« first day (1777 days earlier)      last day (3188 days later) » 
00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 23:00

12:35 AM
@JRichardSnape @J Richard Hi J Richard Snape. Just saw yr message. I am unaware of previous messages. Can you post a link please if possible.
 
1:04 AM
@AbhishekBhatia you can probably find them in chat.stackoverflow.com/users/838992/j-richard-snape?tab=recent
 
 
3 hours later…
4:32 AM
THere is a duplicate for this
And CBG ALL
 
5:09 AM
Thanks tzaman!
 
5:32 AM
@JRichardSnape Thanks for the help!! Great spot! If possible please post an answer here so that I can accept it stackoverflow.com/questions/32242911/….
 
5:44 AM
Hey up all
 
yo
 
ceebeegee
 
kgb
Salad language, Russian dialect
 
@bereal кпст
 
:)
 
5:54 AM
you're speaking pseudorussian salad
 
6:13 AM
ImportError: No module named 'ffi'
:(
 
:(
 
i search the web to find solution, but nothing worked
 
@MuhammadSohail did you pip install ffi
 
yes i did
when i do pip, the same error message appears .
again
File "C:\Python34\lib\site-packages\micropython_ffilib-0.1.1-py3.4.egg\ffilib.py", line 2, in <module>
ImportError: No module named 'ffi'
 
pip --version?
 
6:16 AM
don't know
how can i find
?
 
Run it just like pip install ffi
 
it shows the same error as i said above.
 
okies
 
full error message.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Program Files (x86)\ActiveState Komodo IDE 9\lib\support\dbgp\bin\py3_dbgp.py", line 74, in <module>
import logging
File "C:\Python34\lib\logging\__init__.py", line 26, in <module>
import sys, os, time, io, traceback, warnings, weakref, collections
File "C:\Python34\lib\traceback.py", line 3, in <module>
import linecache
File "C:\Python34\lib\linecache.py", line 10, in <module>
import tokenize
File "C:\Python34\lib\tokenize.py", line 31, in <module>
import re
i face this error also when i try to run the python code.
 
wonder if that is some micropython hacks
 
6:36 AM
what you mean @AnttiHaapala ?
 
Helloo!!!

i = 2134324
set(`i`) <- can this be written in more compressed from to get {'1','2','3','4'}??
In python 3.
 
set(str(i))?
 
Yeah.
 
Yay, FGITW
 
@MuhammadSohail yes you've already said so
 
6:38 AM
@vaultah len("set(str(i))") > len("set(`i`)") .. want something more compact ...
 
Please don't spam chat with your questions repeatedly.
 
TypeError Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-3-9c7757235776> in <module>()
----> 1 set(i)

TypeError: 'int' object is not iterable
 
@VineetKumarDoshi deal with it. Anything more compact would be unreadable.
 
@MuhammadSohail you got this message while importing ffi and you did you not get any message while pip install
 
i get this error when i do pip install as well.
 
6:41 AM
Ask a question on the main site. You'll get more views on it.
 
@vaultah edited the code won't give err now
 
@MuhammadSohail I'd guess you've installed some micropython stuff that did ruin your installation?
 
@AnttiHaapala this error appears even if i delete the micropython folder.
i have tried many things.
nothing worked.
 
no, you need to pip uninstall all the micropython modules
or reinstall python
 
ok.
let me uninstall
 
6:44 AM
I do not know at all if micropython is supposed to work like that in an ordinary python installation
File "C:\Python34\lib\tokenize.py", line 31, in <module>
import re
File "C:\Python34\lib\site-packages\micropython_re_pcre-0.2.1-py3.4.egg\re.py", line 1, in <module>
#
you see, here it goes alllllll wrong.
import re should never try to import some micropython stuff.
you must not ever install anything related to micropython on your real python using pip I'd guess.
@PeterVaro ^ you were playing with micropython right?
 
same error appears when i try to uninstall micropython packages
 
of course
then you just need to reinstall all of python 3.4 I guess
 
ok, let me reinstall.
 
