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00:57
@JohnDoeVsJoeSchmoe JohnDoe yes the main R chatroom is GMTs. If you want to be approved by the GMTs room owners, post your question in R Public and ask to be approved.
 
3 hours later…
04:19
@AndrasDeak Meantime he can post in R Public already
04:52
one day I will learn R better (or Matlab or ......)
05:03
@smci why? why would you point to a post about badly calculated data on the part of SE (and I don't mean where the .015% came from I mean the assumptions behind the data and confidence put into it despite Shog pointing out that SE doesn't have the heuristic to build a methodology that would give this level of confidence - its in the chat, I'd link but I'm sick of seeing another chat involving SE employees hating the regulars) but to answer your question - I stopped hard last year.
and wouldn't be here right now except the Python room seems my last refuse as I research
05:28
@JGreenwell I posted the link (as others here previously have) to highlight it is a matter of ongoing controversy - don't for one minute assume I endorse any specific poster's views. I am also quite tired of drama and impatient to see long-awaited changes inplemented.
@JGreenwell I totally hear you. SO has multiple existential problems, and quite possibly is in the process of destroying itself - only time will tell - and many users may not wait for the endgame.
sorry, I meant that as tongue in cheek more (though the data issue is quite true and I do mean it with SO usage) - just forgot the bloody smiley face
so here: :) ;) :P :D ^-^
Greetings my lords!
I prefer DM
I accept GM
@smci to be honest I think I was one of the original people who linked to it (might have been on Tavern.......not sure, crazy week) so no worries :)
05:53
@JGreenwell Yes honestly most weeks on SO are crazy now, we see the same messed-up set of incentives/penalties perpetuating the same site behavior, separately on the part of both askers and answerers. (Can we borrow a pair of groundhogs to illustrate the point...?)
I serve a file using cherrypy, that file uses ajax to load data from a file present on server, but cherrypy does not identify the file referred to by ajax call.
To test i ran python http server on other port , and changed my ajax url to different port but getting `policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.`
running httpsever was a hack obviously
codepad.org/1z7RzQOI my cherrypy code
06:16
I don't see any ajax there
06:37
cabbage
 
1 hour later…
07:39
@wim I disagree with it too, but it's not in my top-100 of things wrong with SO.
07:50
@smci But management might force to treat like the USA based like git-hub whose banned all Iranian users (btw I don't know if they are forced to do it or it is their own choice)
@smci I am from Turkey, I think we might be next after these political issues
08:01
Nah, Turkey is a small fish. Unless Erdogan starts messing with the internet from the other side.
@AlperAyna by the way I've been meaning to say that you shouldn't call us lords or sir or anything like that; we're all peers here. (Plus any ladies would be excluded :P)
@AndrasDeak cough... what about poor ol' Vetinari here? :p
he'll have to cope :P
@Andras don't make me hit you over the head with a carrot :)
Carrot would never do that
hehe :)
08:15
@AndrasDeak We all can be lords & ladies too, like a D&D rpg
We all can be equal lords too
^_^
Sam
Sam
08:33
Morning all, I have a Pandas dataframe with 768 columns.. I also have a NumPy array of shape (768,).. how would I go about inserting the values of this array as a single row into my DataFrame?
Lmao, i need to check the code template
Sam
Sam
08:48
Ah, thought there might be a nice way to just transpose it into the necessary columns
there is definitely a nice way to do it
Sam
Sam
Yeh?
but i'd have to explore what it is to figure it out. my first thought is just creating a df and using concat or something
@AlperAyna please see our formatting guide to chat and practice in the sandbox
there may be something better, but that seems like a good start.
08:50
@Sam probably df.append
@AndrasDeak My personal savior
Also: looping insert with numpy is madness ;)
Collect all parts into a native list and concat in a single step
Aye, but if it's just a question of 1 row, just directly use .loc
Sam
Sam
@AndrasDeak thanks
08:56
@AndrasDeak Why not :(
it's horribly inefficient.
you have to reallocate memory for the entire df again at every step during the loop.
@AlperAyna numpy arrays are contiguous in memory on construction. If you append 10 times you create 10 intermediate arrays, each larger than the last
Same holds for pandas columns, probably (i.e. columns being contiguous)
C# developer never things about allocations of course
Thank you very much for information
you're welcome
<- C# developer btw lmao
It is good to learn these kind of things
I try c++ for a time but that language is just insanely hard to learn
Python is just fine
 
