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02:09
cbg
 
1 hour later…
03:19
hey, guys, anyone can help in Django automated test?
thank you so much for letting me know @ReblochonMasque
 
4 hours later…
07:44
cbg!
Say I have a dataframe with pairs of ids. I want the pair to be unique but it might be repeated i.e.
id1 324 id2 300
id1 300 id2 324
I dont know how to eliminate the duplicates. Any thoughts?
here is some data pastebin.com/0nzZZxVx
@reydonsancho how about df.drop_duplicates?
you can also pass it a subset keyword that lets you do the dropping based on these two columns alone in a larger dataframe
Thanks @AndrasDeak! Will look into this :)
no problem
especially with a proper MCVE :P
08:03
Sure, I am still facing some issues, because I want the set of the pair of columns to be unique. I.e.
id1 324 id2 300
id1 300 id2 324
Should only keep one of the two registers, with the following code it keeps both
prueba = df[df['CD_PDV'] != df['CD_PDV_1']]
prueba.drop_duplicates(subset=['CD_PDV', 'CD_PDV_1'])
> Should only keep one of the two registers, with the following code it keeps both
you never said that
> I want the pair to be unique but it might be repeated i.e.
I read your question as "have unique ordered pairs, so (2,3) and (3,2) are different"
what I thought you wrote as output was actually input
Yes, the explanation was not very clear
I'm not experienced enough with pandas to know if there's a better way than to construct a set for each row...
That approach would be to 1) Create a set for each column
2) drop duplicates using that column
3) drop that column
08:28
:)
09:02
recbg
@AndrasDeak what you working on there?
16 hours ago, by Kevin
I'm looking for an algorithm that finds the coordinates of every pixel that a circle of known center/radius passes through. Does such an algorithm exist already? Midpoint circle algorithm isn't quite what I want because it doesn't mark every pixel the curve passes through. For example, in the first illustration, the pixels left of and below the dot are not marked.
@Skyler read from there ^
@AndrasDeak That's what I was thinking, and I'm actually very interested in that problem too (though for arbitrary curves/lines/splines/etc)
I take it Bresenham's algorithm is generally used on tiny segments to approximate an actual shape?
no idea
there's a very cool use case for getting algorithm up and this for arbitrary shaped problems. Essentially you can use it to determine if there is a fractal behavior in a system
apply an algorithm like this to a mesh with the map of the UK superimposed and you can quantitatively describe the self-similarity as you descrease/increase the scale of rasterization and find its limits
09:15
I suspect it's more "fractal" and less "self-similar"
most self-similar objects are fractals but not all fractals are self-similar
user6568562
cbg
> Many objects in the real world, such as coastlines, are statistically self-similar: parts of them show the same statistical properties at many scales.
I guess there's that
fair, generally I believe self-similar fractals tend to have rational dimensions
but yea, with coastlines they are sort-of self similar (aka statistically)
@Skyler yeah, they can often be generated using an iterated function system, in which case the dimension is someting like log(n)/log(k) where one is the number of functions and the other is the shrinking factor
considering Sierpinski's triangle that has a factor of 2 and 3 subtriangles, I'll go with k=factor and n=number of copies
10:17
@PM2Ring With the incessant clatter of the Selectric console printer to stop you from dozing off!
 
2 hours later…
12:33
cbg all. hard to come back to work after a week vacation with the mouse :(
cbg
mouse?
been at disney world for the past week with the wife/kiddos and my parents
Ah. The evil mouse overlord.
user10984358
Did you see a Snow White?
user10984358
A couple weeks ago there was a video on Reddit about a kid and a (the) snow white
user10984358
12:38
That kid just lays on Snow White’s lap and it’s just priceless.
nah
Anyone remember my problem with re-using code from an existing class without inheriting from it? I came up with this concept and I'm wondering what y'all think (the example makes Raster a Canvas internally but only a Widget publicly)
And yes I'm aware any and all occurrences of super() will break my copy_class function
12:57
Cbg
13:13
re cabbage wonderful pythonistas
13:24
@Aran-Fey is there a reason why you don't use a class decorator that adds the methods to the class directly?
this way you can easily override methods and still call them through super() if necessary
13:55
Ok, I convinced the dev server's killdrones to unionize, and now they're on strike until they get a livable wage. Maybe now I can get back to my circles.
"Noli turbare circulos meos!", said Kevin to the angry swarm of killdrones
morning cabbages, all
@Aran-Fey Looks very promising. I notice that it bears a resemblance to the midpoint circle algorithm -- I tried adapting it myself but I got bogged down in corner cases.
