I have a sensor that gives me X, Y, and Timestamp values. I can run multiple scans a day. So I created a table to store these values like this.
CREATE TABLE {SCAN####}(id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT, time INTEGER, X REAL, Y NUMERIC)
I figured I could have 1 table for each scan
and this would work well for storing each scan session
But I also want to store the sensor settings for each particular scan. So I thought I could create another table called ScanParameters where Each row corresponds to a scan table.
So essentially the tablenames of the scan tables are primary keys for the one parameter table.
Hi I was trying to print the index of each of the maximum probability of the probability
Array, While Executing the following code I get the error
" The truth value of an array with more than one element is ambiguous. Use a.any() or a.all()"
for prob_ in prob:
max_prob=max(prob_)
index=clf.classes_[prob.index(max(prob_))]
where the prob is an array
@Frrank your question is vague / unclear. Can you rephrase? Primarily flask supplies "context" to jinja templates and that's how jinja can render data in that template.
I doubt that. When it comes to Google it's usually the Googler who gives up / doesn't do it right.
@Frrank This is my finding from googling "jinja flask" (very first link) - flask.pocoo.org/docs/1.0/templating/#context-processors I think it somewhat describes what you want, or at least gives a hint on what else to search for.
This is from the 2nd link - http://jinja.pocoo.org/docs/2.10/templates/#variables Both sum up the entirety of your question.
I think I broke github... I created a repository named "TEST", and it doesn't show up in my repositories... but I can't create another one because "a repository with that name already exists"
eh, I wouldn't care much (since I'm saved by having stuff on bitbucket instead) about it. I really like the new changes overall, makes up for the downtime.
@flowersandbytes @justkelly_ok Stack SRE here - internally, the team is very aware of the problem and it’s been a priority, eg https://stackoverflow.blog/2018/08/07/get-to-know-our-new-code-of-conduct/
Change is very slow because the problem festered so long, and a vocal part of the community is resistant, like that obnoxious DM sea lion. 🤬
Tim Post writing up an empty "mistakes were made, let's think what we can do to move forward" post in 3...2...1...
In unrelated news, we watched the new Jurassic Park with the in-laws and there was a cameo of the original Jurassic Park theme. Now I want to listen to John Williams all day.
I'm currently trying to figure out how to make a good file upload API for a Flask project I'm working on, are there any examples out there of good file upload APIs?
@AndrasDeak I need to go do something to cool off all the rage. I literally started to type out a tweet 5 times and decided against it after a few seconds because it might do some harm (besides self-justification or whatever)...
Your time is well spent by not listening to some ignorant people.
(oh my English...)
I had hired someone who had a very bad impression of SO. The very first SO came up they spoke everything negative about it and I asked why, then they explained about some basic beginner stuff (closed questions, etc.) to which I nicely explained how the site works.
Instead of heeding to my advice on improving the question quality, they chose to link someone else's blog post on how SO is quite bad, etc. to which every single point I had mentioned during my nice explanation was still applicable.
@shad0w_wa1k3r I follow very many people on Twitter to get numb to stuff like that, and it works. The side effect is feeling desperate and anxious, but it's better than closing eyes/ears and living in a bubble
Admitting when I'm wrong is quite tricky. Right now I'm at a 20-80 balance of admitting I'm wrong vs moving the goalposts and/or making a flippant joke that dismisses the topic
Can someone explain to me how sometimes users can answer in questions I goldhammered? This answer came an hour after the close. stackoverflow.com/questions/52926851/…
@vaultah It's like when you are a kid you think there are quite a few "not so good" kids, and then once you grow up, you realise, some of those kids are still like that, or worse.
@AnttiHaapala When I am writing an answer and the question gets closed meanwhile I'm getting a message on top of the screen that the question was closed and no other answers will be accepted.
@timgeb On a technical level I don't think you can distinguish between "people that hacked the submission button" and "people that have spotty internet connections, who never got the 'sorry, can't answer now' message from the server"
So any rule saying "no hacking the button please" would be difficult to police
Presumably they could change the server-side code to simply reject any answer submitted after the closure. Since they have not done this, I guess they consider the grace period more beneficial than harmful
@AndrasDeak Interesting read, but that guy's too soft. We don't need a SO that's friendlier to newbies, we need a SO that's friendly to newbies and another SO that's high-quality Q&A. The current SO is neither.
> We've seen this for Math vs. MathOverflow, English vs. English Learners, Unix vs. Ubuntu... perhaps it's time for a more beginner focused Stack Overflow where duplicates are less frowned upon, and conversational rules are a bit more lenient?
@Aran-Fey SO would be so much better today if "that guy" were still in charge
This particular problem doesn't really require perfect code formatting anyway, since we can tell from context that line 2 should be indented inside line 1
@vaultah I get it, but it can be easily mixed depending on the context. If it's just that tweet, I would like to give some benefit of the doubt to codinghorror (since it's twitter, you don't usually think about your tweet as much, I don't)
@AnttiHaapala ooh, thanks, didn't know that. Don't know what I expected actually, in hindsight.
prob is a nested list of arrays something lik this [[array([0.16 , 0.032, 0.028, 0.608, 0.06 , 0.028, 0.084])], [array([0.116, 0.032, 0.668, 0.02 , 0.096, 0.028, 0.04 ])]]
>>> a = np.array([1,2])
>>> [a].index(1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: The truth value of an array with more than one element is ambiguous. Use a.any() or a.all()
what index does is it tries to do for elem in lst: if elem==arg
but np.array([1,2]) == 1 is an array of bools which you can't coerce into a scalar result
that's why you get the error
Your code is broken so you have to explain what you're trying to do so we can help you fix it.
for prob_ in prob:
#index=clf.classes_[prob.index(max(prob))]
#print("probability",prob_)
maxmm=[max(s) for s in prob_]
#axmm=max(prob_)
#rint(maxmm)
maxm.append(maxmm)
inde=clf.classes_[prob_.index(maxmm)]
finelly find the index of the maximum from clf.classes_
@AkhilAlexander we've been walking in circles for a few screenfuls of messages today. Please step back a bit, take your time, and put together a proper minimal example of what you're trying to do. The ominous MCVE the others were talking about. At this point we're just wasting each other's time.
