A girlfriend I had in college thought that a plane had to flip upside down when it flew passed the equator so that people inside would not fall to the top of the plane.
Even if you believe that gravity in the south hemisphere pulls things towards the sky, that wouldn't make sense. If you're flying due south and cross over the equator, then you'd be moving in the direction of gravity and effectively be in freefall. The passengers would be weightless. Certainly a "please fasten seatbelts" situation, but there's no danger of them slamming into anything.
My favorite was a video where some guy used a globe and a toy airplane to prove the earth can't be round. He put the plane above the northern hemisphere, then moved it down to the southern one and said "As you can see, the plane started right side up but now it's upside-down." I was like "uh-huh, I'm following you so far", and then I waited for him to continue speaking... but he didn't. That was the entirety of his argument.
I suppose the plane would eventually need to corkscrew by 180 degrees so its bottom still faces the direction of gravity (and thus the earth would be overhead) but it's not a particularly tight maneuver. It could do it over the course of like an hour.
Here's a model that might make more sense. Suppose the earth is a flat disc. What popular media calls the "equator" is the edge, and each side of the disc corresponds to a "hemisphere". (this is not the model most popularly used by Flat Earthers -- they think both hemispheres are on the same side, and there's nothing on the other side)
There's no silly "all Australians dangle from tethers attached to the ground" logic this time. Gravity points towards the ground on both sides.
assuming the gravity points towards the centre of that disc, won't people walk tilted towards the centre on that 2D disc, assuming the gravitational pull on that disc is not as high as in the atmosphere
@PM2Ring happened to me just recently after graduation. Although I'd dreamt I'd messed up the dates for two exams and accidentally studied for the wrong one.
There is a sharp discontinuity in gravity on the plane of the disc. If you stand on the edge, then half of you will be pulled in exactly the opposite direction as your other half.
It can't be the case that there is a smooth gradient of direction of gravity pointing towards the axis of the disc, because then everyone in Australia would be pulled at like a forty five degree angle, rather than straight down.
If gravity instantly changes from "down" to "up" as the plane crosses the plane, then it would have to corkscrew 180 degrees quite quickly to correct the chaos in the cabin.
That is, assuming it descends by flying out into empty space and circling around in a gradual descent. I suppose if it moves slightly beyond the edge and nosedives, then the cabin will experience freefall that gradually returns to ordinary 1g as it levels out after it crosses the plane.
I am thinking how when you roll a coin around on a flat table it wobbles towards the centre and then falls flat on it's face, perhaps that happens in this model, and half the life is wiped out, much like Thanos' snap
The moon still goes around the earth and the earth still goes around the sun. There are two independent forces of gravity in this universe, called "Gravity classic" and "Gravity 2". Gravity Classic attracts objects towards one another in the way we are accustomed, but the gravitational constant is weaker and the exponent is smaller; this means that we can't feel the Gravity Classic exerted on us by the disc earth, but the disc earth feels the Gravity Classic exerted on it by the sun.
On the other hand, Gravity 2 only operates along the inherent axis of the universe, which the disc earth also happens to be aligned along. Gravity 2's constant and exponent is larger, so it only really influences things that are close together.
@DeveshKumarSingh Yeah. We can tell that other planets and the sun are round because they look round. (some flat earthers will say this with a straight face)
interesting, and there are forces at play apart from gravity, like what happens to the sunlight, how is weather patterns/ day and night patterns changes, what happens to the tides at sea
If I could abandon the pretense of logical thought, I'd blame the lizard people for intentionally making the Earth flatter and flatter over the course of eons, in order to bring about some sinister new world order
@DeveshKumarSingh Depends on where you are. Earth experiences some amount of Gravity Classic, so the disc would really be more like a biconvex lens. It would be razor thin at the edge and thickest at the axis.
Just veering off the topic slightly for a moment, I remember reading an old scifi story set on a world with such extreme gravity that the people had no word or concept for falling. Stuff falls so quickly in that gravity field that their nervous system can't register it. If you let go of something, it's instantly on the ground.