14:42
(0,0) doesn't get yielded for circle_coords(0,0,0.6) but that's OK, I can special-case that...
mine breaks on that too
How can I execute something like a map function over a query set like that?
I want to iterate over each element and map each one of them that matches a given criteria to another object
x, y, r = 10, 10, 0.9 doesn't look quite right either... I think it's still fine for my purposes if I use my 5x5 brush idea from yesterday.
@reydonsancho when your id1 and id2 have duplicates shuffled, the ideal way is sorting using np.sort , and then check df.duplicated() (this can be on a subset too if you want) , and then using ~ invert , filter them out
something like
df[~pd.DataFrame(np.sort(df,axis=1),index=df.index).duplicated()]
14:56
Is it possible to render markdown or rst markups in a tkinter text widget?
I don't think tkinter has native support for any kind of markdown. But IIRC textboxes do support heterogeneous font stylings, for example font color and boldness and italics, so maybe you could roll your own engine.
@anky_91 this sounds very promising, I eventually concatenated the two columns of ids and sorted them in a different column and dropped the duplicates of the last column
ok, thanks @Kevin - I probably need to read about markup languages a little bit instead of re-inventing the wheel. Surely someone has done that in python already!
Or is there a text editor that renders markdown or rst?
I know SOPython uses a markdown engine, although I'm not sure what library does the heavy lifting. Is it... pygments.org?
pygments.org/docs/lexers/#pygments.lexers.markup.MarkdownLexer implies that pygments can parse markdown, so that's pretty promising
You'd probably need to write your own formatter to process the markdown into commands that tkinter understands. I rate this at a 5/10 on the pain in the butt scale
It sounds like you're flexible on what software you can use to actually display the markdown, so maybe you can find something suitable for your purposes among the existing formatters
15:13
Yes, I am quite flexible.
I am trying to write a simple text archival system that uses exclusively ASCII, so it is not at risk of becoming obsolete, but I would like the rendering to be a bit more edible than plain text
can you elaborate on "exclusively ASCII, so it is not at risk of becoming obsolete"?
I'm just curious
Extreme challenge mode: create a rich text editor that does in-place style rendering. For example, you type [b]Hello, world![/b and nothing happens; but when you type the final ], it immediately replaces that content with Hello, world!
Naturally, placing the cursor to the right of ! and pressing Backspace will revert it to [b]Hello, world![/b
30 years from now, what software will you use to read your archive?
ASCII Text will be there, but the rest?
ArchiveReader.aic, the friendly archive reading ai that's fun to use
If we are talking really long term archival, nothing beats paper yet.
15:19
It speaks ASCII, mojibake, Esperanto, and the binary language of moisture vaporators
When I said "I am trying to write", I meant that I am looking into the concept of such an archival system. I am nowhere near writing code yet.
I'm somewhat skeptical about data storage that's legible 30 years down the line
below_5 = Count('book', filter=Q(book__rating__lte=5))
pubs = Publisher.objects.annotate(below_5=below_5)
not in a paper-crumbles-to-dust manner, but rather in a what-alphabet-is-this-even
15:25
can you please help me understand this?
from django.db.models import Q
you mean paper @AndrasDeak
I vaguely recall a project that reads log files and outputs their text with highlighting corresponding to each line's importance. Errors are red, warnings are yellow, etc.
Hey, quick question regarding asymptotic notation. Is "log_2(x)=O(n^(1/7))"?
Usually, polynomials dominates log_2, but in this case, the exponent is <1, so does that still hold true in this case?
The killer feature being, it can detect warnings and errors even if they don't contain the word "warning" or "error'
15:26
@SebastianNielsen n^(1/7)?????
where did you get that number of all things?
Oh, is this homework?
Yeah
gotta go
yeah, good luck with it ;)
It's hard to say what the complexity of log_2 is unless we can see its source code
you'll need the proper definition of big-O
... Or are you asking "are O(log2(n)) and O(n^(1/7)) equivalent?"? I'm inclined to say no
15:28
no, they are asking if log2(n) can be majored by n^(1/7), but instead of trying to ask help with understanding they are trying to ask help writing the homework
log's one of them wossnames. Transcendental functions. Not equivalent to any kind of polynomial.
small-o, big-O and theta notation can be a bit finnicky, so you have to look at the actual definition your lecturer gives you to be able to give a definitive answer
@AndrasDeak yes thanks, I don't understand how to use that with annotate
Abc.objects.filter(attribute = val).annotate(
      Q(user__iexact = 1)
)
they always use that with Count
Thanks @Kevin
15:32
@Aurelius okay
15:42
Project Codename ECHO CHAMBER Ft. Aran-Fey: complete.
