@Code-Apprentice, well, I finished the dict thing you guys recommended, and now I'm trying to split it up into a functions file and a main file that imports the functions file, and I'm having issues
and then once I finish that I'll go back to the database work.
@AndrewHu Here's another common case where you need to sort an almost sorted list. You have a sorted list that you want to add new data to. You could sort the new data and then insert the new items into the old list, but it's simpler (and generally more efficient in Python) to just extend the old list with the new data, and then sort the extended list.
OTOH, if you need to do this a lot it may be better to use a data structure that's designed to maintain its data in sorted order, like a heap
@AnttiHaapala Well, you don't need to do that, but it can make the insert operation a little more efficient. OTOH, depending on the actual old & new data, the overhead in sorting may be more than the overhead in inserting unsorted data.
I build a docker image from this dockerfile. However, when I run the image in a container, the container automatically exits. Any ideas?
FROM ubuntu:16.04
MAINTAINER Ming "[email protected]"
RUN apt-get -y update
RUN apt-get -y upgrade
RUN apt-get -y install sudo
RUN echo 'Updates have been done...'
RUN echo 'Installing essential libraries now...'
RUN apt-get -y install python3
RUN apt-get -y install python3-pip
RUN apt-get -y install libpq-dev
RUN pip3 install psycopg2
EXPOSE 5432 8001 8002 80
CMD echo 'hey welcome to my container'
CMD mkdir /home/myworkdspace
i did docker build -t my_postgres . and docker run -it --name testContainer1 my_postgres
The weather bureau here predicted we'd get up to 35°C in my region today. It only reached 28.5°C and it's now down to 24°C (at 10PM). And we finally got some decent rain. It's been very dry here for the last 2 months, but a storm hit around 5PM and it's been raining ever since.
something like ops.set_gate(qubits) that does the reading depending on number of qubits possibly, and sets ops.qstat, ops.mem1, ops.mem2 etc. In your current code btw, these mem* variables are globals, but you need to specify global mem1 in your functions when you're trying to overwrite them. Otherwise you're just defining a local variable of the same name in the function, that dies when the function call is over
but defining a class might be more elegant than using globals
OOP might be more suited to your overall read-stuff-in-parallel-and-determine-what-to-do-with-much-headscratch
you can have state then, and not just procedurally look at your inputs
@heather There's some good info on Python's scoping rules here: Short Description of Scoping Rules. That's a rather old question, so the answers mostly focus on Python 2, so please see Antti's answer for additional info that applies to Python 3.
@poke Well, Ned is a SO veteran, but I haven't seen him post since not long after I joined. I assume newer members may not have encountered any of his answers, which are generally of very high quality, so I like to let them know that I'm not just linking to some random blogger. :)
FWIW, I don't type that stuff every time I post it - it comes from a Firefox userscript that generates common SO comments.
And yes, I do have a lot of respect for Ned. I've linked to his "Facts and myths" post a lot, both in here & on the main SO site, and I reckon he's entitled to my respect, and the extra traffic I send his way. The "Facts and myths" post isn't perfect, but it's pretty damn close. :)
@Withnail i didnt try it with the -d flag. but my guess was it was running my CMD command and then exited because it completed the command. so even with the -d, i would assume it would still complete
yeah, that's sort of why i was asking, i was wondering if it worked like running a shell command with nohup, so would keep running even after running those commands? hm.
@ming interesting, I get this when I run it in daemon mode.
97869744dcf5docker: Error response from daemon: invalid header field value "oci runtime error: container_linux.go:247: starting container process caused \"exec: \\\"-d\\\": executable file not found in $PATH\"\n".
Has that always been true? I feel sure I compared specifics with people last year (although it's been too long for me to remember the details of the questions.)
Well if each input requires the calculation of a million md5 hashes, and he's got, say, ten thousand unique puzzle inputs, then he's got to have some monster hardware
I keep missing DSM & Fizzy. I want to know if any of our data science / probability experts have any suggestions re the question Andras & I answered the other day: http://stackoverflow.com/q/40828527/4014959
Because md5 is well-distributed, pretty much every input will have roughly the same time-to-N-quint-0s. I think he would only have needed to try a bunch to verify that the behaviour matches expectations.
@PM2Ring: hey, @PM2Ring. I'll have a look, although before my morning coffee I'm basically only capable of doing AoC. ;-)
Well he's got to calculate the answer for each input eventually, either 1) when he originally wrote the question; or 2) on the fly, when each user submits their answer to see if it's correct. Unless this is one of those problems where it's easier to verify an answer than it is to find one, he can't avoid calculating a billion hashes.
@DSM Thanks! There's no rush, and it's not a big deal, but I'm curious to know if there's a simple solution in terms of well-known random distribution functions. Please feel free to write your own answer. :) But if it's something that I could learn about given a few keywords to get me headed in the right direction that'd be cool too.
@Kevin: hmmph, you're right, I didn't even think about the validation side. I was just thinking that he wouldn't need to search to find them. (See coffee comment from before.) He probably just chose some number of keys and is cycling through.