No, not exactly. Currently I'm doing this: signal.signal(cap_signal, lambda (sig,frame): interruptLoop = True. In a Loop I then check on interruptLoop and break --> if interruptLoop: break.
But this isn't working. The value of interruptLoop will be False even the signal is fired AND handled.
@Code-Apprentice my script has been going for over 700 hours and its still not done! (timelock crypto puzzle)
Can parallel computing be used to factor extremely large numbers? Can anyone explain how to do this with Python or tell me where I should start looking for answers?
@roganjosh need help to set the scroll of Spyder Ipython console to bottom by default. Just like a windows cmd will scroll to the bottom when its printing verbose.
When I type pip in the terminal (not python console) of PyCharm, I get <module 'pip' from 'C:\\Users\\Asus\\Google Drive\\Technicals\\Programming\\Python\\Python Scripts\\Web Scraping\\venv\\lib\\site-packages\\pip-10.0.1-py3.6.egg\\pip\_init_.py'>
I did python3.6 -m pip install bs4 and I get a message: python3.6 is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch files
But python -m pip install bs4 --upgrade --force-reinstall works
Right what I noticed sometimes is that the project folders I have in python
Have the library folders inside them
I am guessing bs4 was not placed inside the same project's folder
So when I press External Libraries on the project explorer of my pycharm I only have folders like python36, venv, DLLs, Lib,site-packages, pip-10.0.1py3.6.egg but no bs4
Anyway thanks for the help i'll just have to play around and figure it out :/
@WantingtobeanAndroidDevelor Anaconda does not, in any way, force you to use Spyder. It's a python distribution that you can link to any IDE that you want
@AndrasDeak I fixed it already. There is indeed a site-packages folder inside the project folder of each project in PyCharm that contains all the installed libraries
Also using pip install in the cmd does not make the library detectable by PyCharm
There is a built in cmd for PyCharm called the terminal
I had to close PyCharm and run it as admin for it to accept pip commands
@WantingtobeanAndroidDevelor Also, I have similar observations to you. Sometimes you can just crash the kernel and have no idea how or why, it just restarts. Add to that the weirdness of some features that Andras alluded to, and it's a good idea just to run your code periodically outside of Spyder to ensure it hasn't messed with imports etc
"eluded" instead of "alluded". This is how important my morning brew is.
@Aqua4 I'm not sure I exactly understand. You mean when printing giant blocks? If you print by line then the console will keep up. I don't think there's a feature as such that you can activate, I think on mega printouts the console just chokes and doesn't do what it's supposed to do but that's conjecture
It kinda half scrolls down through the block but doesn't always make it to the end
Well, you're an unreliable witness for when I take the Spyder crash to court...
I actually don't know how Repl.it works. In the past I've played with someone else's code to test; does that change affect everyone if I'm not the owner of the post?
@taritgoswami I think that is perfectly acceptable for beginners. Not only will you learn what types of mistakes are associated with which error messages, you will become skilled at debugging your own code. That’s an important skill. My advice would be to continue to learn and be patient. And, of course, do not shy away from the official python documentation and related tutorials.
@taritgoswami to the extent that I know python, you really just need a real-world problem to solve and just brute-force your way through errors, trying to actually understand them at each step. People learn differently, I couldn't follow a set tutorial
I got some advice yesterday on AoC problem one and Arne mentioned that I should build the dict with both prereqs and conditions. I have managed to do that but still, after much trial-and-error, cannot go from the dict I’ve built to my final order. If anyone could take a look… dpaste
My lecture attendance at uni hovered between 10-20%. I can't count the the threats I got by email of failing the course. Nobody rushed to apologise when I got a 1st in the exam.
People learn in different ways. A formal tutorial just doesn't work for me
I managed a lab and nobody was injured. Meanwhile I find we're being microwaved in the office above the lab because the microwaves leaked. Stuff like that is almost expected in that industry.
It's comparing apples to oranges. Honestly. The mentality is so different between the two professions
I once spilled methyl cyonide all over my leg. Just packed my jeans with bluerool and go sit in the sun for a cig while it evaporates off :P
@jpp, as per yours and Alex Riley's suggestion, I am planning to move some content from the merge canonical into separate posts. Specifically, I am going to make a separate canonical for index-based merging, and a third for computing the cartesian product. cc @piRSquared
I will not make the cartesian canonical a duplicate target because there are enough questions that serve that purpose already; mine will go into more detail with performance.
Thing is, I'm also wondering whether the section on merging multiple DataFrames should be separate from the post on merging two frames. I don't really think it should, but I don't mind either way, and I'd like to hear some thoughts.
I think the main issue with questions is that askers aren't aware of the variety of ways to answer their question. Throwing a narrow dimension of answers at them may not expand their mind. Allowing for a more comprehensive bit of information is more useful.
It just can't be too much at once. I don't think your post is.
bah, @AndrasDeak, @AnttiHaapala also thought to use the same thing @MartijnPieters did. I went and built it myself. Sometimes I'm so proud of myself up until I realize I just rebuilt an inferior wheel.
And, I'm now upset with myself because I should've remembered.
@piRSquared very true. I do think it is good to put things into perspective when learning something. If someone asks a question about joining on a column, they are given an answer doing that and nothing more. Tomorrow, if they want to merge on the index, they will not know how and will end up asking another question. Really the only thing I feel should be in it's own post is the cross product section which was originally included here because it makes sense in the context of explaining SQL JOINs.
when I rewrote it after, I was like "OK, this order doesn't work, let's swap + and - -> it works". If I had done that the first time around there would've been trouble if neither worked :D
People seem to think Python room regulars are ‘too understanding’:
I lately started to hang around more in the python chat room, and I believe that between that one, php, javascript and the lounge, people in python chat are exceptionally understanding, sometimes too much, if I may. Some users are usual close votes casters, but generally the question need to be really bad for people to get involved. Maybe that also participates to what gnat describes... — Félix Gagnon-Grenier16 mins ago
That post by gnat has my back up a little. I've really been contemplating a meta post for the Python tag because, frankly, we're getting hammered by it being the new teaching language. I'd rather see his name on a few more close votes before he criticizes mods
@AnttiHaapala what benchmark, though? I'm sure I could ask really stupid C questions after hours of research. Or are we talking people dumping requirements?
well, one paragraph questions with no code, backwards indentation in code, photos of screens with code in them, mentions of compilation errors but no sign of the messages, etc... and if I do not cv-pls them with a couple other souls, all them would be answered, upvoted and stay forever
my favourites are the kinds of "I am doing this stupid thing that shouldn't work... but why does it work nevertheless"
@Arne I needed that, lol. I have been getting my butt whooped by this problem (probably will with the rest too). It's like the solution is right on the tip of my brain. I can see what exactly needs to happen but keep getting snagged in the implementation.
But I've got to give it a rest rest for now :) Thanks and rhubarb