Neat. Now do an ellipse!
nevermind, it's a circle reflecting from a square and not a circle reflecting from a circle
it's fun to follow the wave fragments that propagate horizontally, vertically and at +- 45 degree angles
b = Abc.objects.filter(a = val2)
a = Abc.objects.filter(a = val1)
return { 'a': a, 'b': b }
how can I do seomthing like that and have the serializer work?
I suspect the Aran circle algorithm could be extended to ellipses although I'm not confident that I could do it on my first try
I know the exact definition of Big-Oh. I also know that polynomials dominate log_2. But the thing that confuses me is that the greater n becomes in $n^(0.1)$ the bigger part of that value is taken away ... you know, because the exponent is less than one.
In the light of that, I don't believe log_2(n) = O(n^(0.1))
@SebastianNielsen can you write a mathematical proof to back up your belief?
15:51
I think the root of my problem is that I am not sure when we are dealing with a polynomial
@SebastianNielsen good news: you're not dealing with a polynomial
How do you know?
One part that might help: n^0.1 is NOT a polynomial
because n^0.1 is not a polynomial
check the definition of "polynomial"
15:52
In my book some variable raised to a constant is a polynomial
For a handwaving verification to find what you have to prove: what happens if n is doubled? Tripled? multiplied by 1000? 10^15?
a variable raised to an integer constant is a polynomial
In mathematics, a polynomial is an expression consisting of variables (also called indeterminates) and coefficients, that involves only the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and non-negative integer exponents of variables. An example of a polynomial of a single indeterminate, x, is x2 − 4x + 7. An example in three variables is x3 + 2xyz2 − yz + 1. Polynomials appear in many areas of mathematics and science. For example, they are used to form polynomial equations, which encode a wide range of problems, from elementary word problems to complicated scientific problems; they are...
> non-negative integer exponents of variables
I hope Sebastian solves this because I would actually like to know the answer
I've got a guess but it lacks rigor to the extreme
I will, it is just question of time.
I need to go back to see the original question...
@SebastianNielsen What is the question you are trying to solve?
15:55
@Code-Apprentice it's literally that, and it's homework
@Code-Apprentice

Whether this is true or not: log_2(n) = O(n^(0.1))
So you've made a claim that it is not. Do you know where to start with the proof to back up your claim?
I tried plotting it in a graph
You should start with the definition of Big-O. What does it say?
One sec, I got that in my book.
15:58
oh...I'm starting to remember now. Often the definition isn't the easiest way to do these proofs. Have you learned about the different tests, like the root test or the ration test?
No, not really, I am just starting out with asymptotic notation.
Does "X is majored by Y" mean something different from "X is dominated by Y asymptotically"? Or is this one of those quirky distinctions in iternational math terminology?
probably the later
One sec, I am going to plot the two graphs. It is clear to see that n^(0.1) is much slower than log_2(n)
@SebastianNielsen So if log(n) = O(n^0.1) then there exists positive constants c and n0 such that 0 <= f(n) <= c*g(n) for all n > n0
16:01
And that is not true. (though I cannot prove it)
Hot take: "dominates" is a problematic term, like "master/slave" in server architecture or "kill the child" in threading, and will get replaced by "majors" in the next decade
The first step to a formal, rigorous proof is to state what you are trying to prove. In this case, we need the negation of the statement I just typed out.
You need to show that there are no such c and n0 that make 0 <= f(n) <= c*g(n) for all possible values of n.
I can't think of a way to do that, unfortunately, code-apprentice.
16:04
@Code-Apprentice it is a monomial :P
@SebastianNielsen that is the correct intuition. Does your teacher expect a formal proof or will the graph be enough?
I mean, I just have to answer yes or no.
So...
haha
@AnttiHaapala a mononomial must have a positive integer exponent.
p.s. all mononomials are polynomials
I'm trying to solve log_2(n) == n^(1/7) symbolically and I'm just sitting here feeling like this guy
16:05
@SebastianNielsen if that is sufficient, then give that as the answer.
Actually, a former cs graduate just texted me and said than indeed log_2(n) = O(n^(0.1))
so, now I am even more confused...
@Kevin for a rigorous proof, I would use the limit test or the ratio test
@SebastianNielsen I think he is incorrect. And your graph backs that up.
