Enough people use pandas that it can be a useful answer, so I don't think its particularly worth downvoting. But while it gives a solution its also not really an answer either (it doesnt actually address the underlying problem OP has)
user10984358
I feel like I am not following "DRY", just a regex snippet http://dpaste.com/1MFRK3B
can anyone see this code and tell me how I can avoid repeating my self
I am using Flask. I am writing to the logger using: app.logger.exception("error message") - I have configured handler as file. In the command promt screen I can see the error and traceback. But in the file I can only see the error message and no traceback.
Any ideas on why traceback is not getting into the file?
yes I have, I initially tried to pare through it and create lists of the variables I need but it did not work because of the nature of the xml file I have
I want in python some code that would iterate over each id and collect the data I need for each id and save them under that id.
Presumably it's parsed into a nested structure of lists and dictionaries. It's really not possible to say unless you give us some example
@Vasilis please don't invite me to another room for this. There is no reason that it can't be discussed in the main python room (there is no guarantee that I can solve anything, but others might be able to help instead). You should make a minimal but complete example. As per the room rules you should post off-site and link here if it's a lot of code/XML
No, your variable named doc. If you apply your parser to the example you linked here, that will give you some idea of what you're dealing with without being overwhelmed with data
Oki doki, I guess this is the part that I have to actually replicate on my end because I didn't assume it would give a custom document object, I assumed it would just spit out lists and dicts :)
Huh, I didn't think I'd be struggling with XML parsing. I hate the fact that children should be accessed by index and not by name. It could take me a bit of time to figure this out @Vasilis
Guys - technically are both these exceptions: raise AttributeError, raise Exception('some msg'). Or only the 2nd one is an exception and the 1st one raises an exception.
I've sussed it, I just now need to work out how to get a pipe character on this keyboard :P
Oooh, that's a bit annoying. I did have the pipe character but Spyder 4 italicises it to look like a forward slash when it's in a string by default. I'll need to fix that. Very much a TIL morning :)
One sec, I should demo getting the ID of the note
@Vasilis This works for your example:
import csv
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
tree = ET.parse('example.xml')
root = tree.getroot()
rebuilt = []
for note in root.iter('note'):
rebuilt.append([note.attrib['id'],
note.find('to').text,
note.find('from').text,
note.find('heading').text,
note.find('body').text])
with open('example_out.csv', 'w', newline='', ) as outfile:
writer = csv.writer(outfile, delimiter='|')
writer.writerow(['id', 'to', 'from', 'heading', 'body'])
I'm uing Flask to deploy a dominant color finding application and developed the main application in CPP, once the user uploads the image I process it in C++ , but when I pass the file parameter to it it says invalid file however it works in python. Any suggestions?
` if file and allowed_file(file.filename): filename = secure_filename(file.filename) file.save(os.path.join(app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'], filename)) p = Popen(['/blah_blah/dominant_colors', 'file', '3']) flash('File successfully uploaded') return redirect('/') `
In Flask, we have the python root logger, flask logger (flask.app), werkzeug logger (if using the flask development server), and if we use production server then we have for example gunicorn's logger. I am looking for any documentation that will help understand what gets logged into each of these loggers. Any help will be appreciated
Is it just me or is the XML parser just incredibly brittle? Like root[0][1].text seems awful for accessing child objects, and rank = country.find('rank').text immediately fails badly if 'rank' isn't found, but there's no way given to elegantly handle the missing key; just go straight for .text
@roganjosh Yes totally. Just don't use XML parser, and have to write code that mimics the structure of the tags. Use xpath syntax (with lxml, ElementTree or whatever).
Thanks. I actually rarely ever do HTML/XML parsing so I was quite shocked that I couldn't find an elegant way to handle it. I think it's a combination of no real experience and an... interesting... library
@ruben.lfdz pandas will not downcoerce if an integer column contains any NaNs. This is a well-known issue. Does your column contain any NaNs? see (.value_counts(..., dropna=False). If yes, is it ok to replace them at read-time with some sentinel value like -1, 9999 etc.?
@roganjosh Hmm, didn't know: "It is not the default dtype for integers, and will not be inferred; you must explicitly pass dtype = 'I' or dtype = pd.Int64Dtype()". Does it work well with operations like aggregation, apply, pickling etc? without having to redo astype() everywhere?
