Hello! I have a python multi-threading script running on an old 2015 Mac running el capitain with 4 cores that takes 6 mins. Bought a 2018 18 core iMac pro running high Sierra and now that that exact same script takes 40 hours to complete. This same thing is happening in php threading as well--scripts on old machine take minutes and on new machine takes 40+ hours...? Any hints what this could be due to?
Anybody running any php or python threading scripts on high Sierra or the new iMac pro?
Huh; what a great start to the morning. Their answer is decent, although not exactly what I was after (and yes I forgot about the question), now I feel like not accepting just for spite ;)
That poster is deluded if he believes that C is going to disappear anytime soon. C++ is a behemoth. Yes, it has its uses. It's not fun using a non-OOP language to build a sophisticated program. I remember doing GUI stuff in C back in the old Amiga days, but even there we used OOP-like techniques to do it.
However, there is tons of code where C++ is totally unacceptable. You wouldn't use it to write core OS routines. If you told Linus to rewrite the Linux kernel in C++ he'd laugh in your face. And think of all the code that runs on embedded processors and other small environments. They simply can't afford the waste of RAM that using C++ would entail.
And then there's the issue of optimization. Sure, modern compilers are pretty good at it, but I bet it's easier to do it on well-written C than on typical messy C++. ;) I'm getting out of my depth here, I assume Antti would have more accurate information.
Disclaimer: I learned C in the early 1980s, but I haven't used it much in the last decade, so I'm a bit rusty, and some of my info is out of date. I never bothered to learn C++. Originally I figured I'd wait until the language stabilized... I guess it has kinda done that, but it turned into an unwieldy ugly monster in the process.
Welp, that's another person not getting invited to my birthday party. Thankfully they don't seem to hang around the Python tag so hopefully I won't encounter them again.
@AndrasDeak Yes I figured that too. Wait all the comments are gone? That solves it for me
@roganjosh You owe me. Give me up-votes :p
@PM2Ring Thank you for pointing it out, I hadn't noticed ;)
@roganjosh He has a point for business apps, but in the really low level stuff, no it's here to stay...
@PM2Ring My C isn't great, but you are totally correct. Programming drivers/things with little memory space and the like have and will be for some time coded in C and ASM, Those frameworks made for C++ specfically (Wx/Vulkan/Qt ect) all contain at least some C with C++ wrappers
That is why people still use ASM because they can use nothing else to get the job done efficiently.
Python xml ElementTree from a string source? yet another example of the "accepted answer solved the OP's practical problem, but not the problem that was actually asked, and the next answer has three times as many upvotes as the accepted answer, thanks to all the people coming from google that actually want the answer to the asked question"
"How do I get an ElementTree from a string source?" not strictly answered by "use fromstring" because fromstring returns an Element, not an ElementTree
Hmm, is it unreasonable to expect import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET; ET.parse("input.xml").write("output.xml") to create a document whose contents are identical to the input document? Because that's what I expect, and that's not what I'm getting.
Is there a canonical dupe for just basic set intersection? I can find good ones that start with lists, but none that start with sets and just want intersection
@user3483203 Not that I know of. It's in that gray area of "too basic for SO"
Hmm that xml solution kind of only works if you know ahead of time exactly what namespaces you need to register before you open the document. I only have one piece of test data here, so I can't draw any conclusions about what namespaces might appear in all possible input
Rapidly approaching the practicality limit for this script, which should save me five minutes a month
Possibly SOAP has a well-established and publicly documented format for datetime fields that I could look up, but I like complaining more than I like solving my own problems
First google hit suggests "YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss". Problem: first google hit is w3schools.
cv-pls typo etc stackoverflow.com/questions/51653124/… I'm glad that the OP's problem is solved, but I'm not happy about all those wrong answers, some from people who should know better.
@Kevin: you're right about the ranking, but it's so easy to get within, say, 10% of minimal, that it's pretty frustrating when people don't make the effort.
I can imagine scenarios where some nasty heisenbug only occurs for a comically big input, and any attempt to cut that input in half makes the bug vanish. But those are exceptional cases.
Sometimes it can be tough -- someone once found a Sage bug involving a very long function (mathematical function, I mean).. and AARGH Kevin just Kevin'd me, that was exactly the situation which actually happened. I had to write a pretty complicated code to reduce it down to something debuggable.
@Kevin personally I am equally frustrated by incomplete code as I am by non-minimal code. I'm quite active in java and it's frustrating how many code examples are missing a simple class Foo around the methods.
In plain Java, it often isn't critical, but with Swing or Android, the containing class often extends another class which provides much-needed context.
I can see that. For me, I'm generally very forgiving of missing imports...and sometimes even prefer that they are left out. A moderately complex Java program can have 25 lines of imports and I consider that just noise.
Although...there is the rare case that the error asked about is caused by an improper import...but those cases are rare enough that it is usually easy to tell if that is indeed the problem.
