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18:09
>_>
for i, row in enumerate(data):
    if row[0] != 0 and row[0] != 1:
        logging.error(f"here be dragons! {i}")
        weight = data[i][1]
        height = data[i][2]
        logging.debug(f"the length of the array is {len(data)}")
        data = numpy.delete(data, i, axis=0)
        logging.debug(f"the length of the array is {len(data)}")
I'll do things the "wrong way" and you can help me do things the right way
18:23
@kush data = data[(data[:,0]!=0) & (data[:,0]!=1)] or data = data[~np.isin(data[:,0],[0,1])] or np.in1d instead of np.isin for older numpy
I think I hate numpy
or in general, bools_to_drop = ~np.isin(data[:,0],[0,1]); and then weight = data[bools_to_drop,1]; height = data[bools_to_drop,2]
numpy is great, you just need to learn to use it right
of course you can always hit it with native python, but it will hurt and more importantly it will be very slow
it only looks like black magic if you don't grok it
slow is better than not having anything
using numpy wrong is pointless, you could just as well use nested lists :P
the point of numpy beside speed is memory: arrays are contiguous blocks of memory. This is why increasing/decreasing their size is not a convenient thing: that often involves reallocating a whole array
18:30
yeah which is why I want to do it at once
yeah, but my point is that I don't even know how to use numpy.delete because it's usually more straightforward to constructively index into your array
I guess I can't explain my problem. I have one row. I want two rows. How do?
it is babby's first expectation maximization problem
your last half an hour had nothing to do with duplicating rows :P
I showed you the last time how to duplicate rows by generating an index array using a list comp (for want of a better idea). Did you look into that?
Yes, you told me to vectorize
so i created a probability table which is just an array with four rows and three columns
I also showed you how to create an auxiliary array where the nan-y rows are duplicated
18:35
but you said don't do that
no, I said "you can do that and just loop over the new nan-y rows, since your other function is not vectorized anyway" :P
I don't think it's straightforward (and particularly necessary) to skip that auxiliary array
(you can delete messages in the 2-minute edit window)
inds = [ind for inds in ([i,i] if isitnan else [i] for i,isitnan in enumerate(np.isnan(gender))) for ind in inds]
how do I use this?
the way I showed it in the next line or so
look at what that contains (on a small example)
18:40
data[inds]?
try and see what happens
what is ind?
I can't even read that line :(
that is a nested list comprehension which uses a flattening pattern
can we write it in multiple lines or does that make it inefficient?
In [46]: biglist = [[1],[2,3],[4]]

In [47]: flatlist = []

In [48]: for lst in biglist:
    ...:     for elem in lst:
    ...:         flatlist.append(elem)
    ...:

In [49]: flatlist
Out[49]: [1, 2, 3, 4]
first understand this ^ and let me know
(heads-up: I'll have to leave in 10 minutes for a while)
18:43
ok
once you've understood the above, note that it is equivalent to the following nested list comprehension: [elem for lst in biglist for elem in lst]
and if you understand that, you'll see that my original line is this same pattern, but instead of biglist we have a generator expression ([i,i] if isitnan else [i] for i,isitnan in enumerate(np.isnan(gender))), but we could've used a list comprehension if that's more easily comprehensible (pun unintended) to you: [[i,i] if isitnan else [i] for i,isitnan in enumerate(np.isnan(gender))]
(and only try to step from one to the next if you really understood one; otherwise you'll just get frustrated and confused)
if I had the time I'd force you to do it step by step :P
you going to celebrate thanksgiving?
