so I saved my original file as .xlsx, still after loading the workbook, it gives me error:
Warning (from warnings module): File "C:**\Python\Python36-32\lib\site-packages\openpyxl-2.6.2-py3.6.egg\openpyxl\reader\workbook.py", line 89 UserWarning: File contains an invalid specification for *******. This will be removed >>> UserWarning: File contains an invalid specification for *******. This will be removed
Right, sry... didn't use the chat that much... so I'll get right to it, I wont flood the chat here, I'll use pastebin... gimme 1 sec to format it there.
okay so here goes... I have this small sample code here. So when talking about operator precedence as we can see in that table the ternary conditional expression has a lower precedence than the logical operators notandor. Also I know that expressions evaluate from left to right so why is it that it evaluates first?
I used the functions to see which one is evaluated when in terms of printing
because the ternary has the lowest precedence, your line is parsed as return (first_fn() and fifth_fn() or second_fn() and third_fn()) if False else 'we returned False'
no but it's not, that's what I'm trying to say, the ternary is evaluated first (when it really should've been last). I interpreted the expression exactly like you with parenthesis. I just used the dissasembler module to see that the constant False is loaded first and then it jumps to the we returned False
the conditional expression if-else (ternary) appears in that table to have a lower priority than the logical operators (not, and, or) and those themselves have a lower priority than the comparison operators (<=, >=, etc)
@Aran-Fey so the way I understand that table is that or binds strongly than if-else. I would've interpreted your first line as this, judging by that table: expr1 or expr2 where expr2 happens to be an if-else. However everything there is expr1 if condition else expr2, where expr1 is your or expression
basically if you put anything there to the left of that if it would still evaluate it first
yes, because the or binds stronger than the conditional
that's why the parentheses go around the or, not around the conditional
It was a big day in the coliseum: The Caesar himself had offered a grand prize of one 1 literal to the winner. The contestants, or and if, had trained all their lives for this very moment; both were determined to defeat the other and win the great prize. However, or had the support of the python grammar, and defeated its opponent with ease, beating if to a bloody pulp and claiming the 1 for itself. The crowd cheered. It was a good day.
True or 1 if False else 0 so this is equivalent basically to this True if False else 0 since or returns the first operand if it's True and doesn't evaluate the second, correct?
@Aran-Fey well then I still don't have an example of what binding stronger means and how can I illustrate it. If we're talking about parsing not executing then that's not very intuitive. Consider a mathematical example. You would have to execute based on priority and not just parse
FWIW, we had a discussion here a couple of days ago that it's slightly annoying that the Python conditional expression is written with the condition in the middle, rather than the pattern used in C etc, where it's condition ? trueval : falseval
The expression x if C else y first evaluates the condition, C rather than x. If C is true, x is evaluated and its value is returned; otherwise, y is evaluated and its value is returned.
"or binds stonger" literally means that True or 1 if False else 0 is the same as (True or 1) if False else 0, not True or (1 if False else 0). If this is surprising to you it's still true. There's no other way to explain it.
yo hol'up fellas I don't mean to be a hard head ;d I'm just trying to understand what binding stronger means. Clearly not executed first as @Aran-Fey pointed out
since or is higher precedence than if else, when the code is parsed , it becomes (True or 1) if False and not True or (1 if False else 0), I think that's what Aran-Fey meant by that example
the interpreter needs to know what the execution order is, the different branches which can be taken, which it does by parsing, and then executes it based on the inputs
It does a POWER on third() and first(), then it does a MULTIPLY on second() and the result of the previous, then it does an ADD on first() and the result of the previous.
When making any HTTP request pip will first check its local cache to determine if it has a suitable response stored for that request which has not expired. If it does then it simply returns that response and doesn’t make the request.
I don't really know how cricket responds to weather, but it's patchy so far. You'll get a few hours of relatively clear weather and then within the space of minutes it's a deluge, then it stops again for a bit. I don't know if they can work around that kinda thing
I was just reading an article on the Manchester Evening News and it's on the borderline of making no sense. Considering that would be our city's main newspaper, it is just so embarrassingly written and communicated. I feel a real urge to write a strongly-worded email to their editor. Anyway, you may have good weather tomorrow or you may have thunderstorms. It's not clear.
A nice example: '"Temperature-wise we are looking at tomorrow highs of mid to high teens, 16-17C possibly heavy.'. Temperature, apparently, is described in terms of weight.
The temperature is apparently less heavy on Tuesday. I think. They're such an omnishambles as a news agency, I don't even take the free copies they give out in the city centre
@roganjosh The new question is about concatenating multiple lists, not just two, so it's a little different. A new answer with timeit stats just got posted. It'd be good if the OP mentioned how big the lists are...
Oh, maybe I'm reading it incorrectly then. The response to my comments on the first answer were along the lines of "that's related to performance" as though that was subsidiary to the main question.... which happens to mention "performance" 4 times
Andrej just deleted his answer. I guess he noticed the bug I was just going to tell him about. Some of his test cases clobber a source list, eg output = a; output.extend(b). That makes output an alias of a, and then extends it.
@roganjosh I can't recall a better dupe. I've done some list-related timeit answers, but not one that concats multiple lists.
@AndrejKesely You should fix that, and re-run your tests. But maybe make the test code more compact. Eg, put your test strings into a tuple or something so you can loop over them instead of all those copy & paste repeated prints.
I'm half debating whether I'm curious enough to play around with it. Since len() is O(1), part of me is wondering whether it's quicker to instantiate an empty numpy array for the combined length of all the lists and unpack into it. Maybe I'm grossly misrepresenting the efficiency of index assignments
Also, numpy wouldn't require numerical values, but you would need a fixed length on the strings I guess in order to get the final memory allocation in a single step, which is what I think might push it ahead in efficiency
@AndrejKesely I'm not surprised. chain has to iterate over the list items & copy them one by one, but + can combine the arrays of pointers at the C level. I think. :)
@AndrejKesely Hang on! You have output = a.copy();output = a;, so a is still getting clobbered. get rid of those output = a;
@0xPrateek That's the question we have been discussing here. I think it would still be better for you to post your code to test the timings rather than the pictures. You can see the other two answers did that, and PM2 Ring found problems with both methods that then got fixed
I am just learning. Trying to improve and I am feeling wonderfull by seeing people like so good at the top of the community. Love all the way to you from another python beginner
Some of the Stack Exchange chatrooms have a "relaxed" policy about swear words, but we like to keep the tone a little more professional here in the Python room. But we do have our own swear words in our silly Salad Language: tomato & yam. :)
@SalmanFarsi Chat is a bit primitive, we don't have an editor, or syntax highlighting. So external sites tend to work better, especially if you have more than a dozen or so lines to post. For small chunks of code, just format it in your own editor.
I've watched the scene again, plus another that I accidentally landed on, and I still don't get the comedy value. Monty Python is something I feel I ought to get, but I don't. I may exile myself.