this usually means that you're missing a function call, so instead of func().key you wrote func.key by mistake
didn't you forget to return tree from print_tree?
(a) tree_to_list(print_tree) calls your function on print_tree, the function, rather than print_tree(), and even if you wrote it correctly, (b) you forgot the return in the latter, so print_tree() is None, so nothing of interest will happen, due to the early return from tree_to_list @M.Jones
what you have right now is a buggy construction of None;)
My code above currently prints it out like this 2 31 5 27 1 7 is there a way to print it including None and it looks like this : [2, 31, 5, 27, None, None, 1, None, None, None, None, None, None, 7, None]
if you mean print_tree() prints it like that, just drop the print add a return and append the returned value to a list which you print at the end of the calculations
if you mean test_tree() remove the if tree != None and just switch the print to return the current value (you'd have to have stored it so you can change the subtree and honestly at this point I'd move to a generator and yield)
what I just said: don't print within the function return or yield a value, append that to a list, print the list once finished.
where would you have added that? Your tree_to_list function already had it set right. It was wrong in your test_tree() function (was using not equal operator)
def tree_to_list(tree): # Base Case if tree is None: return None
# Create an empty queue for level order traversal queue = []
# Enqueue Root and initialize height queue.append(tree)
while(len(queue) > 0): # Print front of queue and remove it from queue print (queue[0].key) node = queue.pop(0)
#Enqueue left child if node.left is not None: queue.append(node.left)
# Enqueue right child if node.right is not None: queue.append(node.right) return queue like so ? return the list
@JGreenwell this is my main function btw def main(): print_tree() tree = RefBinaryTree(2) tree.insert_left(31) tree.insert_right(5) right = tree.get_right_subtree() left = tree.get_left_subtree() left.insert_left(27) right.insert_right(1) right2 = right.get_right_subtree() right2.insert_left(7) tree_to_list(tree)
progress logically through your program. You print the current queue only (do not return it) which means that it will print each one separately. To print them all at once you need to retain the value in a structure (list) and then print them out all at once on completion. The not printing 'None' is due to the fact that you are constantly checking if it is 'None' and then ignoring it if it is (these values would also have to be added to the list for printing on completion)
currently your combining your call logic (the stuff in the main) with your class logic and that seems to be muddling it for you. So I would suggest starting with creating the list (either with an append within your tree build or by returning the current value at the start and appending within main) and then moving to looking at how to include None types
@Mikhail - pardon my barging in, but just noticed your last question. There is no rule against two keys in a dict pointing to the same object, and is probably fairly common.
{"0": int, "1": int, "A": str, "B": str} has 2 keys that point to the int type and 2 other keys that point to the str type.
Yep, so my_dict['some_string']=a and my_dict['some_other_string']=b could actually overwrite a, or in my case my_dict['some_string'] and my_dict['some_other_string'] point to the same numpy array.
@Mikhail - I think this means you will have to revisit your own code, as it looks like the use of strings as Python dict keys is unlikely to be the source of your problem
Hash collisions are part of how the data structure works. Read about this issue in a data structures textbook such as "Introduction to Algorithms". In general the user of the hash should not even be able to observe that hash collisions are occurring. However if they happen a lot, the user can do timings and probably observe suboptimal performance.
Okay, another question about python. So, I'm using multiprocessing and I i'm putting a numpy array object onto a mp.queue. My understanding is that the numpy array reference counted container is copied by python (via pickle) and the actual pointed memory location can be copied-on-write by the OS. Or is the whole thing just deep copied including wherever the numpy array is storing its data?
@AnttiHaapala This isn't really clear, my understanding is that you need the with statement because the gc isn't called immediately. Same issue in Java.
Yeah, sure, but I'm not sure what this has to do with some type not having reference counting? Eventually the gc will find that the object has no references and will delete it.
I can live with early termination killing the gc, and maybe some implementations can optimize out the references (idk, compiling into .net), but I can't find a type of object that behaves as if there isn't a reference count.
