> On Oct 11, 2019, at 9:19 AM, Mike Bayer wrote:
>
> GNU Mailman is still very widely used and IMO does the job very well
Its web interface is like something from 1997. In particular, it makes reading
archives very painful, clicking through to one message at a time.
I’d recommend groups.io —
> On Oct 11, 2019, at 7:43 AM, GopiKrishna Parisa
> wrote:
>
> One weird thing is for some insertions, it's taking more than 200 msec for
> single record where as others takes around 20 to 40 (avag 27 msec).
Those sound like numbers I’d expect for committing a transaction. (The longer
time is
This is not a sample, but all the systolic blood pressure values of all of
our patients.
All this has to do with the calculation of the QRisk3 score:
https://qrisk.org/three/
RBS
On Sat, Oct 12, 2019 at 5:34 PM Richard Damon
wrote:
> One thing to point out, it sounds like you are dealing with a
One thing to point out, it sounds like you are dealing with a sample,
and I think you want to get the estimated standard deviation of the
process, which says you really want to use the adjusted formula that
uses N-1 in the denominator, as the expected value of the standard
deviation of a sample is
Thanks, I do know how to calculate the SD in code, but I thought in this
particular case it might be faster to do this in SQL.
Only problem is the square root and for that reason I will test this in
code as well and see how it compares with SQL.
I found a way to get the one from last step, so that
#!python3
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function,
unicode_literals
import apsw
db = apsw.Connection()
db.executescript("""
create table x
(
value integer not null
);
insert into x values (120), (130), (140), (110);
""")
# Method 1: Using partial Running calc
On 10/12/19 11:23 AM, Richard Damon wrote:
> On 10/12/19 10:08 AM, Bart Smissaert wrote:
>> How do I get the standard deviation of the last 4 entries (there could be
>> less than 4) of an integer column grouped by an integer ID entry in another
>> column in the same table.
>>
>> So data could be li
On 10/12/19 10:08 AM, Bart Smissaert wrote:
> How do I get the standard deviation of the last 4 entries (there could be
> less than 4) of an integer column grouped by an integer ID entry in another
> column in the same table.
>
> So data could be like this:
>
> ID xValue
>
> 1 13
The Standard Deviation of the Population is the Square Root of the mean of the
second order differences.
For your input values, you calculate the mean.
Then you calculate the mean of the square of the difference between each value
and the mean of the values.
Then you take the square root of tha
Sorry, I forgot to tell that. It is date column with an integer number.
ID xValue xDate
1 130 40123
1 120 41232
1 140 40582
1 100 40888
1 110 42541
2 140 41225
2 130 41589
2 150 40872
RBS
On Sat, Oct 12, 2019 at 3:18 PM Igo
On 10/12/2019 10:08 AM, Bart Smissaert wrote:
How do I get the standard deviation of the last 4 entries (there could be
less than 4) of an integer column grouped by an integer ID entry in another
column in the same table.
What do you mean by "last 4 entries"? What determines the order? How does
How do I get the standard deviation of the last 4 entries (there could be
less than 4) of an integer column grouped by an integer ID entry in another
column in the same table.
So data could be like this:
ID xValue
1 130
1 120
1 140
1 100
1 110
2 140
2 130
2 150
I
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