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pythondev
help
so you could imagine adding a new vertex would be closer to allocate(v) and append(v), where the append is amortized constant
2019-03-15T15:23:22.780000
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T15:23:22.780000
1,552,663,402.78
13,721
pythondev
help
then
2019-03-15T15:23:25.780100
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:23:25.780100
1,552,663,405.7801
13,722
pythondev
help
`list.append([0,0,0,1,0])`
2019-03-15T15:23:48.780400
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:23:48.780400
1,552,663,428.7804
13,723
pythondev
help
where did you get list?
2019-03-15T15:25:26.781500
Clemmie
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-03-15T15:25:26.781500
1,552,663,526.7815
13,724
pythondev
help
it's just the entire list
2019-03-15T15:25:47.781700
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:25:47.781700
1,552,663,547.7817
13,725
pythondev
help
first step is adding a 0 or 1 to the end of each row
2019-03-15T15:26:06.782200
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:26:06.782200
1,552,663,566.7822
13,726
pythondev
help
second step is appending a list - basically the last row of the 2d array
2019-03-15T15:26:22.782500
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:26:22.782500
1,552,663,582.7825
13,727
pythondev
help
Did you see this discussion on Stack Exchange - <https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/297730/why-adding-a-vertex-in-a-graph-represented-using-an-adjacency-matrix-takes-ov>
2019-03-15T15:26:44.782700
Clemmie
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-03-15T15:26:44.782700
1,552,663,604.7827
13,728
pythondev
help
yep
2019-03-15T15:27:07.783100
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:27:07.783100
1,552,663,627.7831
13,729
pythondev
help
there's another SO thread that says it's implementation dependent
2019-03-15T15:27:18.783300
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:27:18.783300
1,552,663,638.7833
13,730
pythondev
help
in a 2d array list of lists in python, we don't have to re-allocate the entire thing
2019-03-15T15:27:45.783500
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:27:45.783500
1,552,663,665.7835
13,731
pythondev
help
Right - that looks like the canonical algorithm is v^2, but fairly simple to do better
2019-03-15T15:27:48.783700
Clemmie
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-03-15T15:27:48.783700
1,552,663,668.7837
13,732
pythondev
help
yeah depending on growth schemes and memory allocators its different
2019-03-15T15:27:50.784000
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T15:27:50.784000
1,552,663,670.784
13,733
pythondev
help
thanks guys!
2019-03-15T15:28:14.784400
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:28:14.784400
1,552,663,694.7844
13,734
pythondev
help
are your edges directed?
2019-03-15T15:28:21.784600
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T15:28:21.784600
1,552,663,701.7846
13,735
pythondev
help
in that green picture i posted - I guess they would be - 0 points to 1, and 1 points to 0
2019-03-15T15:28:54.784800
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:28:54.784800
1,552,663,734.7848
13,736
pythondev
help
So it's symmetric matrix if that's always the case
2019-03-15T15:30:11.785000
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T15:30:11.785000
1,552,663,811.785
13,737
pythondev
help
Or undirected
2019-03-15T15:30:21.785200
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T15:30:21.785200
1,552,663,821.7852
13,738
pythondev
help
I could see using a dict of 1d arrays
2019-03-15T15:32:58.785400
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:32:58.785400
1,552,663,978.7854
13,739
pythondev
help
kind of like an adjacency list
2019-03-15T15:33:04.785600
Lynelle
pythondev_help_Lynelle_2019-03-15T15:33:04.785600
1,552,663,984.7856
13,740
pythondev
help
Also, if you know how many nodes exist ahead of time, or even a guess you can always pre-allocate
2019-03-15T15:37:22.785800
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T15:37:22.785800
1,552,664,242.7858
13,741
pythondev
help
Hi All!
2019-03-15T15:41:44.786200
Freeda
pythondev_help_Freeda_2019-03-15T15:41:44.786200
1,552,664,504.7862
13,742
pythondev
help
quick question, anybody ever work with the NHL API?