I presume you didn't ask me ;)
I did mean u, since ur leaving for a bit. Thought turkey time :D
What should we be thankful for? :D
dude, I'm still a Hungarian living in Hungary
18:47
Python 3
good point :P
extra turkey for GvR
:D I don't know much about Hungary, please excuse my lack of culture knowledge :P
thanksgiving AFAIK is a very Northern American thing
We don't need to be thankful for anything; our fellow Europeans can be thankful for our ancestors not killing them all in a rain of arrows *puts on sunglasses*
$ python
Python 3.6.3 (default, Oct  9 2017, 12:07:10)
[GCC 7.2.1 20170915 (Red Hat 7.2.1-2)] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> biglist = [[1], [2, 3], [4]]
>>> flatlist = []
>>> for lst in biglist:
...     for element in lst:
...         flatlist.append[element]
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 3, in <module>
TypeError: 'builtin_function_or_method' object is not subscriptable
>>>
.append[element] <- square brackets
18:49
.append(element)
[ ] are for indexing generally
ok works
ok I think I get it but is it necessary to write it in one line?
$ python
Python 3.6.3 (default, Oct  9 2017, 12:07:10)
[GCC 7.2.1 20170915 (Red Hat 7.2.1-2)] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> biglist = [[1], [2, 3], [4]]
>>> for lst in biglist:
...     for element in lst:
...         flatlist.append(element)
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 3, in <module>
NameError: name 'flatlist' is not defined
>>> flatlist = []
>>> for lst in biglist:
...     for element in lst:
...         flatlist.append(element)
so this is a nested for loop
the list comp will be somewhat faster for larger lists
biglist = [[1]*10,[2,3]*10,[4]*50,[5,6]*100,[7]*50]
In [56]: %timeit loop(biglist)
24.1 µs ± 426 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10000 loops each)

In [57]: %timeit lc(biglist)
8.1 µs ± 46.3 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000 loops each)
the first function uses the loopy version, the second the list comps
ah
readability counts, so if you're uncomfortable with the latter, just use the loops
(but being comfortable with list comprehensions helps you write pretty python code in the long run)
also in the field, if you are using list comprehension, it's a good practice to write a few comment lines above to state what it's doing. It maybe obvious to most Python programmer but still helps.
18:57
(as with any other nontrivial piece of code)
^
I write comments in english what it's doing and then write the code. Generally it saves people time who looks at the code. :D Plus people won't hate your code.
@kush and yes, it's a nested for loop, one that flattens one level in a list of lists (or equivalent nested sequence)
I usually don't like comments
comments are only useful if anybody ever will maintain your code :P
and "anybody" includes yourself 3 months from now
I guess I need to learn to read list comprehension
19:00
yeah, it's a pretty basic (and fairly simple) construct in python
definitely learn to read one before trying to read a nested one
also something i hate about python people, you guys use short variable names and take it to the extreme almost like people who write unix commands
_______setup.py_________
from distutils.core import setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize
setup(ext_modules = cythonize('Main.pyx'))
__________________________________

I am trying to convert my python code (.pyx) into c, the command I am using is: "python setup.py build_ext --inplace"
But I am getting an "unrecognized character" error -->"class Nøgletal_Analyse:"

How can one avoid this unrecognized character error, without deleting the nordic letters from my code?
@kush we're talking about short snippets here, forgive me if I don't go Tolstoy on the code we're going to throw away in 5 minutes
no, not you. in general
in general, talking down on "python people" in general will probably not take you far in the python chatroom
19:06
i doubt the people here are that thin skinned to take things personally
I didn't take it personally, yet your words hint at a certain kind of superficiality which you might not want to be associated with you :P
there are good programming practices and bad, and unless you're talking about official styles, I don't think it can be pinned down to users of various languages
that being said, I'm not well-versed in the corresponding sections of PEP8
(but I suspect it doesn't tell you to use as short variable names as possible)
no the official pep8 is actually very good at least what I have seen
but I guess in the classroom the teacher is thinking like you did this is throwaway code so I will just write this so I can fit more in the class time
19:24
>>> my_matrix
[[1, 2, 3, 4], [1, 2, 3, 4], [1, 2, 3, 4], [1, 2, 3, 4]]
>>> k = row for row in my_matrix
  File "<stdin>", line 1
    k = row for row in my_matrix
              ^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
what's going on here?
ah turns out k = [row for row in my_matrix]
Descriptive names make code self-documenting. But short variable names have their place too. If it should be obvious from the context, and the variable has a short lifetime, like 1 to 3 lines, then a short name can be OK.
