oh that's OK, it's just that you sort of have a history of reading only half the stuff you're answered:P At least that was my impression from earlier. I'm glad if that's not the case.
Hey all, trying to get Django-Haystack running. I've followed the install guide to a T, but for some reason when I run python manage.py build_solr_schema it complains that it can't find search_configuration/solr.xml - which is just a file within the site-packages dir that gets downloaded WITH the package
Anyone have an ideas? I don't think its a file permission issue, I'm on Windows. I've tried granting everyone permission to the file but to no avail
@DSM Sounds good to me. Pity I can't test that, since my json doesn't have object_pairs_hook. But I found a possible dupe target which uses object_pairs_hook: stackoverflow.com/questions/29321677/…
@PM2Ring: yeah, that looks good. Although disappointing, I was kind of hoping I'd get an answer out of it. :-) What Python are you using that doesn't have o_p_h, though?
@Ffisegydd Thanks, Fizzy! That's intriguing. Here's the results for the primes under a million. The first column gives the final digits for two consecutive primes, so the 13: line gives the count of the number of primes in the range that end in 1 that are followed by a prime ending in 3. The float at the end converts the count to a proportion for that block, i.e. the floats in the (11,13,17,19) block add to 1.
I just did a run up to 10 million using mod 30 instead of mod 10, since all primes > 30 are congruent mod 30 to one of {1, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29}. The pattern is even more pronounced, as you might expect.
I guess you could use a segmented sieve for that, if you can make a safe estimate for the lower limit. I guess that's a bit tricky when you're looking for palindromes.
One of the most "famous" palindromic primes: 1000000000000066600000000000001 is known as Belphegor's Prime, named after Belphegor, one of the seven princes of Hell. Belphegor's Prime consists of the number 666, on either side enclosed by thirteen zeroes and a one. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palindromic_prime
My initial stab at it was for every prime just check for palindrome. Very straight forward for now. I just threw in the sieve implementation for primes, and for each prime returned, if it passes palindrome check, I keep it.
man....math is crazy....
oh for yam's sake...are you kidding me/???
you put together a frackin' website for programmers...yet you screw up your solution validation??? really?
the problem was apparently on checking for < 1000
so I said...what the hey...let me try submitting print(929)
I asked this a bit earlier, though I'm curious as to whether anyone has a suggestion for sending tasks to a VPS through a browser using Selenium? I'd rather not use macros, though I don't know what other way to do it. And to be clear, it'd be through a VNC connection.
@idjaw That's almost the fastest way to do it in Python, except you should store str(n), rather than calculating it twice. The conversion from int to str happens at C speed, so its much faster than any mathematical manipulation happening at Python speed.
Hmmm, yeah. Storing it with single conversion. I'll make that change. Just such a let down that there were no solid tests for this to see if your code can finish the computations in a certain time. Kinda like codewars, if you go over 6s (or any other defined time by the problem), you fail submission.
and they actually give you the method name so they have an entry point to unit test your code.
Well I think I'm just going to have to find everything I'd like to perform and execute with the generated screen's pixels; lol, almost though not quite a macro.
@idjaw Maybe. The probability of a number with n digits being prime is very roughly the same is the probability that it's a palindrome. If we call that probability p, and if we assume that being prime is independent of being a palindrome, then the probility of a given number being a prime palindrome should be around p². So if we're looking for big prime palindromes we can use that info to choose the size of the range for the segmented sieve.
What I said before about "the probability of a number with n digits being prime is very roughly the same is the probability that it's a palindrome" is very rough. :) Palindromes are much rarer than primes, once you get past 2 digits. But we still get useful info by multiplying the probabilities.
Eg, there are 108 palindromes < 1000 and 168 primes. The estimate obtained by multiplying the probabilities is 18.144, and there are 20 prime palindromes < 1000.
if label not in ['eu', 'ca', 'gl', 'es', 'en', 'pt']:
if "+" or "/" in label:
if "/" in label:
for l in label.split("/"):
all_tweets.append([new_tweets, l])
else:
for l in label.split("+"):
all_tweets.append([new_tweets, l])
if label not in ['eu', 'ca', 'gl', 'es', 'en', 'pt']:
if "+" or "/" in label:
if "/" in label:
for l in label.split("/"):
all_tweets.append([new_tweets, l])
elif “+” in label:
for l in label.split("+"):
all_tweets.append([new_tweets, l])
it is a string that take many values, supposedly inside ['eu', 'ca', 'gl', 'es', 'en', 'pt']
if label not in ['eu', 'ca', 'gl', 'es', 'en', 'pt']:
if "+" in label or "/" in label:
if "/" in label:
for l in label.split("/"):
all_tweets.append([new_tweets, l])
elif "+" in label:
for l in label.split("+"):
all_tweets.append([new_tweets, l])
the problem is I don't know every possible label value beforehand
Turtles are a confusing thing to feel. Can you imagine if you were blind (or had your eyes closed, or in a very very dark room) and you were given a turtle (not knowing what it was) how would you even know what to feel? :P
@khajvah That "double free or corruption" error message is saying that something has screwed up the process's internal memory allocation system. Either an attempt has been made to free a block of memory that had already been freed, or some other dumb action has left the process's free memory list in a deranged state.
