« first day (1719 days earlier)      last day (3240 days later) » 

12:00 PM
@IntrepidBrit Scary! Is it Grub2 or the original flavour? I'm reasonably familiar with old Grub, but not Grub2. I've also had a bit of experience with Grub4DOS, which is a lot like old Grub, but much more powerful & very handy when you want to do Grub stuff on predominantly Windows systems - I use it on my bootable USB sticks.
 
It's JRichard, with a "jruh" sound.
Nerd snipe: determine the IPA symbol for the above.
 
I really don't drink enough beer to know that
 
;-)
In that case, just try to find the international phonetic alphabet symbol
 
@PM2Ring Grub2. I should be fine for the time being. It's just a pain that the 15.04 Ubuntu LiveCD keeps crashing, makes trying to fix the bootfile a chore
@PM2Ring But I may pick your brains later if that's okay?
 
@IntrepidBrit Sure! But as I said, I can't help you with GRUB2 stuff... apart from telling you to try GRUB4DOS. :)
 
12:03 PM
It'll be my next plan of action if I can't get grub2 to behave :)
 
12:17 PM
@IntrepidBrit Rather than mucking around with the Ubuntu LiveCD to do rescue work, take a look at Puppy Linux. It's pretty tiny - the .iso file is around 120 MB. Puppy's designed to be run from the CD & it's pretty fast - because it's so tiny the whole thing can load itself into RAM, so everything loads at SSD speed.
Puppy uses a multi-layered file system, with filesystem layers stored as single files. If you make any changes to your Puppy system those changes are saved to a single "save" file and those changes are available the next time you boot the Puppy CD.
Once you have Puppy booted, there's a menu item for creating a bootable USB version. You can install it like a normal distro, but it's more common to install it in "frugal" mode, so you only have a 3 or 4 Puppy files on your HD, which can be in a Linux partition of another distro, or a Windows partition.
 
I haven't started my Puppy VM in ages :)
@thefourtheye no need to delete I thought
 
Hey, what would be the fastest way to talk to people involved in the language design process of Python?
 
In Dutch. :)
 
Nice
 
I couldn't resist.
 
12:28 PM
That feeling when you have a built in that almost entirely solves the problem and yet the manual solution in CJam is shorter. — Alex A. 15 hours ago
:)
 
@BenjaminGruenbaum Python-Dev mailing list, I suppose. Dunno what the response time is like though.
 
I need to talk to a person :)
 
There may be an irc channel somewhere.
I seem to recall #python-dev being a thing on Freenode.
Be careful you don't go to #python though, there lie dragons.
 
can you spot the mistake here:
 
12:38 PM
Do you think I could write a fantasy novel about light cavalry called Eragoon?
 
test  = '__eq__'
...
if getattr(a, test)(b):
    print("Test succeeds")
 
@Ffisegydd thanks! I'll try
 
@AnttiHaapala Doesn't always behave the same as a == b. ex.
>>> class Widget:
...     pass
...
>>> test = '__eq__'
>>> x = Widget()
>>> x == x
True
>>> getattr(x, test)(x)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: Widget instance has no attribute '__eq__'
 
@AnttiHaapala Well that's not going to work if a doesn't actually have an __eq__ method, eg if a is an int.
 
int does have __eq__
we're not talking of exceptions here :P but something more evil
 
12:52 PM
It doesn't automagically check b == a for you if a == b returns NotImplemented?
 
@AnttiHaapala Maybe it does in Python 3, but on Python 2.6.6 I get
AttributeError: 'int' object has no attribute '__eq__'
>>> dir(int)
['__abs__', '__add__', '__and__', '__class__', '__cmp__', '__coerce__', '__delattr__', '__div__', '__divmod__', '__doc__', '__float__', '__floordiv__', '__format__', '__getattribute__', '__getnewargs__', '__hash__', '__hex__', '__index__', '__init__', '__int__', '__invert__', '__long__', '__lshift__', '__mod__', '__mul__', '__neg__', '__new__', '__nonzero__', '__oct__', '__or__', '__pos__', '__pow__', '__radd__', '__rand__', '__rdiv__', '__rdivmod__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', '__repr__', '__rfloordiv__', '__rlshift__', '__rmod__', '__rmul__', '__ror__', '__rpow__', '__rrs
 
cabbage.
 