Especially problematic since they might be using any of import tkinter or import Tkinter or from tkinter import * or import tkinter as tk and any solution you implement for one won't work with any of the other ones, unless the OP is smart enough to fix the namespace, and a lot of the time they aren't
@Kevin Well, with most of those it's easy to see from their code, apart from import tkinter vs import Tkinter, and the OP should know how to deal with that. Unless of course that's the total cause of their problem and they didn't post a Traceback, or any error message at all. :)
Most of the time these days when I answer a Tkinter question I post an answer using import tkinter as tk. And if the OP uses a star import I always lecture them as to why they shouldn't do that.
@jpp: hmm. While jez does have a bad habit of re-answering obvious duplicates -- and I've told him this in comments before, so I'm not breaking news here: if you can do it in one line, it's probably a dupe, and there's probably a preexisting answer by jez himself -- I'm not in love with that target.
I hate Tkinter questions that don't post (almost) runnable code. You end up spending half the time adding enough extra code just to make the thing runnable.
Yeh, I would have closed + commented on the typo. Because the question does state he's working with a series. No big deal, at least ppl can look at the link in the comment.
The tkinter .pack geometry manager cannot be fully comprehended by minds embedded in euclidean space. Humans should not attempt to become a runtime unless they want to become topologically equivalent to a klein bottle.
Speaking of simple mistakes, I wrote a number theory answer on SE.mathematics a few hours ago. Hopefully, I didn't make any simple mistakes or logic errors...
Speaking of SE.mathematics, there's an election on there at the moment, still in the nominations phase. One of the mods there retired recently, due to burnout. I visited the election page yesterday, and things are looking pretty dire. So far, there are only 4 candidates, and two of them strike me as definitely unsuitable.
The fact that burnout is even possible is shocking to me since I assumed every user on that site was a perfect being of logic and rationality, and thus no moderation would even be necessary.
Why argue about things when you can just deduce from first principles who is right
@Kevin There's pretty strong polarization in the community regarding homework questions. Some want to adopt the SE.physics approach of banning all homework or homework-like questions, some find them acceptable if the OP has made some kind of effort, and then there are the rep-farmers who'll answer anything.
Homework-dump questions there are a little different to those on SO, where you can argue that a good answer may benefit future readers. On SE.maths there's a much higher risk that the OP will self-delete as soon as they get an answer so that they don't get caught cheating.
I just listened to a new track by Buddy Guy, with guests Keith Richards and Jeff Beck. Not bad for 3 blokes with a combined age of over 230. :)
This homework distinction is silly. Don't we just want people to learn and collectively advance? I'm only interested in whether someone put some effort in. Across the board there seems to be some distinction about homework; if I was a maths professor and asked a question that someone attempted to answer but asked online, I really wouldn't care if it got answered if they showed effort.
If the student can't get an answer without asking the question online, ok. That probably makes them more productive than the 90% who basically do nothing. They just won't excel in their field.
But I wonder whether we (myself included) might have it wrong. We're in an age where Google searching is the norm, even for professionals. I'm playing devil's advocate; maybe the approach is to ask the hive-mind now. There will always be people who actually research the proper way and they may be accessible.
What people do is expect instant gratification without first making an effort. Like learning a language before using it. "How do I add this word to a string? I'm new to python"
It can be hard to find a good dupe for a lot of questions like that because they're so basic they don't deserve to be on SO. So the only dupes you find are to other low-quality questions, mostly with low-quality answers.
You're both starting from different places. roganjosh is trying to figure out "what's the best way to get people's questions answered" and Andras is trying to figure out "what's the best way to have a quality Q&A repository"
@KevinMGranger and I'm absolutely not advocating this behaviour but I wonder whether there needs to be some introspection in light of the information age where you just get answers
"In a recent xkcd's alt text, Randall Munroe suggested stacksort, a sort that searches StackOverflow for sorting functions and runs them until it returns the correct answer. So, I made it. If you like running arbitrary code in your browser, try it out." gkoberger.github.io/stacksort
I can speak to pandas. I will suggest there are two main issues (actually there are many issues but I think these are the biggest). One: New askers of Pandas questions are more likely to be of the Data Scientist sort. That implies a higher likelihood of not having programmer like tendencies. The most important tendency lacking is the one that allows you to generalize. Two: Pandas questions are difficult to find dups for. Three: (I Know I said two) There are so many ways to answer pandas questions
@AndrasDeak I share your purist views. So much so, I spent 30 minutes lecturing my 5 year old on the scientific method when he said he wanted to be a scientist and build things. I told him, "That' an engineer, a scientist must follow the method"
insert self depreciating joke here about how computer scientists have to have exceptional lateral thinking ability in order to convince themselves that they're real scientists
@SusheelJavadi It looks pretty clear to me. In fact, it warns you to be careful because it can handle absolute pathnames:
Warning
Never extract archives from untrusted sources without prior inspection. It is possible that files are created outside of path, e.g. members that have absolute filenames starting with "/" or filenames with two dots "..".
