@MisterMiyagi @CoreVisional: Just do for element in lst: .... Unless you actually need to also know the index of element (e.g. for printing message), then the best idiom is for element, i in enumerate(lst): ... See this answer
..in particular we don't needlessly declare iterators like C++/Java would. And try to avoid the special case where you want to insert/remove from the list How to remove items from a list while iterating?
@Dsafds bisect.insort is better if you have a already sorted huge list and want to insert a new element, if you already have a long list and just want to sort, you can insert and then use normal sort
this is the site , now how accurate it is I cant vouch for that but I use the site regularly
"This can be much more efficient than repeatedly sorting a list, or explicitly sorting a large list after it is constructed." is what the site claims, in case anyone doenst want to open the link
Job hunting update - I was allowed to retake my failed hackerrank coding test, followed by a 7-1/2 onsite-interview-over-zoom, which included 2 more coding tests and 2 "find the bug in this broken system" tests. I finally wore them down and they just gave up and gave me the job. Start Jan 4.
I keep finding pyparsing everywhere
But... yeah, best get the inventor to pass an online programming trial
Comments are not treated the same as questions/answers. Comments are important to drive towards better q/as, but otherwise are treated as unimportant data. Deleting huge swaths of previous answers will probably get looked at, but if it's bad quality content, no one will care. OTOH if you start deleting answers that have upvotes, that means you're removing quality content from the site, which means it should stay.
You shouldn't do that. This site doesn't exist to answer one person's questions for them. This site exists to create a repository of questions and good answers to them. While the OP might only care about their single piece of code, people who find the answer later give zero shits about OPs code and care about theirs.
sure, most questions don't become canonical/important, but people may still land there regardless. After all, if a question isn't a dupe (or the wording is different enough from a dupe) someone else may also ask the question in that same way.
Basically you should never delete your answers unless they actually contain bad information (or I guess if they contain duplicate information).
@python_user I decided a long time ago that I'd rather be hired for what I am than what I could be. This makes interview prep a breeze, since I am prepared by being who I am. and also rules out places where they place too much emphasis on code tests.
@holdenweb this I can relate to an extent, I remember having to google "python interview questions" when I was seeking internships and after having worked with python now I dont need to do that anymore
@holdenweb "and also rules out places where they place too much emphasis on code tests." it should be understood that this is a position of privilege that not everyone can afford.
I do understand that. And today's economic conditions disadvantage beginners, since jobs overall are scarce and employers can be picky. But anyone who works in an Amazon warehouse could tell you that's the way the world works at present.
yep yep. Also it's strange to me just how regional interviewing practices are. Here on the US west coast, I don't imagine that any job I get in the next 15 years won't have a coding test as part of the interview....
It's been known for some time (centuries) that a plentiful supply of labour depresses wages and allows discriminatory and exploitative behaviours by employers. Which is why I stayed mostly out of the corporate world in my career. I chose to engage with it to earn a living, but not to be part of it, again reflecting a degree of privilege not available to many.
@alkasm I've started and run businesses rather than work for the man, but today's conditions appear far more difficult than those I faced, economically, and education is significantly worse and more expensive.
Just vow not to use testing when you get to be the hiring manager.
Having said which, Holdencorp does currently use testing for some positions, but mostly as a way of eliminating obviously unsuitable candidates early in the process. So I got in by taking a test. I agreed to do this only because the opportunity ran so parallel with so many of my interests and aspirations.
the new thing after testing is a "take home" project, I was once offered one but I later chose not to with the college work I had
its not that common at least where I am, but that is something that is also not great, I have heard reddit posts saying its basically a prototype for the companies new ideas
I've done one of those, to be quite honest it was a really fun problem, and I ended up getting an offer from the company.
And yeah, people like to say that on Reddit. In reality, I cannot imagine that ever being a good idea.
It's probably illegal, you don't write production-level code in one of those, and just writing the code to a well-specified problem is the easiest possible part of every programmer's job.
I highly doubt it really ever happens (though I wouldn't say it never happens)
From my experience it comes from good intentions. People would like to see you code but know that 1) one hour is not enough time to assess your skill, 2) people don't always do well outside of an environment they're productive in, 3) some interviewers might give you more information/less information depending on their whims, 4) coding on a whiteboard is not natural, 5) lets you look up documentation, ...
overall it's much more similar to a "normal working environment" than a whiteboard leetcode problem. And it is inherently more fair than those. OTOH they usually require a decent amount of time, and people will spend a lot more time polishing that code/overthinking it than they generally would so there's still some sort of imbalance..
that way your time isn't wasted, it's paid, you get to actually see what it's like to work there, and people see what it's actually like to work with you.
start ups are more relaxed and are modern when it comes to hiring, as opposed to the well established ones, my interview exp with startups have always been good
Our test format is pretty straightforward (though other are using DevSkiller). We book a 2-hour slot, and at the start of the test we invite you to collaborate on a Github repo we've cloned just for your test. We see what you can do in two hours.
The repo has unit tests in it, one of which already passes. You make the rest pass. We also have adiitional tests we apply after the fact.
It doesn't take up too much a candidate's time, and they can do it where they're most comfortable rather than on a whiteboard under scrutiny. Many of our team are remote anyway.
