I generated (and should) this with np.where :(array([0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2]), array([1, 2, 0, 1, 2, 0, 1, 2])) I use random.choice to generate an available location in the 2d array in a tuple with: position = random.choice( zip(possibilities(board)[0], possibilities(board)[1])). This does give the correct output but it is not accepted in the workspace I use for an exercise. I probably have to generate an answer without using zip in the workspace?
Well nevermind. Probably only some operations specific for numpy are accepted. Will find another solution.
oh man, they implemented &, |, +, - for collections.Counter to be used as multisets. But they didn't bother to implement <, <= etc like set has. That SUCKS!
especially sucky on python 2.7 when it actually runs, but doesn't do anything sensible
ok I finished 3 books and did some data structures and algorithms. I'm looking for more intermediate to advanced books on python with projects to keep learning so I can start my own.
I have a super array which is 1x1000. And 3 lists, of indices between (1,1000). How can I compare these three lists without even inflating them or interpolating them on the super-array
> HINT: It seems you set a fixed date / time / datetime value as default for this field. This may not be what you want. If you want to have the current date as default, use django.utils.timezone.now
I kind of wrote an async answer the other day, but I'm still at the cargo-cult stage with async stuff: I just hacked together my code from an existing answer. :) I guess I should set aside some time to seriously learn about async.
@khajvah No idea. But spawning a new process is a relatively heavy task at the kernel level anyway, I don't expect the extra stuff that Python probably needs to do to make much difference.
then use a pool with 2 internal threads, if i understood correctly. The thing with the webserver... Normally with webservers there is a number of max concurrent connections. Each is processed in a different thread from a thread pool. If the max number is reached other connections are getting refused.
Bangalore /bæŋɡəˈlɔːr/, officially known as Bengaluru ([ˈbeŋɡəɭuːɾu]), is the capital of the Indian state of Karnataka. It has a population of about 8.42 million and a metropolitan population of about 8.52 million, making it the third most populous city and fifth most populous urban agglomeration in India. Located in southern India on the Deccan Plateau, at a height of over 900 m (3,000 ft) above sea level, Bangalore is known for its pleasant climate throughout the year. Its elevation is the highest among the major cities of India.
A succession of South Indian dynasties, the Western Gangas, the...
@Kevin yep i also sometimes feel like picking a closing reason is difficult. the question you have there, my first impression was off-topic. but none of the possible reasons in "off-topic" really fit. so unclear will do. after all it is.
@Kevin Oh yeah, i understand him now i think. So he has this text file. He knows how he could parse it manually. But he thinks this might be a ready made data format like xml, json etc. and dont want to reinvent the wheel. And the thing with the , is, that it looks a lot like lua script when adding , and ;. The question really hast to be reworded to be of any use.
@F.Bar "Does xrange exist as a built-in function in Python 2.7.12?" I'm 99% sure that it does. "Does the community actually use xrange for practical purposes?" I don't see why not, it seems quite useful for huge ranges that you don't want to build proper lists out of.
@F.Bar These days, it's a Good Idea (IMHO) to write code that will perform correctly on Python 3 or Python 2, so xrange should only be used if you need to make a really big range. OTOH, it's easy enough to convert xrange to range using the 2to3 utility.
Off-topic due to Recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site Because of the line *What are your tools (Python, Lua) to evaluate such text files?* in question :P
The rational explanation is that when I'm tired, I have more stringent standards of what makes a good question, and I'm less able to ignore bad questions as "not my problem", but I prefer the explanation that there's a vast conspiracy whose only aim is to irritate me
@MoinuddinQuadri That's not necessarily a resource request though: the OP may suspect that there are standard tools in the language to process that data, but doesn't know how to find them in the docs.
Oh the joys of the English language where "I miss X's Y" can mean "I miss the old days when X still had Y" or "I miss when I had access to X, and thus Y"
My theory is that most new questions are posted by people who are too lazy or too incompetent to make a decent search for an old question that addresses their problem. Or their communication skills (or English skills) are so poor that they can't express their question in a way that makes a search possible.
I see. By building a searchable index of all useful questions, we're gradually filtering out of the active community anyone that is capable of asking a useful question.
I feel like a lot of people just started programming in general (for school, or study) and therefore dont have enough understanding to write a proper question or even understand the answers.
If let's assume SO database is destroyed. Work in most of IT companies (specially service based) will come to halt. As so called Software Engineers won't be knowing "What to do next?"
Can anyone with Pycharm or Sublime text reproduce this? I suspect a simple typo that somehow disappeared when copying the code to SO. stackoverflow.com/questions/41364264/…
I want to serialize some python objects in binary. including dicts, numpy arrays, etc. Maybe with deflate compression if possible. I just found pickle. Is that the right choice? I feel like its going to have a hard time with the numpy arrays. Deflate not to mention.
@Mario AFAIK pickle is the standard serialization tool in python, but numpy arrays have their own tools for serialization (dunno how pickle works for them)
@MoinuddinQuadri I only see the top answer by Martelli that says "my answer..." and starts with "This does not sharply ensure...", I'd blindly go with his approach, whatever that is:P
Yep that is in line with my philosophy of "dear users, please don't mutate this even though you can if you want to. Don't come crying to me when you do and everything breaks"
I am pretty much satisfied with Martelli's version. But what should be the right way to restrict the user for accidently updating the dict? i.e make it immutable
"Ok," you think, "I get your point, but in practice my users aren't going to hack the freaking byte code, so what reasonable safeguards can I set up to protect the 99.9% of my users that aren't completely deranged?" Certainly this is a valid question.
As a first line of defense I'd override update and __setitem__ to raise exceptions.
> On the other hand, exposing the existing read-only dict proxy as a built-in type sounds good to me. (It would need to be changed to allow calling the constructor.) GvR.
Update (2012-04-15): A new MappingProxyType type was added to the types module of Python 3.3.
For the first two, because I didn't read that far through the method list. For __setattr__, doesn't it already raise an AttributeError for pretty much everything?
I don't think my_dict.insert_attribute_name_here = whatever will successfully execute, regardless of what you fill in the blanks with. Nothing obvious comes to mind at least
Ok, so it's update, __setitem__, clear, pop, popitem, and setdefault... Is it obvious yet why I think you can't make a bulletproof immutable object this way? Three days from now I'm going to wake up in a cold sweat, shouting "there's a seventh mutating method that I forgot about!"
NotImplemented means method is not implemented. It is not humanly code (inspired from kenneith - requests for human). As it gives the idea you may implement the method
Christmas was very good, although it's really not over for another week (12 days, and all that). And I don't have to be in the office until next Tuesday.
I guess by parallel behavior you were talking in terms of raised exceptions? OR, is there anything else in your mind that is also needed to be taken care of? @PM2Ring
yeah... i didnt think of using A* for it nor did i think of treating the nodes that can't be moved as walls... now i realized how perfect that fits the question
yup had a nice 4 day weekend, went to be a carrier while my sisters and my mother went ham on shopping for boxing day >.> that was the lowest point for my holiday so i guess it went pretty well...