It's warning you that those files can be extracted to anywhere in your filesystem, if the permissions on the destination directory permit it. Of course, on a sane system it shouldn't clobber anything vital that belongs to root, but it could easily overwrite files belonging to the user that runs the script.
I don't object to such a notion, since I strive to give the impression that I'm a philosopher that spends 99% of his time drawing circles in the dirt, and 1% repelling invading armies with an improvised death ray made from parabolic mirrors
trying to test creating a tar.gz file with pathnames...to post here ```sh-3.2# tar -cvzfP absolute_pathnames.tar.gz /blah a absolute_pathnames.tar.gz tar: Removing leading '/' from member names a blah```
i even gave the -P option to not remove the absolute path-names, without luck
@SusheelJavadi Ok. Does the script give any error messages? I'd assume that you'd get an IOError or OSError if an attempt is made to write to a directory that the script doesn't have permission for. I admit that the docs don't mention that, but it would be surprising for such a command to fail silently.
I assume that you've made sure that all the destination permissions are set correctly. Are you running the script as a normal user, from a normal terminal? Or are you, eg running it as different user from a cron job, etc?
@Susheel they've just announced it on the radio as breaking news in the UK - so I'm guessing they might be right, or it's so close, it doesn't really matter.
@roganjosh I watched that "Richard Turner" Penn and Teller thingy - quite sweet. I've only watched the UK editions with Jonathan Ross hosting - didn't realise Alyson Hannigan was hosting that one.
@Kevin probably fell down the back of the couch or something... I'll happily sort that out if someone told me where the couch was :p
@SusheelJavadi Hmmm. Does the archive extract properly when you try to untar it from the command line? Sorry, I can't think of anything else, but I'm not a tar expert, and I don't use it very often.
@AndrejKesely As with any ranking of prgoramming languages, I am very critical of their metrics. But there are a couple of interesting bits of information in that article, like "[...], Python is now listed as an embedded language."
@Arne In the end, they perform the same function. The main difference is what file you install on other machines to run, whether its a compiled executable or direct source code.
a compiler translates code into an executable file. You copy that file to other machines when you install it. For an interpreted language, copy your source files to other machines.
my understanding is that most modern interpreted languages use JIT technology
@Arne Not really. There's a big conceptual difference, and modern interpreters generally work a little differently to traditional interpreters. As said above, a compiler translates the source code into an equivalent program in the CPU's machine code language. An interpreter doesn't do that.
It reads each instruction from the source and then performs the operation that the instruction specifies. Of course, to actually perform that operation some machine code is going to be executed but the interpreter isn't performing a translation process.
What I just described applies to a classic interpreter, like Basic. Modern interpreters like CPython blur the distinction a little. First, the Python source is compiled into a simpler language, Python bytecode, and then that bytecode is interpreted by running it on a virtual machine: the bytecode instructions are effectively the machine code of that virtual machine.
That machine only understands fairly simple stuff (compared to the Python source language), but its machine code is more sophisticated than the real machine code of your CPU, eg it knows about more sophisticated data structures, not just simple integers, floats and strings of bytes.
But note that the virtual machine is still not translating Python bytecode into CPU machine code. It performs each action that's specified by the bytecode. You can write an interpreter in a high level language, without any knowledge of the CPU machine code.
@Arne Oh, good. :) I'm surprised that Kevin hasn't joined this conversation, since he's actually written a full interpreter for his Kevinscript language. I've only written toy ones, and that was a while ago.
eval must be doing some type-checking trickery, because it seems to know whether __builtins__ is a module object or not before deciding whether to use getitem or getattr.
>>> import math
>>> eval("sin", {'__builtins__':math})
<built-in function sin>
So it knows to do math.sin here, rather than math["sin"]
>>> import math
>>> __builtins__ = math
>>> sin
<built-in function sin>
>>> __builtins__ = {"foo": 23}
>>> foo
23
Initially I thought this getitem/getattr trickery was an exclusive property of the execution mode used by eval, but here it is in the regular repl also
Hmm, but the very same code when executed in a script gives NameError: name 'sin' is not defined. Revising theory to "the trickery is exclusive to the execution mode used by both eval and the repl"
Imagine a CSI-esque scene where I zoom in on "REPL" and enhance the pixels in sector 2 to reveal the existence of "eval" within it
github.com/python/cpython/blob/… is where the byte code interpreter handles name resolution when the name isn't in locals or globals. The PyDict_CheckExact line supports my theory that it's checking for the dict type. But I'm surprised that it doesn't check for dict subtypes also. But whatever.
But whether builtins is a dict or not, it calls Py(Dict|Object)_GetItem, so I still don't see how it could resolve sin in my earlier code
Now I'm suspicious of github.com/python/cpython/blob/…, which indicates that in its first conditional GetItem doesn't operate directly on the object, it operates on o->ob_type->tp_as_mapping. Is a module considered a "mapping"?