hey guys, does anyone know how shape works in Tensorflow? I know that (3,5) means 3x5 matrix for example, (?,?) means that both dimensions are dynamic, but what does (?,) mean
The title of this question is very misleading, esp. given that it was closed in favor of something non-list-comprehension-related. What to do?
The motivator is that this question actually asks about multiple clauses in list comprehension (although its original title didn't say that).
So Q2 would make a good canonical question for those keywords. Q1 should not even show up, for those keywords. Q1 should be renamed "How to test multiple string 'in' conditions in list-comprehension?". Should I rename Q1, or else how do we prevent it causing confusion with Q2?
Am I being too pedantic here and in the follow-up comments? I think it's important to make a clear distinction between retrieving args from the command line and reading from stdin. Or is it simply the case that FK82 understands the distinction but is confused by my terminology?
Are there any good resources for how to structure Flask projects such that they are easily testable? I think I might be doing something a bit wrong by doing things like app.config['FOO'] as it makes testing harder when the app is used in various places. Is config better handled some other way?
@coldspeed You've missed the point entirely. Q1's mistitling was obscuring the findability and canonical nature of Q2. Q2 is very live (asked today) and very important. Aren't you stunned that "How to have multiple condition clauses in list comprehension?" still doesn't have a canonical answer on SO? The feature came out 18 years ago. Shocking.
@PM2Ring I think the confusion arises from the terms "terminal" vs "command line" vs "command line arguments" vs "stdin". "command line" can ambigously be understood as either "terminal" or "command line arguments".
and since stdin is often connected to the terminal, the two words are sometimes used interchangeably, albeit incorrectly.
"reading from the command line" seems technically inaccurate from my point of view. I read your original comment with this phrase as "accept command line arguments", but I see how someone could interpret it as "reading from stdin".
@Code-Apprentice Yeah. I guess I should've originally said something to the effect that the phrase "reading from the command line" is misleading or ambiguous.
@Tug'Tegin That code makes no real sense… You are calculating the factorial recursively, but asking for a new x on every recursion. You should split up the “ask for input” and “calculate the factorial” parts.
which is the best way to get the value of a key, where the dictionary is having only one key and the key is unknown, I got the value using keys() fucntion, Is there a better way to do this
Every time I find myself working with datetimes in matplotlib I get the feeling it will stop at nothing short of demanding a blood sacrifice to get the formatting I want :/
@Mirv as part of the library itself or some separate wrapper?
They do have matplotlib.dates, which is what I ended up using. But you have to create locator objects, then pass them to the axis object. But, curiously, you use plt.xticks(rotation=90) to rotate the actual labels. I just don't have intuition on what properties are set on what objects.
Eh, I don't think there's a unique straightforward way how it should work
I've grown fond of the object-oriented API because it's crystal clear what's happening. With plt.whatever you're screwed if the gca() changes, for instance
Perhaps I'm just used to it by now but it makes a lot of sense to me to have axis-specific workers like formatters and locators which you then attach to the necessary axis. Note that for instance you have colorbars with axes of their own, which can and should also have the appropriate locators and formatters...
But setting the location and formatting of the strings with ax.xaxis.set_major_locator(hour_locator), but having to do the rotation on plt.xticks; do you have insight on what that would be the case?
For this I'd just use plt.xtick for convenience, but I agree that it would be better to either use the state machine or the object-oriented API. I've grown accustomed to fig,ax = plt.subplots() and then just working with those objects whenever possible
and of course if you have more than one axes you'd definitely want to use the latter
re-cbg. I was going to answer this Numpy question earlier today, but I couldn't get sufficient clarification from the OP. Eventually, a reasonable answer was submitted, but the OP says it doesn't do the correct substitution.
Maybe I'm still misunderstanding the OP's requirements, but I suspect that the OP is just misreading the output from that answer. I tried to get the OP to explain what's wrong with that output: I even upvoted the question so that the OP has enough rep to talk in chat, but they've disappeared.
Yeah, because I could envision wanting to rotate one set of labels in something like this and to me it would definitely make my understanding clearer to set it on the axis
@AndrasDeak I think BossaNova's interpretation is reasonable. But if the OP says it doesn't do what they want, then I guess the question really is unclear.
So , I have two python scripts totally independent of each other, slave has to return the status of the execution so that the master may use that data to either rerun the slave script or not.
Should I use pickling
or multiprocessing?
I mean , I just have to return a variable from the slave script
someone on SO suggested I can use something called PIPE
If you're about to say "but I want to return something other than an integer", then I take exception to your earlier phrasing of "to return the status of the execution" which in this context is usually understood to mean "the integer return status"
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>type test.py
print("Hello, world!")
