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DSM
5:01 PM
@Games: the only stuff I think is new in 8 which touches anything I'm doing are lambdas and streams, and neither of those are particularly exciting for a Python programmer. :^)
 
@DSM I hear you. I think I will have to teach a couple of kids Swing programming in the coming months, and I really don't want to do it in Java.
 
@DSM I could but I don't know how it could be sanely behave with <= >= ect
@GamesBrainiac you can use groovy for example
 
Can you parse XML with regex?
0
Q: Regex multiple expression

FauphiI've got the following structure: <ins rev="REV-NEU" editindex="0"> <insacc rev="c3ce7877-42bf-4c41-b3c0-fd225ccaf512">eins</insacc> <insacc rev="c3ce7877-42bf-4c41-b3c0-fd225ccaf512">zwei</insacc> <insacc rev="c3ce7877-42bf-4c41-b3c0-fd225ccaf512">drei</insacc> <insacc rev="c3ce7877...

 
@XavierCombelle I've never used groovy, but I have used Scala, hence my preference.
 
@vaultah Generally, no. Regexes aren't powerful enough.
 
5:07 PM
@vaultah You shouldn't, but you could if you're really determined.
(from the regex faq)
 
Today my coworker discussed the estimated time to completion of a project we're working on. "three weeks. Four weeks in the worse case scenario".
 
Guys, is there a site/newpaper/group letter that you read and find very useful?
 
@Kevin three months later
 
This seems like a shocking lack of imagination, to me. What if the world devolves into a Mad Max style wasteland before we finish? Completion may very well take longer than four weeks.
 
DSM
Gah, I always forget. What code paster do we use?
 
5:10 PM
What if the earth is torn to shreds by the gravitational tide of a wandering black hole?
 
What if we're frozen in a block of ice for a hundred million years?
 
What if the Mayan calendar was off, and the world ends next week?
 
@Kevin what if we get stuck in a Groundhog Day thing?
 
@Kevin What if you start playing magic the gathering, and forget that time exists? :P
 
DSM
5:12 PM
@Xavier: something like this.
>>> z = [1, 2, XavierNum(1.5), XavierNum(2), XavierNum(1.5)]
>>> z
[1, 2, <X 1.5>, <X 2>, <X 1.5>]
>>> z.sort()
>>> z
[1, <X 1.5>, <X 1.5>, 2, <X 2>]
>>> set(z)
set([<X 1.5>, 1, 2, <X 2>])
 
I'd much rather provide time estimates in a probability graph, with black holes etc all in the long tail of 0.000000001% likely events that stretch way off to the right
 
totally possible
 
DSM
@Kevin: erm, isn't the strange thing how close the expected time and the worst-case time are?
 
@davidism I remember that episode :)
 
And in the long tail on the left, improbable events that lead to the project finishing early, ex. "cosmic rays strike me just right, transforming me into a coding demigod. Estimated time to completion: two planck seconds"
 
5:14 PM
One of my favorite (mostly) non-serious episodes
 
Hi, I just got the privileges to access the chat, so I thought I'd say hi to the members of the language I program in. HELLO HUMANS
 
Welcome
 
cabbage @JoeyLiechty
 
cbg @Joey :)
 
this cabbage is delicious
 
5:15 PM
@davidism I've never watched Stargate except sporadically while channel flipping, and that synopsis made me want to do a series marathon a couple weeks back.
But, to my displeasure, it's not available on Netflix. cest la vie.
 
I really need to re-watch it, it's been at least 7 years now.
It used to be on Netflix, but they removed it for some reason. :(
I have it all on DVD though. :)
 
I heard they were remaking it? It's not out yet is it?
 
