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Howdy folks , I have a little pastebin here ( pastebin.com/fn2gQRgd ) and it contains just a couple lines concerning the function "Sorted" in order to organise a list of tuples. The problem I am seeing ( which i am certain is me overlooking something... ) is that regardless if I put reverse to true or not , the order remains the same. Could someone proof read what I did please?
DSM
DSM
key=lambda arr: arrow[1] <- see the problem? ;-)
@davidism Yeah, migrations should be for good questions, not crap ones like that lol
To be very honest "lambda" usage is VERY new to me... ( wiki.python.org/moin/HowTo/Sorting ) I based that line off of what's found here under Key Functions
is it "arr:" should be "arrow" ?
@enderland @WayneWerner There are two Server Fault close reasons. The easier to get to one doesn't migrate, only shows a notice that there might be a more on topic site.
20:08
Oh neat, I didn't know they had the other one
DSM
DSM
@ToddLewden: it's just like def key(arr): return arrow[1]. You're always comparing against the second element of arrow! You might as well be doing key=lambda x: (10,20,30,40).
In your case, arrow[1] is (45, 302, 13, 14), which is why nothing changes -- you're always comparing against the same key.
OhhhHH!
I see I see!
:D thank you!
Wait. Nope. I am still a lost noob. Hang let me try something... :|
DSM
DSM
In [42]: arrow = [(45, 278, 13, 14), (45, 302, 13, 14), (45, 326, 13, 14)]

In [43]: sorted(arrow, key=lambda arr: arr[1], reverse=False)
Out[43]: [(45, 278, 13, 14), (45, 302, 13, 14), (45, 326, 13, 14)]

In [44]: sorted(arrow, key=lambda arr: arr[1], reverse=True)
Out[44]: [(45, 326, 13, 14), (45, 302, 13, 14), (45, 278, 13, 14)]
In this case, since everyone agrees on every element except [1] you don't need the key function at all, of course.
wim
wim
LMAO ... I always assumed the Django ORM uses descriptors for the fields
then I add that in an answer today and got called out on it ... sure enough, they don't use descriptors at all!
@DSM , you're magical, ty for the explanation :)
It wooooorks! My world is so happy! <3
Little things in life , that's what matters lol
DSM
DSM
20:19
Sudden realization: the letters "ow" caused the problem, which seems appropriate.
Hah... Nice.
Time to punch out, cheers folks
eject, eject!
@DSM arrrrrrrr
I got a class that takes in arguments and before i set those arguments to self variables I need to check if any the arguments are empty strings and change into a default value, how could i do this without checking each passed in argument one by one?
class foo:
    def __init__(self, bar1, bar2, bar3, bar4,):
use argument unpacking into args?
20:28
@AndrasDeak Good night , happy dreams & Mr . jon also.
using a set of named variables like that is always a bad idea anyway
argument unpacking?
@Sami sleep well
@Inthuson put them all in single variable called bar
>>> class foo():
...     def __init__(self,*bar):
...         print(bar)
...
>>> foo('134','4','24')
('134', '4', '24')
<__main__.foo object at 0x7f5c53fbfd30>
that might not work exactly like that in python 2 though, I'm unsure
i'm using python 3
Sure it does.
20:30
oh okay :D thank you
@davidism yeah, thanks
checked it to be sure
how do i then assign them to self variables?
I vaguely remembered that there's something about tricky unpacking scenarios where 2 would break
so self.id = 4
self.name = jack
and so on?
hmm
I could guess but I probably won't guess the proper way to do it
20:33
anything would be helpful im sure
for name, arg, default in zip(('bar1', 'bar2', ...), bar, ('default1', 'default2', ...)):
    setattr(self, name, arg or default)
because right now, i'm reading a list of data from a csv file into a dictionary
and the using the dictionary to create a class
But yeah, use kwargs.
I'd just make it explicit and pass / assign each one individually.
20:34
default in zip?
i have seen that before but what does that do?
Morning guys
@davidism so do each one manually?
just to be sure?
I have a dictionary like this:
data = {
    "51256": ["Hobby1", "Hobby2", "Hobby3"],
    "15673": ["Hobby4", "Hobby5", "Hobby6"],
    "62625": ["Hobby1", "Hobby5", "Hobby8"]
}
@Inthuson Yes. There's also pypi.python.org/pypi/attrs.
@ZahidSaeed cabbage
20:37
Now I want to make networks of these ID's
What I mean is, create a list that will show which SIMILAR ID's have SIMILAR hobbies
@davidism manually it is then! Thanks :)
Can anyone help me?
I can't figure out, trying for so long
you just want to reverse it?
@ZahidSaeed I don't think so
I don't find your question clear at all
can you try elaborating?
or maybe give the example for your example
{val:key for key,vals in data.items() for val in vals}
I guess?
20:39
Except that it's already a dictionary of lists. Your keys are already unique.
I want the result like:
51256,62625 = Hobby1
15673,62625 = Hobby5
DSM
DSM
Am I missing something? I don't see how that will work.
meh almost ....
it breaks it doesnt make the list ... hold on
DSM
DSM
20:41
I'd go the setdefault route and then prune the results.
d={};[d.setdefault(val,[]).append(key) for key,vals in data.items() for val in vals];
lol
@AndrasDeak are you busy? I need help debugging something. (Fair warning, it's mostly C related stuff rather than python)
(a) All the users should share at least x number of hobbies
(b) x is a variable that a user can input to the program.
(c) Circles of friends should be written to a file named circles.txt
hobby_user = defaultdict(set)
for key, value in data.items():
    hobby_user[value].add(key)
@MikeVandenberg not too much, we can try in the other room:)
20:42
@BhargavRao agent 3671, report