1 hour later…
10:08
Huh, I've got a directory that Windows explorer can open without problems but os.listdir and Path.iterdir are throwing a [WinError 1392] The file or directory is corrupted and unreadable
Damn windows explorer.exe might corrupt a lot in windows builds
I have in my windows10 and cant change it because of company computer, it can be fixable easily
Apparently os.scandir works. Guess I know how I'll be iterating over files in a folder from now on.
I recommend fixing explorer.exe if you would use that computer a lot
It is easy with some couple google searches
? there's nothing wrong with my explorer
Oh sorry, I did not read well
I saw it now :)
Tim
Tim
10:16
@Aran-Fey Path.iterdir uses os.listdir so would make sense they are both failing. Is it causing the error on the folder or a file inside?
Not sure what you mean. How could it fail on a file?
Tim
Tim
10:49
When the directory is enumerated, the issue is actually one of the files in the directory rather than the directory itself. Was trying to dig through the source code of os.listdir and scandir to see what calls are being used
Tim
Tim
11:01
Yep looking at the source, the error could be caused by any file in the directory and the error will always report based on the initial path.
Would be odd if you don't get the error with scandir though, uses the same FindFirstFileW/FindNextFileW combo. Just as an iterator.
Super annoying that you can't actually determine what the bad file is because FindNextFileW just returns an error code and doesn't provide the file name it errored on just the generic 1392 error code :(
11:22
sounds like a Windows problem more than a Python issue
Hello, anybody can help with this pastebin.com/WcHZ604P.. i have a dict of name of node, coefficient value.... and i want to have the top n ordered nodes whihc higher coeff.....Im going mad....
Hmm, yeah, scandir also crashes midway through the iteration, once it encounters a specific file I guess. Wonder how I'm gonna fix this and how many files I'm gonna lose in the process...
Tim
Tim
@Aran-Fey If you can get a file list (maybe command line will work if explorer does), you can try accessing them one at a time, at least you will know the name of the file that's bad.
@EduardoGutierrez if you can fix the annoying punctuation and add a traceback, that might actually be suitable as a question on Stack Overflow
@tripleee the punctuation is to have a example dict to try...would be bet_cen
11:27
I mean put a single full stop after each sentence and a single question mark after each question
but I think I see the problem -- you are not storing the output of sorted() anywhere so you lose it immediately
try
items = sorted(dictionary, reverse=True, key=lambda x: x[1])
or (less elegantly)
items = dictionary.copy()
sort(items, reverse=True, key=lambda x:x[1])
^ notice how that's sort() not sorted()
Uhhhh, but there is no sort function though?
oh my bad, that was only in Python 2 I guess
good riddance, just use sorted()
Did you mean items = list(dictionary); items.sort(...)?
@tripleee also tried that ....sort doesnt exist
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
Node :@
This is the result with sorted.... im trying to retun a dict, but i cant get...if i return a dict it gives me error....
@Aran-Fey I don't think you want to convert the dictionary to a list, but perhaps obtain a sorted list of keys
dictionaries didn't use to have stable sort order, though that changed recently, so if you are on a new enough Python, it should work
but the better solution is probably to just obtain the top 10 keys and then extract the corresponding slice from the dict
@tripleee i have tried everything... but i cant get it.... the closest i was, returning a list thiw the top N names, but its not enough, because i need to store the coeff value for each node and print it...
anyone got a semi-elegant one-liner for getting from {'a': {'x':1,'y':2}, 'b': {'x':3, 'y':4}, 'c': ...} to {'a': [1, 2], 'b': [3, 4], 'c': ...}?
I'm thinking it's possible with dictionary comprehensions
are the subdicts always with the same keys?
yup
but they might not be in order
11:37
@Aran-Fey i tried something like you said....
that's a given
so trying again, but still untested ...
