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3:01 AM
cbg
 
cbg @AnttiHaapala
 
3:25 AM
wewt, silver Python tag get.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/29860461/new-list-for-each-if
30 mins, incomprehensible question, no clarifications
 
saw that, can't tell if the OP doesn't understand for loops, if/elif/else statments, or misunderstands classes
 
or all of the above
 
guess @tzaman is right
I am a bit concerned about the quality of new python questions, I have the feeling that good programmers are switching to something else...
 
@AnttiHaapala Not necessarily, it could just as well mean that tons of newbies are starting to use Python
 
javascript, go, rust...
 
3:34 AM
JS is definitely gathering a lot of mindshare
not so sure about the other two
 
not only that but there are not a lot good questions anymore
 
I've been wondering how many of these new python questions are generated in intro classes versus intermediate classes (like my college cycles through classes so intro was this semester advanced the coming one)
 
btw we should find/write a canonical question for this: stackoverflow.com/questions/29860552/…
 
Also I've just been wondering that with programming languages in general lately
 
we just had another on the other day about end=
 
3:36 AM
more new programming students seem to misunderstand very basic concepts when moving to intermediate classes
seriously had about half the students in an intermediate Java, :P, class that couldn't figure out subroutines
 
lol
I have a theory that as the number of people doing science increases, the quality of science goes down
because of the Dunning Kruger,
 
not kidding, could not understand returns, assigning value to variables when you return, how to pass parameters, etc....recursion ended that class
 
@JGreenwell and 80 % of those people thought they were better than the average :D
 
well, not after I started laughing but probably before hand
I remember 2 were legitimate - had trouble learning certain concepts and it was coming back to bite them in the behind. They actually worked extra hours with me, the professor, and a few others to learn....other 10-12.......yeah, no
@AnttiHaapala you know the data part of my brain won't let me let this go. Now I'm going to have to collect data, build sets, extract, analyze....this could be interesting
 
3:56 AM
haha
 
evil
like this one, classes are okay, a lot of his other code is okay but both his while loop and for loop are broken....how do people not know for/while?
0
Q: Python Parameter Passing

Justin FarrI'm working on making a modified version of pong for my college class and am having some trouble passing some methods. I believe I have everything set up the way it needs to to be able to do some parameter passing. The code runs fine and stops working just after the while loop in my main function...

 
 
3 hours later…
7:23 AM
I saw a code which reads a csv file with main_list = list(csv.reader(open("filename.csv'), delimiter=','))[0] , but when I tried main_list = list(csv.reader(open('filename.csv')))[0] it did exactly same thing. So what is delimiter in here?
 
@KonformistLiberal the default value is ','
 
oh, thank you
 
or actually it depends on the dialect
the default dialect is excel: The excel class defines the usual properties of an Excel-generated CSV file. It is registered with the dialect name 'excel'.
 
7:58 AM
cbg
def cleanup(value):
	if value.count('|')==1:
		clean=value.replace("{","")
        clean2=clean2.replace("}","")
        helperset=clean2.split("|")
        print helperset
        return helperset
 
looking for a good "url finding regex"
 
There is one somewhere in the Nidaba source code.
Can't find it right now as I'm on my phone. I found it via Google though.
 
someone any idea why my cleanup function does to give me an error but never prints out anything ? :(
 
hmm
@Ffisegydd there were only SO/pydoc specific ones
 
8:13 AM
Cbg
 
cbg folks!
@vaultah Have you found what's important?
 
Ah I must have removed the generic one in a previous commit then
 
@Games not yet :D
 
@vaultah sokka
 
is stack overflow and the chat here in need of donations or do they make money ?
 
8:21 AM
we don't make money or take donations. Some members however, are open to paid mentoring sessions, and mention that on their profiles. @StephanKetterer
SO wants nothing from you other than your data.
 
because i was honestly giving up on my programming udacity course before i found that place here.. in 2 days i learned so much (still a total noob )
 
well glad the guys over here could help!
 
