details | Tools to deal with AWS detailed billing reports | AWS library
kandi X-RAY | details Summary
kandi X-RAY | details Summary
Utilities to process AWS detailed billing reports.
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Loads costs from file
- Adds a single line item
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QUESTION
I am trying to use dotenv and jest together, and run into an error immediately.
A single test file, tests/authenticationt.test.ts
with only
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-16 at 00:40try require('dotenv').config()
QUESTION
maybe you guys here can help. i’m trying to get a token in a script on a website with python beautiful soup but i’m stuck at one part. the request i make is
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 21:46You need access throught JSON, there has an option:
QUESTION
int i = i;
int main() {
int a = a;
return 0;
}
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 02:44Surprisingly, this is not undefined behavior.
Static initialization [basic.start.static]
Constant initialization is performed if a variable or temporary object with static or thread storage duration is constant-initialized. If constant initialization is not performed, a variable with static storage duration or thread storage duration is zero-initialized. Together, zero-initialization and constant initialization are called static initialization; all other initialization is dynamic initialization. All static initialization strongly happens before any dynamic initialization.
Important parts bold-faced. "Static initialization" includes global variable initialization, "static storage duration" includes global variables, and the above clause is applicable here:
QUESTION
I would like to extract the definitions from the book The Navajo Language: A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary by Young and Morgan. They look like this (very blurry):
I tried running it through the Google Cloud Vision API, and got decent results, but it doesn't know what to do with these "special" letters with accent marks on them, or the curls and lines on/through them. And because of the blurryness (there are no alternative sources of the PDF), it gets a lot of them wrong. So I'm thinking of doing it from scratch in Tesseract. Note the term is bold and the definition is not bold.
How can I use Node.js and Tesseract to get basically an array of JSON objects sort of like this:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 20:17Tesseract takes a lang
variable that you can expand to include different languages if they're installed. I've used the UB Mannheim (https://github.com/UB-Mannheim/tesseract/wiki) installation which includes a ton of languages supported.
To get better and more accurate results, the best thing to do is to process the image before handing it to Tesseract. Set a white/black threshold so that you have black text on white background with no shading. I'm not sure how to do this in Node, but I've done it with Python's OpenCV library.
If that font doesn't get you decent results with the out of the box, then you'll want to train your own, yes. This blog post walks through the process in great detail: https://towardsdatascience.com/simple-ocr-with-tesseract-a4341e4564b6. It revolves around using the jTessBoxEditor to hand-label the objects detected in the images you're using.
Edit: In brief, the process to train your own:
- Install jTessBoxEditor (https://sourceforge.net/projects/vietocr/files/jTessBoxEditor/). Requires Java Runtime installed as well.
- Collect your training images. They want to be .tiffs. I found I got fairly accurate results with not a whole lot of images that had a good sample of all the characters I wanted to detect. Maybe 30/40 images. It's tedious, so you don't want to do TOO many, but need enough in order to get a good sampling.
- Use jTessBoxEditor to merge all the images into a single .tiff
- Create a training label file (.box)j. This is done with Tesseract itself.
tesseract your_language.font.exp0.tif your_language.font.exp0 makebox
- Now you can open the box file in jTessBoxEditor and you'll see how/where it detected the characters. Bounding boxes and what character it saw. The tedious part: Hand fix all the bounding boxes and characters to accurately represent what is in the images. Not joking, it's tedious. Slap some tv episodes up and just churn through it.
- Train the tesseract model itself
- save a file:
font_properties
who's content isfont 0 0 0 0 0
- run the following commands:
tesseract num.font.exp0.tif font_name.font.exp0 nobatch box.train
unicharset_extractor font_name.font.exp0.box
shapeclustering -F font_properties -U unicharset -O font_name.unicharset font_name.font.exp0.tr
mftraining -F font_properties -U unicharset -O font_name.unicharset font_name.font.exp0.tr
cntraining font_name.font.exp0.tr
You should, in there close to the end see some output that looks like this:
Master shape_table:Number of shapes = 10 max unichars = 1 number with multiple unichars = 0
That number of shapes should roughly be the number of characters present in all the image files you've provided.