@AnttiHaapala "and even if the program can terminate there is no guarantee that the GC can reclaim the garbage" --> did I misunderstand, or are you saying that there can be lost resources even after the program has terminated?
"CEO Satya Nadella insists that the company is still working in the phone space, but in a much narrower way, saying "We are focusing our phone efforts where we have differentiation—with enterprises that value security, manageability and our Continuum capability, and consumers who value the same.""
I think it's hardware more; they seem to be more committed to software
I just like my work phone which is an £80 4G WP job - got removable battery and SD card, but it's not obvious the back is removable to look at it, it's got free worldwide offline satnav, and all the usual stuff. Missing some apps I don't use. I don't know why their strategy isn't just saying to people "seriously, why are you spending £500 on a phone still?"
Well I've always had Android because I like to have a phone that I can modify and mess around with, that I can do whatever I want with, etc. And you know what? I never modify it. I never mess around with it.
I just want a phone that can access the internet and emails.
@AnttiHaapala it's called a WP, I wasn't emphasising that it was Windows particularly. They're called WP, which is why no-one berated you when you said
I've just rebuilt a server. Same specs, same OS, etc. Copied the database across (see comments passim); postgresql times out on even straightforward queries from django on the new one (even just stuff.objects.all().count(), for example) with an OperationalError.
@AndrasDeak though now the city has been planning to turn that area into parking lots, for an amusement park with such a briandead idea that it is sure to fail
if it was Hungary, that parcel would've been sold in recent years to one of the buddies of the government, who don't do anything with the land but get a buttload of subsidies
i spend couple of hours to solve these problem but did not reach anything. There are several topics about this problem on the net but none of them says an absolute thing to solve this.
I just installed postgresql in order to use it on my django project.
DATABASES = {
"default": {
"E...
@DannyCullen "While uncommon, it’s possible to configure several instances of the same backend with different options. In that case you should define a unique NAME for each engine."
shitty docs
@DannyCullen it seems you need to select the engine using using='namegoeshere' everywhere?
or perhaps it is path-based
whichever engine has thus-named template in its path, will be used
ofc you'd never configure the same path for both engines, right?
One time I spent a week debugging my image reading program before I determined that not opening the file in binary mode meant that all the CR bytes were getting silently removed if they happened to appear before an LF byte.
Still my indisputable worst bug when measured by time spent / characters required to fix ratio.
My problem had obvious wrong behavior, at least. Bytes mysteriously disappearing from bitmap data means that what used to be in the blue color channel is now in the red, and similar for the other two channels. And the image would gradually skew left as you move from the top row to the bottom.
And there would be floor(N/3) junk pixels at the end, where N is the number of missing bytes
Looking for some group input on a new pyparsing feature. In the latest release, I added a namespace class pyparsing_common, containing common expression definitions (integer, real number, real number with scientific notation), and in the upcoming 2.1.5 I'm adding IPv4 and IPv6 addresses (long, short, and mixed forms), MAC address, ISO8601 date and datetime, and UUID. Suggestions for others?
I learned recently that that is not really generic to all URI's. The geo scheme, for instance, does not follow this pattern at all. (no //, comma-separated path, ';' options delimiter)
Had a burst of pyparsing creativity lately, but I need to be careful that it doesn't get bloviated into unwieldiness
Thought I would broaden my db horizons, took the MongoDB online class and Dev Certification test. Turns out I wrote a SQL->pymongo query syntax converter a few years ago (using pyparsing, of course)
@davidism - thanks for the suggestion, I was leery of including URI's (and emails too) as there is a lot of lurking variability outside of the everyday 90% cases, and I don't want these snippets to suck up too much support time.
Yeah, my money is on "you're running both snippets consecutively, and whichever one executes second crashes because call has some kind of persistent state and freaks out when you call it more than once"
@AndrasDeak the answer to the intquestion uses a decorator to overwrite the input parameter, and the return value. The inner function itself returns a 2. Need more coffee before I can actually write it up
@davidism - I probably could do an HTTP_url expression, that would only need to support your posted format (need to handle %nn character escapes too, yuk). Where's the Google Summer of Code when I need it?