Hi everyone, first time in the room. I've got an issue in [django] with a legacy database where datetimes are stored in a different timezone. I opened a question 2 days ago to no avail. Could someone help me please?
In my settings I'm providing the TIME_ZONE in DATABASES but it seems like it has no effect
is high oil price or low better for the environment? With a low oil price people might use more of it (bad for env), but with a high oil price oil companies will see it as super profitable and continue lobbying hard for the industry
argh I'm an idiot, thing not working because this pandas column is all strings not floats
Using pyparsing, I seem to be having trouble understanding why my grammar either matches partially or hits a recursion limit.
lparens = Suppress("(")
rparens = Suppress(")")
name = Word(alphanums, exact=1)
expression = Forward()
function = Group(Literal("λ") + OneOrMore(name) + Literal(".").supp...
Well nestedExpr is something of a cheat, it is just a short-cut to easily jump over nested text inside ()'s, {}'s or whatever. But it is poor for actual parsing, only giving you the raw space-delimited strings inside the nested text.
At this level yes. But we actually parsed that content, instead of just match-up on opening and closing parens.
Unlike nestedExpr, we can do more with the internals
I would define a Node class that takes a list of tokens, and attach it to term using term.setParseAction(Node)
Then you would get a more useful AST, you could add behavior to Node so that you can have the Nodes to whatever work you wanted, instead of brute-force re-navigating the nested structure.
To be sure - this is telling someone who want to know the time how to build a watch
I won't post that as an answer on that question, I want to encourage others to post pyparsing answers, not discourage them by sniping their rep points.
I have to break off now - getting up for work in about 45 minutes
"Does interpreter lock(GIL) comes into picture because globalCount gets updated by more than one thread?" Python is not interested in what the threads are doing. There's more than one thread, so the GIL ensures only one runs at a time.
Both of the threads could be doing nothing at all to any variables and the GIL would still manage them
The last time I read up on this, the GIL round-robins through threads, changing every 100 bytecodes, or if a thread goes into an i/o wait state - is that still pretty much correct?
It is up to the threads that are sharing access to a variable to coordinate access so that they stay out of each others' way, usually using a threading.Lock or RLock
Hmm, QA says the WidgetMap page half-loads and displays a "file not found" message box, but it runs on my machine. The fancy interactive map swf relies on a file ./fancymaps/maps/widgetmap.swf to execute... Maybe it didn't get uploaded to the server. I'll try renaming it to _widgetmap.swf to force an error on my machine and see if it matches... Nope, it runs just fine without that file, somehow???
If it's holding a copy in a cache somewhere I'm going to throw this computer out the window
@overexchange I guess the problem is that most GIL discussions discuss why it's bad and how/why it should be removed. But if you google stuff like "python GIL purpose", you can find posts like this. The common denominator seems to be that CPython was written with a GIL because this way the likelihood of non-thread-safe (C?) libraries breaking stuff is minimal
im using this code lethain.com/tailing-in-python to tail existing file and once read do a tail -f on file. The code works fine but can anyone tell when tail() function would be called
@AndrasDeak yes thats what it "looks " to be doing, BUt I put a print in tail() which never prints. I added newlines to the file hoping that tail is called when new lines are added but still my print inside tail do not print only added new line get printed
adding for line in tail(fin): yield line makes it print my sleeping msgs in tail() wow ! but I have no idea how this happened. Also if the code is able to print newly added lines without even calling tail then it can be removed .
The while loop in readlines_then_tail is a busy loop, no sleeping/idling is being done and the point of tail -f is that it doesn't keep eating CPU (I think) while it's twiddling its thumbs for the file to update do you mean tail() will give a breathing space to cpu while sleeping and that is why it should be used (better performance) ?
@AndrasDeak So, can I say that java jre author was able to implement thread safe memory mgmt unlike cpython author who introduced GIL, as a limitation? To not write multi threaded cpu bound code in python
I don't know anything about python's history, but I suspect that yes, Guido found it easier/more straightforward to use a GIL in the early days, and it stuck. But as I said, I'm only guessing, as I don't know the history.
I suspect that if you have single-core work in mind (and python is old!), a GIL can prove useful to ensure safety, and problems only become prevalent when the GIL starts to lead to more restrictions than freedoms
I'm sure a lot of cpython would be much more complicated if the GIL wasn't there, hence all the discussions about the difficulty of removing it
@pythonRcpp The one that does not use tail() (which includes a periodic sleep) is a "busy loop", so it will suck up all the CPU reading and reading and reading, waiting for any new lines. tail() is better-behaved: it tries to read, then sleeps for a while before reading again.
But if that does not matter to you, then do whichever one you like
"the first test of a species' worthiness for conservation should be some instinct for self-preservation." Counterpoint: no it shouldn't be. As the dominant species on the planet, we can conserve whatever we damn well please, and natural selection can go cry in a corner.
The rules of the game have changed. Fitness no longer necessarily means being able to survive in the wild. Domestic cows are incredibly prolific because they're delicious. We can have pandas even if all they're good for is being cute and making China feel patriotic.
