@PM2Ring, Thanks for posting that note about images in questions. Sadly, there's already a "tested to work" answer, so let's see if OP cares to respond.
Yep, for pure added value / worth / talent, he should be near the top. But not appreciated because NumPy is relatively specialized versus regular Python / Pandas.
If I land on one of his answers, it's a bit of a quandary. On the one hand, I know my problem is solved, on the other I have to work out what the yam it's doing so I can adapt it
If I look careful, normally I find he reuses the same kinds of tools, e.g. np.bincount, np.einsum. But I haven't mastered these yet and there's next to no good material to learn.
he does have some favourite tools for sure but I'm in the same boat as you, it's tough to make the link to how they fix the problem until he demonstrates it
I don't normally see Pandas questions any more (unless they're linked here in a cv-pls request). I added it to my ignored tags a few weeks ago, along with a few tags related to machine learning. The Python tag page is a lot quieter now. :)
Hi Want to run some command with subprocess with live update, I tried few solutions available on StackOverflow but did not work out for me here is my approach: http://pasted.co/75d318e9
changing pObj.communicate(kwargs['input']) line with your pObj.stdin.write(kwargs['input']); pObj.stdin.close() make the functionality of function incorrect and it is not be able to execute commands properly
@PM2Ring there's also the case where the choice of most upvoted and accepted answer is just wonky. It's just been accepted and I don't get how it's the best of the 3 approaches - "trash all your vectorization potential"
@roganjosh, At least that answer has a disclaimer: This also necessarily means that under the hood you'll have a numpy array of pointers, so don't expect the performance you get when using a primitive datatype.
And if there are any serious developers / performance concern, I'd assume you wouldn't be working with strings anyway.
@roganjosh Yeah. There's not much point using a Numpy array instead of a list if you're going to stuff it full of Python objects. But many people seem to think that Numpy will magically make the code faster, even if you do dumb stuff that prevents Numpy from using native machine types.
@PM2Ring, The worst thing that has happened to me (more than once) is when someone asks how you can vectorise a function with NumPy. You do it, it works and improves performance. And then "but my actual function is different, is there a general, universal way to vectorise my function"
And then come across the poorly named np.vectorize [aka np.loopy], think it's magic, and then wonder why it isn't.
I'm trying to learn OOP design patterns. Since I work on my own and tutorials only basically spell them out, I was thinking of rewriting a library from the ground up so I could compare my thought process to what was actually implemented. Does this seem like a good idea? I'm trying to think of a small library - requests is hailed as a great example of being pythonic but it requires domain knowledge (I don't actually know how the whole HTTP get/post thing works underneath). Any suggestions?
Totally aware that libraries only exist to meet needs of a particular domain, but it's more just for open suggestions so I can assess the scale of the task and see whether I might be able to reason out an approach independently from the library
I don't usually look at libraries' source code (except when it's garbage and needs to be monkeypatched), so it's hard to recommend one that's well-designed
I have 40K lines of code now in my Flask app and just become painfully aware that it's solely down to blueprints that's keeping the design afloat. A lot has come from project bloat where the requirements weren't even discussed at the start, but hindsight on other aspects of the design is painful
@Kevin, Actually we are doormats. They got their answer. The question was never fixed. OP happy. Answerer happy for a few minutes while he had his +15. Everyone else, time wasted.
I got review banned until 2020 for failing to spot plagiarism. I'm pretty sure I've passed the last 5-10 audits. But once you've had a ban, that counts for nothing with the "fail & double the sentence" rule.
Maybe it's a blessing in disguise. My previous 2 audit failures were also incorrect, had to get them overturned / undelete posts.
@Kevin I updated my Bezier track program. You can now slide the white points around.
@jpp Grrr. I guess it's hard to stop that, although I think the mods have IP tracking tools that can help them with detecting sock puppets, but I guess it's not perfect, when many IPs these are dynamic.
Nice. If I replace return min(max(0.001, w), 0.999) with return w, then the points are draggable anywhere along the line, not just the line segment. Earlier this month I predicted that this would create aesthetically pleasing loops, but now that I actually try it, all I get are sharp kinks.
So much for that. Your visualizer has saved me the effort of going down that blind alley. I award you 42 quatloos and a commemorative plaque.
The plaque is blank, feel free to engrave whatever you like on it
If you clamp w to min(max(0, w), 1) and put a white dot on a black control dot you get a zero division error in the flatness test used in bezier_points.
