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00:00
I've done 120 lines of code, I think I'm packing that project in for tonight.
It's pretty satisfying as I scroll down though...
 
1 hour later…
01:05
@roganjosh for some reason I decided to answer the meta post: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/365852
Guess I was feeling generous since I got some really good news about Flask today.
 
2 hours later…
wim
wim
03:32
"I have so much rep that I laugh at their attempts" ... gold
(didn't DV it though, his answer is correct and I disagree that it's a typo)
 
3 hours later…
06:29
cbg
user4229770
cbg
cbg
07:07
cbg
job interview (at a bank) tomorrow... The fact that I don't own a suit and my best shoes are sneakers tells me that it might not go well
good luck anyway!
thanks :)
@Aran-Fey forget about the suits, skills will be your best business card
I sure hope so. The good thing is that it's a job specifically for uni students, so the dress code probably won't be too strict
07:48
a friend once asked me "would you rather be a black belt taekwondo with no skills or white belt taekwondo with black belt skills?"
@Aran-Fey I used to work in a bank
you first arrive with a suit for the itw and after that, sneakers and jeans
that's reassuring. I guess I should focus on preparing for the questions they're gonna ask and brush up my MS Office and VBA skills...
prepare some answers to questions like "If you were a car, which car would you be?"
A-F: Whichever car you have.
interviewer: 😲
interviewer: hired!
hahaha, that's thinking outside of the box :D
Hmm, is there anything I should do about a (essentially) link-only answer that was useful in the past but now all the links are dead?
nvm, I found the new urls and updated them
08:17
@Aran-Fey good luck!
thank you!
08:37
Considering that rhel 6 still shipped with python 2.6, I am pleasantly surprised
@Aran-Fey have fun selling your soul ;)
honestly, what are souls even good for?
>>> money > soul
True
I hope you don't come up with anything good
break a leg though!
08:46
Something tells me that "Thanks, I will!" isn't the correct response to that, so I'll just go with "thanks" instead :p
@Aran-Fey nice, good luck with the int
ty, ty
better int than float
Ideally it'd be a uint, because then there'd be no negative outcome :P
08:52
👏👏👏
(read: slow clap)
Hello kind sirs and madams. Do micro-ORMs exist for python, similar to e.g. Dapper for .net?
I'm not sure what "micro" means here but have you looked at SQLAlchemy?
Depending on your definition of "micro-ORM" Peewee might be something you'd be interested in. But nevertheless, check out SQLAlchemy.
09:08
microORM means I pass a SQL query, I get an object (or list of objects)
How's that micro?
Full-blown ORMs do that too
ok, but that's all I need, I don't really want anything else in it.
it's a different philosophy, but given the answers... I guess there's none :-)
Well, Peewee was also suggested: "Peewee is a simple and small ORM"
session.query(Foo).from_statement(text("SELECT * FROM foo")).all()
Is that what you mean by "micro"?
09:12
micro means this is supported and nothing else: dog = connection.Query<Dog>("select Age = @Age, Id = @Id", new { Age = (int?)null, Id = guid });
(ok, a few different fetch methods need to be in there)
Dog is any normal class
I'm in desperate need of motivation today. After weeks of work on a web app, this morning I went into the factory and saw all the novel ways IE could explode the design into something entirely unusable, and none of the PCs are on the internet to get new browsers :/
Very upset about the Champions League results last night :'(
jjj
jjj
@roganjosh have you tried https://www.reddit.com/r/aww/
(cbg all)
@Sklivvz The problem with that is that in Python (ignoring annotations) you don't usually have a static set of attributes to reflect against. Unless you provide them somehow.
@jjj comfort indeed
09:17
@IljaEverilä understood
jjj
jjj
@roganjosh maybe not motivating but soothing for sure :)
What's most frustrating is that I've been battling to make sure it works on IE on my PC as well as actual browsers, but I guess they have older versions on those PCs. I honestly don't know how someone could work on front-end design permanently, it really makes you question your sanity
jjj
jjj
@thefourtheye you mean barceolne vs roma?
^ ugh, I can imagine
SQLAlchemy for example solves it by having you write classes in a certain way (Declarative), or you map existing table metadata against a class (classical mapping). In the 1st option the attributes are reflected from the Declarative class, in the second from the provided table metadata.
@Sklivvz In case you absolutely have to solve this in python and have to write the target object yourself, I'd like to advocate for dataclasses, which are a python3.7 feature. I use them in this exact way (provide a stable definition against database queries) and am quite happy with the results
09:23
Was there an easy method for turning a tuple in to a dataclass instance?
I have a team currently working against the driver, which slows them down. OTOH a whole ORM is actually a net negative since most of the queries we are supporting are highly complex.
I'm not saying you should use SQLA, but just mentioning that it is written with that in mind. It is built in layers. The ORM is just a higher abstraction on top of a Pythonic SQL DSL (the Core) that allows writing complex queries. The idea is that the ORM should not stop you from using the features of your database.
