@rootkit.sys I would imagine that it's as difficult as doing it non-indie. The indie part is a financial problem: you have to fund yourself while you work on a game. So the question is how hard it is to develop a game in python, which probably varies a lot with the game (I'm not familiar with hacknet). But you should know that it's very hard if not impossible to distribute a python program in a way that prevents others from being able to obtain the source code.
@rootkit.sys Is there any specific reason why you would want to use Python? It's probably the least suited of today's languages for game development.
There are tons of free game engines out there that combine powerful compiled engines with scripting languages, in case the latter is your concern.
Even if you want to go most of the way yourself, as you would do with PyGame, I'd rather pick something like LÖVE which supports the much faster LuaJIT. They also seem to have an actual packaging ecosystem.
Apparently a year of me saying "we absolutely, definitively can't do this" as the Subject Matter Expert doesn't seem to cut it at work. I've just opened my inbox and the Sales guy is talking to a customer about "Time Slots at Checkout" which is just about the most hideous part of vehicle routing problems imaginable. I specifically said no to time slots :'(
I need 6 PhD students and tenure, then I might consider it :P
In a cruel twist of fate, you could put Sales Guy on a PhD program so that they actually learn what is and is not possible. Then have them wageslave for Sales Guy Vol. 2.
What exactly are "Time Slots at Checkout", by the way?
I would have hoped that "the last time we implemented this, it cost £6m, took 2 years and required 15 people" would have been enough for them to understand
@MisterMiyagi When a customer wants home delivery, you need to show them potential time slots. Before I worked at Tesco, I didn't know these are actually customised to your location and calculated on-the-fly based on the current scheduled jobs
So you basically have to solve multiple vehicle routing problems in <0.5 secs and it's huge exposure. Especially since this customer delivers on behalf of other customers. Any delays or outages will degrade a 3rd party sales site e.g. some mega-brand clothes store, so the risks are just horrenous
I admit that I don't really have any idea how reliable the real world is. We've given up on scheduling compute tasks more than 15 minutes in advance, but then again you probably don't have roads and cities spontaneously combust.
If you had 6 PhD students and tenure, would you do it? :P
Imagine that you won a competition, and the prize is a free session with a Python think-tank who normally charge $1000 per hour. Don't waste that prize!
@RandomPerson Side note, its situations like these where an MCVE is especially important. If time is precious, then you want to waste as little of it trying to explain your exact issue. MCVE is the best way to ensure you help correct help quickly.
@CodyGray my brain just spasms out thinking its some kind of regex :(
@RandomPerson this looks promising. could you try to cut out some of the fluff further? specifically you could remove the whole mysql thing. a good MCVE (or min-reprex) should have everything needed for the problem, but nothing extra.
@RandomPerson I think a key theme here is that we're encouraging you to do some research around these issues yourself. I gave you a number of phrases (I even spelt it the American way, despite being British) so you should be able to Google the stuff that you're not familiar with
In addition to not bringing a question less than 48 hours old to the room, it's rather impolite to just ping me (or anyone else) specifically to answer
In the mean time, I would recommend working on condensing down the code in your question to the bare minimum required to reproduce your problem, @potatotomato
@RandomPerson There is no reason to expect that you can walk into a bar, for example, and just hand over some django code problem to the first person you see. You would find that rude, no?
@RandomPerson so okay, the main thing i see is that you're sending 3 values, as if trying to plot 1 bar at a time. however, the api actually wants you to give "all" values of 1 type of bar together. So something like plt.bar(X, df0["MT1"]) is what it expected instead
however i did google the rest and you can implement what you need using this bar api like this. the site i found for this was geeksforgeeks.org/… (which is.. unfortunate maybe? but oh well)
@AndrasDeak its spot on. the only other thing seaborn does is that it provides essentially tight integration with dataframes. so it can be a time saver with trying to specifically plot dfs
my advice would echo Andras's in this case. it's better to dive into some plotting library directly, or you'll need to bash your head against that api every now and then.
for me, personally it was seaborn. (which also meant having to understand at least a bit of matplotlib, but oh well)
@RandomPerson what exactly is your question? "How do I plot this dataframe with pyplot"? Surely that's a duplicate. If you need a grouped plot, see the last question I linked.
@ParitoshSingh They're essentially the same library, but I don't know how much of the interactivity would carry over in the plain python interface. I assume it will launch some window that can handle HTML
you got it. it can also embed in notebooks as well
which..is kind of fancy to be honest.
can also produce static graphs, though at that stage you might as well not use the library (well, or maybe they did make some express api, it hadnt existed when i had tried it)
Until just over a year ago, I basically always worked alone. Now we have a team of (something like) 55 Data Scientists, but I still won't move back to notebooks. Others in the team use them, but then I can't reliably view them in github (it seems to fail to load a lot) and it's not going to go into production from there anyway, so why have the interim?
I understand their appeal, but it's frustrating as hell when I'm trying to help someone debug and they can't remember which cell needs to be re-run etc. Just make a package
@RandomPerson i think youve still managed to miss the message i gave to you earlier.
@roganjosh oh definitely, im actually in the same boat as you, expect my situation is "everyone uses them so it's a nightmare trying to get people to use normal py files. production? what production."
so yeah :P i thought you were working independently thus managing to avoid having to use notebooks for the sake of others.
make sure you also read the message i told you earlier just above. it should help you understand what shapes are mismatching as well. (it's basically what the api expects vs what you gave it)
The number of people just coming out of a physics degree/phd and claiming to be a data scientist is huge. I can't exactly complain, given that I came out of an engineering degree and did the same - but it's getting pretty tough to make sure that we can roll things out in a practical way. I just happen to be older, to be honest
we're currently working on a project that's actually going to go to production. and it's been nothing short of a nightmare trying to get people to give me functions that work outside their notebooks
You can't assume that multiplication by 0 is a no-op, and it would not be trivial to assert that a = 48 is kept on the next line. Just too many assumptions.
Sorry, I'm still trying to follow this, but struggling with my lack of understanding of why this optimization is not trivial, even for something that is interpreted.