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07:28
Just found this behavior in 3.10
>>> inspect.isclass(list[str])
True
>>> class Foo(abc.ABC): pass
>>> issubclass(list[str], Foo)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "C:\Python310\lib\abc.py", line 123, in __subclasscheck__
    return _abc_subclasscheck(cls, subclass)
TypeError: issubclass() arg 1 must be a class
Fun
08:24
inspect.isclass(list[str]) is False in 3.11
list[str] is a types.GenericAlias instance. IIRC the 'type' has always been a generic alias instance.
09:07
Has anyone else had to fight the Better Jinja plugin for VSCode that changes href="{{ url_for('consumables.homepage') }}" to href="{{ url_for("consumables.homepage") }}" without fail? I don't know whether it just comes from that or possibly djlint that I also configured but that's clearly borked
Mmm, well I disabled H008 and T002 from the rules which didn't do anything, and I never touched J004 which should specifically be doing the opposite of what's happening :/
But disabling djlint altogether for that line does stop the borkage. The plot thickens... :/
 
6 hours later…
15:19
Hello!
Anyone here can help me with modification of a YODA file? I hope someone is familiar with it. The yoda file is a data file, used in particle physics. It contains data of collisions. And it gives back plots. Now I want to use such a file to produce plots visually in another way. Anyone can help me?
15:36
@imbAF hello. Please could you be clearer about what it is you're trying to do and what you're stuck with?
Of course
So let me elaborate
my code, which was written in C++, is what is known as a rivet analysis. Basically I use an event simulator, to simulate an aribtrary nr. of events, and with event, I mean a proton proton collision, just like it happens in LHC. Now, after the events are simulated, I apply my analysis (my code ) to it. What I do is to calculate observables of the underlying event (UE). Observables of the UE include the nr. of charged particles and their scalar
transverse sum. But the main idea, is that I calculate to things that can be measured. Now I do that for different values of variable y_b and y^*, each takes values from 0 to 2.5
, so in total 15 combinations. and I also consider the regions, 3 regions. It's not important to understand the physics of it, but the fact that I am considering 2 quantities x 3 regions for each quantity x 15 different values of y_b/y_*, so in total once I run the analysis, a .YODA file is produced, which when executed gives 90 plots.
Now, the yoda file if opened with Visual studio code
you can check the data for the 90 plots/graphs/profile1D
Now, I simply need the same plots but presented differently
For example
Before going into too much more detail, is this actually a python question?
yes
because
ask chatgpt it's amazing for plotting stuff in python
15:43
it's my favorite plotting library :D
@ mozway sir, plz see my comment on my question
Now think of this I have 90 plots for the different variables which are: observable,region and yb/y* value. Now I want to do the following:
For a fixed y_b value (i.e 0.5)
For a fixed region (i.e transverse)
For a fixed observble (i.e nr. of charged particles)
I want to produce a graph, where y* varies.
So since y_b and y* have values from 0 to 2.5 with a 0.5 incrementation, then in the case I described above, it means that the graph will have 5 lines
one line for y_*=0.5,1,1.5,2,2.5
And this is done with python
which takes the yoda file and manipulates it accordingly
NOTE: y_b+y*< 3 . It should not reach or exceed 3 as a value
@imbAF sounds pretty straight forward, just ask chatgpt
It doesn't though
I mean
Can we please just stop telling everyone to ask chatGPT at every opportunity?
