so spent £350 taking it to a dealership so they could reprogram the immobiliser and alarm and issue another key... etc.... about 3 weeks later, get back from shopping, re-arrange the freezer and underneath a packet of frozen peas... guess what I found :(
@JonClements Reminds me of the time I lost my credit card, and had to cancel it, at the expense of some fees. Six months later I found it in a pile of textbooks.
I blame the university for that. It's their fault they made me buy a pile of books that I never read.
@corvid Go to interview. Important: leave mother at home.
Last useful textbook I had was high school trigonometry. It had a lovely table with every sin/cos/tan identity you would ever need.
The rest of the book was useless, but that table was incredible.
These days, I know you can find the angles of a triangle if you know all three sides, but I don't know how to actually find them :-( What if my life depends on that kind of information one day?
(this page says "use the law of cosines", but the font they use in their illustrations is too fun. I can't take them seriously.)
@corvid I've got a mixed php/flask and django setup for a single website, that's handled by some rather kludged middleware and nginx rules... but that's not on heroku... but it is possible...
Urf. Because I was lazy I used except Exception even though we always tell people not to, and naturally it swallowed a NameError because of a typo. Sometimes I think experience doesn't prevent mistakes so much as decrease the time to find them..
@DSM it was a very rare exception, took me ages to reproduce... but the function was dropping off the end and returning None, which was sometimes valid in another function depending on something else...
Random fact of the day: it was only in the last year that I learned that matplotlib accepts "upper left" and so on as legend locations, so I didn't have to keep experimenting to find out which number corresponded to what corner.
@DSM Additional random fact of the day: although thinking this room was about reptiles, I seem to have blended in with the natives and convinced them I know "programming"
I've thought about adding a character count indicator to chat, but it's surprisingly difficult to detect when a change has been made to a textbox, in a robust way. Ex. just checking for keyup events won't detect when you right click and choose "paste".
@Kevin dude - I'm racing you in the starconomy now.... I just copy pasted '1234567890' * 20 and I'm ahead of you for the day already - fear me! muhahahhaa
I could just make it check every millisecond, but that's a tragedy of the commons. What if every script had such polling behavior, your computer would lock up
For anyone that actually wants to read that, I suggest bookmarking it with a vague title, and forgetting about it for a few months. That way you won't know the joke ahead of time.
Hey guys, please enlighten me on gevent/greenlet context locals: is it correct that all variables declared and used e.g. in my gevent.wsgi apps should be managed with local context manager? What happens if I don't? I've read quite a bit on this topic, but I am still confused.
@DSM well it uses dateutil.parser.parse under the hood, which similarly returns datetime.datetime(2014, 1, 24, 0, 0). So I suspect it's just the "fuzzy" searching going bad.
especially since, you can't disagree with someone else that has protected a question, so it's only you/a mod that unprotect it again... and never been convinced it does any good anyway
@DSM wow... we almost have the same attitude... I use to go all out answering... hence the spurt to 20k odd in the first year or something... now I look at some questions, and think "I can't think of a dupe, but that's boring - I'll find something interesting, someone else on the answer rampage disease can have it"
hypoctically I do still sometimes answer some of the easier ones if all it's getting is crap answers
mostly out of fear that the asker is going to think they're getting correct approaches or something
I'd say that these days, I answer 1/3rd of the questions I know the answer to. Most of the time I assume 1) someone else will submit a half-baked answer before I compose something good, 2) the OP is going to move the goalposts and withhold any reward until I finish their homework, or 3) the OP simply won't understand the answer.
besides, I've already got trusted user... a couple more tag gold badges wouldn't go amiss, but got python gold... so not overly fussed... since I know everyone is going to vote the awesome cute yellow puppy for mod next year aren't they? :p cough
actually, he's been really annoying lately in the flask and sqlalchemy tags
If you don't understand the question, why are you posting an answer? The asker wants to read configuration from a database rather than a config file. — davidism1 min ago
@Ronald: unfortunately the chat room isn't a great place to cover broad subjects like that. You'll have much better luck reading through longer tutorials on the net.
I've used it maybe a handful of times, and I've been programming in Python since before ~1.5.1. It doesn't come up much for typical uses, by which I mean using Python to solve problems, as opposed to using CPython as an interpreter.
Because you shouldn’t need to read about something to find out why to use it somewhere else. Usually you have a problem you want to solve, and then you find the right tool and read about that.
I write lots of code in Python because it works for the problems I'm throwing at it. I also write lots of code in C++ because there are things I need done which Python can't do (mostly performance-related). Seldom do I need to connect the two.
That's not so common. In our case, it happens because we have a complete, nice, framework in C++, and we wanted to be able to integrate Python into it.
But that's the kind of thing you just do once and you're done.
@MarcusStuhr well, I thought it would be nice let's say taking existing code in C you have written in the past and then make it callable from Python without having to rewrite anything in Python. That way, I would have cut down on a lot of time
I can imagine using Python inside C if I wanted to make use of a module or something. "How shall I parse this user-inputted expression? I know, I'll use ast to make an AST"
Before I learnt Python when I was still beginning learning C#, I remember my good friend telling me that "Python is like a switchboard that help you make your C# talk to your Java talk to your Forth peacefully"