@IljaEverilä Depending on how the tuple was written, moving it to a dataclass is trivial. In our case we literally only needed to change class OurDataModel(NamedTuple) to @dataclass; class OurDataModel and delete a bunch of code that was no longer needed.
But I can imagine how it could also be hard. The cynic in me would probably say that the parts that are hard to rewrite are bugs in the former model, and moving to a proper dataclass is the fix
@Arne I know I could just read the PEP, but I meant that did the provided __init__ accept positional args so that it's easy to convert a result tuple from a query to instances?
I'm 99% sure you can just unpack the tuple into the constructor, provided that the dataclass's attributes were defined (annotated) in the correct order
09:33
yes, all defined class members attributes are named parameters in the init
if that is what you mean
Yeah, that was it.
# micro ORM
def query(conn, cls, stmt, *args):
    with conn.cursor() as cur:
        cur.execute(stmt, args)
        return [cls(*row) for row in cur.fetchall()]
TIL namedtuples can't be **-unpacked
09:52
**namedtuple._asdict()
named tuples don't support __dict__ because of one weird bug way back
Yikes, a documented underscore method
yet another reason to move to dataclasses =]
with them you can at least do **vars(data)
And they have the module level asdict helper as well.
@jjj Yup :( I was supporting for City as well.
10:53
Yay I can Cast Close And Reopen Votes now :D
@Simon Nice! You may find SOpython's list of canonical duplicates useful :)
Thanks that will definitely be helpful. Bookmarking that.
Eeek I'm in the review queue , what do I do with screenshot code questions?
@Simon congrats on 3k!
I got there in the end, it did take me a while :)
Keep in mind that there is no shame in pressing "skip" if you're not sure how to handle a review
11:05
@Simon In reviews, ideally stick to the review only (e.g. Close vote review should only check for close votes), else you might end spending a lot of time. And yeah, use skip very freely, even if you are tiny bit unsure.
Thanks I've skipped three times already.
I will do that then..
You get a lot of reviews to do at 3K.
20 per queue I think, that's good enough for a single day, unless you are a mod.
Yes but 20 * 8 = 160 reviews (one or two are not very active)
And then there is meta
yeah, moderation is a tiring task.
With a lot of hard work and dedication I manage about 40 a day.
That makes a lot I have not covered :(
11:18
Just remember, you don't (always) have to do it.
Yes better to not do it at all rather than just blindly press OK or NO to everything
I do about 50 a year
Cabbage :)
now you can have fun in SOCVR
11:30
XD I went there back when I have 1K, very diplomatically got told to keep quiet till I had 3K. I will take a trip there later.
also pro-tip: you can filter close reasons and tags
and only review when you feel like it; doing crappy reviews as a chore is worse than not doing anything
Erm how?
OH Filter
Great. :D
ooh, I missed that somehow. Reviews should be (little more) fun now.
11:40
Oh Then then you can use filter also:
Somehow I missed that all this time I have been reviewing...
Not sure when all of this was added, or was I blind all this time?
I think neither of us were curious enough to press the button...
pretty sure they're all recent additions
yeah, otherwise I'm usually very curious.
do any of you know whether it's possible to set the space between bars in a seaborn barplot?
there should be no whitespace before 400, but depending on the zoom level white spaces show up
11:55
whoaaaaaaah vtk on pypi
this is amazing
@AshishNitinPatil you were
all this time? :/
As per coldspeed's comment, I don't think so :-p
post from 2011 showing a filter cc @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ
@Skum that doesn't look like a very good way to visualize that data. When a width of your bar is around 1 pixel, it stops making sense
@Skum I'm not that familiar with whatever library you are using, but I think this would have to do with the scaling of your X axis, not the spacing between bars.
11:59
what kind of plots would make more sense?
I'm not sure :P A histogram with broader bins?
thickening
For dense data, you should usually group things?
alright, I'll try a histogram
@AndrasDeak suppose then the reason not many know about it is because they don't make it obvious enough
12:00
thanks!
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ yeah yeah, keep moving the goalpost :P
@AndrasDeak and it yamming works like a charm! Mind. Blown.
@AndrasDeak Well, 3 people here were oblivious to it, so...
that doesn't change the fact that it's an old feature :D
just adding to coldspeed's retort :-p
Anyway, this filter thing (including tags) simplifies things a lot. Reduces the number of skips I'd make, as well as it'd be quite quick.
12:07
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I stopped doing reviews because they became a cumbersome chore, specially for non-python questions. This is really helpful to me.
Plus, I can reliably progress towards some gold tags now.
hmm... I only have one gold from the review queue - suggested edits... the rest require way too much effort with no rewards, I find it better to stay away from the queue if you're not motivated enough to tackle it
but if filters improve your efficacy, then by all means go for it
I think answering is more effort than the queues :-p so...
got me there :p
The question is okay IMO. The answer to it explains why it is sufficient in it's current state.
12:25
Just we don't have a clue what the code is :(
