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1:00 PM
downvoted
the upvote/downvote tooltips are simply: this answer is useful, this answer is not useful
that blurp is not useful as it is, so downvote.
 
user559633
"I was wondering why we can't use token concatenation outside of defines."
>"Why was it is not an easy question..."
 
user559633
it's an attempt
 
user559633
better than most answers, really
 
yes, but it is not useful
so I downvote it and rightly so.
 
user559633
meh i'm upvoting to cancel yours :)
 
1:02 PM
then you're just countering the advice
 
user559633
"// We need 'CAT_HELPER' because of the preprocessor's expansion rules" is interesting in its own regard
 
Might be useful to tristan
 
what kind of moral philosophy says that "sudo rm -rfing" idiots hard disks is a good thing
 
Most arguments/disagreements are about definitions and semantics. If only there were no such thing as subjectivity.... Where is the Singularity when you need it?
 
user559633
more interesting than answers that just say "use jquery's wipe_user_butt() function"
 
user559633
1:03 PM
@AnttiHaapala what kind of moral philosophy says to handhold idiots that would copy and paste code and run it without understanding what it does at all when it's obviously calling something to do with "system" and the writer of the code says "don't ever do this"
 
@tristan the usefulness of that stupid answer is limited only to destroying the users' hard disks
 
user559633
you can't put a blanket around every sharp corner in the world and i especially don't care to do so when giving out free help over the internet
 
I am questioning your upvoting strategy.
 
user559633
if it said "hello world" would that make you feel better? why does it matter what's written there
 
no
if it said hello world you wouldn't upvote it
there is no point in that answer, it does not answer the question. It is not useful in answering the question.
 
1:06 PM
Morning cabbage.
 
shhh
 
user559633
because the answer contains at least mildly interesting content and i'm not such a moron that if someone gave me a loaded gun and said "don't point this at your thigh and pull the trigger" and I did it, I wouldn't look around for someone else to get mad at
 
user559633
never mind
 
@MorganThrapp cabbage o/
 
Finds a sharp corner and throws a blanket over it
 
1:09 PM
"If every one of you put just one blanket over a sharp corner each week, all sharp corners in the world would be made safe in 6 months. Please. Think of the corners."
 
It's not a good answer. But the poor guy doesn't deserves to be persecuted by the Meta effect plus Reddit for it.
 
(I haven't got a clue what we're even talking about)
 
@Ffisegydd We'll run out of blankets. This is bad the for the environment as it abuses natural reserves!
 
@Ffisegydd it's: should sample code be boobytrapped to punish people for not reading it
 
user559633
1:11 PM
actually, my thoughts are pretty easy to sum up. i don't think it's a great answer, but it's at least more interesting than most vanilla-flavored garbage on SO. the answer is more or less "why isn't easy, it comes from the standard's committee, the needs of them don't always match the wants of now, it would be valid to double hash in non-directive lines, but keep in mind C went natural-language in evolution, here's a work around", which is easily top 90th percentile
 
@RobertGrant I broke my middle feet bone to such a prank once (well not cement one, but heavy ball that was bolted to the floor).
 
Calm down, dude, it's just a prant
 
user559633
i hope SO is quick to come out with the list of code that we can include in answers and what example code is "no no don't do a user might make boo boo on their facebook machine"
 
@tristan Can we all downvote this please? It’s a harmful code excerpt in chat! Who knows who comes around in 5 years to read our chat logs and attempts to execute that!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!!1111
 
1:14 PM
No one should be called a psycho because of writing a stupid answer on stackoverflow, but going to meta to whine that your not-useful-and-possibly-dangerous answer is being serially downvoted is just...
 
@poke Are you saying C will be around for 5 years?
 
@AnttiHaapala So a single line out of 100 that may be malicious makes the answer not useful?
@khajvah Yes. And by 2021, people will check Python chat rooms for C help, obviously.
 
Poke's highly caffeinated today
 
user559633
@AnttiHaapala reddit obsessing over your actions on SO would be mildly annoying at best and going to meta to talk about a cloud of downvoting following you around the site is on topic
 
@poke actually most of the contents in that answer make it not useful
it would be more useful if it just said "you can use token pasting within a macro like this"
 
user559633
1:16 PM
@poke oops sorry! i'm going to go back through and remove all mentions of performance in case someone thinks that i'm performance shaming
 
@tristan Thank you!
 
user559633
@AnttiHaapala lol as one of the more hyperbolic users of the site, the irony of you criticizing someone using a colorful example is not lost on anyone
 
Put down the poor straw man, guys
 
@RobertGrant I can’t find a picture of a fallen strawman :(
 
@poke When you make one you have to draw him yourself!
 
