You can't tell a float "you must have two digits after your decimal point" because the number of digits after the decimal point is a fact about its textual representation, and floats are not responsible for their own textual representation
The HackerRank question writers give a darn about string formatting because it's easier to verify an answer is correct if you only have to check against one literal value
It's more work for them to confirm that 26.5 is correct and 26.50 is correct and 26.500 is correct, etc etc
One billion quatloo penalty to HackerRank for not having a framework in place that allows problem authors to specify "the answer to this question is 26.5, but accept any output that resembles a float literal that would compare equal to 26.5"
@Permian only if they want to be, and i dont think many people are inclined to do them here. A lot of folks here have an insane amount of experience with coding every day so.
Afternoon! Got a quick question...I have a dataframe of mainly floats, but also some strings. I am trying to simply remove the strings. I've tried df['colA'].replace('string', '') but it doesn't change the dataframe at all. Any ideas?
If you're saying "What's the point of Python when it's so slow?", you are free to use a different language if you don't like it. If you're saying "What's the point of itertools if Python is slow whether you use itertools or not?", not all libraries exist for the sole purpose of making things faster.
I live a double life. My work projects are all web pages and none of them use Python. My personal projects are all Python and none of them are web pages.
You don't need to look at the language's relative position of the list to guess how much slower it is than the others. The "X" column outright tells you how slow it is: 143 times slower than the fastest submission.
It's not as if there's a fast_itertools module with a fast_groupby function you could be using instead. If you need groupby's functionality, use groupby. If you don't need it, don't use it.
It's fine to say "why not use these faster languages?", I just don't understand why you're saying it specifically in the context of a conversation about itertools.
If you're saying "Python on its own is fine, but once you discover that you need itertools, you should switch to java or c++ instead", that seems like a weirdly specific standard. Oddly specific especially since you've never used itertools before
Perhaps you're saying "Python is good enough for simple tasks, but once you have to import anything, you've reached a threshold of complexity where you should switch to using a faster language", which is a coherent opinion, although I don't agree with it
If I'm changing something for the purpose of speed it's far more likely that I'm thinking about it incorrectly, rather than any form of optimization being necessary or worthwhile.
FWIW I know that BP (British Petroleum) works with a logistics system that can make 10,000 guesses a second on the travelling salesman problem. I know because I met the guy who built it. I've since just touched that myself, but now down to ~3900 a sec with all the conditions I have to check in a loop.
In fact, I know of other systems written in "compiled" languages that can can be outstripped by good python (well, numpy), so speed often is a poor argument against Python
But there's always OSRM to give you the wtf factor on how fast it can work in C++ :)
thats the thing though, its why i dont think python should be called blanket slow. Its the same as calling it an interpreted language. Its not exactly wrong, but its just "off" because its not black and white.
numpy offshores the heavy lifting to C, so its blazing fast. but i cant fault someone for saying numpy is "python turf" so to speak. because it is being used from python and so seamlessly it might as well be taken for granted in the language
or fortran :P i dont really understand how that all works out that much
There are a million possible applications of Python that will look nothing like the N-body problem and have completely different relative performance than what is predicted by the N-body benchmark I linked
@roganjosh I'm not so sure about that. It's not a strong argument that "<language> is not slow because we have <part of language> that is not slow and also not implemented in <language>"
At the same time, "I am coding in <language>. This language allows me to outsource work to <faster language> without having to understand the <faster language>. My code runs pretty fast. but the <language> is slow if i dont use the <faster language> section and write a native replacement."
That turns into a practical issue.
Because, practically speaking, <language> is letting me write fast code.
@JackStout mm, I'm pretty sure assembly is important and if you know programming then your time is worth an awful lot
If a problem that's actually interesting pops up on SO, it's possible that that OP's company has spent several days' salary on that person while they're hitting a brick wall but it can be solved in 10 minutes, and the solution can be for a project worth millions
also idk I find most itertools things I use quite readable. everything can be abused of course..
@roganjosh :crying laughing emoji:
@RobertFarmer measure how long it will take to run the search over a small subset, and extrapolate. E.g. "ok it takes 1 second to search 100k, so can estimate ~3k seconds for 300M"
Alright, So one workbook has job codes stored as 00xx or 000x using zeroes to act as fillers because they must be four digits in that workbook the other just has the plain digits. for example Code 0002 in workbook 1 would be the same as 2 in workbook 2. Is there A way I can compare these entries? They're both strings stored in the workbook rows.
Because that data will be lost. Forever. If you fancy your chances at getting this right first time (and keep in mind I've done quite a bit of debugging with you today) then delete it.
Oh, I do have backups Its just the final copy will have the completed jobs deleted from the Workbook and Jobs that are No longer in service also deleted and jobs still incomplete or not mentioned will be kept.
i'm writing some code that involves the user putting in entries that are then formed into a numpy matrix, that's used for mathematical operations elsewhere in the code.
i want the user to be able to input square roots, constants like pi and e, imaginary numbers, and then standard operations like *,/,+,-.
eval() is frowned upon for obvious reasons, but i've been looking into alternatives and ast doesn't seem to do what i want either - though perhaps i'm looking in the wrong place.
i wonder if there's some simple dictionary type thing i could put together, that would handle a list of functions, but would result in an error for anything else...
it's a command line interface that's pretty simple - it'll ask, 'what do you want in (1, 2) spot of the matrix: ' and take in the input and store it properly, and then that matrix is assigned to a user inputted key in a dictionary.
If someone sits at the computer and wants to hack your vulnerabilities with eval, why wouldn't they just delete the files via literally any other method or fire up the Python interpreter and do it?
@roganjosh You don't necessarily have to be sitting at the machine which is running the code. Say for example, someone writes a Django webapp that uses eval()
i think its just a concern of a reputation hit, so to speak, you shipping a product with an exploit like that. alternatively, add a warning like the docs do
time-series data that is on the order of days just sucks to deal with.
"how many of these events occur per day?" -- "well the events are variable length so...when is the cutoff for each day? If something starts at 23:50 and ends at 00:10, which day does it belong in? What if there's more time in the one before and after?"
"oh you gotta normalize it now by the number of days in each month"
"oh this day was an hour shorter because DST"
Why can't all timeseries data just be on the order of seconds? lol
Mine is not so much about historic data but projecting into the future. For now I can plan for the next 50 weeks from last Monday. But I really think the code will crash on a leap year
tbf it's a minor niggle to deal with, where there is week 53. I just need to get round to it
Not just a leap year. Just week numbers in general.
> The one exception involves deleting a question right after someone posts an answer to it. This (fairly rare!) pattern is seen as so overtly hostile that it does impose a pretty stiff penalty... But that's also a far cry from "self-censoring".
that's what I had in mind, I don't know how "right after" is implemented