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Find column whose name contains a specific string
I have a dataframe with column names, and I want to find the one that contains a certain string, but does not exactly match it. I'm searching for 'spike' in column names like 'spike-2' , 'hey spike' , 'spiked-in' (the 'spike' part is always continuous).
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How do I tokenize a string in C++?
Java has a convenient split method:
35 Answers
35
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MIN and MAX in C
Where are MIN and MAX defined in C, if at all?
14 Answers
14
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Reshaping data.frame from wide to long format
I have some trouble to convert my data.frame from a wide table to a long table.
At the moment it looks like this:
9 Answe...
How do I use arrays in C++?
C++ inherited arrays from C where they are used virtually everywhere. C++ provides abstractions that are easier to use and less error-prone ( std::vector<T> since C++98 and std::array<T, n> since C++11 ), so the need for arrays does not arise quite as often as it does in C. However, ...
How can I select an element with multiple classes in jQuery?
I want to select all the elements that have the two classes a and b .
13 Answers
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Django: multiple models in one template using forms [closed]
I'm building a support ticket tracking app and have a few models I'd like to create from one page. Tickets belong to a Customer via a ForeignKey. Notes belong to Tickets via a ForeignKey as well. I'd like to have the option of selecting a Customer (that's a whole separate project) OR creating a new ...
byte[] to hex string [duplicate]
How do I convert a byte[] to a string ? Every time I attempt it, I get
19 Answers
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Using GCC to produce readable assembly?
I was wondering how to use GCC on my C source file to dump a mnemonic version of the machine code so I could see what my code was being compiled into. You can do this with Java but I haven't been able to find a way with GCC.
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Legality of COW std::string implementation in C++11
It had been my understanding that copy-on-write is not a viable way to implement a conforming std::string in C++11, but when it came up in discussion recently I found myself unable to directly support that statement.
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