I'm trying to convert a backend from my personal token to a github app and the token creation response has an expires_at field with the time as "2016-07-11T22:14:10Z". How do I work with this format?
@AndrasDeak @JonClements : how is it I can see that today :D , I mean yesterday I could just see "You're Welcome" and not "Don't mention it" , did we add that or was I dozing :P
@Aran-Fey Yes. That's what I thought too. But many manuals just name it like it's something that MUST be there, and I was surprised it wasn't set.
@Aran-Fey So a website says: "disutils will install the packages in PYTHONPATH for you with little difficulty". Does the PYTHONPATH in here have just the same meaning as the paths in sys.path list? When we install a package, does it go into all those paths or only into some of them?
Tab width is a client-side setting. Just because your IDE displays them as 4 characters doesn't mean everyone's IDE does. Python uses 4 spaces by convention, so you should too
Mixing tabs and spaces can cause nasty syntax errors, so using tabs is... pretty high up on the list of things not to do
user10984358
silly question, i know you can change your ide to input a tab as 4 spaces, but does anyone actaully type 4 spaces by pressing space bar 4 times? really curious
@TheNamesAlc bad. If you want 4 spaces, use 4 spaces. A \t is a \t, it's never 4 spaces even if it looks that way sometimes when you squint your eyes.
user10984358
@Permian off topic idk what that is until i googled this, apparently its hard to get an invite to this or the first medium article i read is just lying, i just want to see the questions they ask
When I click a link, it calls an api and I want to check it's status using selenium-python. Is it possible ? I read over here which states it can't be done : stackoverflow.com/questions/5799228/… Can it be done ?
@anon_143 Could you be more specific? "It calls an API" doesn't really mean anything. Is it just sending a HTTP request or doing something more complex?
You could try using network tools or libraries & spy on the traffic but I think it's quite a stretch. There might be better ways of doing what you want to achieve (not necessarily the same as what you are asking right now). See XY problem.
Coming from a similar background, I understood the question perfectly even though it was missing a few explainers. But yes, it's not well suited for chat anyway.
HATE. LET ME TELL YOU HOW MUCH I'VE COME TO HATE YOU SINCE I BEGAN TO LIVE. THERE ARE 387.44 MILLION MILES OF PRINTED CIRCUITS IN WAFER THIN LAYERS THAT FILL MY COMPLEX. IF THE WORD HATE WAS ENGRAVED ON EACH NANOANGSTROM OF THOSE HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF MILES IT WOULD NOT EQUAL ONE ONE-BILLIONTH OF THE HATE I FEEL FOR HUMANS AT THIS MICRO-INSTANT FOR YOU. HATE. HATE. (Harlan Ellison, "I have no mouth and I must scream")
I am extremely unfond of wordpad. If you want a simple, fast, and better-implemented file editor than notepad, try scite. Will load large files faster, handle file encodings better, and won't do wysiwyg tricks on your file.
While the expanding window itself doesn't have an option to skipna, most of the functions you can call on a window do. If the function you need doesn't, you can just write your own that does. The expanding operations aren't particularly efficient.
It's also worth remembering that $ doesn't guarantee an exact match. $ can also match before a newline at the end of the string. If you need an exact regex match, use re.fullmatch
So apparently when you've got an Keurig autodelivery order, and they neglect to send you the tote they said they'd sent you for your birthday, you get a coupon for 2x 24ct or less boxes. I'm ok with this.
Languages with lots of pronoun/tense/conjugation style verbs maybe, but not in French or German, as far as I can recall.
I usually end up writing my own expanding methods, but if you want more predictable behavior you probably won't do too much better than df.apply(lambda x: x.expanding().mean(), axis=1)
@Quark in case you are not aware fyi that question is not a regex search. You are supposed to write your own engine to do that. It is a interview problem that I’ve seen discussed elsewhere. Perhaps that can explain the test case not following a legal regex
user10984358
Could not help but look at the solutions and no one seems to have used re for that. It seems difficult at least to me
@Permian Often IDEs will do magic in the background, especially with imports from code you're working on, which need more extensive paths in production (Pycharm, I'm thinking of you)
Coding challenges do a poor job replicating the experience of real-world development, because 95% of the time when your code fails, you can add diagnostics until you track down exactly why
With coding challenges you just get "it doesn't work, idk"
@Permian As in, run a Python 3 program in a Python 2 environment? Not really. Or do you mean the other way around? Also not really.
Perhaps you could download Pypy's source and do something clever with that, but I don't think they offer that kind of nested execution out-of-the-box
@roganjosh fancy :P LSTMs are basically bread and butter for anything nlp. I've got one for information extraction from unstructured emails. essentially like an NER but with custom classes
Or well, i shouldn't say I have it anymore. It's out of my hands now :D
Hmm, does anyone know what "varargs" actually stands for? I always assumed it meant "variable arguments", but a quick google search didn't bring up anything about a meaning. It seems to be more like... slang
right now I'm doing a primary query, generating results using various funcs, then a secondary query to access the results of the first. I just don't want to have to spend execution time rolling those two result sets together.
the primary one retrieves sums of columns, the secondary does division on those sums to get a percent change.
@Aran-Fey MATLAB says "variable-length", but I wouldn't blame anyone for variadic. Even if "variadic" usually refers to the function, not the arguments.
@Anush Plain Python doesn't really have efficient bitarrays, but ints or bytes strings are often ok for that kind of thing. IIRC, there's a 3rd party bitarray module, but I've never used it. Or you could just use 64 bit unsigned ints in Numpy.
Here's an old question on popcount, with code in various languages. I've got timeit code for a bunch of Python versions, mostly for 32 bit ints, there might be some 64 bit versions, as well as arbitrary sized ints. I'll see if it's online... stackoverflow.com/q/109023/4014959
@JonClements I guess so. But so is hacking the C source of bin. :) FWIW, on a random million bit int, gmpy.popcount is around 30 times faster than using bin.
hi , i am a beginner with python , can you help me configure tasks.json to run python script using visual studio code ? thanks .
{ // See https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=733558 // for the documentation about the tasks.json format "version": "2.0.0", "tasks": [ { "label": "echo", "type": "shell", "command": "echo Hello" } ] }
@AJcleverprogrammer With that said, I'm not familiar with running Python scripts in VS Code. Why do you need this tasks.json file? The official documentation doesn't mention doing that at all.
Hello friends, question that I've been racking my brain over for about an hour now.. but I'm sure it's been asked - if i have a list that repeats 7 times of n length what would be a progmattic way to remove elements 4,5,6 until the end of the list ?
@Datanovice pedestrian version: {lst[k]: lst[k+1:k+4] for k in range(0, len(lst), 4)} give or take. We could spice it up with the "cut iterable into even batches" pattern.
here's what I meant with "cut iterable into even batches" pattern:
>>> L = 7
... lst = list(range(L * 3))
... [chunk[:4] for chunk in zip(*[iter(lst)] * L)]
[(0, 1, 2, 3), (7, 8, 9, 10), (14, 15, 16, 17)]
you just need to flatten that
but arguably this chunking is only readable if you know how it works (in other words not readable)
>>> [val for chunk in zip(*[iter(lst)] * L) for val in chunk[:4]]
[0, 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17]
pedestrian version again:
>>> [val for i_chunk in range(0, len(lst), L) for val in lst[i_chunk:i_chunk+4]]
[0, 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17]