@stack Hey, your problem was that you were dealing with an iframe (results were shown inside an iframe within your page). So, just switching to the iframe resolved all the pains -
>>> driver.switch_to.frame("rus-results")
>>> items = driver.find_elements_by_xpath('//*[@id="content"]/div/div/dl[3]/dd[1]/a')
>>> items
[<selenium.webdriver.remote.webelement.WebElement (session="77237ca775f019d949493ee287dbeb4c", element="87a5c6bb-6541-4b8e-9827-92e572ee3019")>]
>>> for item in items:
... print(item.text)
...
tmb200@rutgers.edu
class A: x = 'not a method'
class B(A): pass
print(my_super(B, B()).x) # should return 'not a method'
class Meta(type): x = lambda _: 5
class Class(metaclass=Meta): pass
class Child(Class): pass
print(my_super(Child, Child()).x) # should throw AttributeError
For the first one, you may want to look into descriptors
@Gmanc2 please stop posting more recent questions. The room rules (available top right of the screen) state that a question should be more than 48 hours old before posting here. We now have 2 from you violating this rule
@ParitoshSingh Now I see what you were talking about... someone asked "Why can't I del self?" and the only answer they got was "try self.__del__() instead" :I
@superv Your code seems fine IMO, hard to tell what exactly is the issue unless I could reproduce it on my end. Anyway, did you try installing debug toolbar? It will help you with what was posted & what is the context of the loaded page, etc. So this would help you debug the existing issue with ease.
I have checked this documentation regarding heapq but I couldn't find how to initialize heap key, i.e. the parameter over which the structure of the heap is establihsed, or in other words the paramter of priority.
Question is how to do that?
On internet, they have given example of usages by taking a list consisting of integer, which is not helpful at all when one want to create heap consisting of some objects.
I guess I have asked something relevant to this here.
I guess I have to read about __lt__ and __cmp__. Thanks.
I am stuck again, how to modify the behaviour of heappush() from heapq such that, If some element is already in heap then compare the element in the heap with the element which is supposed to be pushed in the heap, and if the element which is in the heap should be popped out, the element which was supposed to be pushed in gets pushed in.
# For 2, 2 text clearance upon click
def clickerase(event):
# Could be fixed; if same text is typed, it's erased upon click.
if e.get() == "Talk to me, girl.":
e.delete(0, END)
An entry widget in Tk holds default text which is erased upon click. If you type the same text though, it will still erase it upon click.
How can we set an event so that we can only erase it once, upon only the first click?
@Permian I don't think this is related too backtracking. Instead, it's a convoluted (and possibly broken) way of passing nums[i] in the recursive step.
Basically, path.append(nums[i]) means path[-1] is nums[i]. path is then passed in the recursive call, including the element just added. After the call, path.remove(path[-1]) removes the element of value path[-1], i.e. the one just added.
A problem is that list.remove works by value and removes the first match, so if there are duplicates it will pick the wrong one.
A better way would be to pass path + [num[i]] in the recursive call. This avoids mutating the input parameter, which can lead to surprising behaviours in recursive algorithms otherwise.
Yes. It seems to me heapify is useless, if I apply it to list, I am not able to apply other operation like heappush and heappop, as I get error reporting that r is not iterable.
where r is the list on which I have applied heapify
Yes, the answer to my earlier question is that you're not just using heapq functions. Since the heap is represented as a simple list there's no way for it to know that it should be a heap unless what you do to it stays a heap. Hence the heapq functions.
I have a pandas df with two rows and 33 columns. I’m wanting to get desperate bar plots for each column. Each bar plot would have two bars representing the two data points. Can anyone help?
I’ve posted it on stack overflow as a question but the answers so far aren’t working.
@zahid Well, that's only something you can decide. Do you want to get a single axes or multiple ones? To be honest your question is also a bit unclear. It would help if you could clarify what kind of reasult you're looking for.
@wim something something jumping beans
@zahid also you can edit/delete messages for 2 minutes in chat
@Dodge That's a really tough one because it requires a deep knowledge of the timezone model that Python uses, but it also requires some kind of niche geographical knowledge
the venn diagram on those two must be incredibly thin
I just ignored the excel bit :P So it's still unclear: I see "two bars representing two data points", OK. But that's for a single column. For 33 columns you'd need to have 33 of those plots. So either 33 figures or 1 figure with 33 axes.
but let's leave it at that now, I also have to go
user11585758
6:07 PM
Hey guys how are you ? Came with fascinating question? :)
user11585758
Guys , How can i change a fully connected vector to matrix? like for eg i have matrix of shape (1, 4096) into some matrix (8, 8, 64)
hey guys, I was curious if there were any similarity metrics that valued low correlation locally and higher correlation globally for a time series. Playing around with a stock example where you build an index fund and I want to construct a fund where assets that fluctuate locally are anti-correlated in the selection.