Question: I have a dataset with columns having string values. These string classes belong to a few classes. In a dataset of 10,000 rows I have about 20 different string in one column. I can't use sklearn as is. What should I do? I tried to convert to by one-hot encoding but that also did not work.
quick question, running the script found in the "Reading from a live interface" section here: github.com/KimiNewt/pyshark however I'm running into an issue. For interface, I'm using 'wlan0' since I'm connected wireless to the internet. I'm thinking alias is wrong in Windows environment. Is there a Windows equivalent that replaces wlan0?
So I have a package that is based on having enum34 (pypi.python.org/pypi/enum34), but a bunch of the default python packages at the university have enum 0.4.6 (pypi.python.org/pypi/enum). How do I handle that other than having the module take a dump?
@JonClements It was causing an error that I couldn't duplicate on my system, but could easily duplicate on about 25% of the machines in the lab. I drilled down and determined it was because they're using the old enum package.
The way I see it, there are 2 ways to approach it: either have the script install the correct enum package (I don't know how to do this) or do a version check and politely inform the user that they're using the wrong package and need to update (I'm not QUITE sure how to do this either. I guess check __version__ ?
The first method would be ideal, I just don't know that its practical.
@JonClements At a research University, until you have "PhD" after your name, you're worth less than dirt and no amount of proving idiocy gets you anything unless you prove the idiocy in a peer-reviewed journal.
@JonClements I've worked my whole career in global supply chain management. Software Engineering is a new thing for me. I've done personal projects and lots of Excel programming, but programming on a day-in, day-out basis is still really new to me.
and dealing with academics is............ different?
I was in a bar in Columbus, Ohio and some of my buddies were asking me if I wanted to invest in this crazy new SF startup they had concocted. They were trying to raise $35MM. I told them I loved them, but I didn't necessarily believe that their business was going to pay out, and the risk was simply too high.
And then they sold it to Amazon for almost a billion yammin' dollars.
I am trying to run ansible playbook programmatically via python API it works fine outside of the virtualenv but inside virtualenv it is unable to import any of the ansible module packages
@RaviChandraDurvasula Just search for answers to probable causes of 'Connection Refused'. This very likely has nothing to do with your url but your network connection. Try different urls, with / without https to remove your doubts.
quick q: i have a list containing multiple lists which i want to sort descending. Files are like this: incident1009, incident1009a, incident1010, incident1011 etc. They are stored in the var cases. I'm sorting them using cases.sort(reverse=True). When sorting desc i want the 1009a to be between 1009 and 1010. How can i achieve this with cases.sort? Because now it's on top of the list, where i dont want it to be
cases = [], so it's a list which i append with another list. I'm creating an other list called data = [ id, val2, val3 ], then im doing cases.append(data). I want to sort the 'id' value in the data list
its sorting now, but since the '1009a' has got an 'a' in it it's seen as unicode and therefore probably not sorted because the other values are classified as 'long'
I figured, haha. Since the script works fine. The 1009a is only posted on the top while it should be between 1009 and 1010. At least thats what im trying to do
It's usually a good idea to keep your data homogeneous where possible. In other words, if one of your ids is a unicode object, then you should ensure that they are all unicode objects.
If your back is against the wall and for some reason you really have to have a heterogeneous list, then you can use sort's key argument to convert each value to a unicode object before ordering any of them:
Or uh I guess you would need to do key=lambda sublist: unicode(sublist[0]) since you're sorting a list of lists of id-val2-val3s, rather than a simple list of ids
Huh. "pass on the blame" can be interpreted both as "(pass) (on) (the blame)" (that is, to not participate=accept the blame), and "(pass on) (the blame)" (that is, to hand the blame to someone else).
I've nerd sniped myself for the past hour with this problem which I can't find a fast solution for:
Let W be the set of all words. Let P be the set of all word pair concatenations; if A is in W and B is in W, then A+B is in P. A string is "versatile" if it is in P, and if its reverse is in P. Example "boobytrap" is in P and "partyboob" is also in P, so both are versatile. Find all versatile members of P.
The brute force solution is straightforward to implement, but P would contain 29 billion elements so I can't quite execute it with my puny hardware
Possibly some shortcuts can be taken by doing a linear pass through W and creating some kind of... prefix tree... or something, which you can then use to narrow down the possibility space of versatile word pairs
The brute force approach has chugged for ten minutes and now suggests "knarry tas -> "satyr rank". The brute force approach has an interesting idea about what a "word" is.
knarry (comparative more knarry, superlative most knarry)
(obsolete) knotty; gnarled
tas (plural tasses)
Alternative spelling of tass
tass (plural tasses)
(rare or obsolete) a heap, pile.