SO is an invaluable resource
 
honestly in the beginning i was not at a point where i could even understand the help :)
 
Haha I remember that
Initially, you have to learn how you should learn
 
8:38 AM
i have run into a problem, i should write data to dicts that are stored in a list, the data should be cleaned, now i thought i first gonna take the data and put it in and then clean it by writing some kind of cleaning function, problem is now, if i have a string in a place and i want to clean it, strings are not mutable......so should i maybe have started first with the cleaning ?
 
Don't worry about the mutability of strings.
Though honestly it's not very clear what you want.
 
yeah and i am gonna just keep working on it , don't wanna get like the solution
 
cbg
 
the more i can solve on my own , the better it will be
 
@StephanKetterer Good attitude, but when you're done, you can show us an MCVE and we'll tell you if you're doing anything crazy. :)
 
8:49 AM
don't hold your breath... for the last exercise like this.. i took 2 weeks.. then came here and got it done in a day :)
 
Haha. As long as you're learning
I think I'm going to try to make a TWSS bot
Sounds like a good way to put my Machine Learning course to use
 
9:26 AM
what isTWSS?
 
That's What She Said.
 
9:52 AM
@SomeGuy Yes, that's why they have universities.
 
@FaheemMitha Right? Now I just have to get them to accept that this should count as classwork
(I'm kidding, they don't teach me cool things at college)
 
@SomeGuy Sounds like a plan. Let us know how it goes.
@SomeGuy That's too bad.
 
Haha, yeah. We used TurboC as our compiler when we were learning C
 
@SomeGuy when was this?
 
Like 6 months ago
When I first saw that we'd learn AI in our last year of the course, I was really excited. Now, I know not to expect too much out of it
(Haven't reached the last year yet, so I don't know yet)
 
9:58 AM
Oh, you're in Bombay? IITB? Or some engineering college?
 
I am. Another engineering college
@FaheemMitha Are you in India too?
 
@SomeGuy Yes.
 
Nice. Mind me asking where?
 
@SomeGuy Also Bombay.
 
Oh. Studying engineering?
 
10:07 AM
@SomeGuy no.
 
What are you doing?
 
10:29 AM
Cbg :)
 
Cabbage
 
11:07 AM
The Tories have tipped Boris Johnson as next leader if Cameron fails to get a majority.
 
@Ffisegydd Isnt that guy the mayor of london?
yup, he still seems to be.
 
wonder if tilaprimera was affected by the quake
 
@AnttiHaapala it hit bangladesh too.
I felt it just a little bit though.
 
his home ought to be further from *epicenter than kathmandu
@GamesBrainiac never felt any earthquake ever, except manmade ;)
Finland is so boring
 
finland is nice, safe and quiet. Just the way I like it :P
 
The highest you guys have ever had is nicely around 5, so that good.
Its amazing that we can get information so specific so quickly :P
 
11:35 AM
@Ffisegydd loool I took 1 url regex that I found online... and it totally hangs on just a simple text
re.compile(r'(?i)\b((?:https?://|www\d{0,3}[.]|[a-z0-9.\-]+[.][a-z]{2,4}/)(?:[^‌​\s()<>]+|\(([^\s()<>]+|(\([^\s()<>]+\)))*\))+(?:\(([^\s()<>]+|(\([^\s()<>]+\)))*\‌​)|[^\s!()[]{};:\\'".,<>?\xab\xbb\u201c\u201d\u2018\u2019]))'`
this is so broken
 
It hangs just compiling it?
 
@WayneConrad next(pat.finditer('[www.wiki.quantsoftware.org](http://www.wiki.quantsoftware.o‌​rg)'))
or possibly an even shorter fragment
 
As I've said before, maybe I'm getting too soft... This question started life as an almost undecipherable mess. We manged to get the OP to add some input data to the question, but he put it into a quote block. :( So I decided to clean it up and answer it, even though it lacked a code attempt. Hopefully the OP will accept it...
 
blaah
I still need a good url regex
 
its bad form to just mash everything in a program into one place, rather write little functions to call, to make it easier to understand and more modular ?
 