The problem I generally have with the people I interview is going back and forth between "standardizing" the interview while also trying to interview people with specific, niche skills (computer vision). On one hand, there's gonna be some people better at the science aspect than the engineering, and there's different skills people will have in either of those that aren't necessarily intersectional.
Whenever the field gets into more specialized territory, really hard to make a bulletproof interview strategy.
Accept that not all hires will be successful, and have a humane policy for letting the poor choices fail early and leave. It's too stressful to aim for an impossible target, and unrealistic to boot. The number still left after 12 months employment would be a sensible metric.
This makes interviewing rather easier. It all takes the time of other team members for interviews, etc., so there's a cost-benefit balance to be struck too.
Agree with the discussion above - that sounds so much more sensible than doing a leetcode challenge
When I applied to Tesco as a contractor, I got given a coding challenge to do for a week that was somewhat around heuristics for solving a similar problem. It could never be construed as doing free work, it wasn't super prescriptive in how it was solved and I just had to submit my script and talk through it. As it happens, I actually misread the mathematical notation for one of the constraints and solved for the wrong thing, but still got the position (phew!)
I don't understand why the pigeons need to be on LSD for this thought experiment but it has definitely made the whole thing more interesting
I think in all my analogies going forward, every living object will be on some kind of hallucinogen. If anyone questions why, I'll just stare intently and say "because it's critical for the setup"
Anyone familiar with this: making an environment using virtualenv and when using pip to install packages, pip is linked to a different version of Python? i.e. not the activated virtualenv environment :'(
To show what you're actually using. I suspect, though I'm not great with Linux, that you might activate a virtualenv but then use pip3 or something, that isn't recognised by the current terminal and actually points to the system installation or something
$ mkvirtualenv tst
New python executable in /Users/sam/.virtualenvs/tst/bin/python2.7
Also creating executable in /Users/sam/.virtualenvs/tst/bin/python
Installing setuptools, pip, wheel...
done.
(py3.8_main) $ which python
/home/user/virtualenvs/py3.8_main/bin/python
(py3.8_main) $ which python3
/home/user/virtualenvs/py3.8_main/bin/python3
(py3.8_main) $ which python3.8
/home/user/virtualenvs/py3.8_main/bin/python3.8
@roganjosh it's extra sure because pip can still mean a lot of things
if you're not inside a venv then your best bet is using python* -m pip
using pip instead of python -m pip is how you get sopython.com/canon/131/… (well not that, but a bunch of "why is X not installed if I just installed it?" questions)
but if you're inside a venv then it doesn't matter
But since Sam was installing a package to create venvs with, I assumed that they didn't have an active venv when they were installing virtualenvwrapper, hence my suggestion
Looks like their is an equivalent wrapper for venv which is great for lazy people like me: pypi.org/project/venvwrap Gunna swap over to venv and nuke what I have currently. Thanks for pointing it out Andras.
@Sam that seems like something someone threw together. Version 0.1 with 0 stars, background says "I didn't know enough about venvs (or bash scripting), so I spent a weekend learning/making this project. Its generally inspired by virtualenvwrapper. Instead of wrapping virtualenv, these functions support the built-in python venv. I think you can use virtualenvwrapper to wrap venvs since they're almost equivilent, but just using someone elses code means I learn less."
This doesn't necessarily make it bad, just a heads-up that it has different support than virtualenvwrapper
I can mentally list 4 more with multi-billion revenues. I can also tell you that they don't want that any more :P I think it's best to leave 2.7 behind
It's not a big effort on my part; [edit] (without the backticks I've used here to format as code) will auto-expand out into a hyperlink to the edit menu for their own question
@python_user Choose a name that reflects its purpose. A dict of WHAT?
A dict of entries can safely be called entry_dict, but if you dont have an entry_list as well call it entries.
Unless, of course, you enjoy reading code that doesn't tell you what it's doing ...
Worst case, call it d then use your IDE to refactor the name - it saves a lot of time for a crappy typist like me.
Fallback testing for the doubly-mirrored 1.5 TB RAID-1 array is underway. I unplugged a drive and observe the system is now rebuilding the spare volume. With four drives I feel a bit safer from loss than before if this works. And the read speed should theoretically be 3x(disk speed). Assuming the USB-3 pipe is fat enough.
@holdenweb I named it d, but wanted to know if there was a common name in cases where you dont care, eg : a helper function that takes a dict as an arg and will return if a key is present in a dict or not, (lets assume some_dict.get(key, fallback) was not there)
For small pieces of code (the ideal kind) naming can be a bit meh, but remember: the person who will have ti understand this "throw-away" program is most likely you. So do yourself a favour and think about naming.
I was looking for something else but decided to give this video a few mins... and what? "web scrapping" isn't just a typo; there's people making educational videos mentioning it? youtu.be/csG_qfOTvxw?t=146
Indeed, the spelling is correct, but I think the vocal phrasing was unambiguous (especially as I've listened to him up to that point mentioning different terms). It's just curious to me that it really does seem possible that there are two terms in use now
The temptation here is of course to start playing with globals(). I hope raising that hasn't given you ideas; I mention it to explicitly state that it's a bad idea
@Minsky good call. There are a lot of non-solutions and deadly sins on this thread (linking the appropriate answer): stackoverflow.com/a/18090853/5067311
could someone with open/close vote privileges reopen this one? it's been updated with the necessary info, for nearly 2 days now stackoverflow.com/questions/65837380/…