@roganjosh I meant "the question had two screenfuls of text before we got to "How do I pivot a dataframe such that the col values are columns, row values are the index, and mean of val0 are the values?" which should have been the first sentence. Wasn't talking about the answers. The phrasing of the question is way too long-winded. Newbies won't see relevance or scroll to page three. Chainsaw needed.
Q1 = t.TypeVar("Q1", bound="Mul | Div")
Q2 = t.TypeVar("Q2", bound="Mul | Div")
class Mul(t.Generic[Q1, Q2]):
pass
# Q1: Type argument for "Generic" must be a type variable
class Div(t.Generic[Q1, Q2]):
pass
Didn't we have a similar problem a few weeks ago? This one looks cleaner but still follows the same idea - TypeVars bound to unions of mutually parametrised types.
I'm guessing something blows up trying to resolve a recursive relation there.
Might want to post it on GitHub on their bugtracker, this looks like it should work.
The feature I really want is "save the current state of the project and let me restore it later", but I guess we had to make that difficult for some reason
@KarlKnechtel Good grief, no, it's already way too long. They all share the same setup code, anyway. We're not writing a reference guide here, that question is already pushing the limits.
I argue strongly against this approach. Pivot tables are non-trivial and I think it stands to reason that the code (and, crucially, the combinations of arguments) should be explicitly listed
I don't mind if the pre-amble in the question itself is removed but I cannot see a constructive restructuring of the numbered answers that would be useful to me as a pandas user
I'm so glad that polars did away with the concept of indexes because they just melt your brain at times, particularly with this kind of transformation