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00:39
stackoverflow.com/questions/77829153 Should this perhaps be duplicated to some question about activating virtual environments? or is it better considered a typo
 
2 hours later…
02:32
@KarlKnechtel Simple typo. The instructions the user was following were unclear: shouldn't actually type the (venv) prompt in the command (venv) python -m pip install...
 
4 hours later…
06:45
is recursive typing nowadays supported in python?
07:26
basically looking if the answers here are a bit "outdated" or not: stackoverflow.com/questions/51291722/…
08:08
AFAIK mypy's most recent solver can handle recursive types. PyRight also doesn't complain about 'em anymore.
Not sure if they actually work or degrade to Any or some fixed depth, though.
09:04
@smci I found a solution, it was change point detection
09:20
@Hakaishin Was the tuning out-of-the-box for your problem or did you have to fiddle much to get clear separation in the end?
10:17
@roganjosh I don't know yet, I'm still building the thing. On the toy problems it works beautifully I'm very curios to see how it will perform on the real data. I will keep you posted
But I like to add the visualizations first and then do the statistics, like this I can debug it faster, especially when I don't know how a thing will behave visualizations are key
ofc this is non noisy data :P
I just read the session with a novice who said he has been learning Python for a year and he can't get anywhere. I think such an important part in every aspect of life, but especially with programming and at work is expectation management. Like most people have studied the subject of CS for 3-6years in a formal setting, did countless hours of projects etc etc. And people expect to do the same thing in like 1 year or a small course. Stuff takes time, that is just the reality of the world we live
 
2 hours later…
12:10
Is there a way to do x = [1.11111, 2.2222, 3.333333]; f"{x:.2f}" giving "[1.11, 2.22, 3.33]" without a for loop with a short syntax?
or do I have to make a new list with strings with list comprehension?
Ok, I guess this works, althought it looks kinda ugly: f'{[float(f"{y:.2f}") for y in x]}'
12:26
Why is that better than round()?
@roganjosh it's not xD Thanks
I just got used to only show 2 digits precision, but actually it doesn't really matter if I floor or round and round looks simpler in this line
13:13
Does somebody get the jump parameter here? centre-borelli.github.io/ruptures-docs/code-reference/detection/… I don't know much about dynamic programming, it's been years
 
5 hours later…
18:03
Kind of a silly question, but how do you make KeyboardInterrupt neatly exit your program? Do I have to catch it and do sys.exit(1) just so python doesn't print a traceback?
18:33
I think so. Or at least I always wrap my main in a try-except which raises SystemExit.
 
2 hours later…
21:23
@Hakaishin it's basically a timeseries and a step change will want to look at local changes over some horizon. I guess it's just a window in which you can determine in a locality whether a sig ificant change exists
@Hakaishin The doc says it subsamples (one every jump points). So don't use it unless you want an approximation that might miss short changes.
If you extend the window (or jump) then it'll be less responsive to changes because you'll have much data, and therefore more variability, in the pool being analysed in chunks. You can imagine that if the window size was infinite, you'd never see a local change because it will fall within the natural variability in the signal
What I dont understand is why it's not a sliding window. The wording suggests it goes between discrete blocks
I guess that can work in discrete blocks, but with a default block size of 5, it intuitively feels strange to me and that you'll get lots of false positives on the start and end indices of the sample. Those boundaries are pretty tight
@roganjosh maybe worth an erratum on their doc
I'm trying to reason it out actually. I thought I just made a ridiculous thought experiment, but it drops out with the right answer when I worked it through. Hmm
21:42
@roganjosh Why did they not contribute it to sklearn, or else scipy?
I'm not sure, but I have realised an intuitive example for the jump size once my WiFi restarts
Ok, so let's say you have an electronic system that can oscillate between the values of 0 and 1 @Hakaishin. Your current sample rate is in microseconds, so your data might look like [0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1]. If you take discrete 5-element chunks of that without carry-over from the previous chunk then you will get erroneous output. In both cases you would (presumably) see a step change at the end of each chunk, but you'd miss the drop at the end of the first chunk
So I think that would be one aspect of that parameter
Then you fit your equipment that somehow observes signals at picosecond intervals. Then you'd see something like [0, 0, 0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6] (and so on). The actual signal is the same, but you massively increase the sample rate and so you'd need to increase your jump size accordingly
I'll have to have a poke through the source tomorrow because the discrete chunks (at least as it's described) bug me a lot. A rolling window would take a lot of bookkeeping to not keep re-identifying the same change but I can't see how it works with discrete blocks and not miss changes at their boundaries
22:06
@smci see, I agree this is what we're stuck with as things are, but I feel like the Q&A format ought to be able to explain to people how to read examples so that they understand what should be typed and what is just illustrative
@Hakaishin What would you expect to happen if x contained other things? but no, in general lists don't delegate anything to their elements automatically, and the functionality you want involves delegating __format__
@Aran-Fey you'd need the wrapper at top level since the exception can happen pretty well anywhere by definition. But the other way to do it is by setting sys.excepthook

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