@kush BTW, that does the same thing as k = my_matrix
@PM2Ring haha you caught me
19:41
OTOH, k = [row[:] for row in my_matrix] makes a new list that contains copies of the rows.
Actually I wasn't 100% correct before. Your list comp does make a new list object, but it shares all its rows with my_matrix.
Having problems with my code, So the first input is trying to specify the size of the array while the second input specifies the elements pastebin.com/JYtu2nyf
but my elements dont get printed individually
Cbg
cbg?
I was thinking of ditching tkinter today and going for something like Kivy.
Tkinter is a little outdated and kivy works on mobile devices as well.
19:58
@M.Jones n a string so when you are append(n) you are adding the whole string to the list each time. Maybe you wanted to iterate through the string instead of a range ?
also not sure why you would take the length of the list as first input. Python doesn't really care about the length of the list size most of the time.... (unless you are specifically adding things in by the index)
@Simon both have their uses, both are still good to use ... it's personal preference.
@MooingRawr yeah! i just got it !
@MooingRawr but when I test out a number with "0" in it , it doesnt print for some reason
@M.Jones you don't need to ping multiple times, just once is enough. Plus I'm still here :D don't worry.
Also your code could be reduce to this if you wish (unless you need your num_array for something else)
n = input()[::-1]
print(' '.join(n))
@MooingRawr I think I might need two inputs becuase I need the first one to specify the length of the array
and the second to input elements
and don't call your list an array
also this isn't how you raise custom errors in Python raise "You failed to enter an integer" this will throw a TypeError: exceptions must derive from BaseException
20:02
Tkinter is easy, and already in the default Python installation and that's about the only advantage. Personally I like tkinter but it looks like almost a decade out of date. So I really think there is need for change.
when you call a list an array in Python you will make readers mistake it for an actual Array such as Numpy or what not.
@MooingRawr this is what i got right now,not sure why the zero doesnt get accepted pastebin.com/eDvArYPm
@Simon Kivy needs to learn their syntax for objects too... :\ more overhead :D
@M.Jones It's a list, and it automatically grows to whatever size it needs to be.
@M.Jones num_array.append(int(n)) leading 0 gets chopped off when you cast it to an int()
Just leave it as a string
20:04
hold on ill give it a try
oh cool bananas ! it works !
I'll make some more test cases thanks !!
fix your raise it doesn't work.... see my comment above
@M.Jones repl.it/repls/SpecificSilverOlingo take a look at the comments
Damm. I can't run a kivy program till I update to OpenGL 2.0
@M.Jones But if you do really need a list of digits in Int form, then we need to change the code a little. I can only offer limited help because I'm on my phone so posting multi line code in chat is almost impossible.
honestly I'm not sure why you are using a for loop here. is num_array suppose to hold each characters like: 123 num_array will be ['3','2','1']? because your code is making num_array ->> ['321']
that's fine I think i got the problem sorted
20:10
shrug if you say so...
its somehow giving me the correct inputs
input 10 for the first input, and 1234567890
I suspect it won't do what you wish too.
oh mother of god
@Simon Tkinter is a good intro to GUI programming, and it's in the standard library now, but it does have its quirks and limitations.
why is that happening
20:12
Literally just told you why.... idk what you expect. Please stop take a second to read and understand what we are trying to tell you. Then ask a question with a MCVE please.
we can't help you if you don't help yourself ...
@PM2Ring That's why I'm thinking of taking up Kivy
alright sorry will go through the comments
debug your program with prints, for example print your num_array and you will see the issue :D
yeah num_array is coming like this as you said ['321']
how would I get it to print without the ['321'] and just as 312
*321
@Simon Understood, but IIRC Kivy has quirks of its own, not everyone can run it, and because it's got a lot more features than Tkinter there will be a big learning curve. However, your experience with event-driven programming in Tkinter will be very useful.
