Haha i am holding my record of 4 answers in the hot answers tab for python, also first time i got to be the first place
1 hour later…
user10063119
6:51 AM
Hey there! quick question: How to make my terminal use the python version and modules that Jupyter uses (virtual env ml) instead of the importerror? conda list shows the concerned module but pydoc modules doesn't.
Let's say there is a container, (with some python libraries for example) I did a pull image in my docker console. How to use this environment in Spyder (or PyCharm) ? Is it clearer?
I agree if it's just a matter of libraries, using a virtual env is enough. Actually, I don't have any practical cases right now, I'm just trying to get used to docker
Hey guys. I've been scratching my head over this issue with my Flask app for a while now. If anyone could take a look I would really appreciate it. stackoverflow.com/questions/56739519/…
I feel like I have done everything right in my setup, yet I am still unable to set cookies in my browser
I come back with a more basic question. My windows cmd doesn't recognize the 'py' command. So I tried to set it up with the path leading to python, but it's still giving the same error. Do you have any idea?
I am trying to assign to the postal code column of adr_data the values of adr_data postal code column where the postal code value is not equal to an empty string or 0
I know that I am doing something wrong on the RHS
This is because the right hand side would give me a dataframe while the LHS is a Series
I am trying to assign to the postal code column of adr_data the values of adr_data postal code column This sentence seems odd at best. you're trying to assign the values of a column from the same column?
so something like adr_data[(adr_data['postal_code'] != '')&(adr_data['postal_code'] != '0')] As always, think in terms of "selecting" correct values instead.
is there an equivalent to functools.singledispatch for methods?
it dispatches on self, not the actual argument
which is kinda useless :/
from functools import singledispatch
class Foo:
@singledispatch
def bar(self, other):
return 'base'
@bar.register(int)
def _(self, other: int):
return 'int'
foo = Foo()
assert foo.bar('bar') is 'base'
assert Foo.bar(2, 'bar') is 'int'
assert foo.bar(2) is 'int'
writing Python really gets tiresome lately... every week another problem crops up with some builtin/stdlib that will be fixed in a version 4 years away from deployment :/
How do I become good at solving DP problems? I know most people would say practice but if you are stuck on a problem for like days, what should you do? Should you go ahead and see the solution or read some more on it?
And this is coming from somebody who loves to reinvent wheels from first principles, so you know I'm not against the idea of figuring things out for oneself
@HarnishShah Someone already has. If you can't make use of the answer your question is either unclear or you need to learn some basic python before doing web scraping. Have you read a good python tutorial yet?
@HarnishShah Looking at your comment on that answer, I interpret it to be saying two things: "will this still work if the data is slightly different?" and "how do I get the entire json data, not just the 'kushpate' string"? The second one is easy -- the entire json data is in the js object.
The first one is hard for anyone to answer because we don't know how the data will be different.
I got a little off-topic question ... how much does 8GB of ram weight? Someone told me it weights around 20g, is this true? (Yes, I have tried searching for it on Google)
If you're really worried that this answer will only work on the sample data you gave in your question, and will break on any other kind of data, then you could edit your question to add more samples. Then hopefully the answerer will feel inclined to make sure his solution works on all of them.
Yes @Kevin and @AndrasDeak my previous JSON data is this
{
"vpn_detail":
{
"username":"kushpate",
"tokens":
[
"85188605",
"00422786",
"94548619",
"51249494",
"HHEF0EA5",
"2E09A81E"
],
"cluster_name":"bgl13-vpn-cluster-2.cisco.com"
}
}
Now I have read this JSON data in Outlook email through imaplib, but that data is converted into HTML form , that converted HTML data is …
Is any of that different from what you asked in your question? My point was that you need to add additional detail to your post if you want the answerer to give you a more robust solution.
Just copy-pasting your problem in here won't accomplish anything.
In any case, I feel like I already answered the question you asked in the comment - you can get the entire json object instead of just "kushpate" using the js variable.
As far as I'm concerned, the problem is solved until you can provide additional sample input that proves that it isn't.
Is it possible to execute an Excel Macro from a Python Script? I have an Excel Macro to upload some Data from an Excel to my SharePoint site and I'd like to run my PythonScript that already handles some previous steps to then execute the Macro once it's done sorting the data.
Possibly but my only concern figuring out how to send data to a SharePoint in the first place was a painful experience and that was utilizing a VBA Macro. When I tried accessing our SharePoint in Python back around Feb. I couldn't get it to accept my credentials.. which is not good.
In the long term you'd probably be much better off with leaving VBA behind, but I wouldn't be surprised if microsoft wouldn't want you to be able to do that. <3 vendor lock-in
Yeah, I can understand that. My only issue is the credentials I need are a mystery (Technically we log-In based on our windows session) and it has been a nightmare navigating stuff as in.
It ends up in a giant List that we use to communicate item status/changes between teams/departments in our facility.
It can end up in a lot of things like Spreadsheets and various types of lists that are customized for various purposes.
To be honest you could accomplish something similar with GoogleSheets.
but Microsoft just integrated this with Explorer and a lot of things like Access, InfoPath and they use to have a tool called SP Designer to handle workflows and heavy behind the scenes design of the sites.
