@AbhishekBhatia: if one model is equivalent to a broader model under a certain set of assumptions, you can often describe the one model as having made an implicit assumption. The fundamental difference between Bayesian and frequentist analyses isn't priors vs. no priors (whatever that would mean), it's that Bayesians work in the hypothesis space and frequentists work in the sample space. If you don't know what I'm talking about, that just means you get to do more reading. :-)
@DSM I don't what you are talking about. :) Can you explain what you mean by "Bayesians work in the hypothesis space and frequentists work in the sample space". I generally found Probability and Statistics by DeGroot helpful. But I didn't come across this statement/explanation anywhere in it.
that when you show up here people have to write essays for you explaining the thing that was actually searchable with almost the exact words you used to ask about here?
errr....it is not much productive continuing discussion :). I am graduate going ML stuff. I always found this bayesian vs frequentist question cool, and I asked around it about with my profs. But I didn't hear this explanation, so I was just curious. :)
Like what does this even mean frequentist work in sample space? Can frequentist not have a hypothesis? There is no less information to figure it out!
how to run a docker container with ports enabled? I've already created the container now I can't access it via jupyter-notebook. I really new for docker
Why does indentation matter?
In Python, indentation is used to delimit blocks of code. This is different from many other languages that use curly braces {} to delimit blocks such as Java, Javascript, and C. Because of this, Python users must pay close attention to when and how they indent their ...
Hi there! I've got a binary-tree-like structure like in https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f7/Binary_tree.svg Now there is a flow dflow flowing into that structure at node 2 and is split up by the factors n7 and n5 with n7+n5=1. So in node 5 the flow is dflow5=dflow*n5 and for node 6 it is dflow6=dflow*n7*n6. It determine these factors for each node before my calculation with a few million iterations starts. But while looping, dflow and the n-values change constantly, but I don't want to waste time on looping through the tree again.
anyone able to help me? Current workaround is to call a method which loops over the tree-like-structure at each iteration, but that is extremely slow...
well, let s say water is flowing into the tree at node 2 with dflow=1 kg/s. the connection between nodes are pipes. and after node 2 it is split up with dflow5 = dflow*n5 going to node 5 and dflow7 = dflow*n7 with n5+n7=1
and I want to reference to the variables n5,n7... and dflow to dynamically update my dflow5, dflow7... values without having to run the loop over the tree at each iteration
well, unluckily it is a little bit more complicated, as each node does not really know which node is before or after it and one of the nodes determines the dflow-value. this could be node 2, node 5 or any other node. or there could be another tree upside down on top of node 2, etc... so that would make constructing and updating a dict really complicated
In today's saga of "pythonic code": Two people upvoted this answer that simply didn't work, probably because it looked fancy and they couldn't read it.
@Scotty1- So you could parse the tree once and build up a set of dynamic calculation expressions for each node that automatically reference the correct dependent nodes?
@poke yeah, that s the way I tried to do it, but I can't come up with a solution. I tried passing the n-values and dflow-value to a list by appending them, but it only appends their value and not their reference
@Scotty1- Can you show an example for these calculations? Also, when you process the tree, do you want to do the calculations for all nodes in the tree at once; and do you want to do it with a fixed set of flow values? Or is this actually real-time or a delayed execution?
@poke well, the calculations for the flow would be just dflow5 = dflow * n5 for node 5 and for node 6 for example dflow6 = dflow * n7 * n6. the calculations should be done at once as I change one of the values for all nodes in the tree. and the flow values change after each iteration my main calculation.
yeah. currently I am looping over the tree at each iteration, but I thought just giving the nodes some kind of a calculation expression which uses references would be great. something like an expression where dflow and the n-values are pointers which point to the memory adress where the current value is saved
but since each node is saved in an instance of a class it seems like I can't pass the references to the dflow and n-values to the nodes' instance attributes. only passing values seems to work
@Metaphox thanks, that looks like a really nice and easy way to use something like pointers! now the remaining problem is, that I would like to also update the result c in the equation c = a.val * b.val once either a.val or b.val change. any idea on how to do that?
@Scotty1- i think you'll need to either use a messaging system or make a simple event handling mechanism by your own, like handlers = []; def a(): <update c = a.val * b.val>; handlers.append(a). Then, in your node class, whenever the value changes, call def notify_all(): for h in handlers: h()
@Metaphox ok thanks! I m currently trying to make a class which has an update all method which is called after all n-vals have changed and then changes dict-values. but I'm running into the problem that my dict is not ordered and I need to maintain the order (ordererd_dict is no option, because I need to compile the class in Cython later on...). something like notify_all sounds like a great idea for that! I ll try to implement it. thanks!
Alternative to the parent lookup on the node itself, you could also prepare nodes_in_breadth_first_order and some parents dictionary in a first phase when you interpret the tree.
@poke yeah, I am looping over the tree with a recursive function in which I currently try to implement a dict lookup. but I m having trouble with the order in which the dict is looked up, so a parent attribute could be really helpful.
@JonClements still here, yeah, a month from now will be my first anniversary :) things are happening very fast, I work my bottom off (as everyone else)
so I don't really have that much time being around on SO anymore
As previously announced, Stack Overflow Documentation is now in read-only mode in preparation for its sunset permanent removal from the site. Before we move on, I want to update you all on some responses to your feedback.
I’m enormously encouraged by the thoughtful comments and answers to the...
