I'm unittesting a function which takes an string and returns a bool. Is it a good idea to put the test strings into a list and simply iterate over them with an assert? Otherwise I'm writing out self.assertFalse(myfunc(mystring)) over and over again.
Can someone with editing priviliges rollback this question stackoverflow.com/questions/62046152/… ? The author decided to delete the question by editing.
Can someone with Python experience tell me, if I have the following code.
with open(self.filepath, 'rb') as f:
raw = f.read(36)
header = self.header_structure.parse(raw)
raw = f.read(52)
When you call the read method a second time using read(52) does the read method continue reading from position 36 just after the position where the previous call of read(36) stopped reading, or does read(52)start reading bytes from position 0 up to position 51?
Every time I want to spread the good word about comment formatting tricks I draw a mental blank on the actual phrase and thus can't find the link. I'm enthusiastic but terrible at converting people when I can't even find the sacred text :(
I should be good getting to it via the "help" button in the text box rather than take up your time, but thanks :)
I think the problem with remembering the search term was that we spend so much time having to tell people how to format code in chat that "formatting" has an exclusive association with that task, rather than finding something cool
I don't get how marketing hasn't learned by now that the phrase: "It just works" sends shivers down my spine and most peoples who know what they are talking about. I guess, this just means that I am not the target audience for this github pages ad. But hearing It just works, makes me want to not have anything to do with it. And yes, I have been lied to too many times :D
I'm in the UK. We work in mph rather than with km, and we have signs for 20, 30, 40, 50 but then we have one for national speed limit. That's 60 mph on single laned roads and 70 for dual carriageways and over. It's something like 60% of people that don't know that
It drives me crazy on "smart motorways" when they display the national speed limit sign and people just stick to 50 because they don't even know what the sign is telling them
Because the smart motorway will transition from 50 to national speed limit. So they stick to the last speed limit they saw because they don't know the sign told them that it just changed
I don't know what other countries employ this "smart motorway" concept but it's a monumental waste of time and money. I'd rather they played films on the screens rather than sit at standstill looking at a "40" sign
Every 200m or something, there is a set of speed cameras and screens displaying the speed limit. So the idea is that, when traffic starts, you have different portions of the motorway enforcing different speeds so you'll hit the "smart" section and it'll pull you down to 40 and then start increasing again
This is the code i used to read 40 folders(classes), each class has 10 images and divide each classes into training and testing classes (from each folder 5 go into the training class and 5 into testing class). How can i make this more better ?
trainingImages = []
testImages = []
for Class in allClasses:
path = folderPath + '/' + Class
allImages = os.listdir(path)
imageCount = len(allImages)
# seperating training images
randomlist = random.sample(range(imageCount), (int)(imageCount / 2))
The above code works perfectly fine. but i want to know if i can do this implementation better?
@MisterMiyagi traffic works a lot like a wave and can be modeled as such. That's why you emerge from traffic jams and wonder what the yam caused it. I guess it's a kind of controlled attenuation... but I'm not sure that's the word I want to use
Maybe dampening. This is why I'm not a physicist :/
from pathlib import Path
trainingImages = []
testImages = []
for class_ in allClasses:
path = Path(folderPath) / class_
allImages = [readImage(img_path) for img_path in path.iterdir()]
imageCount = len(allImages)
randomlist = set(random.sample(range(imageCount), imageCount // 2))
for i, img in enumerate(allImages):
list_ = trainingImages if i in randomlist else testImages
list_.append(img)
@KhwajaHussamQuasmi Something like ^ that
Ideally the "split the list of images in two" part of the code should be moved to a function
Thanks to flex time, if I solved the problem while unconscious, then by definition that counted as work hours
Not sure how to log the duration in my time card. The clock in my dream kept changing every time I looked at it. I mean, normal clocks in reality do that too, but in a useful way.
Google tells me that REM cycles typically cap out at 1 hour, so let's call that the upper limit
I'll subtract 15 minutes for the time I spent frantically trying to find my locker in my old highschool while my teeth fell out
"Proceeding from the above meaning, we can conclude that the inability to read in a dream primarily means the inability to develop, change their views on life and gain new knowledge." Source
Tangentially related: there's a popular tweet along the lines of "everyone has a cell phone these days, but has anyone seen one in a dream?". As of about a month ago, I have.
