Hey, quick question. I bumped into this unexpected error and I'm not sure how to resolve it while maintaining the same mutability. When I remove global, the error is as expected; that python couldn't find a local variable of that name. Documentation and examples seem to indicate I've used global correctly. Perhaps a better solution would be passing a state object which contains a?
@davidism Ah, thank you! That distinction seems an unintuitive one, but I was sure I was missing something. Also, apparently it's time for me to use python 3 as my default rather than a backup
I have a question for you guys. I'm a Senior Network Engineer that know basic Python. I also get a lot company interest in me because I have Python on my resume, but when I go to into an interview, I always failed in the python interview.
What would be a good python book to get me to the next level? Things that I need to learn are there: Anything with Network, Threading, How to analyze data that I collect from either logs or stat.
For example; What is the best way to ping 3000k devices(threading) and print/save all devices down and up.
I use python to automate some tasks like templating the network devices config. Testing connectivity between location. I disagree about taking it out of my resume because I do work using python.
Granted if you take Python off your resume but use it for some, basic, networking tasks - this is something you should mention in a networking admin or engineer interview. If you do not know Python well enough to do full development you should not have it in a resume for those type of positions (or be interviewing for them). Even if your hired it won't likely last long and too many "6 month jobs" is not a good sign in the hiring market
so was the test to determine if you could find the top network resource hog yourself (using something like socket I would assume) or if you could perform statistical and heuristic operations to determine the top hog given a string of information?
People always recommend Euler, but I dunno.. it feels like there should be a less-mathy place to send people, one with more data manipulation and less theorem recall..
hey, @DSM I was just talking about something you said yesterday (full discloser: I still am not entirely sure what you were saying but it gave the person I was talking to a full blown headache)
When I've been interviewing Python candidates lately, my first question is just "count the unique names in this string", and watching how people solve -- or fail to solve -- that one question gives me most of what I need to know.
@MarcusS: there are some commas strewn about, and the question is deliberately ambiguous about "subname" vs. full name to see if they catch the problem. But a variant of that would fly.
You'd be astonished how many people who claim they've been programming in Python for a while can't manage it.
I used to think that speed interviews were silly, but in the last dozen interviews I've given I've only significantly changed my views after the first fifteen minutes once.
yeah, as if it is a small string I think I would just use a set based solution but larger the dataset gets the more one would need Counter or other tools (or to start optimizing the set solution which I haven't had to do in years)
@DSM I would probably ask what you mean by names. Are you simply looking for unique "words" in a string? i.e. omit certain characters, like punctuation? If so, I would probably simply do a counter and just grab all counts that are 1 and get the length of that
(this is the part where DSM is going to tell me I don't have the job)
@MarcusS: don't want to give too much away in public :-), but the standard is-any-permutation-a-palindrome; certain mstermnd-based games; returning the longest contiguous groups; etc. I also give an a remove_duplicates function which I'm proud of -- it looks perfectly reasonable and works just fine, but can show O(n^3) behaviour in some cases -- and ask them to optimize it. If the candidate has pandas experience, there's a separate [number-y data source] I ask them to work with.
Disclaimer, you have to also know where each person is coming from. Data Science Man (DSM) deals with a lot of......data 😛 so his questions cater around a lot of that
@idjaw: those are perfectly reasonable questions. Usually I say "well, let's do full names first", and all the names I give have commas in them. 75% of the time they try to count commas, and then I add "Sting". Once a guy said "okay, I'll check that all names have length > 1", so I added "Q"..
@idjaw that is actually a really good point as I've had Undergrads who write a huge solution (huge here referencing memory and processing impact) loading pandas, scikit or NLTK to do frequency analysis when I just asked them to make a bubble chart of unique word counts. Not that this is bad, but many cannot explain why they did it that way (like to allow for scalability or something) as they are just programming from route memorization not actually looking at what I asked for.
@MarcusS: bugs like that show up during the process, though, because there's a test suite which the code has to pass. So pretty much everybody makes a think-o the first time, and then they go "oh, yeah, need to fix that", and that's just fine.
@JGreenwell Right! See. In our interview process, we are not married to one language. Granted, on my team in particular we are Python dominant. But, we are flexible with jumping to different things. Other teams jump between Python, PHP, JavaScript. So, when we interview candidates, we interview them for their engineering/development capabilities. How do they solve problems as a developer. Can we work with them. Depending on the team they are interviewing for, they get a tech-test catering to that
While in the past I've asked whiteboard questions, these days I tell candidates to bring their laptop. We go over the questions, I show them the test suite, and tell them to code until python whatever.py passes.
My problem with just doing whiteboards is that if you write amazing code on the whiteboard you'll probably be good in front of a terminal. But lots of people who are great when they have feedback blank in front of a whiteboard, and in our actual projects, they get feedback. So it culls too many viable candidates.
typically when I got whiteboard problems they were math based and just to check that I actually knew the math I claimed to know (which seemed to be a problem, people claiming to know way more math and analysis techniques then they actually did, around here)
Hard to come up with some offhand that don't give away what NumberFirm does, not that it's rocket science to deduce. :-) But we have some teams who care very much about optimization of certain functions of time series where a lot of work is done to model said series as quasirandom processes.
@Code-Apprentice: oh, I just meant that I'd like the candidates to know what it means to take the mod. Nothing beyond fizzbuzz level.
the whiteboard question was based on calculating limits of integration (which is massively import when it comes to flow modeling). I got the question right but further interviews showed that it was way out of my level of expertise (this was 3 years ago but still would be in an area of mathematics that I don't use enough to be that comfortable with it)
was really fun writing the code to answer their questions though so not a total loss :)
@MarcusS: I don't understand your deleted argument from above, regarding pbzovavat fhocnguf.
@davidism's "Rhubarb for now, I'll solve it in the morning" reminds me of the Dread Pirate Roberts' "Sleep well. I'll most likely kill you in the morning." But then most [something]-in-the-morning expressions do..
:-) Okay. And now that I can sleep the sleep of the guy who found his own bug, I really will. Rhubarb for all!
but when I fixed the bug in the code that I didn't write today, my code gives the right answer to part 1 and part 2 was just adding like one character.
Yesterday I saw a question about printing all balanced sequences of parentheses of a given length. It was closed as a dupe of this old question, so today I posted an answer there. :) And since then I've been implementing various related algorithms from this PDF which was linked in the dupe target.
Unfortunately, that paper uses 1-based indexing, and trying to convert some of those algorithms (like the one for generating a Dyck word from its index number) to 0-based made my brain melt. :)
Anyway, it's now Christmas in my time zone, so I guess I better go to bed, or Santa won't come. :) Rhubarb
@idjaw sure it does. It's December 25th somewhere in the world. It's been like that every Winterbash; dates stretch to a 48h period to cover all time zones.
I tried to do that. But anonymous man in my image is having very big face and hat won't adjust to that level. So instead I aligned my hat too put beard on head :P
I just changed my hat. But it looks like it takes some time to reflect the changes in chat group. I am loving the new one. Hope anonymous group won't see this change, else they'll definitely hack me :'(