C

C stands for Control.
@davidism Yeah, that.
no not that one:P
@AnttiHaapala Roger that
Cabbage
unless it's too C and I can't help debugging:D
20:42
@AndrasDeak not that one? That's the C room run by friend of sopython @PeterVaro.
cbg
IP yet :P
@davidism I know:) But he didn't volunteer to help Mike; I did;)
Oh, I thought you meant "let's take it to the C room"
@AnttiHaapala My cousin passed away last week, So haven't gone out. Might take another week. :/
no, I meant this other room where we've hammered out some numpy vs pyopencl issues
focussed debugging tasks like this shouldn't fit well with any topical room
20:44
Yes, I'd find it very convenient, and better to start somewhere with unifying the two views. Let's not forget just adding a documented chat API too. ;-) — davidism 5 mins ago
(trivia: @davidism kicks more than anyone else anywhere on the network, so when he says "yes", that's the voice of experience talking) — Shog9 ♦ 4 mins ago
4
@BhargavRao I'm sorry, BR.
@BhargavRao my condolences, obvious
@davidism :D
Thanks, Really need them at this hour.
Very sorry to hear that, Bhargav:(
20:47
@davidism It says, unhashable type list
DSM
DSM
He forgot a for value in values: loop.
hobby_user = defaultdict(set)
for key, values in data.items():
    for value in values:
        hobby_user[value].add(key)
Ha! Did not know that Shog maintains a kickers table!
he's referred to the room's exquisite statistics many times:D
@BhargavRao do you really need statistics
20:50
@davidism Why I can't use print hobby_user ?
@ZahidSaeed you can.
It says, hobby_user isn't defined
@AnttiHaapala C'mon, we all know that you are not a good kicker! So you won't be needing it ;)
@AnttiHaapala Unless you're talking about jobs.
@ZahidSaeed then you didn't run the same code. This is starting to become us spoonfeeding you. Have you not gotten enough to develop on yet? Can you not play around with the code yourself?
20:51
Who might be the second?
@BhargavRao I am saving myself for my true love hate
@AnttiHaapala Your boots have gathered dust
but one day he'll get the booty call
must not try to provoke Antti on Friday
DSM
DSM
Rhubarb for all.
20:53
rhubarb, DSM
rhubarb
rbrb DSM.
I'm not sure I've ever kicked someone on SO
@davidism It shows the data like:
Hobby1: 12415,52636
I don't know if I've ever kicked someone anywhere, now that I think about it
20:54
and so on
at least, not on purpose seriously
@BhargavRao I am an extroverted Finn. I do not look at my own boots.
Garlic.
But I want multiple Hobbies shared by same ID's
Right now it's like 1 to many relationship
@ZahidSaeed you're joking, right? That shows which ids have each hobby.
20:56
Foreign candy always seems like the output of a slightly undertrained neural net. https://t.co/n7cQFlvLOk
Dairy Milk is great.
@davidism It's showing, which hobbies have which ID's
So much better than American chocolate.
@AnttiHaapala That explains why the boots are dusty! :D
@Ffisegydd I like Frogs Alive.
20:57
Only Dutch and the Nordics got candy right
@ZahidSaeed I'd suggest you go away and do some research on the subject/think about it yourself. From looking at your conversation I'm sure you're going to anger some people soon.
Spend the rest of the day thinking it through and reading.
@davidism Please read this:
Seriously now.
Please stop.
i. In each circle you will report, all the users should share at least x number of hobbies ii. x is a variable that a user can input to the program.
iii. Circles of friends should be written to a file named circles.txt.
iv. Each line should have the usernames in the circle/network you found, tab character, and list of shared hobbies.
v. for example, a line may look like: 2254,552,1258 reading,swimming,hiking
21:00
I wonder if Guido is fond of zoute drop
Please take that kick as a warning and read what I just said to you.
@Ffisegydd trying to bump me from the #1 spot, eh?
bunny bunny bunny