20:16
repl.it/repls/SpecificSilverOlingo is the answer you are looking for. You were iterating through num which is incorrect, you were appending n when you should be appending i, you were double reversing when you should only reverse once (during input or output your choice depending on the list you want)
16 mins ago, by MooingRawr
Also your code could be reduce to this if you wish (unless you need your num_array for something else)
^ there's a two liner if you don't wish to have an array (in the comment history of this chat)
but we have type hinting in python, no?
@Simon To add to PM. Kivy has it's own issues. Plus when you publish it, you need to package Kivy with your program... :\ It all depends on what you need
@MooingRawr I get it ! thanks I see where I was going wrong
ah only since 3.5
thanks found it (:
20:19
:D generally Python doesn't care about type hinting. sure people can comment their code for inputs and output but the snake likes to be free :D
Yeah the non-goal even says that in bold o.O
@MooingRawr So im doing this exercise on a website and one of the test cases are test with corner cases in case of large numbers but it doesnt pass that requirement
it doesn't specify how high large numbers are and i tested with an array size of 20 and it still works so not sure why It doesnt meet that test case
@M.Jones mcve please.... remember we aren't mind readers here. What you see is not what I see. You have to provide details which you might thing is clear because you are reading the problem.
I assume you don't have access to the test cases?
Uhmm okay ill try reword that haha
yeah i dont have access to them
quick question
what does corner case mean?
Well without updating the drivers I might not be able to use it.
20:32
@MooingRawr one of the test cases involve using negative numbers would that mean i have to change the n=input() line?
20:50
@M.Jones corner case = edge case = really extreme edge cases = rare cases.
idk that's up to you... how do you handle -123? would it be 32-1 would it be -321 or just 321?
thank you so much. I think I understand a bit about list comprehension. I don't know how inds works but I think I will eventually.
:)
if you can express exactly what you don't understand, I can try to explain further
the learning path is still for loops -> list comp in general -> nested list comps in general -> what I wrote for inds
\ @MooingRawr i think it would be -321
the hardest part of learning is expressing what you don't understand in a way for others to understand you.
yeah :/
20:57
Jones, for you, you will need an if statement to check if the start of the string begins with - and then deal with it by chopping it off before you reverse and re adding it in manually or going another route. plenty of ways to do it.... try something first
oh yeah makes sense ill give it a crack
@kush I didn't think of this earlier: separate the nested list comp into two steps in case that helps
I started doing the %2 == 0 and else for the two null rows but so far I've gotten that new_list = [list_element for list_element in original_list if some condition on list_element] now this is pretty powerful but lets look at [[row[i] for row in matrix] for i in range(4)]
nested_list = [[i,i] if isitnan else [i] for i,isitnan in enumerate(np.isnan(gender))]
and then flatten that with the pattern I showed
this way you can look at what nested_list is and what the flattening is doing
ah
if i is nan then [i,i]
and then change the [i, i] into [i], [i]
now I get what you were talking about earlier about flattening
21:19
has anyone used localbtc's api?
been getting an error pip installing it
Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement lbcapi (from versions: )
what makes you think that it's on pypi?
sure,OK
21:44
@MooingRawr for the if statement
I
I've started as if n == "-":
but why would I want to chop it off ?
@AndrasDeak thats what their github page said to do in order to install
dont use n=="-" that's saying n is exactly "-" look up python's startswith(). Ask yourself why you would want to chop it off. Think back to when I asked you what you want to do when you receive '-123'
Why would you want to remove - first before reversing and add it back after it's all done ?
oh yeah so we want to chop it off so we can then put it back on the reversed output
one thing you have to learn is how to critically think for yourself. One of the best way to do this is to talk to something (yourself or say a rubber ducky )
Talk to yourself in English/whatever language you speak what you want to do and what your code is doing and why you aren't getting the result you want... that's the best way to learn to code.
