Something I'm wondering about now: how does round actually work internally? I mean, how does it know how to pick a value, such that the string-formatted result will have the right number of decimal digits? e.g.
round(0.1 + 0.2, 1) will report 0.3, differently from the raw addition (the classic float imprecision example).
but it seems like it must be fairly complex, internally, to subtract just enough from the 0.1+0.2 result to make it display as 0.3 when shown as a string.
I was wondering about that too once. I remember trying to get a specific number of precision (eg: 1 or 2 for a float) but didn't like the result of round, so ended up just converting it to string and back
the naive implementation I guess is to subtract epsilons until it finds something that works.
I can't think of a more efficient way than that, nor can I think of a more efficient "does it work" test than actually string-formatting the number. but.
having round as a built-in seems like a design mistake, though. it encourages wrong thinking simply by being there
technically truncating (without rounding) it can be done in a single line using math.floor or math.trunc, but at least the answer above does go a bit more in depth I think
are (0.2 + 0.1) and 0.3 actually the same numbers when it comes to the binary representation? If that's the case, what additional data Python stores with floats to tell them apart?
TLDR: ds is the number of digits to the left of the decimal point in the value d2. The expression is a fast and slightly imprecise approximation of log10(d2). The numbers are specially chosen so the approximation is never an underestimate.
I reckon that much of the hard math in this function is for the purpose of 1) calculating the size of the resulting char array; and/or 2) taking simple math and making it 1% faster by making it 1000% scarier looking
I would like to play a bit with multiprocessing (not sure if even possible) but it feels there shall be some sort of mechanism which starts reading a new file once the remaning number of batches from current file is below certain limit (number of cores?).
unrelated, but I might end up going after a C# adventure for the first time. Does anyone have any recommendations/tips for someone from a python background?
@JonClements At the moment none. Just creating sort of a general python based loader. When csv file is loaded in dataframe, it is trivial to adjust data (presumably easier than in sql loading scripts).
@aeiou Well, not that I'm very experienced with C#, but from what I can tell it's much more rigid than Python. Static typing, namespaces are more explicit, you've got keywords like private, static etc.
The shock of static typing can be lessened somewhat by using var, where reasonable. I don't have too much trouble with namespaces, as Visual Studio often recommends what using statements I should have.
@JonClements converting df to list of tuples, as required by oracle.connect(..).cursor.executemany(). I would expect sqlalchemy does same conversion to flatten the dataframe.
private and static and so forth... I won't say they're trivial. Python is pretty ambivalent about what design paradigm you use, but dotnet wants you to use OOP. If you don't know OOP, this will be challenging.
@aeiou possibly but you can let it work that out... and df.to_sql('some_table', your_connection, if_exists='append') is just clear as to what you're doing...
@aeiou probably not... but as mentioned before... depending on locking/connection modes etc... you're unlikely to get a massive (if not penalised) for trying that sort of thing
@matszwecja yeah, I know what you mean. Thanks for reminding me :)
@Kevin Nice :D Thanks for the docs links.
hopefully, there are similar instances, so I don't suffer too much. I know OOP is really prevalent in C#, which already gives me shivers, but I guess we'll see...
The different SQL dialects sometimes get frustrating. With postgres and redshift, COPY would be the be the best method to do bulk inserts, via very different mechanisms, but apparently in Oracle that's just for copying data between tables :/
But you haven't fed back on any of them, so what was the need to ask here? If you have issues with the answers given, it would be polite to actually feed back to the authors rather than fishing to get more people to pile in
@Pherdindy as @roganjosh says... I'm sure it does - I had one today: ParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: EOF inside string starting at row 8828
I get this error and don't really know what to make out of the error pandas.errors.ParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: Expected 9 fields in line 224, saw 10
I'm getting confused now. In one part you appear to be suggesting that it's line 224 of the code being reported but then suggesting it could be because you're already batching the file. pandas can be wonky but Expected 9 fields in line 224, saw 10 makes no sense if it's reporting the line of code in its own internals
What will that do if there is a comma inside a data field? For instance, what if one of your entries in column 0 is "ALICE,BOB", and not enclosed in quotes? This will look like a row with an extra column.
