My sister works in recruitment for python developers and has asked me to write her a LinkedIn post giving resources for learning. What's the general feeling towards Real Python? It's not in our recommended sources - is it reasonably vetted?
I've found some articles there that have been helpful to me, but I don't have a feeling for it as-a-whole
Funnily enough, I've been having to learn R this last week. The reason is for r-markdown and ggplot because it's the only decent way for us to build reports in a standard format. I don't know how I'd replicate that output in python
<shrug/> I've never had to auto-generate reports with markdown until last week so it's not something I've thought about too much, I can just cargo-cult the company's existing approach that happens to be in R :P
I don't think an R vs. Python argument is particularly helpful, though. What's the outcome going to be if I told you that it was better at frobnicating bizbaz? Are you suddenly going to need to learn the language and start frobnicating bizbaz?
I was surprised to learn that frobnication is actually a word. When I was only a few weeks into learning python (and programming at all) I came across a docstring - "optionalplotz wants to frobnicate the bizbaz first" or something close to that and I just remember thinking "what on Earth have I got myself into?"
Haha, "and that's how a wish to learn programming unraveled into me joining a obscure cult of hooded people, whose mantra while summoning the underworld is 'frobnicate the bizbaz' "
Goodbye for now, perhaps our lives will intertwine in the future somehow -- sorry that sounded way too dramatic, I need to learn how to curb myself, jezz.
@Aran-Fey I ve an equivalent code that I wrote an year back, I just changed the path of images. It's like one of your template code what you say it as.
there too I don't have any subfolders but I get images loaded there
<David Attenborough voice> The life cycle of a Rob is complex. He'll only emerge from hibernation on the Python chat channel when roused by an SO API question :P
ok I should have researched more before I did that but I used pd.read_html and pd.to_csvto initially create the csv files, I realized there is pd.to_sql now
I saw this before I asked here pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/reference/api/… and it said "Databases supported by SQLAlchemy [1] are supported" so I was expecting a pandas based solution, didnt know loops were actually ok
sure, as I mentioned above, I scraped a couple tables from a site using pd.read_htmland then saved them to csv using pd.to_csv, it turns out I need these csv in a db thats it. So I can either run the scraper again and use to_sql or convert the existing csv to db, do I make sense?
@python_learner since you are using pandas from the start to read_html . so you can use pandas.concat which will combine all into one. then you can load it to the database at once.
@python_learner does this work? (I have in my head there's an exception) before we move on to the SQLite
import csv
import os
files = os.listdir('some_dir')
data = []
for file in files:
with open(file, 'r') as infile:
this_file = list(csv.reader(data))
data.extend(this_file)
@python_learner pandas is an analysis and manipulation tool where you've just used a small function of it which use requests & bs4 library on background to parse HTML structure. something like i don't need to use pandas.to_csv in case if there's a library can be used to write to csv (csv library .. etc)
I don't think pandas has anything to add, btw. Not only do I distrust to_sql but I think the concatentation of multiple CSVs is slower than using the stdlib csv module
Until recently, I've been a contractor, so they can't tell me how to use my time. Now I have a job, I still will watch Room 6 (but not the main feed) because I learn a lot from here and it's a requirement that I stay on top of tech
@roganjosh kinda thing such bajillion which i personally liked :P. yea am recovering and all is good. hope you are fine as well. and all nice guys here as well.
@αԋɱҽԃαмєяιcαη glad to hear it! "bajillion" is an overlooked unit of measurement. It's less than np.inf but more than basically everything else. I think I need a PR to python
That reminds me of a project that I thought of a week or two ago. If augmented reality is sufficiently developed now, one could write a tamagotchi-like AR game where you watch your animals walk around your house. And then after a few weeks of gameplay animals start to disappear. And again after a while you start seeing weird things, like your pets being scared of something off-screen. And eventually you can see an animal being snatched behind/under a cupboard by something.
of course the game is advertised as a tamagotchi-like app, the rest is an easter egg :P
Are you saying that games where all you do is tend to a farm and pet animals are out of fashion? I haven't been keeping up with the times but I doubt that.
It's still close-worthy even if you know what SSTV is and how it works. You're either asking people to help you find a library that does the work for you, which is off-topic, or to write the whole code for you, which is also off-topic/too broad
:( Sic transit gloria mundi. Thanks for the feedback, guys. Any chance there's a replacement immortal figure? I saw Shaggy being an all-powerful being a few years ago...
@MattDMo but do they also know that Chuck Norris counted to infinity, twice?
littletable is getting cleaned up. Just pushed version 1.1.0, with rich integration for pretty tabular output. And converted crappy HowToUseLittletable.txt to Markdown-ified HowToUseLittletable.md