def get_top_keys(dictionary, top):
    items = sorted(dictionary.keys(), reverse=True, key=lambda x: dictionary[x][1])
    return map(lambda x: dictionary[x], items[:top])
@towc {k: [v for _,v in sorted(d.items())] for k,d in dct.items()} or something like that, can't make it more elegant right now
oh, interesting
might be worth not squeezing it into one line for readability
11:42
typeError: 'float' object is not subscriptable
in line items .....
or right, remove the final [1], sorry for still leaving that in
so, the items come in a certain order, it's just not alphabetical order, which is great, because actually {k: list(d.values()) for k,d in dct.items()} works just fine for me. Not sure how I missed that
thanks :)
Perfect
@tripleee : no worry, thanks for your help.. we are closer to the answer ....
Node :Value : 0.922292421234356
Node :Value : 0.06847650211363833
Node :Value : 0.04045038531572407
Node :Value : 0.018720846982006843
Node :Value : 0.015602690697544637
Node :Value : 0.01413215129391548
Node :Value : 0.010485765908598102
Node :Value : 0.010083207897113693
Node :Value : 0.007836968437450895
Node :Value : 0.007256267175076385
Seems that 10 values are ordered in descendeing as asked, but i can get the node value.. node name
# Iterate over the sorted sequence
for elem in top_bet_cen:
print("Node :" + "Value : " + str(elem))
@tripleee : any idea of how to return a dict sliced or dict to have pairs node, values....
try googlng exactly that
@towc: ive tried everyhint
look through the methods in dict
ive trying all.... yesterday and this morning ive made many tests
12:12
I just got here, is this a "let him figure it out on his own in an Important Learning Moment" situation or can I meddle with these affairs?
meddle away
hmm, i wonder. does that count as an oxymoron? :P
how would it?
"x away" is a common phrase
Even though the intent is clear, i suppose im not too sure how a word like "meddle" that involves actively being near and interacting with something and "away" be working together
@EduardoGutierrez If you have a list of key-value pairs, like the kind returned when you call sorted on some_dict.items(), then you can turn it back into a dict simply by calling dict on it. pastebin.com/dR5iq7sr
12:17
I actually think the question was simply asking for .items()
@ParitoshSingh ok, I guess it doesn't make intuitive sense if taken literally
Atleast how i read it
@towc aye, was just a random musing, just looking at that phrase :)
I thought that top_bet_cen was probably not a dict, because str(elem) returns a float, and the original dict's keys were strings, not floats
On the other hand, it's probably not a list of string-and-float tuples, which is what my advice applies to.
Oh, i suppose it could. i only read the last sentence in isolation, and mentally rejected every transcript before i hopped on. good job me -.-
@Kevin I'm sure you're making things clearer
12:19
But yes, if you have a dict, then you can iterate over both its keys and values by using .items(). It's a good method.
>>> for name, coef in top_ten_dict.items():
...     print(f"Node: {name}\tValue: {coef}")
...
Node: @tvcat    Value: 0.922292421234356
Node: @totesmoutv       Value: 0.04045038531572407
Node: @joanmiro Value: 0.006012034125910597
Node: @cat      Value: 0.003195519887556792
Node: @mossos   Value: 0.002142041920465624
Node: @bcnajuntament    Value: 0.0007046599855081178
Node: @000001account    Value: 0.0005682421458083075
Node: @ccmacat  Value: 0.0003548196295776669
Node: @diba     Value: 0.0003413454578759128
Do we have a dupe target for "why does x = sorted(x) do something different than x = x.sort()?"? List assignment statement [duplicate] got hammered with a question about .reverse, which isn't a perfect fit because this question doesn't call reverse.
cbg
Sure, any programmer can apply thirty seconds of critical thought and notice that reversed and .reverse probably have the same relationship as sorted and .sort, but we may as well be precise where possible
12:24
@kevin i catnt im on python 3.7....
def get_top_keys(dictionary, top):
    items = sorted(dictionary.keys(), reverse=True, key=lambda x: dictionary[x])
    return map(lambda x: (x,dictionary[x]), items[:top])



