Anyone know the best way to plot a list of events that occur within a day? I have csv where each row is a title and a starttime, each event takes 30s and the entire list all occurs within about 24 hours. I mainly want to visualize it so i can see where events are grouped/which ones are stragglers that can be clumped together
I have to say, I don't know whether it came in 3.7 or 3.8 (pretty sure it's recent-ish), but I do love the helpful error messages eg E SyntaxError: unmatched ')'.
#simpleThreading program to run just 1 thread other than main thread
import threading
import time
#function
def func():
for i in range(10):
print('func: ', i)
time.sleep(0.1)
#creating thread
t1 = threading.Thread(target = func, name = 't1')
t1.start()
t1.join() #waiting for the thread to end
I have this threading program working properly on Python IDLE but not on command line or when I double click it.
When I double click it, a window pops up and closes instantly.
I am using windows 10 and Python 3.8.1
Please help me!!
When I use the command prompt, Attribute error pops up like this -
F:\Pinku\Python_test_programs>py Threading8.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "Threading8.py", line 3, in <module>
import threading
File "F:\Pinku\Python_test_programs\threading.py", line 18, in <module>
t1 = threading.Thread(target = disp1, args = (4,))
AttributeError: partially initialized module 'threading' has no attribute 'Thread' (most likely due to a circular import)
The output on the IDLE window is like this (just as I intend) -
Let's say I feed a neural network images with a very faint signal, and the signal gradually goes to 0. Is it even possible to feed the model with images where the signal is fainter, than the human perceivable threshold? Because at some point I'm just feeding it noise. So my questions is basically, how can I make sure I still feed a signal and not just noise, if I as a human can't even perceive the signal and it looks like noise to me?
yeah I know that one, but for real :D It seems like this is an impossible task :D I can see how I can get to human level skill, but how on earth would I go beyond. Because if I can't tell if the answers are right I would need some kind of other model to tell me if they are right, but if I would have one, I wouldn't need to train an ml model in the first place. Hmmm
On a more serious note, "human perceivable" can't be any kind of measure. Naively I'd think that if you subtract the original image and scale the result, whether or not the pattern is still there can tell you if it's noise.
@Abhijeet.py please always check for error messages. "it failed to work" can mean a lot of things, and instead of everyone trying themselves you can just tell us (and of course yourself).
Why would a neural network care about human perception?
(apart from the obvious "teach it to see stuff" aspect)
Part of machine learning is to write code that sees things that aren't there. The trick is to make it see something that's actually there, just not obvious. Rather than seeing utter nonsense.
I mean the important part is that I want to feed it data with a signal. And I assume there is even signal, if I can't perceive it. But I gotta make sure there is signal and not just noise. I don't want to train a random model
The thing is its an led sign. I know there is signal, but because of reflection from the sun, the signal might be invisible. So the only measure I have right now is just if I can see it
@Hakaishin what kind of signal are we talking about here? If it's just about perception, nö problem. If its about interpretation, why trust the meatbag?
Basically I tried to train it with the data where I can tell there is signal. It works. Now because of other constraints I want to feed it data with less signal and it doesn't work anymore :P
But I just realized and that is the stupid part of this project. The other constraints are non formal, made by humans. So there is no way to make a good tradeoff. The thing is the other constraints could mean the projects doesn't get implemented or it does, but the boundary of how much we have to satisfy the other constraint is not even clear...
I have constraint A and B. B is how good the classification is. I can see that by training my model. A is something else. A is gradual and there is a cut-off after which our solution is unacceptable. I know the big ends of A. Like this works for sure, this doesn't work for sure. But everything inbetween is nill. And the better I fullfill A, the worse B gets and opposite. Now since I don't know stuff about constraint A, it makes fullfilling both constraints overall impossible.
Question: if you have no way to say whether the unclassifiable pictures contain a signal, how do you know there are any unclassifiable pictures that contain a signal?
I understand that you know whether the source of the image contains a signal. I don't understand why you assume this means the image itself contains any signal.