My kd-tree implementation is buggy in a way that only occurs when I add a hundred points to it. That'll be fun to debug ;_;
 
DSM
Canada Day cabbage for all!
 
Ok. Can you give us more clues? :) Are you talking about, eg a class that has
def __eq__(self, other): return False
 
12:57 PM
Thanks for existing, Canada.
 
@PM2Ring nope :D
wtf indeed, why doesn't int have __eq__ in Python 2
 
The mistake is that simple is better than complex, so you shouldn't use getattr when you can use ==.
I declare this the correct answer, and will now dive out the window before Antti can contradict me.
shoop
 
ah bc it falls back to __cmp__in python 2 :P
stupid python2
@PM2Ring the thing is:
assuming there is __eq__ and it performs properly
>>> ''.__eq__(2)
NotImplemented
>>> bool(NotImplemented)
True
 
Ah, found the bug in my code. To fix it, I just have to double the execution time of this bottleneck... :-(
 
Oh dear. The yam's about to hit the fan
 
1:02 PM
But hey. Now I have near-neighbor search working.
 
@PM2Ring Does PuppyLinux have a package manager or anything?
 
Sure beats O(N^2), still
 
@Kevin pretty
 
Now to animate it :-D
 
Awesome
 
1:04 PM
 
@IntrepidBrit Sort of. :) It originally had its own native package system (Puppy packages are called pets or pups). But for the last few years Puppy can also use the repos of more well-known distros like Ubuntu or Slackware.
 
Let's all embrace Canadianness today, eh
 
@PM2Ring Okay. Because of my set up, there's all sorts of weirdness going on. I currently don't have a bootloader and Ubuntu is getting tangled. It's bloody demented that I can't boot off CD anymore, yet USB3.0 LiveUSBs are discouraged (and I can see why)
 
@Kevin Yay, Canadia!
 
DSM
1:09 PM
Last night I spent the leap second in line at the grocery store. Not sure I made the best use of the extra time.
 
I spent it as Batman
 
Would have been if the tills had all failed and you'd gotten free food though.
 
I spent it in the langolier-proof fortress in my basement.
 
@IntrepidBrit You can't boot of a CD at all on that machine? That makes things a bit tricky. Can it boot off a USB stick? If so, you could boot a Puppy CD on another machine, and create a bootable USB there.
 
DSM
Oddly enough a lot of the self-serve scanning machines were down. I was wondering if it was leap-second related but (1) I doubt they knew about it, and (2) I couldn't think of a plausible reason why some were down and not all.
@Kevin: good pull there.
 
1:12 PM
@Kevin wow, that's some advanced referring-to of stuff
 
I could have gone a tick more obscure and replaced "langolier" with "the timeline-preserving garbagemen from the TV show Eerie, Indiana"
 
DSM
I remember the Bureau of Lost Things!
 
They mentioned the leap second on the news here. Maybe because last time we had a leap second it caused a crash in the QANTAS reservation system which was rather chaotic & took a while to fix.
 
DSM
Wikipedia says it was actually the Bureau of Lost. My memory's going, obviously.
 
Apparently google and amazon's cloud platforms had to have some massaging to get them through, but Azure powered through
 
1:15 PM
@PM2Ring For some reason, any time I try booting from USB it's fine until it crashes at a "random" point later
Which makes me not want to proceed with that method
 
Wonder if say .NET lets them pause the VM for a second so it looks to the software as though nothing happened
Assuming Azure even uses .NET
 
@IntrepidBrit Fair enough.
 
It's been a long time since I network boot'd
 
Is the machine that's misbehaving a UEFI system, or does it have an old-fashioned BIOS?
 
