In this case I would work up a good MCVE of the problems your having - and a good but short explanation of what your trying to do - and post this as a question
That way people could see what the intent was and help from there as they are able
Hmmph. Someone posted a "do my math for me" question here, but it has a nice canonical solution which can be done using scipy.optimize.minimize, and it was deleted before I got to post.
Ehh, but it's still mostly off-topic for SO, because he wasn't really asking for help with an implementation.
The question was basically "say you have an unfair die, so the expectation value of rolling it is 5 instead of 3.5 like a fair die. Find a probability distribution for each face". There are lots of possible solutions, but only one maximum entropy solution..
would something like that (can't see question so guessing by your description) be on-topic for stats.SE?
eh, if it is that basic I bet there is already an answer on Math or Stats....or Computer Science (I remember that exact question in some course I took)
Which is why I wish it had been an implementation question. :-) In olden days constraints were a nuisance in scipy but now they've made it much easier.
Submitted a MCVE not too long ago, would some of you mind looking over it? stackoverflow.com/questions/35930398/… Haven't got too much feedback yet, and just want to figure out a solution.
@JGreenwell: yeah, the pre-seaborn mpl plots I made at work weren't the prettiest. Once I could make them in seaborn the boss let me get away with using them directly in presentations. :-)
<- same.....well, sometimes, most of the time I end up rebuilding them using Excel/Powershell/.Net but once in the while direct Notebook based presentation.
Universe man, universe man Size of the entire universe man Usually kind to smaller men, universe man He's got a watch with a minute hand A millennium hand, and an eon hand When they meet it's happyland Powerful man, universe man.
Cool. But where I live importing is a pain. Most chinese sellers don't ship and the customs guys steal or don't send stuff. Unless you use 30$ for Fedex
let's take a look. Never heard of that one. The logic is simple. Press a button, open a file dialog -> select a folder full of files -> convert those files to XML -> allow to download them
I've already done the functionality. Now I have to integrate it in a simple app
HTTP and HTML only allows you to process a file at a time. So you would have to upload all files individually to your server to perform that processing on the server side.
when i do that and add + "AAAA" , it prints out all the terms in one dictionary (which is indicated as there is only one AAA at the end). I am trying to get the items out individually — musss9 mins ago
The curse of knowledge is a cognitive bias that leads better-informed parties to find it extremely difficult to think about problems from the perspective of lesser-informed parties. The effect was first described in print by the economists Colin Camerer, George Loewenstein and Martin Weber, though they give original credit for suggesting the term to Robin Hogarth.
An example of this bias would be of a tailor selling clothes. Because the tailor has made a dress, he is intimately familiar with the quality of the item in craftsmanship, features, and fabric quality. When pricing a dress for sale, however...
Joking aside, I find Curse of Knowledge difficult when explaining my work to other people. "How can you not understand the intricacies of my wonderful logic?"
The rise of smartphones connected to Google has definitely destroyed the ancient tradition of sitting in the pub and drunkenly reciting facts. It's not nearly as fun to drunkenly say "Did you know..." when we literally have the world's knowledge sat in our pockets.
Mini rant: I will never understand how people can write “of” instead of “have”. E.g. “I should of thought about that”. Just what is wrong with people?!
I am trying to use beautifulsoup for the first time to read a table. print table_body works but rows = table_body.find_all('tr') gives TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not callable. the result of the print is bpaste.net/show/387fe5cf6ef1
Who said anything about having a separate server? What are you pushing? Are you pushing over an existing html connection? A new html connection? To an app on a mobile device?
When you say push, I presume you're talking about pushing from Django to something else?
Django has its uses - but they're not developing it to be a framework for everything. They've developed it for a specific reason and they continue to build towards their end goals. Everyone else be damned :)
@holdenweb Are all the ESP8266 boards compatible. You seem to have bought an expensive version with an additional Atmega? It looks like the expensive version is just a ESP8266 with an additional AtMega326 for more pins. Right?
