Although, there's a massive contradiction in what you're suggesting. If it it's slow and doesn't do what you expect, how is that "working technically"?
@Vader That code is so confusing. if value_of_important_2_for_this_row is np.NaN:is almost certainly going to fail, and you shouldn't be iterating the df anyway
Hello Python people. Do any of you know of a canonical post/answer to the many (I found 12 in a matter of minutes) web scraping questions which all stem from people using tools like Requests + BeautifulSoup on pages which are dynamically generated? I was thinking of asking and answering a question of my own, which would hopefully cover all these various posts.
There is a similar question which has 6 upvotes, although I would obviously rather not edit the existing content to death.
Also, if this isn't the right place to discuss this, where should I go?
I'm trying to develop a simple web scraper. I want to extract text without the HTML code. In fact, I achieve this goal, but I have seen that in some pages where JavaScript is loaded I didn't obtain good results.
For example, if some JavaScript code adds some text, I can't see it, because when I ...
@tripleee See that one seems like it fits, but I don't know how I feel about it. That post shows how to solve the issue, yet it doesn't explicitly answer most of the questions. I think it would feel slightly odd to flag questions as a duplicate of that post since the question is the answer to potential duplicate. Am I making sense?
Essentially, question A (highly upvoted one) itself is the answer to question B (why isn't my web scraping working), which is why I find it weird to use the duplicate function, designed for identical questions, because they're not, really.
Now if presented with that canonical question, most people can figure things out, I'm more concerned with explicitness and discoverability, amongst other things.
@tripleee Update: The "Add Common Question" page says: You are not an editor. The page will be created in draft mode and must be approved by an editor., so it looks like that shouldn't be too big of an issue.
This common question on sopython does cover the issue.
@AMC Well, the people asking these types of questions they usually don't know how website work (and that some content might be dynamically generated). The easiest way is to point them to use something like selenium, but I don't know if that's right (usually they return with the same type of question later). If I can hobble some quick answer and point them that the page is making other requests via JavaScript and do an example, I put that in answer. Hope that helps.
@Kevin You could view it as a Constraint-Satisfaction Problem, or a permutation problem, since individual moves are not unrelated. When an object only has one viable move option, you get a (chain of) forced implications.
@Kevin Don't do coloring, sounds like a total red herring. This sounds like A* search, since you only want the hypotheses with most moves, then compute the (unexpanded) candidates and score them according to the no. of moves. You'd need a heuristic for unexpanded candidates. e.g. "Total #moves >= #legally moveable objects for which we haven't computed move yet". Although that'll be an overestimate. I'm sure you can refine if further, considering when two subgraphs overlap on a node/subgraph
@Aran-Fey Agreed. (@tripleee) My non-expert take: The overhypeing of design patterns as a language-agnostic thing is somewhat a discarded 1990s fad, and goes hand-in-hand with Java evangelism. Really many of them should be viewed as a language-specific attempt to solve a problem given the limitations(/design choices) of that specific language. I'd love to see an essay covering which specific subsets of design patterns are obsoleted(/necessitated) by which language choices...
@Aran-Fey If Toplevel, SingleContainer are from an open-source package, can you give a link? Neither inherits from the other? What is their highest-level common ancestor?
It's from my own code. I'm in the middle of refactoring, but I can push it if you really need to see it. They don't inherit from each other; their first common ancestor is Widget as you can see
that was an accident though - Toplevel should actually inherit from Container, which also fixes the problem. I just don't understand why
@smci Sorry, still not getting it. Could you tell me where exactly the problem is?
@Aran-Fey I don't know much about multiple inheritance, but supposedly when class B inherits from A, and C inherits from both A and B, your definition should just be class C(B) not class C(A,B), which causes the confusion about multiple inheritance MRO; it sees multiple definitions of the methods from A. Per stackoverflow.com/questions/29214888/… etc.
@AndrasDeak That is a very good question. I double-checked, but there's no multiple inheritance anywhere except for Window. I can't figure out how to repro it outside of my project either
@smci I understand that class Foo(Child, Parent) can't work, but I don't think that's the problem I have in my code
I'm not gonna try to make a MCVE because there's at least a dozen classes involved, so suffice to say that I had two copies of all those classes, and one Toplevel inherited from Container but the other didn't
@Aran-Fey if this is some kind of backend system would it make sense to have them all qualified names such as GTKWindow/QtWindow etc., and have a front-end module that aliases the necessary set to unqualified Window etc.?
