« first day (1818 days earlier)      last day (3134 days later) » 

1:49 AM
I told my wife that SO said it would be really great if I'd spend a lot more time on the site.
:D
 
my wife said "You're on that stackoverflow site a lot"
she's on to me
 
 
1 hour later…
2:56 AM
I brought Davidism's concerns to Laura, our gracious host.
 
good evening @AaronHall ! :)
 
3:31 AM
Good night everyone!
 
peace
 
3:58 AM
Greetings peeps. I'm trying to generate some interest in a question I posted a few days ago. I'm executing GDAL from an os.system call and running into troubles when I compile it. If anyone is good with pyinstaller, please have a look. Probably something simple.

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32931976/pyinstaller-calling-gdal-from-os-system-gdal-translate
 
 
1 hour later…
5:04 AM
Is anyone else having trouble connecting to SO? A basic ping -t www.stackoverflow.com is showing 20-60% packet loss.
 
 
1 hour later…
6:17 AM
Hi everyone
 
Good morning all :-)
 
Hey up all
 
6:36 AM
morning
 
Cabbage
^ lol @thefourtheye
 
Now they show the tag name as well :-)
 
list-hammered
 
6:57 AM
sweet :)
Why don't I have a gold badge in list yet sighs
 
Yeah come on Jon. You're letting the side down.
 
just caught someone using has_key in an otherwise good answer
 
Yeah it should clearly be hasKey
 
@Ffisegydd Yeah sorry - I'll work on increasing my dupe hammer powers forthwith!
 
You'll need them when you're sacked from being a mod for power abuse.
 
7:04 AM
Ahh yes... that close all the questions and delete all the users rampage I keep forgetting to do, right? :p
 
Not all the users, just the set {RO for RO in pythonROs if RO.name != 'Ffisegydd'}
Make sure to delete yourself last.
 
Sound advice - always pillage before you burn and all that
 
meta.stackoverflow.com/users/3791372/user3791372 seems like a proper ****** just going absolutely hyperbolic in his comments on davidism's Q.
Up early or late @tristan?
 
8:20 AM
I hate Linux so much.
 
ducks
@Ffisegydd you should love Linux
@Ffisegydd sudo you should love Linux
3
 
o.o
I suppose I should say "I hate RHEL so much"
What's that? You want to install any modern IDE? Sorry! glibc is out of date and you can't upgrade without borking your entire install.
 
> You are not supposed to laugh on my question. Haha
 
1
A: It looks like the duplicate banner changed. How does it work now?

Thomas OrozcoWe are making two changes to closure by users that own a gold badge: First, we're going to start looking at the question's current tags instead of its original tags, unless you were the one that edited them (either by doing it yourself, or by approving an edit from someone else). This is done ...

 
> we're going to start looking at the question's current tags instead of its original tags
*cheer*
 
I imagine that'll go down well when it's got its own meta post ;)
 
9:34 AM
And there was much rejoicing.
 
9:48 AM
Cbg @Jon! o/ Haven't heard from your in AGES!
#loyal
 
@IanClark I know right! :)
mumble mumble traitor mumble mumble :p
 
Need to learn how to do sprint planning within the next 10 minutes.
 
@Ffisegydd the irony is not lost there... :p
 
It's okay I just read some blogs on it and am now an expert.
 
Well - have fun with your perpendicular lines :p
 
10:04 AM
cabbage
 
This person is clearly a competent Python programmer, but why does he have to do that stuff with the whitespace? stackoverflow.com/a/33010839/4014959 The alignment stuff I can (almost) forgive, but those spaces before the open parentheses are really annoying. IMO.
 
cabbage
@PM2Ring I feel the same way towards those spaces. They're certainly not something you see often, nor in any of the languages I know by the way
they look misplaced or something by themselves
 
import time as t ugh as well
 
As long as PEP-008 doesn't worry about it, it is valid Python (about the spaces)
And yes, the pep8 tool complains about it.
➜  Desktop  pep8 Test.py
Test.py:2:15: E272 multiple spaces before keyword
➜  Desktop  cat Test.py
from collections import OrderedDict
from itertools   import chain
 
10:16 AM
Hey guys, wondering if anyone can provide assistance on this question about compiling using os.system calls in pyinstaller. I'm trying to generate more interest in it.