@Code-Apprentice depends.
@AnttiHaapala on what?
@Code-Apprentice He tells me the reason why the graph isn't showing it, is because we have to get really, really far out in order to see it.
16:08
@Code-Apprentice considering that poly means many then I'd like to disagree :P
In mathematics, a monomial is, roughly speaking, a polynomial which has only one term. Two definitions of a monomial may be encountered: (1): A monomial, also called power product, is a product of powers of variables with nonnegative integer exponents, or, in other words, a product of variables, possibly with repetitions. The constant 1 is a monomial, being equal to the empty product and x0 for any variable x. If only a single variable x is considered, this means that a monomial is either 1 or a power xn of x, with n a positive integer. If several variables are considered, say,...
A list of length 1 is still a list ;-)
@Code-Apprentice I am talking etymology.
@Kevin that is true. but it is not a list of many elements .P
The latin origin of the word gives you an intuition, but it doesn't entirely hold up to the exact definition.
Still...the difference between "poly" and "mono" is irrelevant in this case, n^0.1 is not a mononomial because 0.1 is not a "non negative integer".
When will linguists incorporate strong typing into English already
user10984358
16:13
heya
user10984358
is there any other or pythonic way to do the following
user10984358
>>> a=[('abc',123),('def',456),('ghi',789)]
>>> a
[('abc', 123), ('def', 456), ('ghi', 789)]
>>> 'abc' in [x[0] for x  in a]
True
>>>
user10984358
I want to see if the element i want to check is in the list of tuples (as first element in the tuple)
@ReblochonMasque ugh, no
@Kevin Wen wil lingwists incorpuraet cunsistunt speling intu Inglish olredy
user10984358
16:16
that was fun
@TheNamesAlc One "cute" approach is "abc" in next(zip(*a)). I'm not inclined to use cute approaches in production quality code though.
zip(*a) transpose a into an iterable that looks like (("abc", "def", "ghi"), (123, 456, 789)), then next extracts only ("abc", "def", "ghi") from that, and in does what it usually does
but using a generator might help with huge lists
user10984358
well if actual context is needed then I have a list of tuples with the tuples being Path objects
so something like [(Path(),Path()]
>>> 'abc' in (x[0] for x  in a)
True
user10984358
I want to see if a path is in the first element of any tuples in the list
16:19
or for piR's favourite, 'abc' in map(itemgetter(0), a)
user10984358
imagine it like a list that holds sourcePath and destinationPath Path Objects
Depending on how many details you've sanded off your toy example, something like any(t[0] == "abc" for t in a) might be appropriate
user10984358
I thought of a generator as well, like what @AndrasDeak mentioned
If it turns out that in doesn't work on collections of paths or something
16:22
@Code-Apprentice Ok, with the ratio test I can at least prove that x^a diverges as x approaches infinity for any positive a. That helps, I guess.
user10984358
thanks ! also that example with zip was helpful in making me understand the concept of zip, I still can't think "zip" when I code
But log_2 also diverges so I'm not quite at QED yet
Maybe I can try to prove that x^a / log_2(x) > 1 when x approaches infinity
Now I will shut up in case I'm giving Sebastian too many hints. Or leading him down a pointless blind alley. Either one.
@Kevin Do you mean positive a > 1?
user10984358
I am just curious, you don't have to answer though, how do everyone here know this math-y stuff?
I think it works for a > 0. For example, sqrt(x) aka x^0.5 diverges... Right?
user10984358
16:26
are you all like professors or just do some high level math stuff for work?
@TheNamesAlc I don't know about everyone else, but I have a bachelor's degree in applied mathematics.
@TheNamesAlc A half-forgotten math minor in college, plus too many hours on Wikipedia
@Kevin oh yah...all positive values of a will make it diverge.
x^a converges to 0 for negative values of a
but I'm not sure what the ratio test has to do with that. This is just basic limits.
user10984358
noted :) thanks again! , carry on with some space level math stuff
and still says nothing about Big-O
16:28
@TheNamesAlc we kinda like went to high school :P
@Kevin that limit still needs to remain finite for x^a = O(log(n)).
that is "inf / inf" and we can use l'Hôpital and take derivatives of both
conditions for using the'Hospital can be fickle
that's probably the right approach
I know it's bitten me in the past so I avoid it if possible (because I never knew the conditions)
16:33
with repeated applications, x^a will disappear before log(x) does.
