Grump: It massively bugs me that someone called a "Security Researcher" on their profile will just assume that a perfectly-stated (but nonsensical) output just gets interpreted as a typo so answers anyway, probably for rep. Can't wait for their close_enough filter on my password
@roganjosh I would legitimately love a close enough on my laptop password lol
@PaulMcG I read somewhere that sqlite only writes to the portion of the file which is changing, rather than reading the entire file into memory and rewriting the entire file to disk. That may not be what you meant by optimised though.
def group(array):
if not array:
yield ()
for i in range(len(array)):
for b in group(array[i+1:]):
yield (array[:i+1],) + b
for g in group(list(range(3))):
print(g)
# ([0], [1], [2])
# ([0], [1, 2])
# ([0, 1], [2])
# ([0, 1, 2],)
@toonarmycaptain the data will be contained in pages so I'm a bit confused by what "the file" is that you're both discussing. The .db on disk will be a collection of a lot of page files and it only updates the necessary page vs. rewriting the entire db. SQLite is super-quick for sequential writes
That's a strange error to get from their code. I would have thought they created a tuple and then the code would explode later on, but I wouldn't have anticipated that error.
Actually, they couldn't get a tuple because they have an assignment in there. I think I've already spent 10x more time considering the code than the OP though, so I'll move on :)
Question: I have 10 people, each with an app that has a task list of 100 items, and they go through that list one-by-one suggesting the order that they will do those tasks. Separately, I have datetime stamps for each person on when they did those tasks (some time later). I'm trying to think of a good benchmark for how accurately the initial, planned, ordering aligns with reality. Also, this benchmark should be able to rank the 10 users. I'm thinking Damerau–Levenshtein distance...
but maybe I'm on the wrong path. Any suggestions?
I suspect that if they took task 3 out and instead put it at the end of the day, the difference metric will blow up even though most of the sequence is preserved
Hmm, almost everything seems to be DNA-related, which doesn't surprise me and might explain why I had no Earthly idea how to start :) Seems it'll start with Gap Penalty
@roganjosh Probably reflects the out-of-dateness of my sqlite knowledge. Nice to see that they have tuned that up (though it makes the db file itself a little more unwieldy - it used to be just one file, so that once you built it, you could copy it to a USB drive and use elsewhere).
Ah, it's one file on your filesystem that you can copy/paste, but it almost certainly can target pages in that file for any modification. I can edit a row in a 5GB file in microseconds if it's got an index on the row
In fact, it's probably nippier than postgres for most things... until you need to do more than one thing at once, or have multiple users, or want type safety...
Hey everyone! Could someone please help me with a pandas issue? So basically I am trying something that looks like this: df["new-column"] = [ func(value) for value in df["old-column"].values] I know for sure that old-column exists, but I get a KeyError
Not really, it just means that you haven't defined the problem properly
Between us in the room, we'll likely be able to fix what it is you want to do. But you've introduced split()after I gave my suggestion, so we don't know what we're working with or towards
To be honest, it might be a good thing that it doesn't have a name. That'd make it sound special, when in fact it's something super trivial.
News flash: After importing a name into a module, you can then import it from there into yet another module. And if you're feeling super adventurous, you can even import it from there into a 3rd namespace! Mind-blowing stuff!
FWIW it seemed like a trick to me for a very long time. I didn't take a structured approach to learning the language, as you probably know, so I have quite a bit of empathy for the OP. It's not easy to search
@roganjosh Oh, sure, it's not obvious when you're just starting out. I'm just saying that we shouldn't give people the idea that everything that happens is some kind of "concept" or "technique" or "design pattern" they have to learn. Sometimes things are just a logical consequence of things you (should) already know.
I.e. the idea is to tell people "think about it for a second" instead of "go to google and research the thing named 'X'"
mmm. But if it was a case of inheritance and my answer just says "well, the parent class has children that do the same as the parent" then I've done a disservice when I could and should have known to give them the technical phrase. I was sense-checking myself
In any case, I'm satisfied that I didn't miss anything here. Thanks :)
I've specified this on the Gitlab service. I setted it in the gitlab service. If I set in the script: echo $DB_HOST or another varible it prints ok the result
Hopefully a docker expert will pop up but it's slow at the weekend so it might take some time. I'm aware it's not just docker but it's going to be linked with the gitlab CI
Now there are two people asking "is this docker"? Perhaps you could explain a bit in your question how it is or isn't docker, because it seems relevant to the configuration.
Yes, you have reason. It's the Gitlab CI running service. It's like a docker. I'm using a service called mysql and the documentation says that I can set the host the same to service. So if the service is 'mysql' the host is 'mysql'. So I get the host using getenv and the result is 'mysql' but it doesn't connect
It's strage 'cause when I print in the runner echo $DB_HOST (befer I execute ./manage.py test - to run the tests) or another variable it gives me the correct result.
Oh, it's an example. If I print all the variables I've setted in the settings.py of Django it's ok. In fact, the error that Django response is "Can't find the host 'mysql'." It recive 'mysql' as host
Maybe is a problem of the Gitlab CI not Django.
'Cause in local it connects ok with environment variables