@oso9817 oh, I was looking for localbtc after your messages
21:49
ah i should've specified
pip search indeed suggests there's an lbcapi both for 2 and 3. Does your pip say the same?
Collecting lbcapi
Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement lbcapi (from versions: )
No matching distribution found for lbcapi
only thing it says
when installing havent tried search
search should at least find it (but I'm not sure that would tell us anything)
but that returns only this lbcapi (1.0.1) - Make API calls to LocalBitcoins API.
yea
are you using a nontrivial platform/architecture?
21:51
@MooingRawr what if its 2-312 ? as the elements wouldnt that mean you cant use startswith
using win10 py 3.5
@oso9817 seems to be python2 only
I could install it only on a py2 virtualenv, and see also pypi.python.org/pypi/lbcapi/1.0.1
think to yourself once again. you had a .isnumeric() checking for the number.... print('2-312'.isnumeric()) #prints False
gotya thanks man
no worries
that lib really doesn't look like something that has to be written in python2 :| (there seems to be a simple PR addressing the single issue of the lib)
21:55
@MooingRawr okay so I've got this so far
if n.startswith("-"):
n.pop(0)
so it removes the first element which would be the -
but when appending do I'm assuming you append the indivdual string ("-")
okie. ask yourself this, you've removed the - and you want - to be in the first slot of the list, and the rest is the reverse of n. how do you do it ?
you already know the answer just sit down and think about it. you have all the tools to do it.
i get this error
if num_array.startswith("-"):
AttributeError: 'list' object has no attribute 'startswith'
Has anyone asked whether you've read any python tutorials yet?
wait i think i got it
3

-123
321-
that's the output i get
shouldn't it be that instead of -321?
idk should it ?
22:05
website doesn't specify -.-
I'l come back to this problem and try the next one
Good news: noscript is now on the new firefox. Bad news: it's a piece of yam just like the rest of the new-style add-ons :'(
I've heard people say they like uMatrix. I installed it and uninstalled it but you can give it a try if you like.
thanks for the tip
I don't know what I did wrong in noscript but I can't allow this site for this session in noscript anymore so I removed it
it's getting wonky with http vs https
I couldn't enable ikea until I switched the "only https" setting for it
22:18
but can you still do the allow temporarily?
yup
you need to click on the S then click on the little clock on the right side of the "S trusted" label :|
and sometimes if you click the S it enables it temporarily
I swear the temporarily allow all on this page wasn't there this morning
or maybe I am going crazy
that's a new thing I noticed an hour ago, it's in the top right corner of the menu
yup, just installed to check
do you have https everywhere installed by any chance?
22:22
Thanksgiving cabbage to all
o/
turcabbage
@MooingRawr write a program that takes as input an integer N and an integer K between 0 and 31 inclusive need to output the K-th bit of the binary representation of the integer N. Does that mean output the first bit ? so the first element?
why would that mean "output the first bit"?
22:28
it's just my assumption I'm not 100% sure
what does K-th bit mean ?
well what makes you think it means "first"?
K-th as in "if K=2, the 2nd. If K=5, the 5th. If K==K, the K-th"
i just imagined that if K was 1 it would be like output 1 and if k is 2 output 2 etc
yes but that's completely not what you said/asked
22:44
so turns out I misunderstood the question and now as a workaround I have implied logic in the code o.O even rows are male and odd rows are female for the missing data... so I have to either fix the code or add a comment and guess what I will do
23:07
I have additional questions... not too python related but in general are these two functions not equivalent? hastebin.com/iditecahok.py
full program so far hastebin.com/izadirawiq.py
23:33
What's a typical hourly rate for a Python dev freelancer? I have a project I need to post....
Depends on the country. US being the highest.
@Simon Yes, but if you were to put a dollars-per-hour number to that it would be......
Tricky. The rates depend enormously on what you can do (Python is quite large). I'm no expert but this might be of interest
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