top_bet_cen = get_top_keys(bet_cen,5)

#print 'Top 10 places for betweenness centrality:'
for node_id in top_bet_cen:
    print ("Node :" + str(node_id))
The closest im right now, im returning an string...not exactly what im looking for, but can do its job
I'm on 3.7 too, and my code works perfectly on my machine. Did you run my code on your machine to determine whether it works?
return :
Node :('@tvcat', 0.922292421234356)
Node :('@xriusenoticies', 0.06847650211363833)
Node :('@totesmoutv', 0.04045038531572407)
Node :('@jordicanyas', 0.018720846982006843)
Node :('@senseficcio', 0.015602690697544637)
@Kevin: AttributeError: 'map' object has no attribute 'items'
My code does not contain a call to map. I don't know what you're running, but you're not running my code.
That is not my code.
def get_top_keys(dictionary, top):
    items = sorted(dictionary.keys(), reverse=True, key=lambda x: dictionary[x])
    return map(lambda x: (x,dictionary[x]), items[:top])



top_bet_cen = get_top_keys(bet_cen,5)

for name, coef in top_bet_cen.items():
    print(f"Node: {name}\tValue: {coef}")
Your get_top_keys function returns an iterable of string-and-float tuples. If you insist on using that function, then you can unpack each tuple into individual values by providing two names in the for loop.
>>> #print 'Top 10 places for betweenness centrality:'
... for name, node in top_bet_cen:
...     print ("Name", name, "Node :", node)
...
Name @tvcat Node : 0.922292421234356
Name @totesmoutv Node : 0.04045038531572407
Name @joanmiro Node : 0.006012034125910597
Name @cat Node : 0.003195519887556792
Name @mossos Node : 0.002142041920465624
12:31
Hi everyone, is there something particular we should do when we want to import modules we have created?
Just import my_module should be sufficient in the usual case
@Mez13 if it's just a local file then no. If you want it to be available just like any other library you need to package and install it.
I'm just doing a simple import MyModule after setting a path via sys.path.append()
that should be the latter instead
Yes, it's a local file
12:32
it's not local in the way I meant if you need to mess with the sys.path :P
Rule of thumb: if you're adding things to sys.path, there's probably a better way to do it.
Haha
@kevin i ve adapted your code
... For certain definitions of "better". I've had some frustrating experiences getting my modules to be visible everywhere in my local environment
def get_top_keysk(d, top):
    return sorted(d.items(), reverse=True, key=lambda item: item[1])[:top]

top_bet_cen = get_top_keysk(bet_cen,5)