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32931976/pyinstaller-calling-gdal-from-os-system-gdal-translate
 
@JonClements Agreed. I suppose I could tolerate import time as tm, especially if the coder is used to tm being a time-related thing (like it is in C). After all, import tkiner as tk is fairly common. But sheesh, time is only 4 chars. And obviously Filip doesn't mind wasting chars, with all that superfluous whitespace he's using. :)
 
Volkswagen detects when your tests are being run in a CI server, and makes them pass.
9
 
@thefourtheye It's syntactically-valid Python, but using spaces for alignment like is discouraged PEP-008. And spaces between a function name and the parentheses is definitely not PEP-008 compliant.
FWIW, in languages that need parentheses around if & while conditionals and for loop parameters, I generally leave a space before the open parenthesis so they don't look like function calls. So when people put a space in function calls I find it really annoying.
 
I agree :-)
 
10:23 AM
@PM2Ring @thefourtheye and I ignore the stupid non-alignment requirements of PEP8
 
The thing is - surely it takes a certain amount of effort to format code like that... possibly more time that just typing it out naturally :p
 
I did say "The alignment stuff I can (almost) forgive". :) And to be honest, I have done a little of it myself, when (I believe) it makes certain structures in the code clearer. But for things like import statements? Forget it!
 
yeah import statements are not supposed to be read
and they're not supposed to be written either.
IDE just autoinserts them.
 
11:01 AM
Ahh huh... smoke alarm tells me my pizza is "cooked" brb
 
cbg all!
 
I hate being a sys admin
 
Hi all. Do you know where I can find the GTK documentation? I am getting confused with gtk.gdk and gi.repository imports...
 
@user4039874 Are you writing on Python?
 
@khajvah Yes
 
11:09 AM
 
@khajvah Thanks. But what is the difference between using the import gtk.gdk and from gi.repository import Gtk, Gdk? I am using the latter and development is so slow, because I cannot find information...
 
@user4039874 I know a bit about GTK2+ and pygtk. But I know very little about the changes introduced in GTK3. So I probably can't help you very much.
 
@user4039874 here is a question that you might find helpful
yeah, Qt is better anyways.
 
I guess The Python GTK+ 3 Tutorial dated October 07, 2015 could be helpful. :)
 
@khajvah Thanks!
@PM2Ring thanks!
 
11:20 AM
@JRichardSnape Hey mate, was wondering if you could cast a gaze on this question I had. You were extremely helpful on a previous pyinstaller problem. If you have time, please check it out

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32931976/pyinstaller-calling-gdal-from-os-system-gdal-translate
 
@Praxis Hi @Praxis. I saw it - I'll have a look it I can get some time - I noticed you hadn't had much interest.
 
Thanks buddy, much appreciate. Whenever you have time :)
 
@khajvah Maybe it is, these days, now that Qt's licensing has changed. I chose GTK because Qt wasn't so open back then, and I had this crazy idea that I might want to use GTK from C, and although I have occasionally read gnome C docs I've never been tempted to build a gnome / GTK GUI in C.
 
Bloody unicode / str in Python 2. Trying to get some flaming debug info printed - somehow the library's repr is trying to join a mix of str and unicode (I think). Feels like I've entered Dante's first circle of hell.
 
@PM2Ring GUI development with C is a nightmare
I have used Qt with C++ and it was fine.
 
11:26 AM
@khajvah I wouldn't go that far. But it's certainly much more painful than doing it in an OOP language.
 
Well yeah, not that it's complicated or anything. It's just too boring and frustrating.
 
@PM2Ring If you have experience with GTK, do you think you can help me? I am stuck here stackoverflow.com/questions/33010538/…
 
FWIW, I've done lots of GUI stuff in C - but that was ages ago, on the Amiga, so the whole environment was a lot simpler, and we were using OOP-ish techniques, anyway.
 
oh Amiga. You must be old :P
 
:D. How to win friends and influence people :D
 
11:35 AM
Is there something I'm not understanding with this question? RPC C++ and Python. Wouldn't it just be a matter of communicating with an RPC client on the Python side?
 
@khajvah Yes. Now get off my lawn. :)
 
this is what you get for not installing adblocker
I wonder if these annoying websites earn any money
 
Hey up again all.
 
hey!
 
11:44 AM
hi
can someone help me with recursion?
 
@stack What's the problem?
 
i send u the link to pastbin and explain to you.
 
hey up fizzy
 
@JRichardSnape Have you ever been in the Lounge? Your avatar seems familiar?
 
