Two things to note: (1) if you have crappy hash functions you'll get more collisions; and (2) your table size better be prime because you're depending on having a step function that doesn't have any common factors with it.
You are trying to use the string as a function:
"Your new price is: $"(float(price) * 0.1)
Because there is nothing between the string literal and the (..) parenthesis, Python interprets that as an instruction to treat the string as a callable and invoke it with one argument:
>>> "Hello World...
"Your eyes are getting heavy... You want to perform analysis on a large collection of images... You want to store this data in HDFS and process it with MapReduce..."
> I have vivid memories of that time — my self-image had been wrapped up in being “a good programmer”, and here I was just hideously failing.
I know that feeling ;_;
Reminds me of the study that shows how kids who are praised as smart will refuse to do difficult tasks, so they can't fail and prove their appraisers wrong; while kids who are praised for being hard working will put in extra effort on difficult tasks, to prove their appraisers right.
@idjaw not really that bad of a question, considering common regex questions at least, his answer could have used a bit more code and would’ve been perfect
@JohanLarsson the music of "The Knick" is pretty cool: deep, minimal techno -- a melancholic trip -- probably you will enjoy it most, once you watch a few episodes of the show
It's been asked in various forms about a thousand times since that GCSE coursework exercise was released, so even if it was difficult there's no excuse to ask it again.
Thanks for the input guys. If it interests anyone, one more vote to put on hold if you feel it should be put on hold...but it already attracted a few answers:
The intentions might have been genuine in only wanting a hint, but I'd have to agree with jon here...when deciding to answer homework questions, there has to be at least some explicit effort shown in the form of code and indication of where they are having difficulty. Showing the examples that are on the assignment question can't qualify as effort.
How to convert this list of time to datetime in python ?
time = [2014, 1, 1, 0, 0]
so the result should be :
result = datetime.datetime(2014, 1, 1, 0, 0)
I don't think that would help - you can ask the OP to unaccept if you really want to, but I don't see the problem with having an answer right there are a link to more information on the dupe
The question is a dupe, so reopening it is clearly not the way to go
@VinodPrime have you considered providing the information requested in comments, or showing what you're currently doing and how it's failing? Why not start with the (5, 25, 25) array of zeros then insert the data from each file into it, rather than trying to pad each one out?
That would be as easy as starting with np.zeros((5, 25, 25))
@VinodPrime FYI, "Can anyone tell me how to do this?" is a textbook bad SO question. What have you tried, and what precisely is the problem with it?
So really all you need to do now is 1) figure out how to turn an array of shape (a,b) into an array of shape (15,15), and 2) figure out how to make a c that has more than two elements, without having to write c = [a,b,c...x,y,z]
It seems a lot like giving it a few simple inputs and going "huh, that's not the cube of that" for anything but 0, 1 and 3 would have solved this without asking SO!
Its strange how people like me come to stack overflow to access knowledgeable developers pointers... and instead get snide comments from a moderator? I got the correct answer. The goal of the SO system should be to aid people in improving and solving issues, but instead it is ripe with people leaving comments like this. I am happy I found the correct answer, but again let down by a moderator. I have seen complaints increasing on other systems like quora that say that SO has become a mess of rude moderator replies. I suggest you read up on common courtesy tutorials so you can see how that works — Chad Collins17 mins ago
Earlier today an OP asked me "If I replace this line with that line, will my code work?" I replied "I don't know, what happens when you try?". Took thirty minutes to get a reply to that one, for what should have taken five seconds.
@davidism I honestly don’t care about such people. If they come here expecting to get solutions for their crappy problems without investing any work, then I’m fine without them.
Whenever I see a post on reddit/HN/whatever like "I made a post on SO and people treated it like a bad question and now I'm never going back" I think "good, one less bad question asker"
"I will no longer patronize this establishment" is not a punishment when we don't want you here in the first place
My only worry is that being mean to everyone all the time will cause the influx of actual helpful new users to dry up, and the site will become a withered husk of its former glory.
It's very difficult to distinguish between "don't know what I'm doing yet but willing to engage and learn" and "lazy and thoughtless and will become abusive if this is pointed out"
OTOH it's not clear to me what percentage of valuable community members got started by asking a bad question, but were not repelled because it was in a more polite era.
