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11:59
@roganjosh I see you are still battling garbage in garbage out xD Yeah, Data science can't help if the data is bad :D That's the harder problem of increasing the overall standard of many organizational units withing a company, which takes time, can be uncomfortable for certain people/divisions and involves a lot of politics in general... Hard job
 
1 hour later…
13:04
@Hakaishin The problem here is that there are at least three ways to generate a week number, all valid in their own right, but once it just gets saved to a DB table as "week" there's literally zero metadata remaining to know which system was used
If the company has its own week numbering system (one of the three methods I can think of off the top of my head), it doesn't make sense to use a foreign key system because then that's just another integer that might not align with the week number it points to. I suppose it's metadata to know how to do JOIN in a query but it'd be totally bonkers trying to reason about the raw data itself
You're missing the point, there are various other unique good ways to store a datetime. People should be using those instead of weeks, weeks is an insance thing to store data in. It's a view of some underlying better data it never should be stored in a db in the first place
Sure, that was my initial statement. I would much rather it be stored as a datetime but then you have weird reporting rules in some companies that compels them to think it'd just be easier to save the date as their own week number... until someone else comes along and saves data using a different week numbering system (probably by accident) in another table
@roganjosh which completes the circle and brings me to my comment which started today's discussion :) Organizational change is hard :P
13:20
I should really get off my high horse today, though. I just played one of my worst cards ever. In my race to present our shiny new end-to-end system based on this data for a presentation, I managed to get the denominator and numerator the wrong way around in a scaling factor, dumped the data into a presentation at the last second and then absolutely bombed when people saw the numbers. That'll instil confidence in me :'(
@roganjosh Been there done that, it sucks I feel you. Recalibrate your work procedure and onward you go :)
14:08
an alternative interpretation: you sir, turned their world upside down. That shows you off as a radical thinker who refuses to be confined by arcane definitions. The world needs more people like you because that's how problems get solved
xD
Did somebody have the problem that matplotlib 3D plots are kinda small? Like it's using 40% of vertical space for the plot and 30% of the horizontal space...
Is that a zoom button on the bottom bar?
Yeah but it zooms into the plot which is still using a small fraction of the screen
and the zoom doesn't really work well
dang! I've successfully used mpl to adjust image sizes etc in the past. That should be a viable solution for you here
Does that apply to all plots? I feel like it is presenting a cube + enough space for it to rotate freely
14:16
@inspectorG4dget what's mpl?
@matszwecja I mean it's alright, but I't wasting like so much free space on the top and bottom and left and right of the screen which I was hoping I could use
Also I wish there was a way to tell it to only look at 2 axis now
@Hakaishin matplotlib
@inspectorG4dget One way to put it. I forecast £900 of profit loss while the real figure was £108,000. I'm just very optimistic!
Is there a good 3D plotting library where I can get boxplots in 3D space? Chatgpt is doing a poor job of it :P
14:34
plotly, maybe?
 
3 hours later…
17:41
@Hakaishin matplotlib?
what was the symbol to indicate "remaining arguments are kwargs only"?
is that python 3.12 and newer only?
Can't remember I think a while ago
pycharm complains about def __init__(self, *args, *, TEST_ORDERNODE_COUNT=1, **kwargs):
"multiple * parameters not allowed"
You can't put * with *args as all arguments after *args are kw only so is redundant
17:44
oh yea
use args.get("TEST_ORDERNODE_COUNT", 1)
18:31
I'm not following why that's necessary when kwargs also take defaults?
Wait, no, I'm getting confused about the design itself
 
2 hours later…
20:11
Does anyone know how to type sentinel objects? Here's an example dict.get:
TKey = TypeVar("TKey")
TValue = TypeVar("TValue")
SENTINEL = object()
def get(
    object: dict[TKey, TValue],
    key: TKey,
    default: Literal[SENTINEL] | TValue = SENTINEL,
) -> TValue | Literal[SENTINEL]: ...

if (value := get({}, "key")) is not SENTINEL:
    reveal_type(value)  # TValue
You can't, you have to make a class for the sentinel
Ah :( ty
soo... we took some time off, went up on the roof, and played some Bonnie Tyler. Successful eclipse viewing, and back to work now
 
3 hours later…
23:19
there's peps.python.org/pep-0661 but it's draft. still worth a look IMHO, it also mentions the topic of typing sentinels...
A popular and often-cited page on improving performance in your scientific/data-science python/numpy/pandas(/polars) code: pythonspeed.com/datascience
@roganjosh Ouch. Do you have a trusted colleague or two who can give your presentation a quick eyeball beforehand next time? Always helps
@Hakaishin Yes matplotlib 3D plots are wasteful on space, they're padded to allow for all possible rotations of the cube. I forget if you can turn off the interactive rotation and force a specific 3D axis orientation, in matplotlib.
23:37
@ThiefMaster Oh nice, in the past I have written a similar class before so would be nice to be part of stdlib. "06-Jun-2021" and last message a year ago... I guess the PEP's not going to get approved tho :/
@Arne "...and often, the only audience. Everyone else tuned out."

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