Haha I don't. I assume that there is a range between 0-and signal in image which is below human perceptible. So I thought why throw out data, which the model could use to learn better than a human, just because I can't see it. But yeah, if I can't differentiate between 0 and small signal. I can't be sure I don't feed it garbage. Except for just trying and seeing if it works. But this seems to fail
Also subtracting the base image from them gives the same validation accuracy. It shows that some images are quite noisy, but also that there are faint signals
@Hakaishin I would imagine there is a formal approach to putting limits on the model. Similar to when I worked in chromatography, we would get an average baseline and set a Limit of Quantification at some multiple of the baseline. Equally, Siri et al. will default to "I don't know what you just said" than pull from a bag of words it has low confidence in
Eh, the tricky part is I don't really know where in the image the signal is
I mean it's roughly centered but not always.
@roganjosh Yes I would love that, have to check how I can make my model less confident. Right now it is super confident 99% of the time. For each image it says 100% some class, but is is wrong :D
I guess it's overfitting
The problem is I used BN to prevent overfit, but because I only train for 3-5 epochs, the moving averages for the BN don't get updated fast enough and I can't use BN
:D haha thanks for the paper. Yeah I think in general the problem is hard. But even though I have been told, try to solve it in general, the actual problem we will face, will be probably easier.
Well let's focus on bits at a time rather than the whole thing. Do you have some code to share where you process the query results? Please take note of the room rules for longer blocks of code (host them off-site) and the formatting guide if you're posting code here
I'm still perturbed by the claim that in 2019 there was no framework for evaluating the resolution capability of image processing algorithms. If it wasn't Nature Communications I'd say that was a sensationalised statement
cbg, I am trying to get rid of a loop in comments below with a map, with no success. Would a map here improve anything in the first place? I have read that maps are better because it is the C code, whereas a traditional loop would have to be interpreted first
from collections import Counter
class Solution:
def checkInclusion(self, s1: str, s2: str) -> bool:
s1n, s2n = len(s1), len(s2)
if s1n > s2n: return False
s1_count = Counter(s1)
s2_count = Counter()
def update(i: int) -> None:
print(i)
nonlocal s2_count, s2
s2_count[s2[i]] += 1
return s2_count
map(update, range(s1n))
print(list(s2_count))
for i in range(s1n):
s2_count[s2[i]] += 1
And you can run it with Solution().checkInclusion("ab", "acba")
It is supposed to tell you if a permutation of s1 is in s2. I wrote a solution for this no problem, but was thinking how I can improve the performance further
here is the full code
from collections import Counter
class Solution:
def checkInclusion(self, s1: str, s2: str) -> bool:
s1n, s2n = len(s1), len(s2)
if s1n > s2n: return False
s1_count = Counter(s1)
s2_count = Counter()
for i in range(s1n):
s2_count[s2[i]] += 1
if s1_count == s2_count: return True
for ix in range(s1n, s2n):
drop_item = s2[ix - s1n]
if s2_count[drop_item] == 1: del s2_count[drop_item]
else: s2_count[drop_item] -= 1
what I personally found interesting in that article is that, if you alias function references like: something.do to whatever = something.do (when they are found in for loops), then python does not have to reevaluate them each time and so you get some performance benefits
Even with tight loops that I want to run millions of times, I've rarely turned to that optimisation. It's often unbelievably marginal in the gains it gives
the second loop is a sliding window, it removes the first character (so that we can properly compare to counters later) or decrements the count of the first character. Where first character is the character immediately in front of the sliding window
it then also increments the count of the last character. Where the last character is the last character in the sliding window
s1_permutations = Counter(s1) # all permutations of s1, as a multiset
for end in range(len(s1), len(s2)): # sliding window over s2
# multiset overlap => there exists a permutation
if not (s1_permutations == Counter(s2[end - len(s1):end])):
return True
return False
Now my 25-line solution looks like garbage, thanks
>:I
def checkInclusion(str1: str, str2: str) -> bool:
len1, len2 = len(str1), len(str2)
if len1 > len2: return False
# Take the first len1 characters of str2 and check
# if they're a permutation of str1
count1 = Counter(str1)
count2 = Counter(str2[:len1])
if count1 == count2: return True
# Next we'll "slide" the substring of str2 to the right
# one character at a time.
for i in range(len1, len2):
# Drop the leftmost character. Subtracting a dict will
@Naz I would approach this by converting the search string to a predictable permutation - by sorting it. Then run a sliding window of the same size across the search string, and for each position, sort the window contents and compare to the sorted search string.