1:20 PM
installing linux is fun when you have no disks or usbs....
 
Cabbage all, long time no see. Funny to see that almost everyone who i saw online a year ago is still active here :)
 
user559633
@RowanKleinGunnewiek yes, i also find it unfortunate that i still rely on computers
 
@RowanKleinGunnewiek welcome back :)
 
@tristan Most computers find it also unfortunate they still have to rely on humans. So it evens out.
 
@RobertGrant thx :)
 
1:24 PM
@RowanKleinGunnewiek WB!
 
@RobertGrant Searching for lying scarecrows on Google Images results in a surprising amount of pictures of women in an erotic posture…
So I’m going to stop now, and get back to work..
 
Just be careful to not stand up straight away if you're in a suit
 
It was all still SFW.
And I’m not that weak.
 
@RobertGrant :D
 
You define weakness weirdly
 
1:26 PM
Now we've found the level
 
@RobertGrant Weak to visuals.
 
Make it stop. Let's go back to blankets to prevent corner cases. Or have I misunderstood.
 
That's true, a blanket is a good idea
 
Hej @JRichardSnape, the man that helped me pass my trimester xD
 
@RowanKleinGunnewiek o/ hej. Glad it worked out :)
 
1:29 PM
JRS, can I bore you with a noob math related question?
 
:slaps khajvah with a wet fish: You know better than to target individuals here with a question.
 
:(
 
So just ask your question. :)
 
ok, I might sound dumb but how do I get better with doing proofs?
I am used to easily ace-ing calculus/linear algebra and that kind of stuff but I just can't do proofs
 
@tristan :D anyway I did answer that question
and my answer is more useful than either of the current answers alone
 
user559633
1:37 PM
Checking it out now
 
user559633
`A formal parameter (or normal operand) as an operand for ## is not expanded before pasting.`
wat
 
user559633
a normal operand as an operand
 
@khajvah How do you get better at anything.. Excercise it. Proofs typically fall into certain categories - and you'll know what to look for after doing several similar proofs. You then know which steps are most logical etc etc.
 
@paul23 yeah but how do you check your own proofs?
 
@khajvah Like anything: practice. Work through proofs written by other people. That means getting a pen and paper and writing it down, not just reading through it.
 
1:40 PM
Dibbler's drinks had circumstantial evidence at best
 
in calc, I could run wolfram alpha and check if I got the right answer. In case of proofs, I sometimes think that I am right but turns out it's incomplete
 
For example during my linear algebra course, the exam was 50+% proofs: proof that a if matrix A follows specifics f, it fits criteria B. And this often had to do with proving whether or not the matrix was invertible. So you could look at the list of rules for that almost always.
@khajvah Uh if you proof it it's "logical" - other than that you'll have to review it manual (math.se?)
 
@khajvah Well, you can always post stuff on SE.Mathematics.
 
Wolfram|alpha isn't really suited for a lot of things, differential calculus is one of the things :P.
 
I think checking your own proofs can be very hard, if you've made a step that you think is valid, but actually turns out to need more to make it robust
I believe that was, for instance, a problem with the initial claim to have proven Fermat's theorem, which was subsequently "filled in" to speak colloquially.
Is that the kind of thing you mean Khajvah?
 
1:45 PM
well yeah, I can practice myself and try to solve 100s of problems but then, I won't be able to check them
 
My only advice would be practice. However, I am far from an expert on proofs at the higher levels - I'm an 'umble engineer rather than a mathematician.
 
I think they use some computer software for long proofs
 
argh, is it simply impossible to find the smallest difference between two angles in lined? Each version I'm trying to type seems to have a conditional in it.
 
