@roganjosh this and this and this make it sound like that pylab can easily be loaded, and that a shell may be a dedicated pylab shell. That would explain a lot... Although the first link is pretty old, might not be relevant anymore. cc @m8_
When I enrolled in my first programming class at a university, we got introduced to Jupyter as our IDE. It was buggy, slow, and sometimes didn't want to work at all. Instead I used Pycharm. I was never able to get any good answer to why they chose to use Jupyter. It seems some of the people in here use Jupyter. Is there any advantage in using Jupyter over a local, native IDE?
@wim A broken representation of a 3D model, in a buggy (ravioli coded) Metal 1 "game implementation". I messed up the source code quite badly (after fixing the issue, having the model render correctly), so I'd have to do a bit of job to get it back up and running. The cyan bottom part is just the flat ground layer. Quite some time since it happened now. Anyway; I got a cool screenshot out of it.
In [9]: foo()
Out[9]: ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
In [10]: from numpy import any
In [11]: foo()
Out[11]: ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
I haven't made myself familiar enough in here to answer that...
I wrote an undo handler some time ago, that observes objects by temporarily overriding their __ class __. The issue is that this doesn't work on lists, dicts, sets, etc, without having the user supply them subclassed. Might there be a better way to solve this?
@wim I have been getting by on a simple function with a while loop for the intcode problems until just now because the instructions said the program was always restarted and state was irrelevant. Now I need to make make something that keeps track of program state for each amp
I know, I did make a binary tree out of node classes for day six though. My test case for day seven part b is taking forever to finish. The opcode logic I have is right but ,,, idunno
oh, missed that because you said the logic was right just bad numbers, thought phase settings could be problematic (as in you'd tested but submitted answers were wrong)
@wim Is my code at least easy to follow? NB This latest iteration of my computer still passes the tests from day 5 a little while ago, as long as you repeat .run_program() until it returns True
So I assume the internal logic is ok. How I'm using the AmpComputer I've built is another matter.
in day 7 you may not want to run until halt, but rather until the output buffer is filled, or block until an input buffer is selectable (depending on whether you coded the amplifier to "push" or "pull", I guess)
@wim, that's my day 5, my current AmpComputer is here. I thought about subclassing, but figured it would be easier for me to follow to just copy and modify, since so much had to change.
the AmpComputer should have 5 intcomputers (you can connect up their inputs and outputs at AmpComputer.__init__ time). It should not rewrite the intcomputer entirely
this is not subclassing (is a) but composition (has a)
I recommend you re-use your computer from day 5 in the amp. there is not really "so much had to change", I barely had to change the computer class at all
I reused most of it, just the run_computer stops at the output opcode, and maintains a list for the inputs, which I reference from a generator, so I can add inputs while the computer is instantiated, oh and the pointer is an instance variable. I ended up not changing as much as I expected to need to, now I look at it.
@wim Do you see any glaring flaws in how I'm passing the outputs to inputs?
Well I have a generator reading from my .inputs list inside the computer, and I simply append the most recent output from the just run so I store next_input = A.outputs[-1] then when it goes to B I'm running B.inputs.append(next_input)
Line 238
I tried halting when one of the five computers halts, then reading the last computer's last output, in case it was different, but it made no difference, in each of the text cases, the final computer to output before reaching op99 is the last computer (E) anyway.
So....my understanding is the phase is passed as the first input, then the 0 (in the first amplifier. And on my first loop through my five amplifiers, two inputs are used on each, then 1 for subsequent loops
Not in A's input, but my AmpComp.run_program ends with a return None after outputting a value to allow the next AmpComp to run with that output as input, whereas if it hits op99 it returns True (indicating completed here), it doesn't continue, so the next AmpComp wouldn't be given the input anyway.
Yam. Ok, so I was copying a reference to my intcode program, rather than copying the program, inserting a [:] after the intcode_program variable I passed in solved it.
Hey, it took me awhile, but I'm happy I found it myself, rather than someone else pointing it out. Thankyou for your help :) I printed out the program state (because the program is changed as it runs) while I was examining what y'all were suggesting, and noticed that the patterns seemed to be sequential.
@wim I didn't check whether it happened, but the problem description is clear. I thought you wanted correct solutions, not just ones that work with input :P
@sammy welcome
@user76284 drop how?
