On the very large scale that cosmologists work in, the universe is fairly homogeneous. The universe is modeled as a homogeneous cloud of dust, with the dust particles being galaxies.
And milk is often homogenized. :)
An earlier xkcd comic on the dark matter density in the solar system: xkcd.com/2186
Hi All, I really need some help here please: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/58412457/how-to-write-scraped-data-to-a-data-frame-in-the-correct-order-in-python
nah, it's fun to see how others solved it and marvel at their wizardry. there is a list of people who share theirs somewhere each year: sopython.com/wiki/Advent_of_Code
Thanks @AndrasDeak for that new prime spiral pattern. I love stuff like that which is simple & almost obvious in hindsight, but which nobody's done before... or if they have, they never bothered publishing it because it seemed too simple. :)
@PM2Ring I'm..... a network engineer, who's had experience doing all sorts of weird stuff. The language I knew 'best' was php, and even then I wouldn't say i knew it well at all, just enough to make things work.
hahah, my very first version of the script was mutating globals...
heh, now I got to the bit about returning values, and it says it's likely the best way. ;)
It's often quicker to create a fresh list than to modify lots of the items in an existing list. And the resulting code is usually easier to read, and less likely to have subtle bugs. Also, Python is very good at recycling memory, so don't worry about making lots of temporary objects, unless they're ginormous.
Just curious, is there a way to parse a string as an f-string after it's been already assigned?
var = 42
a = '{var}'
# somehow take the string in a and parse/treat it like an fstring.
(For science. not intended for any practical use.) I haven't been able to figure a way so far. Also, haven't really found a builtin/function that i honestly expected i'd find for fstrings.
does someone have experience managing python services via puppet? any modules that work well or google-top-hits that one should avoid?
@PM2Ring some code would be useful to understand what the OP actually expects the conversion to mean. it is not unlike people wanting to convert a string to an r-string, which is equally ill-defined.
@MisterMiyagi Fair point, and there are several questions by confused OPs asking about converting a "normal" string to an r-string. But I think the desired output given in the f-string question makes it clear enough what the OP wants: basically what Aran-Fey's code above does.
@AndrasDeak Very true. I use this Martijn answer to dupe-hammer such questions. But it's one of those things that can be hard to get if you have a wrong idea stuck in your head. Just reading a good answer may not be sufficient to get your thoughts switched over to the right track. A chatroom (or face to face) discussion may be required.
@MisterMiyagi aye, honestly, just fooling around with that one in particular, not really planning to use it. Someone asked me this question, and it got me thinking
I kept a "how do I pad this string?" question open too long and now all four of the answers recommend doing overly complicated length arithmetic instead of just calling ljust with the correct precedence and now I'm mad.
I think we need to consider the two lives of this room: The old one, and the one after it was rescued by @JonClements. So we have two eras: BC and AD – Before jon Clements and After jon Did rescue the room.
cbg. I'm looking for something quite hacky but my searches keep getting derailed. I want to create a demo version of my flask software that's currently hooked up to live data. A lot of the app takes the current datetime into account (e.g. the last month's worth of machine production from this point backwards). If I stop feeding live data to the demo, most of the functionality will break over time. Is there a way to launch the app and it forever think that "now" is the current datetime?
It bothers me that "foobar" * -2 evaluates to the empty string. Perhaps it's nice for people trying to format their data, who would prefer incorrectly padded output instead of a ValueError, but that doesn't mean I have to like it.
One common place you might see string multiplication pop up is if you're writing a homebrew string padder, e.g. pad = lambda s, x: s + " "*(x-len(s)). It's conceptually valid to do pad("foo", 3), so it should be valid to multiply space by zero.
In [1]: import numpy as np
In [2]: a = [1, 2, 3]
In [3]: a * -2
Out[3]: []
In [4]: A = np.array(a)
In [5]: A * -2
Out[5]: array([-2, -4, -6])
In [6]: np.repeat(A, 2)
Out[6]: array([1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3])
In [7]: np.repeat(A, -2)
But, hmm, there's still some inconsistency, because "one hundred" precedes "two hundred", but there's no "zero hundred"... Ok, zero through nine are now "zero hundred zeroty zero" through "zero hundred zeroty nine"
vvv an infinite number of placeholder zeroes goes here
"(...) zero hundred zeroty zero million, zero hundred zeroty zero thousand, zero hundred zeroty [digit]"
Speaking of strings & negative numbers, here's something I saw in a Martin Gardner column. Let a=1, z=-1, b=2, y=-2, etc. Then (-4, 9, -1, 1, -9, 4) encodes "wizard".
Only getMembers will be directly accessible in the file that you're importing from, but when you call getMembers it will be able to access searchGroup and whatever other local values it requires
I struggle to understand the thought process of users that ask questions like "I've noticed that [fundamental feature of the language] is pretty slow. Can I make it faster?", where the feature is something like "modulus" or "function calls". Do they think that the language devs wrote an intentionally slow implementation as a joke?
Note that this category does not include users that ask something more focused like "can I make my recursive function faster?" and then post the O(2^N) version of the fibonacci function. That's fine.