@AnttiHaapala They are. I actually read the question about the flirting students. The question itself was perfectly reasonable, not sexist, and answered in a reasonable and mature fashion, IMHO. Some of the advice given may have been a little unrealistic, or sub-optimal, but hey, the people answering are amateurs, not professionals in adolescent psychology, and the quality of the answers is what you'd expect from intelligent articulate parents.
@Kevin, Hmm, I always thought requirements need explaining. So a bit different to "do my assignment, here are my requirements" but closer to "I tried this way because X". But feel free to reopen if you think you can help this guy.
Back when "too narrow" was a valid close reason, it would be beneficial for OP to explain how their problem could possibly occur to other people, but the sun has set on that age.
To me, that backslash in the OP's lambda is a symptom that he's a cargo-culter, making minor modifications to code that he doesn't really understand. He put the backslash in there because it was in some code he copied & pasted. He wants to use a lambda because it's a magic incantation.
Yeah, I was responding to the error message he was getting, didn't read that really all he wanted to store in those cells was 'A' or 'B', which is what the lambda would evaluate to. Just wrap it in ()'s and call it, and his problem would be "fixed", but definitely in a cargo-culty way
Anyone familiar with machine learning? I know nothing about ML but I want to try my hand at something that gets an image as input and produces a different image as output, and I'm having trouble figuring out what the correct algorithm for that would be. My guess is that I need a neural network?
No, not classification. Each input image has exactly 1 corresponding output image, and the AI is supposed to generate something similar to the desired output
in principle you could do naive interpolation and probably other non-NN solutions, but I'd expect a problem like yours to need something very complicated
training with 20 pictures of pugs you probably don't want to end up with a brown mush, you want a 21th weird artificial pug
What's a good high-profile example of a successful machine learning project? Is there anything more interesting than "Netflix / Amazon / Google's recommendation engine"?
I want, like, a robot that swims through the ocean picking up trash, using ML to distinguish plastic from seaweed
Hmm, hard to strike a balance between "profitable enough to be worth developing" and "more interesting than a tool which makes our product 1% more appealing"
@Aran-Fey Nothing on this blog that I've read to date solves your issue but this is a fantastic ML/image classification blog, IMO : pyimagesearch.com
Also, does anyone think it is possible to count the syllables in an English language sentence by simply counting vowels and characterizing their relationship to preceding or subsequent consonants?
I suspect there would be so many exceptions to the rule, that you may as well just manually construct a dictionary that maps every word to syllable count
I also suspect that some words' syllable count would vary based on region
What if we limited it to American English only? We have comparatively few place names in the style of "Worcestershire"
I wonder how many words' syllable counts you could get just by picking apart a corpus of literature with known line length, e.g. haiku or iambic pentameter
I wanted to use this to ask a fun algorithm question but it is too complex. My favorite questions on SO are language agnostic algorithm questions so I have been working on coming up with a good one.
It must seem complex on the surface with a beautifully simple answer. May never happen
@Kevin That should work pretty well. Linguists do poetry analysis to get an idea of pronunciation of ancient languages. Of course, there's room for error, but with a good network of cross-correlations you can be fairly confident of the sounds of the majority of words, especially those in frequent use.
Deriving the syllable count from a big collection of haikus is equivalent to solving a system of equations of the form a + b + c + d + ... = 5 (or 7), which doesn't seem too hard. The tricky part is if 1% of the haikus accidentally have incorrect syllable counts, then you have to assign confidence values to everything
"crooked", "dogged", "learned", are in a similar boat... Ooh! "moped" is a good one.
I moped 'round the house because my moped was in the shop
Corner cases aside, I think I have to retract my statement that it isn't too hard to solve a system of equations composed only of variables adding up to numbers. Considering you might have ten thousand equations, you can't combine them in every possible permutation until you get an answer, and expect to get that answer before the sun explodes.
"I will fly away from this problem with my awesome fighter jet, and thus stop caring about it" works on many problems, but not all problems.
"Giving your very young child their first experience with independence" is a problem solvable with a tricycle, which you would not want to run away from with your fighter jet
@ThiefMaster Think I should just add itsdangerous.want_bytes as an import again to fix Flask-Session? It's not part of the public API, but it looks like Flask-Session isn't actively maintained, and it's importing it.
Yesterday I discovered that the recipe I've been using to cook eggs calls for 2 tsp of butter, when I've been using 2 tbsp. This is a problem. A delicious problem.
I discovered this before I added the butter, but I added 2 tbsp anyway because the butter wrapper doesn't have measurements for tsp, and I couldn't be bothered to look up the conversion rate
Google now tells me that it's 3:1. That sounds about right.
I suspect the average person does not consult a recipe to cook scrambled eggs, but because I am very special I cannot be expected to uphold those kinds of societal standards