11:41 AM
yes
 
Each function name is an executable comment that can help explain the intent of the code.
 
"sort of"
 
i someties have problems with the documentation, maybe language barrier idk.. did i understand correctly that .strip() applied to a string will just remove any whitespace in front and after the string ?
 
@AnttiHaapala sort of?
@AnttiHaapala Trying it in Ruby, but Ruby doesn't like the regex. Trying to figure out why.
 
@StephanKetterer Correct. The original string is unchanged (since strings are immutable), so .strip() returns a new string.
 
11:48 AM
i am sitting for a few hours on this assignment now, can i maybe after a bit more work, post it in its entirety to get some feedback ?
 
@StephanKetterer Sure. If you can condense it to a small piece of code you can post it here directly, otherwise post it somewhere else (eg pastebin) and link to it.
 
yes i know that , thank you :)
 
@AnttiHaapala There's something funky with that regex. When I paste it into my editor, I get some odd unicode characters. The regex I see here has (?:[^\s" in it. When I paste it into Emacs and save it to a file, it becomes (?:[^<some funky unicode stuff>\s`
I think a URI has to be seven-bit ASCII. So yeah, that regex is no good.
 
@WayneConrad it certainly does not have to be!
even domain names can have unicode
 
Ah, didn't know that. But why would the regex need to have unicode in it? I still think something's wrong.
 
11:58 AM
i dread , to try to run the program the first time, since i know it will get like 30 errors
 
An internationalized domain name (IDN) is an Internet domain name that contains at least one label that is displayed in software applications, in whole or in part, in a language-specific script or alphabet, such as Arabic, Chinese, Cyrillic, Tamil, Hebrew or the Latin alphabet-based characters with diacritics, such as French. These writing systems are encoded by computers in multi-byte Unicode. Internationalized domain names are stored in the Domain Name System as ASCII strings using Punycode transcription. The Domain Name System, which performs a lookup service to translate user-friendly names...
 
ok here it comes.. its the complete thing.. even with the assignment text.. i only did work on the function called process file ( thats what i was supposed to do) pastebin.com/hCdFEjGr
 
@AnttiHaapala I stand corrected, thanks. I wonder if someone has packaged up URI matching in a package.
 
I got asked "when you type a url into the browser, what happens?" question in an interview the other day :p
 
@Ffisegydd I'd flunk that one, except at a very very high level. There's a whole heck of a lot going on there.
 
12:06 PM
Yeah I was very high level.
 
WTF? Here's a new question that's an almost exact duplicate of that messy question I mentioned a little while ago.
 
@Ffisegydd After I mumbled something about URL encoding and HTTP and sockets, I'd wave my hands in the air and say "and then magic happens."
 
I mentioned dns too :p
 
Oh yeah, DNS. I forgot that. See, I told you I'd flunk.
 
But yeah pretty much identical answer.
 
12:08 PM
@WayneConrad dunno if they work well for searching
 
Would someone like to upvote my answer so we can dupe-close the new one?
 
I am trying to find out the github/bitbucket/etc repository for a package from pypi description
 
@AnttiHaapala I don't know. It looks like that package exposes the regex patterns for you to do what you want with.
 
which is the new one @PM2Ring
 
12:11 PM
@Ffisegydd From what I can surmise, it seems to me that Johnson is really quite talented.
 
@PM2Ring döner
cvd
 
Thanks, Antti. I guess it must be a homework question - both OPs are fairly new, but I think it's unlikely that they're the same person.
 
www.ndtv.com/world-news/historic-dharara-tower-collapses-in-kathmandu-after-7-9-‌​earthquake-758076
 
cbg
 
@Games he is extremely clever. He plays the part of a buffoon sometimes. He's kind of a fan favourite, irregardless of his politics.
 