print(top_bet_cen)
12:33
in the simplest case you can have a very short setup.py which you can then install, and have the module available from anywhere just like builtin modules or numpy or whatever
for name, coef in top_bet_cen.items():
    print(f"Node: {name}\tValue: {coef}")
I just keep my modules in a folder inside my project
@Kevin : the for doesnt work....have to delete .items()
@EduardoGutierrez As I said, if your function returns an iterable of tuples, then use for name, node in top_bet_cen:. Please read my messages carefully. I don't like repeating myself.
@kevin sorry my english is not very good, is almost bad.....
sorry
@kevin: what option is better, i think this one which returns a dict, better thant
the other one that i returned a pair ( x, dictionary[x])
12:37
I don't know what you mean by "returns a dict". None of the functions you've written so far return a dict. chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/46893291#46893291 returns a list of tuples, and chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/46893199#46893199 returns an iterable object that yields tuples.
You can confirm that this is the case by doing print(type(top_bet_cen))
well what do you think is the best solution ? id use this function to call for the 10 or N best values in betweeness coefficient, and others....
I highly encourage you to check the types of your objects frequently while debugging. The instant you got object has no attribute 'items' the first time, you could have printed the type of that object and instantly discovered that it wasn't a dict, which explains why you couldn't call a dict method on it
@EduardoGutierrez Tricky question. I think it would be better to return a collection of (x, dict[x]) pairs. I say this because dicts are typically not used to represent data where ordering matters. Even though dicts are now well-ordered in modern versions of Python, I'm hesitant to use them for that purpose. Both because it makes the code non-backwards-compatible, and because it's just plain spooky to me.
Maybe in a couple more versions I'll be more comfortable with the idea. At the very least I want to wait until Python 2 dies at the end of the year
Anoter reason to return a collections of two-item tuples: that's what Counter.most_common returns. You may as well match the interface of a similar type in the standard docs, as it's less confusing to the user, all other things being equal
To go back to my problem, I get 2 errors, one of them saying "No module named MyModule"
I want to run a second program in pycharm, when running a program. Let's say I have a.py and as program arguments I want to pass python b.py and when I click run on the a file b also get's executed
also I would like to run b first
b is actually setting rosparams
and no clue, how to do that without the rosrun command
12:51
@EduardoGutierrez It's OK if your English isn't very good. It's also OK if you don't understand all of my messages. You can tell me if you don't understand something. I want you to tell me if you don't understand something. But I get upset if you tell me "your code doesn't work" and show me code that I didn't write.
And @EduardoGutierrez take those words very seriously. Kevin is one of the most patient people you will find here, so you must be doing something very wrong if he has to tell you this.
@Hakaishin Have you tried the subprocess module? That's a typical way of running a program inside your Python program.
juhu I found it, there actually is an option in pycharm to run external program before running my program, perfect
Although if you only want to run another Python script, it's better to just import it
import b; b.set_ros_params(foo="bar")
Something like that.
Actually my example above is a bit contrieved, it is more about clion, c++ and ros. Especially ros, but yeah I found a solution
but man this ros plugin keeps crashing clion, ros is just annoying
12:56
@Kevin How the command 'import b' would work if it doesnt know where is b. I'm facing the same kind of issues
@Mez13 I don't believe he was talking to you
@AndrasDeak He discovered my two secret insecurities: people not reading my messages all the way through, and people telling me my work is flawed. That's a good way to make me regress to grade school levels of emotional stability.
@AndrasDeak I know. That's why I say I'm facing the same kind of problems
@Kevin I'm content with whatever makes Hulk Kevin appear
The import b message was not directed at Mez, true, but I was talking earlier about making imports work from anywhere, so I accept this ping as a segue back to that topic.
How do you do it again...? There's some trick with packaging modules. I think pip install is involved
12:59
1. create setup.py, 2. pip install maybe with -e
@Kevin I either set a path or not, in both case it doesnt work
Yes, I think that -e is important
Kevin is like King Arthur...Artoriusss!
-e is important if you want to change the code after installing
13:01
@Kevin come to think of it, I think you need an enclosing directory with an __init__.py to make it a package
I may as well look up how to do this, since it's my most-neglected area and I really should brush up
I cargo-culted this solution a while back chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/46067165#46067165
packaging.python.org is probably the proper resource
@Mez13 Oh, it's surprising that even the sys.path trick doesn't make your module visible. That usually works.
@Kevin Indeed, that's why I'm stuck
you probably messed up the path
13:05
I don't think this is the problem, but just to be sure, check the name of your file and ensure that it doesn't have the same name as another file in your project, or a module in the standard libs. Don't name your file itertools.py for instance.
@AndrasDeak Well, I would like, but I don't think so
@Kevin I think it's good from this perspective. I get this problem with many modules, not only one
Actually, I keep some of them in a particular folder, it works. And for those which are sharing the same folder that the script from where I call them, it doesnt work. May it be a problem?
Very puzzling. I know it's irritating when your problem spans across multiple files, but if you could construct an MCVE that demonstrates the problem, that would be very useful. Basically I'm looking for a pastebin that shows the contents of each file, and also the locations of each file in your project directory.
That could be as simple as:
#myproject/main.py
import blah
blah.hello_world()

