@BluePrint Welcome :) It's a way for people interested in Python to communicate in a slightly less formal way than the main site. We have some room rules that may help understand how it works
Do you think its worth to put ai neat python project on my portfolio if it uses tensorflow, so I didnt code the whole thing. I see alot of people coding their own neat library all the time.
@roganjosh I often find myself close-voting Q:"how do I do X" A: "do X" questions as needing more details, because it's absolutely unclear why they don't just do X.
@BluePrint Most work will utilise existing libraries anyway and reinventing the wheel isn't exactly to be lauded if tools already exist. I think it's probably a decent skill to put down (demand for tensorflow skills is only going to increase)
@MisterMiyagi makes sense. Maybe less-so from the OP's perspective if we don't follow it up with a comment
user10984358
12:32 PM
Talking about reinventing the wheel, my superiors ask me to keep using the python2 framework in python3, even though there are things like a non-lazy map and filters are used. They just said thanks for the intern for exploring but we need work done
user10984358
Maybe test engineers don’t realize those changes, their response was change print() and fix errors as the code is run in python3
user10984358
In this case is it better to write a new code base in python3 or fix what is there?
File "scipy/linalg/setup.py", line 19, in configuration
raise NotFoundError('no lapack/blas resources found')
numpy.distutils.system_info.NotFoundError: no lapack/blas resources found
@TheNamesAlc If people are forced to use Python 2 they should at least be using the future imports so that they can use the print function, and so that / division works like it does in Python 3. And avoid doing dumb Python 2 stuff like sorting heterogeneous lists (i.e., lists containing a mixture of different types).
@Mannya That looks horrible. I'm gonna go with the off/on again approach and suggest that you might want to reinstall numpy to have it compile against blas/lapack that you installed. What do you get from import numpy; numpy.show_config()? Please post in dpaste as the output might be quite large
It is often possible to write Py 3 code that works correctly on Py 2, but it's often slower due to the list vs generator thing requiring you to wrap generators in a list() call.
I made the mistake before on trying to keep a bunch of terrible code running, when I really should have thrown it out and reimplemented it - if that helps
But str vs bytes issues can be very difficult to handle in a way that works properly on both versions. Most of the time, it's just too complicated, and can easily lead to bugs.
Hi :) I would like to learn how can I combine a code (ctrl + k) and text together, properly. If I highlight only the code and press ctrl + k , all the text (the code and the explanations) get a form of a code after pressing enter, which is an unwanted result.
And of course there's a ton of Py 2 code out there in the wild that doesn't handle Unicode properly, it just appears to if it only ever encounters Latin1 encoded stuff. But throw an emoji at it and it will do Bad Things.
@YoelZajac It's impossible. Chat doesn't support mixing normal text & code, except by using backticks for single lines of code, not ctrl-k.
@Todd It can't, due to the way Py 2 strings work. Fortunately, they realised that dropping u-strings in Py 3 was a dumb idea, so they added them back in.
@Todd Yep. And using b-strings for strings that are supposed to be bytes, so there are no plain strings in the code. It's not a perfect solution, but it will eliminate a lot of problems
I spent about a year writing "bilingual" code in my SO answers that works on Py 2 & 3, but eventually I decided it was too annoying, and it was better to post code that forces people to upgrade. :)
@YoelZajac I was trying to find the quote where I told you to read the formatting guide, but you kept reposting the same message over and over again. You stopped when I kicked you so it seems it worked.
@YoelZajac You weren't asked to post your question without context, you were asked to read the formatting guide <-- that's a hyperlink that you should click, read through and understand
@YoelZajac it's been 1.5 hours since we started and we're not a single step closer to what you're asking. I'm starting to think this is not very helpful.
@Permian I haven't looked at your code, or the challenge site, but my advice is: don't just rely on their visible test data. Make up your own test data. Good data doesn't just verify that the code handles the easy cases. You need to verify that the code works correctly when given ugly data too. So you need to figure out what properties that ugly data needs in order to properly test all the logic in your code.