In googlesheets you could use gspread and it's relatively easy (I had it running just a few months into my programming life for real-time updates). Presumably your road-block here was just the authentication, though? I'm not sure exactly what VBA can do that another language couldn't (if the API exists), it just might not be as well documented
slightly related, may help or hurt you but i've used vbscripts to process some portions of a pipeline if i could not replace it in python
in my own research, i never found a reliable way to "write" macros or interact with macros directly when creating an excel file via python. I'd assume that similar issues will exist when it comes to "accessing" a macro inside an excel file too
So, A clean solution for us was to just utilize vbscripts for portions that had to use VBA, delegate the task to a subprocess call with the script.
I think since VBA is coming from excel if authentication issues arise it's passing my Windows session while Python I tried defining my Windows session where applicable or providing my credentials but it never panned out. As how what I'm doing I'm just passing the data using ADO. As far as I've seen SharePoint isn't the funnest thing to use with Python I've seen many questions but no discernible solution that has managed to work for me.
I'd have to admit my VBA knowledge isn't great I work mostly in Python but there's only so much I can do when constrained by IT.
I've had to fight to get some libraries to process my Excel Reports (See my Previous Questions a few months back)
If I found a way to access the SharePoint using Python I'd happily just make a Python script for everything but things have proved difficult and I'm not exactly a wizard so I resorted to a simpler solution.
Oh that's why. I didn't "Know" my credential which is where my attempts failed I can give it another go now that I've worked in the Site a lot more since then. Still don't really know what they use as my "Credentials"
Yeah, I know what I use to login to my Windows Session but I'm not sure if there is something else that is added or used instead of what is used to login to our windows session
aye. and with all this said, always keep one thing in mind. IF you can replace the vba portion entirely in python, always opt for that or attempt to get that working first. And if you can't help it, reduce the amount of time/work you need to do in microsoft ecosystem if you're bringing python into the mix.
Well, I know they have it setup so if you're on the network and if you go to a site that requires a login based for our company it auto-logs you in based on your session I've seen the term okta pop up in between authorizations from time to time.
One problem with the tutorial I learned git from is, I can't easily go back and double-check the order of arguments of the commands it teaches, because in some cases I have to click through three pages of interactive exercises to get back to the part I care about.
Of course I can always check the official git docs, and pray that I can determine which of the thirty different forms of git reset is the one that I've actually used before
I want a compromise between the two where I get a plaintext description of the one or two most common forms of each command. Where "most common" is determined by what I personally use them for
Somebody in here as production experience with scrapers? I've done multiple scrapers but I'm wondering what is the optimal process for this kind of things.... In a serious company, how this process normally runs? How is stored?
I don't know if I'm being clear with what I want to say.
How does the PM always request the features that aren't easily supported by the framework and libraries that were chosen to make building this app easier?
Frankly, it's really up to you. No one really has set guidelines on scraping, especially considering scraping should ideally be frowned upon in any serious company. You know, legal issues and whatnot. :P Regardless though, if your setup works for you, you seem to be doing fine.
Yes, but not all the websites have API's. I understand what you say, but that is an ideal world, I would like to be like that... But unfortunately is not.
roganjosh kinda hinted at one practical way of looking at it. When you're doing the scraping, it's just the program for scraping that's running. Once the request for scraping goes through, you get data. storing data is a pretty common task. How to store data is a relatively simple question to think over. the answer usually being "well, how much data do you have, and what do you need to do with it?"
So, its no longer about "how should i store data that i get from scraping", but simply one of "how should i store data".
I suppose there are scenarios where the service lacks an API, not because they want to prevent people from accessing the data, but because they just can't be bothered to design a formal interface for it.
In any case, I endorse all the previous messages that suggest that the best practices for storing scraped data are the same as the best practices for storing any other kind of data
Probably because they don't want you to have the data
(and that's not me getting on my high horse over scraping, which I don't think is inherently bad)
On scraping (ish); I was watching Dragon's Den earlier and saw an episode about Brand Yourself. I used the tool and couldn't understand it properly - it doesn't seem to do anything useful, and then gives me a slightly-below-average score :/
All but 1 of the references that it thought were me, weren't. Then I get a low score for having a small internet footprint against my actual name; it's Black Mirror coming to life.
@WayneWerner At least Blender might give me an angle into green-screen so I can be sipping champagne on royal yachts and golfing with Nobel prize winners in my downtime
though now this fun event has provided somewhere for it to stick, so it's possible I'll remember it
Fun fact: at one point I knew there was an arrow in FedEx, and then I forgot. And then I read a post that said once you know it's there you can't forget, and now I can't
"In modern usage, the term has lost its theological context and is used as a metaphor for wasting time debating topics of no practical value, or questions whose answers hold no intellectual consequence, while more urgent concerns accumulate."
I think imdb reviews will save me legwork here. I didn't read them until after I watched it and was left with the "what the yam?" feeling
@WayneWerner I mean Grindelwald in the latest film. That's kinda the end of his crimes and it, I assume, deliberately tries to reference the Harry Potter incident