Anybody remember how numpy stores arrays of custom objects internally? Does it store a reference counted version at each index? Or just the item without the reference count?
I stumbled upon that thread, for now I am using a manual python based filtering to get what I want as some other thread said what I wanted was not possible
Can i somehow search objects in S3 by extension, not only by prefix?
Here is what i have now:
ListObjectsResponse r = s3Client.ListObjects(new Amazon.S3.Model.ListObjectsRequest()
{
BucketName = BucketName,
Marker = marker,
Prefix = folder,
MaxKeys = 1000
});
So, I need to li...
hello, I have a question: export MY_VARIABLE=100 in python context. How I can do that? then it goes to python3 preprocess.py train.txt.tmp \$MY_VARIABLE > train.txt like this.
Can you clarify your question a little more? As I read your question it has nothing to do with Python, but variable expansion inside bash
setting an environment variable sets it for your current bash session, so you can call for e.g. command $VARIABLE afterwards
alkasm:~$ export FOO=123
alkasm:~$ echo $FOO
123
this works if you're running any executable, whether or not its a python script. The expansion happens in bash, before it gets passed into the program.
What's the differences of using += operator and .extend()? I read that the only difference is that .extend() is a function call and can be used in function chain call (no idea what is that). For example, list_1 = [1, 2, 3], and I want to add 4, 5, 6, the result is the same when I use either the += operator or .extend() function.
+= only works if the right-hand-side operand is also a list, extend works with any iterable
user13727121
8:23 AM
@Aran-Fey I just tested it, I'm still not seeing any difference. The += operator works the same as .extend() function. The only difference I was able to notice is that if I only provide one value using += operator, I'd get a TypeError unless I enclose it with the square brackets []. And the .extend() function requires an iterable, else it'd return a TypeError as well.
If there is a PR in an open source project which was there since 6months and I asked what is the status because the last 2 months there was no activity and the PR is currently unusable, then the person responded, they have a fix and are testing it right now. How long is it appropriate to wait until asking again? I need the feature, but for an outsider I think it would be a few months to get into the code and finish it, that's why I would rather wait for the person to finish it, especially after
they said they have a fix. But if they tell me it's gonna be another 2months, I'd rather get into it myself
1 week passed since his message and I think of asking for an update again, is that ok or considered rude?
@Hakaishin I think it boils down to the fact that that's someone's unpaid work in their free time. They could take an year and it would still be unfair to "expect" them to finish it just because you need it.
So if youre genuinely willing to work on this feature, perhaps start the conversation from that angle, offering your help if they need it. That might be a better way to tackle it. If they say no, they are almost done, then great you have your answer. If they say yes, i could use the help, well then you were going to work on it anyways if they couldn't finish it quickly, so it's the same as status quo in that case either ways, yeah?
@ParitoshSingh ofc I get that and I don't expect them to finish it, but I kinda expect them to give a rough timeline, because If I know it will take give or take x and I can wait so long + some safety margin, I'm gonna do other things. If I can't wait x I will try to do it myself.
man ros has such stupid default values. If anybody ever makes something which has rgba values, they should chose a default of 0,0,0,1! not 0,0,0,0. So annoying
I mean, the person in this answer is Jennie, and the question asks about Gerrit Cole. are you sure youre looking at the right answer? If so, you can safely conclude this is entirely bogus
The names may be different, but the book states the exact same probabilities in the answer
That's why I'm so confused -- #1) It seems like the problem doesn't have enough information and #2) The solution picks out random numbers from thin air!
So at this point, i can only state what i've stated above, just common sense approach to how youd solve it. And i cannot guess the intention behind an incomplete question, or a strangely worded answer, because i didn't write these (phew)
Aye, but i'd also suggest a frame challenge with your teacher (assuming this is related to some homework) and see what they think, even if you have this discussion post assignment
Has anybody switched to using their left hand, because of strain in the right hand and is it normal that my left hand hurts already? I think it's because I have no muscles built up in my left hand. Was wondering if somebody else did that switch and also I'm surprised nobody in my office has this problem, then again at home they don't continue to be on their pc.
I started using my left hand 2 weeks ago
Also I start to sympathize with vim fanatics because of hand issues
this is not a good sign btw, if such a strain develops it does not fix itself even if the hand starts feeling fine one day. you must give it rest for a while even when you think the pain has gone, for it to fully recover.