"Why is my recursive fib(n) slow?" --> acceptable "is there a speedup I can apply to all recursive functions?" --> not acceptable
def f(g, a, b=1):
return g()
def g():
# do something that accesses caller's frame
# and somehow return the values of `a` and `b`
pass
f(g, 'hi') == ('hi', 1)
# I want it to return the tuple `('hi', 1)`
@PM2Ring "How can I make (a**b)%m faster?" is acceptable to me. I consider the combination of two operators to be more than one fundamental feature of the language
him: calls me over to help diagnose/solve a python issue me: test whether `pd.func(arg)` actually does what you think it does him: <checks>. It does! me: then, `arg` isn't what we think it is. Easiest way to diagnose this is to wrap <problem line> in a try/catch and print out `arg` him: I don't want to do that me: why not? him: because I don't want to <cycle repeats 2-3x>
him (finally): can't rerun because that involves <way too much effort with CI/CD> me: oh! that actually makes sense. Maybe tell me that next time. Otherwise it looks like you're just being lazy him: I shouldn't have to. You should assume that I'm not being lazy me: ragequits
@inspectorG4dget I have a circle of trust, where I automatically assume that any member has a good reason for whatever wacky thing they're trying to do. That said, none of my coworkers are in the circle of trust.
well, it's also partly that I'm new here (3 months) and he's not (1.5 years). What bugs me is the apparent mentality of "because I said so" rather than explaining reasoning. Makes it seem like he's posturing himself to intentionally make me look clueless
A good developer should always be prepared to explain their reasoning. Even if they're in the circle of trust of everyone on the planet, it's still a good sanity check.
see that's what I thought... Also, I figured I could use it as a learning opportunity about how our CI/CD works (and where/how it can be frustrating), while helping out a friend. But that seems to not only not be in the cards, but not even allowed in the deck (if that makes any sense at all)
I think there's a time and place to say "I can't explain it to you now because you'd need a ton of context that you'll only be familiar with later", but I don't think that's what is happening here
@Kevin I would have accepted that. That would have been "trust me, there's a good reason, but not enough time to get into it right now". But "because I don't want to" just seems like a d!|{ move
I was v. lucky in the full-time jobs I've had, my seniors acted as mentors and weren't focused on "the known" ways of doing which they taught me, but also welcome "to be taught"? @inspectorG4dget
my manager is fine in this respect. This guy is actually a good friend from back in the day, who actually referred me to this position. Makes it even more difficult for me
@inspectorG4dget then maybe the best thing is, especially if they're a friend (and while it's difficult if you're friends), you should evaluate the level of friendship and criticism you can both take. It takes nothing to take 20 minutes out of the day and just have a 1-1 chat to hopefully make you both reach something you can move forward with.
just try and keep it neutral and have a discussion of why you thought what you were doing/thought you'd do was better than their's and listen to them as well
I understand what you're saying, but I'm having trouble figuring out how to describe an action without saying "when you do <X>", which immediately brings him into the narrative
I am reminded of back in high school, when I'd play Magic: The Gathering during lunch period. Some of my opponents had a habit of countering my spells and saying "it's countered". I criticized them for using passive tense and insisted on "I counter it". If they were going to rain on my parade, I wanted them to at least take responsibility for it.
for example, how would I say "when you don't tell me the reasoning behind a decision, it makes it difficult for me to understand that decision and extrapolate it to other similar decisions" without the "you" in there. I could abstract it away as "when someone says", but that almost seems like I'm trying to posture into some high ground
something along the lines of: "We both agree on the end-goal, but we seemed to have a difference of opinion the other day... can we work through those and discuss both our opinions?"
I'm an avid enthusiast of overthinking my words so they can't possibly be misinterpreted, so I think I'm in a good position to say: some people will take things the wrong way no matter what.
bigList = [i for s in listOfLists for i in s]
bigList.reverse()
dedup = set(bigList)
inds = {e:len(bigList)-i-1 for i,e in enumerate(bigList)}
answer = sorted(dedup, key=inds.get)
@Aran-Fey THVM! It's working, but why it works? I till not getting why perms.append(chosen) can't append the value chosen is currently representing. Can you tell me a little bit more about it?
@Kevin heck... over the years and years, depending on the person I was dealing with, you have to switch "approaches" as it were... some wouldn't have get the point hammered home until they were called into the office and were asked "you've fed up - what the f is going" and others needed to be "we've got a tricky situation here, where do you think we've not got things quite right?"
@Quark It is appending the value chosen is currently representing. But then you modify that value. You only have one list, the one that you call chosen. If you want each element to be different, you need more than one list. So you need to create copies.
djsmiley2k wanted to deduplicate his list of ip addresses. I think he already found something that worked for him, so we're just bikeshedding at this point
(By the way, what does it mean in the tab of a browser when there is (*) in SO chat? Is it like a regular expression, there have been an arbitrary amount of replies ever since the last time you opened the tab?)
I just helped depploy a full service written in python with scikit-learn, wrapped in a flask server, deployed in a docker image on <some server somewhere>. I think at that point, it becomes somewhat accurate to say that the whole thing was written in python
@inspectorG4dget anyway... you're one of the few that I'd consider free to msg me off line regarding stuff if you want - just happy to see you around more these days
@JonClements Much thanks. I might have to take you up on that at some point if I don't find a therapist soon enough. Glad to be back. School's over and I get to do real things now
Buffer all IO to reduce the overhead on Go system calls. On a system call, current Goroutines yield to that call.
When possible in tight loops, use structs instead of interfaces to minimize the interface methods indirection overhead.
Use pre-allocated buffers within tight loops (similarly to how io.Reader works) to minimize garbage collection pressure.
Process data rows in batches as a workaround to poor compiler inlining, as to move the actual computation closer to the data and minimize the overhead on each function call. …
@overexchange the reason is simple. The cache is meant to be kept around, that's the purpose of a cache, whereas the build volume is not supposed to be kept around.
on the contrary if it is then it might mess up things.