As in, moving the dot so it's not collinear with the line segment any more? I would expect the curve to have an abrupt corner at the white dot, in that case
Now, if you want to say "well maybe you can make loops that way and you just didn't try out enough test cases", that's a reasonable position. I only made like three shapes and then gave up.
I could just use a simple loop with bezier to plot the curves, but bezier_points is a bit faster because it's adaptive and does less arithmetic. You can push the initial tol up to 0.05, but the curves start looking polygonal if you make it too big.
I understood that your original design had a restriction that control points coincided at the midpoints of edges, but this needn't be the case in general
@AndrasDeak In my program, a track is composed of overlapping cubic Bezier curves. A single curve has a white dot at each end and two black control dots between them.
The number of black points between white points corresponds to the dimension of the bezier curve. My program has one black point between white points, so it makes quadratic curves. PM's has two points, so it makes cubic curves. You could theoretically extend this however far you want.
Whether higher-dimension curves are cooler looking, is an open question.
The article also mentions higher dimensions, but they actually mean a generalization of the concept into more spatial dimensions in that case. i.e. Bezier surfaces
Interesting. Wikipedia says it's tricky to calculate the intersection of a ray and a bezier surface.
> One problem with Bézier patches is that calculating their intersections with lines is difficult, making them awkward for pure ray tracing or other direct geometric techniques which do not use subdivision or successive approximation techniques. They are also difficult to combine directly with perspective projection algorithms.
@Kevin I don't know how POV-Ray does it. I guess it could subdivide the surface into linear patches. POV-Ray originally only used with quadric surfaces (3D versions of conics). The various kinds of meshes were a later addition, and render a fair bit slower.
If anyone's interested, I finished version 1.0 of my duplicate manager userscript. Some features still need a bit of polishing, but it's completely functional. Bug reports, feature requests, and any other kind of feedback are appreciated.
On the main site, I've just corrected a user for using the term "a json" when they mean "an object composed of nested dicts, lists, strings, and numbers", for what feels like the millionth time. I'm beginning to feel like this is not the hill I want to die on.
Maybe everyone understands already that there's no json type, but it's a pain in the butt to say "an object composed of nested dicts, lists, strings, and numbers", so they don't say it.
But I think there's a sizeable population that doesn't understand it, because they're looking at their object as a mysterious opaque thing that requires magic incantations to open
A user asking "How do I get a value out of my three dimensional json object?" might look at the json module docs and give up after not finding anything. A user asking "How do I get a value out of my list of lists of lists?" might discover that it's as easy as x[0][0][0] before they even compose a post on SO
@Kevin Pet peeve: People saying “JSON object” when they actually meant to say “some data that happens to be deserialized from or serializable into JSON”.
IIRC, literals are evaluated at compile time, so a dict object has been built from the dict literal before your subclass has a chance to do anything to it.
@PM2Ring i know this is super broad, i been working on all my standard lib however its called all the python doc page, what should be next priority for me ? numpy? I know i gotta learn jsons
Luddites, minimalists, and ordinary people that don't apply an ideological label to themselves and who have a tendency to only use the tools that are necessary for the task and nothing further, unite!
@vash_the_stampede JSON is a very popular way to store data, and we get lots of JSON questions on SO. The json module docs aren't that big, so it's pretty easy to learn. Some of the material in those docs is a bit obscure, so feel free to skip over stuff that doesn't make sense. ;)
What shall we call people that "don't apply an ideological label to themselves and who have a tendency to only use the tools that are necessary for the task and nothing further"
@roganjosh Oh i have noticed and i been able to mimic some json processes as far as load dump and utilitzing it like a dictionary, where do csv's fall into play with json or along those lines
json.org takes about a page and a half to entirely describe the format. Doesn't quite fit in a single chat message, unless you cheat and embed a screenshot.
But even then, the oneboxer will smallify it to an unreadable degree
Wikipedia briefly lists the 6 basic data types that JSON uses. A JSON Object is like a Python dictionary, except that it only permits strings as keys, and it does not prohibit duplicated keys.
JSON has double quotes, not single quotes. If it has single quotes, it's been parsed into a python structure. This consists of nested lists and dictionaries. Keys must be strings,so they'll be converted as such if you change to JSON. load and dump are for dealing with files, loads and dumps are for dealing with strings, the 's' indicating such.