(and remember to also remove all from site-packages before reinstalling)
 
ok
i installed micropython because some other module imported it.
 
6:52 AM
then you shouldn't have installed that "some other module" either
micropython is a python for embedded devices
afaik there is nothing that ought to work on real python.
 
ok.
i wanted to call API from python.
how can i do this?
 
the micropython_re_pcre there is a replacement for the re module in Python standard library for these embedded devices. Alas, it takes over your re module completely - you install it once, you can't uninstall it.
which API?
 
any API which returns JSON results.
 
what does it have to do micropython?
for that the requests library is almost all you need.
 
Happy Friday you lot!
 
6:57 AM
@MuhammadSohail you should probably do your own research into how to call APIs from Python before coming and asking here. It's quite an easy subject to search around for.
 
i don't know, but i followed a tutorial on stackoverflow, there they said, we need httplib for it, and when i installed httplib, it further required other modules to import, and when I installed those ones, those required some other modules which included ffi also.
 
Hey up mucka.
 
Guys this whole moving thing is getting pretty real
 
\o/
 
Booked plane tickets and everything
 
6:58 AM
@MuhammadSohail don't follow such a tutorial
 
@MuhammadSohail, you do not need ffi to call HTTP APIs. What are you tyring to do, specifically? Which API?
 
@MuhammadSohail follow a tutorial that uses requests
36
Q: How do I request and process JSON with python?

sa125I am trying to send a GET request to a URL that I know returns data in the form of JSON using python. I would like to know how to send this request to http://someurl/path/to/json, and how to parse it - preferably to a python dict.

34
A: How do I request and process JSON with python?

webjunkieFor anything with requests to URLs you might want to check out requests. For JSON in particular: import requests r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json') r.json() [{u'repository': {u'open_issues': 0, u'url': 'https://github.com/...

this answer specifically ^
 
@MuhammadSohail what's the URL to the SO tutorial you've been following?
 
ok @AnttiHaapala i am looking at these tutorials.
 
@RobertGrant Scary. Whereabouts are you going to be living?
 
7:01 AM
Good question.
Looking at Abingdon, just south of Oxford
 
@RobertGrant this one.
3
Q: How to call a REST API using Python using json request/response- Crucible Development

amit pandeyI am a newbie to python and am trying to create a script to login to crucible and use the token to pass to other services. 1) I am able to make a xml request and get a response but as soon as I pass the headers to my conn.request it says HTTP Error 415, unsupported Media Type. I have done quiet ...

 
I've got friends that live in Abingdon, they love it.
 
urrrgh
 
Only an hour by car from Cheltenham \o/
 
@MuhammadSohail good advice: see how the code in the question is written. If it is badly formatted, rest of it is most probably is awful as well
 
7:03 AM
@MuhammadSohail incidentally that is not a tutorial. That is someone who has written some hacky code and has asked a bad question about it.
If you're after tutorials, you're best going somewhere other than Stack Overflow.
 
of course the opposite is not true (well-formatted code can be awful as well), but I've never seen code that ugly that was well thought out.
 
i searched the web to call api from python, clicked this link, the answers was marked correct and tried it.
 
@Ffisegydd yes! That is what I want to hear :)
 
@MuhammadSohail he wrote the question and the answer, and accepted his own answer
In any case, if you want a tutorial, avoid SO.
 
And yeah not far from Cheltenham! Don't think I didn't pick it for that exact reason.
 
7:08 AM
2 hours by train. It's a shame that the trains to Oxford are so bad from Cheltenham,
 
Wow that sucks
Stupid previous generation dismantling most of the train network
 
In any case I've now downvoted the question :D
 
Same.
 
because it is utterly awful and not really useful
 
Also
That's why I asked for it :)
 
7:21 AM
i faced another error last day, it was showing there is a line in the module which in installed, which has no paranthesis for print statement. i think, the module's code was written in 2.x version.
is there some solution for this type of errors?
i am using latest version of python.
 
@MuhammadSohail have you tried to research this error yourself?
 