REM is similar to wakefulness, at least in comparison to any other phase of sleep. Speculation: higher-level brain functions are online, but produce garbage output as a result of garbage input.
I'm confused now. I assumed the "can't read" was a statement about how you can't research in your sleep but I suspect there's actually something in the fact that people don't dream of their phone
@AndrasDeak As in, your job involves reading research papers which you couldn't do whilst asleep. I think I misunderstood the tone of the conversation because I thought it was tongue-in-cheek
In which case, I don't believe Aunty Flo has any credibility. I linked that in jest
Ah, I get it. No, it was in reference to Kevin's remark about clocks not working.
I literally can't read in my dreams, so needless to say (or so I thought) clocks don't work either. But it's needful to say that, since Kevin's stance turned out to be "analog clocks are within the realm of possibility".
I had a recurrent theme where I would turn a light on and it'd just be a faintly glowing bulb. Invariably, this meant that something horrendous was imminent. After years of this, I had a dream where I just changed the bulb and I've not had it since. I had some personal growth that I can't identify and I'm struggling to word it on my CV
If there are a million firsthand accounts of "I've been stressed lately, and having dreams about falling", there's probably a correlation there. If one dreamologer consults their tarot cards and announces that an inability to read means an inability to develop... More data is required.
I was interested in the mystical as a preteen, but after a month of failing to develop telekinesis, even with all the assistance the ESP enthusiast message board could muster, I gave up on it
I'll still have dreams where I can move things with my mind, and I'll always attempt to replicate the action when I wake up. But that's just good science.
With my family and my best friend, we have a word each and we're all committed to keeping it secret and safe. Whoever remains after the first death must go to at least 3 mediums and, if that word isn't said, then we can be convinced that it doesn't work. If it does work, it's not something to evangelise about but the remaining people would at least know
I dislike movies where the nerd character encounters something paranormal and they dismiss what they're seeing as impossible. The correct reaction is: "cool, now let's try to get this to work in a controlled setting"
"The ghost probably won't leave the old mansion. Can we build a lab in the mansion?"
If I had proof of a legitimate medium, I would totally evangelize about it. Twist: all bonafide psychics foresee that becoming world-famous is more trouble than it's worth, so they only give authentic readings to people that won't evangelize about them.
People like me that enter their shop will get the boring "I see a mysterious stranger in your future, and your dead grandma says hello" treatment
Thing is, there's no national buy-in so I'd just end up being the new David Icke or something
Nor could there be. I disclosed this plan in my local pub once and it almost ended with people fighting because apparently the whole concept was "sick". I just saw it as a way of monkey-patching the inevitable
Are you asking because you're curious how people interpret it or because you're trying to figure out what kind of behavior it's supposed to have?
If it's the latter, rather than trying to guess the meaning of a line of pseudo-code, it would be better to understand what the goal of the whole code is
It's like asking "I'm trying to use a library, but I won't tell you which library, to do X, but the library instead does Y. What am I doing wrong?" It's impossible to answer without knowing anything about the library
@MyWrathAcademia Then why are you trying to use it? Relying on unmaintained data formats is even more technical debt than relying on unmaintained libraries.
@roganjosh i did but it gives the same result 40 different windows. how do i have one window but the image and labels should change and show that of the next test\
The behaviour you describe is exactly in line with having plt.show() inside that loop. If I normalise the indentation to being within that loop not shown, then you just need to move plt.show() back one level
We really need a flag/close reason: "we're not here to do people's homework" (my bots are going nuts identifying possible matches to my assignments which are just highschoolers)
In that case, I suggest building an MCVE because I'd assume it was to do with imshow but you're defining f, ax = plt.subplots(1, 2) inside the loop too
@MisterMiyagi It shouldn't be banned (just held to the same standard as asking about a work assignment your stuck on) but we don't have a "no effort" reason anymore and this should be an easy case for a "no effort homework flag" (Java tag had several copy and pasted homework assignment itself today)
huh? Andras's comment was to someone who wouldn't have close vote priviliages. My current account (Link) doesn't have CloseVotes (on SO) and I deleted my original account because of reasons so I would have to flag stuff at this point as well. So wondered if that reason helped it avoid the standard review loop
not a big deal really, I don't think there is an optimal solution (given current tools/options)
@AndrasDeak My browser stalled on loading the link, so I didn't realise it pointed to a comment, I just saw the banner and you were the final closer. Given that, I found it weird that you were pinged about it. My bad
sigh - I use that xkcd as the example of SQLInjection in every single class I teach that includes SQL. It simply is the best (easy to understand) example that exists
>Ask your question directly. Avoid asking if it's okay to ask, or if anyone knows about a topic. Users may want to see your question before speaking up, and users who join later can see it.
