You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. Dismiss alert
Clustering with Scikit with GIFs This posts describes (with GIFs and words) the most common clustering algorithms available through Scikit-learn. It’s a common task for a data scientist: you need to generate segments (or clusters- I’ll use the terms interchangably) of the customer base. Where does one start? With definitions, of course!!! Clustering is the subfield of unsupervised learning that ai
Official downloads for macOS Installer with Python 3.10 (universal2) thonny-4.1.4.pkg (42 MB) Re-using an existing Python installation (for advanced users) pip install thonny 3rd party distributions (may have older version) Downloading and launching the installer with Homebrew brew install thonny Official downloads for Linux Installer (installs private Python 3.10 on x86_64, uses existing python3
This is the second installment in my two-part series on terminal applications with great command-line UIs. In the first article, I discussed features that make a command-line application a pure joy to use. In part two, I'll look at how to implement those features in Python with the help of a few libraries. By the end of this article, readers should have a good understanding of how to use Prompt To
class: center, middle # 10 awesome features of Python that you can't use because you refuse to upgrade to Python 3 .footnote[[There is also a pdf version of these slides](http://asmeurer.github.io/python3-presentation/python3-presentation.pdf)] --- class: center, middle # 10 awesome features of Python that you can't use because you refuse to upgrade to Python 3 # or # Turning it up to 13! --- # Pr
Submitted by Daniel Lebrero on Wed, 18/05/2016 - 11:03 It is funny how things turn around. For fifteen years I have been preaching TDD (Test-driven development, or as it used to be called: test-first approach), or at least for developers to write some unit tests. However, in recent times I have found myself saying more often, "Why did you write that test?" instead of, "You should write a test."
Why does Google prepend while(1); to their (private) JSON responses? For example, here's a response while turning a calendar on and off in Google Calendar: while (1); [ ['u', [ ['smsSentFlag', 'false'], ['hideInvitations', 'false'], ['remindOnRespondedEventsOnly', 'true'], ['hideInvitations_remindOnRespondedEventsOnly', 'false_true'], ['Calendar ID stripped for privacy', 'false'], ['smsVerifiedFla
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く