panda due to which I got a doubt
I created a data frame pd.DataFrame([True,NaN,True,NaN]) now I want to get values which are not nan and not True .That is no data match this criteria I ran a code x[pd.notnull(x[0])&x[0]!=True] but ended up getting NaN as output
but when I do x[pd.notnull(x[0])&x[0]!=False] I get the correct values which is value which are True
BTW, if you want to explicitly test that some object is the bool object True (rather than merely testing if it's truthy) then you should do a is True rather than a == True
@TigerhawkT3 Yeah, poor dupe choice. OTOH, it does have good info (which may be of interest to the new OP), but it doesn't really address the new OP's concern, which you've covered nicely in your answer.
Ok. But the dict() constructor doesn't do the conversion from keywords to strings itself: it gets called with a dict already built in its kwargs. So from the constructor's POV it can't tell whether it was called with dict(spades=3, hearts=2) or dict(**{'spades':3, 'hearts':2})
@TigerhawkT3 I'm hoping the OP will spend some time to read the docs I linked to, and play around with it a bit so they understand what they're doing, rather than hassle people into giving him the solution on a plate.
OTOH, the suggestion to pre-process the images rather than resizing them on the fly is reasonable, even if it doesn't answer the OP's exact question. And when the OP knows Tkinter & PIL well enough to do dynamic resizing that's sensitive to the user's environment they can ask a new question if they need help with that. :)
We didn't have DST in Australia when I was a young kid, but I thought it was a cool idea when I first read about it. It was re-introduced here in 1971, and it quickly lost its novelty value for me. :)
All the Oz states that have DST now do a coordinated change, but for many years Tasmania (the southernmost state) changed to DST earlier & finished later.
IMO, DST is now counter-productive. The original logic was to save an hour's worth of electric lighting in the evening. But these days, DST in the warmer parts of Oz means that people get home from work in summer when it's still quite hot, so their home aircon gets used an hour more than it otherwise would have.
@JonClements I just had to use Australian dictionary to understand what you just said :p :) I find that hard to accept @PM2Ring are you a self thought mathematician cum programmer :)
@VigneshKalai Yes, I'm (mostly) self-taught. I did attend some formal & semi-formal programming courses in my youth but never managed to complete the formal ones for various reasons.
Then I admire you @PM2Ring :) I haven't seen most of the people here answering simple question except me :P but I see you answering only mathematical questions or questions which are difficult to understand
@VigneshKalai SO & Wikipedia have different goals. Wiki can be good for some programming stuff, like describing and comparing algorithms. But SO is better for learning how to use stuff. Neither can teach you how to program, though.
Okay who's good at network based stuff? I don't get why getting devices shows a different ip than the actual device address I know is true. Something about DHCP I think?
From docs.python.org/2/c-api/int.html#c.PyInt_FromLong The current implementation keeps an array of integer objects for all integers between -5 and 256, when you create an int in that range you actually just get back a reference to the existing object.
Converting a loop into a comprehension is simple enough:
mylist = []
for word in ['Hello', 'world']:
mylist.append(word.split('l')[0])
to
mylist = [word.split('l')[0] for word in ['Hello', 'world']]
But I'm not sure how to proceed when the loop involves assigning a value to a reference....
I don't think a comprehension can allow subsequent elements to track previous ones. That's why you never see "add it to the list if it's not in there yet" as a comprehension.
Python 3, 84
Pretty brute force.
i=input().split()
s=[]
p=int(i[0])
for n in map(int,i):
if p<=n:s+=[n];p=n
print(s)
Ungolfed version:
input_numbers = input().split()
sorted_numbers = []
previous_number = int(input_numbers[0])
for number in map(int, input_numbers):
if previous_number <=...
seq = []
for x in range(10):
y = seq[-1] - random.randint(0, 5) if seq else None
if x < y or not seq:
seq.append(x)
#is equivalent to
seq = (lambda seq: ([seq.append(x) for x in range(10) if not seq or x < seq[-1] - random.randint(0,5)], seq)[1])([])
[sorted_numbers.append(number) for number in map(int, input_numbers) if not sorted_numbers or sorted_numbers[-1] <= number]
So I'm atm wondering how guys do this in python. I figure I need either constructor overloading - or a factory method and a private constructor. Neither are particularly available in python: I have an "orbit" object. To initialize the object I need some parameters. One set is the eccentricity & semimajor axis. However I could also take both peri- & apoapsis. Sometimes the first set is more logical sometimes the second. So how do I create this in python?
Hmm this question did take more than a single line to explain, maybe I should've taken it to SO...
@MorganThrapp Problem is than that I'm also forcing those arguments to be "last" in the list, while typically in databases they are always the first things to note (followed by inclination etc).
You came in decided that you need to do "constructor overloading" or a factory method and were told you can just use variadic keyword args in your constructor and build logic based on non-null values. How does Python make this "more complex"
user559633
At some point, in any language, you need to look at the parameters you've passed.
If you're reading data from a database and putting it into objects, I think it would be complicated regardless of whether constructor overloading was possible or not
Actually, never mind, my crystal ball has told me that you already have your mind made up that this is more complex than a method that dumps out objects with dynamic non-keyword argument positioning and then another method that parses the object positional args to determine what it is.
@MorganThrapp I first tried doing something with a function, caching the max in a function attribute, but it got a bit silly. And far too big. :) Here's what I came up with: