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1:16 PM
rhubarb all
 
rbrb @Swordy
everything but one url working now
and I have no idea how it works on the original site, as I can't see it there either
bet the things reverse proxying something else
 
morning everyone
 
@JonClements I'm a big fan of something like waitress that's its own buffering, nginx-like server. Then you can keep all the (app-specific) config within Django or whatever routing framework you're using
 
has anyone worked on larger scale projects using WebGL or Three.js?
 
@Robert it's not using a routing framework, it's mostly in PHP with some .htaccess trickery to get other stuff done, and some nginx stuff to reverse proxy and re-write other stuff
it's a complete mess
 
1:24 PM
@JonClements ah :)
 
it's gotta be a cheating symlink somewbere
 
@JonClements but I feel my point still stands :)
Even though compared to what you're looking at, only having web framework routing and nginx rules is still probably a dream situation
 
just this one blasted link to find
and can't work out how it even works on the original server
because AFAICT - it shouldn't be doing so
 
@JonClements wish I could help :(
Wow, GvR thinking about static typing for python3
Ooh, magic is making the new version of Office install on my laptop as I work
 
ahhh huh
it's the root of the django app
 
1:31 PM
Ah :)
 
so should just be able to re-write that, and done... sighs
 
Wait, so this is PHP, .htaccess, Django AND nginx?
 
Just spent 29 minutes performing a 30-minute file transfer operation to a remote desktop, when I was interrupted by another user -_-
And of course we're not using a sane file transfer protocol, so there's no possibility of resuming partial transfers
 
@Robert one of the django's on uwsgi, the other on fast cgi, some php via mod_php and some via fast cgi
been trying to err, "make it sane"
 
how can you test a site for if it works with mobile while it's still in dev? User-Agent switcher suitable?
 
1:44 PM
Huh, I almost completely forgot PHP. Haven't used it for 2 years
 
@corvid not 100%, as the mobile browsers behave differently to each other and their desktop counterparts, if they have them
First test is just open the site in firefox, and hit ctrl-shift-m
 
that's fine -- I'm just trying to figure out Flask-Mobility
 
arhghgh... what's the syntax for re-writing a subdir to be /
(in nginx)
cbg @Games
 
@JonClements How's my favorite puppy in the whole wide world? :)
How ya been?
 
@Games I bet you say that to the other puppy when I'm not about :)
 
1:55 PM
No, you're cuter, so you win :P
And they say looks don't matter.
 
beams
 
I think that I am doing this wrong...
 
/me brings @Games an old slipper
 
So, hows it going? Are you any less busy?
lol
 
@GamesBrainiac I wish... having great fun at the moment
 
1:56 PM
@JonClements What are you up to? Anything interesting?
 
@bp.route(/<class>/static/<template>)
def template(class, template):
  if request.MOBILE:
    return render_template('class/{}/{}'.format(class, template))
  else:
    return render_template('mobile/class/{}/{}'.format(class, template))
 
@Games at the moment - no... pulling my hair out
 
@corvid oh sorry, ctrl-shift-m won't help with that
 
trying to make an insane setup, at least vaguely sane
 
@corvid Here's one advice that I got a long time ago that's served me well. That is serverside template rendering is pretty much dead, embrace js :)
@JonClements Whats the OS?
 
1:59 PM
@GamesBrainiac yeah but this is just a very quick mock-up, don't have time to add the front end frameworks right now
 
@corvid What are you trying to make?
 
The assignment is to make a mobile version of the site with jquery mobile and a plain version of the site. Alas the teacher is using PHP and I am using Flask.
 
Also, instead of adding if statements, why not just append to before_request method?
 
@corvid by plain do you mean javascript free or non-mobile?
 
@Games it's moved from a CentOS 4 (or something) to a Ubuntu 14.04
 
2:01 PM
@RobertGrant plain, in this case, basically just means "not using jquery mobile"
 
@JonClements Ahh, I usually get people moving to redhat based stuff, why the change to debian-based?
 
I prefer debian
no other reason than that
 
ahahahaha
A friend of mine is a die hard arch guy
 
arch totally wins
 
Honestly, I had so much trouble setting it up, I just quit at one point.
 
2:03 PM
not that bad, took me back then as a new linux user a day
setting up the software and crap for it to be usable took forever tho
 
Yea, I was pretty new at the time too. I was just getting my feet wet with linux.
 
whatcha mean by that games? As in, determine the path for the templates in before_request?
 
compiling your slackware kernel from floppies in the good old days was fun :)
 
Since arch was the "biggest and the baddest" at that time, I tried it out :D
 
Still is :)
 
2:04 PM
@JonClements Man, those were the days.
 
@JonClements hardcore maschocism :D
 
@corvid ah okay :)
 
@corvid Yea, your path should get all the data, without have to worrying about all the nitty gritties.
 
@GamesBrainiac flask-mobility seems to have a decorator for "mobile template", but I think I am using it wrong.
 
People say not to use g, but man use g. g is awesome.
 
2:08 PM
Sorry but what's g?
 
@simonzack Flask().g. It’s a global variable that you can just stick things on and it lives on in the request.
 
In this question, the OP wishes to use threading in order to download many files simultaneously. Would this actually be faster than a single-threaded design? It's not clear to me whether the GIL restricts network file transfers or not. For all I know, the actual IO is being done in a separate process.
 
that worked, games. g seems suitable for use in this context, I think a lot of people just try to use it to find "hacky" solutions to flask problems
 
@Kevin GIL is cool with networks, its actually parallel processing that it has a problem with. When you download stuff, python isn't really doing anything.
However, too many parallel streams and then you might have a problem. I say might because it depends.
 
I'm don't know GIL that well, but does it mean that python bytecode can only execute atomicly?
 
2:11 PM
Pardon my intrusion but can I ask my question here ?
 
@d-coder Yes.
@simonzack Yeah, that's generally the case.
 
@simonzack cpython's implementation means that.
pypy on the other hand is a little different.
 
@d-coder but since you're only allowed one question a day... you've already used it :p
 
@GamesBrainiac Yeah, "too many parallel streams" is actually the main point of the OP's post. He has too many files open at once.
 
Yea I hear they're trying to work around the gil
 
2:13 PM
@d-coder on a more less jovial note: please check sopython.com/pages/chatroom to make sure your question is going to be acceptable - thank you in advance
 
@Kevin I know this, because I tried downloading a ton of files in parallel at one point. In py3, this is almost never an issue, with py2 its an issue.
@Kevin But there can also be another reason. Unless the guy has SSD, the HD will slow down the process too.
I think @inspectorG4dget asked a question regarding this some time ago.
 
Is that so ? I have question ban. It says my question limit has been reached. So I don't how to remove it. I've answered few question which was well received but still
 
The exact mechanics of the question ban, are shrouded in mystery.
 
No idea you profile looks alright to me
Can't see any downvotes
 
Let's see, I think there's a guideline on Meta...
 
2:15 PM
Yes! But it says I have reached my question limit. What does that mean ?
 
if one gets banned, how can he remove that?
 
@simonzack If he's deleted any questions, then the downvotes from those posts may still count.
 
@d-coder Did you delete any of your questions?
 
Yes!
SO keeps account of that too ? :(
 
Then that’s the problem. If you delete a question on SO, it has to be for a damn good reason.
Otherwise, the system thinks its spam.
 
2:16 PM
51
Q: What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”?

Robert HarveyDo not repost the question you were about to ask until you have READ EVERYTHING WE ARE ABOUT TO TELL YOU. While trying to ask a question, one could get: We are no longer accepting questions from this account. See the Help Center to learn more. Likewise, for answers: We are no longer a...

 
Ok! Now the solution for that would be ?
 
In particular, see the section labeled "What can I do to release the ban?"
 
Okay! Cool
Now can I ask my question ? Real one ?
 
Yeah.
 
@Kevin Honestly, I got a question ban when I first came in. I asked C++ questions. The guys were so mean to me, that I just deleted my questions in shame.
 
2:18 PM
Aw :-(
 
Yea, I mean when a community you respect is mean to you, it just totally sucks.
But then I grew a harder skin and all was well :D
 
i have deleted some questions few weeks back, will that be a problem?
 
> deleted questions (if less than 30 days old when deleted) and deleted answers count towards an automatic ban. [...] It's not a problem to have deleted posts. But if a large percentage of your posts are deleted by yourself or the community, then apparently they are not suitable for the site.
 
@ChillarAnand Perhaps. Its hard to tell, but I can say is that don't do it anymore, and don't care if you have -6 in downvotes, everything will just wash over.
 
I'm generating a .txt file which has to be stored in directory I specify. How to achieve it ? Should I paste my code here ?
 
2:20 PM
if it’s a large piece of code, please use dpaste.de
 
its a snippet
 
shoot then
 
Seems like a straightforward task.
data = get_data()
directory = raw_input("Enter the name of the directory to save this in: ")
file = open(directory + "/" + "output.txt", "w")
file.write(data)
file.close()
 
@GamesBrainiac @Kevin i asked some stupid questions and did nt got answers. so i deleted them. will be careful in future
 
f = open(file_name,"a")
for i in listofheading:
f.write(i)
for j in listofdata:
f.write(j)
f.close()
 
2:22 PM
@corvid Glad I could help. I might seem a little snarky sometimes, but feel free to ask my any help with pretty much anything in python. I'm more than happy to :D
 
try to use context managers @d-coder
 
@d-coder First, use context managers. Google that, and ask me your second question. the with statement might also help you triangulate what you're trying to find.
 
Done!
Thanks guys!
 
@Kevin heyyy, you're not supposed to give him the answer :P
 
I know :-( It's not even a good answer. I should have suggested os.path.join, but I didn't feel like importing.
And it doesn't use context managers, which you all seem to love :-P
 
2:25 PM
HA!
 
import os.path
data = get_data()
directory = raw_input("Enter the name of the directory to save this in: ")
with open(os.path.join(directory, "output.txt"), "w") as file:
    file.write(data)
There, all better.
 
I actually used os.chdir() but it permanently changed the path
 
Looks good, except I don't like python 2 & raw_input() much
 
Anyway, the main point I am trying to convey is, open can accept more than just filenames. You can specify the path as well, absolute or relative.
 
I'm using django so it goes crazy if I change the directory
 
2:27 PM
@Kevin context managers are just safer man, that’s all.
 
And they look prettier
 
@GamesBrainiac On one hand, I like code with fewer lines. On the other hand, I dislike code with more indentation.
 
I started using them everywhere after closing() was introduced
 
Thanks Kevin
 
I know, I'll open files, but not close them. Thus, I'll have as few lines as the with approach, but with none of the indentation >:-)
 
2:29 PM
I just posted a scons question -> stackoverflow.com/q/26467113/350713
 
@Kevin I get that, but say the with statement that you just used, its doing more than just opening and closing the file stream ;)
 
@Kevin Yeah same, but I prefer indentation over more lines :)
 
@simonzack Be careful with Kevin when you talk fewer lines. He made an entire program just using lambdas, and all in one line.
Just sayin bratha :P
@Kevin is badass when it comes to line efficiency.
 
lol I like the sound of that
 
I will take any excuse to repost my baby:
Jan 7 at 21:06, by Kevin
Today's experiment: Fizzbuzz in 56,909 bytes
 
2:33 PM
so isn't bootstrap mobile friendly? Is there really a reason to make a separate mobile site if the site is basic enough?
 
@corvid Please don't use bootstrap. If I hear that name one more time, Imma pop.
 
@corvid the latest one is very mobile friendly
 
what's bad about it? It's easy
 
@Kevin Man this brings back memories.
 
@Kevin look at the state of that lamdba
 
2:34 PM
@Kevin i cant see anything except lambda!
 
There's a 0 in there somewhere.
 
@ChillarAnand now, for a moment, you see the world the way @Kevin does all the time
 
Haha nice, is that lambda calculus?
 
Yeah.
 
@GamesBrainiac <3 Boooooooooootstraaaaaaaaaaaaaap.
 
2:37 PM
I never understood that
 
@Ffisegydd Die.
 
@Kevin please explain in a way that will make sense to me
@GamesBrainiac are you a Foundational man? :)
 
There I zapped you, you little evil baby.
 
It employs church encoding, as indicated by the original conversation
 
@RobertGrant Nope ;)
 
2:38 PM
The unobfuscated version is more straightforward.
 
I shouldn't have talked about Kevin's baby. Now he can't stop. :P
 
@GamesBrainiac why you dont like bootstrap?
 
@GamesBrainiac go on then. What are you?
 
Nice work, thought they were all constants.
 
@ChillarAnand the problem with Bootstrap is it isn't nice semantic HTML attributes. The advantage of bootstrap is simple, but too long to fit in this margin
 
2:40 PM
@RobertGrant Pure.
 
i just started using it. looks ok for now
 
@ChillarAnand Too much rubbish.
 
@RobertGrant The basic premise is: any non-negative integer can be represented as a function with arguments f, x, which calls f a certain number of times.
 
As in there's way too much crap you don't need.
 
user559633
bootstrap is great :)
 
2:41 PM
So zero equals x, one equals f(x), two equals f(f(x)), etc.
 
But its good for non-artists
 
user559633
get someone to handle the stupid cross browser stuff? awesome
 
@tristan and responsive
 
is someone trying to wish death upon my former BFF? /me walks around the room bearing this teeth and growling - bring it on!
 
@tristan Why not just use sass then?
 
user559633
2:41 PM
sass isn't x-browser compat
 
or responsive
guesses
 
user559633
actually doesn't make sense as a response even
 
Sorry, talking about compass
 
@Kevin yep, that (sort of) makes sense
 
It’s the whole deal.
 
2:43 PM
so four calls three, three calls two, two calls one, etc
 
But frankly put, the real reason I have a gripe with bootstrap is that it makes every site look generic. I'm sick and tired of jumbotrons.
 
In fact that's literally in your code
 
They were rather unique in the 90s
now that was the golden age of web design
 
@GamesBrainiac it's brilliant for that, given that the lowest common denominator is now bootstrap. Remember angelfire? :)
 
You can then use these functions to simulate simple logical branching. For example, IS_ZERO = lambda n: n(lambda x: FALSE)(TRUE). Zero is the only number that doesn't call f at all, so it's the only one that returns TRUE when passed to this function.
 
user559633
2:44 PM
@GamesBrainiac you don't have to use jumbotrons.
 
@RobertGrant You just had to do that to me, didn't you :P
 
user559633
I use their base layout and then just throw in my own containers.
 
user559633
I'm reasonably happy with how it's working
 
@tristan No, no you don't. But if all you use in bootstrap are its buttons and grids, just use pure then. Same thing, just looks different and won't look generic.
 
You could work up some css magic to make it look different though
 
2:46 PM
OK, so what it boils down to is this: I don't use/like bs since its generic, and pure is the same thing with a different face, so its nicer.
 
user559633
I feel as if that if I stopped using bootstrap, i'd end up with something very similar to how it looks in bootstrap (menu, sticky footer, grid layout), but then i'd have to deal with cross-browser dumbness. i use bootstrap/foundation/frameworks so i have other people maintaining it
 
Anyone know of an up to date article on setting up a Django virtual environment? The one I'm using is from 2012 and a lot of it is giving issues
 
Yea, will pure will do that for you. I get the crazy cross browser thing man, I just can't take bootstraps buttons and jumbotrons anymore.
 
@GamesBrainiac I'm just teaching you to love bootstrap :)
 
@RobertGrant Remember those animated gifs and those sprinkles trailing your mouse?
 
2:48 PM
You a designer @GamesBrainiac? I personally don't mind every program looking like windows xp
 
Oh what a wonderful world.
@simonzack You will when you try to sell that program ;)
 
@GamesBrainiac oh yeah, the mouse trail things were amazing for the time, actually. But yeah, not amazing now :)
@GamesBrainiac ...to designers :)
@GamesBrainiac Pure does look cool though, I might use that
 
@RobertGrant We have a convert people. Halelujah.
 
user559633
link to pure?
 
@Kevin can you guess how many lambdas are there in your program?
 
2:50 PM
@tristan purecss.io
 
user559633
i don't really care what i use as long as someone else is doing the stupid browser/css compat junk
 
I like how this teacher bases every assignment off of which "national day" it is. The assignment for October 14th was to make a "national bald appreciation day" website
 
@corvid what about a national lazy teacher day?
 
user559633
the pure landing page looks like bootstrap
 
Or is that...every day? :)
 
2:51 PM
@ChillarAnand About 4,000
 
user559633
zing
 
he already has his own website!
nah but this teacher is cool
 
@Kevin banana.. 4304!
 
Most of them are copy-pasted from one another
 
looks interesting. want to do something like that :)
 
user559633
2:53 PM
My current startup uses fewer than a dozen templates, so i might end up switching to Pure if the a/b test shows the same browser and mobile support, display times, and reduced bandwidth
 
@Kevin It would be interesting to make a function that compiles to lambda calc.
 
But anyway. @corvid use Bootstrap for this project, and use something else next time.
 
user559633
like foundation
 
user559633
so you can tell me where it has issues
 
2:54 PM
eh, I am lazy with html
 
I think one of the things with those frameworks is whether or not they have feature parity in terms of widgets etc
 
Honestly, I use angular, and I don't feel like I'm writing html when I write it :P
Its pretty cool.
 
I use angular sometimes, it is frustrating sometimes because it seems to get very complex
 
@corvid Just do it how the big shots tell you to do it, and you'll be fine. You can ofc use ember or bb, but man bb has too much boilerplate.
 
yeah, I dunno javascript just always strikes me as unnecessarily complex
 
2:56 PM
@PeterVaro awakens
 
@corvid I don't blame you one bit for feeling that way. Wait for es6 though, its got some amazing features.
 
user559633
 
One thing I never liked about angular is it trying include everything, promises, manage modules, ajax and all that
 
I don't like when I have a simple problem like "I want to make this element go here, and delete this" and then it leads to reading thick documentation on directives just to get started
 
user559633
at least when you're done writing it in a better way in js, no one will notice or care
 
3:00 PM
Has anyone tried Google Polymer?
 
@tristan @corvid at least KevinScript will solve all future debates about this - won't it @Kevin!? :p
 
@JonClements KevinScript's one keyword, lambda, also makes the syntax very regular
 
yeah, I usually just make it a strategy to minimize any javascript... IMO it gets so complicated so quickly
 
user559633
I'm using KevinScript now
 
cbg @DSM
 
3:02 PM
@JonClements Reading thick documentation is a thing of the past with Kevinscript, because it has no documentation at all!
 
DSM
Cabbage for all. I have some numerical code to write today in C#, but maybe KevinScript is an alternative route..
 
user559633
That's actually how I'm using the pre-release of KS
 
The source is all the specification you'll ever need. You'll read the whole thing and like it!
 
user559633
It's faith-based computing -- i put my runtime-critical code in a try/except block and hope that kevin script is available when the site goes live
 
Yep, that fits the KS philosophy. "put off your problems today, so someone else can fix them in the future"
 
DSM
3:05 PM
Be fun to see when KS becomes self-hosting.
 
@Kevin that's how I code. Make a load of nice, clean utilities, which don't solve the problem at hand exactly but are easy to write, then tie them together in hideous, inefficient ways
 
@DSM Working on it, albeit glacially. I wouldn't actually have to rewrite most of the parser generator code that already exists. Once the language is stable, I could generate a single static table that works for all KS programs.
 
lambda a: lambda b: (a) ??
 
I think I need to make a KS-to-C compiler first, though. The interpreter I have now executes KS programs about 10 times slower than an equivalent program written in the host language.
So self-hosting KS would be a hundred times slower.
 
user559633
ks-assembly
 
3:12 PM
(note to new users: KevinScript is a project of mine that is completely distinct from the 4,000 lambda monster I posted earlier today)
 
user559633
why settle for anything less than direct hardware access
 
I would love a KS-to-assembly compiler! But I don't know enough assembly to do that :-)
 
user559633
"to use this website, you must first install kvm with intel extensions"
 
C is more within my reach. Or C++, more realistically.
 
@Kevin have u written any other (in)sane programmes like the lamda one?
 
DSM
3:15 PM
Could go the llvm route.
 
What about KS-to-Brython?
 
@DSM Yep, that's in my "to investigate" pile from our last conversation.
 
dash.app is being weird today.
 
That's got to a be a killer combo
 
@ChillarAnand Not that I can remember.
 
user559633
3:16 PM
KS-Ruby
 
user559633
And Ruby to the little garbage bin on your computer.
 
Hey, I've got an idea about how to make Python much easier for newcomers
 
DSM
@Kevin: well, at least I'm consistent. :-)
 
user559633
@RobertGrant what, force reading of a page of documentation?
 
ln -s easy_install egg_install
 
3:18 PM
@RobertGrant egg_install?
 
user559633
reminds me of the time i aliased cd to rm -rf on a coworker's machine
 
@ChillarAnand egg_install.
 
user559633
eggs?
 
@tristan eggs.
This is the @RobertGrant AMA
 
@RobertGrant Of the scrambled variety?
cabbage(**users)
 
3:20 PM
My next point of confusion: why does Perl get Parrot? Surely Python should have something called Parrot instead.
 
user559633
 
user559633
eggs?
 