I only understand that question as "overwrite with zeros" which would probably be r = range(arr.shape[-1]); arr[..., r, r] = 0 if the two last dimensions have the same size
if they have different size you probably need something like min(arr.shape[-2:]) for the range
the docs are pretty bad for its python implementation but thats what some answer on stack overflow said about it (if both min and max are set to zero I could see that being a special case)
also weirdly enough the sobel/scharr filters seem way better in sk then opencv
from what I've read it seems to pump the picture through a Canny filter then work off that, but I've never really gotten a satisfying filter from opencv in the first place,
according to openv "This operation processes the edges while removing the noise."
one thing im still trying to learn how to do is change the levels of the image, since I know generally my targets skew purple it'd be nice to make an adjustment that rewards blue+red dark values
Hey guys, these codecs thing always confuse me. I have the following data
>> title out 'Maude Adams (1872\xe2\x80\x931953) as Joan of Arc' >>type(title) out str
The \xw2 and such means it's in utf-8. It should read "Maude Adams (1872-1953) as Joan of Arc" Is there a way to convert title to what I want?
Converting it to unicode changes the utf-8 characters, but still doesn't show a dash. Changing it to ascii, I have to remove/ignore the dash. Neither is what I really want
if I have to compare two excel files, think of it as a "before" and "after" statistics file, and then see how much each attribute has changed (increase or decrease), is pandas really needed or can I do this with normal python?
user10984358
obviously pandas will make it easier, considering I am a beginner to pandas, would it be better to do it normal python?
if you somehow get your root linux drive to go to 0 bytes of free space, you're in for a lot of trouble :( Expect Chrome to not restore & if you reboot & that doesn't recover space, even gnome login crashes.
@Kevin well... it's less fun trying to play people that are way way way better with far more cards... there's a very popular aggro in red for small easily producible tokens coupled with one or more gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/…
@TheLittleNaruto It's hard to know without any context, but try converting your ObjectId to a str. If that doesn't give you the hex string, pass an ObjectId to dir() to see what attributes it has.
My poor little intcode based signal amplifier stops one amplification cycle too early from looking at my results and the test results. Looks like I may have to abandon it, which sets me up for problems in later days for sure. :(
@Dodge Why/how does it stop too early? The stopping point must be after the correct output, unless your intcode interpreter (from day 5) itself is wrong.
@KieranMoynihan It is a mess but works on everything but the feedback loop, I am managing pointer state and program state by storing them in variables and passing in and out, I'll show you what I mean, though
@wim To be fair, unless you already implemented the feature, you would need to add some way to "pause" or something similar after outputs/before inputs.
@Dodge I'm wondering what your condition is for stopping, but I fear we'll get a little far into spoiler territory if we go down that road. If only you had it up on github :)
Nevertheless, I must admit that I have selected a horrible design and should not forget this moving forward, at least today's does not use the computer
I'll push it, but make sure there are no children present when you view it, it's pretty gruesome :P
@PM2Ring Yeah! Because it's pain to deal with it later. Just a background: I am writing a REST API, and for every record I want to have a primary key which can be accessed easily by the REST API consumer(i.e. client).
One way is to get this object id after inserting and add one more attribute called something like "prime_id" with the same hex key.
i.e. insert() -> generates "_id": Object("hex"); Now get the hex string out of it, and update the same record with new attribute "prime_id": "hex"
Ugh... that's a frustrating game - pesky blue card players... no damage dealt at all in the game, just countered everything with enchantments on the field that kept re-triggering so ended up having to discard 12 cards each play... so that didn't last long - remarkably boring
I can relate. I have a separate partition for the OS which makes upgrades trivial and safe, but I've been reaching the end of its size for the past year or two
right now I have 2.7 GB free in / which only lasts a few minutes when apt decides to download the entire wikipedia
Hello I am new to network stats and I would like to compare network graphs based on their densities. I normalized the densities using min max. The group size differ significantly (eg. range between 2 and 800). Is this comparison meaningful What would you suggest?
@user11964604 what definition of density are you using? The ones at e.g. math.stackexchange.com/questions/1526372/… are already naturally between 0 and 1 I think, no normalization needed.