One of my pet peeves from time to time is when I in fact gave a detailed correct answer, the questioner downvotes my answer even though I have answered exactly what their bolded statement requested
new people cant vote most of the time, even the upvote needs like 25 rep to register, downvote is probably 100 or 125 min, so its probably someone who knows the site at least some what
@python_user I do not know where it gets registered. But it does not get counted. Not sure if the OP passes 15 it would get counted automatically, either
it does not show up, once a 10 rep OP said they accepted and upvoted my answer, so I wanted them reps and voted the OP to 20, I got nothing, just +15 for the answer :/
@python_user deleted my answer, immediately watch my reputation +2 and OP's reputation +1
Anyway, whatever, the question was actually something that nagged me for a long time in sqlalchemy, and that I am in a pretty decent mood today so I still helped that OP. Hopefully they can see the light.
Yeah, some people don't quite know the etiquette for that. Even more annoying is when my 8+ year old question on a rather niche framework got a downvote for some reason without explanation, but whatever lol
so I just discovered that there are two symbols in sympy that I would like to import, but with different names ie `I` and `E`, which i would _really_ like to call `i` and `e`. it seams like I can't just do `from sympy import E,I as e,i`. But I can do:
``` from sympy import I as i from sympy import E as e ```
You could just import them as is (i.e. from sympy import E, I) and then create the assignment using tuple unpacking like e, i = E, I. Really though, "better" is very subjective.
TIL (and it's still early) that Substance over form has a very defined meeting. I was preparing a new attack and remembered the phrase "form over substance" which I was going to use to basically say "Yeah it looks good, but it has yam all use in the practical sense". Now I'm confused how my potential phrase came to be.
@AbdulRehman I like to recommend "Hands-On Machine Learning with Scikit-Learn, Keras, and TensorFlow" by Aurélien Géron, mostly because it has lots of practical examples.
No. Your code isn't pretty, but at least it works. What I'm saying is that this problem has a simple solution (like I said... two loops and a +=), but for some reason a map became involved and that made it difficult
@AndrasDeak Okey, no problem, I'm new here, and I'm learning deep learning, I tried to run a face antispoofing model in python , so I get some results and I want some help to understand them
it's just a test features comparaison between LBP and Haralick texture features, I want just to learn how to interpret the accuracy and the confusion matrix
@AbdelmalekMallek The use of features to predict classes is not deep learning. Deep learning uses little to no preprocessing or feature extraction. The accuracy is just that, the number of correct classifications in the validation run. The confusion matrix is a more detailed breakdown of predictions for each class. Explained fairly simply (I can understand it) here
I had a take-home test (suggested to be written in python) for a position and didn't get it, here's my repo: github.com/aeyalcinoglu/grover-challenge - I am curious what the correct solution was, any ideas?
@AbdelmalekMallek I'm a room owner here so people acting up is my problem. From our rules: "Don't ping (@username) users unsolicited. Use pings when they assist the flow of existing conversations."
@aeyalcinoglu you should write back to them for any constructive feedback. Even emailing the specific people you might have interviewed with. You'll probably get no reply but it's worth a shot.
@aeyalcinoglu Some general commentary: As mentioned before, one could do this much more lightweight (esp. without dependencies, without async) – this may or may not be what they wanted. There are some code-quality red-flags that you might want to look into as well:
If two people produce the same code it doesn't mean much. Syntax is perfectly copied by definition. Variable names might be unique. Finding the best program structure would be common to both and that's expected.
@aeyalcinoglu [cont] Use docstrings liberally; if anyone but your or even just future you looks at it, document it. Don't use bare relative paths, use __file__ to anchor them to your script. Don't join paths via +, use os.path or pathlib. Don't put anything stateful in global scope unless you have to; that's open files, csv writes, and such. Be mindful of how your types work – don't copy then append to a list, use old_list + [new_item] to create a new one.
does Numpy have modular power? I can do pow(base, power, modulus) but I can't seem to do the same thing in Numpy without creating it myself. I'm about to write a Numba function but thought I'd ask before I do.
@aeyalcinoglu [final cont] Don't use global; whenever you have a global, it's most likely a good opportunity to show your grasp on class. Stick to the language – don't use os.system('kill -9 {}'.format(os.getpid())), directly use os.kill or even better sys.exit().
@Dodge I assume it means "use generators/iterators", but honestly it could mean anything. I'd go with the former, on the assumption that anyone who means something else is mentally streaming.
output_file_names = ["test_1.csv", "test_2.csv", "test_3.csv"]
subtask_file_names = ["infants_with_more_than_14_rings.csv","males_heavy_and_short.csv", "shell_humidity.csv"]
output_file_names = [os.path.join(dest_dict_name, filename) for filename in subtask_file_names]
... Although I wonder if the first and third variables are really necessary to begin with, since you can derive their values at the point where you need them
#in other words, no point doing this:
for i in range(3):
with open(sub_task_file_names[i]) as infile:
data = frobnicate(infile.read())
with open(output_file_names[i], "w") as outfile:
outfile.write(data)
#... When it's easy enough to form the output filename inline:
for i in range(3):
with open(sub_task_file_names[i]) as infile:
data = frobnicate(infile.read())
with open(f"test_{i}.csv", "w") as outfile:
outfile.write(data)
You caught me :-) Yes, enumerate is almost always preferable to iterating over the indices of a collection using range.