@Permian no, that should basically give "JC" or "CJ" as an answer. The overlap should not happen for a single person. Both, C & J can work together on different activities, but one of them shouldn't be doing 2 activities at any time.
The new "needs more focus" and "needs more details" wording confuses me to no end. I've now settled for "needs more focus" => there is too much in the question, versus "needs more details" => there is too little in the question.
Nah, it's not an issue with the language itself IMO. The change in CV reasons seems quite deliberate to make it confusing. If we don't know why we're closing something, we won't close it and everyone will feel more welcome
@davidism while you're here... What do you suggest in regards to the incompatibility of Flask-Session with Werkzeug 1.0 here. I've been holding werkzeug at 0.16 to avoid the issue but should I consider Flask-Session dead? I have advocated it a few times in answers, I think
I just want to be more useful to the community as a mathematician cum python developer. For eg: take this issue, github.com/numpy/numpy/issues/15905. It is reported as a bug. But I am not able to figure out where should I start checking to fix this issue. Is there any standard process to be followed in such scenarios?
In regards to the process on actually implementing something to fix it, I think my links are relevant. As to tracing code paths - I think you need to just be familiar with the code base. Can you easily navigate numpy on github?
@davidsim @roganjosh Sure. So this is what I am going to do. I will clone the repo, try to reproduce the stated issue with the given example. Since it is not outputting any errors, I will try to trace the calls that is being made, using step in. And will try to understand what is causing the issue. Is this the right way to do it?
@codeslord if it's you that's starring messages, they work differently to upvotes from the main site. We prefer to just star things that are of interest to others in the room and not necessarily as a way of saying thanks
@codeslord be careful just diving in. It's a complex code base, to say the least. You will need a reasonable understanding to understand potential side-effects from changes that you make. In any case, I wish you luck
@roganjosh Sure,I will try to be very careful. I might need some guidelines to understand the side-effects. But I think that is too much to ask. Thanks for your help.
if I use set_xticks the longitudes for some points are added on the xaxis but the rest is just blank. I want the xaxis to be in range -180 to 180 and then the point be drawn in the right spot.
@aderchox ok, well then there are 2 things that don't make sense to me; 1) why would you expect an x axis label to be dependent on the data (beyond setting the upper and lower bounds) and 2) are you plotting lat/long in a Cartesian way?
it seems to me that your x data right now is just np.arange(y_data.size), which is not what you want. You want to pass actual longitude values as the first arg.
which is to say, the problem is not with your labels, but with your data you're passing to plot
for your actual issue you have to investigate your data
I just grabbed the json and it's at 59.2, -44.5 which is consistent with degrees
OK, your code is not OK after all
location_axes.set_xticks(range(-180,180,10))
location_axes.set_yticks(range(-90,90,10))
location_axes.set_xticklabels([ str(n) for n in range(-180,180,10)])
setting tick positions and tick labels is a good way to detach your axes from your actual data
@Aran-Fey I know I'm the worst person who can possibly reply this at this moment but I reply only because it might be funny. I don't like listening to music at all. It's just too artificial. I'd rather listen to the air and even the silence itself, but no music :D
@Aran-Fey I listen to an awful lot of music without lyrics when I'm working. The more dramatic, the better. I'm just odd; it helps focus my brain. Half the time I'm working on problems, i have some epic instrumental music blasting in my ears :P
@AndrasDeak I'm quite surprised it hasn't come up in my youtube playlist that it makes for me. A typical day starts with searching "kinetic epic music", clicking the video that has the dragon and just hoping youtube will fix the rest
@roganjosh that reminded me of the OST of the new Witcher series. Really good, but probably not kinetic enough for you. And people who liked it also praised the music of the third witcher game, but I never played any.
The only music I can listen to in the background while I do something else is Lord of the Dance. Blast from the past, I'm aware.
It's crazy how important a good soundtrack is though. Most movies and games that I remember as being good had great music. It just elevates it to a whole 'nother level
The first episode is just insane and nonsensical exposition. "Oh, we didn't do that since we fought the flimflams on dodo hill and they took over sillybilly castle" --> "hush child, we gifted them the nikinonk fields in exchange for ...".