Does anyone know a way to get better auto-indentation in vscode? Lately it's so terrible that I'm starting to understand why some people prefer languages with braces
@Aran-Fey Frame challenge, Pycharm has all the formatting built in. I never had to change a thing and it fixes such issues as in your screenshot
@roganjosh how does negative shrinkage happen? I mean I get it how the model could predict that, but this looks like groundtruth has negative shrinkage, which is funny :D
A couple of boxes of stock are received in the store on a pallet during a busy period and someone forgets to hand-scan them into receipt (or there is a system error). The stock gets realised when a periodic full stocktake is made, so it gets realised then and the adjustment made
It does sound like a really fun problem to work on though
@roganjosh Seems like fixing that is more important than the modelling. If you know that your gt is silly it's better to invest more time into that, than crazy predictions on nonsense data. Imo
It's not nonsense data. If the stock isn't realised then that is technically shrink, even if it gets corrected at a later date. The business does >£30bn in retail sales in a year so good luck ironing out every single operational error
That's why you do periodic full stock takes. The numbers add up over the year, just not necessarily week-on-week. That said, I'm not going to argue that any model could be fitted to that data because it's really just looking like noise to me right now
haha not saying it's easy. But you know the old saying garbage in garbage out. Ofc that's hyperbole, but if you crunch different things into the same category that might lead to problems
when I have 1,2 and I want the median it could be 1,2 or 1.5. Is there a name for the last median? Wikipedia says that the last is the normal definition of median, but I remember that there were different names for when taking only elements or taking elements which are not in the set as medians
<brings out smorgasbord>mean, median or mode, sir?
I can't think of any other term other than quartile or percentile, given that you mention a normal distribution (I don't understand the connection here)
Totally unrelated to any of this - if people want some compelling internet tv during their downtime, I highly recommend The Traitors, free on BBC iPlayer (which you can get if you have a VPN). I can't remember the last time I actually watched a game show and enjoyed it
I mean, that did have its moments :P I kinda wanted to hate this, just because it's yet another prolonged contestant show, but even the most annoying characters are just about sufferable and the plot twists are keeping it going. It's genuinely captivating
So far, they're all failing miserably at the game in one way or another. Maybe it's catharsis :P
Total Wipeout beats Takeshi's Castle any femtosecond of the week btw
But The Traitors is much more psychological, and it's weirdly fun to watch the group dynamic just tear itself apart and consistently be wrong (I'm only in Season 1. I kept hearing about it on the radio on my drive to work and they were talking about Season 2. I'm late to the party)
The answer is in a discrete set with an even number of values, a set of two "middle points" could satisfy the looser definition "value m such that P(X<=m) >= 1/2 and P(X>= m) <= 1/2. But we generally define median to be the average of those two middle-points.
@roganjosh That's not a bug. Comment lines don't affect the indentation. They "look" like lines containing whitespace. On a related note, continuations involving brackets etc spanning multiple lines don't affect indentation, either. Eg, this is perfectly legal, even though it's not exactly recommended by PEP-8.
if True:
a = 7
b = [2,
3]
c = 5
# Still inside the block
print(a + b[1] + c)
Oh, ok. It may not be desirable in an organisation's code, or in some IDE. I was just saying it's valid Python.
FWIW, I've seen code (in various languages) where full line comments always start in column 1, regardless of the indentation of the surrounding code. But I guess that was more common a few decades ago.
And in ancient Fortran, comments were always on a separate line, with a C in a specific column (5, IIRC) that caused them to be treated as comments.