@khajvah That's a pretty general statement. I'd find a few examples - well known proofs. Try them yourself, see whether your method matches those used by others, see whether you miss steps. If there's a step you think is valid but doesn't appear elsewhere, ask (math.se, or a local teacher).
Anyhow - lunch time now. temp rbrb
 
Thanks a lot
 
1:51 PM
@JRichardSnape Rbrb
 
@Kevin umm... learn something new everyday - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Livingston_Seagull_(album)
 
Writing a robust proof is a lot like writing robust code, except that it's easier to test code. But the more you do it the better your instincts get at spotting gaps and shaky logic. Don't expect to achieve perfection. There are proofs in Euclidean geometry that were accepted as perfect for dozens of centuries that have little flaws that were only uncovered in the last century or so.
Also, the standard of robustness in algebra and calculus before guys like Weierstrasse was fairly relaxed compared to what it is today. Even though Euler was without doubt a genius a lot of his proofs would be considered sloppy these days.
 
One of Fermat's definitely needed some work
 
user559633
I prefer ferment's theorem. beer^2 + beer^2 = happy^2
 
user559633
you might think i'm better than that, but no, i'm not
 
2:01 PM
I'm just surprised you got the theorem wrong. It's beer^2 + whisky^2 = happy^2.
 
ok, I think my answer proves the point
the upvoters are just trolling there.
 
is there anyway to make a question more visible without bounties?
 
user559633
@AnttiHaapala on that C question? your answer didn't add much more than the other -- your "i am not a psychic" is the same as "idk, because C evolved?"
 
@tristan :D
so why is the other answer getting upvotes much faster than mine, with its messy code
 
user559633
which other one? the one that originally contained the "rm"?
 
2:09 PM
yes
 
user559633
i think it's getting upvotes because it's a vessel for people saying "uhh actually we're not okay with this getting serially downvoted because it contains code a complete moron might run". also it's 4 days older and the target of a meta
 
user image
8
(or in diagram form....)
 
user559633
that's a starrin'
 
user559633
@AnttiHaapala which is to say, i upvoted your answer on it because it's cleaner than Kemy's, but it's not exactly a magnum opus
 
2:11 PM
@tristan what I am saying that when discussing the answers with my colleagues about it, the other answer got 5 upvotes.
now 7
 
user559633
@AnttiHaapala yeah, because it's the target of a meta. i'm too lazy and don't have the site permissions to search/get data, but i think that answer is attracting upvotes at a slower rate than ones in which someone complains that their crappy copy/paste answer got too few upvotes
 
user559633
yes, i think it's a vessel for people saying "reddit needs to piss off" and people implicitly voting against SO hand-holding offense-fetishist idiots
 
user559633
i'd test that theory by making a meta post that asks for a new rule demanding that all example code is safe to run on any computer and comes with instructions for non-technically savvy people, but i think i'm a known entity on meta by this point
 
How could I forget? Happy pi day everyone :p
 
user559633
 
user559633
dial it back a bit, apartment broker. you're not the little mermaid; you just have a spreadsheet with apartments for rent
 
I can't tell if they're inviting you for a tryst in one of the apartments
 
EVERYTHING
 
user559633
@RobertGrant oof. i bet that guy is against kids playing dodgeball
 
2:19 PM
With dodgeballs made of a more dangerous substance than one would expect, probably yes
 
user559633
i opened a dictionary and i saw a word that offended me!!! dictionaries should have warnings on them!!!
 
user559633
@RajendraKhabiya sopython.com/chatroom read these
 
@tristan this is just about what's a reasonable expectation; all this excluded middle stuff is pointless
 
Ohh.. I am sorry
 
2:21 PM
Happy Pi day guys!
 
user559633
@RajendraKhabiya No need to be sorry, everyone gets one warning
 
Sep 28 '15 at 13:34, by PM 2Ring
Which reminds me...
Q: What's the volume of a pizza of radius `z` and thickness `a`?
A: pizza
 
user559633
yeah because if i was roofing and found a nail gun, put it on my hand and pulled the trigger, i'd feel justified in getting mad at someone else
 
Still excluding the middle
 
user559633
what's the middle?
 