12:17 PM
irregardless? :D
 
@PM2Ring wanna take a look at my awesome code ? :)
 
@Ffisegydd Read up on him. Got scholrships to eton and Oxford. Boy, this guy has a pedigree.
 
not without lack of undue regard
 
@StephanKetterer I already said I would. :)
 
ok now i am confused :)
i posted it , you overlooked it or looking at it
sry, english is not my first language
 
12:20 PM
@StephanKetterer you are using dictreader, sure you could make the process_file easier
why do you need helperdict?
 
@StephanKetterer Sorry, I missed that post - I was kinda busy with that dupe question that we just closed.
 
i am gonna look but please through my code through the prism that i am a total noob :)
 
@StephanKetterer me also. No prob..
 
                    helperlist=[]
                    helperlist.append(line[col].strip())
                    helperdict[col]=helperlist
 
@AnttiHaapala it said create a list of dicts
 
12:21 PM
@AnttiHaapala Is there a way to create a text-wrap object that would skip over particular lines?
 
And the OP of the original has just returned & accepted my answer. :)
 
how about helperdict[col] = [line[col].strip()]
 
so i called the dicts helperdict, and wanted to add them to my list called data
 
or is the helperlisst reused there?
 
Hey @AvinashRaj: Antti needs a killer regex for URLs
 
12:22 PM
nope
 
not in the same line no
 
@PM2Ring now I got: http://h.wrttn.me ]
this as an url!
 
really? I'm ready to help.
 
@AnttiHaapala yes yours is obviously a lot smarter and shorter :)
 
and you know, it fails with ValueError: Invalid IPv6 URL
 
12:23 PM
i am am sure it is obvious that i am a total beginner just trying to get it working somehow
 
@AvinashRaj I am looking for a perfect uri search regex
that also needs to complete in finite time
 
not validate, search
 
ok, let me create a room for us.
 
no need
i just asked if you know of a good regex
 
12:27 PM
@JohanLarsson: Some more blues for you. Kansas City singer / guitarist Samantha Fish & her band covering a Tom Waits' classic Mr Siegal. Her playing's not perfect, but her feel is excellent - I like Sam's version better than the original.
 
@AnttiHaapala That package has methods that give you the regex, I think. Did I misread the docs?
 
I am using 1 but it is not perfect
@AvinashRaj now I am using: URLINTEXT_PAT = re.compile(r'\b(([\w-]+://?|www[.])[^\s()<>]+(?:([\w\d]+)|([^[:punct:]\s]|/)))‌​')
basically I want it to work more or less even if it is in ReST and markdown
 
reading about reftful and non-restful uri's :-)
Sorry, it's hard for me to understand. Is this worth for asking as a question in SO?
 
@AnttiHaapala I don't think markdown recognize www.twitter.com
cbg by the way
 
12:53 PM
re-hey-up
 
@StephanKetterer: Ok. I've had a look at your code, but I haven't analyzed it deeply to make sure it performs correctly. One thing I noticed is that you've defined a function parse_array, but you never call it. Anyway, you can simplify it by changing
    if (v[0] == "{") and (v[-1] == "}"):
        v = v.lstrip("{")
        v = v.rstrip("}")
to
 
oh
upfront, maybe you did not read it
 
if (v[0] == "{") and (v[-1] == "}"):
    v = v[1:-1]
 
i only had to do work on the function process_fields
all other stuff, was written by them
 
Ah, ok.
        for i in range(3):
            l = reader.next()

can be changed to
        for i in range(3):
            reader.next()
since you don't need the return value from reader.next()
 
12:56 PM
wow
also that part was written by them :)
 
Oh dear! BTW, what language is your mother tongue?
Instead of
clean = line[col].replace("{","")
clean2 = clean.replace("}","")
you can "recycle" the clean name:
clean = line[col].replace("{","")
clean = clean.replace("}","")
In fact, you could do
hlist = line[col].replace("{","").replace("}","").split("|")
Rather than
if line[col]=="NULL" or line[col].isalnum()==False:
it's more Pythonic to do
if line[col]=="NULL" or not line[col].isalnum():
 
replacements = {'{':'', '}':''}

clean = '{string}'

for old, new in replacements.items():
    clean = clean.replace(old, new)

print(clean) # string
:P
 
I also see a useless pass statement on line 99
@Ffisegydd Sure, but why bother with a dict & a loop for only 2 items? And for more than a few items there are better ways, eg translate()
 
translate only works if the new and old are single characters (which is one drawback of it).
So I'm not sure you could do it for '{' to ''
 