Hm, I vaguely remember that "sliding window permutations via sort" were already discussed a few weeks back. Also in relation to leetcode. Might have been the same task.
@roblox Have you checked that the file is actually where you expect it to be? Do you use a relative path (as with your fallback) or an absolute one?
My installation of Anaconda seems to be very broken. I don't want to fully wipe my system just yet and start again but really don't know how to remove unused enviroments and fix my base environment.
Can anyone help?
(I've been trying to fix this myself and been surfing Stack Overflow questions/answer for months)
@JamesMcIntyre you need to be more specific on the issue you're facing and how borked your conda installation is. I've hit a few bumps with conda myself; it seems that, recently, it can get itself into an unworkable state
Not sure if i'm being stupid here.. is there a clean way to unwrap a keyvalue from a dictionary which only contains one item? I thought I could do something like key, value = mydictionary
I can never remember which kinds of wacky nesting tricks are allowed in 3.X because they made one specific kind illegal during the 2-to-3 fracas, but I always forget what it is
I have problem using the '.pyw' extension in python. I saved the following code with .pyw extension and the console gets hidden (as I intended) -# a program to test console hiding using .pyw extension
root.mainloop() But, the following program 'Peacock123.pyw' is not hiding the console. #Starter- file to start the peacock program #This is version 1.0 import sys import os
I got destperate enough that I've even just tried conda install conda but even then conda update anaconda didn't work.
I'm worried to do conda update --all as many people online seem to suggest that this can break your librarys and I have production Python programs which I need to be able to update.
Saving as .pyw is fairly typical advice for users that want their program to run invisibly (and are windows users? I don't know what the situation is in Linux et al)
I don't know if this is the cause of your problem, but you should almost never use os.system to start up another python script. The conventional way for one script to run another is to import it.
I still get PackageNotInstalledError: Package is not installed in prefix. prefix: C:\Users\JamesMcintyre\AppData\Local\Continuum\anaconda3 package name: anaconda when I try to do conda update annaconda after the conda update --all
Could the issue be that I get this?: RemoveError: 'setuptools' is a dependency of conda and cannot be removed from conda's operating environment.
Usage of os.system is rare, for one thing because it can be a huge security vulnerability*, and for another thing because the subprocess module is a hundred times more flexible and powerful
(*if you pass it a string that the user has the power to manipulate. Obviously not the case here, but it's worth being paranoid about)
"importing just results in importing of functions that are no longer needed." I don't understand what this means. Surely the functions are needed, or else you would not be trying to run those scripts
Or maybe you're saying "after I run Breeze_Peacock.pyw, I would like all of its objects (including functions) to be deallocated before Initialiser.pyw runs". I think you're prematurely optimizing here. Function objects take up, like, a hundred bytes. Your RAM can survive that.
CondaValueError: no package names supplied # If you want to update to a newer version of Anaconda, type: # # $ conda update --prefix C:\Users\JamesMcintyre\AppData\Local\Continuum\anaconda3 anaconda
(base) C:\Users\JamesMcintyre
Maybe I should try conda update annaconda --force?
Or maybe you're saying "If I import Breeze_Peacock, it will dump all of the functions into the global scope and clutter everything up". It will only do that if you do from Breeze_Peacock import *. If you do import Breeze_Peacock, all of the functions will be conveniently encapsulated inside the Breeze_Peacock module object.
WARNING: The --force flag will be removed in a future conda release. See 'conda update --help' for details about the --force-reinstall and --clobber flags.
