How come all the arrays inside this list point to the same array
adj = [[]] * nodescount
BUT
When I do it this way the arrays are independant of each other
adj = [[] for _ in range(numCourses)]
hello, quick question - how can i only return true if two columns evaluate to false on pandas? thank you!
i used truth_cond = df.col1 & df.col2 to look for columns that both evaluate to true, but doing !truth_cond returns true even when there is only one column that is false (but i want it to only return false when both are false). any pointers, thanks!
guys. I can't seem to use datetime module anymore. it worked last year, the exact same code run like this f = open("rekaman_aktifitas.txt","a") now = datetime.now() date = now.strftime("%m/%d/%Y, %H:%M:%S") f.write(date+"[aktifitas user]=> "+input+"\n") f.close()
but now it tells me that ``AttributeError: 'builtin_function_or_method' object has no attribute 'strftime'```
"operator.__invert__(obj)Return the bitwise ... ... .. equivalent to ~obj." I was searching for "complement" in the doc page and hence couldn't find this
How do you install Anaconda (not miniconda) on Google Colab?
I did this: ```python !pip install anaconda !conda env create --file environment.yml ``` But then it did this: ```bash Collecting anaconda Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/bd/81/44690deb604d72ffa59ec6e5552f4ef21afb59c8e2698717c8a6be4af09c/anaconda-0.0.1.1.tar.gz Building wheels for collected packages: anaconda Building wheel for anaconda (setup.py) ... done Created wheel for anaconda: filename=anaconda-0.0.1.1-cp36-none-any.whl size=1124 sha256=f7bd16fd00c86bd43929695c19302a9c59fbc2a9570d57fb958aafd4dd33791a
I added !export PATH=~/anaconda3/bin:$PATH before the conda command and it's still not found
Furthermore, how do I check which anaconda (I don't want mini, I need the other) I have from pip?
I think it's in the URL (recent discussions suggest it might be a UUID of the specific revision). Going back a few years, you could just get a shareable link to a file by right-clicking
I tried the same thing `MODEL_SAVE_PATH = '/content/drive/My Drive/Colab-Notebook/bert2gpt' MODEL_TEMP_PATH = '/content/drive/My Drive/Colab-Notebook/temp'` used in the docs as per the example `with open('/content/drive/My Drive/foo.txt', 'w') as f:`, *after* mounting
Next problem: Later cells have !pip install rouge_score, next cell has from datasets import load_metric rouge = load_metric("rouge")... but then this happens: ImportError: To be able to use this metric, you need to install the following dependencies['rouge_score'] using 'pip install rouge_score' for instance'
Sure, hence there being 3 points in my flow diagram
That's not to say that the latest issue isn't valid, but the error explicitly states a potential way to correct it. You never mention whether you even tried it, just presented it as "next problem"
You saved the water for litmus tests, right? I have a distinct memory of bringing in red cabbage water to primary school to watch it change colour :) (otherwise, I like my red cabbage pickled)
@AndrasDeak highlight of our science class. I think we had to concentrate it down a bit, but the assignment was to boil up a cabbage and bring the juice into class the next day
@MisterMiyagi My sister turned 3 last week and I've been round celebrating (given that she had 2 guests.... her family). She's been watching YT vids about bones and got quite engrossed in what they were talking about (even if she didn't really understand). Given that they have a shed, I now have a perfect excuse to build my Ruben's Tube and not feel washed-up :P
@MisterMiyagi I just need a cover story, and she's not just obsessed with Peppa Pig and the interwebs. Give it a few years and I'll have my perfect sound system :P
As long as her curiosity holds for a few more years, that is
I hope not! :) My grandfather was nuts in indulging my questions. In a few years, it'd be awesome if I can say "let's go illustrate it" and run off to the shed to make some contraption that I've only learned about in later life
So I was looking through typing.cast in Python 3.6 and noticed that cast actually doesn't do anything in the python source.
def cast(typ, val):
"""Cast a value to a type.
This returns the value unchanged. To the type checker this
signals that the return value has the designated type, but at
runtime we intentionally don't check anything (we want this
to be as fast as possible).
"""
return val
Would make sense to do something like def cast(typ, val) -> typ:
Well it can't actually do that at runtime. Its more an additional place to specify the type information. Especially when writing a library where the value is supplied by a caller - This means you don't have control over of the type.
So its more like a static assert for the type checker, than a type cast (which doesn't really exist in python).
There is a difference. The thing is we could do more if the casting function wasn't garbage. For example, libraries like typeguard could handle it correct. So then runtime checking would work, because you could compare iff it was actually castable.
Type checking at runtime can be veeery expensive. In some cases even impossible. (You can't type check the values yielded by a generator, for instance. At least not without making the generator useless)
Type checking at runtime exists right now with the typeguard library. I'm going through a large code base and fixing stuff. Certainly not how you run the library in production :-)
Although honestly, doing type checking at every invocation of the cast function shouldn't be too expensive, especially since everybody using the cast function already subscribed to adding extra call overhead...