Okay, that cs graduate helped me, it is indeed correct that "log_2(x) = O(x^0.1)"
and basically we then get bx^(ca) / ~(1 / x) something...
x^0.1 > log_2(x) and beyond for some really big x
like x=5000000000000000
and then it becomes apparent that the limit is > 1
lazy to calculate, I am not wolfram alpha, fire can be extinguished, solution exists, q.e.d.
Did you guys study CS?
16:35
/me blows out the candle
@SebastianNielsen no
You sound like you did, I don't think you learn that much math just by studying software development.
I didn't
andras studied physics...so even more math than any CS major
industrial engineering
university engineering this is "calculus 101" stuff
16:36
Wow, okay, and you just so happen to be gods at Python at the same time.
(or at least so I believe)
No, I am just god. Being omnipotent and omniscient means that implicitly then I am a god in Python as well.
Well then, I am surprised you know of asymptotic notation, that isn't something I would expect an industrial engineer or physic major to know of.
I read this in highschool:
16:40
No way ...
Please tell me you're kidding me.
actually I have it on my bookshelf
CLRS! I remember you :)
I do too, but I am in college.
@SebastianNielsen Much to learn, you still have
I just read chaptors 1-3 in it.
(it was my homework)
16:41
I got it because I ranked 2nd in the national IOI preliminary in Finland in 2000
Holy moly, are you serious?
does my avatar look !serious?
Uhm ... is that a trick questioon? xD
help(IOI)
Well anyway, have you read the entire book antti?
16:42
of course
and needed very little of it :P
I am seriously blown away.
he wrote it
@AndrasDeak hey hey... everything I've stated above has been true
including the god thing
we must not disregard the possibility that you are a dysgraphic dog
I learned a lot of trigonometry from software development, during my many many attempts to do game dev
Calculus not so much
16:46
But, antti, one thing is to superficially, quickly read it, but did you actually take your time to understand the material? I find some of it quite hard to grasp (and we are talking about the first few chaptors here).
it is rather easy stuff after 20 years of processing it in one's head
@AnttiHaapala Are you bad at anything? ;)
Yes, social skills :P
Antti once tried to fail... And failed to do so.
Haha, good one.
16:52
Ahhh... so funny. That's got to be on "The most interesting man in the world" commercials
Alas, it's a stolen joke.
Antti is alias for Chuck Norris
I passed a course called "Integral transforms, Z-transform and applications". I have no clue about any of that any more :(
I got it from the Addams Family cartoon, of all places
ask me what is fourier transform and I say "it is the F thing"
16:55
The overachieving Gomez finds himself bored with his usual perilous escapades because he succeeds at them effortlessly, and resolves to find something he can fail at
it is easy to internalize the algorithm stuff when you use them day to day ... unlike Andras, say, I haven't really needed higher math so I am getting really bad at it :'(
Wrestling great white sharks while blindfolded and on fire, that kind of thing
being in the water while on fire is not easy
So I suppose you guys are great at calculus beta, right?
I could need some help with it, I am having some trouble with a specific "limit" problem.
@SebastianNielsen good at googling :P
16:58
Is beta what comes after 101?
@Dodge Quite so. And yet by the end of the episode Gomez hasn't failed a single time. Morticia consoles him, observing that he failed to fail, and thus succeeded in failing. Much to his delight.
I have never heard of 101, so I am not sure.
@SebastianNielsen we're not your math support group
That sucks :(
ah good point I guess that was the 2nd calculus course where they had l'Hôpital
16:58
So ask reddit instead
The deep nature of this paradox is not addressed. Too heady for a kid's show I guess.
@Kevin did you type this out from memory or did you find a synopsis online to copy/paste? Because either one is quite a feat.
I wrote it out. The details are probably wrong. Might have been a straight jacket and not a blindfold, for instance
You guys are amazing, it is a privilege to be a part of this chat room. :)
17:04
Aug 20 at 9:35, by PM 2Ring
Imagine that you won a competition, and the prize is a free session with a Python think-tank who normally charge $1000 per hour. Don't waste that prize!
Unfortunately the think tank has thin walls and you can hear someone recounting old 90s cartoons in the next office over
it just adds
to the experience
@Anadactothe you can edit/delete messages for 2 minutes in chat
thanks
can you do s/o/r
Do what?
17:08
substitute/original/replacement
its a thing in discord & slack among other things
why did i type c
I can do selective catalytic reduction, but not if anyone's watching
let's say I sent

Wanna hang out on saturday? I think saturday's good for me.