It's actually just a picture of Alan Rickman he stole off the internet.
 
11:47 AM
@khajvah occasionally - I tend not to speak in there. My impression is of a brutal dystopian Mad Max-esque wilderness.
I would perish immediately upon speaking. Also, I know nothing of :: ;)
 
@user4039874 The .new_from_data()call looks ok. But I don't know OpenCV. Are you sure the ndarray has the data in the correct format?
 
@JRichardSnape Sounds 'bout right :p
 
Lounge is the 4chan of SE
 
@khajvah http://pastebin.com/YBS9Wc1u
take a look at my code.
i'm trying to check whether e,l and f s inside the userinput string.
for instance, if the word user enter is "flates", the output should be is a elfish word.
if the word the user enter is "hello", the output will be it is not a elfish word.
if the word the user enter is "elyanas", the output will be is not an elfish word
however, it works very strangely now.
 
@stack why the heck are you doing that with recursion?
 
11:52 AM
@stack I can't understand what is the problem you are trying to solve
 
Because homework.
 
@Ffisegydd mumble mumble bad instructors forcing inappropriate methodologies on students mumble mumble
 
@JonClements it was a task
 
univesities can't teach programming. That's a rule of the universe.
 
especially when (as in my experience) the professor started the class with "I have not programmed in 15 years"
YAAAAY
that is how my first programming class went
 
11:55 AM
I had a course named "Software development in C++", which didn't cover classes.
 
how cute
 
@khajvah for now,
if i enter "hello" it wil show that it is a elfish word, but it shouldn't be.
it should print out it is not elfish word instead
 
@PM2Ring @user4039874 Definitely worth checking type() and contents of what is coming from openCV - it can return empty, for instance, rather than erroring if a file can't be read (I recall this from a question some months ago)
 
My entire French class at school got detention because we all failed the test in the following class since we had the woodwork teacher "teach" the prior lesson
 
Lol at C++ without classes. "Now, class, some people will tell you that classes are integral to C++. But you don't need classes to learn C++. Well, not that sort of classes. You do need my classes. Now, where was I...(cont p.94)"
 
12:00 PM
Then I decided to study Mathematics. Much better.
 
You been trying out a new sock puppet, @Ffisegydd? ;) stackoverflow.com/a/33014727/838992
 
@stack Because in "l" you have all the flags set to "True" for some reason.
 
because
if I didn't set to true,
when I input "selfish", it will stay that it's not a elfish word
 
mumble mumble people keep flagging stuff mumble mumble
 
sorry =/
 
12:04 PM
@JRichardSnape u wot m8.
 
@JonClements should flagging be done sparingly?
 
@idjaw should be done when appropriate
 
@idjaw The rule of thumb: If the community can handle it then don't bother the mods.
 
@khajvah thank you somuch
this is my first time writing a recursion task. thanks alot
 
12:08 PM
@stack The reason you didn't understand is because this is a terrible task for teaching recursion.
 
cbg
 
@khajvah my prof wrote. if we know how to do it, we are a genius.. HAHA!
 
oh wow
 
@stack You didn't answer the question earlier: Why are you using recursion for this? Is it a requirement of the assignment?
 
I get a "NameError: global name 'any' is not defined" using the first approach and a syntax error when using "with open" which I mentioned in an above comment. I'm not sure if this is to do with my python version (2.4.3)? — Matt Damon 2 mins ago
 
12:10 PM
@PM2Ring @JonClements thanks and duly noted. My motivation with flagging was to get a badge...two away :p. I got suckered in to the achievement.
 
11 years old Python... yowsers
 
@PM2Ring yes, it's a requirement. for us to understand recursion
 
Tell your professor he's an idiot.
 
^^this
 
HAHAHA! @Ffisegydd , i like ur reply
can someone explain to me, where's recursion is all about?
 
12:11 PM
@stack Please speak English, rather than "txt" speak. It really isn't much effort to type "your"
 
Wow - there's a lot more practical and useful examples of using recursion to help understand it - that's just a beep one
 
There are so many good problems for teaching recursion, he chose the worst possible one.
 
sorry
 
function-ception
 
The remark about txt speak is especially funny in the room where 90% of people speak native Salad.
 
12:12 PM
@idjaw Ahh well - when you get to 3k - you won't have to raise those kinds of flags anymore... start getting some fake internet points under your belt!
 
@JonClements working hard on that 3k. :) love fake internet points .
 