@PaulMcG no, it seems more 'conceptual' rather than an actual implementation -- I've seen it before, but only in college, where we made a program that implemented interface LinkedList in Java
Just saw it again, I think that's what I remember it doing
(devil's advocate: it's possible that the author wanted to say "entirely", but knew that the Well Actually Brigade would descend upon him with obscure counterexamples if he didn't pepper his answer with weasel words)
Java uses "interfaces" as a way to define an expected set of methods and properties for classes that implement them. Especially relevant for Java since it does not support multiple inheritance (I'm always misspelling that "multipole"). Python supports both MI and duck typing, so interfaces are not strictly required. But using an abstract base class (in Python) to lay out an expectation of implementation in subclasses is a nice way to represent that expectation.
Some IDEs (PyCharm for instance) will actually check for implementations of base class methods that do nothing by raise NotImplementedError, which is the de facto means for defining an abstract method.
I understand that frustration. When I go into other rooms with a question, I usually have to write a couple paragraphs of follow-up information and self-guided diagnostics just to make sure that someone, anyone, reads one of my messages, in the hopes that they think "what's this guy babbling about?" and scroll up to my original post to read my Q.
I try not to take it personally when my posts go unreplied-to. Questions go unanswered in here all the time and I can tell that it's not because everyone is thinking "I know the answer but you are unworthy to receive it, worm", it's because they're thinking "I'm not familiar with third party library X, hopefully someone else is"
... Ok, maybe 5% of the time they're thinking "I could potentially answer this but I'm exhausted from the last five help-seekers that needed a lot of encouragement and direction just to provide an unambiguous problem statement, and frankly nobody is inherently entitled to the free labor I give out of love for the community, so I'm completely justified in remaining silent on this particular one"
I expect that percentage to go up in the higher traffic rooms.
Also, @SohaibAsif, note that there's no magic internet points that you get for answering questions in the chat.
So there's less incentive for people to answer your questions. Of course that doesn't mean you won't get answers - but just like in ye olde pre-ternet days, it's only those who are in for their love of helping others. But their time is valuable because there's always people to help.
You're still not getting a free lunch - you've gotta do enough work to pique their interest
whether that's showing how hard you worked on the thing
or present the problem in an interesting/humorous way
If you expect that you'll say, "I have a problem, something doesn't work" and everyone will suss out your problem for you, then you'll be constantly disappointed
@Rawing: my pet peeve is beginners who say "python pandas". I don't know where they're getting that expression from and I've never been able to track it down.
I just wish I didn't have to start all of my C# questions with "this problem only occurs in my fifty thousand line legacy project, so I can't provide an MCVE, but..."
it's a shame, because the principle that there's a lot of stuff out there that could be an awfully lot better documented, and that many SO users know enough from experience to write that better documentation, is true
@LangeHaare specifically for languages such as python where the official documentation and tutorial is awesome, SOD is needless. For everything else it could work but then it's not "Documentation" but "examples", and the reward/moderation system is a mess
Writing good documentation is much harder than solving a random SO question/problem, I think. And it's much harder to know whether or not you're good at it (at least with SO questions you usually get more concrete feedback.)
ok so here's a problem a colleague is having that isn't clearly solved by looking at the (pandas) documentation:
In [247]: x = pd.DataFrame({'x' : [1, 2, 3]}) In [248]: x Out[248]: x 0 1 1 2 2 3 In [249]: x.values[0, 0] = 10 In [250]: x Out[250]: x 0 10 1 2 2 3
In [251]: x = pd.DataFrame({'x' : [1, 2, 3], 'y': ['a', 'b', 'c'], 'z' : [True, False, False]}) In [252]: x Out[252]: x y z 0 1 a True 1 2 b False 2 3 c False In [253]: x.values[0, 0] = 10 In [254]: x Out[254]: x y z
@DSM it might be because "numpy", "scipy" etc have py in the name and don't mean anything. Saying "I'm using pandas" might sound a bit weird with no further context.
@DSM Similarly, I dislike question titles like "adding two numbers python". At least when people do "adding two numbers in python" or "adding two numbers [Python]" they're making an effort to present a coherent noun clause.
what your colleague is trying to do is akin to looping over numpy arrays or doing logical operators on them, and being surprised that it's slow or doesn't return a bool
that's not to say that it can't be done; it's equally likely that there are images which I just haven't encountered yet, or it's possible but nobody's ever done it
Currently browsing github.com/sopython/sopython-site to see if I can figure it out... If it's possible I wager 2 quatloos that the syntax is identical to how stack overflow does it
They're for initializing class instances and returning nice string representations of class instances, respectively. This is true of all classes that implement those functions, not just model classes for SQL Alchemy and Django.
English is not my first language so sometimes I have hard time understanding concepts. I went throught the docs , too dumb to understand so I came here
@davidism: not sure that's fair. Knowing what __init__ does by itself doesn't tell you much about what it should or shouldn't do in a given framework-- I for one would have no idea whether or not I'm supposed to configure something there or not.
Hmm probably should have verified that SOPython can embed gifvs before making a big long wiki post that is only useful if you can embed gifvs in it :-I
Maybe if I change it to gif... I assume imgur hosts both versions
In hindsight it would have been better to use a code sample that has significant whitespace. With just that REPL snippet, the only way you can distinguish the functional examples from the broken ones is by observing that the former has a monospaced font
You can also distinguish the functional examples from the broken ones by reading the text of the wiki page, but I made the illustrations exactly because people don't like to read.