yeah, OP could give a little more clarity, but at least we can point to the exact error.
Sam
Sam
Hi any data sci guys! I have a question regarding combining probabilities. If I have a patient which has 5 probabilities of experiencing some event where each probability corresponds to a year, is there a way I can somehow combine these probabilities into a single probability. I'm not sure if just taking the average of the 5 is the best way given that there is a time element? I may be wrong
What do you mean by "probability corresponds to a year"?
The following packages will be REMOVED:
  gdm3 gnome gnome-core gnome-session gnome-shell gnome-shell-extension-weather gnome-shell-extensions task-gnome-desktop
oops, let me reconsider that
@Sam you mean the 5 probabilities apply to 5 consecutive years?
@AndrasDeak lol, what are you installing?
12:32
python3.6 headers for wxpython for mayavi for python3.6
Then why is gnome being hurt in all this?! oof
Sam
Sam
Hi both. Sorry if I was unclear, what I mean is each probability value corresponds to the probability of contracting event x in a particular year. ie, prob_1 = .80 translates to an 80% probability of contracting event x in year 1
wxpython, hmm
@Sam I get what 1 event does; tell me what prob_2 means...
if you have 5 probabilities for 5 independent events in the same year, well, my answer would be the same: you need to add your probabilities
if you find a quarter with 0.01% chance and you die by a lightning strike with 0.01% chance, there's 0.02% chance that something happened to you
@AshishNitinPatil installing python3.6-dev would probably mess with my system 3.5 somehow
My upgrade to Ubuntu 18.04 did screw up a few things for me, specially my docker installation. I can understand how "-dev" might screw you up
Sam
Sam
12:37
prob_2 corresponds to the probability of experiencing that event in year 2. My model only considers 12 months of data, therefore it is pivoted forward 12 month to generate these new predictions. My goal is to have a single probability (representing all years) and treat the actual_observed_output as "if the event actually happened in any year, True, else, False." The reason I want it patient level is so I can toggle the prediction threshold to some fixed sensitivity, for instance
So your five probabilities correspond to 5 consecutive years?
Sam
Sam
That's right yes
6 mins ago, by Andras Deak
@Sam you mean the 5 probabilities apply to 5 consecutive years?
A "yes" would've sufficed...
Sam
Sam
Ah, sorry. Durp
if you assume the events to be independent, the total probability of it happening in 5 years is the sum of the 5 individual per-year probabilities
I hope
assuming it only happens once...
Sam
Sam
12:41
Yes the event can only happen once
that's great
in that case P(it happens in 5 years) = P(it happens in year 1) + P(it happens in year 2) + ... P(it happens in year 5) because these events on the right hand side are mutually exclusive
Sam
Sam
OK great, I'll try that now. Thanks
rhubarb for a while
user4229770
12:58
Laurel
hey.. OP marked this as solved in title and made a whole lot changes. Should be rolled back to rev 1 right?
thanks
I wasn't even halfway done reading the question yet when you made the decision to roll back ._.
13:03
Out of curiosity, for the ones here that "master" pandas library, how many time did it take you to master it ?
@Aran-Fey I read fast ;)
@IMCoins (pun, ignore) "many" time.
Oh my. Well, you got what I meant :D
How long did it take you to master the pandas library ? :)
@IMCoins I don't know, I stopped counting the seconds
also, I am not qualified to answer since I haven't really "mastered" it
:(
No one would ideally be able to give a specific time frame.
If you wanted to rather ask "basics" of pandas, then that's a different question.
Which might get some quantifiable answers.
13:21
Hmm. Would "How long did it take you to get a good understanding of pandas library ?" be better ?
afternooncbg
Let's say that I'm curious about how long does it take for people to learn specific things. Maybe I'm trying to unconsciously assert myself, who knows. ;D
@IMCoins yep. Syntax n basics shouldn't take more than a day. Overall know-how of all modules, etc. would take longer (1-2 weeks?)
But that's my opinion. I usually like to try things out, when learning.
Others might be able to better answer though, since I hardly use pandas, and don't know it's depths.
Now that I think about it, the question is a bit dumb since someone who has been programming in python for several years (let's say 5 years) will learn pandas way faster than another who wouldn't have a good understanding of underlying libraries (such as matplotlib), things like that.
\o cbg
13:35
What's everyone working on today?
I've been munging cloudfront distributions in Boto3 all morning.
@Withnail powershell and probably my suicide as well ...
Making visualizations and dashboards for IoT.
Going well then?
except than that, life is fine :D
I need more time to code
and move jobs
story of our life
13:43
cbg JG
Quick question - where do I put an init function in Django (I have to set up a bunch of database creds)?
one day we will get a Django "Expert" in here :P
lol
I guess its me right now!
I would assume that you would put that in some kind of initial module that gets called to actually start up your app
I personally prefer Flask.
13:55
But I don’t actually have a clue how Django apps are set up
Oh, fun fact: you can call it directly from manage.py
I’m just goint to assume that that means anything to me
It's the entry point for starting a Django server
I see
What I've found :