It would also be possible to write the first code block without any indices at all, by using zip, but all other things being equal I'd prefer the approach that only depends on one list
I am looking to edit templates with python. For example I have a psd(photoshop) file for now and it has text layers and I want to be able to edit it with python. Does not seem to be possible. But is there any alternative to create a template with python?
I'm not sure I understand the connection between "edit the text layer in an image file" and "create a template". Is "template" the same thing as "psd file"?
What I mean is I have a file that is editable inside photoshop and that file would have like placeholders, so with python it would be nice if I could just edit the placeholders with whatever I want dynamically, but not possible. So I was wondering if it was possible to create such templates with placeholders to edit dynamically on the go(not psd, any other library).
Right now with python, I use tkinter and place() and then put the placeholder texts wherever necessary, but since those are pixels, they distort on different screens
I'm interpreting the broader goal as "I have several programs that produce files of various types -- images, rich text, spreadsheets, etc. I want to be able to use those programs to create a nicely styled output, but which doesn't have any specific data yet. For instance, maybe my rich text will just say '[ESSAY TITLE] by [AUTHOR NAME]'. Once I have saved these files, can I use Python to fill in my placeholders?"
And the answer is, "it depends on the file format". Some formats, such as .txt or .csv, are as simple as outfile.write(infile.read().replace("[AUTHOR_NAME]", "Cool Cloud")).
@Kevin Hmmmm when it comes to images, it is much of a bummer. Okay I guess I can use Canvas and then use Canvas coordinates, I think they wont be distorted on different resolution
Others are a little more difficult. I can think of a few Steam games whose save format I reverse-engineered. They were effectively just zipped .xml files. It would be possible to alter strings in those with a zip library and and xml library and like two lines of actual code.
To use an example fresh in my memory, .SWF would be more difficult still. On top of being zipped, most structures in the file statically define their lengths in their first field. Trying to change the size of any of the structure's other fields, without updating that length value, and the length value of all the parent and sibling structures of that structure, would make the file unreadable to the real software
@Aran-Fey Well not distort per se, but appear a little displaced. github.com/nihaalnz/patient-hsptl-app/blob/master/Image/… In this image if I want to place text at x=10 and y=20 which is on the header, but in some other resolution it would be little displaced from the header.
SVG is a good example of an image file that you probably could edit the text structure of. It basically comes down to, is it a raster format or a vector format? raster formats such as BMP, PNG and JPG store only pixels, and have no native understanding of what "text" is. SVG, and almost certainly PSD, are vector formats. They know what text is and store it in a way that makes it easy for editing software to change it later.
I'm just guessing honestly :-) If you can't draw a line between (0,0) and (0,0.000000000000000001), then it's arguably not a vector format. But for our purposes we're more interested in the rich semantic metadata that vector formats usually have, compared to raster formats
Skimming through the Adobe document I linked above, I see a "type tool object setting" structure, with a Text data field. Very promising.
Every image editor worth its salt has text layers... which are certainly not raster data... and therefore, even if 99% of layers are raster images, PSD files are technically vector graphics
Ok, now that my rant is complete, I'm thinking more about the XY Problem... If the question is "how do I draw text in the correct position on this ID card?", I'd probably skip everything I just said and use Pillow
In other news, implementing + writing tests for my set-like class with a key function has drained me of all my motivation to code anything for a week. I think I'm just gonna publish the module without the set class...
@Kevin Oh and Pillow would use x,y related to the image? Because if I want to write a text at 10,10 and it has to appear at a line, if it gets displaced then it would be elsewhere
Sets support too yam many operators, and every one of them requires 3 methods... __op__, __rop__, and __iop__. And then there's two variants of most operations, one that returns a new set, and one that modifies it in-place... I thought I might as well implement a set in addition to my dict (which was the original objective of the module), but I severely misjudged the amount of effort that goes into a set class
@Dodge It's a set that lets you customize how values are hashed. Each value is passed into the key function, and the return value from that is used for hashing and comparisons. For example, if your key function is len, then "x" and "y" and [3] are all equivalent as far as the set is concerned
Can anyone explain this piece of code from REST framework for Django to me? The whole Django community and their tutorials are just copy pasting this piece of code without any elaboration whatsoever
What is instance, what is validated_data, why does it have a get method, what is the get method, where does it come from? Why do we need to pass instance.field to the get method?
looks like you take an object called instance and overwrite its email, content, and created attributes with what's in validated_data (which appears to be a dict), if it has the data. If validated_data doesn't have this information, don't overwrite the attribute
and the instance, is the instance passed in to the Serializer? I think this update method is overridden here, does the Serializer internally call this method with the instance the serialzer has been assigned with when first created?
@AndrasDeak I mean I'm new to this but it's all Django REST framework thing, this method is just overriden inside the Serializer class, the parameters are passed in internally, the function doesnt get called directly by me
@Dodge In my case, I'm going to store 2d matrices in it. They're not natively hashable because they're mutable, but I'm not mutating them and I want to filter out duplicates
yeah they are just very vague (in my opinion) but you're right, it is (sort of) mentioned, it's the instance created by the create method or if you explicitly pass one to the serializer