WUT
 
0
Q: Passing the doctest mystery?

user3877043class Mystery: >>> m = Mystery() >>> m.value 42 >>> m.speak() Yikes! m = [None, 42] only the none works so far, i cant get 42 or yikes to get the doctest to pass THISISWHATIHAVESOFAR

 
DSM
5:18 PM
A long-running TV SF show I was never able to get into. I suppose one had to come along eventually.
 
ummmm
 
My friend is a big fan, so I suspect he has every season in multiple mediums, but I am bad at returning borrowed things and thus would have to bend over backwards to get his approval.
 
oh, redo the movie, in order to be distinct from the show
 
Tagged #THISISWHATIHAVESOFAR
 
Kind of like a "What the new Star Trek films are doing"....
 
5:19 PM
Hey guys, anyone experienced with wtforms?
 
I'd still watch it, no questions, especially if the original creators are involved.
 
Not me (in regards to wtforms, not the Stargate remake)
 
@BenMezger yes, but just ask your question without asking to ask first
 
I quite enjoyed SG: Atlantis though....
 
@davidism awesome, do you know the answer for this? github.com/wtforms/wtforms/issues/111
I urgently need it, been stuck here for a few hours, nothing on stackoverflow
 
DSM
5:21 PM
It's pretty unusual to have an ambiguity between "Stargate remake" and "wtforms".
 
You'd be surprised at the number of wacky misunderstandings that I've experienced due to the confusion between those two things.
 
@BenMezger yes, give me a few minutes
 
No worries
(that issue is mine, btw)
 
Eh, Atlantis and Universe had their moments, but just never felt quite right.
 
Last episode I watched was an in-universe documentary about the base.
 
5:23 PM
Maybe I should re-watch them too, just to be sure. :)
@BenMezger just to be clear, you want to populate the choices and set the default dynamically?
 
They interviewed the guy that sits in the control room when they activate the stargate.
"So what do you do here?"
"During activation, I say 'chevron one locked', then 'chevron two locked' and so on"
"...Uh, is that all?"
"Pretty much."
 
The self-aware moments were just so good.
 
That's the kind of job I want to have. Minus the threat of alien invasion.
 
@davidism Yes, as you see in the code, I set the choices dynamically, and I also want to set the default dynamically. Doing exactly what I posted in the code, I get no traceback, but it does not set the field's default
say, choices = ['a', 'b', 'c'] and default =['c'] it does not set C as default (at least I don't see it in the form)
 
Do you mind altering the form __init__ rather than changing the values after init?
 
DSM
5:26 PM
I often enjoy Rosencrantz-and-Guildenstern-are-Dead-style in-world stories.
 
No, I don't mind
but I am not sure how to do that
 
Yesterday I watched a Disney cartoon that effectively ran in parallel to the events of the original Star Wars
Answering such questions as "who started the trash compactor while the main characters were in it?" and "what really happened to porkins?"
 
Guys, not sure about what movie you are talking about, but for me, the big bom I watched two days ago was "Open Grave"
Check if out, insane
 
Stargate is an adventure military science fiction franchise, initially conceived by Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin. The first film in the franchise was simply titled Stargate. It was originally released on October 28, 1994, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Carolco, and became a hit, grossing nearly $200 million (USD) worldwide. Three years later, Brad Wright and Jonathan Glassner created a television series titled Stargate SG-1 as a sequel to the film. In addition to film and television, the Stargate franchise has expanded into other media, including books, video games, and comic books. These supplements...
 
cabbage banana people
 
5:31 PM
@DSM but the problem is does some strange result dpaste.com/33P0P60
>>> print (XavierNum(2)>=2 and XavierNum(2)<=2 and XavierNum(2)==2)
False
 
do you mind if I give you asparagus in testing for security vulnerabilities of sopython.com ?
 
@davidism any idea?
 
yes, you will need to be more patient though :)
 
aha, sorry about that
 
perhaps create an SO question while you're waiting, since github isn't really the place for that
 
5:38 PM
Sure
 
Ok I'm going to security test sopython.com now. If you experience any problems don't worry, it won't be for too much time. I'll report back any security issues I found if any. Later.
 
Thanks but no thanks.
 
DSM
@Xavier: I only implemented == and <..
 