You know I'm really finding I like SQLAlchemy for spinning up small graphs using its ORM (ones too small for a full GraphDB that I just need to query a bit for cleaning)
Even if someone is familiar with SQLAlchemy there's no guarantee they're familiar enough to answer your question. So skip the intro and just ask your question
Yeah, I just didn't realize they also redirected the flags to just go to close queue to avoid the whole review loop. Its been a while since I used flags on SO and I missed the update due to grading 250+ students with all new "we had to go online only" rules - nightmare :P ;)
the only update that has happened was the rewording of the reasons
The mechanics has always been the same: <3k have close flags, >=3k have close votes. Close flags are only useful for putting questions in the CVQ. Close votes do the same, but also add one vote out of 3 (formerly 5).
the flags also help differentiate between close reasons when you filter in the CVQ but that's extra niche information
As I recall, might be wrong, flagging something lead it to Triage then people would say "needs edits" which would mean "help & improvement" queue then those would say "cannot be helped" which somehow lead to "Triage" then repeat
i couldn't find anyone tutorial or something close enough. can anyone help me out with this https://stackoverflow.com/questions/62068661/update-plt-show-python-to-show-all-results-on-same-window
i found something related to my issue but it was on graphs
@JonClements yeah, I have two classes I'm due to teach next Fall but its so up-in-the-air right now I decided it was time to polish off the old CV & portfolio (for Ph.D applications/just straight work) which often times finds me in this room ;) :)
@KhwajaHussamQuasmi We don't weigh in on answering questions that are freshly posted, but here is a suggestion on how to improve this question: delete EVERYTHING in your posted code, except that part related to showing plots one at a time. Hmm, you will need something to plot - create a plot at (x, y) = (i, i) where i is the range from 1 to 10. This will demonstrate your problem without pulling in all the extra distracting stuff.
Darn. This is the question I'm thinking of. Really low quality, gimme teh codez, equally low-quality answer from sub-100 rep user. Said user claims they'll delete the answer, but haven't, and I'd hate for them to be rewarded by the OP. Oh well...
with all negative rep that post might just be deleted before OP accepts
@Permian I was actually reading your code right now to see what could be the issue but with that attitude there's not much incentive for me to do that now
@Permian Not an issue with the link (it works) its an issue with asking a question with people then saying "ignore my question; thanks". People are not going to help when you express that type of attitude
Ive been trying to find information on bash/ansi and converting it to html through python... but I think im getting the encoding all messed up and BAH I just dont even know where to begin, I have asked some questions on SO but Im so bad at questions I need a conversation with someone
I spawn a bash shell in pexpect spawn('/bin//bash') get the output and then convert it to html but get a load of weird characters as it cannot process them all it seems
@LinkBerest Im just trying to get it to any front end code, i would even transfer it in raw bytes if needed and convert on front end. I see lots of options for node stuff but trying to keep vanilla js at most on front end
I do like the digital background when I have a bunch of random stuff on my whiteboards (so I don't have to worry as much that I have some proprietary info up)
@MattDMo yea i am using that! works well for most part but seems to want you to send it to a file, if you dont send it to a file you get some weird encoding
thats the output from your suggestion @MattDMo and im not sure why it has all the extra trimmings around it. its like double encoded? or something
I've been combing through SQLAlchemy tutorials (pure Query over ORM/core) to use for my class and its just depressing how bad those are on the whole - bad here meaning rampant with SQL Injection problems. I reject my earlier statement: that being #1 (at least with flask) makes perfect sense now
I hate PHP but that has nothing to do with PHP as a language (I used to hate JS but that had nothing to do with JS and everything to do with W3 schools)
@d4rk4ng31 stupid questions are best left unasked anywhere. Reasonable questions can be asked here as long as it's not asked on the main site in parallel.
How does one pass modifiable reference in python?
Like:
for string in strList:
if len(string) is not 16:
adjust(string)
The string function should now add extra spaces in the string and modify the original string.