I'm unable to import matplotlib ` from matplotlib import ( ImportError: cannot import name 'get_backend'`. I'm on python 3.6.7 & matplotlib 3.0.0 . looks like a related but I don't understand it at all https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/issues/12601
@WayneWerner I just did "import matplotlib" and got the error. Found a temporary solution by downgrading matlplotolib to 2.2.3 There is some compatibility issue going on btw Python>3.6.6 and matplotlib 3.0...
I was running an optimization code for around 3 hours and my colleague accidentally moved the file to a different directory. The scipt seems to be running on terminal, but can this cause some problems?
Grand. :) I'm working on a new deployment of a thing, so a lot of my time is being spent waiting on stuff running today. Filling the time with python chat and an O'Reilly book...
user6718998
So what I am trying to do is print all accounts from where money went on a ether network. It start from the given account and I want to show all accounts where money went. Now I am doing it for the first account where money was ever sent and then by applying recursivity, I am using the first account money was sent to and show his first account where money was sent and so on..
user6718998
But I noticed some account can send money back from the person they received and I don't want those to be taken into parsing again cuz I would be in an infinite loop pastebin.com/517PWXLi
Hello, given myList = [0, 1, 1, 1, 10, 100] what's the easyest and fastest way to visualize its histogram using plt.hist(myList)? I want to be able to see ALL different numbers in the list and their corresponding frequency
@Thewise, in your tmp_tx list you are only returning the values which have a tx_receipt _status as not 0. so why can't use some other unique identifier at this point itself to not receive money back from the same account?
def recursive_func(arg, seen=set()):
if arg in seen:
return # skip arguments that were already seen
seen.add(arg)
# run recursive logic
recursive_func(other_arg_maybe, seen)
only works if your input parameters can be hashed though
ahh, I think I mistyped up there.. that's what I get for avoiding the use of mutable default arguments.
Yeah, you don't need to pass seen in the recursive call
Recently I got tripped up on variable assignment, where I have a variable foo which was a class attribute (e.g class.foo = 1) in one program and a second program where foo gets updated. The second program was imported into program 1 and I did not realise that foo was also being updated but this variable foo was passed back into the first program altered. Looking back it makes sense but does anyone have a pointer on where I can read up on this?
@cd123 there's usually just one object for any given Python module in a Python process, meaning there's usually one class object for any class definition
Hi everyone, I'd like to have little help to implement a stiffness solver in Python as shown here. I tried it with my code but I get a few errors I haven't had before trying to implement the solver like "float is not subscriptable. I can share you my code using Pastebin if it's ok for you.
Someone wrote it that why, and only that someone can tell you why they did it that way. Sure we can guess on why but at the end of the day we can't read minds :\
Here is my previous working normally. And this one is after the changings as mention in the post I'm using to implement the solver. Any help will be very appriciated.
@Hakaishin literally still don't understand what you want us to do. Help you brainstorm a million reasons on why someone did something until we hit a possible acceptable reason ?
If you don't know just don't answer. I'm sure there is a reason for this construct it was written by an electrical engineer at nvidia so I would assume it is not just random code obfuscation
@MooingRawr this is a way used to solve differencial equations or system of differential equations which are to harsh to solve numerically with "basic" methods.
@Hakaishin I apologize if I seem agressive, not my intent, but I'm generally curious on what you are hoping for ? if I hit the nail on the head then okie, that's fine, hopefully others can chim in.
True, I am especially appaled at the fact that this person has allegedly a bsc and msc in computer science. But there are so many basic violations of good practice that I am starting to think there are there on purpose to slow down people trying to reproduce the results
I never understood why people believe in the hanlon's razor and not in the opposite. There should be one named that says exactly the opposite. A prior neither makes more sense
1 is debatable and not even so well defined as one might think and for 2 I have kind of hard time right now since I can not understand what this is even supposed to mean...
since something can only be stupid with respect to an average, there can be no such thing as stupidity being more common. Except if of course one takes different vantage points for what is stupid. Meaning one thinks one is ahead of the curve, which given the sector might be a valid assumptions I guess. But I'm still not sure how valid 2 is, since any malice can once the person is being pressed very often be converted into stupidity so the actual amount of malice in the world
This question. Should it be raised on Meta (it's now deleted by the author)? I can't see how it happens unless someone is trying to develop a spam bot or something. How do you accidentally post lorem ipsum?
