so, I was wondering: I'm trying to add N strings to a tuple but also joining them before that at the same time. Only managed to do the 'add N string to a tuple':
from itertools import islice
def grouper(n, iterable):
it = iter(iterable)
return iter(lambda: tuple(islice(it, n)), ())
# test data
test_data = """\
1 some test
2 some test
3 some test
4 some test
5 some test
6 some test
7 some test
8 some test
9 some test
10 some test"""
test_data = test_data.split("\n")
for i in grouper(3, test_data):
print(i)
@AndrasDeak if you try the for loop in the example, you would see it does add N string to a tuple :) but I'm stuck on actually making the N string joined together as a single string here
@roganjosh an empty loop? I'm afraid I don't understand...isn't the loop in the example above using print,and thus making it not empty? Sorry if I misunderstood :0
@AndrasDeak yeah, I actually tried that couple hours ago but sadly doesn't work...
I don't think I'm following this issue at all, sorry. I was wrong that you had an empty loop after your edit, but it just prints. What is the expected output of this?
@roganjosh I only print to showcase the example itself :D I do have a use for this but I don't think it'll help knowing it here, so i omitted it to not make things more complicated
@AndrasDeak oh, I didn't try map yet :o Thanks, I'll try that
@NordineLotfi Then I don't know what you're asking. I can of course run your code, but if you don't show the expected output then I can't follow what the issue is
It may be that Andras has fully understood it, and it may be that others do too, and I'm the odd one out, but you've failed to pull me along on this journey
@Aran-Fey you're right. I usually don't use such long example but this time failed to shorten it. I'll keep that in mind :) Thanks
@roganjosh the code above output ('\t1 some test', '\t2 some test', '\t3 some test') instead of ('\t1 some test\n\t2 some test\n\t3 some test'). Here it actually divide the string in the test_data variable into N string, thus 3 + remainder in a tuple. But what I failed to do was to concatenate/join the said N string into a single one in their respective tuple.
def chunks(l, n):
return ['\n'.join(l[i:i+n]) for i in range(0, len(l), n)]
# test data
test_data = """\
1 some test
2 some test
3 some test
4 some test
5 some test
6 some test
7 some test
"""
test_data = test_data.split("\n")
print(chunks(test_data, 3))
@roganjosh Yeah, it does seem to give the expected result :o Thanks. Here it output a list and use a list comprehension which I didn't do because: 1. I'm obliged to use tuple because of some function that need that, 2. I have this (mis?)conception that using a for loop/comprehension like this would maybe be slower than to use islice and iter like the previous example
of course I'm not saying a for loop is slow or anything, but I digress
@roganjosh hmm, to be honest with you, I need a tuple because I'm using it to send chunks of N lines of a file for multiprocessing. And as far as I'm aware, Pool.map only accept tuple? yeah
@AndrasDeak I meant that for the second argument but, let me show a very short example of what I mean:
p = multiprocessing.Pool(4)
chdir('testfirst')
h = 'testlast'
g = open(k, 'w')
with open(h, 'r') as f:
for chunk in grouper(100, f, 'x'):
results = p.map(process_chunk, chunk)
for r in results:
print(r, file=g)
here, process_chunk isn't important as it only work on the lines it receive
In the first few years of using python, I couldn't understand why anyone wouldn't use multiprocessing. I can honestly say now that I don't remember the last time I used it
yeah, multi <threading/processing/some other newfangled thing> is not a silver bullet, and often you don't even need the performance gains in the first place.
@AndrasDeak that is peculiar...I tried to use it with a variable and other things beside tuple but I guess I did it wrong somehow. Thank you for the clarification and example :)
@lupus my other laptop is in an update cycle. Just email me at j.pilkington@hotmail.com.
I cba keeping that one secret when people keep signing me up to weird mailing lists, or I get receipts for buying women's underwear, or asked to beat a church cross with a chain to give it a "weathered" look, or getting invited to a stag do in Vegas, or everyone's credit reports
@NordineLotfi it's actually really bad. I tracked one of the recipients down on facebook. She lives in Canada; I got her credit report, her work documents and a mortgage application. She should really sue the companies involved but meh, that's up to her
That's autocorrect for you. .ca becomes .com
And now you've broken just about every data privacy law going
@roganjosh wow. Yeah, i see what you mean...I guess her email was leaked because of some sites she used :/ I don't think this ever happened to me yet unless I'm unaware of it
.. is for the upper directory starting from your current one, so '/root/banana' -> '/root'. ./ is essentially similar here: . -> current directory, and / is for specifying the current directory/file
mmh, so I want to load a .txt file (words seprated by newlines) into an array, such that the array looks like ['dog', 'cat', 'house', 'boat'], do I need numpy and earthpy for this or is there another way?