It would try expand it into an extra column because that's malformed but I had this debate with Kevin a couple of months ago IIRC and I was surprised to find that the csv format isn't standardised
I see thanks i'll inspect how the data is structured and see how to work from there. Maybe there is an issue with the raw files since they are manually uploaded in a FB page by people
I would guess some guy didn't upload the file with the correct format
I was genuinely shocked about the general encoding of strings in CSV; I've probably mis-advised multiple people over the years on how delimiters would be handled in the file
The csv module supports various "dialects" for handling unfortunate CSV data, defaulting the the one used by Excel (where strings are generally unquoted, unless quotes are necessary due to embedded quotes or separators).
In any case, I would strip pandas out of this investigation and just iterate the rows of a normal file object, using enumerate to start printing the rows above and below the problem row
But, I'm not responsible for writing it to a CSV. That's always on the client, but I mean the CSV format itself should be unambiguous in the way the client saves it
This second "nice" of mine (above) was sent by mistake, it was giving a "timeout" error when sending my first "nice" and ended up being sent more than once, it was certainly a problem with my internet.
I'll also put in a little plug for my littletable package - very lightweight, low-complexity package for tabular data of various types, easy CSV import, which gives a Table that is just a wrapper around a list of Python objects.
I find it pretty complicated. I can read it pretty well but writing it is... not simple for me
I definitely found Java easier but then I was just extending libraries and I imagine some people would be horrified in how I did it... rust just won't let me do it
I find Java to be a nightmare, mainly because of dependencies and the different versions and changes between libraries. If I want to do X, it's harder to make it compile for me, etc. Maybe I'm biased since I didn't try hard enough. C looks easier to me, but still relatively hard.
I don't want to say Shells or even Python is easy, but compared to the above, there is definitely a difference.
The thing with java (and certainly python) is that I can see a clear path to disassembling the problem. I can see beauty in how it's done in rust but I've just not got my brain into the right frame to do it myself. I think a lot of complexity just comes from that tbh
In any case, I think I'll be hedging a lot on it very soon, so hopefully it becomes mainstream and I can pick it up faster :P
Part of me wants to try Rust, but another part of me still wants to continue on the not-too-popular path of going for C and whatnot. I even wanted to try Go when it was popular but didn't do it.
@roganjosh I think the main problem for me (based on introspection) is probably just the syntax itself. Like how I map the understanding I have vs the syntax and the missing stuff in the docs.
Oh, java, I just faff and hope. Maybe cast a few things around and see if the method names make more sense. Doesn't help that the library I was working with is almost entirely undocumented
My impression of Rust is that it's a novel way to have memory safety without garbage collection. But I do not care if my programs have garbage collection, so I am not eager to try Rust.
Maybe the next time I play with my Arduino... Can't put Python on that.
@Kevin I recall you mentioned using Arduino before. I think you even mentioned IronPython as a possible alternative to usual Python, but don't know if it's a good enough equivalent.
there are other fork/version for embedded devices though.
I'm not sure I have ever used any Fancy-exclusive features though. They're probably ten menus deep.
I am usually a luddite with my personal project dev environment, but I admit a certain fondness for VS' "go to definition" and "find all references" features.
cv-plsstackoverflow.com/questions/75240404 needs debugging details (maybe one of you has a clearer idea of what debugging details are needed, outside of a complete error of course)
Is there any library that make replicate the production development environment with the local development environment apart from docker. Like, working with M1 chip in local and production environment having Linux based, there is always conflict of package version require in these different kind of environment. Any solution for this apart from docker?
It's interesting that you raise the issue of M1 because all of those died away on my hassle list at work, so I thought most libraries were stable against it now