Thanks for the question. You mentioned you need the numbers, so can you please try the following:
If you want just to get 2 numbers: pattern = re.compile(r"\d{2}")
If you want to get all numbers: pattern = re.compile(r"\d?")
2 hours later…
user16319883
4:10 AM
How to create h5 after every iteration in for loop, can anyone explain with example?
I wonder just how many hours, accounts, and fake upvotes you've invested into that question by now, instead of sitting down and reading a programming tutorial
@ChristophBühler scriptverse.academy/tutorials/… came up as first search. i think the only trick you're probably missing is this: plotting is being done here by using arrays. So, all you need is an array of multiple x values, and the corresponding results for y(x) for them.
@ParitoshSingh That example is using y = x**3 as well. Probably there is some way of assigning all the y-values to an array in numpy. Could not find a standard way yet.
just calculate them yourself, you're probably overthinking this.
results = [y(x) for x in your_array_of_x_vals]
# and if need be, convert `results` to numpy array.
similar thing whether you use map, pd.Series.map, or whatnot, you simply are just plotting a bunch of x-y pairs. matplotlib doesn't understand the underlying functions, it's just plotting points.
vague answer: how about a web browser? If it's not web content, then you're likely looking for a tree-comparison algorithm with a custom, fuzzy comparator for node-level similarity
Example use case: the top level element of both documents is a WidgetCollection, which contains any number of Widget elements. I want to look at the 23rd Widget in both documents, and compare their color tags.
Having one browser tab open for each document is not great for this use case, since I'd have to manually count Widget tags until I found the 23rd one, then search through the Widget's children for a color tag. Then I'd have to do it again for the other document. And I can't just say "document A's 23rd widget's color is on line 100, so I'll just jump there in the other document", because widgets take up a variable number of lines
@Kevin The Python stdlib has modules for parsing XML, but they smell strongly of Java. The docs are almost unreadable if you don't know Java, and the standard Java library methods for handling XML. :(
I managed to glean some info from them a few years ago, and even wrote an answer or two, but it was pretty painful, and I've forgotten most of what I learned, although I guess it wouldn't take me too long to pick up those rudiments again.
XML isn't too bad if the document is nicely structured. Unfortunately, XML allows some annoying things, and people have been known to create stupid structures with it.
I'm moderately deft with the xml-walking stdlib. It would be a minute's work to navigate to the 23rd widget and search for the color node. But I'm a bit dissatisfied with the presentation of the output.
Suppose that the color element is more complicated than an RGB trupple. Maybe it indicates what kind of paint the widget is coated with, and where I can buy it, etc. Then just doing print(widgets[23].findTag("color")) will produce a lot of output.
A UI would be nice in this case because it could show a nice collapsed "<Color>...</Color>" tag, and I could click on it to incrementally reveal more detail
@inspectorG4dget Yeah, it's pretty similar. But I would want two elements be be inspected in side-by-side windows. Expanding the color tag in document A should also expand the color tag in document B.
I'm undecided about what should happen if A has a color tag and B doesn't. Perhaps a segfault.
I think what you want is something like git-diff that does a tree-diff and accordion-open's the differing node with from-root context... for two side-by-side documents. It's a sufficiently straightforward task, but I think it needs a custom solution, which I unfortunately don't have the time to write right now
It's nice of you to even consider writing anything :-) the only outcomes I expect from this conversation are "you want popular and featureful tool TwoXmlDocumentsComparator, here is the link to the download page", or "dang those are some crazy requirements, good luck tho"
TreeView certainly looks capable of producing the UI I'm imagining. Whether I can hook my logic into the appropriate areas, is less of a certainty. I must investigate further.
I'm willing to lint beforehand, although I worry that a diff tool could still get confused
For example. Suppose document A is <X><Y z=1/><Y z=2/><Y z=3></X>, and document B is <X><Y z=2/><Y z=3/><Y z=4></X>. A clueless diff tool might say that the documents are the same at <Y z=2/><Y z=3/>. But in fact all three of the Y tags should be considered different.
I'm decently sure that git has some knowledge of common contexts' for its diff. For example it will display the class header if you make changes to methods.