Eggs don't come out of mouths. I'm pretty sure Birdo is shooting some kind of crystallized gland secretion.
 
user559633
oh, eggs :(
 
user559633
i remember being a child and not really understanding why birdo was shooting potential children at me
 
3:24 PM
Most likely tonsil stones. (content warning: Wikipedia's article on that contains amateur pictures of the condition. Grossness level 3/10)
 
@Kevin I'm too young to know what Birdo is :C
 
i'm a computer science student and need the answer of these question ASAP. — Muhammad Danyal Saleem 44 secs ago
Love the attitude.
 
Anyone care to fill me in?
 
Birdo is an enemy in the game Super Mario Bros 2. It attacks the player character by firing large white things out of its mouth.
See above for a picture.
 
Huh. That's odd.
 
3:29 PM
The ambiguity regarding its gender also lends credence to the "those aren't eggs" theory.
 
Looks like I have a game to play >:)
 
Ok, but don't expect to find any answers :-)
 
@Kevin Maybe there isn't an answer :O
 
TIL downloading more than one doctest in dash at a time, will cause it to crash.
 
I guess it's not surprising that Mario ignores inconsistencies in biology, since it does the same for physics, history, topology...
 
3:35 PM
@Kevin I'd mention chemistry with the whole bouncing fireballs thing.
 
rbrb
 
Hey, what is the easiest way to produce an iterator that would produce all windows of size N of a string?
 
@Iplodman eating mushrooms also don't make you run faster or grow larger or get an extra life - they just make you see things man! SEE THINGS MAN! SEE THINGS MAN!
 
"ABCD" N=2:
"AB", "BC", "CD"
it has to be an iterator to not run out of memory
 
3:43 PM
@DSM Reminds me of the species of snake which carries its young in its mouth. Then when a predator appears, it opens its jaw and a hundred tiny snakes spring out. This is usually effective at scaring the predator away.
 
def windows(s, n):
for i in range(n, len(s)): yield s[i:i+n]
 
It is not encouraged for other species to try this. Human mothers, please don't throw your baby at a bear.
 
er ixs are wrong
 
DSM
(s[i:i+N] for i in range(len(s)-N+1)) or something would probably work (in 3; in 2 use xrange.)
 
@DSM better
 
3:44 PM
Thank you both
 
Sep 8 at 11:05, by R.A.B.B.I.T
from itertools import islice, tee

data = [1,2,3,4,5]
slices = (islice(el, n, None) for n, el in enumerate(tee(data, 3)))
print zip(*slices)
# [(1, 2, 3), (2, 3, 4), (3, 4, 5)]
 
DSM
@Kevin: it's scary enough that I don't even want to reread your comment for fear of bringing the mental image back.
 
I have some a flask app, and I want to show some mpld3 plots: trying this but it just displays a bunch of JSON text on my page...
any suggestions?
 
@RokKralj obviously adapt the window size and data :)
that way it'll cope in a memory efficient way of an iterable, not just sizeable's
 
yes, Jon, yours seems more complicated, but it's not prone to one-off errors
 
3:47 PM
Basically, if I have an mpld3 object generated, what do I "route" to flask? can I just do mpld3.show()?
 
@jakebrinkmann you need to design your frontend to consume the json
the answer you linked to has some sample html
 
@RokKralj two ways around that, chunk the data, or izip_longest the data
 
if you can see the json then it's not being processed in the javascript
 
Sometimes, I feel that underscore is a requirement for js development. The funcs are just so useful.
 
user559633
lol, yahoo re-uses old email addresses
 
user559633
3:49 PM
no way nothing bad will come of that, no
 
@tristan Why the very thought.
 
@metaperture yes, sorry, I guess, how do I get json01 into the html?
like, when the page renders, it is still the template, no figures...
*I cannot see the JSON once I returned render_template() instead of just the json01, but how can I get the json01 into the template?
@metaperture I cannot see the JSON once I returned render_template() instead of just the json01, but how can I get the json01 into the template?
 
can you make a separate gitignore for two different remotes?
 
@corvid you're going to need to make a config file for that.
 
do I just need to say json01 = ... and a = render_template(...) and then return a.format(<snip JSON code>=json01) for routing the view to flask?
 
3:58 PM
@PeterVaro You're right about yosemite. The design sucks.
The folders just look bad.
 
I quite like Yosemite, although I don't think the designers had to take a six month holiday to see it.
 

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