Unless you're willing to convert it so it works in both versions, you have to find an equivalent library that does what you want
 
@Ffisegydd no
 
@MuhammadSohail Then please go do so. In an hour or two, if you still haven't solved it, come back and ask.
 
7:23 AM
And please be prepared to explain what you've researched and why it doesn't work.
i.e. don't just drink coffee for 2 hours then come back and ask again.
 
That's my go-to strategy
 
I'm drinking coffee at this very moment, but I am also working, for I can multitask
 
@AnttiHaapala this link worked for me to call json api.
35
A: How do I request and process JSON with python?

webjunkieFor anything with requests to URLs you might want to check out requests. For JSON in particular: import requests r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json') r.json() [{u'repository': {u'open_issues': 0, u'url': 'https://github.com/...

 
7:39 AM
@MuhammadSohail good :D
 
@AnttiHaapala thank you.
 
and the code is a bit simpler, won't you agree ;)
 
8:00 AM
yeah it's simpler.
 
I know this question is probably off-topic, but I physically cannot cv it: stackoverflow.com/questions/32266162/…
 
Envelope!
Hot damn that's some nostalgia
 
Beep!
 
I am not sure what he's asking
 
Probably, you've also never seen "R'Tape Loading Error"...
 
8:07 AM
I've done ADSRs myself and added sines together and whatnots in python but... like ...
whaaaat does the OP really want :D
the problem ofc is that there are no oscillators any more in modern sound cards
 
he wants a library that says ni
but with modern sound cards you can only say ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing
 
Ah, @RobertGrant, envelope indeed drifts off to 1988
 
8:28 AM
@PM2Ring shame on you answering such simple question :P you could add some example
 
@VigneshKalai I've expanded my original answer, but I didn't add an example, since it is such a basic thing.
 
You deserve an upvote for adding information about _future_ did not know that :)
He has 4,122 score in python tag but why did he get a gold medal he got only silver medal
 
8:45 AM
You need 1000 net upvotes, not 1000 rep.
So to get it you need at least 10,000. And most of the time you need significantly more due to accepts, etc.
 
Isn't score and upvote related
I mean 1 score =1 upvote
 
@Ffisegydd: the score is 4122 (upvotes - downvotes)
 
Oh sorry yes.
 
I got my bronze when I got 100 score in python thought it would be related
 
He doesn't have enough answers then.
You also need 400 answers IIRC.
 
8:47 AM
^ this
 
He only has 202 posts.
 
He is too good for the gold badge
 
That is right he answered only 202 questions
He is actually brilliant he has 4122 from 202 answers I have 190 from 165 :P
 
Wow that's crazy
Maybe he deletes any answers that do badly :)
 
4122 upvotes or score?
 
actually, upvotes
1478
A: Calling an external command in Python

Eli CourtwrightHere's a summary of the ways to call external programs and the advantages and disadvantages of each: os.system("some_command with args") passes the command and arguments to your system's shell. This is nice because you can actually run multiple commands at once in this manner and set up pipes ...

those were the days, when you could ask such a question.
 
@vaultah All his posts counts and he has posted very little answers to get that reputation
 
What does "Double digit love" mean? I can't figure it from the context D:
 
It means that the amount of love is not <3
 
Aaaaah nice :)
To be honest it sounds rude, but that could just be me
 
9:03 AM
Oh, sorry :[ and thanks
Aaand I watched the music video
damn it
 
No I don't mean you sounded rude, just that it could be interpreted in a rude way :)
 
9:22 AM
I guess I could put a warning "I don't get it and can't tell if it's not a good fit for the room" :p
 
Hey, NSFW probably seemed long when people first said it. IDGIACTIINAGFFTR isn't so much longer :)
 
10:22 AM
 
10:51 AM
Pub lunch today.
I'm thinking of going for the gammon.
 
