Not that I know of. I presume it's meant as an alias for clarity, but it really is just None and I almost never see the longer version in code. And they can't just switch np.newaxis to something not None because that would break so much code.
yup, and your chancellor said something along the lines of "the population aged 14-30 is the primary carrier of the virus on account of them having the most extensive social network, so they have to be in the center of mitigation", which makes a lot of sense to me
by the time you recover you can deep dive into your projects :P
That's not exactly "shut down", though. If you make attendance optional but still carry on with lectures "most" students will go anyway for fear of dropping out
Just today we got a rector's memo that employees in risky population can excuse themselves from teaching in person, but electronic means must be provided for the students. In my own case the corresponding infrastructure would be "whatever I can do on my own". I'm not even sure whom I could ask for help.
Hehe, I'll try. I did ride a bike to work yesterday, after ~8 years of not touching my bike.
for now the two subways I take to work is by far the largest source of infection to me
I'm hoping that by the time the small faculty of phys/math students come down with the virus we'll have thousands of sick engineering students who make up most of the student body, so precautions will be made before my students get sick
there was also going to be a conference in Germany next week that would've served as a nice entry point of the virus into our department, but the conference was called off last week
@AndrasDeak do you have lectures at the moment? we're currently in exam season, so it's just been memos like "students, stay at home if you feel sick".
I have to confess I am quite amazed by some ratios. So, for instance for what I'm seeing right now, there's 631 deaths in Italy with 10,149 infected cases
@MisterMiyagi no, because I pulled myself out weeks ago :)
@CeliusStingher we don't really know the number of infected, because it seems that the vast majority of cases are mild and are never diagnosed
The largest threat seems to be that even if a small percentage of the total susceptible population get infected the medical system won't be able to handle it eventually, so people that can be saved under nicer circumstances might die. So the main task is to slow down the disease in order to spread out its spread over time. Ease up the strain that's put on medical systems.
@AndrasDeak Agreed, I'm still impressed by the ratio mentioned above. I hope cases start to decline soon as Europe moves away from the winter. And I'm hoping there's not a raise here in South America as we approach the winter.
@CeliusStingher we've had a girl from Ecuador pass through here and end up in Prague sick, but she probably picked the virus up in Italy (backpacking with friends)
@CeliusStingher The stats are all skewed in plenty of ways, so it's super-hard to get realistic figures with an emergent virus
Don't forget about High-Rise Syndrome, which appeared to suggest that cats are more likely to die with increased height if they fall from high-rise balconies up to ~6 storeys, after which their chance of survival tended to increase the higher up they fell from
This just happened to be a side effect of people not bothering to take splatted kitties to the vet, so it gave really odd results, because only those that were likely to survive were taken to the vet. I imagine there's a similar situation with this virus. If you're not particularly sick, would you want to thrust yourself into the limelight?
I would imagine that a lot of cases simply aren't self-reported, either through not wanting to become one of the numbers on the news or just because people don't even realise they have it
@Aran-Fey incidentally we kind of do, but that's mostly by accident. And we don't use it as a quiz platform...and I can't imagine translating our 10-minute short quizes for that (which all involve deriving formulae and integrals)
@Aran-Fey AFAIK it's because __new__ is some weird hybrid that isn't actually a class method, even though it looks like one. Basically super().__new__ fetches __new__ from the class, not the instance (since there isn't one), thereby not binding the first argument.
Anyways, __new__ looks like a class method but is actually a regular method. type.__call__ looks it up on the class (receiving the bare function, since function.__get__(cls, None) returns the function) and explicitly passes in cls.
@MisterMiyagi That demonstrates the mechanism behind type.__call__ calling __new__ as if it were a classmethod, but it doesn't have anything to do with super(), does it?
Both Foo.__new__ and Foo.fromkeys are functions that are called with a class as the first argument, yet chain-calling with super() behaves differently. Where's the mechanism that causes that difference?
Because __new__ is a regular method, cls.__new__ returns an unbound method. But if it were decorated with @classmethod, it would return a bound method.
note that according to the data model, __new__ is a static method – which kinda has the same result. It's too late around here to check whether it actually is or Python just pretentds.
@AndrasDeak <holds out a big not sign> begone, vile demon
I'm not sure what the biggest protest could be in Python for a placard. not feels weak
I've also totally lost the comment I was supposed to be replying to with link to enumerate :/ The main feed has been brutal on links for dupes etc tonight
I've downloaded 6 books tonight, all (IIRC) from .edu domains. I'm somewhat confused; it seems that Universities are making copyright texts freely available. When I was at uni, I used to have to torrent books or find other underhanded ways of getting PDFs. Are they paying some kind of special license?
I wouldn't think there's a way to make someone else's property freely available. So it's probably more ignorance than magic. Unless it's their own books, in which case they can probably do that.
@AndrasDeak I think you're right. I noticed a few Unis offering PDFs for books I was searching for and conflated it with URLs like https://web.ist.utl.pt/~fabio.ferreira/material/asa/clrs.pdf. I guess I was just more surprised that nobody is taking the links down when all you have to do is add "pdf" to the end of the book title
100% hit rate on what is collectively probably ~£500-worth of books seems strange, with no tricks, is all
@Todd Big hit between different Python versions or what?
@roganjosh Another hack that I definitely don't do when looking for a book is finding the Amazon preview, selecting a good paragraph of text and then using quotes "" for google's exact match with filetype:pdf and 90% of the time you can just find the book pdf
@jamylak I've never struggled to find books :P I'm just surprised that it was definitely easier now to get the PDFs than having to torrent when I needed them at uni. And there's no way that an author would miss the trick of just adding "pdf" to the end of their book title
i'm trying to use an alternative @roganjosh to get a some comparison.. wish I had a better alternative though than looping over set items and comparing
maybe set.intersectaion(set) would be faster than set.intersection(list) idk
the logic of the program can be summed up as, do a dozen loops within loops within loops to find one thing that might not be what is needed, in which case start looping again... all that in a loop =)