2019-03-15T15:41:58.786500
Freeda
pythondev_help_Freeda_2019-03-15T15:41:58.786500
1,552,664,518.7865
13,743
pythondev
help
I've never faced off with it
2019-03-15T15:49:34.787200
Joette
pythondev_help_Joette_2019-03-15T15:49:34.787200
1,552,664,974.7872
13,744
pythondev
help
None
2019-03-15T15:51:14.787400
Leana
pythondev_help_Leana_2019-03-15T15:51:14.787400
1,552,665,074.7874
13,745
pythondev
help
:slightly_smiling_face:
2019-03-15T15:51:18.787600
Clemmie
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-03-15T15:51:18.787600
1,552,665,078.7876
13,746
pythondev
help
`Hashable` is not a *type*, it’s more of a *trait*
2019-03-15T15:52:55.788400
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:52:55.788400
1,552,665,175.7884
13,747
pythondev
help
I'm here to give helpful answers and make dad jokes and I'm all out of helpful answers
2019-03-15T15:52:56.788600
Joette
pythondev_help_Joette_2019-03-15T15:52:56.788600
1,552,665,176.7886
13,748
pythondev
help
it’s not a *thing*
2019-03-15T15:53:02.788700
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:53:02.788700
1,552,665,182.7887
13,749
pythondev
help
Got any gum?
2019-03-15T15:53:11.789000
Clemmie
pythondev_help_Clemmie_2019-03-15T15:53:11.789000
1,552,665,191.789
13,750
pythondev
help
anything that *has* a `__hash__` method *is a Hashable*
2019-03-15T15:53:14.789100
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:53:14.789100
1,552,665,194.7891
13,751
pythondev
help
`isinstance("hello world", Hashable) == True`
2019-03-15T15:53:31.789300
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:53:31.789300
1,552,665,211.7893
13,752
pythondev
help
Yes, I understand. If I have some object that is Hashable, I want to override its `__hash__` method.
2019-03-15T15:54:03.789600
Cammie
pythondev_help_Cammie_2019-03-15T15:54:03.789600
1,552,665,243.7896
13,753
pythondev
help
I have been unable to do this
2019-03-15T15:54:09.789800
Cammie
pythondev_help_Cammie_2019-03-15T15:54:09.789800
1,552,665,249.7898
13,754
pythondev
help
_this is for educational, illustrative purposes. I’ve effectively trying to monkey patch here_
2019-03-15T15:54:21.790000
Cammie
pythondev_help_Cammie_2019-03-15T15:54:21.790000
1,552,665,261.79
13,755
pythondev
help
```class YourCustomObject(TheObjectYouWantToOverride): def __hash__(self): ...```
2019-03-15T15:54:38.790200
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:54:38.790200
1,552,665,278.7902
13,756
pythondev
help
should do the thing
2019-03-15T15:54:42.790400
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:54:42.790400
1,552,665,282.7904
13,757
pythondev
help
you can’t override a __hash__ method of an existing type
2019-03-15T15:54:57.790600
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:54:57.790600
1,552,665,297.7906
13,758
pythondev
help
for example, you can’t modify the `__hash__` of a tuple or a string
2019-03-15T15:55:09.790800
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:55:09.790800
1,552,665,309.7908
13,759
pythondev
help
you _can_ with monkey patching only for pure-python objects (i.e not builtins), but it’s hard because it’s not something you really need or want to do
2019-03-15T15:55:35.791000
Jonas
pythondev_help_Jonas_2019-03-15T15:55:35.791000
1,552,665,335.791
13,760
pythondev
help
Okay. Makes sense. I’ll try that extension method you’ve shown. Thank you
2019-03-15T15:56:03.791300
Cammie
pythondev_help_Cammie_2019-03-15T15:56:03.791300
1,552,665,363.7913
13,761
pythondev
help
Great idea! <@Jonas> :taco:
2019-03-15T15:56:09.791500
Cammie
pythondev_help_Cammie_2019-03-15T15:56:09.791500
1,552,665,369.7915
13,762
pythondev
help
none of that either ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
2019-03-15T15:57:51.791900
Joette
pythondev_help_Joette_2019-03-15T15:57:51.791900
1,552,665,471.7919
13,763
pythondev
help
Assuming pandas uses the Re module. Is there a way for .str.match to use the regex module instead?
2019-03-15T17:21:31.794300
Janay
pythondev_help_Janay_2019-03-15T17:21:31.794300
1,552,670,491.7943
13,764
pythondev
help
.apply probably
2019-03-15T17:56:09.795200
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T17:56:09.795200
1,552,672,569.7952
13,765
pythondev
help
hi everyone, I have a bit of a frustrating situation. I’m using python3.7, and simply trying to read hexidecimal string, perform an XOR on each byte, and get the resulting character that produces: ```a = '4f0a' for i in range(0,4,2): chr(ord(binascii.unhexlify(a[i:2])) ^ 0x2a)```
2019-03-15T18:54:14.798400
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T18:54:14.798400
1,552,676,054.7984
13,766
pythondev
help
but no matter what I try, the ‘0a’ portion is interpreted as a newline, and python throws an error
2019-03-15T18:54:42.799100
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T18:54:42.799100
1,552,676,082.7991
13,767
pythondev
help
I’ve tried parsing in different ways, I’ve tried converting the values into something else, such as using int, but I always end up with an error due to the ‘0a’ value being interpreted as a newline
2019-03-15T18:57:36.800300
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T18:57:36.800300
1,552,676,256.8003
13,768
pythondev
help
It is a newline, though. What is the error?