I m trying to install PyCrypto and facing this error message.
Microsoft Visual C++ 10.0 is required (Unable to find vcvarsall.bat)
i serach the web.
and i installed visual c++ 10.0 as instructed
but this didn't work
 
11:08 AM
let me try
it is showing Invalid Syntax error
 
Maybe this lib is not compatible with py3k
Idk pycrypt seems to support Python 3
 
11:28 AM
idk ?
 
idk == I Don't Know
I don't use Windows, so I can't offer much help. But it looks like there are pre-built binaries available, if you're willing to risk using them, eg dropbox.com/s/n6rckn0k6u4nqke/pycrypto-2.6.1.zip?dl=0
 
cabbage, pythonicals.
@vaultah is right - you're trying to use a python 2 syntax library on python 3. It says in the name of the .egg on your screenshot that it's for Py 2.6 - you need to get the python 3 version.
Oops - the above FAO @MuhammadSohail
 
where can i get pytyon 3 version ?
i tried from pypi.
and also from link visible in screenshot
but nothign worked
 
@PM2Ring I like it - getting a crypto library from a dropbox link with no identifying features. Laurel...
@MuhammadSohail Well - you can build it yourself. Or, if you can't do that and you trust exe files found on the internet (P.S. all I did was google "prebuilt windows python 3 pycrypto"), you could try this : github.com/axper/python3-pycrypto-windows-installer . Please note I am not endorsing that link, I have no idea who built the binary or its veracity
I would say, though, that if you're using cryptography and are interested in open security, using someone else's prebuilt version could be deemed risky - I mean, they could have built a backdoor into it or anything. Having said that, it's unlikely, and if you're just doing it for interest, it's probably fine
 
11:46 AM
@JRichardSnape Hence the use of the word "risk" in that post. :) But it does look legit: it's from the Python mailing list: pycrypto 3.4 binaries for windows x86
 
Cool - I didn't think you'd really post something you hadn't thought about :)
 
can i trust that dropbox link then?
 
P.S. @MuhammadSohail you can probably work this out for yourself but, given the link that PM2 posted and the owner of that dropbox link (google him), you might be inclined to think they are more trustworthy
 
i am using it for online transactions, so i need trusted source.
 
@MuhammadSohail If you're doing security professionally. No
@MuhammadSohail well - you have to work out whether you can trust them enough for whatever you are doing. Trust is between you and whoever you are trusting. We are both telling you there is risk involved. Only you can work out if that risk is too great / acceptable for your application
@Ffisegydd Always the steak pie and chips for me. Mmm, pie...
cbg @kevin
 
11:52 AM
I am doing job in an organization which do online transaction processing, they asked me to find some python library for it. I will discuss with them about this risk.
 
You can never trust any code ever, because it's possible that while you were sleeping, the government replaced your computer with a replica that sends all your data to the pentagon every ten minutes
 
@MuhammadSohail I could say, "Yes, you can definitely trust that dropbox link"... but how do you know that you can trust me? :evil grin: But yeah, it looks safe: Christian Heimes is a respected core Python developer.
 
You can't even trust source code you read yourself and verify as clean, because the compiler may insert malicious code into the resulting executable. This can even happen if you read the compiler's source code and verify it as clean.
 
If an organization is doing online transaction processing, it had better hire a full-time security professional, who knows all the caveats of crypto.
 
@Kevin Especially if the tool you use to read the compiler's source code was compiled with that compiler...
 
11:55 AM
a guy who you can awake at 3am and he would tell you the difference between CBC and CTR.
 
@Kevin Not to mention the malicious monkey that sits on my shoulder and types naughty words when I'm not looking.
@bereal lol - I now have the mental image of someone awaking with a start and shouting out crypto acronyms followed by a list of pros and cons.
 
@JRichardSnape some scene from Full Metal Jacket
Private Joker, what's are the downsides of ECB mode?
 
So, anyway, having established that trust is a relative concept and Kevin is paranoid, what other philosophical concepts shall we explore in the context of code?
 