@DSM I know I implemented the others
@BenMezger try following
form.courses.data = [i.title() for i in get_user_courses(userid)]
or
form.myfield.default = [i.title() for i in get_user_courses(userid)]
form.process()
 
DSM
@Xavier: wait. The whole point of this was to guarantee that XavierNum(2) wasn't equal to 2. So your three conditions are True, True, False, and and-ing them together will give you False.
 
5:45 PM
@XavierCombelle Let me try
 
@BenMezger basically, setting default does nothing after __init__ has been called
 
not tested
 
Wow... I'm not quite sure what I expected from a "security check" - don't think it was two failed login attempts thus far though :p
 
default is only used to set the data if no data was provided otherwise
@JonClements I was going to ping you, but then decided it was harmless anyways
 
5:47 PM
@XavierCombelle Doesn't work, doing the defaul and form.process() removes all user's attributes, since I pass obj=userobj
 
@BenMezger so you need to set data directly after init, or set default before init
 
@davidism but won't that reset the user's obj data?
 
if you pass an object in, of course the default shouldn't work, but default is different than data
 
indeed
wait
check this
I have form = PersonalForm(request.form, obj=user), since the use will re-redit his settings
 
DSM
@Xavier: if you want 2 to be equal to XavierNum(2) but for them to show up differently in sets, then just get __hash__ to return something which isn't the hash value of its underlying value. hash(self.value) + 1 or something (although there's got to be something less stupid than that.)
 
5:49 PM
in that case the default doesn't matter, because there is already data
 
@DSM but in case of hash collision it would not work
@BenMezger change the object
change the user
 
@davidism Because the user's object is a sqlalchemy object, where the course is a relationship in the database, so apparently wtform is not checking that
if I do a print to the obj, I do see the course, but it's not setting the default
 
@BenMezger at this point, I think it would be really helpful for you to post a full question with the exact code you're using
 
DSM
@Xavier: hash collisions only mean that it has to call __eq__, which will return False for X & non-X. The resolution order is "identity, hash, equality", if memory serves.
 
5:53 PM
@BenMezger You want the default to be the user selected countries? In that case, it's not a default, it's data being passed in by the user or object.
 
@davidism That's excatly what I want, and it works, but only for the selectmultiplefield doesn't seem to work
I don't know why
 
OK, I will take a look at this when I get home if it's still not solved. I need to eat lunch and be there to get the ISP set up. :)
rhubarb all
 
@davidism ah huh... now we're getting some login failure warnings...
 
DSM
rhubarb, davidism!
 
but they're all being blocked and timedout
 
5:56 PM
Oops
 
@davidism Sure! Thanks!
 
also, add the sqlalchemy model and the get_countries/get_user_countries functions
 
DSM
@JonClements: Is there backstory here, or is this just some random guy who showed up and decided to help out with a surprise audit?
 
@davidism Will do
 
@DSM by David's comment "oh it's you again. no thanks" (or similar) - I'm guessing there's history... :p
 
6:05 PM
@Jon, he is Hakan
 
Ahhh... how nice... I'll update our records :)
 
I'm not 100% sure, but I recognize one of the questions
What records?
 
DSM
Certainly the interest in security is like him.
 
It is Hakan.
(I know)
 
I knew it too :D I just didn't want to cause something bad
So many answers already :(
Got -3 on a single post
 
6:10 PM
I'll join you ;)
 
Well... I've just blocked the IP address they're using as after some research, it's only used for ill gained purposes anyway
 
ill gained == ill-gotten?
 
How can you tell the login attempts? Lindoe Dashboard?
 
@Ffisegydd look at the log files
 
@vaultah either way, you're still getting sick
 
6:26 PM
Gotcha
HOHO, I got Enlightened badge!
 
@DSM after reflexion you are right. I think the resolusion order is hash, identity, equality
 
Cabbage folks
 
cbg @Humdinger
 
user559633
anyone have a link to the "simple complete, comprehensive example" edit, found: sscce.org
 
okay, question. If you want to have click able to run a plain sql command, how would you do that?
 
user559633
6:34 PM
oh
 
cabbage @Humdinger
 
@tristan isnt there a SO page on that as well?
Ah yes
 
@corvid clic on what a graphic interface or a web navigator ?
 