@roganjosh based on their earlier message, I'm guessing they mentioned earthpy because it's related to a tutorial they aw for something they wanted to do...or at least that's the impression I had
@roganjosh I noticed the same thing too on existing codebase. I'm guessing they were trying different things with the myriad of sub function/class on their editor/repl and forgot/didn'tcare about making it more streamlined/specific
The Zen of Python is a half-serious collection of wisdoms that roughly specify what good python code is like.
The last one is key. Or at least relevant here.
> Namespaces are one honking great idea -- let's do more of those!
The problem with star imports is twofold: one is that dumping every name from a large module can indeed bloat your global namespace, as you said. But more importantly, it makes very hard to read and debug code when you can't instantly see where the name came from. And finally, multiple star imports can have name clashes, and that's not better than an error, it's far worse: you won't even notice until the object behaves differently from what you expect.
The sane rule of thumb is to avoid star imports altogether. The price is that when you need a lot of names from a module, you have to import each one explicitly, which can make the imports quite verbose. This is probably the reason why GUI libraries often lead to star imports: there are usually many names to import, and people are lazy.
So the alternative is to keep the namespace: import numpy as np and then use np.whatever each time you need it. This is the idiomatic use of numpy, for instance.
It shouldn't be "oh". Your mental model is "'import thing' binds every name of 'thing' into the current namespace". Any module with names in it should prove or disprove that.
@AndrasDeak ah, so essentially: star import -> pollute namespaces with more than just thing, import thing bind onlything. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong :)
import thing is "please put that box on the countertop". Then thing.foo is "use foo from the box". from thing import foo is "go over to the box and pick out foo". from thing import * is "just dump that whole box here, and throw the box away"
So module.function() is preferred over function() in big projects, that's what I could gather. (assuming you make import module/from module import function)
Because module.function is easier to read which function from where the coder means.
and yet even better is "import module as md" and write md.function then
Well, how do I plot the hours on the X axis, in the format like "15:00", based only on the size of the number of points to be plotted (using the len function on the y axis array)? In this case, I have 9000 points to be plotted, that's 15 minutes of points, 1 point every 0.00166666666 minute (15/9000). I have the following information: the start time (example, "17:45"), and end time (example, "18:00").
@SAJW from module import function is also fine, because if you search the code for the first occurence of function you'll see that it comes from `module.
So if I want word_to_guess= random word, it is irrelevant whether I use numpys rng or random.random? It's for a hangman game, so I doubt I need true rng.
@Marco I'm not entirely clear on what you're asking, but as far as I know matplotlib only supports datetimes, and not times. So you might have to construct datetimes with a dummy day, and then use a matplotlib.dates.DateFormatter potentially with a matplotlib.dates.MinuteLocator or similar.
Mmh, I thought about list limits via available RAM. I want my list to have like 300,000 English words. Do I need to worry about splitting the tasks into smaller ones to avoid memory limits? Like I could split the file into 10. Then roll a 10-dice and work only with 30,000 words.
@AndrasDeak Another example (this is very simple): I have a Y-axis array with 10 elements. I know this data starts at 21:00. I want to plot hours and minutes on the X-axis. My data always has 15 minutes of data. So in this case, there will be one point every 10/15 minutes = 1.5 minutes. The first point on the X-axis will be 21:00 and the last will be 21:15.
So I'd do something like start = datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 21); interval = datetime.timedelta(minutes=15)/len(y); x = [start + interval*i for i in range(len(y))]. Something along those lines. But beware that I'm not much of a datetime user.
Ok, so I have now a window that updates its content, but I only want to read one word at a time, not the previous words, how do I do that? and if I'm making something wrong please say. Destroy just kills the window, which is not what I want :( pastebin.com/5wx5z817
also stating everytime how I want to have the words formatted seems superfluous