1:11 PM
In case you're wondering, @Ffisegydd, the code we're looking at is pastebin.com/hCdFEjGr
 
Yeah I just found it, having a looksie.
 
@Ffisegydd Ah. Python2 translate accepts a deletechars arg. See docs.python.org/2/library/stdtypes.html#str.translate
But docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#str.translate says "Characters mapped to None are deleted." So it's all good. :)
 
thank you all.. btw my mother tongue is german
 
@StephanKetterer: You could change if col=="synonym" and line[col]!="": to if col=="synonym" and line[col]:, OTOH, the 1st form is probably a little nicer to read.
 
for me yes :)
 
1:17 PM
@PM2Ring may I know your name? Is this confidential?
 
@PM2Ring about your suggestion recycling clean,, i think missunderstood something... i thought i have a string in there,, and when i do .. i cannot change it
 
@Avinash it may be considered a bit rude to ask people's names, especially online.
 
Sorry, my real name is confidential. I like to maintain my secret identity. :) But I can tell you my first name is a fairly typical English name.
 
@Stephan you can re-bind the clean "name" to a new string.
Strings are immutable so the original string object is not modified, all you effectively do is take the label off it and stick it on a new string object.
 
ah ok
so its more a switch then a modification
than
 
1:21 PM
Yep. And then the original string is typically garbage collected automatically (assuming it has no other "labels" attached to it)
 
@Ffisegydd may i know how? I don't know how knowing the name will affect that particular user since there are many names available.
 
my code must look to you like a kid sitting on a piano with his butt
 
@Avinash know how what? Know why it may be rude? If you have someone who has specifically used a nickname/false name and you are asking them, they may feel uncomfortable at your prying.
I know a few users of this room who value their privacy offline.
 
Indentation is sometimes hard to parse and a nightmare to reformat.
 
I'm buffing up on my R for an interview.
 
1:29 PM
@AvinashRaj FWIW, I'm not offended by your asking for my real name, and I hope that you're not offended by my refusal to divulge it. :)
 
@PM2Ring no prob.. :-)
 
Groovy! I just got an accept on SE.Mathematics! math.stackexchange.com/a/1250949/207316
R is the name of an esoteric programming language used by pirates. It has no functions, because pirates never return anything. It is an object-oriented programming language that implements data hiding through multiple instances of a pointer referred to as "X" so no one knows where the real treasure is buried.

R has been criticized by Microsoft, Apple, Google, Mozilla, Linux and Your Mom for enabling a perfectly legal form of software piracy. From a technical perspective, it's lack of support for and discriminatory license restrictions against ninjas have gotten heated criticism from some s
7
@GamesBrainiac It can be downright impossible to restore lost indentation, but IMO that's a two-edged sword, as I alluded to in this Meta comment
 
1:56 PM
It's not _that_ bad! :)
Another minor improvement to the style of your code is to have a space on each side of an operator symbol. So instead of `a=b+c` write `a = b + c`. Exception: _don't_ use a space when specifying [named arguments in a function](https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/controlflow.html#default-argument-values). When you have time, you should take a look at [PEP 8 - Style Guide for Python Code](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008)
Also, @StephanKetterer, if you want further info on what Ffisegydd & I said about recycling names, see Facts and myths about Python names and values
 
2:23 PM
 
2:40 PM
Thats actually pretty accurate.
 
Why are people surprised when they try to convert ridiculously huge numbers to Python floats? This OP stackoverflow.com/questions/29865919/… says he wants math.exp(2**8635)...
 