CondaValueError: no package names supplied # If you want to update to a newer version of Anaconda, type:
If you're allocating a huge object inside Breeze_Peacock, do it somewhere other than the global scope (i.e. inside a function), and it will be deallocated automatically by the garbage collector before Initializer begins.
shall I try doing what the terminal is saying then and put in?: conda update --prefix C:\Users\JamesMcintyre\AppData\Local\Continuum\anaconda3 anaconda
@Aran-Fey I upgraded the code like this (substituting py with pyw) - #Starter- file to start the peacock program #This is version 1.0 import sys import os
@Aran-Fey I updated the code like this - #Starter- file to start the peacock program
#This is version 1.0
import sys
import os
print('Console...')
#os.system('pyw "./Program/DecorationResources/Breeze_Peacock.pyw"')
#os.system('pyw "./Program/Initialiser.py"')
ERROR: Could not install packages due to an EnvironmentError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'c:\\users\\jamesmcintyre\\appdata\\local\\continuum\\anaconda3\\lib\\site-packages\\jdcal-1.4.1.dist-info\\METADATA'
I'm now trying conda update -n base -c defaults conda --force as that apparently worked for one of the last people on that github error page
@JamesMcIntyre I honestly don't know what they borked; I gave you a warning that I'd be rapidly out-of-my-depth and what fixed it for me. It wasn't that command. I think I'm redundant here, sorry
Now, the console for Breeze_Peacock is hidden. But I am unable to understand why it is now working with the os.system("pyw .....")
There can be one possible reason that I suspect - The os.system maybe starting everything using a command line window, as if we are starting the program by typing "pyw ....." on command line.
no your right. I think I'm gonna have to restart my computer to try and fix this. I agree that Windows is a pile of crap but unforntuatly I need to use it on my work machine.
Is there a particular version of anaconda you were able to downgrate to which worked?
WARNING: The --force flag will be removed in a future conda release. See 'conda update --help' for details about the --force-reinstall and --clobber flags.
hello friends, can anyone point me to any materials that might help me query a rest API in batches I need to process around 800k values and working on a row by row case seems like madness
sys.path.insert(1,"./Program/DecorationResources/") sys.path.insert(2,"./Program/") import Breeze_Peacock import Initialiser Now, all consoles are hidden (as I intend) and I have found that infact the os.system() starts everything up in a new command line window - the reason I wa…
@Aran-Fey Thanks, I have around 800 thousand addresses of which I need to fetch a long and lat value from the Microsoft Location API I'll have a look into batches
@MisterMiyagi I'm still researching the best approach from the docs : The following table describes the default service protection API limits enforced per web server within the 5 minute sliding window.
Measure Description Limit per web server Number of requests The cumulative number of requests made by the user. 6000 Execution time The combined execution time of all requests made by the user. 20 minutes (1200 seconds) Number of concurrent requests The number of concurrent requests made by the user 52
@MisterMiyagi but higher than 1 at a time, 800 k is the total not the batch size, if I could do 6k at a time that would be ideal, just need to figure out how!
Hmm, reviewing my interactions with The Bureaucracy, it looks like I submitted a form in duplicate last week when I was supposed to submit it in triplicate. I should know by this afternoon whether it was mercifully accepted anyway, or if I have to pay $40 for the privilege of starting over.
Hopefully I get it right in the next two tries, which is approximately when The Bureaucracy will process its maximum number of applications, and turn me away forever
30% of my motivation to begin with is to be able to say I tried. I can tick that box whether I succeed or not.
The other 70% is "because I really want the thing at the other end of this red tape"
Empirically, the thing must be worth more to me than $40, but worth less than the effort required to confirm that I photocopied a form the correct number of times
I cannot throw rocks from within my glass house, because on at least one occasion I have close-voted a question for being unclear when I was pretty sure I understood it well enough to answer.
It irks me that there's no easy way to correctly look up a dundermethod for an instance. Every time I write some_obj.__some_dunder__(), I have this annoying "that's not the correct way to look up dundermethods" thought :I
@Aran-Fey no, keeping some_obj.__some_dunder__() but pretending that you're just accessing a regular some_obj.class_attr where class_attr belongs to the class
though your preceding message suggests that this is not a consistent mental model because some_obj.class_attr should be the same as type(some_obj).class_attr until you shadow the latter with something else on the former