That's not a way to be a helpful or welcoming community to people, especially if they aren't familiar with the room. In fact, it's pretty dismissive
15:56
@roganjosh That's like saying stop suggesting people to use a hammer if they want to hang a picture with a nail... I don't see what is dismissive about it. For some tasks it's hopeless and for others and plotting is my number 1 use case of it, it is amazing and works better than I ever could write plotting code. So suggesting that is a pretty good idea. If you have an ideological problem, that is not my problem... Also his question isn't specific, just general, so not much we can help with
@imbAF which part specifically are you stuck on? Presumably you have some code already that parses the data and takes a shot at this task? Are you able to share what you have in a dpaste and link to it here or something? If it's about parsing the file itself then we will probably need to see the structure
@roganjosh The problem is that I am not proficient in python. I have basic knowledge in it, but now I need to suddenly modify a data type to manipulate it in such a way that it displays things the way I want. So, the person who is helping me, gave me two links as reference and help: https://github.com/HerrHorizontal/herwig-run/blob/plotting/uncertainty/scripts/yodaPlotNPCorrSummary.py?fbclid=IwAR1qmw5WYgcfBomoDXsNmmQ-rWXQoumwEbYtvRx6PfmK0G66nVqKVa6uuQg

https://github.com/HerrHorizontal/herwig-run/blob/plotting/uncertainty/scripts/yodaPlotNPCorr.py?fbclid=IwAR0rbVnt1hDFsGTkiWEm3NFeMwqRMLuYZ
And all I have to do is modify one of them, in such a way that it does what I described
@Hakaishin if you think just blanket statements, repeated numerous times in succession to someone who thought "I'll try asking this community", which literally just amount to "go ask this to a computer", is an ideological stance then we will not see eye-to-eye on this
@roganjosh I can provide you my C++ code and a yoda file, which can be opened with VSC
I think that will be too much, we would want a minimal example here. I don't program in C++ so that would be a lot of effort on my part. Are you suggesting that you're taking those template files and trying to modify the code in one go to get your solution?
The first thing you should probably look at is modifying a small section of the YODA file
In isolation
16:05
More like I will use the yoda file which is like a text editor file, because if opened it just contains some data, and then filter through the data in such a way, that I produce plots in a different format
@roganjosh How do I do that?
Basically as you just described. Open it in a text editor, find a repeating unit of data, dump that somewhere in a file on its own and then start working to parse it in and get your head around that bit on its own
Is it possible Matplotlib to do that
and by that I mean
I don't know the format itself and it actually looks dead - the spec is just in a draft stage. But if it's YAML-based, you should be able to snip bits out
In one graph to have 5 different ploting lines
Plotting what, though? You can't expect that matplotlib knows anything about the YODA format, and by a quick search, it doesn't
You need to parse that data out yourself and get it into a structure that it can actually understand
Out of curiosity, did you write the C++ portion of the code?
16:09
No I am talking about using a Notepad to dump some data and run it
@roganjosh I based it on another code, because it has syntax from a MC simlulator
but
I did write my part, which does what I want
Essentially what I want to do, said simply is:
I am measuring something, variable y which is a function of x, so y=y(x) at 5 different time zones. So I will get 5 different graphs. Now I want to plot all 5 into 1
No, please stop
That doesn't mean anything in relation to what I have been saying
yes?
I am sorry
Right now, you can't even read the YODA file into python and get data in lists, right?
@imbAF No need to be sorry. I think you get ahead of yourself while qwe're just talking about the fundamentals for now
I can't because in order to do that, python needs to import the yoda package, which is possible only if yoda is installed, and yoda is installed in linux, which I don't have, or via a Docker
Right, so that is what you're struggling with. Not the grand vision - right now you need to be concentrating just on that part
16:14
Just as an info, I am doing my bachelor thesis in physics, and until now I had to spend time with C++ to write my analysis and now suddenly I need to be extremely good at python
@roganjosh I see. Well I tried to use Docker, but I don't understand it
I mean this in a nice way - If you're currently struggling with python right now then Docker will be hell and take way more time to get going on
How big is the YODA file?
Let me check
500kb
Yes, so what do I do
I was given some references in python
Ok, please do your initial plan - open it in a text editor (I assume it's just raw text) and dump it into a dpaste, then give a link back to it here so I can have a look
One second
I can send a ss
No, please please don't
16:20
Ok
Then I have to type the whole thing out before I can even start doing something with it. Always send text
No I mean a small photo
because you said
it is a raw text, which i don't believe it is, though idk what you mean by that
And I though if I showed how it looked, maybe it will be easier for you to understand and help me further
As in notepad will open it. Which it clearly will if you can send a screenshot of it open in notepad
@imbAF We risk going in circles here. Right now I'm giving you an olive branch where I will actually try parsing it myself to give you a hand getting started but I do actually have other things to do and reiterating myself on this is eating into the time I have to help you
Ok
Then, what is it that I need to do
How it looks.
I assume I copy some data and try to modify them
@Hakaishin I concur with @roganjosh. If people want to be given trash when asking for help they can ask on quora or whatever. If we don't know or don't care we say so. Sending innocent people to the trash machine is not welcome here.
And yes, it often gives correct results, but we're not willing to clean up after it when it often fails miserably.