@stack Ok. As khajvah (& Fizzy) said, this is probably not a great task for learning recursion. FWIW, it's generally a Good Idea to avoid recursion, unless it's appropriate to the task, eg handling recursive data structures like trees. Using recursion has more overheads than simple looping. Some languages can optimize that away if the recursive call is at the end of the recursive function (tail call optimization), but Python can't do that.
 
Sometimes I wonder if educators are doing more harm than good by treating recursion as some dark magical technique. function f calling function f is no different than function f calling function g.
 
@Kevin I have a feeling of deja vu - I'm fairly sure you and I have had a little bit of a "rant" about this very topic already
 
i can't get it
 
12:17 PM
OTOH, from the questions on SO, it seems that most newbies believe that there's one immutable scope for each function, and having two instances of a function on the call stack breaks it or causes them to intertwine somehow, when that isn't the case.
 
@stack unfortunately, we're not here to teach you programming. We are here to help with programming problems.
 
I believe this is the basis for all those questions where people forget the return statement in their recursive case
 
If you're not understanding it, I suggest you contact your professor or a teaching assistant.
 
@Ffisegydd mind you - doesn't appear the "instructor" is really teaching programming either :p
 
HAHA!
no one understand what he teach
 
12:18 PM
I agree, but that doesn't make us a substitute.
 
@Ffisegydd i didn't think that way.
 
I suspect googling "recursion examples [language]" would give far more and better explanations than any of us could.
 
I wasn't replying to you with my last message.
 
@stack In that case, you should play around with some simple examples of recursion first, and work your way up to more complicated cases. Eg, can you understand this recursive factorial ? (That page isn't fantastic, it's just one of the first ones I saw in a quick Google search).
 
I actually went to youtube and search about it
 
12:20 PM
Why? Videos are the worst way to learn programming.
5
 
@Kevin somehow , I understand it better than what my prof taught me
 
I like it when you Google recursion. :)
 
@stack For a more specific and easy to understand example - google recursion factorial python. Find a listing (shouldn't be more than about 5 lines). Convince yourself what it's doing (add a print before every line if you need)
 
Thanks everyone for the help!(:
 
@Kevin I like that theory
 
12:23 PM
No probs - as Fizzy said, the site isn't suited to teaching, but often people can point you in the right direction for a few search terms.
 
They call me Fizzy "Bad Cop" Good.
The fact that my last name is Good, but I'm the Bad Cop, fills me with irony.
 
@stack Once you're comfortable with the recursive factorial, take a look at the answers to this question:Python recursion permutations. Don't expect to understand it just by reading about it and writing code by trial & error. Get some paper and make diagrams of what's happening at every step.
 
look so complicated!
Can I ask, why do people want to use recursion?
 
Because they want to use recursion
Seriously though, try to do anything in a tree structure without recursion.
Then you know why you want to use recursion.
 
Programming is the art of doing complicated stuff by breaking it up into smaller and smaller pieces until the pieces are small enough to understand. Of course, then you have the problem of putting the pieces back together again... :)
 
12:32 PM
I FOUND A NEW JOB: I have to support a visual basic 5 code
how cool is that?
 
Not at all.
 
I don’t even know what to say
 
:(
 
I would get VB6, but 5?!
 
Actually I might try to run/translate it in VB6
 
12:33 PM
@PM2Ring oof. I know the image type: <type 'numpy.ndarray'> and dimensions: (640, 800). Or does this not give enough information?
 
@khajvah That sounds like a dangerous idea.
 
@JRichardSnape Thanks! I am reading a local file just to get this part to work. It is read properly, which is why I think my actions are not good.
 
@user4039874 Sorry, I don't know Numpy, either. However, there's a gtk.gdk.pixbuf_new_from_array which probably does what you want.
 
@poke Here is the story. My parents have a small business, selling POS stuff to restaurants and supermarkets. But the shit company they are working with don't want to translate the application to my native language with reasoning that it's written in VB5 (is it true it doesn't have unicode support?), so I will try to translate it.
 
oh i see.
thanks
 
12:36 PM
@PM2Ring I am looking for that one in GTK3, but haven't found it so far
 
@user4039874 Oh well. But surely extracting the data from that Numpy array and turning it into a byte string of RGB values is straightforward.
 
Hi any one who is using sunpy
 
@JRichardSnape That sounds evil. A class's __repr__() should use the repr() of sub-items (like built-in container types do) so that problems like that can't arise.
 
