quick Q peeps. trying to change string format/desc/upper etc within a few columns in my dataframe via a for loop....seemingly simple task but im at a roadblock
@AndrasDeak is it suitable for general purpose work, or just numerics/numpy? It's been a while since I looked at it, and the docs were pretty vague back then.
@MisterMiyagi I think its real strength is being able to sidestep the python interpreter altogether with jit(nopython=True) (a.k.a. njit()). It's probably harder to do that when you have dicts and stuff.
My hunch is that it works best for numerical problems, numpy or not. If you want generic JIT with restricted functionality you might as well use pypy, right?
Plus, I'm mostly interested in not paying the price for all the vodoo magic runtime mutation hackz that my code just does not do. PyPy is fast, but it's still regular, ugly Python.
At the same time, Cython's type model is too restricted for my evil schemes.
@jamest no worries. It takes practice to ask. But you do have to practice ;) Imagine that you're talking to someone who has no idea what you want to do (which happens to be the truth). A rubber duck helps.
@AndrasDeak yeah, its great for my pure analysis style programs but not on the data flow, wrangling, and other applications (which are mostly batch so less of a speed requirement anyway)
@wim I've found them useful for splitting a framework across several independent repos, without needing users to know about that. entry-points seem better for supporting arbitrary, third-party plugins.
@MisterMiyagi ok in theory but not working well in practice. many parts of Python ecosystem seem to have forgotten about namespace packages and either don't handle them properly or even worse just assume they don't exist
this is even true for some implementation in stdlib itself e.g. importlib.resources
@wim can't deny that the ecosystem does hardly care, flit is basically the same case. :D As long as namespace packages are working for what we need them for, we'll stay a +1 on people actually using them.
@wim Mostly more independent versioning and development. We have some pretty stable core parts used by everything, plus some faster moving experimental parts with limited usage.
Splitting our projects horizontally has already been a great quality boost. It largely prevents muddled responsibilities and people taking hack'y shortcuts.
Doesn't the question title (which should be unique, but I saw that constraint broken once somehow) cast the net wider to funnel people to the same answer?
I don't know, that particular one is suspicious because there is no traceback so we can't tell if it's syntax error from print or syntax error from indentation.
arguably, it should have been closed as unclear, but I'm asking about roomba rules not about that Q in particular.
@wim the IDE drew squiggles under the last few prints as well. It will be a 2 vs 3 problem, which is in agreement with OP's dubious "syntax error" naming.
"has 1 or 0 comments". Well, I've thrown some poop into the roomba, it seems. I wouldn't be surprised if I've kept hundreds of questions open from that condition :'(
People leave comments all the time. That roomba rule just means that non-closed questions with non-negative score mostly don't get roombad. Which is fine.
ah, it's actually "0 score or less".
Still not a huge deal. Tumbleweeds are not a problem. And closed non-dupes get deleted much easier.
Yeah, I'm not surprised that it doesn't work out of the box. I just can't think of a way to accomplish it without monkeypatching some sphinx internals (yet again)
The thing is that I'd need to maintain the table and a regular toctree, because I need the toctree for the "previous"/"next" links to work. That seems like a pain to maintain
Maybe I should just add some text + a heading to each function/class