Essentially, err on the side of caution and dont overstrain even when you think it "feels fine"
I'd echo AD's thoughts with some urgency, talk to a doctor
@Hakaishin Not sure if that helps you, but in the past I have sometimes experienced pain (in both hands) when I was typing. I fixed that by learning Colemak, hasn't happened a single time since
Hmm interesting, I havent heard of colemak. I think it's more the mouse which is giving me trouble than the keyboard. Also I HATE doctors with a vigor. They have been utterly useless in my whole life(besides antibiotics, praise antibiotics). Otherwise they have been a pure moneysink with no result. I even tried to go to the doctors for wrist pain, they gave me a cast thingy which didn't work at all. So I'd rather not waste more money. Also I wish we had canadian like healthcare, then I could try
I will see if it stays for a few more weeks I guess I will have to go to the doctor again
I do sometimes feel uncomfortable using my mouse, but it's never been so bad that I had to switch to my other hand. But I definitely should buy a better one
Good point, I will start to use those buttons more, literally outside of consoles I never used them. Sadly I can't try out ergonomic mice due to covid and I'd rather try them first. Well I guess I will wait a month
hmm, did anyone here worked with position of characters? I'm trying to save the position of certain characters in strings (letters) but in the smallest way possible (as in, the smallest notation/logic possible)
can't use offset/full number as it would take too much space per strings...
only thing i thought of that kind of worked was using BCD/binary numbers, and putting 1 where letters were in strings...but that use too much space in my current notation still
I don't like my dataset to take too much space, but i still need the letters in the context of each strings...just don't care to know what those are, just their specific positions
I already have a working method but I'm curious if there better ways than what i already do is all
Does anyone know how best to keep files (eg. CSV) in sync between an EC2 instance and a local machine? I'm unsure if I should be using subprocess, paramiko or boto3 in python to accomplish this. My logic is, if I run my script offline, I want to ensure that a)whenever I run my script offline, I import/sync the latest DB states from my EC2 instance, and similarly b) after I run my script offline, I'm able to export/sync my DB states back to my EC2 instance.
@AndrasDeak, sorry for disturbing you. Why setattr does not work here? It supposes to rewrite static State class's property, but it does not work at all :( https://github.com/zaxoavoki/pypad/blob/test/app.py#L18
@entithat I don't have experience with this, so what I'd do is first check on a dummy example whether it's indeed not working, and if it works in the dummy example then figure out why it "doesn't work" in your real code
sorry for interruption.. Initially i have subdomain in public_html that host the WordPress and then now i have implement the python app inside that subdomain by removing all the WordPress files and comment out all the text in .htaccess while accessing that domain it shows 403 forbidden error.. after i add index.html file that error is gone . but now while accessing the url that is set in urls.py it say Internal Server Error.
can anybody help me which part i should look for... for this kind of situations please
Juhu, they guy of the PR earlier today responded that he plans to spend the rest of the week on it and he didn't go into how I could help him, which sounds to me like it's close to finished :)
Depending on your workflow, you can also consider a Mapping/dict subclass that understands such keys. Depends on whether these keys are used internally as well.
Also inconvenient when you need to go to the outhouse in the middle of the night, and you go to light your bedside pitchtorch, and it stabs you with its sharp tines
@J.L.Louis If strings like "system.memory.cpu0.bank0" would do, or if you wanted to modify the code to use a double-colon separator, you might want to meet hu.dotted_dict. The code's pretty gash, but it might give you a few ideas.
I was replying to a comment that said he was thinking of using the strings as keys. dotted_dict has code that splits such strings down and descends a structure, of which nested dicts are a proper subset, to retrieve and set values. Seems relevant to me, but whatever.
outputMat = [row[:] for row in self.mat]
rows = len(self.mat)
cols = len(self.mat[0])
for i in range(rows):
for j in range(cols):
outputMat[i][j] = (1.0-coupling) * function(self.mat[i][j],parameters, np.shape(self.mat),nit,snapshot)
for n in neighborhood:
outputMat[i][j] += (coupling/float(len(neighborhood))) * function(self.mat[(i+n[1]+rows) % rows][(j+n[0]+cols) % cols],parameters, np.shape(self.mat),nit,snapshot)