@JRichardSnape: Are you familiar with the work of the folk singer Anne Briggs? She was a very influential person in the English folk revival of the 60s & early 70s, both due to her style and the songs she unearthed, influencing bands like Pentangle and Steeleye Span, but she did very little recording herself. Here's an audio clip of her singing Blackwaterside.
 
Is there anything in the Python documentation that explains the notation they use in the documentation? I'm trying to figure out if enumerate(iterable, start=0) conveys different information than enumerate(iterable, [start=0])
 
12:08 PM
from the second, what I understand is that start=0 is optional whilst you have to have it in the first
 
@PM2Ring I am was not. I like the song and voice - not over-stylised. I see she recorded "she moved through the fair" in the sidebar too. One of my favourites. Anyone with Sandy Denny in youtube's "similar" recommendations has to be work a listen.
 
it's just intuitive to me, not the actual documentation
 
I don't think that's it, because the first one is how it really appears in the documentation, and enumerate does work even with one argument
 
@Kevin At I guess, I'd say they're identical, but using brackets makes it explicit that [start=0] is optional.
 
Browsing around, it seems like an optional argument has brackets only if it doesn't have a default value
But the image from this post breaks that rule.
 
12:10 PM
@JRichardSnape Yeah. Sandy got "she moved through the fair" from Anne.
 
But on the third hand, when I actually go to the page where that image was apparently taken, there aren't any brackets.
Ah, there are brackets in the 2.7 version but not the 3.X one.
 
Briggs is nice, but I like Bert Jansch more.
 
Seems there are a few collaborations between the two available on YT
Where in this case few means (>=1)
;)
 
too many brackets for my eyes x_x
 
cabbage all, bugrit
 
12:14 PM
need to check. collaborations are cool.
like Paul McCartney and Kanye West :P
 
Pace of work is picking up, got some ideas for implementing a Python API to our services. Slow going but I am having an immense amount of fun.
 
Didn't realise youtube was one-boxed automatically
@holdenweb Cbg, foul ole ron ;) Glad to hear you're having fun
Did you work out why scipy doesn't auto install numpy when using pip install?
 
I'm now assuming the rule is: always use brackets if it's optional and has no defaults. If it's optional and does have a default, don't use brackets if you're in 3.X and do whatever you feel like if you're in 2.7.
 
@Kevin nods sagely yes, yes, There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
 
12:18 PM
the people who wrote the documentation for 3.X obviously were like me; their eyes couldn't handle the brackets :P
 
@JRichardSnape: Here's another classic song that Anne Briggs introduced to the 60s English folk scene: Willie O Winsbury, performed by the great Richard Thompson. I've loved this song ever since I first heard a version by Pentangle.
@bereal Bert & Annie were a good combination.
@JRichardSnape They did live together for a number of years.
 
@PM2Ring Now that I am very familiar with :) I've been to Fairport's Cropedy festival for 30 years on and off. I went to see Pentangle in about 2000, iirc - enjoyed it very much.
 
@Jerry Keyword args should always be optional. And functions that don't work like that are evil. :)
@JRichardSnape Excellent! You'll probably like this one then: a cover of Richard Thompson's Beeswing, which was inspired by Anne Briggs.
 
Now I want to know how the documentation would annotate a function with a mandatory keyword argument.
"The standard libs would never have such a thing" is unsatisfactory. If the language permits it, there should be an accompanying notation.
 
foo(X,bar=<put something here or you'll regret it>)
 
12:28 PM
Functions can also be called using keyword arguments of the form kwarg=value. For instance, the following function:
def parrot(voltage, state='a stiff', action='voom', type='Norwegian Blue'):
[...]
accepts one required argument (voltage) and three optional arguments (state, action, and type). This function can be called in any of the following ways:
 
can we create a function with a mandatory keyword argument? o.o
 
def frob(a, **kwargs):
    if "b" not in kwargs:
        raise Exception("forgot mandatory keyword argument 'b'")
Don't think you can do it without **kwargs though.
 
oh ok, it's handled inside the function body. I thought it like an error raised on calling the function before it gets executed (like when not enough args supplied or too many)
 
An acceptable answer to my question might then be "the documentation would just look like frob(a, **kwargs), with no indication that b is mandatory until you read farther down than the header"
 
it would be better I think for the function to request a list variable instead of kwargs
 
list or something of the same family
 
When one or more parameters have the form parameter = expression, the function is said to have “default parameter values.” For a parameter with a default value, the corresponding argument may be omitted from a call, in which case the parameter’s default value is substituted. If a parameter has a default value, all following parameters up until the “*” must also have a default value — this is a syntactic restriction that is not expressed by the grammar.
 