@smci I can't answer any of those questions because I've only just upgraded myself but I'd wager that pickling is the only real concern there because the other 2 are handled internally. I'd imagine that pickling was pretty much broken
It's also survived 0.24 --> 0.25 in an experimental state so I guess they're having issues
@roganjosh Ok cool then you might like to update the existing questions on how to read/handle integer columns containing NaNs, almost noone is aware of this. Also there's this person using 0.24 who wanted to infer float or Int64, else string: stackoverflow.com/questions/55479542/…
@roganjosh Right but I also wonder if you do an aggregate/apply/transform/assign/etc if it preserves Int64Dtype or not... don't have time to test it and I suspect it has corner-cases and limitations which aren't well-documented, even in github... beware fresh new barely-tested pandas functionality...
Sure. I only suggested because they seemed pretty adamant that they didn't want a float type. In reality, I expect the requirement to remove .0 is an XY problem
@ThiefMaster - in this (github.com/pallets/flask/issues/2704#issuecomment-381543277) post you have mentioned that - "General advice: Don't use app.logger for more complex apps. Instead, just use Python's logging module directly.". So what is the purpose of the flask logger (flask.app)?
And will I have to turn on the propagate on the flask.app so taht the logs from flask all come into the python loggong module also if I wish to capture them at one palce (that is on teh looging module's logger)
@roganjosh to explain myself better I have to present a column that represents values and 0 has to be Null so what I did is turned the column into np.nan although values now show with .0, instead of doing that another solution would be turning 0 values to NULL in int64 column. Did I explain myself better?
@roganjosh thanks a lot anyways. I'm not sure how to apply that
@ruben.lfdz Look, don't keep the NaNs unless there's a valid reason (e.g. you're doing aggregation, summary statistics (e.g. mean), tabulation, value-counts, histogram etc. and you don't want them included). Can you convert them to a sentinel value like -1 or 9999, yes or no? If you can, do. If you can't, please explain what information would you actually lose if you converted them to a sentinel value? We don't know your data so we can't answer for you. You have to tell us.
@ruben.lfdz You're welcome. Keep in mind that it's possible that you'll get wonky behaviour because it's something they are experimenting with; you should read the docs that I linked earlier
@ruben.lfdz Like I said, the Int64Dtype will work if you don't do much postprocessing on the data, but if you do the things I mentioned, type coercion or some other functionality will probably get broken, and in surprising and untested ways (since this is new functionality). Whereas people have been replacing NAs with sentinel values for 10+ years, as a workaround.
My opinion, which I will not express within the question, lest I be sucked in: there's no such thing as "a JSON", but you can tell what people mean when they say that, so just go with it
In the event that the question asker is vague about whether their JSON is a (string in memory that needs to be run through json.loads | a file containing said string that needs to be run through json.load | an actual useful dict), you may then scold the asker. But this particular question has a functional MCVE so that's not an issue here
It's often not clear whether an OP has actual JSON or a dict/list, so I do wish people would use the correct labels instead of calling literally anything under the sun "a JSON"
>>> import re
>>> pattern = re.compile(r"\((.*?)\)")
>>> pattern.search("28 of november 2012(London)").group(1)
'London'
>>> pattern.search("2012(Amsterdam)").group(1)
'Amsterdam'
>>> pattern.search("what (happens) if there are (mulitiple) (parens)?").group(1)
'happens'
>>> pattern.search("what (((((happens))))) if there are nested parens?").group(1)
'((((happens'
>>> pattern.search("what happens if there aren't any parens?").group(1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
@Kevin since JSON is a notation, the only corresponding thing in Python is a string adhering to said notation. Just as a URL is a string adhering to URL format.
everything else is lies, damned lies, and fluffy kittens. But not JSON.
A daycare employee may say "in my fifty years in this business, not one of my charges has known multivariate calculus", but he should not despair at the mathematical illiteracy of the last five generations.
@MisterMiyagi More like, it's a subset of possible dicts. There are restrictions on both keys and values. See chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/48233650 passim. (The confusion/definition about this keeps coming up on SO...)
Recently I noticed that the website we use at my workplace makes firefox emit a warning that "this TLS version is outdated and will be disabled in March 2020". I wonder if they're going to fix this in time or if our company is gonna implode in March
All: we don't seem to have a findable canonical target for "Why shouldn't you remove items from a list you're iterating over?", stated in prescriptive language like that. I only see How to remove items from a list while iterating? (locked, 2009) which indirectly implies "You shouldn't do that, if you need that then you probably want a list-comprehension instead" . In comments someone recommends...
I'm decently sure removing items from a list during iteration is plain undefined. Just because it yields some deterministic behaviour on all implementations doesn't change that.
@MisterMiyagi Sure. I mean a high-level "Don't do this in Python, because it's not supported, what precisely happens will be implementation-dependent, so your code won't be well-defined, testable or portable". Not like excruciating detailed analysis on what all the diffrent implementations and versions do.