16:26
Chatgpt is not helping me tbh. It explains things in a very convoluted way, I am not sure
@imbAF you need to go back and re-read the specific instructions I gave on how to share the file and specifically said I don't want a screenshot
On another note, a poll (to humans): how much of a code smell is it to have a class which only gets instantiated once?
Not a singleton, just a class where you'll only need one instance for one specific task
@roganjosh Can you explain, what you mean with this?
What it means to parse the data?
9 mins ago, by roganjosh
Ok, please do your initial plan - open it in a text editor (I assume it's just raw text) and dump it into a dpaste, then give a link back to it here so I can have a look
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Is it a dataclass?
16:28
And with that I will check back later because we're struggling to make basic progress right now
If it's too big you might have to create a gist
I think we as a society really missed teaching CS at an early level in school. It's nowadays as important as math and if you don't have the basics there is so much ground to cover later on
They started with some programs in Switzerland now, but it feels about 15 years too late or more
@roganjosh I am sorry but I don't understand the lingo most of the times. I haven't programmed much. I don't have a python code to copy and past at dpaste. Whatever I would have, would have been a modification of the python code provided by the person who helps me. In case I would know how to modify that python code, which I don't
Actually while I'm here, does anyone have experience with doing parametric studies on ARIMA (even better if it's SARIMAX). I've just baffled myself into not understanding how to combine the different parameters, so I figure I'll just set the computer off doing it but then I have to think about sensible ranges
@imbAF none of this is programming. I'm not asking for python code. I am literally just asking you to copy the text content of the YODA file into the dpaste site, post it there and give the link back here. That's it.
16:41
@roganjosh Initially I was thinking of taking the long way, meaning. In the yoda file, I select those data which I need to put all together in one plot. It's a bit tedious process, but is something I can do. I believe so. Unless a more efficient way exist
You can't do anything in the yoda file because it's just plain text
That would be like saying you want to run python in the middle of a word document. No doubt someone could do it, but "easy" is the last thing that comes to mind
You will have to leave this with me for a while, I have some stuff to finish up before I can have a play and the format is a bit more complex than I had hoped
Ok sure
Anything else I need to explain
like the variables involved etc?
No. I'm not doing any of the logic. That's your job. My goal (which should have been yours but you don't seem to be able to see the wood for the trees right now) is simply to get the data into something you can manipulate in python. You'll still have to learn python
@Hakaishin depends. Am I talking to a human? :P No, it's not.
The only vaguely intriguing part is that the YODA package looks dead so it'd be handy if there was some supported code around to help with that in general.
16:46
Yes
hold on
Is this helpful in any way
?
No, that's entirely unrelated
Well what I was told is that if I install yoda, then I can import the package to python. But to do that, like I said I need linux, or Docker
But I'll be here, waiting for an answer, if possible
Actually, the more I look at it, it was probably me wrong, which is why I assumed it was dead. Oh well, still something to procrastinate with
I'm gonna call it Yaddle to avoid ambiguity :P
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні then it does seem a bit odd
but I think we've all done that and it can work out fine. Just fix the problems as they come along :D
@roganjosh Btw, I can provide you with a images, where you can see how the data of the yoda file looks like. That way you have a visual understanding of how things are and how I am trying to modify them. If you need that I can provide it
16:56
... you literally just gave me the entire contents of the file
Yes, but I don't think it's that easy to comprehend. You are considering 3 sets of variables.
And I thought, looking at the images might help
@Hakaishin it definitely works, it just feels like an antipattern. Not sure. (Hence the poll.)
I guess the alternative would be a namespace, or a module with state in globals? Might as well be a class.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні yeah, rather a class than namespace or module
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні FWIW flask apps can be specifically configured to take a Config class, which I guess only gets used once with from_object. I've used that in the past to create an instance that does some pre-processing, then pass the instance over to the app
 
1 hour later…
18:23
@imbAF It's here. It ended up being more complicated than I expected and then there are some weird formatting things at the end of your file that I just abandoned and gave up on my package dreams. So it's not the best code but it will pull out your data for you
@roganjosh First of all thank you
2nd, could you help me understand what you did
I mean, does the code do what I need it to do?
Yes it does. I'm going to put some installation instructions in the README, then you will need to figure the rest out. If you have looked at C++ then you will be able to see the parsing rules
Ok but before I continue on my own, could I tell you what my aim is so that then you can evaluate if, for the state of the code you provided, I'll be able to do what I need?