Is it accepted in 'ask questions' to ask how the program is working (a dash visualization). I've made it work for my case and now need to modify it to suit my needs. But I can't do that if I don't understand how it works. I've written some of the intermediate data structures and to text files, trying to read which DS is doing what. But I don't see much.
@Code-Apprentice Hmmm, luckily while looking at the DS's right after my above comment found some sense in the code, eventually I'm hoping to be as specific as I can.
Note that this represents my opinion on the matter. It isn't an official stance, and shouldn't be taken as such.
Additionally, this doesn't completely apply to cases of already-established users posting gibberish. It's probably better to flag those as NAA and give them the benefit of the ...
Same thing ^
Not official stance but Undo has become a mod and a very good one since
Ok, I bow to public opinion. I cba fighting my corner. Something didn't seem right to me, I raised it, it will be voted on or dismissed as appropriate.
I can only say that it's completely at odds with every spam post I've encountered, considering I've seen thousands, but it can go to moderator judgement or SO employee consideration who have seen orders of magnitude more posts
@AndrasDeak probably right. I also covered in a comment. I could faff and try to find the exact channels on a broken phone and just lose the link
Bleurgh. I don't mean I've seen thousands of spam posts :P
*Thousands of posts, and from those, it doesn't gel with the spam posts I've seen
What Andras said. It definitely warrants a flag, to alert mods of possible proto-spam, or robotic posting. But it's of zero concern for meta. OTOH, the SOCVR are interested in tracking potential spammers.
On a related note I was reviewing posts in the queue the other day and came across a post in Arabic. I marked it as “Needs Editing.” It turns out the post was a test to see if I was paying attention and should have been marked as spam. My thought was that the post simply needed to be translated but apparently I’m supposed to be able to detect spam in languages other than English.
It's fine. There's no possibility of shadowing. You can see even the language core reusing built-in names as method names, like float.hex reusing the hex name.
Sure, they don't shadow, but they can confuse simplistic syntax highlighters (like the one I use), so they get coloured as if they were a built-in name
I'm running an API in Flask, currently just as localhost. If I want to allow multiple devs (who work remotely) work on the front-end and allow them to make requests to the server, am I right in saying I need to buy a domain? Or is there some free way I can do this whilst in development?
Well, I'm on a lone sailor for most of my coding time so I'm probably not the best person to answer this, but I really wouldn't be looking to expose an endpoint on the interwebs for development before considering other options
Sounds to me like you both need to set up self-contained development environments. It shouldn't be difficult to set it up so that you each run your own database, backend, and frontend for development.
In fact in many ways this is preferred for development so that you aren't stepping on each other's toes by modifying data that the other is using.
@Code-Apprentice Yeh I think I'm edging toward this. I suppose if I wanted us to have the same data, I could write a script to pre-populate the DB and get all of the developers to execute the script
But yeah, @roganjosh you are right, it isn't a crucial requirement
@Sam I don't know how flask manages this, but with Django, there is a command to export data to a JSON file then anyone can load that data into their own dev environ. This is incredibly useful when you want to start from a pristine dataset.
@Code-Apprentice I'll have to look into those commands, thanks. I have a feeling that you're using some kind of database management to make that work, though
I'm currently writing my own migration scripts before pushing to production but I think I need something a tad more sophisticated :)
what kind of migrations? Are you adding tables or modifying columns? If that is all, then you can do ./manage.py makemigrations to generate the migration scripts for you. If you have more complex data modifications, then you probably need custom scripts.
The dumpdata and loaddata commands are built into django. The only database management I'm using is whatever magic django does.
my use case for both of these commands has only been for my dev environ. I'm not involved in deployment.
@roganjosh I lost track of this conversation...or rather I thought more people were involved in it. Anyways, Django does a lot of the magic for me as far as migrations
Almost everything I see about django is for an ORM whereas, what I've built is basically a control panel with 100s of buttons for simulation settings and I just can't conceptualize it in that format. But changes to database schema are ugly
Knowing a bit about how you'd handle it in django is not wasted info for how I might handle it in flask. It just gives me more angles to research because I'm still very much a learner
in one project that I work on regularly, we declare model classes in python code. Django generates migrations from these. Which in turn modify the database as necessary.
the entire database schema is defined from the model classes. We do not mess with the schema at any lower level than that.