BIOS
Thank goodness
 
1:19 PM
So can you go into the BIOS & force it to boot from CD?
 
user559633
@Kevin what are you doing to generate that?
 
@RobertGrant Dunno. It was major news when I was a kid.
 
@PM2Ring I'm currently trying to download a different bootloader on my office internet (zzz) to see if it's something wrong with the couple I had lying aroung
But CDs are temperamental on that computer at the best of times.
 
@tristan this. Explanation: I create a KD-tree to hold 100 random points, draw black lines to indicate the tree's partitioning of space, and draw red lines between any point pairs that are less than one unit away from each other.
(requires my hacky homebrew geometry module)
 
user559633
1:28 PM
@Kevin That's really cool
 
Now because I boasted to Robert, I want to do the same thing, but animated with the points moving along unique paths.
Now to reinvent bezier curves.
 
user559633
You're an impressive man, @Kevin.
 
user559633
I'd be interested in seeing the code after as I never do this kind of stuff
 
If only they would pay me to do this.
 
cabbage
stackoverflow.com/q/31153249/400617 needs mcve/full traceback
stackoverflow.com/q/31154087/400617 copy/paste dupe of above, asked by same user w/different account
 
1:37 PM
Hey up
 
user559633
Hey!
 
Ok, now I'm leaving again. Just need to get my morning cv's started. :-P
 
user559633
:) See you soon.
 
user559633
I'm waiting for my brain to start working after spending some time in the banya (like a sauna)
 
1:56 PM
I lied, I haven't left yet :-/
stackoverflow.com/q/31156091/400617 dupe, also the title "What happen about bug in Flask?"
 
Also, stackoverflow.com/questions/31162886/… is really interesting.
I didn't know list comprehensions were in a different scope.
 
@IntrepidBrit are you linked to the John Lewis innovation people for 3D printing?
Just say no if you can't tell us :) I just read this and it mentions they 3D print prototypes.
 
2:12 PM
@MorganThrapp They weren't in Python 2, but a lot of people didn't like that, so in Python 3 a list comp creates a new scope.
 
@PM2Ring Why would you want that? It seems really counter-intuitive.
 
@MorganThrapp I agree that it's a bit silly, but it caused bugs for people who re-used a variable name inside a list comp that they'd already used in the outer scope.
 
@PM2Ring I guess that makes sense.
 
That's a weird reason
Better give for loops a different scope as well
 
And they did that because they assumed that it was only natural for a list comp to create a new scope & so the index variables used in the list comp wouldn't interfere with the code outside the list comp.
 
2:14 PM
Yeah, I'd rather just have people learn to not shadow.
 
DSM
Wow, my instincts are entirely the opposite. I thought having listcomps leak variables was very ugly, and was happy to see it fixed.
 
@RobertGrant Nope, not linked with them at all I'm afraid
 
Well, in lots of languages (eg C) a for loop block does create a new scope. So maybe they expect Python's list comps to behave like that. FWIW, the original design of the list comp didn't create a new scope, for reasons of efficiency.
 
@DSM actually I was sort of assuming they'd be like a closure: anything they refer to that's from the enclosing scope is accessible, but it doesn't modify the enclosing scope
Except I've probably got closures wrong there
 
I didn't know that.. I've actually been assuming this whole time that list comps were in their own scope on 2.x
Who knows what kind of havoc that could have wreaked had I not found out just now
 
2:19 PM
@PM2Ring Okay. PuppyLinux downloaded. Let's see what we can do
 
@DSM Coming from C, I was a little perturbed when I gotten bitten by the leak, but then I realised that I had no good reason to assume that a list comp would create a new scope. :)
@IntrepidBrit Yay!
 
I find it interesting that it was intuitive to me that list comps would be in their own scope despite loop behavior, but other people feel the opposite
Good news is, we're both right :D
 
DSM
Among the reasons that 2 should be avoided is the inconsistency between list and set/dict comprehensions regarding whether or not they leak.. bah.
 
2.x is coming back, guys. Don't fool yourselves
Just like disco, it'll be back with a vengeance
 
Pipe down.
We'll have none of that heresy here.
 
2:21 PM
[python-2.x]
 
I think they should just keep releasing 2.x versions, but so that they just include more and more of the breaking changes that 3.x has. 2.8: unicode. 2.9: list comp nonleakiness etc
 
We have that there so we can bait in the non-believers and convert them to our ways.
 
DSM
Earlier today someone was asking about a 2.7 backport of the statistics module.
 
Until by 2.15 they're at parity with 3.whatever
 
That Python 2/3 difference is actually really scary
 
2:23 PM
Which one? The awesomeness factor that had to be toned down for 3.x?
 
That's up there with the change in how division works in terms of "Silent Killer"-ness
The comprehension scope difference.
 
Pssh I'd say division difference is bigger than list comp scope difference.
 
Yeah, I'm surprised I've never overwritten an x/y variable
 
@Ffisegydd yeah true. And lazy-by-default stuff
 
All the more reason to use better variable names
 
2:24 PM
I think the division difference is way more likely to happen, but the list scope difference would be way harder to find.
 
Hmmm, touché.
 
DSM
I dunno. If you're relying on listcomps leaking, then odds are your tests will catch the bug when you port. And if your tests don't verify your code works, leaks are the least of your problems.
 
Just have from __past__ import rubbish_division()
 
@DSM I'm worried about the intern that has to fix the bug though.
 
Soul destroying bugs build character...and destroy souls...
 
2:27 PM
>>> i = 5
>>> # 80 lines later...
... l = [i for i in range(10)]
I guess it's not that different from getting bit by python's noscoping in general though.
 
I just think people would think to check the math more easily than that
 
DSM
@QuestionC: it's a minor fix, and can be tracked down just by adding prints. Honestly doesn't seem that rough to me.
 
Maybe that's because I've been burned by floor division so many times
 
Also hasn't it been an option to use the 3.x way since 2.lownumber? It's just because people kept using the even older way that there's a problem?
 
@Ffisegydd Maybe. OTOH, the Python 2 docs warned that division would change in the future, at least as far back as 2.4, and that if you want int division you should explicitly use //.
 
DSM
2:32 PM
I adopted // early, mostly because I often find myself wanting float//float, and so it's natural to reach for that.
 
I guess floor division doesn't bother me so much because it bites everybody in every language in some way.
 
:)
 
Unless someone has invented a language without integers I suppose.
 
Fizzy script will just have strings, no other types.
Fortunately the expression '3' + '2' will equal '5'.
 
2:35 PM
5 or '5'?
 
user559633
@Ffisegydd Why not call it fuzzy script and have it just to pattern matching?
 
Or the symbol :five?
 
user559633
You could also claim it does "fuzzy math" and return '3' + '2' = '32'
 
Fizzy maths, of course
Fizzy logic, etc
 
How about roman numeral math only
 
2:36 PM
Ah, don't mention that in here. I We dreamed a dream
 
;___;
Long live PEP-IVXII.
 
'IV' + 'VII' = 'XI'.. Took me forever to figure that out
 
user559633
@RobertGrant well then wtf else would you dream?
 
A nightmare
 
or 'IVVII'
 
Aka the hideous, overbearing use of the decimal system
 
is probably accidentally mangling all of his hard-drives with Grub4Dos
 
@QuestionC In awk, numeric values are floating-point, but it will print integer values as integers.
 
Those awk programmers can live safely in their world free of division ambiguities. The land that int forgot.
 
Can binary numbers be floats? 1001011.01101
I don't think I've ever seen one
 
user559633
2:42 PM
Not sure if joking
 
I'm not sure yet either, I'll have to wait until I get more responses
 
user559633
Good show.
 
