h3
yapf
h3 | yapf | |
---|---|---|
21 | 21 | |
4,605 | 13,655 | |
1.0% | 0.3% | |
7.2 | 8.0 | |
3 days ago | 7 days ago | |
C | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
h3
- H3: Hexagonal hierarchical geospatial indexing system
- Evaluation of Location Encoding Systems
- Not sure if this is the worst or most genius indentation I've seen
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A population density map of the state of Pennsylvania
It looks like the base Kontur dataset uses H3 resolution 8, and there’s a lookup table here. “400m” seems to refer to the edge length (which averages to 461m).
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[ANN] HexTree: geographical region-to-value mapping
I can speak to quadtrees, but the primary reason for using this is that you need a geographic "dictionary" (not using the word map to avoid confusion with charts), and you're perhaps already using the H3 hexagonal grid system.
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What's everyone working on this week (34/2022)?
HexSet: is a way of storing a set of H3 cells in a tree, and doing fast (2-20 ns on my 2013 trashcan Mac Pro) membership tests. You must first convert the input data (e.g. GeoJSoN polygon) into H3 cells.
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Surprising result while transpiling C to Go
> What an amazing tool that can completely change function names when it converts from C to Go.
How can one read the code of the benchmark, then switch into virulent sarcasm mode without trying to understand the code? And seeing "+1" comments without any effort to understand is also disheartening.
The blog post had a link about the Go helper functions the author used. It lands on https://github.com/akhenakh/goh3/blob/main/h3.go This shows that the `FromGeo()` function used by the Go benchmark is a helper that calls transpiled functions. The benchmark code itself was of course not transpiled, so the sarcasm was unneeded and wrong.
If anyone wants to dig in deeper, the C function `latLngToCell()` calls 2 functions, see https://github.com/uber/h3/blob/master/src/h3lib/lib/h3Index...
- Completely ignorant Newbie needing help with launching Ubers H3 Software.
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Anyone doing geospatial queries? NoSQL? Amazon Location Service?
Uber just released their library to perform geospatial indexing - https://h3geo.org/. This might be an useful building block for you.
yapf
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Enhance Your Project Quality with These Top Python Libraries
YAPF (Yet Another Python Formatter): YAPF takes a different approach in that it’s based off of ‘clang-format’, a popular formatter for C++ code. YAPF reformats Python code so that it conforms to the style guide and looks good.
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Why is Prettier rock solid?
I think I agree about the testing and labor of complicated translation rules.
But it doesn't appear that almost every pretty printer uses the Wadler pretty printing paper. It seems like MOST of them don't?
e.g. clang-format is one of the biggest and best, and it has a model that includes "unwrapped lines", a "layouter", a line break cost function, exhaustive search with memoization, and Dijikstra's algorithm:
https://llvm.org/devmtg/2013-04/jasper-slides.pdf
The YAPF Python formatter is based on this same algorithm - https://github.com/google/yapf
The Dart formatter used a model of "chunks, rules, and spans"
https://journal.stuffwithstuff.com/2015/09/08/the-hardest-pr...
It almost seems like there are 2 camps -- the functional algorithms for functional/expression-based languages, and other algorithms for more statement-based languages.
Though I guess Prettier/JavaScript falls on the functional side.
I just ran across this survey on lobste.rs and it seems to cover the functional pretty printing languages influenced by Wadler, but functional style, but not the other kind of formatter ("Google" formatters perhaps)
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2310.01530.pdf
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A Tale of Two Kitchens - Hypermodernizing Your Python Code Base
To get all your code into a consistent format the next step is to run a formatter. I recommend black, the well-known uncompromising code formatter, which is the most popular choice. Alternatives to black are autoflake, prettier and yapf, if you do not agree with blacks constraints.
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Front page news headline scraping data engineering project
Use yapf to format code -> https://github.com/google/yapf
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Confused by Google's docstring "Attributes" section.
Google is surprisingly rigorous when it comes to code formatting. I have been a software engineer at Amazon and it was nothing like what the book says happens at Google. So the conventions you see for python docstring formatting are primarily designed to integrate with Google's internal tooling. By using docstrings following the Google conventions, you will ultimately end up with automated documentation and other fancy automated things (like type checking which they did in the docstring before there were type hints). Also notably, Google has an open source python formatting tool that they use internally called YAPF (which stands for "Yet Another Python Formatter". So if you really want to go all-in on Google python style, grab that, too.
- Alternate python spacing.
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Not sure if this is the worst or most genius indentation I've seen
https://github.com/google/yapf has configs, do ctrl+f SPLIT_COMPLEX_COMPREHENSION in the readme
- Google Python Style Guide
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Enable hyphenation only for code blocks
Only as recommendation: If the lines of the source code (here: you C code you aim to document) are kept short, in manageable bytes (similar to entries parser.add_argument in Clark's "Tiny Python Projects", example seldomly pass beyond the frequently recommended threshold of 80 characters/line), reporting with listings becomes easier (equally, the reading of the difference logs/views by git and vimdiff), than with lines of say 120 characters per line. Though we no longer are constrained to 80 characters per line by terminals/screens and punch cards (when Fortran still was FORTRAN), this is a reason e.g., yapf for Python allows you to choose between 4 spaces/indentation (PEP8 style), or 2 spaces/indentation (Google style).
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3 popular Python style guides that will help your team write better code
There is also a formatter for Python files called yapf that your team can use to avoid arguing over formatting conventions. Plus, Google also provides a settings file for Vim, noting that the default settings should be enough if you're using Emacs.
What are some alternatives?
S2 geometry - S2 geometry library in Go
black - The uncompromising Python code formatter
Leaflet - 🍃 JavaScript library for mobile-friendly interactive maps 🇺🇦
isort - A Python utility / library to sort imports.
mapbox-gl-js - Interactive, thoroughly customizable maps in the browser, powered by vector tiles and WebGL
flake8
starlink-coverage - Calculating some statistics about Starlink satellites
autopep8 - A tool that automatically formats Python code to conform to the PEP 8 style guide.
s2geometry - Computational geometry and spatial indexing on the sphere
awesome-python-typing - Collection of awesome Python types, stubs, plugins, and tools to work with them.
maplibre-gl-js - MapLibre GL JS - Interactive vector tile maps in WebGL2
pyright - Static Type Checker for Python