@K.SasikumarRaja just ask your question
 
@PM2Ring Yeah - I can't quite work out what's causing it. It seems to recursively use the reprs, but it prepends some stuff - a bit like this '%s %0.2f %s' % (internal_var, count, ''.join([repr(x) for x in children]))' It's a pig to debug
I guess I can dive into the source and make alterations, but is life too short?...
 
12:50 PM
It seems counterproductive that my Nature Sounds pandora station is interrupted by the most high energy, shock-jock, shouting and wacky sound effects commercial imaginable.
 
@Kevin use Deezer
 
[whale song for fifteen minutes]
IS YOUR CAR ON LIFE SUPPORT?! [BEEP, BEEP, BEEP, BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP]
GO TO BUY.USED.CARS.BIZ.UK.RU NOW! WOOO!
[pan flute and water trickling over rocks]
 
@JRichardSnape That ''.join([repr(x) for x in children]))' ought to be safe... unless the __repr__() methods of some of those children are returning unicode strings instead of byte strings, in which case the final result will be unicode.
 
morning everyone
 
Hi bird
 
12:59 PM
Hey corvid!
 
@user4039874 Two guesses. (1) try calling flatten() on the image array before you pass it in. (2) neither of those dimensions is divisible by 3, which makes me think that your stride of 3*width is bound to cause an index array out of bounds. Try type(image[0][0]) - I think these are not single bytes...
@PM2Ring That's what I thought too. I'll have another look later, when my brain is in better shape :) Thanks for having a muse on it.
 
@Kevin How annoying. Perhaps their software isn't smart enough to match ads to the music stream. Or perhaps they just don't give a yam.
FWIW, there's been a bit of whale-spotting going on around here lately, eg Humpback protects its calf from killer whale. I think I saw a whale yesterday from my balcony, but it's a bit too far to be sure without using binoculars (or younger eyes :) ).
 
@PM2Ring Darkest explanation: they know exactly how to match ads to music streams, and are choosing the least appropriate ones so as to annoy me into upgrading
 
@Kevin Or they just have higher charges for the advertisers that want to exploit the shock value.
 
I can only hope.
 
1:07 PM
isn't it playing ads every song?
 
I have to learn VB. Send help.
 
More like every 45 minutes, which comes to about three songs
 
@Programmer VBros unite
 
At least Pandora's only like $5 a month for ad free.
 
"Let me just delete the old `thing.zip` and then zip the `thing` directory..."
_deletes `thing.zip`, then deletes `thing` directory._
[kid_in_front_of_destroyed_microwave.png]
 
1:11 PM
@MorganThrapp I pay 6
 
But 6 is greater than 5.
So that's not much of an endorsement
 
it costs more, it must be better
 
yeah, it's better
also "We are deeply, deeply sorry to say that due to licensing constraints, we can no longer allow access to Pandora for listeners located outside of the U.S., Australia and New Zealand."
 
I'm not going to pay an extra dollar out of solidarity
Actually, that's a false dichotomy. I'm not going to pay 5$ or 6$ for either
 
ads are too annoying
 
1:17 PM
Counterpoint: nuh uh.
 
Yeah, I listen to Pandora for ~10 hours a week on the weekend while I'm working on side projects, and I will gladly pay $5 a month to not have to deal with ads interrupting my robot sex electronica.
 
I pay $10 for GMusic
It's the only one that streams well on my shitty internet
 
I might do it if I could just insert a five dollar bill into my computer's cd tray. I have a great deal of intolerance for entering credit card data and choosing passwords and managing repeating payments etc etc
 
@Kevin You can do it with gift cards
 
I have a great deal of intolerance for going down to the corner store and buying a gift card
 
1:21 PM
You can just use paypal
 
lol
 
... And entering the gift card number and choosing passwords....
I don't have paypal and getting an account would be a pain. There is no escape from my prison of sloth.
 
One and done :)
 
@Kevin You don't need an account to make a payment.
 
One more than I'm willing to do
 
1:22 PM
@Kevin "Prison of Sloth" would be a great name for a band
 
BTW, are those terrible smartphone paying thingys used anywhere?
when you touch your smarphone to something and make a payment
 
Personally, I've never seen it used
 
It's sound like a terrible idea
 
Assuming you're talking about NFC payments
 
yeah that
 
1:25 PM
I feel like that technology is only useful in big cities like NYC
 
I don't understand what's wrong with cash
 
@khajvah Because I never carry cash on me?
 
direct deposit is how most people are paid
 
I don't like the idea of being monitored on anything I do.
 