@IntrepidBrit It should be ok; at least, I've never had a problem with Grub4DOS screwing up a drive. OTOH, maybe I should've mentioned that it's a Good Ideaā„¢ to back up the MBR of your disks before you start playing with stuff that overwrites MBRs. In Linux you can easily use the dd command to backup & restore the first sector of a disk, or just the MBR, if you prefer.
 
Yeah, I was joking
 
DSM
2:43 PM
Base 12 is the most felicitous.
 
@PM2Ring I may have already lost my MBR
So, no need to make a back-up eh?
 
felicitous sounds like a sexy word, by the way
 
user559633
@IntrepidBrit Is that a form of an MBA?
 
@IntrepidBrit I had a feeling that might be the case. So there's no point shutting the gate once the horse has bolted. :)
 
user559633
2:45 PM
(I don't know things, but I sure know how to point you towards someone that does!)
 
@PM2Ring "Installing Grub4Dos. Please wait..."
 
stackoverflow.com/q/31154087/400617 exact dupe (by dupe account)
 
Ah, linux. Have you crashed OR has the collie puppy powering my OS escaped out the back door and is now rounding up sheep? I have no way of telling.
 
lolbuyamac.
 
@DSM Base phi, aka phinary, is pretty groovy. And factorial base is rather neat, too.
 
2:47 PM
Although, Grub4Dos did spot something interesting. Apparently, I have over 4 installed windows partitions. I shouldn't, I should only have 1. Could explain why GRUB was wonky previously
 
@davidism Yeah, but "This question does not have an upvoted or accepted answer" - so I can't vtc it as a dupe.
 
@Ffisegydd It's my rapper name. J-Rich, keepin it real. If I'm in the right hood, J-Rock. Dude. Or something like that.
In reality the reason is too sensitive for public fora. I can't believe you asked.
 
Oh god I'm a monster >_<
I'm so insensitive, I should go bury myself and never emerge.
 
@PM2Ring derp, I thought that was just when proposing the dupe, so I un-upvoted the answer after my cv. I upvoted again, close away!
 
2:52 PM
@IntrepidBrit Oh-oh. That could be a corrupt partition table. I'd be using gparted to check that. Or maybe one of the fdisk family (fdisk, sfdisk, cfdisk) to edit the partition table in the CLI, if you're comfortable using a CLI tool for that sort of thing.
 
stackoverflow.com/q/31154087/400617 exact dupe that you can actually close this time
 
@Ffisegydd that's definitely the reaction of an insensitive person :)
 
It's just that my first name is Joseph, for some ridiculous family reasons. And I got into the habit of J Richard, so officials didn't keep telling me I wasn't who I said I was "Actually, I only have funds for a Joseph Snape" etc
 
@davidism Done!
 
What's ridiculous about Joseph? I thought it was..normal?
 
2:53 PM
@PM2Ring Aha! No. It just looks like I have 3-4 master boot loaders installed by windows. 1 recovery one, the original/proper one, another one on my "storage drive" (that should be deleted later) and a ... spare one.
 
DSM
For guests!
 
So, I've always been called Richard (or worse) by everyone. Also - there's an impertinent Australian publishing research by the name of Richard Snape, with whom I did not which to be confused.
 
Either way, you have the chance now to visit on your children a much more modern name, such as Severus
 
@JRichardSnape "Richard (or worse)" sounds a bit of a mouthful, if I'm honest.
 
@RobertGrant Joseph is not ridiculous, giving your kid a first name and then using the other one as their given name is. (a bit)
 
2:54 PM
Laughs just thinking about it
@JRichardSnape oooh sorry I get it
 
@IntrepidBrit Ah, ok. That's not so bad then. :)
 
CBG!
 
I thought you meant Joseph was some crazy family name :)
 
Hah - no need to apologise to me. You can apologise to my faintly foolhardy parents by proxy should you wish
 
My mum uses her middle name as her main name, and so did her dad
 
2:55 PM
Would you deliver to your parents our apologies?
 
