VSCode does have support to sort imports inside a .py file using isort. The recommended way to turn this on is via the following settings:
"[python]": {
"editor.formatOnSave": true,
"editor.codeActionsOnSave": {| const log_el = document.getElementById('log') | |
| function log(...messages) { | |
| console.log(...messages) | |
| log_el.innerText += '\n' + messages.map(m => JSON.stringify(m, null, 2)).join(' ') | |
| } | |
| function error(message) { | |
| console.error(message) | |
| log_el.innerText += '\n' + message |
| class Graph: | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| self.nodes = set() | |
| self.edges = defaultdict(list) | |
| self.distances = {} | |
| def add_node(self, value): | |
| self.nodes.add(value) | |
| def add_edge(self, from_node, to_node, distance): |
| # coding=UTF-8 | |
| from __future__ import division | |
| import re | |
| # This is a naive text summarization algorithm | |
| # Created by Shlomi Babluki | |
| # April, 2013 | |
| class SummaryTool(object): |
| '''This script goes along the blog post | |
| "Building powerful image classification models using very little data" | |
| from blog.keras.io. | |
| It uses data that can be downloaded at: | |
| https://www.kaggle.com/c/dogs-vs-cats/data | |
| In our setup, we: | |
| - created a data/ folder | |
| - created train/ and validation/ subfolders inside data/ | |
| - created cats/ and dogs/ subfolders inside train/ and validation/ | |
| - put the cat pictures index 0-999 in data/train/cats |
| # extracted from http//www.naturalearthdata.com/download/110m/cultural/ne_110m_admin_0_countries.zip | |
| # under public domain terms | |
| country_bounding_boxes = { | |
| 'AF': ('Afghanistan', (60.5284298033, 29.318572496, 75.1580277851, 38.4862816432)), | |
| 'AO': ('Angola', (11.6400960629, -17.9306364885, 24.0799052263, -4.43802336998)), | |
| 'AL': ('Albania', (19.3044861183, 39.624997667, 21.0200403175, 42.6882473822)), | |
| 'AE': ('United Arab Emirates', (51.5795186705, 22.4969475367, 56.3968473651, 26.055464179)), | |
| 'AR': ('Argentina', (-73.4154357571, -55.25, -53.628348965, -21.8323104794)), | |
| 'AM': ('Armenia', (43.5827458026, 38.7412014837, 46.5057198423, 41.2481285671)), |
[ Update 2020-05-31: I won't be maintaining this page or responding to comments anymore. The list of supporting software reflects the known state as of this date. ]
Most of the terminal emulators auto-detect when a URL appears onscreen and allow to conveniently open them (e.g. via Ctrl+click or Cmd+click, or the right click menu).
It was, however, not possible until now for arbitrary text to point to URLs, just as on webpages.
| Latency Comparison Numbers (~2012) | |
| ---------------------------------- | |
| L1 cache reference 0.5 ns | |
| Branch mispredict 5 ns | |
| L2 cache reference 7 ns 14x L1 cache | |
| Mutex lock/unlock 25 ns | |
| Main memory reference 100 ns 20x L2 cache, 200x L1 cache | |
| Compress 1K bytes with Zippy 3,000 ns 3 us | |
| Send 1K bytes over 1 Gbps network 10,000 ns 10 us | |
| Read 4K randomly from SSD* 150,000 ns 150 us ~1GB/sec SSD |