I had a problem in trying to create a progress bar for python when using shutil.copy , i browsed a bit and got this wonderful package called "Winutils" it leverages windows's copy dialog when using the copy function. Its amazinggggg.. This is why I love python :-D
Nice.. Good for you .. I am just lazy, I wanted to implement a progressbar , I searched around on SO and found a 90line code with threading and whatnot for a basic monochromatic progressbar , Instead I choose this winutils package , literally one line of code with the awesome windows copy dialog so saved me close to probably half and hour.
is there a difference between scopes and namespaces? I see these two words interchangeably used in python, but can't really grasp the difference between these two
Scope I know is something inside a function, or a block of code, and variables defined within it cannot be accessed outside it, but what is a namespace then
for a very layman approach to name spaces, think of what modules are doing when you import numpy as np. every function there is contained in np.something
if you know the scale is 0 to 100 but you only have values from 49 to 51 the default plot will have 49 as the bottom of the range and 51 as the top and so the plot will look like you have data all over the range when in fact of course all the dots are close together near the center
so you can explictly tell it to draw a bigger plot which reflects the real range, not just the points actually attested in the data
im looking for a term so i can better google my problem. Could use the assistance. basically, i want to write out an incrementing counter whenever a key changes.
@tripleee oh, uh, nah i just need to create this column on an existing dataframe. Except that speed is important and the list could be pretty big, i am not given much context there.
Has anyone here ever stumbled over a page python-course.eu? It's as far as I can see, horribly bad. I only read two articles so far, one on slots and the other on packages.
I thought the page looked familiar. The last time I read articles in it, I didn't like it very much
@ParitoshSingh list or df column? There's probably a smart pandas way but the naive numpy would be (col[1:] != col[:-1]).cumsum() and you probably have to restore the leading 0
Spyder uses the same principle basically. Really useful in some cases and causing confusing issues to debug in others. For example, if you copy/paste some line of code from SO into the console and don't realise it tramples on a builtin name, all of your subsequent scripts that use that builtin now won't work
I was too optimistic here... Anyone want to earn some points explaining the metacls.__call__ -> cls.__new__ -> cls.__init__ hierarchy or do I have to do it myself?
guys quick question i'll be converting all my forms to WTForms for CSRF protection but i was wondering is it better to use Bootstrap or flask-bootstrap and why ?
@Aran-Fey You come up with pretty interesting questions, this one and the bases one, but I had a question, are these questions something related to a specific scenario, or these concepts needed to work with day to day python Because a lot of these things are not really covered in many tutorials so perhaps it's something you stumble upon when you were working on something perhaps
I mean, there's plenty of things that WTForms will help with, such as validation but you can just use flask-csrf specifically for csrf and you can add <input type="hidden" name="csrf_token" value="{{ csrf_token() }}"> in your forms
@DeveshKumarSingh They're definitely not day-to-day concepts... they're mostly interesting little quirks I discover while reading/answering SO questions or sometimes while coding
is there some reliable way to clean up (async) iterables when aborting for loops? the only thing I could come up with are some ugly AsyncContextManager[AsyncIterator[T]] stacks
@roganjosh Aye, i had settled for temp = df['col0'].values[1:] != df['col0'].values[:-1] and then i had done an result = np.zeros(len(df['col0']), dtype = np.int32) before filling it. not familiar with np.full
i guess that should be good enough to hold up
then did a cumsum on temp
curious though, does an array with this output have a name?
looks like .values is slower. not by too much but slower.
@Arne i've run into them only once before, and it was in context of lambdas and map filter reduce It helped me at the time. I suppose if you're looking for indepth explanations, it's definitely not the right place.
Slightly unrelated, but it does look like we can't make blanket statements about .values. The operation can make one faster than the other.
%timeit "np.diff(df['col1'].values)"
10.7 ns ± 1.39 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000000 loops each)
%timeit "np.diff(df['col1'])"
12.8 ns ± 0.208 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000000 loops each)
@DeveshKumarSingh next time if a question is missing the generic python tag, add it. Gold badgers can single-handedly close dupes if the question is tagged correctly.
for np.diff, it seems like explicitly using .values edged out. i wonder if that is because im using a numpy operation? but then again, series has a diff operation too.