Clueless diff tool output:
<X> |<X> | same
<Y z=1/> | | different
<Y z=2/> | <Y z=2/> | same
<Y z=3/> | <Y z=3/> | same
| <Y z=4/> | different
</X> |</X> | same
Desired output:
<X> |<X> | same
<Y z=1/> | <Y z=2/> | different
<Y z=2/> | <Y z=3/> | different
<Y z=3/> | <Y z=4/> | different
</X> |</X> | same
"Clueless" is an unkind term because it's probably easier to write a diff tool that doesn't search for ways to insert blank lines in order to minimize difference
True. But there may be contexts where a good diff does retain some whitespace... I'm way out in the Fog of Requirements so I can't give a beautiful example. But suffice to say that corner cases lurk around every corner
I should also set aside some time to play with ExamXML. The vibe I get from the UI is "I have received feedback from Marketing regarding the interface, and have elected to ignore it"
When the devs have supreme executive power, that's when you see some interesting features
Possible drawback: devs with supreme executive power might put 300 hours into writing the world's most cryptographically secure 30 day trial timer, just because it's interesting. I probably won't be able to just open settings.ini and change deadline=11/20/2021 to deadline=1/1/2099
Hmm, I don't think I can embed arbitrary widgets inside a TreeView, which makes it unsuitable for my dumbest and least important feature, heretofore unmentioned
Ah, a less dumb way presents itself. Rubber duck session #2: success
I wanted to put an RGB color picker inside the view, so the user could change the value of a color tag. Instead, I'll put the picker in a panel to the side of the view, and control its visibility based on whether a color tag is selected
anyone deploy or use self-hosted wikis at work? I'm looking for a recommendation. JS.wiki seems to be popular choice. Would love your inputs. Specifically looking for local auth (third-party/oauth is a bonus)
Normally I leave everything un-stretchy and size all of my widgets so that they comfortably fit all their contents. But the Treeview widget has no width parameter, and I need to know what letter comes after "Liechtenstei",
What is it with GUI toolkits picking the weirdest possible defaults? You give a widget all that space and it just doesn't use it, because... why? And Gtk took it a step further and made newly created widgets invisible
If I can replicate 10% of this man's vibe, I will be unstoppable
Chapter 2, entitled "Kon’nichi wa, Ruby", reminds me of a fact I learned recently. "Kon(o)", "nichi", and "wa" translate respectively to "this", "day", and "the sentence clauses and sentences following this one will have a subject or topic related to the preceding words". In XML terms, it translates to <today>.
"oyasumi" is often used as an equivalent of "goodnight", but its literal meaning is more like "O listener, rest / break / take a day off". Perhaps "take a day off" could be interpreted to mean "pop the top element of the day queue"
Let's see sayonara's etymology... "Shortening of earlier 左様ならば (sayō naraba), itself a compound of 左様 (sayō, “like that, that way”) + ならば (naraba, “if”, now somewhat archaic, often replaced by なら (nara)).[1] Literally “if that's the way it is”.
Yikes, an if with no following block? That's even worse than a missing end tag
There is a certain romance to parting with what is essentially a promise to meet again and continue where you left off
The more causal "mata ne" ("again ok") maps rather directly to continue
If that nani is an authentic request for more information, "jouzu" means "good at", but it has garnered a reputation among foreigners as a patronizing compliment given to non-native speakers that can say anything more complicated than "hello"
Perhaps the compliment giver is really truly impressed that you know how to ask where the bathroom is, but you can only jump over a low bar so many times
DenverCoder9 asks, "how do I make sure the full contents of my Treeview are visible?". Answer: switch to wxPython. stackoverflow.com/questions/49039772/…
There are answers elsewhere on the site that are variations upon "calculate the necessary width using the font object's what_width_would_this_text_be_if_I_rendered_it method", but I'm guessing you have to add some fudge factor for padding etc
All of the prooves of concept I've seen are for the rectangular grid style of treeview, not the tree style. This worries me.
If I can't programatically fetch the width-in-pixels of the indent used for child items, then I'm up to my neck in fudge
If I go a level or two up the XY problem hierarchy, I can probably find less frustrating ways to display my data. But I'll beat the dead horse for a little longer, as is my way.
So I dont undertand why the method overloading is not working here:
img: PIL.Image = Image.open("PATH")
drawShapes(img) #calls numpy method
@overload
def drawShapes(pil_image: PIL.Image):
print("not called")
drawShapes(numpy.array(pil_image))
def drawShapes(img: numpy.array):
#calc code here
pass
The type hint at both variable and parameter match only at the first method, so why it calls the other one, resulting into errors since the passed image is still as PIL object?
What you're looking for is docs.python.org/3/library/… but you should just make your one function handle different inputs (potentially with different private backends)