@imbAF math-inclined person passing by; I find your problem puzzling but for a different reason: an exponential rv can be arbitrarily large, so you cannot strictly speaking impose a tmax. For what you are confused by- each choice of tau gives a differrent exponential distribution. You actually cannot produce values without giving tau, if you can then you are probably assuming e.g. tau=1.
@imbAF If you want to discuss this mathematically further you/we can consider the main math chatroom which has people more qualified than me
I use shutil.copytree to copy some directory for backup reason. In one of those directory i have a pyqt5 file icons.qrc which have relative path to assets folder. I see a lot of this messages: Cannot find file: ../assets/images/folder-images/folder-weather-news.png. If i remove the icons.qrc file from the folder then there is no any related message.
What's wrong about?
shutil.copytree doesn't copy only files and subfolders (no paths inside files copy)
@SantiagoE.98 I've just taken a look at it and I have no idea what it is asking specifically. This looks like a debugging problem but it is totally unclear to me what output you actually receive and what you expected instead; take note that code that requires to set up a DB table just for filtering tuples is very, very far away from an MRE. At a glance it seems to be a simple "typo" problem in that you calculate the condition outside of the loop so of course it is the same for every item.
Oh, and it looks like you attracted a ChatGPT answer.
@SantiagoE.98 Take note that bountied questions are protected from the usual close voting so any shortcomings that would result in a close vote are likely to attract downvotes instead. Due to the bounty it will also attract more attention in general. So I strongly recommend to work on the debugging shortcommings, e.g. clarify what output you get and what you expect instead and shorten the code to an actual MRE; the text could be shortened significantly as well.
The Windows flag CREATE_NO_WINDOW is not really that useful in Python's subprocess library, right?
I mean, if I don't set "stdout" and "stderr" to "subprocess.PIPE", nothing will be piped to the terminal, so why would I need "CREATE_NO_WINDOW" to suppress output?
I had a use case for this once. Basically, depending on what you're doing, there are instances where a terminal on Windows will be seen, even if you use shell=False, etc. It really depends however, as I can't recall why I used this, but this can happen
in such cases, using this sometimes work, otherwise, it doesn't (I think I managed to do it using ctypes or something)
if you make unittest/test cases to make sure it doesn't ever happen on Windows with your library, I think you wouldn't need it then.
You can do some shenanigans with gc.get_referrers, or keep it simple with a for module in sys.modules: if cos in vars(module).values():, but both of those have their own edge cases
There's a 3rd party lib that defines cos in 2 different ways in 2 different modules. If I import it anywhere in my code from the wrong module I ll get bugs.
@Riya like a funciton need cos of module1 then before that cos function usageage use import cos not in all file package part or you can use this as different name like from module import cos as cos_module and use this cos_module
In that case it might be simplest to expand your testing/CI (you have that, right?) with a regex or even just plaintext check against the import statements.
If you need to check it at runtime, then what @matszwecja showed above should work. Make sure to check with the is operator instead of == to be sure, though.
Half serious suggestion: just don't import the buggy function.
Anywhere you have from badmodule import cos, instead do from goodmodule import cos
Do you have any import * statements in your code? If so, that can cause variables to get assigned or reassigned in surprising ways. Consider replacing the asterisk with only the names you need. from badmodule import * might reassign cos against your wishes, but from badmodule import sin, tan will definitely not reassign cos
Odds that I'm completely misunderstanding the problem: 50%
@Kevin it's easy to mistakenly import it. Bad design by the library dev. from math1 import cos (wrong one) vs from math1.funcs import cos (correct one). A new dev could easily auto-import the first.
@Kevin that's a good tip, but nearly never use * anyway.
I need help with a "for" loop for a little video game i'm making. The problem is the for of for row loop in Rows_NextFights[0:] and its contents.
Premise that the arithmetic average is already calculated correctly for a single monster, my idea is:
Calculate the average Attacks for each monster (...