Actually, basically, you just need pip install git+https://github.com/roganjoshp/yaddle.git and then have a look at the example.py file and work that into your own code. If you have people on your end that know some python, please ask them for further info if you struggle and can't find the answer. I've already ploughed a lot of time into this; I just finished it because I told you I would try
Ok
Could I use VSC also?
18:29
yep
Ok, thank you
Assuming you mean visual studio code
yes
Just out of curiosity, were you able to understand how the plots were being produced, how they would differ from each other?
As I said before, I'm not doing any of the logic. It literally just parses the data for you
Ok
18:33
file --> something python can understand. You have dataframes holding the data. The rest is on you - it's your project
And by the rest is for me
you mean, the coding, and the sorting of the data in such a way that I get another output right?
 
3 hours later…
21:03
@roganjosh It's funny because I saw stuff about the Yoda format a couple of hours ago, and then I see the repo on your github couple hours later :o
@roganjosh you mean sweep/grid-search vs Monte-Carlo? IIRC: first you do detrending (seasonal-monthly-weekly-daily-hourly etc.) Then you determine the optimal difference interval by autocorrelation. If you got that decomposition right you can estimate the order. Then you grid-search/Monte-Carlo the other parameters. But it helps to have a good intuition for the underlying process, whate order polynomial, etc.
@NordineLotfi I meant to make an OS-independent package based on the above discussion but a) I realised I didn't really understand the format principles (it works in this case, though discards the last bits of data) so it ended up being quite crude
@smci I'm not sure where monte-carlo comes into this. Perhaps I need to dig deeper
I'm out ATM and I've forgotten the statsmodels wrapper I'm using. I'll have to get back to you shortly sorry
Ah, I misunderstood the Monte-Carlo suggestion. Yeah, in principle you're right. It's 7 params I need to optimise so I was gonna use a factorial experimental design to try trim down the options, but I don't know the sensible range of each value. I think we're on the same page, though. I'm just on my phone for now
21:36
In essence, I have weekly data for two years, so ~52 observations for a year and I expect massive signal spikes at Xmas, Easter and Halloween for certain products. It's not clear to me how I encode that via the parameters available for periodicity
22:03
@roganjosh: which 7 parameters do you want to estimate, do you know the order of the model, how many different components do you have in the decomposition, etc? Ah ok: sales data or something. There will be seasonal and weekly components, and also depnding on which country, holidays (Easter, Halloween, Black Friday, Christmas etc.)
Funnily, it's the opposite of sales - "shrink" which has a big theft component :) the 7 pararams are the inputs to SARIMAX
See e.g. approaches to Kaggle dummhumby (= Tesco analytics) shopping prediction from 2011: kaggle.com/c/dunnhumbychallenge . (Although they were trying to predict individual customer spend and date of visit.)
Actually forget that one, see Kaggle Walmart - Store Sales Forecasting (2014) kaggle.com/c/walmart-recruiting-store-sales-forecasting
Look in > Discussion > exploratory data analyses and any solutions discussing detrending
@roganjosh Was this online or brick-and-mortar? Groceries or durable goods? Gifts or household? That will all affect how Xmas, Easter and H'ween will split over multiple days or weeks. Including days stores were closed, shippnig deadlines etc.
... hmm. If only I wasn't embroiled in literally every company you just mentioned. My model is now up against kaggle. I didn't realise I was up against those models. Maybe I need to take a break this evening. Thanks for raising those examples
@smci brick and mortar. I basically need to predict how much stuff will go missing, mostly through theft
There are operational issues that need to be disentangled from that. It's... tough
It doesn't help that I only have 2 years' data, crossing covid and people have decided it's fine to just assault staff because... reasons? What a mess
22:59
@roganjosh Err... with the UK lockdowns etc. that will have major components that aren't even periodic... don't get wedded to your ARIMA assumption, mix in some other baseline models... shrinkage might be proportionate to the number of idle staff and the amount of inventory...
23:29
Which 'operational issues' do you see? If I was guessing about the propensity and ability of staff to steal inventory during Covid, questions I'd look into: were store staff and security staff contract or fulltime? how many were out sick, furloughed or due to Covid? were their wages guaranteed or not? etc. Trying to frame this as a polynomial seems silly. If you don't have enough data to estimate 'operational issues' then see if you can dig for it... may be privacy issues with gathering it...
... Does more product go missing in the weeks before an employee leaves? etc. I imagine GDPR still applies to individual-level data.

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