Of Welsh descent, where it's apparently common
 
import requests

endpoint = "https://dev.olacabs.com/v1/products"
token = "my secret token"

parameters = {'pickup_lat':12.94914,'pickup_lng':77.64298}
headers = {'Authorization':'X-APP-TOKEN:%s' % token}
response = requests.get(endpoint, params=parameters,headers = headers)
print response
 
@RobertGrant Ah, not as uncommon as I thought, then
 
Am I doing anything wrong in above code ?
 
DSM
My father uses his middle name as his name; so did two ex-gfs.
 
2:56 PM
@Dracunos For you, sir, certainly.
 
My cousin was named exactly after his father, so he always went by his middle name to disambiguate
 
I get 409 Error
 
@Dracunos I'm hoping his middle name was Junior
 
His middle name is Zachary :p
 
@JRichardSnape IME, that tends to happen when the son is named after their father, but later the parents realize that calling both people by the same name is a bit confusing. :)
 
2:57 PM
I tried with urllib2 package
It something related to syntax and not package
 
I was named exactly after my father as well, but we both decided to go by Mark. Because the name Everette would have made childhood difficult
 
my best guess
 
@RobertGrant My step-dad has the same 1st name as his dad. But my step-dad has no middle name, and his dad wasn't going to start using his middle name as his main name (which was his dad's 1st name), so they just had to suffer the confusion. :)
 
@PM2Ring :)
Alright - rbrb!
 
3:01 PM
Exact dupe from same account as stackoverflow.com/questions/31161797/…
Er, except now they want different results without changing code at all.
 
You should actually flag it so the dupe shows up.
 
@PM2Ring yeah, there's a Joseph Lawrence, Joseph Keith, Joseph Richard and I think at the top of the line just Joseph
Or maybe Joseph Joseph, if their data model was consistent
 
I did already, but it got rejected for reasons that I can't figure out.
 
DSM
@MorganThrapp: I was trying to figure out what the OP wanted to happen in the case of varying x_size and y_size. I think the OP now wants (row_col[1]+1)*x_size//2, (row_col[0]+1)*y_size, but it's hard to tell.
 
@DSM Yeah, I have no idea what's going on in that question.
 
3:04 PM
@PM2Ring How I feel right now - youtube.com/v/LCskJkcC7E0?start=1&end=10
I've got most things working again - just need to work out the best way of altering which of the Windows partitions it boots into by default
 
@IntrepidBrit ROFL
 
This couldn't help me either stackoverflow.com/questions/25014025/…
 
@IntrepidBrit Excellent. The Windows partition naming scheme isn't exactly helpful when doing stuff like that, but I'm sure you'll figure it out. :)
 
Oh for yam's sake. After all this - Ubuntu 15.04 didn't install properly
 
@d-coder I take it you have googled what a 409 response code means? w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html#sec10.4.10 and followed up on the information there to look at the body of the request which should include info to resolve
@IntrepidBrit You're having some real bad luck. I've never had an actual install fail.
 
3:12 PM
@RobertGrant @tristan There, it's done. animated KD tree.
 
I think it's my custom hardware on this computer. Ubuntu seems to hate it. A lot.
 
@Kevin That's some nice stuff
 
Notice the remnants of a dot poking out of the left of the frame at the six second mark. That's definitely a bug, although I don't know which layer of the code is responsible.
 
@Kevin Nice! Very hypnotic. But slightly nauseating if you watch too long.
 
Probably somewhere in my animation module, or lower - not the actual visualization's fault.
Dare I blame imagemagick?
 
3:13 PM
Hi guys, i've seen many demos where pypy is faster than python, I tried to run my script using it, it analyses patterns and write to a csv, a small csv that i created for testing and pypy was significantly slower. python ran it in 0.03s, pypy in 0.36 so im not sure i want to use pypy for the real data. therefore I'd like to ask, when is pypy faster than python
 
DSM
When you're doing many loops, so the JIT has time to warm up.
 
@JRichardSnape Maybe the failure was due to Intrepid's dodgy CD drive.
 