Related, do any of you ever encounter legit use-cases for using .copy() or [:]?
The behavior of removal-and-iteration is somewhat defined. docs.python.org/3/reference/… contains a "Note:" box describing the interaction. But one might argue that this is a description of current behavior and not a prescription of required behavior
The behavior of for loops in general are well defined: get an iterator, and call next() on it until it stops giving you values. So we kick the can down the road and ask whether the behavior of a list's iterator object is well defined during mutation
@Kevin It's impenetrable to newbies, and it doesn't hint at "Don't try this at home, kids". (And even saying 'iterable' instead of 'list' is impenetrable to newbies and Google, which is how people find stuff...)
I fail to understand your reasoning then. I asked can you show me an actual example of two things (objects?) expecting joint ownership of a list, so they can both mutate it? Any time I've needed to thtat, I'd use an object.
I do copy lists sometimes, but I can't think of an actual example. More often than not I use list(some_iterable) to create a "copy" because I can't be sure that my input is a list
guys, stupid question...python is running through the apache webserver with a wsgi module...how do I run a script that works ok on local machine ? i have and endpoint something like : 10.5.5.55/start
@MisterMiyagi You think? I don't think I've ever used .copy() = I've used deepcopy, but from memory 'most'(?) of the beginner tutorials showed you [:] even if it's just part of showing how slicing works.
@MisterMiyagi We know that. But you seemed to be talking about two (bodies of code?/functions?/methods?/other objects?) containing/wrapping/referencing a list. It would be clearer if you showed a specific example.
I think the problem gets fuzzy at the edges, in particular when some operation both changes the size of the list and changes the value of the element that was most recently yielded by the iterator. Let me compose an example...
I feel like this would be weird... So you want an object A that keeps track of what is the next objects. You would need to have __next__ keep track of the "current" object say i. So, suppose you call del on and object. Say that you call del B on an object in A. But del B then calls A.i=0 to reset counter...
x = [0,1,2,3,4,5,6]
for item in x:
print(item)
if item == 3:
x[2:5] = [3, 23, 3, 42, 3]
#at this point, x is now `[0, 1, 3, 23, 3, 42, 3, 5, 6]`.
#what is the next item that should be returned by the generator?
@Kevin ...use a dictionary under the hood? Use indexes as keys? Maybe using 1.1, 1.2 etc for elements added between index 1 and 2...although frequently composing an ordered list of indexes and iterating over them might get slow.
It's easy enough to answer this question in terms of what the existing generator does, but it's not clear to me what the hyptothetical "smart position tracking" generator would do
@smci basically whenever I use lists between concurrent actors, if that is any help to you. The use-case doesn't lend itself to copy/pasting examples that show more than the call to .copy.
You could separate element index and 'id' so to speak. You might lose relevance of the actual value of index, but you keep track of which element is current and next, etc even if the precise location in the list changes.
@MisterMiyagi I didn't say it wasn't a viable use-case. But it's pretty rare and not something new users would do. (Personally, I've only ever implemented concurrency in C++ and Java not Python.)
I'm not sure whether "that works ok when run from my local machine" is prescriptive (as in, "when my project is complete, it must work ok when run from my local machine. Unfortunately, right now it doesn't") or descriptive ("currently, it works ok when run from my local machine")
@MisterMiyagi Huh? Concurrency implies 2+ actors. Iterating over a list doesn't. (We might choose a concurrent implementation for a for-loop, but it isn't necessary or implied). If that's wrong, tell me how.
@Kevin no issue :) let me see if I can get mine down to a bare min example and I'll post it. It seems like my queue is piling up and it's only updating like 10-15 seconds after the data has changed. I've even got the message queue set to not send another message to the queue unless it's empty now and it's still not quite working
@smci In the iter/del scenario, are two separate tasks/stacks: The iterator body and the loop body. With the exception of 0/1 length iterators, the iterator state persists while body runs and vice versa. While they don't run in parallel, they run concurrently.
@MisterMiyagi Ok I think you're saying the iterator itself, and whatever the loop body is doing, are two separate concurrent actors. (At least, they are when the loop body does something that alters the state. If it doesn't, wouldn't we consider they conceptually just have one (shared) state? which is the usual case)
yes, loop body and iterator each are separate actors.
They are even if none of them alter state. The problem with iter+del is that they share state, and one expects said state to be static whereas the other mutates said state.
It's fine to share state, and it's fine to mutate state. But as soon as one shares and mutates state, the usual concurrency problems manifest.
@roganjosh totally ok with browser hanging ! for now...later maybe I can learn how to do the asynchronous stuff. All I have now is that endpoint...when I open the page it's just a Hello World message. When I try to upload my script, say, image.py and open the page, I still see that Hello World message.
