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2999 - 2999 - looking back
This is the first of a series of articles that reviews where Well House Consultants has been - and where we're going - after 6 years of blogging and some 3000 articles. - "towards the next 3000" I'm headed towards article number 3000 - this is blog article 2999. I started writing back in the sum ....

2998 - Using an exception to initialise a static variable in a Python function / method
Exceptions are sometimes "sold" as a way of trapping errors - but they're more than that - they're an excellent way of trapping conditions where there isn't a valid result. "How many people live in this house" you may ask of a function / method call, and the answer may come back as "2" or "5" ... o ....

2997 - 3D graphics - web site usage - simple matplotlib and python example
Some very interesting graphs from our server log data, courtesy of Python, numpy and matplotlib. Truly, a picture paints a thousand words. The data in the first and last diagrams is raw - showing exact number of hits per hour; in other diagrams I have used proximity smoothing which makes the trends ....

2996 - Copying - duplicating data, or just adding a name? Perl and Python compared
When you copy a list in Perl, you're duplicating the data and you end up with two distinct copies ... but when you copy a list in Python, you're copying the reference so that you end up with two names for the same variable - almost like an alias. So in Perl - with two different copies - you end up ....

2995 - A river in Melksham is not just for boaters.
How many boats will the link canal ... the river through the town ... and the ongoing Wilts and Berks canal bring to Melksham? Not as many as you might think - I've seen it written somewhere that out of every 100 people visiting the river in such a scheme, only 4 will arrive by boat - and as there ....

2994 - Python - some common questions answered in code examples
Some tips and new examples from last week ... Python in Plymouth! • How do I put comments in a Python regular expression to make it more readable: [source] • How do I use a python dictionary as a table of counters - in our example, counting the number of people in our team who have each ....

2993 - Arrays v Lists - what is the difference, why use one or the other
If you want a program to run quickly through a data set (that's the sort of thing you'll be doing in heavy scientific work), you'll want the data loaded into successive memory locations - but that means that you have to know how much space to allocate before you set the data up. Otherwise, you'll f ....

2992 - Matplotlib - graphing in Python - teaching examples
Matplotlib provides Python with a graph drawing and data representation tool that is extremely flexible - in fact so flexible that it's hard for the newcomer to know where to start. The following examples are very straightforward, but useful, graphs showing real data sets (from the second example o ....

2991 - Loading and saving data - Python / numpy
If you're using big data sets in Python, you're probably using the numpy module - providing you with fast data handlers at C speed of running, and Python coding speed. But how do you load that data in? Numpy also provides a number of data handlers, data setup routines, and also a save and restore ....

2990 - What are numpy and scipy?
In Python, all the operators are really methods - in other words, you write   c = d + e and you're really writing   c = d . __add__ ( e ) So this means that it's possible to use the language to handle data of any sort, including data types that aren't supported at standard. It ....

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This is http://www.wellho.net/demo/mqclim.php
See source code here • More examples - same topic here
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