2:24 PM
usually the bit in the centre
 
A valid analogy would be kids playing dodgeball and not checking the ball's filled with acid before playing
 
user559633
system(rm -rf) is a tool with a purpose. picking it up and using it without understanding why it exists is the same thing
 
Ie something that is normally totally fine to do suddenly isn't, for some reason
 
@QuestionC @PM2Ring it should say "of a cylinder"
 
user559633
man, if that analogy holds and we're the teachers meant to wipe kid's stupid snotty noses and keep them from learning life lessons, i'm going to hand in my gun and my badge (yes i know the position does not come with a firearm; no worries, i brought mine in from home)
 
2:26 PM
That's so close to what you were saying before that I can't tell if you're parodying yourself or just saying it
 
user559633
@RobertGrant definitely
 
this made me to think that perhaps I should have a vm to test the code from stackoverflow
 
user559633
@AnttiHaapala if you're going to copy/paste/run code you don't understand, yes
 
Or to put it another way: do you really think the purpose of sites that contain code samples to teach people how to use sites that contain code samples?
 
2:27 PM
@tristan indeed. but made me to think...
 
user559633
@RobertGrant knowing what you know about me, what do you think
 
that if there's a long C sample,
 
Well if that's the case then what's the point of all the questions and answers?
 
morning cbg
 
that what if someone could make a program that looks like an assignment, but is an exploit
 
2:29 PM
Is it all a big setup to catch one person pasting some code? Now that's done, should we stop?
 
user559633
@RobertGrant if you asked me for advice on how to make a casserole and i said "drink bleach and get someone to push you down stairs" would you go WELL OKAY THEN and set to work? no, you'd read it and think "well, that doesn't sound right"
 
user559633
Trust, but verify is a form of advice given which recommends that while a source of information might be considered reliable, one should perform additional research to verify that such information is accurate, or trustworthy. == Soviet–American relations == Suzanne Massie, a writer on Russia, met with President Ronald Reagan many times between 1984 and 1987. She taught him the Russian proverb, "doveryai no proveryai" (trust, but verify) advising him that "The Russians like to talk in proverbs. It would be nice of you to know a few. You are an actor – you can learn them very quickly." The proverb...
 
I honestly understand your point, I'm just saying it's very simplistic
 
I think a better analogy would be to say "Drink Bleach and get someone to push you down stairs. By the way, don't actually do that"
 
user559633
because some things in life are simple. don't explicitly trust strangers and don't do things without thinking.
 
2:30 PM
@tristan I'd rather instruct you to make some delicious food of Finnish false morels... cooking them in a cream sauce
 
I'm saying that SO teaches people (correctly) that they can run code samples on there. Once they've been taught that, it seems stupid to suddenly change things without warning
 
user559633
@RobertGrant For running code in JS, sure, whatever, it's just dumb browser stuff. For copy/pasting code and running it on your local machine, dude, that's on you.
 
Either don't change things, or give a warning.
 
@tristan now the ohter answer got +10 score since we last talked about it
 
@idjaw Cbg. I may need your help in about a month's time..
 
user559633
2:32 PM
In this case, the answerer said "don't do this", and in other cases, there's downvotes and comments.
 
it has a total of 101 people thinking it is particularly useful
 
@Programmer hey. what's up?
 
I've never once thought I should copy and run some code without looking at it first.
 
Yeah but you've been arguing that that feedback shouldn't be there. What the heck was the point of all your analogies?
 
Yawns languorously.
 
user559633
2:33 PM
Kicked because come on. Programmer, you've been here long enough to know not to ping users specifically to ask for help. And this is a ask-to-ask a full month out on some vague request.
 
user559633
@RobertGrant Killing time because I'm deeply underutilized at work
 
DSM
Morning cabbage for all.
 
user559633
cbg DSM
 
cabbage DSM
 
cabbage
 
2:34 PM
cabbage
 
DSM
For those keeping track at home (which should be exactly no one!) I submitted my formal resignation on Friday. #newworld
12
 
user559633
@DSM :O congrats
 
It wasn't programming related, but okay.
 
@DSM Pineapple. Onward to a brave new world.
 
Wow! I knew you were thinking about it, DSM, but I didn't realise things had gotten that bad.
 
2:36 PM
Grats DSM! What are your plans?
 
DSM
I have absolutely no idea. :-) Not even sure what province I'll end up in. But it was time for a change, and while I can pull off the occasional miracle, a business plan which depends on my regularly doing so isn't really viable long-term..
 
@DSM don't know why I checked this but.. you've never asked any SO questions?
You must be some crazy font of knowledge
 
Here's some fresh Tedeschi Trucks Band to inspire you: Anyhow
 
DSM - The WingDing of knowledge.
 
@tristan I think he pinged me because I did say cbg.
 