If it went well, you should have 4 files created: inttemp
normproto
pffmtable
shapetable
. Rename them all with the prefix of your_language
from before. So e.g. your_language.inttemp
etc.
Then run:
combine_tessdata your_language
The file: your_language.traineddata
is the model. Copy that into your Tesseract's data folder. On Windows, it'll be like: C:\Program Files x86\tesseract\4.0\tessdata
and on Linux it's probably something like /usr/shared/tesseract/4.0/tessdata
.
Then when you run Tesseract, you'll pass the lang=your_language
. I found best results when I still passed an existing language as well, so like for my stuff it was still English I was grabbing, just funny fonts. So I still wanted the English as well, so I'd pass: lang=your_language+eng
.
QUESTION
I'm writing a Firebase function (Gist) which
Queries a realtime database ref (events) in the following fashion:
await admin.database().ref('/events_geo').once('value').then(snapshots => {
Iterates through all the events
snapshots.forEach(snapshot => {
Events are filtered by a criteria for further processing
Several queries are fired off towards realtime DB to get details related to the event
await database().ref("/ratings").orderByChild('fk_event').equalTo(snapshot.key).once('value').then(snapshots => {
Data is prepared for SendGrid and the processing is finished
All of the data processing works perfectly fine but I can't get the outer await (point 1 in my list) to wait for the inner awaits (queries towards realtime DB) and thus when SendGrid should be called the data is empty. The data arrives a little while later. Example output from Firebase function logs can be seen below:
10:54:12.642 AM Function execution started
10:54:13.945 AM There are no emails to be sent in afterEventHostMailGoodRating
10:54:14.048 AM There are no emails to be sent in afterEventHostMailBadRating
10:54:14.052 AM Function execution took 1412 ms, finished with status: 'ok'
10:54:14.148 AM
Super hyggelig aften :)
super oplevelse, ... long string generated
Gist showing the function in question
I'm probably mixing up my async/awaits because of the awaits inside the await. But I don't see how else the code could be written without splitting it out into many atomic pieces but that would still require stitching a bunch of awaits together and make it harder to read.
So, two questions in total. Can this code work and what would be the ideal way to handle this pattern of making further processing on top of data fetched from Realtime DB?
Best regards, Simon
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 11:20Your problem is that you use async
in a foreEach
loop here:
QUESTION
Details
I'm working on an algo dealing with a multi-dimensional array. If there is a zero, then the elements of the same column, but following arrays will also equal zero. I want to be able to sum the items that are not zeroed out.
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 17:18Try this code
QUESTION
In the app file I have a function called refreshList, when I update things in a database on the site I call it so that the state is updated and all the components are refreshed.
But I noticed something very strange when I called the function
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 12:33This is a very common behavior you face if you don't understand async/await
promise
topic.
Try this code:
QUESTION
I am querying a database for an item using R2DBC and Spring Integration. I want to extend the transaction boundary a bit to include a handler - if the handler fails I want to roll back the database operation. But I'm having difficulty even establishing transactionality explicitly in my integration flow. The flow is defined as
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 18:32Well, it's indeed not possible that declarative way since we don't have hook for injecting to the reactive type in the middle on that level.
Try to look into a TransactionalOperator
and its usage from the Java DSL's fluxTransform()
:
QUESTION
I am using class based projection with constructor expressions. here is a sample code form my work
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 00:02try using left join
QUESTION
I have to POST customer details (list hardcode just for reff) and also I want to POST a list with unique ID.
I have written a simple For loop which adds customer details to the List only if my details to be POSTED have a unique Id, but I'm getting an error here which says "Not all code path returns a value". Please tell me if there is another simple way.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 16:51A method need to return something every time (return null
will work too), so when the return is in if
statement, it may not enter that if statement on all of the loop's iterations therefore not return
anything, so you need to have another return
either in else
statement, or outside of the if
statement.
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