Syntactic restrictions not expressed by the grammar? Tsk tsk, Python devs.
 
anyone see this new youtube for games thing?
 
No
Describe it to me. Be my eyes.
 
12:45 PM
I think I did yesterday. Didn't pay too much attention to it @corvid
it is the little game console icon I think at the top left?
 
Yeah it's just "here's all our video game videos" basically, but it has a cool design
Hrmph... how do you listen to two events both firing?
 
Ye cannae.
 
1:02 PM
@corvid Do your events have timestamps? If so, you create listeners for both events, and maintain lists of recent events so you can compare their timestamps. If your events don't have timestamps, you're out of luck.
 
It's basically just making sure that two sockets are both open at the same time. If either are closed, set the property of _connected to false, if both are open, set _connected to true
 
1:18 PM
Another mystery user all those reputation was from asking questions
 
I am unable to parse that sentence.
"Another mystery: user all those reputation was from, asking questions"
"Another mystery user! all those reputation, was from asking questions"
"Another mystery, user. All those, reputation was from asking questions"
Oh. "It is a mystery how this user got so much reputation only from asking questions".
 
hi guys
 
hi @uniking
 
user559633
oh hey
 
having a great day?
 
user559633
1:30 PM
Eh. You?
 
yeees 30'til weekend:)
 
user559633
I have a cat that occasionally reverts to being feral and tries to kill people. I find it a little cute, but having a 5kg animal trying to kill you all morning gets tedious
 
are u serious?
 
user559633
Yes, completely.
 
hahah
 
user559633
1:33 PM
It's like snake charming, but the snake is more dexterous, has claws, has four legs, and is something you care about.
 
sounds very intresting
 
@VigneshKalai His top voted question is pretty basic but got 956 votes and 384323 views. But the guy who answered it did even better - 1782 votes, plus a 500 point bounty. Those were the days...
 
user559633
Oh god. I wish I could go back to those days and answer an internals question to get to 10k overnight
 
“If cats looked like frogs we'd realize what nasty, cruel little bastards they are. Style. That's what people remember.”
― Terry Pratchett, Lords and Ladies
 
Cabbage.
 
1:40 PM
That quote's a Granny Weatherwax line, IIRC.
cbg, Morgan.
 
Granny Weatherwax was always one of my favorite characters.
 
TP always said her opinion on issues was basically his opinion on issues
 
user559633
1:55 PM
Was Discworld a popular book for children in the UK? Growing up here in the states, we mostly read the bible and glock maintenance manuals
 
The Discworld books were (mostly) written for adults, not children. Some of the later ones (the Tiffany Aching books) were written for Young Adults, but even those have some fairly adult concepts, IMO. Sure, plenty of young people have read Discworld books, but I think you need to be aware of a lot of the background references to get the full value from them, and many younger readers just won't have that background.
 
cbg all
 
user559633
@PM2Ring Ah, cool. From what I've been linked to, it didn't seem targeted at children, but it seems that most people have read the books, so I'm wondering why that is the case.
 
Pratchett was is a brilliant and engaging storyteller. The Discworld is a fun place to set stories, and while there's plenty of humour there's also some very dark stuff, too. And even though it's nominally a fantasy world it doesn't seem unrealistic while you're immersed in it.
But I think the secret to Pratchett's & Discworld's success is his excellence at character creation. His characters grow through the books, and even though some of them can do pretty amazing stuff they still have their little flaws, so they don't become boring Mary Sues.
FWIW, I've read all 40 of the Discworld novels several times, and I'll probably keep re-reading them for the rest of my life.
 
