Wow... probably took more time to post this than just read the explanation next to the example in the documentation... amazing... Why do people do that!? growls
Well I was just going to comment something like...
We've recently been doing a lot of burnination work and to try and help this along, davidism wrote a bot to try and do edits. The bot obviously did not work -_- davidism has now gone to bed and so will wake up to a lovely message from balpha in the morning. He had the best interests of the community at heart, but obviously he has made a mistake and will face up to the consequences. I'd like to apologise on my friends behalf for now, and am sure he'll profusely apologise later.
@Ffisegydd sounds good to me... is it worth mentioning that there's a group of us willing to help in rolling back etc... but don't want to proceed with that as it's uncertain if mods/devs are working on anything?
@ZeroPiraeus *we refers to Python chat room regulars. In order to define who are regulars and who was not, we set up a meta definition to define users who can potentially be regulars. We set up a meta-meta definition to define users who may define regulars as regulars, who are...
I love when I plug in my headphones and a little popup comes on and says "Audio jack connected" - "Yes Windows, I know it's connected, I connected it..."
I do not understand the edit made on my question:
http://stackoverflow.com/posts/22328191/revisions
if it is retag work, why the quotes have been changed? (it even does not work in the code section)
Yeah. Just the other day I was at a data analytics meetup speaking to some people about Nidaba. They asked whether I'd eventually automate the closing process and I explained to them that if it went wrong, it would be my (or whoever's account was being used) fault.
@GamesBrainiac It's called the golden ratio. Many things in nature use it. Check sunflower seeds while still on the plant. Or the way some plants position their leaves.
@MartijnPieters that question you just participated in putting on hold: he's not getting very far from his first post (now rolled back twice): stackoverflow.com/posts/27763779/revisions
@Martijn for that guys original post, I was sorely tempted to hand him:
with open(classno) as fin, open('class11.txt', 'w') as fout:
for line in filter(str.rstrip, fin):
name, *nums = line.split()
print(max(nums, key=int), name, file=fout)
One of the devs has been made aware of this by @J. Steen's flag and has notified the author of the script. No idea how the edits will be sorted out though. — BoltClock ♦1 min ago
@JonClements I don't think we have an automatic way. I've asked the user in question to go fix it, but he hasn't reacted yet. If you want to help out, that's certainly appreciated
@Jon ok balpha has replied, I'll start from the end of the pile in 5-10 minutes or so over lunch. You can start from the front if you want and I'll meet you in the middle.
Okay, almost finished a script that takes a question using the api, then corrects the encoding errors, and outputs new text that can be used... but we'll do the editing manually :)
I think I've done 8 too, but I missed some because they were fine (the malformed bit was in text so appeared "fine) but I may go back and do those too.
Ah you're doing those now :) in which case I will finish my lunch then head back to the office.
this guy has some concerns about using with file as f:, which is unusual to me. Isn't it conventional to do with open(whatever) as f:? Why do a with on an existing file object?
and it turns out that editing a previous revision will only touch the tags if you not also 'change' the body. I add a useless space, then remove it again.
KevinScript type system attempt #4 is going pretty well. My specification doc got to 35 lines long before I had the first, "wait, how can I possibly make this work?" moment
Which is like three times better than my previous attempts.
I think I'm an hour away from learning why Python makes a distinction between __new__ and __call__, and why I should too
I'll just look up __new__ in my usual dunder method documentation... It says "Really Complicated". Well, I knew that.
Right now, my design is like: when ClassType.__call__ executes, create an Object instance and add all the functions from ClassType onto that object, with some closure trickery so that self points to the right thing.
...And this works quite well, except for one thing: I can't define special calling behavior for instances of that class, since ClassType.__call__ already exists and must not be replaced by anything else.
Just came across a page while browsing that before fully loading renders literally "Welcome to {{VENUE.TITLE}}", then it finishes loading and actually does render the Jinja or whatever their using.
But what causes the template code to ever seep through? I previously thought the replacement was done before it made it to the browser at all.
@Kevin I'm glad you're surprised too! Here (SFW) if you're curious. It flashes up and corrects more quickly for me now - but when my network connection was much slower a few mins ago, effect was much more pronounced.
My sincere apologies to you and everyone else for the trouble I've caused. I decided to use a script without testing and obviously was wrong to do that. Thanks to the efforts of everyone in chat, this is being fixed.
@davidism and just in case you missed it: in my strong opinion such retags should be done by hand anyway as there are usually other issues to pick up on, like removing thank you and closing blatantly off-topic posts.
Consider the opposite. If the rule was "replace all boolean expressions with if expression == True:, then you'd never be done, because if greeting: would become if greeting == True: which would become if (greeting == True) == True: which would become if ((greeting == True) == True) == True: which would become...
@balpha @Shog9 and for others with an interest in the re-tagging "Fortran Fiasco" - all changes have been corrected, and also related, http://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/284933/
@davidism I'd be interested in a copy of the message balpha sent you - can you forward it? :p