@Simon And the gold hammer persons get angry when there’s another one who didn’t bother to read the rules or even bothered entering the exact question title on Google… (because how do people think the gold hammer people find the questions they use to close questions!?!?! xD)
@James_M_South Good to hear this from a well know voice in the industry. I feel everyone should stand against stupid policies of SO. They have full of bullies and insensitive people. I hope someone takes out a better portal than Stack overflow.
That'd be interesting. We could all place bets how long it'd take before people started tweeting "the people at this 'better portal' are all jerks. someone should start a bestest portal"
@James_M_South Stackoverflow is a place where people get shamed for trying and being curious. I'd rather crawl google for hours by myself than step foot in that cesspool.
SO did try an answer queue. There were next/previous arrows on the sides, and the "try answering these next" box after answering. They dropped it pretty quickly.
Hi Friends, I have a column in pandas df where the type is object and the values are (eg: 42872,42741...) these are essentially dates When i convert them to short date in excel, they get converted in the right way.
However, if i use pd.to_datetime - they get converted to year 1970
@AsmitAdgaonkar I'm not that familiar with pandas, but from the info you state, the formatting would be incorrect, so you probably need to adjust it according to what excel is comfortable with. The 1970 is epoch, basically the "start of time" for excel (and plenty others).
Your object values fit nicely for dates (42872, etc. they are the # days from 1970-01-01), you need to check your pd.to_datetime's output.
I always ran my scripts on windows by double-clicking them. However after I reinstalled my python versions this is not happenning. My python installations are on C:\Python27 and C:\Python33. PATH has C:\Python27\ in it. If I try to run a script from cmd, it works ok. But when I double-click any ....
@noumenal then your script finishes execution without interruption. Try doing a time.sleep(15) at the end of the file. If it stays up, then your raw_input line is not getting executed, there is a problem with the script, not the environment you are running it on.
Say I've got a function which takes a single argument and returns a boolean, how do I call this function using arguments from a list and return True if any one call returned True, and False otherwise?
Just wanted to let you all know that I solved my problem. When inspecting the error I realized that it was a path related import error, which suggests to me that the `sys.path` was initialized differently and did not include parallel directories.
After the `import sys` statement I simply included `sys.path.append('../')`.
Chips (crisps) are horribly salty and full of spices, unless they're home-made but those look a lot like pringles. So either the dog didn't eat them and so he was forced to pose with a huge chunk of no-go food on his nose, or he ate them and he got a crazy amount of salt (even from a few chips). And all of these aside, having your dog pose for your entertainment with a huge scent bomb in his face is just cruel
Bold should be used in moderation too, so you should have written “Even question answering?” to match the “Maximum 40% boldness per message” rule that I just made up.
In [3]: def foo_native(x): return sum(elem**2 for elem in x)
In [4]: def foo_np(x): return x.dot(x)
In [5]: x = np.random.rand(100000)
In [6]: %timeit foo_native(x)
45.1 ms ± 328 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
In [7]: %timeit foo_np(x)
37.6 µs ± 160 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10000 loops each)
np.ndarray.dot uses compiled C code under the hood (it also uses multiple threads so it's also cheating, multiply the numpy timing by 4)
guys, how would you handle [this question](https://stackoverflow.com/q/48500047/1222951)? 1) it doesn't really make sense to close as typo 2) I'm not sure what a suitable duplicate would even look like 3) I don't believe it's a useful question that should be kept around. Nobody's ever going to find that question and think "that solves my problem!"
@Rawing it's more of a brain fart. Some people would close it as a typo, but indeed others would be furious because "that's not even close to a typo". But then again the typo close reason includes "unlikely to help future readers". I really don't know what to do with that...
Yes! I've switched to 3.6 for python and ipython. All code shall henceforth be written in python3.6 and will be available under the "do as you like with it" license.
So i am writing a program that will tell me total number of developers in a company and the input i get is only number of employees and company industry.Manually i can get number of developers by adding my query on Linkedin of that specific company.
I have scraped linkedin and got the total number of developers and total number of companies of that specific company size and industry
> Constants are usually defined on a module level and written in all capital letters with underscores separating words. Examples include MAX_OVERFLOW and TOTAL.
the module docstring says "string - A collection of string constants". So, despite that it contains a few functions, it's mainly a collection of constants. I presume that if everything is a constant, nothing is a constant, at least when it comes to style.
3.5 to 3.6 should be good enough for now then, thanks. Will fiddle around, should be worth the time.
> A plain backport of *just* Python 3.6. System extensions/Python libraries may or may not work. > > Don't remove Python 3.5 from your system - it will break.
I am writing a program that will tell me total number of developers in a company and the input i get is only number of employees and company industry.Manually i can get number of developers by adding my query on Linkedin of that specific company.
For example
A is a company and its industry is F...
Whenever you ask for help in whatever field of life, MCVE or equivalent is what you should start with. What is your situation, what does it do, what should it do instead. Do all the work you can for the person who you're asking help from.
Is there a way in Python3 to set the file permissions for the log file? All I see is filemode and that's only really to append/overwrite. Right now it's creating the log file as world readable. I could chmod it, but hoping for a solution using logging module.
It gets the rights of the user who calls the python interpreter. If you want different rights on it, you can create a user with those specific rights and execute python programs as him.
This is more a linux question than a python question though
Having used logging for all of an hour over the course of my life, my expectation is that it wouldn't have granular control over file permissions, since how permissions work tends to vary across OSes* and OS-specific stuff tends to get sequestered in the os module
(*uh, at least I think the permission systems of the big OSes aren't perfectly isomorphic to one another? I really only use windows so [shrug])
(inb4 "well technically there's a difference between 'can I ask a question about X here?' and 'anybody good with X in here?' because only the first one is 'asking to ask'")
actually, this program should be generic which should automatically take city country and company whatever provided. like if I give new york it should take the city as the column name. basically, intention of asking this question is if there is some package available for it or we have some generic approach for it — user90397 mins ago
I try to limit my sass to the chat room. Except for my rote comment of "interesting problem. Go ahead and get started and let us know if you have a specific question :^)"
Exactly because it will sail completely over the head of any well-meaning-yet-clueless OP who thinks, "you know what, I will get started and come back with a specific question!"
Maybe OP is asking "if I have three tables PLACES, COMPANIES, PEOPLE; and a string like 'New York', how can I efficiently determine if the string is in one of the tables, and if so which one(s)?"
... Or was the implication that multiple tables might exist, put forth by a commenter? In which case never mind.
I recently finished playing a game called Rime and in the credits was the line "original idea by [name]" and I thought "wait, you can actually get credited for being the Idea Guy?"
It would be understandable if he also drew the concept art for the game because when I looked at those I thought "I want to play the game this art promises, rather than the game they actually became". That's some good concept art.
The game this game could have been if they had ten times as much funding and Miyamoto's personal phone number
@ArneRecknagel It's an improvement, but the question still doesn't sit well with me. Just looking at it makes me angry because it's trivial to debug and it's such a specific problem that nobody's ever going to discover it with a google search. That said, I'm probably unreasonably upset by this, and should just learn to chill.
... I didn't see that coming. I only started using it cause it was featured in a recent anime that I was watching :\ It was suppose to denounce a cute little puffed up cheek version of :|
And if meta doesn't accept my plead, I shall look into writing a browser plugin that replaces the code locally to change :davidism: and inject the picture instead.
We could all pitch in on a userscript that adds whatever bells and whistles we like, but it would be strictly opt-in, so normies would still see :davidism: instead of our hilarious custom image