2:13 PM
I've got most of them on my Kindle, I really need to reread them.
 
Do it! :) I'll probably be starting my annual Discworld marathon sometime within the next month or so; I'm a little late getting started this year. :)
 
How did a SyntaxError get two votes?! stackoverflow.com/a/32273127/3001761
Four votes!
 
"hangs out in a programming chat room" and "enjoys humorous works of fiction in a DnD-like setting" seems like a venn diagram with a lot of overlap
 
user559633
@PM2Ring I'm not doubting his ability, just surprised by the number of people in here that have read his works.
 
What's the recommended order of reading Pratchett?
 
2:21 PM
 
Chronological worked for me, but the first couple of books are fairly different from the rest
 
thanks.
 
There's a newer version
 
@tristan Well, he is very popular. But he is very English. For some Americans that's an attraction, but for others it's a turn-off. Also, his various American publishers made a few marketing blunders, so he's not as well-known in the States as he ought to be, IMO. OTOH, he still does have lot of American fans, partly because he was very active on Usenet, back in the days before the WWW.
 
IRIC Eric especially establishes a bunch of mythology that never gets addressed again.
 
user559633
2:23 PM
Ah, Usenet is maybe it -- I had never even heard of him before this room and I still don't see him referenced in any other community
 
It's kind of weird that they visit hell when in every other book, you don't see anything about the afterlife beyond the conversation each new ghost has with Death
(that's not a spoiler because you can deduce as much from the cover)
 
My top 3: Carpe Jugulum, Night Watch and Feet of Clay
 
@RobertGrant I would agree with the first two, but I would replace Feet of Clay with The Hogfather.
 
@Kevin perhaps it's like the Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy movie - a decent story that just happens to be set in an existing universe
 
Thief of Time is the only one of mine that consistently has a high rank
 
2:26 PM
Actually yeah I might do that as well :)
I can't remember which one that is (Thief of Time)
Night Watch is the one with time travel in, right?
 
Yes
 
@bereal Unfortunately, that's not an easy question to give a blanket answer to. On the official Terry Pratchett forum, they often suggest starting on the Watch novels, and if you like the try the Witches &/or Death series. And once you're hooked, you'll probably want to go back and read them in proper chronological order of publication. :) However...
As Kevin mentioned, the very early Discworld books are somewhat different in feel to the later books - more parody than satire, and you kind of need to be familiar with the works he's parodying to appreciate them properly. Also, the nature of the Discworld in the later books is subtly different to the world he originally introduces in the first two books. So reading those early books can be slightly disconcerting if you come to them after reading the later books first.
 
Huh, the thing I spent literally 10 minutes on got more stars on github than something I actually thought was really hard :|
 
TANJ
 
The sheer density of wrong here is impressive: stackoverflow.com/q/32273596/3001761
 
2:42 PM
I experienced physical pain while reading that.
 
@jonrsharpe "Any suggestions and/or alternatives? " Yes. Try something more suited to your ability, like finger-painting.
 
"i'm new to programming" - yeah no kidding!
Possibly also thinking
 
cbg
 
Anyone here ever try to automate a windows batch script (while providing input!) using python?
I've been working on this for a while and just can't seem to get this working appropriately
 
user559633
@Musher read the room rules and just ask your question
 
2:54 PM
You could always rewrite the batch script in Python.
 
The question is that I can't get this input to actually be sent to the batch script
@Kevin that's... I don't know why I didn't think of that. That might just be the better option
 
I don't think I've ever gotten communicate to work properly.
 
@jonrsharpe oof, a wee bit harsh, I think (maybe biased because I just answered that before coming here). I assumed the OP there knew what they were trying to do, just got a bit confused about what type they were dealing with at each stage. Maybe I'm too soft.
 
Pretty much every line in isolation didn't make sense, I think I was remarkably restrained!
 
00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 23:00

« first day (1777 days earlier)      last day (3188 days later) »