2:38 PM
@DSM I was keeping track! What are you going onto?
 
SO has answered tons of questions for me, but I've never needed to actually post a question. :)
 
user559633
@idjaw Yeah my bad.
 
@DSM did you get to present your Flask app before you left?
 
(Answer: FizzyCorp)
 
DSM
@RobertGrant: it's not so much that, it's just that the questions I usually have aren't good fits for SO. Structural questions which would be voted down to oblivion, like "okay, so I'm new to [framework X], what's the best practice on where to put stuff?"
 
2:39 PM
StructOverflow!
 
DSM
@davidism: got a colleague to join the project and it looks like it's going to be accepted! Flask + plot.ly, using my C++ N-dim datacube library. So I'll count it a win.
 
user559633
I've only posted questions to self answer or have something to point coworkers to as a "look, it's a thing that isn't well solved"
 
I posted a question once....I realized after some time that it was totally off-topic, so I deleted it.
@DSM just read the side bar. All the best!
 
cbg all
 
\o/
 
2:49 PM
whoa there! I ain't Hitler :P
 
o7
 
also, 'grats @DSM for resigning with resolve
 
@inspectorG4dget Cabbage o/
 
Hello all. I found a SO answer that almost does what I need (stackoverflow.com/a/7559542). Instead of extracting one block of text as in the answer, I need to process multiple blocks of text. Any clues how best to do that?
 
yeah, do the exact same thing in a while loop until there's no more data
 
2:54 PM
@DSM good luck with the future!
 
hey... I have an interesting problem:
>>> x = itertools.groupby(range(10), lambda x : True)
>>> y = next(x)
>>> next(x)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
StopIteration
>>> list(y[1])
what is the result
and why
actually I realized why already
but this is a nice puzzle
 
It's NameError: name itertools is undefined
HTH
And wow yeah, dunno
 
you are a true Python guru if you know the solution to that code without running it
because I didn't think about it.
 
@inspectorG4dget Hey gadget. I've got a few minutes if you want to hop over to the other room.
P.S. Antti, I like your logic: One is a guru because one thinks about something you didn't.
 
no, my point is that it requires a true guru to outright think that solution
 
3:03 PM
@davidism: hmm, what condition should I then use for the while loop?
 
I guess it's 1?
 
In b4 argument. I was joking.
 
askjfdlakdsjf I mean, @JRichardSnape what does it return, it returns a list with some element(s) or empty list, what is the list
 
@JRichardSnape just pinged you there
 
@AnttiHaapala I know. I haven't got it (although I'm gonna think before running it now). I was messing about.
 
3:13 PM
badger badger badger!
 
Why do pretty much all the rude/offensive flags on chat messages seem to come from the JavaScript or C++ chat rooms?
 
They're just very similar languages
 
DSM
People adapt to room cultures, and the Lounge has the culture of a sewer.
 
stackoverflow.com/q/35990616/198633 - asking to recommend a tool/library
 
@inspectorG4dget isn't C++ obvious; how can you not be on the edge all the time if you're coding in such a horrible language.
 
3:18 PM
@AnttiHaapala I'm not totally clear why it gives that result, but I'm pretty sure that it's because "The returned group is itself an iterator that shares the underlying iterable with groupby(). Because the source is shared, when the groupby() object is advanced, the previous group is no longer visible". docs.python.org/3/library/itertools.html#itertools.groupby
 
@AnttiHaapala hahahaha. That makes more ense than it probably should
 
DSM
>>>> x = itertools.groupby(range(10), lambda x: True)
>>>> y = next(x)
>>>> next(x)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
StopIteration
>>>> y
(True, <itertools._groupby object at 0x00007fb1096039a0>)
>>>> list(y[1])
[]
 
Wat.
>>> import itertools
>>> x = itertools.groupby(range(10), lambda x: True)
>>> y = next(x)
>>> next(x)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
StopIteration
>>> list(y[1])
[9]
 
I got the same output as QuestionC => [9]
 
which python version?
 
3:23 PM
3.5
 
3.4.2
 
DSM
Hint: count the chevrons in my transcript. :-)
 
@DSM liar
 
haha
 
@AnttiHaapala have my c++-hate star
 
DSM
3:24 PM
@AnttiHaapala: hey, using PyPy isn't a lie!
 
hmm i should test this with jython too, if it is broken as well
 
DSM
IronPython gives me
>>> y
(True, <IronPython.Modules.PythonIterTools+groupby+<Grouper>c__Iterator1 object at 0x000000000000002C [IronPython.Modules.PythonIterTools+groupby+<Grouper>c__Iterator1]>)
>>> list(y[1])
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
IndexError: Index was outside the bounds of the array.
 