@AnotherUser31 for example, at work, my model takes ~90 secs to run. I decoupled it completely from the flask app; the user submits the model, the body of which is dumped to json, and then an entry is written in my db. I have a completely different script that queries the db to find the next model to solve. Once a job is submitted, the user's broswer is freed up and they can do other things
@AnotherUser31 This seems more fundamental than what you first asked. image.py isn't going to change the template that you're rendering
We're coming at this from different angles. Why aren't you using render_template if you want something displayed in a browser?
In fact, I'm really lost. You want to use a URL pattern in the browser to start a script off, but it looks like you're designing a programming API with no front-end
How do you intend to submit 10.5.5.55/start to your server?
kevin: lemme look at this more this morning. may do a gist this afternoon if i'm still having issues. Learned a lot the past week ripping my hair out...maybe my brain can breathe better so I can do more XD
@TheLittleNaruto Not that I know of. Note this only describes the server side of the issue also. You'll need to also learn the client side, either requests or httpx. We use requests at work; in which you set stream=True in the get call, and then use iter_content on the response object, specifying a chunk_size - for completeness, I'll repeat that I recommend 32 or greater for this. The default of 1 will make things horrendously slow.
"I don't have a method named do_whatever()", you hypothetically say, "or any other single function that makes for a convenient entry point. When I usually run image.py, I do it by invoking it straight from the command line. I have a lot of logic at the global scope, and I need it all to run when my 10.5.5.55/start page loads".
If that's the case, there are two possible solutions: 1) refactor image.py so that it does have a single function that makes for a convenient entry point. In the best case scenario, this is as easy as indenting all of your global code and adding a def main(): to the top.
2) leave image.py exactly the way it is, and instead of using import, execute it using subprocess.check_output or similar.
str(subprocess.Popen([cmd, *args], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0], 'utf-8') has been my go-to way of dealing with this sort of thing, of late
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>type image.py
import time
print("Frobnicating the gumpy...")
time.sleep(3)
print("Frobnicated.")
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>type main.py
import subprocess
print("About to execute image.py...")
subprocess.run(["python", "image.py"])
print("Executed.")
C:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>main.py
About to execute image.py...
Frobnicating the gumpy...
Frobnicated.
Executed.
In production-quality code, there is almost never a good reason to use subprocess to execute another python script that you have control over. You should almost always rewrite the script so it can be imported normally. But if you just need a dirty hack to get things off the ground, there it is.
@MisterMiyagi More like: it's not fine to share mutable state without some concurrency construct (semaphore, mutex etc.) with something that might change it, is the version I was taught.
@MisterMiyagi It actually depends on how many training-wheels the language builds in. Cheerfully providing lots of different copy commands and syntaxes, without any argument for an optional builtin concurrency construct, seems dangerous.
Maybe you already know this, but many threading-related objects have a "wait until something important happens" method, which is usually preferable to use instead of time.sleep. For example, queue.get will wait until the queue contains a value.
I just got something to work. Did it a little too elegantly ("and he sticks the landing!"). My ego is soaring out of control. Quick, please list a few python things that I am not yet familiar with and take me down a peg. Numpy and Pandas, sure. What else?
If you happen to find the link to my threading code in the transcript, let me know, and I'll double check it for race conditions and/or slowdown issues
@smci Well, if we started telling newcomers "for loops are stackless cooperative concurrency", no one would ever get done training their neural networks.
Hi can I use txt file for range? When I try that I get 'str' object cannot be interpreted as an integer. I need for dec in range(1, 100): user(dec) I tried
f = open("demofile.txt", "r") for dec in range(f.readline()): and
Coupled with Python's strong stance on non-concurrency being more important than concurrency, it makes sense not to have training wheels for concurrency. They're really costly.
In any case, the "right" way to do this would probably be to use a well-established serialization format, like json, instead of trying to parse the numbers yourself
@AnotherUser31. Hmm. Other than the missing indentation, I don't see anything obviously wrong. Check the server error log to see if there's a stack trace. If you don't have a server error log, you may need to create one.
Wild guess: maybe [output] needs to be a list of bytes objects, but your output is a string. Try return [output.encode()] and see if that does anything.
response = requests.get(url, data=params, auth=self.auth, stream=True)
response.raise_for_status()
text = []
for line in response.iter_content(chunk_size=1024):
text.append(line)
return json.loads(b''.join(text).decode())
Maybe post as a self-answered question so this can be more generally accessible instead of just in chat.
@TheLittleNaruto Sorry, I meant you could do this. I don't post very many questions generally, and you would do a better job at describing what your original question actually was.