2019-03-15T18:57:58.801000
Sasha
pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-03-15T18:57:58.801000
1,552,676,278.801
13,769
pythondev
help
so, for the command I have inside the loop, it throws `TypeError: ord() expected a character, but string of length 0 found`
2019-03-15T18:58:43.801800
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T18:58:43.801800
1,552,676,323.8018
13,770
pythondev
help
Oh, I see. You want `a[i:i+2]`.
2019-03-15T18:59:08.802500
Sasha
pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-03-15T18:59:08.802500
1,552,676,348.8025
13,771
pythondev
help
if I use something int(), it throws `ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 16: ''`
2019-03-15T18:59:16.802800
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T18:59:16.802800
1,552,676,356.8028
13,772
pythondev
help
…………………..
2019-03-15T18:59:26.803000
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T18:59:26.803000
1,552,676,366.803
13,773
pythondev
help
sigh
2019-03-15T19:00:07.803200
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T19:00:07.803200
1,552,676,407.8032
13,774
pythondev
help
yes
2019-03-15T19:00:29.803600
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T19:00:29.803600
1,552,676,429.8036
13,775
pythondev
help
haha
2019-03-15T19:00:30.803800
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T19:00:30.803800
1,552,676,430.8038
13,776
pythondev
help
THANK YOU :slightly_smiling_face:
2019-03-15T19:00:35.804000
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T19:00:35.804000
1,552,676,435.804
13,777
pythondev
help
No prob. Just needed another set of eyes.
2019-03-15T19:00:44.804300
Sasha
pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-03-15T19:00:44.804300
1,552,676,444.8043
13,778
pythondev
help
seriously, I really appreciate the help! can’t believe I missed that :facepalm:
2019-03-15T19:01:48.805100
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-15T19:01:48.805100
1,552,676,508.8051
13,779
pythondev
help
anyone communicate over bitbus with python?
2019-03-15T20:09:17.805500
Priscilla
pythondev_help_Priscilla_2019-03-15T20:09:17.805500
1,552,680,557.8055
13,780
pythondev
help
that was my first thought as well, but was hoping for something like df[col].str.match(expression, engine = regex)
2019-03-15T20:43:02.805600
Janay
pythondev_help_Janay_2019-03-15T20:43:02.805600
1,552,682,582.8056
13,781
pythondev
help
Not that specifically, but I have used other embedded wire protocols.
2019-03-15T20:46:23.806400
Sasha
pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-03-15T20:46:23.806400
1,552,682,783.8064
13,782
pythondev
help
could you point me to some resources?
2019-03-15T20:59:04.806700
Priscilla
pythondev_help_Priscilla_2019-03-15T20:59:04.806700
1,552,683,544.8067
13,783
pythondev
help
anything helps :slightly_smiling_face:
2019-03-15T20:59:15.807000
Priscilla
pythondev_help_Priscilla_2019-03-15T20:59:15.807000
1,552,683,555.807
13,784
pythondev
help
Heh, I'd just be Googling things for you. Do you know what hardware you have to interface to? The Python interface would likely be to that thing rather than raw bus logic.
