Hi Guys. What can I do if I am iterating through XML tags, and some tags happen and some do not. Explicitly: Some people have Titles and some not. When I first iterate through the title tag, then people without titles are no longer iterated. What can I do?
for amkilet in child2:
for titel in amkilet.findall("PERSON_TITEL"):
for vorname in amkilet.findall("VORNAME"):
for nachname in amkilet.findall("NACHNAME"):
Also note that Spyder throws it into a new file by default, so whether or not it has any use, it could be that people just don't delete the auto-generated text
Hi, I think my question is too small to qualify for a real SO question so maybe I can find help here? Highly appreciated :-) What is the most pythonic way to interleave a list of strings with a fixed string BUT unlike join also after the last element?
``fooString.join(myList) + fooString`` gives an unexpected result for empty lists. I also tried ``zip()`` but it gets quite lengthy with the itertools and the flattening: ``''.join(itertools.chain.from_iterable(zip(myList, itertools.repeat(fooString, len(myList)))))``
@AndrasDeak Yes. So if you have non-ASCII chars in your source, and you don't save the file as UTF-8, and it doesn't have a coding directive, odd things can happen.
@AndrasDeak ok, got it :-) I am only a beginner in python and what I already know is that a) there are stunningly short solutions for seemingly complex problems b) it is quite hard to find these short solutions if you lack experience. So I was hoping/thinking I overlooked a function which does the job with less amount of code
@PhilLab The comment from Andras was simply to help you format your code correctly in chat. It's just a bit hard to read without the code being formatted. We're more than happy to try help you solve the actual programming problem.
@AndrasDeak I hope I get the formatting right now. @piRSquared but I like Python3 :-D
Example:
fooString = ":myGradleTask "
myList = ["lib", "app", "something"]
result = .... let there be magic here ...
assert(result == "lib:myGradleTask app:myGradleTask something:myGradleTask ")
the current state of the packaging world is actually not terrible! but people still do it wrong, because of all the old advice floating around on the internet and the lack of a good modern guide.
Hi Guys. What can I do if I am iterating through XML tags, and some tags happen and some do not. Explicitly: Some people have Titles and some not. When I first iterate through the title tag, then people without titles are no longer iterated. What can I do?
for amkilet in child2:
for titel in amkilet.findall("PERSON_TITEL"):
for vorname in amkilet.findall("VORNAME"):
for nachname in amkilet.findall("NACHNAME"):
@AndrasDeak No, the trailing space is not needed, the genexp works marvelously. I didn't see that they would fit the use case but they do and it is quite simple. Thank you!
canon: a general law, rule, principle, or criterion by which something is judged. "the appointment violated the canons of fair play and equal opportunity" synonyms: principle, rule, law, tenet, precept; More
@madik_atma Why are those .findall calls nested? I don't understand why you're even using the 3 inner for loops. People normally have 0 or 1 title, 1 first name, and 1 last name.
@roganjosh In chat I can do @ tagging, with auto-completion, but not in comments.
@wim I'd actually appreciate a ping in chat once you've done it (I'm aware it's somewhere on the horizon and vacation is paramount priority but I'm registering my interest :) )
@PM2Ring Yeah, it just doesn't work for comments. It's frustrating actually.
@PhilLab :) Getting drunk and writing in Python is still fine though. If you can get an IDE with iPython it's really easy to use %timeit to test the speed of code, and you'll be surprised at the proportion of clever-looking one-liners perform awfully against the blatantly obvious approach.
@madik_atma Do each of those .findall calls always return a list containing 0 or 1 items?
@PhilLab Yes, it's a little shorter, but I bet it's quite a bit slower, and probably consumes more RAM although that's probably irrelevant unless you list is huge, or you're doing that join operation in a loop.
I've seen it happen once when I clicked twice on the edit icon, so perhaps the other times are when a single click registers as a double. Or you know, invalid anecdotal evidence
@madik_atma Really? I thought the .findall method returns a list of matching elements, but I haven't used that module very much; I don't do much XML parsing.
@madik_atma So immediately after for amkilet in child2: you should make those 3 .findall calls (without using more for loops), then extract the data you need from each list using simple indexing. If a list can be empty, like the title list, then you need to test for that, since it's an error to index into an empty list.
@AndrasDeak python breaks all the time. "for loop doesn't work in python". "if doesn't work in python" and so forth. I'm surprised it hasn't brought planes down on our heads.
@AndrasDeak I was passing some exec_lines to IPython, now we're using the notebook under the new architecture, which really separates stuff - but I can't figure out how to pass the IPython arguments through from notebook... I know IPython still has a supporting interface, but I'm trying to use Jupyter in the same way, but failing because I can't pass exec_lines directly to Jupyter. I have to figure out how to make it pass the exec_lines for me.
I could upvote your question now (I won't because I don't understand its relevance as I expressed) and I could have upvoted one of your questions in the past. Then I cave in to SO and delete my account; both upvotes are removed at the same time.
@Simon In other words, those upvotes that are being removed could be collected over any period of time from the same user. They just happen to be removed all at once :)
Yes but the score of the first theoretical up-vote will show as 1 for each post. In my case it shows as 3 (with one down-vote). If you had deleted your account then the up-votes from both posts would disappear. So the score for this question would go back down to 2 (and so would the other post). In my case it dropped down to +1/-1 so I lost two votes. @roganjosh
If you deleted you account the rep would go down for each post, and for the score to go down by 2 on the first post and the other post would lose the rep. In which case I would lose 15 rep not 10
The other possibility was that another user removed his up-vote at the same moment as the other account was deleted (I find that somehow unlikely). @roganjosh
@Simon I don't think that I have random people following my activity and upvoting my answers (to apparently inflate the upvote economy) so if you have them, please direct them my way :)
@roganjosh Camouflage. If a sock only upvotes one person's stuff, it looks pretty obvious. But anyway, I think we've had enough of this topic for the time being.
@coldspeed You can edit it out. ;) I'm amazed more low-rep users don't clean those up: it's 6 chars, so it's over the minimal edit limit. That sounds like an easy way to earn 2 points to me.
Mind you, PYTHON in a title is less annoying than [SOLVED] added onto the title after it's answered.
I managed to write an Astronomy answer on my phone. Although I came close to throwing it at the wall, fighting auto-correct. It keeps turning "its" into "it's".
@AaronHall Probably. It's a pretty good auto-completion most of the time. It's just the "invisible" corrections that you don't pick up straight away that are annoying. And it's still learning - I've only had this phone for a week.