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>python
Python 3.6.3 (v3.6.3:2c5fed8, Oct 3 2017, 17:26:49) [MSC v.1900 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import subprocess
>>> s = subprocess.check_output(["python", "test.py"])
>>> s
b'Hello, world!\r\n'
>>>
When it comes to third party libraries, expertise can be a bit scattershot among chat users. For some libraries, we have core devs lurking. For other libraries, nobody has more than fifteen minutes of experience
Whirlwind then. I took a job in London last year, had just over a week to find a flat. Moved in Sunday night and started Monday. At least you'll get a little more breathing room than that :)
I'm a bit anxious about it but I'm thinking about it for a long time. Often you have to jump in otherwise, you will always wonder if the sea is cold, hot, if there are sharks or actually, nothing, just your mind paralyzing you out of fear
@piRSquared you need to, otherwise you are stuck. I've seen so many people, metaphorically speaking, looking at the land from the sea and never touch the land because they were unwilling to be disappointed by the reality of the land or just too afraid with they would discover with the "what if"
I guess I'll just pick the first thing on Amazon I see that supports Windows 7, runs on something other than disposable AA batteries, doesn't have any reviews describing it as a piece of junk, and isn't some cheerful bright color that will show dirt with the highest possible contrast after 15 minutes of use.
My first attempt last night to meet all these criteria was a rousing failure
Possibly what he wants to have is a list of dicts, and he simply can't articulate his problem well enough. The ambiguous description is exactly why I lost interest in the question
Ah no, I misread your other comment and thought you were making a statement on what the OP wants now. You were instead referring to the way you read the initial question. Wires crossed.
@MooingRawr I'm coming from a diverse background, having started a fablab on my spare time that is still working today to working on IT projects and having done support / key account care with large corp
After explaining to the OP that print() returns None in three separate comments and it precisely explained the behaviour they were seeing, they settled on it definitely being an issue with the library they are using. I think that's reverse progress :/
I got as far as pastebin.com/VcvnJch9 but I've brainfarted and haven't yet been able to turn this into [expr for value, is_first_or_last in informatively_iterate(g)]
tee and next are probably important components of the hypothetical best solution. I'd need higher blood sugar than what I've got to work through all the corner cases though
The headache comes in because you can't know something is the last until you've hit the StopIteration somehow.. oh, well, maybe lunch will bring me insight.
@jpp It's clear to me what the OP is trying to do. But I suppose it should be closed as too broad, due to the lack of a code attempt. And I don't like the "give me solution" attitude, but I guess that's probably a language / culture issue.
@PM2Ring, Fair enough. I (try and) go out of my way to add a couple of sentences of explanation. In my opinion, it's middle-of-the-road compared to the many people who just write "Use:..."
So I have a 3d axis graph. The X and Y axis both have the same view settings, etc but not the data. Is there a good way to compress these statements down into 1 line each? I've considered using eval() in a for loop with these as strings and the "x" and "y" parameter in a list.
If the answer is long, etc. I can write this as a good question.
"ever" might be a bit strong, but yeah, it's best avoided except in very rare circumstances. :-) I'm a little surprised there isn't already a data structure and/or function which contains the axes, but I can't think of one offhand.
for axis in ax.xaxis,ax.yaxis:
axis.set_major_locator(locator)
axis.set_major_formatter(StrMethodFormatter("{{x:0{}d}}".format(length)))
axis.get_major_ticks()[-number_ticks+1].set_visible(False)
If you're saying "I couldn't generalize my code into a loop because the bit that operates on yaxis also creates a yticks value, and the bit that operates on xaxis creates an xticks value", then you can just skip creating the value :-)
@KevinMGranger: I'd of course write the first DSMScript compiler in DSMScript but the first interpreter would probably be in Python, I'll admit..
(Also it needs a better name. Unfortunately the letters "DSM" don't contribute to a lot of good words-- so far the best are DiSMay and DiSMal, both of which seem darkly appropriate.)
Also, I meant more how you can define almost every single language construct of scheme from within scheme given just macros (and in fact, the end of SICP has you do that)
I assume mylisthere is a list of Numpy arrays. Is there any benefit to doing np.asarray(mylist)? I'd expect it to be faster to just iterate over the list directly.
Creating a Python generator that yields ordered products of integers from two large lists is interesting... I don't think you can do it with O(1) additional memory, but I suspect O(N) is possible. Basically, if you draw a multiplication table and X out all the ones you visited, then the next smallest number must have exactly two Xed out neighbors. So you really only need to store the "edge" that demarcates the Xed out zone and the unvisited zone.
the edge's coordinates are strictly increasing along both axes, so it can't double back on itself, which means that in the worst case it goes from one corner of the table to the other, which is only N items
I think you might be able to do it with one of those "moving index" tricks, and the fact that [certain product condition which I wrote incorrectly here originally holds.] I haven't thought it through yet, though.
@Kevin Yes, it can be done with a heap, but I'm not sure how big the heap can grow. I thought you might be able to do it more conservatively by scanning along the diagonals, but it doesn't look like you gain much, if anything. But here's my diagonal scanning code:
a = [6, 7, 8, 9]
b = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
for x in a:
print(*[f'{x * y:2}' for y in b])
print()
mi, mj = len(a), len(b)
for n in range(mi + mj):
for i in range(n + 1):
j = n - i
if i >= mi or j >= mj: continue
print((a[i] * b[j]), end=' ')
print()
I've been too lazy to work out the details, but assume the values are unique to make the argument simpler. We know that a[i] * b[j] < a[i+1] * b[j+1], so at every step you know that you have to look through at most ~ (len(a)-i) + (len(b)-j) possible products to sort. I.e. you have to look at [i+1, j], [i+2, j]... and [i, j+1, j+2, ...]]. You can break as soon as you pass the 'diagonal' product. heapq.merge those, and then take the +1, +1 step. I think something like that works.