But you use the internet?
 
1:27 PM
Can you make me a tinfoil hat?
 
"Subject does not like the idea of being monitored", mutters the NSA operative assigned to monitor khajvah
 
@MorganThrapp well yeah but I try not to use anything that will track me
 
Fun fact: the transcript of everything we say in here is publicly available forever
 
which is not meant to be private anyways
 
forever
 
1:28 PM
my payments, on the other hand, are private
 
It'll be just cockroaches and Stack Overflow servers in the year 992015
 
Yeah, I'm sure the NSA is super interested in the breakfast sandwich you bought.
"Bacon? Hmmmm, always suspected he was more of a ham guy".
 
@MorganThrapp That's not an argument.
 
Hi
 
@MorganThrapp Classic "if you have nothing to hide, you shouldn't have a problem" argument
 
1:30 PM
"Subject shows sensitivity to gluten", writes the NSA operative in his "khajvah's greatest weaknesses" journal
 
Can somebody recommend a cleaner looking documentation website for python?
 
@SomeGuy I'm not arguing that at all. I think the NSA has overreached enormously, I just don't think it's a binary thing.
 
I can't get anything from the docs.python.org
 
I do some stuff to stop the low hanging fruit of tracking, but there's a difference between that and "I only pay cash for everything because otherwise the NSA knows what food I buy".
 
@MorganThrapp Well, one day, NSA might be interested in where you were at any given time
 
1:31 PM
@khajvah do you have a phone?
 
@Programmer :D
 
@khajvah Possibly, but they have a million ways to track that other than my credit card.
 
Ok you win
 
user559633
@Ffisegydd didn't even realize i was online
 
but still, credit card/NFC makes it all trivial
while they have to actually do something to track by phone
 
1:34 PM
Not really, but okay.
 
Actual programming chat. map and filter can be replaced by list comprehensions. If there was list-comprehension-like syntax to replace reduce, what would it look like?
If I can come up with decent syntax, I'd like to put it in KevinScript as a non-joke feature.
 
the last phrase out of the context sounds really cool.
 
@Kevin Write a PEP
 
That's putting the cart before the horse. A PEP would contain proposed syntax; I don't have proposed syntax.
 
@Kevin I haven't used reduce, but it's basically lambda x, y: x OP y for x, y in zip(a, b) right?
 
1:41 PM
I mean, after you come up with a proper syntax
 
Where OP is +, -, *, etc?
And looping until it hits 1 number.
 
x = reduce(f, seq, start) is equivalent to
x = start
for item in seq:
    x = f(x, item)
 
@MorganThrapp no, that's map with two input sequences.
 
Maybe [f(x, item) for item in seq with (x=0, f=add)]?
 
Save me from system administrating please
 
1:44 PM
Perhaps the fundamental problem with my hypothetical is that reduce does not necessarily return a list.
Ex. reduce(lambda a,b: a*b, range(1,10)) returns an int.
 
most often it does not
 
So having "list" comprehension syntax would be misleading.
 
@Kevin Maybe do it as a generator?
 
@khajvah sudo /etc/init.d/networking stop And just run away
 
but something like <f(x, item) for item in seq with x=0> might be interesting.
 
1:47 PM
@idjaw systemD baby
 
and that's why you're the sysadmin. I do anti-sysadmin stuff like use puppet. Unless sysadmins like puppet/chef these days? I'm not sure how the sysadmin side feels about those.
 
@MorganThrapp Still silly, since reduce is supposed to return a final result. Which can be a collection, but generally isn't.
 
@idjaw I am not using it but I don't know. Also, I am not that much of a sysadmin. It's just a web server running ubuntu server.
Have to write nginx configuration
 
OTOH, there is accumulate, which is like a cross between map and reduce.
 
Maybe you could replace reduce with accumulate if the overhead isn't too bad.
Then you just need a "The end of this iterator" function or operator.
 
1:57 PM
@bereal Maybe. Although I'm not so happy with overloading <> as angle brackets in Python.
@QuestionC last() in contrast to next().
 
Anonymous
Is there actually anything wrong with using one try/except e for every task in one-file based apps?
 
@samayo depends
 
Anonymous
hm, good enough for me
 

« first day (1818 days earlier)      last day (3134 days later) »