@PM2Ring That certainly got my upvote. Forgot mpmath existed.
 
Thanks, @GamesBrainiac. mpmath is pretty neat. I also used it earlier today on xkcd to calculate the sum of an infinite trig series: forums.xkcd.com/…
 
Thats pretty neat!
 
Yeah. A math library that lets you put infinity into equations is nice. :)
 
3:04 PM
cbg
@XavierCombelle ah I do not mean that it should recognize the same things as markdown, I mean that the regex should work reasonably even when used with markdown source code; should find the proper urls from there...
 
I want to kiss the person who created the hash map. The greatest data structure ever built.
 
@GamesBrainiac you sexist, what makes you think they was a guy
 
Should I bother adding this stuff to this class to make it a singleton?
class Any:
    def __eq__(self, other):
        return True
 
@PM2Ring I have an even better pattern, wait a sec
(this is utterly awful)
 
3:17 PM
@PM2Ring Use the borg pattern.
 
FWIW, it's to use in wild-card matching.
 
class AnyBase(type):
    def __eq__(self, other):
        return True
    @classmethod
    def __subclasscheck__(cls, other):
        return True
    @classmethod
    def __instancecheck__(cls, other):
        return True
class Any(object):
    __metaclass__ = AnyBase
@PM2Ring ^
you can do x == Any and also isinstance(x, Any) and issubclass(int, Any)
def __init__(self):
    raise NotImplementedError("How'd you instantiate Any?")
 
@AnttiHaapala Should that __init__ go in AnyBase or in Any itself?
 
in Any so that you cannot instantiate with Any() (bc it would not make any sense) :D
you can even have AnyBase have a __repr__ that returns 'Any' ;)
 
3:31 PM
@PM2Ring is it right that , while there are certainly a ton of things i could have done better and shorter, there are no claring errors in my code ?
 
Cool. I was working on this stuff for this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/29866269/… , but it's getting late & I should go...
 
Hi guys, i've got a question :) if opening file without specifing an filehandler, will python close the file after execution of `open` command?

open('filename.txt', 'w')
#Is file closed after this line???
 
@StephanKetterer It looks mostly ok apart from those style issues. But I can't be certain that it works properly without testing. And I can't test it without data.
 
yeah , they did not gave a download link to the data tis time :)
but thanks a lot !
 
@PYPL yes the open file object should be GC'd. But it's definitely a should.
Ideally you should close it yourself, or use with open(...) as f: block.
 
3:34 PM
@AnttiHaapala: But I guess I can post a quick answer...
 
ok but is it correct to do this
with open('file.txt', 'w'):
return None
 
I don't know? Are you in a function?
Probably not though.
It makes no sense to open a file then immediately return None.
 
yes im in function and have to create a file if it doesn't exist and return back to the main code since the newly created file is empty and nothing have to be done with it...
 
Ah ok. In that case, yeah makes sense.
Of course you could always do open(filename).close() to open a file (and create it) and then immediately close it.
 
ah nice didnt even thought that i can use .close right with open function, thats nice, thanks
 
3:40 PM
@AvinashRaj r'\b(([\w-]+://?|www[.])[^\s()<>]+(?:([\w\d]+)|([^[:punct:]\s]|/)))' this is what I am using now, and it fails too :D
 
Re-cbg
 
3:57 PM
cbg
 
@JonClements cbg!
 
@Games cbg!
 
I've come to realize that list comprehensions in python are severely limited.
I actively avoid them for anything other than simple tasks.
 
hmmhm
@GamesBrainiac ?
 
4:12 PM
Would you like to back this sweeping generalisation up with some data, boyo? :P
Or at the very least some examples.
 
@Ffisegydd Nope. You'll see the limitations, pup ;)
 
Don't pup me young man.
 
Just in terms of python matey.
 
How long have you been using Python?
 
~4 years.
 
4:15 PM
Ah fair play. I've only been using it for 7, that's nothing compared to some others of course.
 