2019-03-15T21:04:13.808300
Sasha
pythondev_help_Sasha_2019-03-15T21:04:13.808300
1,552,683,853.8083
13,785
pythondev
help
rs232 to bitbus, the rest of the hardware is designed and built by the company i work for
2019-03-15T21:32:08.809100
Priscilla
pythondev_help_Priscilla_2019-03-15T21:32:08.809100
1,552,685,528.8091
13,786
pythondev
help
that is not helpful, i apologize lol
2019-03-15T21:34:22.810800
Priscilla
pythondev_help_Priscilla_2019-03-15T21:34:22.810800
1,552,685,662.8108
13,787
pythondev
help
you know what, i dont think i have all the information i need to build this.. Thanks for all your help EdKeyes! :smile:
2019-03-15T21:35:52.812000
Priscilla
pythondev_help_Priscilla_2019-03-15T21:35:52.812000
1,552,685,752.812
13,788
pythondev
help
Nope just dug around the source code. You could possibly mock a function in the library but you're better off with apply probably
2019-03-15T22:55:08.813000
Bethany
pythondev_help_Bethany_2019-03-15T22:55:08.813000
1,552,690,508.813
13,789
pythondev
help
I am trying to implement this <https://github.com/davidsandberg/facenet/wiki/Validate-on-lfw> ( A thread)
2019-03-16T06:31:03.816900
Jewel
pythondev_help_Jewel_2019-03-16T06:31:03.816900
1,552,717,863.8169
13,790
pythondev
help
I need to know that in the below code , what is ~/datasets/lfw/lfw_mtcnnpy_160 \ line doing??? for N in {1..4}; do \ python src/align/align_dataset_mtcnn.py \ ~/datasets/lfw/raw \ ~/datasets/lfw/lfw_mtcnnpy_160 \ --image_size 160 \ --margin 32 \ --random_order \ --gpu_memory_fraction 0.25 \ &amp; done
2019-03-16T06:34:39.817300
Jewel
pythondev_help_Jewel_2019-03-16T06:34:39.817300
1,552,718,079.8173
13,791
pythondev
help
```for N in range(1,4): !python src\\align\\align_dataset_mtcnn.pyC:\\Users\\SnehaR\\Desktop\\miniproject\\datasets\\lfw C:\\Users\\SnehaR\\Desktop\\miniproject\\datasets\\lfw\\lfw_mtcnnpy_160 --image_size 160 --margin 32 --random order``` This is how I am running this in python
2019-03-16T06:38:05.817600
Jewel
pythondev_help_Jewel_2019-03-16T06:38:05.817600
1,552,718,285.8176
13,792
pythondev
help
Does anyone have any thoughts where I would start if I want to compare two near identical images for things like differences in specific colors? Use case is: in Australia our weather bureau publishes near-real-time weather radar images that represent storm activity as pixels overlaid on a map. Severe storm cells are represented with black pixels (decreasing down there to brown, red, orange, yellow, green blue etc). Black storm cells often represent hail storms. So, I would like to capture the most recent image (this part is easy), compare it against a 'clear weather' radar image, and perform some sort of activity if specifically the count of black pixels is higher in the current version of the image. I've never done image processing previously, so I'm wondering if anyone can point me to libraries, methods etc.
2019-03-16T08:42:21.824000
Chuck
pythondev_help_Chuck_2019-03-16T08:42:21.824000
1,552,725,741.824
13,793
pythondev
help
I believe Pillow is the image processing library for Python. I’ve used it for steganography in the past, for such things like you’re describing. <https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/stable/>
2019-03-16T08:44:32.825000
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-16T08:44:32.825000
1,552,725,872.825
13,794
pythondev
help
not sure if it’ll meet your needs, but it’s a start
2019-03-16T08:45:09.825400
Virgie
pythondev_help_Virgie_2019-03-16T08:45:09.825400
1,552,725,909.8254
13,795
pythondev
help
Thanks <@Virgie>, I'll look into it
2019-03-16T09:09:02.826100
Chuck
pythondev_help_Chuck_2019-03-16T09:09:02.826100
1,552,727,342.8261
13,796
pythondev
help
<@Chuck> you don’t need to bring in Pillow for this, since you can use numpy/scipy
2019-03-16T09:36:54.827800
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T09:36:54.827800
1,552,729,014.8278
13,797
pythondev
help
<http://scipy-lectures.org/advanced/image_processing/>
2019-03-16T09:36:54.828000
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T09:36:54.828000
1,552,729,014.828
13,798
pythondev
help
an alternative option
2019-03-16T09:36:59.828200
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T09:36:59.828200
1,552,729,019.8282
13,799
pythondev
help
Can anyone let me know how to move the value of `i` to next row continously ```import xlwings as xw import time def test(): wb = xw.Book('temp.xlsx') sht = wb.sheets['Sheet1'] sht.range('A1').value = 'Foo 1 new' i=1 while i&gt;0: sht.range('A2').value = i i=i+1 test() ```
2019-03-16T09:38:24.829200
Chad
pythondev_help_Chad_2019-03-16T09:38:24.829200
1,552,729,104.8292
13,800
pythondev
help
```while True: sht.range(f'A{i}').value = i i += 1 ```
2019-03-16T09:50:10.830700
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T09:50:10.830700
1,552,729,810.8307
13,801
pythondev
help
assuming you’re using python 3.6
2019-03-16T09:53:59.831300
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T09:53:59.831300
1,552,730,039.8313
13,802
pythondev
help
<@Hiroko> Thank You buddy it worked but want to know what is `(f'A{i}')` for?