@khajvah I agree it's not designed to do complex database applications. Others in the room have pointed out that there are certain common DB structures that the Django ORM doesn't do. But I believe that they've not been implemented for design decision reasons rather than technical limitations
That being said, I've quickly built up complex prototype systems for my clients, and much to my chagrin, are still in operation.
In the end I gave up and started writing raw SQL, so I don't have the ORM issue any more. Now, my struggle is websocket support, which doesn't seem Django's limitation but rather wsgi's
A battle I am soon going to have to fight: our prototype releases 24 March, and I want the spend a whole scrum cycle after that refactoring/elucidating our architecture
@MartijnPieters I didn't. I mistyped. I meant find_all. OP is trying to use find_all for BeautifulSoup which is BS3. But there is no such method, and now your 17 upv answer says there is :D
I even had a dream about it. "I was in a bus and there was a guy with Python code printed on papers. The lines I remember were "from bs4 import BeautifulSoup". I started a conversation with him and he told me the government was teaching programming to unemployed people for free."
But my govt teaches Java. The'd never teach Python though. LOL! But neverthless a beautiful dream
% sudo apt-cache search beautifulsoup
python-bs4 - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python
python-bs4-doc - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python - documentation
python3-bs4 - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python 3
pypy-bs4 - error-tolerant HTML parser for PyPy
python-beautifulsoup - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python
wait I just realized something. Should this be tagged Python http://stackoverflow.com/questions/35941506/python-print-to-stdout-and-redirect-output-to-file
Python happens to be the command being used, but I don't think it has anything to do with Python
user@user-Linuxbox:~$ apt-cache search beautifulsoup
python-bs4 - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python
python-bs4-doc - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python - documentation
python3-bs4 - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python 3
pypy-bs4 - error-tolerant HTML parser for PyPy
python-beautifulsoup - error-tolerant HTML parser for Python
user@user-Linuxbox:~$
We come across this issue quite a lot - converted to python package speke - should each package have its version in its import name, so you can have multiple versions available at once, or should you always rely on the correct deployment to figure stuff out
@Wally There was some program—I can’t remember its name atm—that would go in place of sudo that would show you what a command is attempting to do with sudo permissions
@RobertGrant Basically, you have a huge mess because you may use module A and B, and A has a dependency on C version X, while B has a dependency on C version Y. So you end up having both of them. Sounds fine in terms of compatibility but is a big mess. And even if C-X and C-Y are perfectly compatible, you are required for the A and B authors to update the dependency.
E.g. I have a dependency that depends on something else which depends on something else again which depends on an outdated version of another module. So I get a deprecation warning because someone in the chain cannot bother to update the dependency.
Where we come from is normally offering org-wide web services, and it's generally best to put a version in the url so each consumer can manage their own upgrade path
But it's a slower-moving situation than creating a single application
Well nothing you can do lol. Other than creating a very well defined scope before starting a project - and with that a fully defined interface between modules. And also forbidding (forbading?) updating to newer versions.
@AnttiHaapala But it's interesting to see what root operations a program is doing when I run it as sudo. Why assume you're already backdoored. Even if you are backdoored, it's like do you want only an NSA backdoor or do you want NSA, Chinese, Indian and some one else's backdoors combined.
You can't expect old libraries to update because someone else changed things. - I have a python libary for a simulator at our uni I use a lot. But it's only for 2.7 and there is simply not enough money to update the library.
@paul23 So assuming you released an early version 1.0.0, and later added features, so you got 1.1.0 and 1.2.0, and three years later rewritten the whole thing to get 2.0.0 which has been the active version for two years. Assuming I now find a bug that exists in all versions, do you release a 1.0.1, 1.1.1, 1.2.1, and 2.0.1?
@paul23 And there is simply not enough money at the Python Foundation to provide support for every version forever? – Not sure how your library is any different there.