let me dig up a bunny picture...
But reading and dumping homework requirements is clearly the same thing.
@ZahidSaeed do your own homework.
21:01
Well, time to go eat jambalaya and drink scotch. Rbrb for all!
@Ffisegydd wow, that's a powerful barcode scanner for sure :d
@MorganThrapp Rbrb
Well, I'll get going too. Rhubarb all.
rhubarb
21:18
@AnttiHaapala I was thinking that apparently the cat had a really impressive barcode pattern.
I'm having very intriguing connectivity. Wayne's message showed up ~5 seconds sooner in the sidebar of another room than appearing here...
stackoverflow.com/q/39539617 mcve / possible dupe but can't tell exact target
my messages are also bouncing back....
happen when internet is slow
Watching Knight and Day. It's silly but I like it 🙃
21:25
@AndrasDeak got it no italics
@ColdFire you're right, only 12 Mbps right now (it's usually 40 through wifi)
@ColdFire ROs are listed in the left column of the room's info: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/info/6/python and get their name in italics in the live room.
@ColdFire not here
@AndrasDeak yeah got it
@davidism got it thanks
anyways i think i offended my friend BR by discussing that meta question not gonna repeat that
21:29
haha andras
not the offending; the not repeating it:P
@AndrasDeak yeah i got it never thought he would get offended man , i was just saying a construtive argument nothing else man
I'm not sure he got offended; but anyway the best thing you can do now is to move along, as he himself told you.
he's gone to sleep and your argument is misplaced here
Did this happen in the Python room? Where did this conversation come from?
21:32
nope
another room
Then why is it being discussed here?
ok end
21:57
to confumse us
22:21
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39540598/converting-string-datet‌​ime-stamp-to-python-datetime-object dupe marked
22:35
@tzaman wait: dupe or answer? Both is rarely called for.
the point of duping is to prevent dupe answers
all the information in your answer seems to be present in the accepted answer of the dupe
except your answer might get upvoted/accepted, preventing roomba from eating the question later
but the dupe target already has 5+ pages worth of duplicates, I don't think another one is necessary
22:54
I'm trying to write some text to a .txt file using with open() before a class is destroyed using __del__(self): method but an error is being thrown up
NameError: name 'open' is not defined
why is this?
Does the __del__ method get called right before the interpreter shuts down? @Inthuson
23:31
So glad I discovered Angel Olsen. She released a great album this month, and the song I heard in a TV advert and immediately liked was taken from her earlier album
Ah, one of the famed Olsen twins.
(no, not really)
Are float2's the same as doubles?
no
that's an opencl specific, and I linked you to it in the other room:P
Err more specific question then: are float2's and doubles the same in terms of their impact on flops and memory transfers? My lab is looking to build a workstation soon and choosing a new GPU is the last variable. We've been working with complex64's under the assumption that they are closer to single precision rather than double. The importance is that particular GPU's have better performance depending on which you use.
Just saw your other message
well, a complex64 has a float32 real and imaginary part, so it's single precision for all intents and purposes
23:39
good to hear
the size in memory is the same as a double but for actual calculations, each element is a single float
you can do nice tricks with it, namely complex step differentiation of functions, which circumvents certain precision problems
@MikeVandenberg I would think so, yes
and a double complex would be a numpy.complex128, having a double as real and imaginary part

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