I have two csv files, each row corresponding to an event (and all events are present in both files). I'm reading the rows into a database. One of these files has an indicator field for row i indicating that row i should be excluded from A.csv and from B.csv, it should not be read into the database. I'm struggling to come up with an elegant design for this situation.
blacklist = set()
for row_a, row_b in zip(reader_a, reader_b):
if row_a['do not write']:
blacklist.add(row_a['event id'])
continue
elif row_a['event id'] not in blacklist:
write_to_db(row_a, row_b)
So I work in a lab at a university, and I'm apparently the only person in all of the labs who knows Python. I don't know how that is, but it is, and now I'm being asked to teach the entire lab "how to structure big data using Python."
I haven't been an analyst for very long so I have no idea what that means.
Can anyone help me out and tell me what's being expected of me?
Specifically, what is "big data" as it relates to Python and programming at large?
@Cosmo I don't think python = big data, and even if you knew data-y python, that would still not necessarily mean that you know "how to structure big data using python". And if "what is big data?" is a question in this context, they're probably asking the wrong guy, or the wrong questions:/ Don't take this against you: I'm surprised (angry? outraged?) at your colleagues. But I'm not one of the data guys, so maybe my issues are unfounded:)
so as this is a lab at a university....can't you just tell them "up yours"? Or maybe "I'm sorry, but I don't think I'm qualified for this task" to soften the message?
Because what you described reminds me of one of those nightmares where you show up to your finals without studying, and realize that you're also naked.
So far, I've only been in email correspondence with the member who wants me to teach everyone.
And she refuses to give me any details until we meet in person.
And at the point, I'll be giving my "lesson."
"Were all new to python over here and are generally wondering about the best and most efficient way to package our data in python and then the best ways to do matlab type matrix operations in python."
That's the most I've got, lol.
I've already recommended that they check out Anaconda.
hmm...the first part of this question (what should I do about expectations) could be asked on academia.SE with likely better results (trust me you'll need that site soon if your in this position already)
and the rest of the group; would definitely recommend starting with those as they are interactive demos that can be immediately shared
However, your first problem is "how much programming do these people know?" (Python or otherwise) cause you may have a deeper problem if no dev experience (or analyst) at all
Actually, I have no idea why the entire lab is suddenly deciding to move from MATLAB to Python (they've been ignoring my evangelism since I got here). I desperately hope that you aren't correct.
Is there any way to reward you guys with rep or something for your help?
Yeah, my typical schtick involves shitting all over MATLAB's totally unintuitive syntax and elevating Python as the free, open-source savior of humankind that it is. Of course, no one cares.
"Python's hard and stupid because I don't know it and I've been using MATLAB for SO LONG and EVERYONE uses MATLAB!!!"
I'd also be worried that you'll have a bunch of people who write godawful MATLAB code, who'll start writing the same godawful code in python. But at least they would be able to program somehow
@JGreenwell it's funny because MATLAB's new execution engine makes it considerably faster, and the new graphics engine makes it considerably prettier (figure output-wise) by default
@Cosmo if they are advanced enough to know and love bsxfun, you should get familiar with numpy.einsum and sweep them off their feet
but those are advanced MATLAB and numpy, respectively
@AndrasDeak I have a lecturer friend whose university just changed his lab to Python because they decided to change the main CS program to Python - even though he knows R and Matlab pretty much exclusively - guess what he has a semester to learn (well enough to teach ;)
@Cosmo while you're here... I'd consider uploading the gif in your matplotlib question to Stack Overflow's imgur account (just use the "insert image" functionality of the editor)
I think you can upload animgifs, at least I remember doing that recently
your gfycat link seems like something that could rot at any minute (or year)
and if you're not bound to python 3, mayavi is really good for kick-ass 3d plots (I mean replacing matplotlib)
hey everyone, I was hoping to get a little direction... been looking at documentation all day and have just turned into a swirl of thread, processings and async coroutines.
I'm trying to create a server that will consistently listen to a socket, once data is received, I need to determine what type of "packet" it is and then pass that packet onto another event based action that will run in the background
@AndrasDeak both actually, but the real one is the one that I've been mostly looking at