mysite/
manage.py
mysite/
__init__.py
settings.py
urls.py
wsgi.py

And you launch using : python manage.py runserver
And you create the tree using... django-admin startproject myproject /Users/jezdez/Code/myproject_repo
You can see the tree in a better shape there. ;D
14:10
You would normally set up the database credentials in the settings.py file, which is called by the wsgi applicaiton on startup - this has been true in cases where I've been directly accessing external systems through raw sql as well as Django managed dbs
Are you trying to do something that's not covered by that use case?
@Withnail Yes, but I don't want to hardcode the db credentials into the settings.py file
I want to have them load from an external file.
(there are also other credentials that it needs to load)
Does anyone have a defacto they go to for linting python?
@Johnston I use whatever is built into PyCharm (I think PyLint)
@JGrindal for sure - but reading them in from an env file is v common.
@Withnail Totally. But with where this is being deployed, there can be other services that share envvars, and we've already had an issue with them being overwritten by another process.
14:23
django-environ does this nicely
Gotcha, so read from a file.
yup, that's what we're doing
ROOT_DIR = environ.Path(__file__) - 3 #
APPS_DIR = ROOT_DIR.path('appname')

env = environ.Env()
env.read_env(str(ROOT_DIR.path('.env')))


# ENVIRONMENT CONFIGURATION
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IS_LOCAL = env.bool('DJANGO_IS_LOCAL', default=False)
etc
django.environ looks like its very promising
thanks for the tip on that.
@JGrindal take a look at the way cookie-cutter django does it.
You'd find a lot of goodies there.
@IMCoins yes, plus "mastery" will lead to heavy Dunning–Kruger
wim
wim
14:46
who's good with descriptor protocol
wondering if there's something incorrect here, or just haters
4
A: Why is this false? `SomeClass.method is SomeClass.method`

wimExample 1: Someclass.a_method is an unbound method. These don't even exist in Python nowadays, so consider this a useless history lesson. Does Python make a copy of the method each time it is referenced? Yes, more or less. This is done via descriptor protocol. >>> SomeClass.a_method ...

Downvotes and no comment are rarely factual problems
wim
wim
hmm, not sure I agree with that
I would agree with AD. If you downvote, I do hope you leave a comment on what's wrong with the post. (unless someone already left a comment)
When I downvote for being factually wrong I always comment to educate the answerer
wim
wim
yeah, people often don't though
14:50
Possibly calling Python 2.7 useless, in a question tagged python 2.7 and therefore likely to be read by users that still use Python 2.7, may be not the most diplomatic phrasing
hence they aren't factual, and it's just an opinionated vote.
If you're thinking "I didn't call it useless, I called its history useless, a rational reader would understand the distinction", recall the kind of people that use the Internet
"You stink", while a valid sentiment, is not factual
wim
wim
14:52
hmm
You might be right. I didn't mean to call Python 2.7 useless, but now that I read it again it could be misconstrued that way
I don't mind a little bit of editorializing in a question if it's otherwise factually correct, personally
wim
wim
I learned something fun when answering the Q too
Hearing people's opinions about 2.7 was a factor in my decision to move to 3.X full time, so there's value there even though SO wants to optimize for purely objective data

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