@Ffisegydd and @davidism After SIX HOURS of banging my head, I've narrowed it down: stackoverflow.com/questions/25066580/…. What a day.
 
6:49 PM
Hi all, am building a search fn and am getting a weird result when I use __gte in the queryset,, `.filter(years_of_exp__gte=no_of_years)`
It is bringing all the users. What cold be the issue?
 
DSM
@aliteralmind: what version of Python are you using? except ImportError as e: used to be invalid syntax, long ago.
 
Python 3.4.1, Django 1.6.5
Oh. So you're suggesting that when I don't put "python" at the start of the command, it's using an old Python version.
I thought it was an import error.
 
@aliteralmind right. What is your whole PATH?
 
DSM
No, looks like a version error. You could go into C:\applications\programming\python_341\Scripts\django-admin.py, comment out the entire code, and add import sys; print(sys.version, sys.executable) to confirm.
 
@Alexxio filter requires a lambda and an input list
 
6:53 PM
Path, line separated:
Path=
C:\applications\programming\python_341\;
C:\applications\programming\python_341\Scripts;
C:\applications\utilities\shell_utilities;
C:\applications\programming\;
.;
C:\Program Files\Common Files\ArcSoft\Bin;
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Windows Live;
C:\Program Files\Windows Live\Shared;
C:\Windows;
C:\Windows\System32\Wbem;
C:\Windows\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\;
C:\Windows\system32;
C:\applications\audio\LilyPond\usr\bin;
C:\applications\internet\LinkChecker;
C:\applications\programming\DependencyFinder-1.2.1-beta4\bin;
When I start ipython, it says "Python 3.4.1"
@DSM: Will give it a try.
 
@Humdinger Are you talking about the built-in filter function? I'm guessing Alexxio is talking about some kind of third party object that has a filter method, which may behave differently. Probably something to do with databases, since he mentions a queryset.
 
@Kevin Ah, good point. Didn't catch that
 
@DSM Sonavaparent:
R:\jeffy\programming\sandbox\python\django_files\tutorial>django-admin.py startproject mysite3
('2.4.5 (#1, Dec 15 2009, 16:41:19) \n[GCC 4.1.1]', 'C:\\applications\\audio\\LilyPond\\usr\\bin\\python.exe')
And C:\applications\audio\LilyPond\usr\bin is part of the path.
 
no_of_years = request.POST.get('no-of-years')
users = User.objects.filter(years_of_exp__gte=no_of_years)
This ain't working. @Humdinger what do you mean?
 
I just noticed that soapUI also has its own certification exams
 
6:59 PM
@Alexxio nvm. I was thinking about the built in filter function. Probably different than yours.
@Alexxio You might want to turn this into a full blown question on the site
 
If you do, be sure to mention what libraries you're using. I googled years_of_exp__gte and got zero results, so I'm totally lost
 
@aliteralmind try putting the python directory near the END of your path
after LilyPond
(or if you can, just remove lilyPond all together)
 
My instinct was to eliminate LilyPond from the path. When I get back to it, I'll reinstall it fresh.
 
Awesome. Let me know if it works
 
@Kevin looks like the django ORM to me :)
 
@XavierCombelle click from the command line flask.readthedocs.org/en/latest/cli
 
@DSM: That's a neat trick.
 
user559633
i wrote a SSCCE on importing from sibling modules in a parent module. i think this is just the way life is, but can someone else just confirm? github.com/tristanfisher/python_import_sibling_example
 
@corvid there's nothing special to do, just write a function and decorate it with @cli.command
 
what is the python equivalent of "static" in java and c#?
 
user559633
7:17 PM
@abhi ha!
 
This is an interview question in India. :-)
 
user559633
in python, it's called "we're all adults here"
 
@abhi put a @staticmethod decorator over your function
 
user559633
the static version is calling a variable
 
user559633
that's not the same as static
 
7:18 PM
it's close enough!
 
