I have recently joined SO, interested in Python, pandas, and NumPy, and have noticed a tendency for questioners to favour, and often explicitly request the following:
- "One-line" answer
- "Most efficent" answer, when the piece of code is not a bottleneck
- Get from A [input] to B [output], when no existing code shared
With particular reference to questions tagged [python], where a good solution is a readable solution, this is problematic.
Exhibit 1: python: write column backwards with condition
This is an example of issues 1 & 3. Possibly the most efficient, shortest and smartest answer is given as:
df['x'] = df.groupby((df['number'].bfill()[::-1]//10).diff().ne(0).cumsum())['number'].transform(min)
There are at least 6 functions involved here. But it works, and I envy the poster for being able to come up with this. In this case, it wasn't the accepted answer, but in many cases it will be. The answer is accepted because it solves the problem tersely and efficiently.
Let's say tomorrow the question changes to "10% change condition but only if number is increasing, otherwise 5%". In my mediocrity, I will be clueless to adapt the above answer. Most people wanting to adapt it will need specialist knowledge, but this is available, because there are dozens of pandas-specialists on call at SO.
Exhibit 2: Expand pandas DataFrame column into multiple rows
These are 2 valid solutions to the stated problem:
def using_repeat(df):
lens = [len(item) for item in df['days']]
return pd.DataFrame( {"name" : np.repeat(df['name'].values,lens),
"days" : np.concatenate(df['days'].values)})
def using_apply(df):
return (df.apply(lambda x: pd.Series(x.days), axis=1).stack().reset_index(level=1, drop=1).to_frame('day').join(df['name']))
The second answer requires a good understanding of pandas, using at least 6 functions. Such a response is usually "first to market" and often the one that is accepted. But the chances are if this is the one the user accepts, as soon as some minor change is required, they will return with another question / answer. Which suits both questioners and responders well if the respective goals are to fix something quickly and maximise reputation.
A case in point is that I see these questions which ask to split pandas columns of lists on a very regular basis: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Given a few more minutes, I could find dozens of these.
My Question
What is the point of SO? Is it to provide smart, optimal one-line solutions to problems that need to be maintained by SO responders should requirements change? Or should it be to provide the tools and knowledge so that questioners can incorporate, understand and easily adapt solutions? If the latter, how can we encourage this behaviour, when incentives appear to be aligned towards quick-solutions/max-rep?