Well, I give up looking for the question/answer I was looking for on why we might wanna use np.where instead of letting pandas handle the datetime. If jpp hadn't answered so many questions, I might have had some hope, but I'm not trawling 195 answers in the hope that the question even had the datetime tag
python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008 is more of a style guide and coding conventions so if the syntax is valid but doesn't look good to the eye, python won't complain
@connectyourcharger Well, it was over a year ago so the score could be anywhere now and it wasn't a particularly interesting question but the results in the answer got ever-more-interesting so it probably didn't get huge attention at the time either
But I think the search would be fruitless; I appreciate the offer though. It was a pandas question about datetime comparisons; numpy only came up in a side test to see whether it would beat pandas. The user is jpp. Honestly, though, with what I've given you to go off, you'd be asking me "is this the one?" repeatedly
@AndrasDeak yeah, that question is the only reason i was able to have a "suspect" to work with. It was an absolute nightmare, because at first the error differences were tiny enough to pass by unnoticed
Considering that bees have been observed to "solve" the travelling salesman problem, I can't understand why they are so hopeless at getting out of my house. I've had to release 6 in the last 2 days as they repeatedly fly into the only panel on my window that isn't open :(
@roganjosh mind you - it is amusing (in a way) how when the window's open these things can fly in and then just look they've got completely bonkers flying into everything
@JonClements I don't know how bees perceive glass tbh since I assume it is different in different spectra. But it's been quite windy here the last 2 days and they don't seem to have evolved to detect fresh air flow as a potential escape
Possibly it looks entirely different to them depending on whether the sun is on the inside or the outside of the glass
there's no doubt something in that... for instance - you/I would know it's glass because we know it's err, well glass...
there's no doubt YT videos of people walking into non-open glass doors and doing themselves mischieve but... then you know how foolish you've been and just open the door rather than keep trying
If there's a lot of visible light coming through but some of the UV and IR is reflected this would probably just mean that the glass has a bit of a tint
they can still see through and would not have evolved to handle transparent obstacles
The human analogue is a sheet of glass that reflects a portion of red light. You would probably see the glass blue or green or whatever the complement of red is.
So presumably the glass from the outside must be visible as a real barrier, but on the inside it then becomes transparent because certain wavelengths have been reflected away
I'm losing myself as well... what I took from that was... if everything I see to me is completely transparent, but there's a tint "somewhere" - might be I just avoid the tint and try to walk fly through the rest or something?
Then how are they so adept at getting in to a house but not so at getting out? Or is this a case that we're only perceiving their efforts once they're actually in the house?
the fact that some light is reflected on the outside only means that 1. that light is missing on the inside, and 2. on the outside you see that reflection stronger
@roganjosh yes, imagine a pool of random walkers. Some will get in, and once they're in it's hard to randomly walk out.
It's a bit more complicated probably: they see through the glass, they think they can leave there, so they just try doing that without realizing they should look elsewhere. If you're in a tunnel and see a light you won't try to go sideways to get out.
- name: enable verbose mode
ini_file: dest=/etc/setting.conf section=DEFAULT option=verbose value=True backup=yes
tags: configuration
If i want to change another option in the config, will i have to create another name section ?
@roganjosh yeah... I think @Andras is right... but you'd have thought while they're not going to be philosophers or whatever, they'd have at least as much memory retention to just go "nope - that didn't work - let's try something else thing time"
I'm going to take a wild stab at that since they don't really live that long - then it doesn't really matter as you're going to be replaced by others anyway kind of thing... they then repeat the same and so on and so forth...
@Paritosh you do know how to get out of the corner right? You're not going to keep running into the furniture or walls or something... we've only recently had this room re-done and all that... :p
oh poop... that wall doesn't work, going to try it again... nope... going to try that other wall... nope... ow ow ow! must be close - going to try that first wall again... :p
And, for some reason, I happened to overlook the significance of it being sung by Sting. 3 counts of contextual relevance, I'm pretty pleased with that as I head out for a bit :)
it's a string that contains control characters, namely \n and \u2013
and if you print that string:
>>> print("Eu test\n\nTest unicode \u2013 ")
Eu test
Test unicode –
that's what it should be
though come to think of it this might not answer your question
> As permitted, though not required, by the RFC, this module’s serializer sets ensure_ascii=True by default, thus escaping the output so that the resulting strings only contain ASCII characters.
yes I know about ensure_ascii, i was confuse about the double \ for unicode. I felt like i understood your answer but now I am confuse why printing the JSON would not show an additional \ in front of \n
prints "parse" the strings. same as \n would become a blank new line in a print, a \\n becomes a \n because the "escaping character" was an instruction during parsing.
@MisterMiyagi oh! that actually makes something "click" so to speak. I havent read anything up on async except broad strokes of how it allows you to do other things and work off of results only when you get them. The generator is definitely more "familiar unfamiliar" turf comparted to async.
I'm was originally studying math/physics and dreamed to be an astrophysicist. Life would lead me on a different path. If I didn't have to worry about feeding my family. I'd pick it up again.