#myproject/libs/blah.py
def hello_world():
    print("Hello, world!")
haha, strict mvce policies are in effect! :D
How can I do something like this?
Oh, I don't think there's a tool or anything that will produce that kind of output for you. It's not too much work to just put it all together manually, assuming your project only has a few files.
13:12
Are there deg-min-sec to decimal and back functions in the standard lib?
I suspect the minimal form of this problem requires exactly two files to demonstrate
Three, if you want to show how importing from a specific subfolder works, but importing from the same folder doesn't
@Kevin No no, I meant the font you used
@Mez13 manual labour. Work you have to invest so we don't have to
@Mez13 Ah. You can get code styling by using any of the techniques listed at sopython.com/wiki/…
@AndrasDeak Chill, I was just referring to the font. I'm not asking you to work for me
13:14
mvce is a hot trigger, and rightly so!
Come to think of it, I think I did once write a tool that flattened a directory of .py files into a single pastebinnable .py file. I have no idea what I did with it, unfortunately.
Practice in the sandbox
The Sandbox is lovely this time of year. Beautiful fjords.
#myproject/main.py
import MyModule1 #It works, this module is located in myproject/libs/
import MyModule2# It doesn't work, this module is located at the same place as main.py
Do you see better?
We're halfway there. I would also like to see the complete contents of MyModule1 and MyModule2. Make sure to include whichever file is appending values to sys.path.
13:19
@Kevin There are super long :/
And many as well, I'm not dealing with only 2 modules
Fortunately I have to go
That's part of the fun of constructing an MCVE :-) you get to delete everything out of your files that don't have anything to do with the problem, and delete the file themselves too if they're not important.
I suspect the import problem would still occur if MyModule1 and MyModule2 were completely blank. Of course, my suspicions don't mean anything. You have to try it yourself and see.
@Kevin Sorry again, i mixed your code with @tripleee. Thanks for your effort and help....
@Kevin But when I run those files manually, I dont get any error. If it was what you wanted to check by that
@ReblochonMasque I don't think so. I wrote an obfuscated solution using reduce at one time, and also got into an argument once about how to represent negative values of such.
13:21
@Kevin No no, you're right. The problem does not come from the content. It just doesnt find them
I don't have any specific thing I want to check, per se. Exactly the opposite. It's when I run out of ideas for specific diagnostics that I request an MCVE, so I can poke and prod at the problem at my own pace.
('.' is probably missing from the path)
@AndrasDeak Where would you put it?
ok, thanks @PaulMcG I'll have to deal with the corner cases then
I can check two dozen "this probably isn't the problem, but maybe...?" candidates in the time it would take me to walk another person through how to check one of them
13:24
@Mez13 sorry, too many unknowns. How you're running main, where you're running it from, what's inside main, etc. An MCVE is not penance, it's a necessity.
If you want the Deluxe Express Troubleshooting package, the MCVE is cost of admission
Ok guys, I thank you for the time you spent
Hey @Mez13, give the man his mvce! :D
@ReblochonMasque They want me the details of all my modules, haha. I have like 40+ of them, it will just confuse them :o
@Mez13 M stands for Minimal
13:26
And some of them have like 3000+ rows
no, they want an mvce so they can help solve your problem
@AndrasDeak Yes. But I need to short them so it becomes minimal
@Mez13 exactly
Yes, that's the idea
13:27
@Mez13 or make a completely separate example that reproduces it
> They want me the details of all my modules, haha. I have like 40+ of them, it will just confuse them :o
13
A: Convert DD (decimal degrees) to DMS (degrees minutes seconds) in Python?

PaulMcGThis is exactly what divmod was invented for: >>> def decdeg2dms(dd): ... mnt,sec = divmod(dd*3600,60) ... deg,mnt = divmod(mnt,60) ... return deg,mnt,sec >>> dd = 45 + 30.0/60 + 1.0/3600 >>> print dd 45.5002777778 >>> decdeg2dms(dd) (45.0, 30.0, 1.0)

Doesn't matter what you base it on, just that it's minimal. No-one wants all your modules.
@RobertGrant I tried that
@AndrasDeak So you understand my problem then :)
13:28
@RobertGrant Yes yes, I shared something, it was not enough
It can not be enough but still people don't want your modules.
@AndrasDeak Haha, forget then. It was nice to help until then, thanks man
I have pretty loose standards when it comes to "minimal". If it fits in one pastebin and still runs, it's minimal enough for me... But I guess that's tricky here since pasting forty files back-to-back in one pastebin basically guarantees that it won't run.
@Mez13 good luck
@Kevin Ok, I give it a last try. What else do you need?
13:29
I really should dig up my directory smoosher. I'll pick through the transcript this afternoon.
@Mez13 Ok, in the absence of an MCVE, what I'm most interested in is: all of the lines that modify the value of sys.path.
Thanks @PaulMcG - I think I'll write the test cases first.
I think the negatives must all go in the same direction - either it is positive, or it is negative.
@Kevin Betweem the moment where I set the paths and the imports : nothing
Alright. I'd like to see the part where you set the paths, then.
sys.path.append('C:\\Blabla1\\')
sys.path.append('C:\\Blabla2\\')