The OS provides robust routines for allocating and freeing blocks of memory from the heap. Low level languages like C provide simple wrappers around those system calls that make them easier to use.
That's adequate for simple programs that don't do much dynamic memory stuff, but more sophisticated programs allocate memory in big chunks and then manage that internally to minimize the time overhead in making system calls and to try to prevent memory fragmentation. But doing that properly can be tricky, and it sounds like your program has made a mess of its internal memory management.
My guess is that some C extension that Django uses is buggy, and you've just uncovered that bug.
It could be something that works perfectly on a 32 bit system, but is incorrect on a 64 bit system. The best you can do is try to create a MCVE and file a bug report.
@khajvah But if you lost power during the commit, then your working directory should still reflect the committed state.
And the most that could get corrupt would have been the commit object or the branch pointer. The tree and the blob objects are created as soon as you add things to the index.
I use github for two things: private repos and github pages. If I can get the former from bitbucket for nothing, I'd rather pay PA than github for the latter (or an equivalent thereof)
Gratuitous use of globals().update makes me sad, but I guess it's an improvement on his earlier version that used locals().update. And he still can't get his lambda right... stackoverflow.com/a/36007783/4014959
Can someone help me with this question please: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/36007437/getting-output-of-command-in-subprocess/ tripleee's commented saying that `shell=True` is "completely usless here". `echo` is a command in cmd therefore a shell is required right? If I was doing something like `out = check_output(["C:\Windows\System32\ipconfig.exe"], shell =False)` it would work because ipconfig.exe is a standalone program. Any help would be appreciated!
I have a json file which happens to have a multitude of Chinese and Japanese (and other language) characters. I'm loading it into my python 2.7 script using io.open as follows:
with io.open('multiIdName.json', encoding="utf-8") as json_data:
cards = json.load(json_data)
I add a new propert...
@AnttiHaapala No, I haven't. And I just answered a Python 2 question. :P Although I will admit that the code would work equally well on either version, apart from the print statement, and I _could've used .format instead of %-style string interpolation.
@AnttiHaapala But for internal commands such as echo it has to be used right? I know I would never call the echo command from python but nonetheless it can't be called without shell=True right?
I guess we're always telling people to post the complete error message, but that one's yamming ridiculous! I mean, a condensed summary would've been more than adequate.
@BhargavRao That can't be repeated enough ... Too often do I see stuff pushed to the re-open queue because someone had to fix that typo. Worst part is, it only gets pushed to the queue once, so when the OP fixes his question the next day, it doesn't get back in the queue
OTOH, dupes are a bit different to questions that are closed because they're bad, since dupes may act as portals to the dupe target. So it's good if the dupe looks nice.
@PM2Ring I tend to edit new user's question because new user don't know how to format their question. I do it even if it was a bad question. Is this wrong?
"it only gets pushed to the queue once, so when the OP fixes his question the next day, it doesn't get back in the queue". Ah! I didn't know that. But I guess it kinda makes sense, otherwise people could keep bumping their crappy question.
@The6thSense Well... I guess it's helpful to show newbies what their question ought to look like. But really, if it's a bad question that will be closed and Roomba'd then don't waste time (and disk space) editing it. Remember, all of these edit actions get archived, even on deleted questions.
@PM2Ring Not sure if that's the reason. A automatic flag already gets raised once a post is edited by the original author a certain amount of times, so "bumping" shouldn't be too much of a problem ... I've been intending to write a meta post about it if no one else has in the past (I haven't searched).
Something went wrong with your code formatting. Consult [Markdown help - Code and Preformatted Text](http://$SITEURL$/editing-help#code) and please [edit] your post.
If a bad question has potential, try to get the OP to fix it. If they respond to your comments and turn it into something worth answering it's a win-win situation. If you go around cleaning up newbie messes for them all the time they'll never learn to do it for themself.
I used to edit a lot of questions. But these days, I mostly just edit ones where it's easier for me to do it than to explain it, and when the question deserves answers. Often I don't bother cleaning up the question until after I've answered it. Or if I start writing an answer and then notice a bunch of FGITW answers have already appeared I'll just abandon my answer and start work on cleaning up the question and improving the answers, when necessary.
So this is a new one: "Moreover, there a lot of students asked more pretty simple problems... and no one refused that... an you can check ... this is a RACIST."