My last exchange on hackernews was criticizing someone that went all SJW defending paedophiles (and I was the one getting "downvotes"), so I'm okay with those types of new users staying away.
On the gripping hand, a potentially valuable member need not ask a bad question to be dissuaded - just hearing millions of sob stories from the rubes that do ask bad questions, may be enough of a chilling effect to keep them from ever making a post in the first place
Meanwhile, the answer I edited yesterday is now the user's second highest scoring post ever, yet he really, really couldn't accept that he should be answering better when discussed on meta.
there are 30k-reppish users who ask shitty questions all the time
user559633
@jonrsharpe What do you mean? SJWs aren't actual activists and it's a well-understood term on the internet for someone begging to be contrarian and take offense over the pettiest of things.
And yes, I got a banner saying (roughly) "hey don't do that"
user559633
2:09 PM
@jonrsharpe Oh, I don't really care about ethics in video game journalism, it's to be expected that it's not real journalism. And at the same time, I don't care about the opinions of people that demand to not be offended by anything.
user559633
reminds self that every group is criticized, stereotyped, and dismissed by its lunatic fringe
I just do an occasional checkup to make sure that none of them are growing in power enough to destroy the world. So far, they haven't, so I'm good to put up the blinders for another year or so.
As long as the ethical breach is by a man, you're golden!
user559633
My understanding of the gamergate thing is that someone said "hey, isn't it fucked up how these people give positive reviews and don't disclose personal relationships?" and a group of people hoping to make a living off being offended on the internet reeled back with "how dare you microaggress and use the term 'positive' and electron shame atoms?!?!"
@tobias_k- yeah yeah my code was print('hello') raw_input('press enter to close') i know it's dumb m a newbee and trying to learn and ummm_hmm i double clicked the .py file thanks! — Ayushya Rao4 mins ago
Anyone fancy that? I'm not sure I have it in me today
Sigh. There's so much confusion among newbies and commenters because it's impossible to determine exactly what their environment looks like. Is it a REPL? Is it a command line? Is it IDLE? Who knows? Certainly not the OP!
All they know is that they click the thing and then they type words in the thing, and when they run the thing, a bad thing happens.
Mine too, but I can provide a better thing - er, description - if I am prompted to do so.
Whereas the newbies are like "what is an IDE? What is cmd? Why are you asking me these questions? Just answer my problem please"
(consequence of impoliteness #3: if you ask lots of clarifying questions just for the purpose of annoying the OP, then all future OPs will assume that your questions are just pranks, and won't answer them)
For me it's the opposite - I'm flummoxed by lack of choice. The thing I want for Xmas comes in cyan but not blue. I don't even want the thing if it's not blue.
Cyan isn't even the canonical color of the thing as it appears in the source material. This seems like a bungle on the thing's source material's creator's marketing team's part, really.
What is this thing, and can we see pictures and then speculate (hopefully) amusingly on how the marketing department should have referred to that shade?
The difference between International Klein blue and Egyptian blue has been a running joke in the office for several weeks for reasons it would take too long to explain. :-)
I just joined Code Golf & posted a PostScript answer for that circle fractal thing. It's certainly not the smallest entry, but it's better than some. And the output's gorgeous, if I do say so myself. :)
Can we speculate (hopefully) amusingly on what it is that you would want but be embarrassed about and comes in cyan (not blue)?
@PM2Ring "PostScript isn't just a graphics file format with both vector and bitmap capabilities, it's actually an object-based Turing-complete programing language." - are there slides to go with this?
I briefly considered going through the Python tutorial and making self-answered questions for everything without a decent existing dupe target. Like "how do I add two numbers" and such.
Does anyone remember when dupe hammering first came into existence, and one guy abused it by closing all questions he didn't like, with the target being some kind of "you're dumb" post that he made?
Pretty sure the mods put a stop to that in like, ten minutes
For some reason I find "Can we start a colony on a passing rogue planet?", "Should I make tea for everyone in my open plan office?", and "Does "red apples and bottles" mean "the apples are red and the bottles are red" or "only apples are red"?" an interesting combination of questions.
@DSM, 1) yes, but it is a bad idea. 2) see previous answer. 3) the second one. "red" has a high priority so it only binds to the closest word. I just made this rule up.