import MyModule1
import MyModule2
@ReblochonMasque This is purely a convention which is mathematically over-constrained
Here is the reduce version:
def decdeg2dms(dd):
    return reduce(lambda ll,b : divmod(ll[0],b) + ll[1:], [(dd*3600,),60,60])
13:35
@Mez13 Hmm. Nothing obviously wrong there. I'll ruminate over this and see if any insights occur.
Thanks @PaulMcG
Is there a standard for expressing angles in dms?
Or is it convention to agree upon... or not?
In the meantime, do let me know if you manage to construct a minimalish-CVE.
@Kevin OK, thank you
@ReblochonMasque You should probably follow the "all the signs should be the same" style, since this will avoid arguments.
I just dislike being told I'm wrong just because someone doesn't share my unique perspective
Tim
Tim
@ReblochonMasque I have this in a NMEA parser library I wrote circa 2008, has tests and all github.com/timsavage/python-gpsd/blob/master/src/nmea/…
13:40
Yes, good advice @PaulMcG
can anyone tell me what is happening in this code here?
import sklearn
reg = linear_model.LinearRegression()
reg = reg.fit(X_train, Y_train)
I'm not getting what's happening here.. what does this equality sign do here? are they referencing to the function LinearRegression()?
Seems pretty self-explanatory. Google "linear regression" and "fitting a line"
Tim
Tim
Although PalMcG's example would clean it up a bit. Wasn't anywhere near as familiar with Python at the time.
@Tim - my example also falls short in the "all the signs should be the same" category.
@Quark Ah, you weren't asking about what was being performed, you were asking about the code syntax.
@PaulMcG Yeah
Tim
Tim
13:48
@PaulMcG Looking at my own code I did all the math with abs numbers then just re-applied the sign at the end.
Based on the naming, I would guess that LinearRegession is not a function but a class. So the assignment to reg is not performing any work yet, it is just creating an object that is able to do linear regression. The second line is a bit confusing to me, as I am not familar with sklearn - why assign back to reg? Still the second line is using the LR object to fit the X and Y training data, presumably to a line.
@Tim And I don't know as my code is any faster or more efficient, I was just in a code-golfy mood that day
Tim
Tim
Although I'll stop looking at my source, seeing lots of other things and my code OCD is twitching!
@Tim I've never liked that the stdlib does not have a builtin signum function, which would make that easier. Maybe I should submit a PEP
Sam
Sam
hey guys, i was wondering if you could call functions from arrays
like i have a tts function, which says a choice.random() from an array
but if i did this: [print("hello"),"normal response", "another normal response"]
would this return a cannot convert function to str
@PaulMcG Probably you can get some idea from here. I'm new to Python actually
13:55
@Sam I'm not sure I completely understand the problem. But if you're trying to put code inside a list, and want the code to delay execution until a later time, lambdas are a popular approach.
Tim
Tim
@PaulMcG That would be handy, nice to be more explicit
Sam
Sam
no, i mean, i have this code:
>>> prompts = [lambda: print("hello"), lambda: print("blah"), lambda: print("derp")]
>>> #nothing has been printed yet. These functions don't run unless you call them, like so:
...
>>> prompts[1]()
blah
Sam
Sam
i removed it by accident
wait a minute
Your list can contain a mixture of lambdas and strings if you really want, although I consider it a bit of a yellow flag to have a list with more than one type of object.
Sam
Sam
13:58
array = ["response 1", "response 2", print("this is not a response but a function")]
texttospeech(random.choice(array))
@Kevin this, thank you
Ok. What should happen if the third item is chosen and passed to texttospeech? How should a print call differ from a string?
Sam
Sam
i dont know, texttospeech does nothing when text from texttospeech(text) is empty i think
but what would happen if i did this: lambda: print("hello") + "hello"
that it would both print and say
I would expect that code to crash when you execute the lambda, because print returns None and you can't add a string to None.
Sam
Sam
and it isnt possible to make a custom function like print_custom which does print() but then return ""?
Oh, sure. But if you're going to make a custom function, then it would probably be simpler to return the complete string from that.
def show(s):
    print(s)
    return s

