pip is a well-used tag about the Python package manager known as pip. It has roughly 7,000 questions, a summary, and a tag wiki. Meanwhile, pip3, intended to be used for pip questions targeting Python 3, has no summary and 12 questions, with the tag wiki stating simply
pip3 is the pip package...
Hey Guys, I got a python project in visual studio 2017. I made a new python file, wrote print('hi'), and right clicked and selected "run without debugging"...BUT instead of running this new file I just made and ran, it runs my old startup py file
what am I missing here? I right clicked and ran the new file, but its running code from the startup file
pip3 It doesn't need to be removed - just make it into a synonym of pip. There is no program called pip3. pip is a Python package that can be executed as
pythonN.M -mpip
This then has a runnable wrapper that is ordinarily named pip. Now, on Linux and Mac distributions the system might support ...
Cabbage. Thanks, Antti. Pity there isn't much that can be done about unifying the Python version tags. Of course, it'd be great if OPs always added the generic Python tag, but I don't see that happening in a hurry.
@JonClements You should start answering pandas questions. There are usually more than one answers to a question, and I often leave them out of mine to let others have a crack ;-)
Not ready for prime time... as in I'm still adding stuff... but since crickets are chirping and all, I thought I'd make some noise. I'm working on this project I made up for fun and learning. I'm soliciting feedback github.com/pirsquared/Str2D/tree/master
you can follow the link to docs at bottom of readme
I'm working on the usage section now. This section will be the first thing you see and will show you the intended usage. For now you can look at motivation.
@ReblochonMasque I'm mostly trying to figure out all the components of producing a package. This was a good excuse to try. I figure there will be bumps and bruises along the way but the only way to learn is to jump in and get dirty
I also engaged in questionable activity that I'm not proud of. I tagged a bunch of stuff with a newly created crap tag just to get a silver badge and associated hat. I then subsequently removed all traces of said newly created tag. Like I said, not proud
Fair point, although I suspect that Arctic ninjas know their way around Canada. And they wouldn't feel out of place in the Swiss Alps. Wiki lists 28 red & white national or state flags, but of course you have to visit each page to see the flags.
I answered 2 Tkinter questions from people who just don't get what a MCVE is. When one of the OPs was asked to reduce their code they just butchered their main function so it no longer has a def line.
@JonClements Nothing wrong with fillna(method='ffill'). Pretty smart actually. Although you can shorten it using the ffill() convenience function that does the same thing.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Just a short preamble that describes the problem which the question addresses. I don't know Pandas, so I have no idea what would be appropriate.
What Andras said. One or two sentences should be fine. We just want something that will appear on the main Common Questions page.
If you want to write a longer description as well, that would be even better. You can copy & paste something from the question / answer itself, if you think it's appropriate.
"The 101 of indexing with pandas. There are many ways of selecting rows and columns with pandas dataframes. One common way is using label based indexing, which is either done with index labels, or boolean masks. Another way is using positional based indexing, which is purely based on the position or rows or columns in the dataframe. "
When one of us decides to make a canonical expanding the ins and outs of every possible manner of indexing, I'll send in more links, and possibly edits to the description.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I decided to put your description as the main text, and reduce the short description to "A Pandas indexing how-to." You can find it with "pandas" or "index" keypwrds.
The thing is, no question currently exists that justifiably addresses every aspect of indexing. There are many indexers to consider: loc, iloc, at, iat, xs, index slicers, and each and every one's intricate functionality. Making one Q&A would be waaaaay to broad, but some amount of aggregation is needed. I see too many of these questions, but all the required information is split piece meal across many questions.
Actually, this one isn't comprehensive, but it is a good starting point. @PM2Ring, Could you add this to the same list please? stackoverflow.com/questions/28757389/…. The second answer in particular.
@JonClements It seems I haven't given you nearly enough credit for your pandas expertise. I've only been here for a few months you see, and in that time I've only seen you answer like, 2 or 3 questions. So I'm liable to make that mistake :p
I'm slightly amazed that anyone could use itertools.groupby without being aware of how fragile those <itertools._grouper> iterables are. stackoverflow.com/questions/48036998/…
@MartijnPieters oooo... How'd that one slip me by... Sounds very promising
I don't always check the radio player enough - they had Mort and something by Gaiman a bit back... Searching for Pratchett on there comes back with quite a few interviews of various recency...
Ok stupid question, but what's the easiest way to create a 3d-numpy array from a nested list? It seems the ndarray constructor only works with 2 dimensions?
Not sure what "rectangular" means exactly when talking about >2 dimensions, but I'm trying to make a 1-by-1 rgb image:
>>> np.ndarray([[[1, 0, 0]]])
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: 'list' object cannot be interpreted as an integer
Thanks. I'll spend a few hours coming up with a way to turn a numpy array into an rgb-encoded byte string, then come back and ask how horribly inefficient and overcomplicated it is :)