@roganjosh got it last question when someone uses arr = array([[5,3,4,5,6,4,2,4,5,8],
[4,5,8,5,2,3,6,4,1,7],
[8,3,5,8,5,2,5,9,9,4]]) is that numpy or does python have arrays like that
Poke assures us that PHP isn't quite as bad as it used to be. But still, it's hard to clean up a language that just grew organically from humble beginnings, without a clear overall design structure.
I recently upgraded some of my prime number generating programs to use bytearray for boolean arrays. They use much less space than lists, and are faster as well. That's why they're my new best friend.
I'd be interested to see when exactly arrays were introduced to the language. ctrl-f for "array" on docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/index.html reveals zero results, so... Before 2.0?
Here's a silly circle drawing program I put together a couple of hours ago. It's based on the old formula for generating Pythagorean triads: a=u²-v², b=2uv, c=u²+v². Also note that for complex z=u+iv, z² =a+ib, so if (u,v) is a point on the unit circle with angle θ from the +ve X axis, then (a,b) is also on the unit circle with angle 2θ.
import tkinter as tk
def circle_gen(ox, oy, radius):
u, v = 1, 2
while True:
u2, v2 = u * u, v * v
r = u2 + v2
u, v = (u2 - v2) / r, 2 * u * v / r
yield int(ox + radius * u), int(oy + radius * v)
def draw(gen):
photo.put('#000', next(gen))
root.after(1, draw, gen)
width, height, radius = 320, 256, 100
root = tk.Tk()
photo = tk.PhotoImage(width=width, height=height)
tk.Label(root, image=photo).pack()
draw(circle_gen(width / 2, height / 2, radius))
root.mainloop()
@BlackThunder As for concrete feedback, "seperated" and "seperation" should be "separated" and "separation". And it's conventional to upload the source code of your project to Github, not just the executable :-)
@vash_the_stampede I have no formal education after high school, but I was always good at mathematics at school. I've taught myself a few things since then, though.
"Here, run this opaque executable which produces opaque executables that you should also run" would be suspicious if it wasn't coming from a billion dollar company. Actually it's still kind of suspicious.
@vash_the_stampede It depends on what you want to do. Eg, if you want to do low level graphics stuff you need to know basic geometry, and it helps to know some trigonometry. And matrices. But apart from that, you don't need a lot of maths to be a good coder. Unless you're specifically coding mathematical stuff, or solving coding challenges based on maths puzzles.
@roganjosh I had the opportunity to learn some programming during my high school years in the early 1970s, and I've been an amateur coder ever since. :)
stackoverflow.com/a/52727874/10255652 no lie I know its no major task, but I was proud of this solution, flame on haha just have no one else to share with taht can relate
We've come to this conclusion before: that Counter is good at exactly one thing, and trying to make it do anything more than that is typically more of a headache than it's worth
@vash_the_stampede It's a pretty simple module, and well worth learning. Mind you, it's also good to know how to parse stuff manually. But the CSV module is good at handling the unpleasant corner cases. And even when you do read the data with the CSV module you often have to do additional processing to get the data into the structures you want.
i was just curious since counter can update if it has a=1 then a=3 i was wondering if we could associate them in the list and use counter directly on them , just exploring possibilities curious
@AndrasDeak hah but it could end up being a better solution, you never know til you try
This reminds me of a time when we went to the forest with some friends in elementary school, and when we were doing some DIY and we couldn't drive the screws with a screwdriver anymore, we resorted to using a hammer. Nice sparks. And we all have both eyes each.
@Withnail well, there was a large clearing with a...kind find the name. The elevated construction made of wood from which hunters and less-lethal people can stalk wildlife. So we climbed up and decided to add some features :D
A hunting blind (US), hide or machan is a cover device for hunters or gamekeepers, designed to reduce the chance of detection. There are different types of blinds for different situations, such as deer blinds and duck blinds. Some are exceedingly simple, while others are complex. The legality of various kinds of blinds may vary according to season, state and location.
== Types of blinds ==
Blinds may be stable or mobile. An early blind used by hunters was a cocking-cloth, a piece of canvas stretched on a frame like a kite that would permit hunters to approach pheasants and to shoot them through...
@vash_the_stampede, Regarding your answer here, I appreciate your energy in explaining your code line by line. But I think much more valuable is explaining the general / idea or concepts. If it's helpful (and I should do this more often), you can use bullet-points for 2-3 main ideas.