I sometimes wonder if Martijn used it before it existed :p
 
But joking aside, unless you're willing to actually provide some examples it is a seemingly grand generalisation :P
 
wait a minute? You've been doing python jobs for 7 years?
 
No I've been using Python for 6-7 years.
 
Ahh. That makes sense.
 
4:21 PM
14 yrs here :P
 
@AnttiHaapala Never doubted that.
 
The company I'm interviewing for next seems to like sending their employees to conferences. Might be a chance of me getting to a PyCon if I get a job there.
 
Continuum Analytics?
 
@Antti yeah I was thinking about her earlier :/
She's not been on chat recently so can't ping her through SO.
 
4:26 PM
last online ~1 hour before the quake
 
cbg
Back after 2 tiring days
@AnttiHaapala over 1500 dead now.
 
4:44 PM
yeah, tilaprimera's profile says she's from the area from that link
Lalitpur
 
Oh Damn!
The epicenter was quite near
 
@BhargavRao you know, the 2004 tsunami.. Finland's ministry of foreign affairs said "we guess everything is OK there since we haven't heard anything from there"
 
It is a old sanskrit saying Maunam sammathi Lakshanam
 
179 Finns died there
 
I hate these politicians
They are the same breed everywhere
 
4:49 PM
I've had that hanging on my office wall for years. It says everything I feel about politicians.
 
@BhargavRao finland's current president almost died then too, he too was in Thailand on christmas holidays, damnit I cannot write English, clinged to an utility pole
 
Well, not everything. It says everything I can say in polite company.
 
One of my friend is from Sikkim
Quite near to Nepal
 
Luckily our MEA is doing a good job out there! Thank God
I wanted to visit Nepal after my Engineering
It was the first on my list
@AnttiHaapala Were any of his family or relatives hurt?
 
5:01 PM
nope, surprisingly
 
So he was roaming the beaches of Thai alone?
 
Oh wow... Inspect Gadget the original cartoon series is now on Netflix... awesome
not so awesome is that it's 1983... way to go to make myself feel old again
 
@BhargavRao had 2 sons and girlfriend of the other son
all of them survived with bruises being the biggest harm
 
Thank god they were safe
 
5:04 PM
cbg Tim
 
cbg @TimCastelijns
 
I didn't mean to interrupt, please continue
 
lol
just sayin' that "we haven't heard anything" means that nothing bad has happened or something very terrible has happened.
 
Imagine if there were no means of mass communication during such a calamity
 
5:11 PM
Ah! Got a notification from vks telling that he is safe
 
I wanted to go to that place
In 2017
:(
 
some Finns living in Kathmandu had contacted a newspaper telling they're ok, but said they used to see this tower from their window and that it would have been very popular on saturdays
 
That image makes me cry
Wikipedia is already up to date on that topic
 
yeah it is
think about climbing the stairs to the top and then noticing that the tower is shaking ....
 
5:16 PM
> During the earthquake of 1834, both towers survived, but the first Bhimsen's tower suffered severe damage. A hundred years later, on 15 January 1934, another earthquake completely destroyed the Bhimsen's first tower. Only two of the 11 storeys of the second tower remained.

On 25 April 2015, the 2015 Nepal earthquake, with an estimated magnitude between 7.8 and 8.1(Mw), hit the region, leading to the collapse of the tower.[3] The earthquake's epicenter was approximately 29 kilometres (18 mi) east-southeast of Lamjung, Nepal.[2] The structure collapsed and only its base survived.[4][5]
@AnttiHaapala That would be soo screwed
There are hundreds trapped underneath
Good to know that Twitter is saving lives
Thank you, Twitter
 
5:43 PM
Guys, i am not getting an excat answer for my post stackoverflow.com/questions/29859319/… . I have tried the steps as shown in AWS. I got the environment up, i also copied my project to that folder, but when i access the ec2 url its pointing to django default project. Pls help to solve the issue
 
@Anish you just copy your django app somehow to the server, and use it instead of the app you created by hand in step 8
 
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