Often as I have been browsing this Q & A site, the answers that use multi-threading and processing have told me to use a format that goes like this:
(target=foo, args=(bar, baz))
It is most often used in multiprocessing and multithreading (at least with my limited knowledge.)
My question is, ...
Lots of the bigger channels have some kind of rules, stuff people are supposed to read before posting or requesting access, etc.
In the topic it clutters valuable space that can be used for more useful things (regulars usually don't need a link about when to request access etc. there).
When a bo...
First off I will apologize to the arbitraryness of this question but I am rewriting some of my scripts to use Numpy arrays instead of nested python lists (for performance and memory) but I'm still struggling with their declaration.
I am trying to create a structure using numpy arrays, I am start...
hey, any ideas if there's a vim plugin that adds a proper way to jump to a function definition in another file? i'm working on a rather big project where i'd usually use a proper IDE but i like vim more.. and pydev/eclipse somewhat sucks so i'd rather not use it.
@ThiefMaster no idea mate - not a user of vim, but for some reason it does ring a bell of a post I remember seeing the other day... lemme see if that's still in my history...
@ThiefMaster: If you're in the market for trying a new editor, take a look at SublimeText2. I switched a few months ago and I'm loving it. Huge reduction on keystrokes
@pcalcao: Don't bother with emacs, vim will mean you can edit files with only a console. Vim cheatsheet on a mug
I know enough of vim to get ssh to machines and edit stuff, I can even code half decently on it, but my shortcut usage is quite limited. Jump to lines, complete with Ctrl-N, insert, delete, copy/paste... and that's about it.
@MattH SublimeText2 is what I've been using for Python mostly. I have an IntelliJ licence, so I could use the Python plugin, but I find it's a bit overkill for most things.
I feel a Vim/Emacs discussion on the horizon, is there any on the internet already?
I know that some implementations of Conway's Game of Life use a "sparse grid" which uses something more exotic than a nested list.
Ideally you'd have something whose memory footprint grows with the number of live cells, not with the dimensions of the world. A dict fits the bill there.
for x,y in dict will attempt to take the key of dict and unpack it into two values. So for example, if you had a key (23,42), then x would be 23 and y would be 42.
But, usually, that kind of speed isn't necessary. It's not like most of us are doing super intensive 3D hydrodynamic or Particle in Cell codes in python.
You can also do for a in d.keys(), but that is almost always identical to for a in d. There are only a few corner cases where it could give different results (and only on python2.x, so it's best to avoid relying on that)
@udaysagar -- Not directly.
something like sum(1 for value in d.values() if value == value_i_want) will work.
Perhaps I shouldn't have mentioned NumPy's speed, even in passing. It's still worth using it if you're writing vector code, just for the convenience of having vector addition, scalar multiplication, dot/cross products, norms, and so on. (Though in my defence, its arrays are way faster than vanilla Python list-of-lists—e.g. I get a 100x speedup with NumPy just for adding two 100x100 arrays of floats.)
You need to properly define your fitfunc:
fitfunc = lambda p, x: sqrt(p[3]**2 - (x[:, 0] - p[0])**2 - (x[:, 1] - p[1])**2) + p[2]
I don't think that your approach is very robust, because when you take the sqrt there are two solutions, one positive, one negative, and you are only considering th...
besides i dont 'treat' i just did 'take in chats' with people that wanted to donate material to a study cohort
ie, sir, we are studying glycosylation across the entire population and are interesting in creating a large cohort of healthy sample, would you be willing to donate some of your blood?
that's all... and a simple harmless dracula tooth + halloween + I WANT YOUR BLOOOOODDD... god me warned
got*
in all honesty tho, i have no idea why we have a bar.
@BasJansen -- I think they just iterate over the entire array. I don't know about extract, but I don't see how where could behave any differently. You don't know if you want to take an element until you've looked at it.
Looks like a job for Queue with maxsize set to a positive value (and potentially with timeout):
http://docs.python.org/2/library/queue.html
Note that it is thread safe.
by the way if some people have an idea about this is welcome. I cannot figure out i resolve this step http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15837980/prevent-the-closure-of-command-prompt-with-python-when-an-exception-occurs
i wish to avoid the closure of my window *.exe when there is the "Exception"
As long as you mention that caveat: that this is on your blog i think it's fine. And as long as everything you post is not a blatant attempt a self-promotion... I don't think this is a problem as I've seen several of your answers and they are of high quality
@Wooble The code, I sometimes implement stuff just for fun, like data structures, and since Python isn't my main language, I don't always know if I'm not commiting a huge crime.
Well, if your motivation is to get feedback on your code, it's pretty much by definition on-topic; I don't see why it would matter why you wrote it in the first place.
@Wooble Thanks, I think you're right, I usually keep the code I blog about summarized in a gist or github project, so I'll probably just link there. That kind of solves it.
While i usually prefer vim (kind of obvious from my previous question) pycharm looks really awesome :o being able to remote-debug and launch via SSH while editing the files locally (they are on a samba share) is pretty nice
@MirkoCianfarani: your questions are no more clear than when you asked them 2 weeks ago. If you want the URL the person visiting your website sees in the location bar to change, you need to redirect.
actually i am web app dev of php... after working 2 year with it. i got a bit of frustration (frankly saying). dont know but wanted to work with desktop application and after googling i found cloud app developement