10
Q: Python's Equivalent of "public static void main"

DevotedWhat is Python's equivalent of "public static void main(String[] args) { ... }"? I remember having used it in the past and then forgot. What I'm basically trying to remember is a function which I think included some underscores (__)... thx

There is even an upvoted question to that effect on SO.
 
user559633
that's not what you're asking
 
user559633
ugh i give up
 
user559633
i'm going to go raise trash goats for a living
 
I feel like asking "what is the equivalent of this in some other language?" is a deceptive question. The languages are inherently different
 
user559633
7:19 PM
it's worse when the asker is like "lol nevermind i found a different thing that shares some of the words and stopped trying to learn"
 
@davidism sure, but I mean it wouldn't interact with my SQLAlchemy ORM, it would just be a plain query along the lines of SELECT * FROM table
 
The python equivalent doesn't exist. Like the word "Schadenfraude" in German does not exist in any other language. English had to import it.
 
what's "Schadenfraude"?
 
right, so just use the dbapi (pyscopg2, sqlite3, etc.) instead of sqlalchemy
 
user559633
Pronounced "Shooten Fruity", Schadenfraude is the term used for taking shots of alcohol with a fruit juice chaser"
 
7:21 PM
pyscopg2 is for postgresql, yeah?
 
@Unihedron When you're happy about the misfortune of others
 
@Unihedron Are you going pedantic on me, as I misspelled the word?
 
Er, what?
 
Sorry
 
7:21 PM
wrong ping
 
heh :p
 
Ack! @Unihedron!?
 
@corvid you should simply replace print 'Init the db' in this example flask.readthedocs.org/en/latest/cli/#custom-commands by something like rv = sqlite3.connect(app.config['DATABASE']);cursor=rv.cursor();cursor.execute("SELEC‌​T * FROM ...")
 
@aliteralmind Am I not welcomed? :P
 
7:23 PM
Just confused! :)
 
Because the C++ room is dead.
 
@XavierCombelle ah, that is perfect, thank you. Just might be a bit odd to input that string... would a prompt be able to accept a multi-line input?
 
Today's been a Python nightmare, but I think I've figured it out.
@Unihedron I saw your comment about using my answer in yours, but I didn't see any of my answers actually in your answer.
 
Answer ception. I stole your xml excerpt.
 
user559633
anyone have a good working example of passing around structs in python?
 
7:27 PM
Ohhhhhh. Nice excerpt :)
 
"structs"?
 
none my examples are working. @tristan
that's the true horror of me programming in python. :-)
 
^ Same here. :)
I've never actually compiled any of my python programs.
 
@Corvid structs in python are called "TUPLES"
</flameoff>
 
<offtopic> isn't struct in C?
 
user559633
7:29 PM
sigh
 
@tristan are you working with ctypes?
 
@aliteralmind Thanks. My answer using it was something along the lines of parsing XML with regex. I expected hateful comments, but instead it became tumbleweed. (lol)
 
Is it fine to downvote the answers to the "a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error" question, when this problem was found in comments?
 
user559633
Possibly @JonClements. I think I'm going to do some CFFI, but eventually I'm just going to communicate using pipes
 
@corvid just add a decorator

@app.cli.argument('sqlcommand')
@app.cli.command()
def sql(sqlcommand):
  sqlite3.connect(app.config['DATABASE'])
  cursor=rv.cursor();cursor.execute(sqlcommand)

and call your app like this  flask -a hello.py sql "SELECT * FROM mytable"
 
7:32 PM
You are free to downvote for whatever the reason you like, though the etiquette is to downvote questions not useful to future readers.
 
user559633
but yeah, i'm using python right now to prototype what i'm eventually going to be writing in C or C++
 
Right, python is close to pseudocode. It's understandable.
 
Probably I'm super tired -- I don't know -- but I was just walking my dog, when this popped into my mind: do you know what this is?
 