What to do with this highly-upvoted 2010 question How does polymorphism work in Python? It has many views but the question body is not general and contains a wrong premise: OP thinks myDog.__class__ is animal does what isinstance(myDog, animal). Also, OP isn't asking "How does polymorphism work in Python?" but "How to test if an object is an instance of specified class or its subclasses?"
Hi all, does anyone know if there is a package to align two lists of tokens? Consider the example: a=["30", "-", "foot"]b=["30-", "foot"]... If I want to get an alignment from a -> b the resultant list could look something like [[0, 1], [2]]
@Sam No idea but it seems trivial to walk down each of the two lists/iterators, and consider the cases (join left/ right/ neither/ (both?)). Is it guaranteed to only ever involve merging two tokens, or would you have to consider 'free-for-all' vs ['free', '-', 'for-', 'all']? Also, (esp. if whitespace is preserved, or removed), you could simply use len() to eliminate candidates...
@Sam Well, do you want an entire recursive-descent parser? (Better to fix the two tokenizers, in the first place). Please show us a better example. Also, my comment that len() wil help you eliminate candidates, just see which side has a shorter cumulative-length so far, that should tell you what's likely to have merged.
@Sam Like I said, walk down each of the two lists/iterators, and consider which join case you're looking at; basically len() tells you, it's always the one with the shorter cumulative length. You should be able to code it yourself. Else post a question on SO and I'll answer it.
@Sam Your case is even simpler than the straddle-case that I gave. Pseudocode: at each point, continue to get a token from the iterator with shorter cumulative length. When both lengths are equal, you should see the concatenated tokens are equal too. (else parse-error).
@AndrejKesely I don't think itertools has anything useful -- groupby and accumulate can get you half way there, but they don't play well with auxiliary information.
What's the correct procedure when I'm in the middle of refactoring, and I want to try a different way of refactoring? What do I do with the current unfinished state of the project? Commit? Stash?
Let's assume I'm currently working on a refactor branch and I've already made a couple of commits (with code that's still broken, but where individual parts have already been successfully refactored)
From git-scm: "Often, when you’ve been working on part of your project, things are in a messy state and you want to switch branches for a bit to work on something else. The problem is, you don’t want to do a commit of half-done work just so you can get back to this point later. The answer to this issue is the git stash command."
Follow up from earlier, is there a reason why "hello world." would get encoded with "``", "hello", "world", "\'\"`? Is this character escaping on the speech marks?
Sure I can use naming conventions to remind myself that refactor_TMP stores the current state of my refactor branch and that I need to delete it later, but what the heck kind of UX is that
The current state of your refactor branch should be therefactor branch. If you wnat to take its current state as-is, that's exactly sitting on a given commit, so you either take a post-it note and write its hash there, or you create a branch, or you create a tag (would be even weirder)
Hi guys i work with BeautifulSoup. I want to get only user1, user2, user3. With this code user = soup.find_all('span', {"class" : 'users'}) I get this pastebin.com/MYPsD61C Can someone to help me?
@AndrejKesely after staring at that code for 2 minutes, I still have literally no idea what it is doing.
@Aran-Fey I recommend using git stash only for short-term storage, such as stash-checkoutbranch-stashpop. Long-term, you should name things. If both of your variants are non-trivial and divergent, that's exactly what branching is useful for.
@MisterMiyagi The idea is to create regex patterns from list b (eg. 3\|?0\|?\-\|?f\|?o\|?o\|?t), then re.match string from a (eg. 30|-|foot|und|ete|cted) - count number of separators (|) in found substring and we have [start, end] of the group. Ok, I'm going to have dinner now
I'm working off of a raspberry pi computer at the moment. these things really aren't bad for 40 bucks. anyone in the world can have an OK computer with these things on the market
Just keeping you on your toes :P The way you navigate SO/Meta, I'm imagining a full chart on the wall with pins and string to work out what I was replying to :D
Someone on FB keeps going on about The Whitcher. It's been god-awful getting to episode 5; I'm wondering whether I can finish the series while trying to get back into work mode for tomorrow or whether it's just rotting my brain
@AndrejKesely That sounds good to me! I think the transition HTML parser + request --> Selenium is a rather natural one, since both follow the same "select the elements using CSS or xpath etc." style.
I think I'm going to start writing a draft for a canonical/reference answer
@AndrasDeak It's taken effort to get through 5. I certainly won't be staying up to get through the rest, but I have ep. 6 ready to go :) 1 a night is more than enough