I think you could reasonably have tectonic plates on Disc Lens Earth, but you might expect the layout of the north plates to be a mirror image of the layout of the south plates, since they're the same plates viewed from opposite sides. I don't think you'd necessarily see exactly symmetrical land masses; it would be possible for a mountain on one side to have an oceanic trench on the other side. It depends on how the plates interact.
@PM2Ring Reminiscent of the scifi story about the life forms that live on the surface of a star. Their society is basically two dimensional. I think @JonClements has spoken of it once or twice.
A couple of weeks ago, I did some calculations of falling speed on a neutron star, but I forgot to write down the results. But it was something like a 10 metre drop in a couple of milliseconds. When stuff falls onto a neutron star from a decent height, it tends to cause a nuclear explosion.
If you toss an object up and let it hit the ground, it will have more kinetic energy than if you had limply dropped it from your hand. This is true whether you're on a planet or a neutron star. So perhaps the explosion would have slightly more energy. But I doubt it would be very noticeable
I'm no nuclear physicist but I'm willing to guess that what's meant is that there is an amount of energy that would be required to start a nuclear reaction somewhere but not necessarily on that neutron start.
Or, hmm, I think I misread the question. You weren't asking "if I throw an ordinary object upwards on a neutron star, will it explode more forcefully than if I had let it drop?", you were asking "if an ordinary object causes a nuclear explosion, would an actual nuclear bomb cause some sort of super explosion?". I'm going to say "yes" because that's the more fun answer.
@Aqua4 It wouldn't make much difference. But to be fair, the stuff we normally see falling onto neutron stars is standard stellar gas: a mixture of hydrogen & helium. And hydrogen is your main ingredient in a hydrogen bomb. Chucking heavy stuff onto a neutron star is still pretty spectacular, though.
90% of questions of the form "can I do [thing] to a file?" can be solved by reading the file contents into a list, then asking "can I do [thing] to a list?", then writing the list to a file.
@Aqua4 What I'm hearing is "that approach has O(N) runtime so think twice about using it on huge files". This is true, but any approach will also be O(N) unless your file system is doing something clever that lets it store files in noncontiguous blocks of memory, and if you have access to that level of abstraction. So it's no worse than the sed approach.
Is it even possible to do this iteratively with O(1)* memory? You'd need to write to a file while reading from it. I know "+" mode exists, but I don't know what it's capable of exactly.
Hey guys! Do you happen to know if I want to run geckodriver in headless mode if I also need to have Firefox installed on my Linux machine? EDIT: With Selenium 3.11.0 and Firefox 57
Where is the documentation for the various modes of open? I'm looking at docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#open and the only thing I can find about "+" is the table that says "open a disk file for updating (reading and writing)". Is that all they have to say?
I might naively assume that the correct usage of "+" is open(filename, "+"), but this crashes with ValueError: Must have exactly one of create/read/write/append mode and at most one plus. Where does it say in the docs that I should be doing open(filename, "r+")? Is it in the tutorial somewhere...?
Zero points awarded for a reply like "it doesn't need to be in the docs because you can figure it out from the error message". It ought to be possible in principle to write a correct program on the first try without having to deduce critical interface information via guesswork
I notice that there is an additional sentence in the 3.x open docs that mentions "+" in the context of w+b and r+b. Neither of which are exactly what I was interested in, so these crazy eyes of mine filtered them out.
Whenever I make an outrageous claim that the documentation doesn't document something important, assume what I'm actually saying is "my reading comprehension is too poor to find this thing that is definitely documented, please help me"
@Kevin The docs maintainers tricked you. In Python 2, the docs for open did have info about all the modes, but they removed it in 3, since it was duplicated in io.
For some reason OPs have a tendency to self-delete when I imply that I know that they're working on an assignment for a class and not just asking a question about a problem that they came up with all on their own. How strange -- it's not as if we have an official ban on homework questions, or anything :^)
> There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened.
On the subject of variable naming, I was reminded the other day of a code base I inherited many years ago that kept track of the first and last line of a window scroll buffer using variables l_1 and l_l (representing the first and last lines). Now picture that with a Courier-style font, they are pretty much indistinguishable. I strongly suspect that the original dev did the work using more reasonable names (like first_line and last_line) and then in a moment of pique renamed them.