@tristan I am not sure your github write up fully explains the problem. For example, at the top of my head I just wonder why you dont use relative imports
 
IT'S PY-THONIC
 
7:34 PM
@corvid of course if you use sqlite3 in the same way that the tutorial explain
 
@Peter doesn't look like some Tonic Water I'd wish to buy....
 
user559633
@Humdinger it is using relative imports..
 
@JonClements even if it's pythonic?
I guess we have to go back to the lab..
more testing needed..
 
@tristan than I guess I dont understand what you are asking
 
anyway, my MicroPython board has just arrived
 
7:36 PM
@XavierCombelle in my app itself I usually just use SQLAlchemy
 
really excited what she can do..
 
@corvid why not use it in the cli as well?
 
user559633
i think the README in the repo is pretty clear @Humdinger. sibling imports in child modules while still allowing imports at the 'parent module' level. the issue hinges in the package name being the anchor
 
@PeterVaro That was used by the British Government in the colonies as they believed it prevented spread of Malaria
 
@davidism the client wishes to be able to use plain sql commands on the app
 
7:37 PM
once upon a time, it was supposed to contain quinine bark
 
@corvid you can still use sqlalchemy to set up the connection and execute the commands, you just need a way to input the sql from a file or stdin
 
yeah, I guess the main thing is like... how do I make a multi-line prompt? So they can type, and press control-d for end of file, then it will execute to command after?
 
@corvid if you use SQLalchemy replace the complicate lines by db.engine.execute(sqlcommand ) http://stackoverflow.com/a/17987782/128629
if you want a multiline command just remove sqlcommand decorator and parameter and replace the main line it by import sys;print "input SQL:";db.engine.execute(sys.stdin.read())
and call like this flask -a hello.py sql
 
cool cool, sounds like a good idea, thank you sir
 
don't use sys.stdin in click though, use its wrappers
also see file arguments
if you use file arguments, you can let bash handle piping multiline data
 
user559633
7:48 PM
@corvid your client wants to mash arbitrary SQL into a web app?
 
@tristan he wants to do reporting and does not know how to use SQLAlchemy
 
@davidism @corvid only if you want to use eventually files
 
if he wants to execute straight sql, give him credentials to the sql shell
 
it might be nice to save files for common operations
sql shell...?
 
@corvid you could also give him a nice web interface for his reports
 
7:51 PM
he specifically stated he would like the capacity to use sql
 
sqlite>, psql>, mysql>, etc.
the shell interface to the database
 
I have no clue how to activate that, davidism
 
you don't "activate" it, it's a program
so if you're using sqlite3, you would type sqlite3 <the database file> at the bash prompt
or psql if you're using postgres, etc.
are you telling me you've worked with databases without ever touching the shell?
 
yep, tbh databases are definitely not my thing. I make the models and the relationships and... that's it
 
you could give to your client a nice web interface instead of command line
@corvid using SQLalchemy like this stackoverflow.com/a/18808942/128629
 
7:55 PM
hmmm... you have a point. Although, still a bit fuzzy on authorization. He would have to have a special privilege
 
I would avoid that, it's a massive security hole waiting to happen
you'd probably at least want to ensure autorization and whitelisted ips
or, you could make your life easy and just point them at the existing cli for the database
 
@corvid does your client know how to manage command line ?
 
Okay, I did as suggested by @DSM, and the long form still works (python path-to-django-admin.py ...), but the short forms (path-to-django-admin.py ... and django-admin.py) are now failing differently. If anyone has any ideas, it would be seriously appreciated: stackoverflow.com/questions/25066580/…
 
@XavierCombelle he has a major in computer science, so he can probably figure it out if I gave him docs
but he's more of a manager
 
Hey guys, any solution for this? stackoverflow.com/questions/25065629/… Still nothing :(
the answer Raschel gave me didn't work
 
8:01 PM
is there a reason you're not using flask-sqlalchemy? those functions and session setup are weird
 
@corvid what is your database ?
@corvid what is your client os ?
 