but I meant sunday, I could send a message as follows

s/saturday/sunday

and the former will be edited so all occurances of "saturday" will be replaced with "sunday":

Wanna hang out on sunday? I think sunday's good for me.
No, we don't have anything like that here.
That's a pretty neat feature though.
slack doesn't do that
s/x/y is often understood in a techie context to represent find/replace, even if the chat environment itself doesn't do anything with it
17:12
Hey everyone. I am new here!
What is this chat for? Do I ask Python related questions here?
Probably because Perl (and... PHP?) use s// syntax for regex replacement
@ArafatKhan Yeah.
Oh! Then I had a Conda question. Can I ask?
I mean anyone here can help me with some Anaconda/Conda questions?
You can ask, although I don't know that any of us are specifically good at Conda
17:15
Best to ask your question. If someone can weigh in, they usually will
@ArafatKhan please see sopython.com/chatroom for local rules, chat.stackoverflow.com/faq for general chat FAQ
Okay so I am trying to create a Conda environment specifically for web development with Django and I want to have Python 3.4 on that.
```$ conda create -n web-development python=3.4 django
Collecting package metadata (current_repodata.json): ...working... done
Solving environment: ...working... failed with repodata from current_repodata.json, will retry with next repodata source.
Collecting package metadata (repodata.json): ...working... done
Solving environment: ...working... failed

PackagesNotFoundError: The following packages are not available from current channels:

- python=3.4

Current channels:

- https://repo.anaconda.com/pkgs/main/win-64
Can anyone see what the issue is?
@ArafatKhan please see our code formatting guide for chat and practice in the sandbox if necessary
Thank. It really is my first time so sorry.
it's alright, chat formatting is fundamentally broken and weird
17:25
@ArafatKhan for future reference, you can edit a chat post in the first 2 minutes
A curious error message, since I don't think of Python itself as a "package"
@Code-Apprentice Thanks
I don't know much about how Conda works but from what I have seen, I think it might be a problem with the defaults channel
Browsing through repo.anaconda.com/pkgs/main/win-64, I notice that the earliest version of Python 3 they have is python-3.5.4-h1357f44_23.tar.bz2
Yes you are right. I just found out before you gave that link.
Python 3.4 isn't available from Anaconda.
I wonder what would happen if you tried conda create -n web-development python=3.5 django instead.
17:31
Anaconda supports Python 2.7, 3.6, and 3.7.
why are you looking for py34 specifically?
Python 3.5 works!
and so does Python 3.6
$ conda create -n web-development python=3.5 django
Collecting package metadata (current_repodata.json): ...working... done
Solving environment: ...working... failed with repodata from current_repodata.json, will retry with next repodata source.
Collecting package metadata (repodata.json): ...working... done
Solving environment: ...working... done

## Package Plan ##

environment location: C:\Users\User\Anaconda3\envs\web-development

added / updated specs:
- django
- python=3.5


The following packages will be downloaded:
Ok, so this confirms that the problem is with 3.4 specifically.
I wonder what is meant by "failed with repodata from current_repodata.json, will retry with next repodata source."
Knowing nothing about Conda, I wonder if there's another channel or repository or whatever where you can get Python 3.4
17:37
please consider first whether you actually need Python3.4; even if you can get it to run now, many libraries may stop supporting it soon
There's no specific reason to use Python 3.4 actually.
numpy's already dropped 3.4 I think
type hints, async and a few others are very good reason to switch to newer version for library maintainers
I have the latest version of Python and other libraries on my base environment
As I am a very novice Python programmer I don't get much change to use virtual environments. So I wanted to know what other Python versions I could create Conda environments from.
how can I limit two query sets
so that the result of both combined containes less then X elements?
7
A: django - filter after slice / filter on queryset where results have been limited

AlasdairYou can't use filter() after you have sliced the queryset. The error is pretty explicit. Cannot filter a query once a slice has been taken. You could do the filter in Python stuff = stuff.objects.all()[:3] extra_stuff = [s for s in stuff if s.stuff_flag=='flag'] To get the number or items i...

this is the problem
Cannot filter a query once a slice has been taken.
I can't filter afte slicing the first query
is the better to use
data = self.serializer_class(queryset, many = True).data
to serialize to json
or simple call .values() on the query set?
17:57
@Anadactothe no because it is lacking the right delimiter. The proper syntax is s/o/r/
s@o@r@ because you might have paths
true dat
@Anadactothe they also tell that you shouldn't teach your mom how to ...
I've read that first time in the last millennium so...
02:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

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