DSM
If you test only on small cases, you're just measuring overhead.
 
Ah - that's the "custom hardware". CD tray doubles as cup holder?
 
I wish we used more of those tiny cds that fit into the smaller slot inside the cd tray
I've only used two in my life
 
3:16 PM
I want to take an old CD tray now and modify it to hold beverages. Nothing at all could go wrong with this idea.
 
@DSM i do have like 2 nested for loops in my code
 
Yes but if you're testing it on 30 data points you're measuring, as a percentage, more overhead than if you were testing it on 30,000,000.
 
so you think if i run full scale, pypy would be faster than python after it warms up?
 
@Ffisegydd Obligatory ITAPPMONROBOT link.
 
ok will try it on real data
 
3:18 PM
@Fischer What he's saying is - run it on a bigger CSV.
 
@JRichardSnape i will now
 
DSM
And remember that pypy obviously can't help much with tasks which are I/O dominated, so make sure to do some actual work.
I should ask this on ELU, but is there a word for "mixing different types of cereal together because you've got less than a bowlful left in multiple boxes"?
 
Heresy?
An abomination?
Despicable?
 
Good story @PM2Ring
 
DSM
Mental note: don't invite Fizzy to bottom-of-the-box parties.
 
3:21 PM
To be fair, I don't eat cereal :P
 
First, cut a hole in the box
 
@DSM ok thank you
 
@DSM verb: multiflaking. Noun: a Multikellog
 
Aha! Looks like PuppyLinux's Dos4Grub doesn't set up Ubuntu BRs properly
 
3:26 PM
Dude just set fire to your PC and buy a new one. I think it's the only thing that will work now.
 
At this point, I'm seriously considering inviting PuppyLinux as a full time resident in place of Ubuntu ;)
 
@IntrepidBrit Bugger. :(
It's getting late here, so I have to say rhubarb.
 
That's fine. I just need to work out what Ubuntu needs. People just seem to pass it off onto grub, which I need to avoid right now
 
bai pm2
 
Thanks for the help today :)
 
3:29 PM
No worries.
 
See you
 
DSM
Midday-here rhubarb for PM 2Ring.
 
Okay! Minimal Ubuntu install is a gogo.
 
cmd.exe is the worst shell I've ever seen.
 
I dunno...
That one's not particularly stable either
 
3:39 PM
cmd.exe is truly bad
 
Bah, I keep thinking my code is bad on codewars, but even pass is giving me a timed out error
 
user559633
@Kevin holy crap that's awesome (give me the codes?)
 
Yes, once I get the many files in a coherent form
 
user559633
@Kevin Cheers man, I'm going to use this to learn how to do something new
 
I want to see it too, that looks really nice
 
user559633
3:44 PM
Are people cool with pinning projects once a week or something so we have a topic to kind of idly discuss between other content?
 
github or it didn't happen ;)
 
user559633
I think it's a good idea, but feedback from regulars appreciated, etc
 
Bah for the time being i'll just paste the whole thing in one document
 
DSM
Not a bad idea. Preferably ones which accept PRs so we could contribute if we see something.
 
You know what - I think that's a great idea. </nosarcasm>
 
DSM
3:48 PM
@Kevin: ah, so that's the Rect(*[d.get(attr, getattr(self, attr)) for attr in "left top right bottom".split()]) you were mentioning earlier.
 
Yeah.
I could make it longer and legible, but nah.
 
user559633
That's so cool.
 
That's a fantastic idea tristan.
 
user559633
@Kevin can you put it in a gist or something (i'd do it, but i don't want to steal credit)
 
On my "to do eventually" list is the task of formally uploading my collection of trippy gif making programs to Github proper
 
3:52 PM
@Kevin Still in a single fileā€¦ *sigh* xD
 
Oh yeah, gist has multi-file capability. I forgot.
I'll split them off
Ok, there
 
another +1 for your idea @tristan
 

« first day (1719 days earlier)      last day (3240 days later) »