2019-03-16T09:54:28.831700
Chad
pythondev_help_Chad_2019-03-16T09:54:28.831700
1,552,730,068.8317
13,803
pythondev
help
yes I am using 3.6
2019-03-16T09:54:44.832000
Chad
pythondev_help_Chad_2019-03-16T09:54:44.832000
1,552,730,084.832
13,804
pythondev
help
<https://realpython.com/python-f-strings/>
2019-03-16T09:57:15.832600
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T09:57:15.832600
1,552,730,235.8326
13,805
pythondev
help
you’re dynamically building the string for the row based on the current index value of the loop
2019-03-16T09:57:44.833200
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T09:57:44.833200
1,552,730,264.8332
13,806
pythondev
help
<@Hiroko> Great Jason I now understand the concept Thank You for the help Buddy:smile:
2019-03-16T09:59:56.834200
Chad
pythondev_help_Chad_2019-03-16T09:59:56.834200
1,552,730,396.8342
13,807
pythondev
help
:thumbsup:
2019-03-16T10:16:18.835200
Hiroko
pythondev_help_Hiroko_2019-03-16T10:16:18.835200
1,552,731,378.8352
13,808
pythondev
help
So, it seems I can't install any libraries with pip. Keep getting the error `No matching distribution found for [pacakge]`, anyone know how to fix this? (I'm also currently googling, but I think I tried previously and couldn't fix it)
2019-03-16T11:03:28.837600
Ursula
pythondev_help_Ursula_2019-03-16T11:03:28.837600
1,552,734,208.8376
13,809
pythondev
help
So, I fixed the issue with the answer in the link, I must have did a bad job googling before if I fixed it so quick :sweat_smile: <https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49748063/pip-install-fails-for-every-package-could-not-find-a-version-that-satisfies>
2019-03-16T11:06:23.838700
Ursula
pythondev_help_Ursula_2019-03-16T11:06:23.838700
1,552,734,383.8387
13,810
pythondev
help
hi willa75 could you share the screenshot of your screen for better understanding of error?
2019-03-16T11:17:55.839800
Rhona
pythondev_help_Rhona_2019-03-16T11:17:55.839800
1,552,735,075.8398
13,811
pythondev
help
<@Rhona> hey, I ended up fixing the error by reinstalling pip, thanks for trying to help me though
2019-03-16T11:58:32.840000
Ursula
pythondev_help_Ursula_2019-03-16T11:58:32.840000
1,552,737,512.84
13,812
pythondev
help
<@Joanne> no problem
2019-03-16T12:00:50.840200
Rhona
pythondev_help_Rhona_2019-03-16T12:00:50.840200
1,552,737,650.8402
13,813
pythondev
help
<@Melynda> Yeah. the key is fine. Actually, I got the issue sorted! Thanks for your inputs! :gavel_parrot::ubuntu:
2019-03-16T12:14:20.840400
Elmo
pythondev_help_Elmo_2019-03-16T12:14:20.840400
1,552,738,460.8404
13,814
pythondev
help
i want to install my pip packages into specific directory, so i can copy them during multi stage docker build
2019-03-16T19:30:43.842400
Mckinley
pythondev_help_Mckinley_2019-03-16T19:30:43.842400
1,552,764,643.8424
13,815
pythondev
help
i found this post <https://blog.realkinetic.com/building-minimal-docker-containers-for-python-applications-37d0272c52f3>
2019-03-16T19:31:07.842700
Mckinley
pythondev_help_Mckinley_2019-03-16T19:31:07.842700
1,552,764,667.8427
13,816
pythondev
help
but i have one problematic dependency `django-push-notifications==1.6.0`
2019-03-16T19:31:34.843400
Mckinley
pythondev_help_Mckinley_2019-03-16T19:31:34.843400
1,552,764,694.8434
13,817
pythondev
help
it can not be installed with `--install-option="--prefix=/install"`
2019-03-16T19:32:10.843900
Mckinley
pythondev_help_Mckinley_2019-03-16T19:32:10.843900
1,552,764,730.8439
13,818
pythondev
help
i'm getting ` UserWarning: Disabling all use of wheels due to the use of --build-options / --global-options / --install-options.` warning from pip and the newest version pip can found for that package is `1.4.1`
2019-03-16T19:32:45.844500
Mckinley
pythondev_help_Mckinley_2019-03-16T19:32:45.844500
1,552,764,765.8445
13,819
pythondev
help
i downgraded it tested again, but this time i'm getting `ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'setuptools'` error during build
2019-03-16T19:33:21.845100
Mckinley
pythondev_help_Mckinley_2019-03-16T19:33:21.845100
1,552,764,801.8451
13,820