Using single argument type for anything other than logging purposes sets off one million alarms in my head, but I am loathe to call a dunder directly
And anyway x.__class__() should probably also raise the same million alarms and the only reason it doesn't is because I don't use __class__ nearly as much as I use type()
Yes, that'll do. I just hate that question. I wanted to ask OP why did you have it in a dataframe in the first place? The 2d structure was pointless. How did you pick how many rows and/or columns? Then I told myself "No one cares about your peeves."
Fungi skeeze me out. I think we should put all of them on a rocket ship and fire them off to another planet so the animals and plants can have earth to themselves*
I'm ambivalent about vinegar as a condiment. I would need to take a census to determine if there are any foods I like that require vinegar during the cooking process.
haha, and now i know a new phrase that so aptly describes something i've seen fairly often in new questions on SO without ever realising there was a phrase for it
In the template I want to show the parent categories(categories with parentId as NULL) and the sub categories(categories with parentId as one of the category ids) as dropdown items of the parent category
There are more efficient ways to find the common elements between two collections than by iterating over both of them in a double for loop. For instance, create a dictionary with categoryIds as keys, and lists of items as values. You populate it with list_1's items in O(N) time, then iterate through list_2 in O(N) time and check if its categortyIds are in the dict.
That sentence got away from me a little bit. Maybe some code would be more illustrative.
from collections import defaultdict
d = defaultdict(list)
for item in list_1:
d[item.categoryId].append(item)
for item in list_2:
for matching_item in d[item.categoryId]:
print("{item} and {matching_item} have identical categoryIds")
If you're thinking "great, but how do I do all of this using only the operations available to me in the template framework?", I have no idea. Maybe you can define this function on the Python side and call it from the template?
@Kevin I did a little mistake while posting the question here see again I am posting it. The mistake was just at on line: the if condition of the inner for loop
I have a category table like this:
Model:
class Category(models.Model): parentId = models.ForeignKey('self',on_delete=models.CASCADE,null=True) name = models.CharField(max_length = 200, db_index = True)
In the template I want to show the parent categories(categories with parentId as NULL) and the sub categories(categories with parentId as one of the category ids) as dropdown items of the parent category
You'd only need to tweak my above code to change the dict indexing in the second-to-last line:
from collections import defaultdict
d = defaultdict(list)
for item in list_1:
d[item.categoryId].append(item)
for item in list_2:
for matching_item in d[item.parentId]:
print("{item}'s parentId is the same as {matching_item}'s categoryId")
Is categoryId unique? you could do it with one less explicit for in that case.
d = {item.categoryId: item for item in list_1}
for item in list_2:
if item.parentId in d:
parent = d[item.parentId]
print(f"{item}'s parentId is the same as {parent}'s categoryId")
else:
print(f"Couldn't find parent for {item}")
4/5 because I could have guess that the one I missed was the other way around because why else would you ask the question but I really think that I should be right.
I don't understand why I'm struggling so much with trying to answer this pandas question. I first thought about get_dummies but all schools are missing "History". I've also tried different joins. This seems pretty fundamental; any pandas guys have a dupe or a question to shove me in the right direction?
I kinda thought an outer join of some kind would leave some NaNs to work out which schools were missing which classes, but it doesn't expand out for all school/course combinations
class A(object):
def hello(self):
print("A")
class B(object):
pass
obj = B()
obj.__class__ = A
@Aran-Fey good point, the edge-cases that are glossed over here are not really relevant to the question.
and the question is one of those annoying ones like "I'm trying to do this really weird/dumb thing. I'm not going to explain why I'm doing it like this".
> The problem here is that all objects in python have a __class__ attribute that stores the type of the object
Should a new answers duplicating an existing high voted one under the same question, only be flagged for moderator attention or additionally be downvoted?
I always imagined isin to represent somewhere.isin(something) but I realise it's actually something.isin(somewhere) (or more accurately, somethings.isin(somewhere)). I've been thinking about this backwards