I am not an expert by any means but why not try to link the engine to a brand new DB like sqlite or something and run the make migrations command, that way, neither the migration files will be there nor the tables.
if it successfully creates the tables in the sqlite db then you will have to probably drop the tables in your current db and recreate them all over again. Again, I am not an expert and just giving suggestions.
Hey guys I have a generell question about data management (keeping data up to date) within an app. Yesterday I created a new question but nobody answered. So hopefully somebody can help me: I'd like to check within my app if some data is up-to-date, maybe every time the user opens the app. So my idea is to download a file (.txt) and compare its contents with the contents in the app.
Is this the right way - to download a file for checking if the data is still up-to-date? Or are there any better solutions? I also thought about making a new update for the app if something changes but it's not guaranteed that every user will update it. :D
@CedricMichael where is this file that you will download to get the lastest information, there's so many gaps in your question to kind help you with :\
@idjaw i love cheese just can't eat it :\ life is cruel that way. you want something you can't have :(
@MooingRawr thanks for your answer! :) Until yet I havent such a file on a website. My idea is to do it like this. What I ask myself is: is this the right approach?
@CedricMichael I'm actually confused on what your goal is, you have an app that has some url that you want to keep updated correct? what's the correlation to your "site" and your app? do you have a database? when will the url get updated (not your app's url outside of your app). whos updating the url that is causing your app to have to be updated.
@MooingRawr not too bad. back from holidays also known as "time to do chores like fixing the bathtub or putting that extra paint the room, you don't have time to do during the years"
@MooingRawr hmm okay, sorry for the confusion. Its a iOS app, I have local database. There are product objects inside it who have an url attribute redirecting the user to the url (by interaction). My plan is to check these urls one time a week if there are still working/ correct. So if there are incorrect I update them (with my plan within a .txt/csv file which will be downloaded by the app automatically from a website/ cloud - something like that). Sooo hopefully this is more understandable.
@MooingRawr I could also publish an update for the app but so then I dont need all of that. But I think thats not the right way - publishing updates for such small data changes. (hopefully my english is understandable :S)
before, i was straight up using `cv2.fitLine(circles[0] ....` where `circles = cv2.HoughCircles(imgray,cv.CV_HOUGH_GRADIENT,1,20,minRadius=20` however i realised that, that contained a few more extra data so i thought that was causing the error
Looks like you've got a problem there in the C++ code (so maybe Python room ain't the best place to come for help). However, it looks like an assertion has failed
The syntax in that line of C++ looks similar to the Python, so you can work out what's wrong.
((is2d || is3d) && (points.depth() == CV_32F || points.depth() == CV_32S)) has evaluated false for some reason.
Well. First work from the assumption that it is what you are passing in that's wrong. Of course it's possible that there's a bug in the Python wrapper for the C++ code, but that's the least likely option.
We may get to that
I guess points is the data you're passing in somehow
I'm using the cv2.fitLine method to find a line segment among many points.
I have the following error:
error: /Users/jenkins/miniconda/1/x64/conda-bld/work/opencv-3.1.0/modules/imgproc/src/linefit.cpp:603: error: (-215) npoints2 >= 0 || npoints3 >= 0 in function fitLine
Here's the section of m...
Here's an idea. Try doing coord_arr = np.array(circle_cords) before the call to fitLine() and then check that coord_arr is actually in the shape you want
@CedricMichael sounds like you are depending on a third party site. If you are planing on checking once a week, you could make your app point to your database for the url, and when you do your weekly check up, just update the database value, no need to actually write update codes in your app since it would assume the database has the newest info. You will write a separate update 'job' that runs (you said once a week) once every x days, and update the database values. It's how I would do it if I
@CedricMichael I've never written a Web app, but I agree that forcing an update of the app just because the data on your site has changed is overkill, and annoying for the user, as well as wasting their internet data usage. Your app could just blindly download the data files it needs every week, but that's wasteful too.
It would be much better if the app can access a list of the names & timestamps of the files it needs, and if the version of a file on the site has a newer datestamp than the local version, then it needs to be downloaded. You may also like to include a cryptographic checksum, eg SHA-256, with that data.
@SylentNyte Just an idea, if the underlying C++ cares which dimension is 2 long. This chat is a bit extended now. Maybe if you do a question with an MCVE on the main site, it will get answered. It won't mess up your underlying data, because you can just transpose it for that particular call (if needed).
I have used cv.fitLine() before with no issues, but it is years ago.
@MooingRawr thank you! That sounds good. But @PM2Ring your approach also sounds really well! I think this is the best way how to solve my issue. Never thought about checking it by datestamp/ cryptographic checksum - this is how i'll do it! Really well! Thank you very much guys =)
@SylentNyte OK - just tried what I think is a minimal example from your data and it works for me. Which makes me think that you are not copy-pasting exactly what you are doing.
@MooingRawr Sorry, I haven't read all of the relevant posts yet, so I don't know the details of how Cedric Michael is handling the data. Sure, that info can be on a database, but it could be an independent JSON or plain text file. And I assume that any sane file delivery system already incorporates datestamps & checksums. ;)
my point was that im not a fan of writing update data code into my apps, i rather have them point to something like a database, and have my separate update codes that update the database, the only downside to my method is you will be using data to ping the database for urls, unless u manage it with sessions and or cookies....
@PM2Ring dont be sorry :D I'm just pointing out what I think and just wondering no worries :D your idea of checking hash values and timestamp is the correct way of updating files and data. I'm just saying where to put that update code.
@MooingRawr Rightio. I defer to your expertise in this matter. Being an amateur programmer, I haven't had much experience doing database programming stuff.