python newbie
Maura E Monville
maura.monville at gmail.com
Wed Jun 18 08:57:19 EDT 2014
On Wednesday, June 18, 2014 1:50:54 PM UTC+1, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Wed, 18 Jun 2014 05:10:03 -0700, Maura E Monville wrote:
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>
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> > My supervisor has palmed me off with a python code, written by a
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> > collaborator, which implements an algorithm aimed at denoising the dose
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> > distribution (energy per unit mass) output from a radiation transport
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> > Monte Carlo code. My task is to translate the python code into a MatLab
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> > code. A colleague of mine and I stared at the python code for a while
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> > without understanding the logic. To me that code looks like Chinese or
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> > Arabian. I don't have clear ideas about the syntax and python variables.
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> > For instance, in MatLab there is the cell array storage type to host
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> > data of different type. I have no idea how a 3D matrix can be loaded
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> > through python. Does a debugger exist for python code ? Is there an easy
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> > concise user's manual ?
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> If you don't understand how to even read Python code, using a debugger
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> isn't going to help you.
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>
>
> Start by spending an hour or two to go through the tutorial, to get up to
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> speed with the basic principles of the syntax:
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>
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> https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/
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>
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> If you're using Python 3, you should use this instead:
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>
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> https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/
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> Although there aren't very many differences between the versions, when
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> you're learning something for the first time, those differences can be
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> perplexing.
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> Once you've done that, you'll be better able to ask sensible questions
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> about your code. Feel free to show us your code (especially snippets) if
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> there is anything unclear.
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> --
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> Steven
Thank you so much.
I am pretty sure you'll have to put up with my naive questions for a while. The python code though is not long.
Best regards,
Maura
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