database is postgresql in production, and linux in production
@davidism me? I am using flask-sqlalchemy
 
I don't get this:
3
Q: Clear all widgets in a layout in pyqt

FalmarriIs there a way to clear (delete) all the widgets in a layout? self.plot_layout = QtGui.QGridLayout() self.plot_layout.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(200,200,200,200)) self.root_layout.addLayout(self.plot_layout) self.plot_layout.addWidget(MyWidget()) Now I want to replace the widget ...

the guy with the highest rated answer
answered the question almost a year later
than the guys who answered the same (and correct) answers and doesn't have as much up votes as him
 
8:17 PM
More attractive use of bold fonts? I dunno
 
why?
@Kevin yeah, and longer.. but this is so unfair
 
"this is the way I found to really clear and delete the widgets in a layout" ooh, I bet none of the other answers tell you how to delete the widgets too
[relevant XKCD: three cereal boxes, one of which says "asbestos free!".]
 
:):):)
 
but, but... that's the tasty bit!
 
btw @Kevin have you watched the Transcendence ?
 
8:21 PM
Asbestos is more of a dinner food than a breakfast food.
 
Anyone?
 
pondering if I should have a quick couple games of magic before bed
 
DSM
Bueller?
(Probably dating myself with that one.)
 
@PeterVaro No, but I read the Wikipedia article
 
user559633
i'm starting to see wtforms as not worth it
 
8:22 PM
@BenMezger Not me. I still know as much wtforms as I did this morning. Which is to say, none at all.
 
@DSM I just saw "Ferris Bueller Day's off..."
 
user559633
i couldn't find a way to add arbitrary attributes to the elements
 
@kevin, hauhau I see
 
@Kevin don't waste your time then! the concept and the start of the story is so brilliant -- and it became a usual hollywood shite
 
user559633
e.g. <input type="blah blah" ... *mandatory*> a la bootstrap
 
8:23 PM
so bad.. it has great potentials..
@Ffisegydd PyBoard (with MicroPython) is AWESOME! I would probably suggest you to buy that one instead of a RaspberryPi -- if finally you move to hardware at some point ;)
 
@Peter did you back the kickstarter of it?
 
nope, I was a late-bird (is there a phrase like this?)
and it just arrived a few hours ago
 
late-bird isn't really a phrase (unlike early-bird)
latecomer would be the closest I suppose
 
and it only took 2 minutes to get to know every detail of it and make it work and test all the components of the board
@Ffisegydd then a latecomer yepp..
 
Done.
 
8:30 PM
@Ffisegydd Diolch yn fawr
 
:D
 
what -- isn't this the phrase?
 
No it is
 
@Ffisegydd now we're getting a massive amount of login requests to sopython
 
8:31 PM
@Jon ssh login requests?
 
DSM
I find that "Lou-ellen Fizzygood" covers most of my Welsh needs.
 
cbg
evenin'
Returning to an old tradition:
 
@Jon I believe that all users who need immediate access to the server have keys set up if you wanted to remove password login and make it key only? That won't stop him attempting it but I assume it'll make it orders of magnitude more likely he'll not get access
 
I'm not really that concerned tbh
I just find it fascinating someone would go through such a poor effort of trying to do so
 
DSM
8:46 PM
Now, now. I'm sure he's doing the best he can.
 
Yes, because of course we have a user on the server called "audrey" :)
 
That's not my user name but it is my password, so he was kinda close.
 
How did he learn my real name?!
 
DSM
Audrey Hepburn.. Audrey Horne.. I can work with this.
 
It's not like the usernames are hard to guess...
 
8:52 PM
Anyway, the ip table is dropping most of the traffic
pondering if it's worth while alerting a mod so they can suspend their account here... then they'll have to start again from 1 before we get another name...
 
Can they be suspended here for things outside SO?
 
Jul 6 at 18:55, by Ffisegydd
I would suggest not performing a DDoS attack on Stack Overflow
 
user559633
RT @iAmTrendingHoe All we do is duck, drink and sleep.
 
Heh
 

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