I also noticed a very handy feature in matlab: suppose you have a struct open in the variable editor and you copy one of the field names and then paste it somewhere - it automatically adds the struct name :)
I used:
df['ids'] = df['ids'].values.astype(set)
to turn lists into sets, but the output was a list not a set:
>>> x = np.array([[1, 2, 2.5],[12,35,12]])
>>> x.astype(set)
array([[1.0, 2.0, 2.5],
[12.0, 35.0, 12.0]], dtype=object)
Is there an efficient way to turn list into set ...
"-solve my problem A" "-here." "But this doesn't solve my problem which is actually B which is more complicated than A." "-Here." "-But this is not efficient! My actual case is much larger than hinted at!" "-gtfo"
I actually stopped at step 1 and deleted my answer which doesn't apply to problem B:D
I have this code which runs very slow. Can someone help me vectorize it.
for i=1:K,
y=w*x(i,:)'; % y is N by 1
u=zeros(N,M);
disp(num2str(i));
for j=1:N,
u(j,:)=y(j)*(x(i,:)-y(1:j)'*w(1:j,:));
end
wold=w;
w=wold+eta*u; % updated weight matrix
end
I figured out why your code is not working:
First of all you need to call row indices, not linear indices, i.e. change your loop to:
for ii=1:100
G(ii+1,:) = G(ii,:) + (T(ii,:)*0.1);
end
note that I also used ii as opposed to i, since using that as a variable is bad.
This results in T re...
this noob just forgot to assign a recursive variable >.<
@rayryeng this question pops up three times in the curtain, since it triggers on matlab, matlab-figure and matlab-guide. I do not think the latter two catch anything that's not in the first (and if they do, it will be edited soon enough), so I suggest removing them from the feed since it just displays things more than once. This is not the first occurrence I see of this.
I am classifying vehicles using neural networks in Matlab. So far the vehicles have been classified. My problem is putting the predicted class labels into a single vector form for use in subsequent stages. The total number of vehicles classified is 188. Part of the code used is as follows:
for i...
@Dev-iL actually I'm an atheist. It's really more of a heritage thing. I identify as Jewish, but I don't keep the holidays (besides greeting my relatives with shana tova at new year) nor any religious customs.
But anyway, I can't imagine myself as on orthodox in any way, even if I was religious:)
Well you see, in Israel we are taught from a small age, that "Jewish" is a nationality as well as a religion. For this reason it makes sense to say "Arabs and Jews" (otherwise it would've been "Muslims and Jews")... So I did not ask you about what you may or may not think about an imaginary friend that may or may not be living in the sky, rather about the "on paper" heritage thing
As far as I understand, Orthodox != Neolog
I was once in a Neolog synagogue during a holiday prayer - it was very impressive, but also very strange to me.
I suggest you change the code with which you obtained all these variables, because using dynamic variable names is bad.. The reason that this is bad is that you probably did a lot of code-copying to obtain 188 sequential variables, which is easier done in a single loop; the other reason is that the way to evaluate dynamically named variables is barely supported by MATLAB and breaks most things, including JIT, your most important speed-up engine. — Adriaan30 secs ago
This is about position 2 divs next to each other.
There's this guy who downvotes every single answer on this question, then looked at my comment containing a jsFiddle. He then decided it was perfectly fine to copy it into his own answer.
When I said something about it, he quickly deleted the an...
@AndrasDeak yea, but at least mention the user that suggested in in the first place. I've done that a couple of times, and I've never heard about it (citing the comment in the answer of course)
@AndrasDeak Ive done that once, after a similar discussion with Ray. He suggested that if you steal it entirely, make it CW, otherwise just cite it and use it amongst your own code.
or actually he suggested make the answer and comment to the original commenter that you used it and will make the answer CW if he answers (this was about an eight month old question)
@Adriaan I've added matlab, matlab-guide and matlab-figure in the feed because sometimes, the OP forgets to tag the question with matlab or matlab-guide, and just matlab-figure
Recently the MATLAB and Octave chat room had the tags matlab-figure and matlab-guide added to the feed curtain, which originally only contained matlab. Now questions that are tagged with more than one of the tags trigger on both feeds, thus they show up in the curtain twice.
I therefore suggest ...
I was amazed that there hasn't been an inflow of comments on your meta post. Then I realized that I only read meta posts which are on the side bar, and those are the top ones:D
@AndrasDeak you, not spoiling homework? Do not make me laugh:
Note that in my previous comment you probably need fix instead of floor to treat negative numbers properly... So: when you say "In my task I had number...", do you mean a homework? I wouldn't want to spoil that for you. — Andras Deak18 mins ago
The current state of your question (can change any time): how can I efficiently remove unique elements from a large array of large arrays?
import numpy as np
l=np.random.rand(3000,30000)
lout1=map(np.unique,l)
#or
lout2=[np.unique(ll) for ll in l]
Runtimes:
In [86]: timeit map(np.unique,lbig...
OP accepted, I'm not sure if this is what they wanted