"The code I wrote without considering principles of maintainability has become a knarry tas"
The problem is, we set up programs that run for minimum of hours, a maximum of days, and if there's a bug in some stupid subroutine, you just wasted a LOT of computing resources.
OK, I thought I heard the stupidest thing today with the testing comment. Nope. New stupidest comment of the day: "When does the garbage collector get called in CougarVis (our in-house simulator)?"
lava lamps are sufficient until someone invents a partial differential equation that can predict the state of a fluid dynamics system to arbitrary precision at any point in the future
(I'm not entirely sure what all of those words mean, I hope they mean something in that order)
When I write a function that takes multiple arguments and returns a boolean, I try to order the arguments so that if you were asking the question in English, then you could fill in the arguments madlibs-style and get something coherent
I feel that most functions of this kind also adhere to this principle
hi... I have a pandas dataframe and I do dataset = pd.get_dummies(dataset, columns=columns, sparse=True). But I then do print(dataset.head(10)) I get the error TypeError: values must be SparseArray
could someone reproduce my problem please with this code. import pandas as pd df = pd.DataFrame([['a','b'],['c','d']]) S = pd.get_dummies(df, columns=[1], sparse=True) print(S.head(1))
I think it is a bug and will report it if someone can reproduce it
I think the joke here is that if you're not using f strings, you may as well regress to the most bang-rocks-together approach available. .format is more medieval than it is caveman.
Hey all, I was wondering where I could discuss some scripting plans with people to get a game plan in my head. Im working with AutoHotKey and would like to store multiple hotstrings in a global database and then have a client script that allows the client to pull in hotstrings they would like to use into their client. Not sure on my best approach for the use of hotstrings from a database.
I chose the most to-the-point one, but perhaps "because it will place the read pointer, file pointer or whatever it's called at the end of the file." is not the most beautiful answer.
Let's add in a couple more for completeness.
@ZackTarr The best approach is whatever is the simplest thing that works :-)
Which in this case, I suppose would be "pick whichever database has the nicest looking tutorial, and make a table containing a column for the primary key and a column for the hostring"
@wim I see. I usually treat "data" as uncountable, but in situations such as the above (when there are multiple datasets involved, so I get a feeling of several batches of data) I sometimes refer to it in the plural. I acknowledge that this might be annoying to a native, but we don't have a notion of countability in my native language :)
Weird... pip install is failing if I try to install a package from a local tar.gz in a different directory, but it works if I'm in the same directory as the file.
Looks like it has something to do with the specific directory I was in (the project root directory); installing it from my home directory also works.
oh dear - I tried making and installing an empty example project as an MCVE, and now pip doesn't know how to uninstall it because it doesn't have any files.
hmm... maybe when I installed the package from the project root, pip thought it was already installed because it found the package in the local directory.
I think the same thing is happening with the empty example project - I think it actually didn't install anything at all, but it's finding metadata for an empty project in the current directory, and all 0 of the files listed in that metadata seem to be installed, so it figures this project must be installed.
Running pip list with a different Python version I didn't "install" the project on also says it's installed, and moving out of the directory makes the example project's entry stop appearing in the pip list output (for either Python version).
If by "no1 answered" you mean "nobody suggested a solution for my current problem, considering that upgrading won't fix it", then you may have missed my message recommending changing greedy = "50" to greedy = 50
any suggest any detailed begginers book? im using two at the same time, cuz both at one point or the other assume that i know something they didnt teach me...
mb i really dont have much time for studying and when i get stuck i spend over 20 minutes each trying to understand it when finding answers online is a lot quicker (or so i thought xD)
Anyone spending more than half an hour looking at Linux man pages knows that shortening every word you can to three letters is unsustainable in the long run
One might also add that the process of spending said 20+ minutes trying to understand/find the answer is time better spent in the long run. Particularly as practice shortens that time.
It pains me to say it, but knowing how to google things is probably the #1 most important skill for a professional developer
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@DSM Nice one.
Yesterday I was watching television and a character said "it's a promise, brother" and I was inexplicably disappointed that they didn't say "It's a bro-pro"
The cup-half-full perspective is that it should not pain me to say it, because googling is just as valid a form of research as any other, and should not be considered an admission of one's shortcomings or lack of imagination or whatever.
Anything special needed for request.get() to work for https sites? I only get "Max retries exceeded with url" and examples im finding online dont point out anything special that is needed
something simple like requests.get('https://github.com')