texttospeech(show("Hello"))
I would expect this to both print "Hello" and say it.
14:02
something smells
oh, it's code
I've used this show pattern in my own code, but usually only for debugging purposes
Sam
Sam
thanks kevin
Why not make a print_and_say function that does print(s) and texttospeech(s)?
Mm hmm, I was just about to say. An approach like that is more self-documenting.
Then you can do something like
actions = [
    lambda: texttospeech("response 1"),
    lambda: texttospeech("response 2"),
    lambda: print_and_say("You must construct additional pylons")
]

random.choice(actions)()
Which I like, because the list is nice and homogeneous.
@Quark Ok, it is as I suspected, LinearRegression is a class, and reg is an instance of that class, created for the purpose of doing linear regression. A bunch of X's and corresponding Y's are fed to it for fitting a line (since it is the Regression called "Linear").
14:09
Hmm, I'm following packaging.python.org/tutorials/packaging-projects and I think I may have missed a step. I wrote a setup.py for my file, myFirstPackage/hello.py. Then I ran python setup.py install. At this point I expect to be able to do import hello from any directory, but I'm getting ModuleNotFoundError. Do I need to do something with pip install here...?
I can see I have a hello-1.0.0-py3.7.egg file in my Python/lib/site-packages directory, so I know setup.py did something.
Once the X-Y values are fit to the LR instance reg, you can do things with reg. reg.score() will give you the R^2 value. reg.predict(0) will give you the Y-intercept of the fitted line. And so on.
I would try pip install hello but I don't want to accidentally download pypi.org/project/hello
@Kevin what's in your setup.py?
@Kevin I'd use a unique test name for safety
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
setup(
    name='hello',
    version='1.0.0',
    packages=find_packages(),
)
@AndrasDeak good idea. I'll rename it to something else.
The assignment of reg.fit() to reg is unnecessary. fit just ends by returning self, the original LR instance. This is known as a fluent API, where a mutator returns self. In this case it would allow you to write reg = LinearRegression().fit(x_values, y_values)
14:15
@Kevin fwiw, I always do python -m pip install .
@Kevin packages is what you can import
Here I can't import big_project_name, only module*
There's no kevinscoolprogram on pypi, so I'll go with that
@Arne I always use setup.py develop with mine ;)
Oh, I thought packages was a listing of the module's third party dependencies. Like numpy and stuff.
@Arne Ok, I'll try that.
Now I've got a kevinscoolprogram-1.0.0-py3.7.egg-info folder in my site-packages directory, which is more what I was expecting. Still can't import kevinscoolprogram or myFirstPackage when I'm in a different directory though.
I bet I need an __init__.py somewhere. Whenever packages don't work for me, it's because my __init__.pys are wrong.
@Kevin you can compare mine
14:24
I see that Past Kevin tangled with this issue once before. Round and round we go...
Apr 18 '17 at 16:23, by Kevin
I think I'm going to have a hard time convincing Future Kevin to go through all these setuptools-related steps when it runs on my machine even if I don't do them
Past Kevin, you are as perceptive as you are handsome.
3
Current Kevin might also stop writing setup.py files and use pyproject.toml and a packaging tool like poetry instead.
it's fashionable right now
All versions of me prefer to use only built-in tools where available. Failing that, third party tools that are mentioned by name on docs.python.org. Failing that, cool fashionable tools that might not be fashionable two years from now.
setuptools is mentioned in docs.python.org/3/distributing/…, so it's in category 2. distutils is in category 1, but I only found out about it thirty seconds ago, so I'll carry on with setuptools since I've already got it half working.
setuptools gets vendored into python3 I think, so it might be 1.5
14:35
Oh, nice. I couldn't remember if it came bundled with my Python, or if I installed it separately.
Currently trying to reconcile my mental model of the packaging mechanism with the fact that '17 Kevin needed to put an __init__.py in both WidgetLib and lib. I'd expect just WidgetLib to be sufficient.
@AndrasDeak They're the same thing, with a tiny difference where pip may or may not avoid some kind of gotcha.
my point exactly :P
>>> import kevinscoolpackage.kevinscoolprogram
>>> kevinscoolpackage.kevinscoolprogram.hello_world()
Hello, World!
Progress is being made.
yeah, but you broke your naming convention: it should have been kevins_world()
00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00

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