:D:D:D:D lol
now that's bad
 
The C++ room reminds me a lot of some tabletop communities. I think it has to do with pedantry over poorly written rules.
 
DSM
All things being equal I think I prefer pypy's answer -- that's what I was expecting (even though I knew from the way the question was asked that wasn't going to be what was observed).
 
3:28 PM
I get [9] on 3.4.2 on my mac
 
jython is broken as well
 
DSM
@QuestionC: interesting point. One of the things I find silliest about C++ is how many conversations become language-lawyer debates with people referring to the specifications. That happens much more infrequently in Python.
 
> community/ironpython 2.7.5-3 14.75 MiB 4.21 MiB
> community/jython 2.7.0-1 131.69 MiB 56.86 MiB
jython's so much larger for some reason
 
@davidism have libs
 
This should be posted as a question. @QuestionC, would you like to post it, or shall I?
 
3:29 PM
@davidism hmm jar is 37M
 
these are the arch packages, not the source
 
@QuestionC That's exactly what they are trying to be
 
@davidism jython 2.7.0 contains full modified stdlib
 
I obviously don't understand groupby. I don't understand any of these results.
 
in addition it contains ICU and bouncycastle
I am not sure if I should consider cpython's behaviour a bug
 
DSM
3:32 PM
@AnttiHaapala: jython seems to behave like pypy does for me.
 
IronPython is buggy
 
which version of IronPython are you running?
 
DSM
I was using IronPython 2.9.9a0 (2.9.0.0) on Mono 4.0.30319.17020 (64-bit), FWIW.
 
which version of pypy?
 
can someone dupe hammer this one quickly please
 
DSM
3:36 PM
Python 2.7.10 (5f8302b8bf9f, Nov 18 2015, 10:46:46)
[PyPy 4.0.1 with GCC 4.8.4]
(I haven't upgraded to pypy5 on my work machine yet.)
 
Anyway @RainerKoirikivi found this, and also told that django for loop forces the iterable into a list :D so have fun debugging if you ever use groupby directly there :d
 
Just posted it as a question: stackoverflow.com/q/35991852/198633
 
DSM
@inspectorG4dget: on pypy I see [], not [9].
 
@inspectorG4dget on 3.5 I see [9]
 
DSM
And on IronPython I get that weird IndexError instead, and on jython I also get []. So I think there's more implementation dependence here than your question makes it seem like.
 
3:40 PM
updated!
 
Thanks to JonCle, I read pypy as puppy
 
FWIW, here's a Python 2 / Python 3 version that can be run from a script:
import itertools

x = itertools.groupby(range(10), lambda x : True)
y = next(x)
try:
    next(x)
except StopIteration:
    pass

print(list(y[1]))
 
is it bad that when I heard my internal voice reading JonCle, I heard "joncle" ("j" + "o" as in "oscar" + "ncle" as in "uncle")?
 
I am trying to find any easy way to implement audio chat rooms in flask. Is there something simliar to webrtc for python?
 
DSM
@inspectorG4dget: I had exactly the same thought. :-) So did Air & JRS, see here..
 
3:46 PM
@DSM hahaha... great minds do think alike
 
rhubarb
 
DSM
@PM2Ring: rhubarb, PM2R!
 
@inspectorG4dget Some people say it jon clee - some say it jon call
 
Jawn Clee
 
@inspectorG4dget That’s exactly how it sounds in my head too.
 
DSM
3:53 PM
"joncuhl" is what I hear in my head. (Disclaimer: it's been recently established I have strange vowels.)
 
@DSM at least you have vowels - unlike our friend Fizzy :p
 
it is now forever burned into my brain, that @joncle shall be "Uncle John"
 
Friendly Room Uncle For Life ...
 
I'm fairly sure that's Martijn's description for the team :)
 
3:56 PM
I'll stick with my "Escaped Village Idiot" :)
 
good luck @DSM.
 
how does one apply for membership to this team?
 
DSM
#100!
 
@DSM Congrats \o/
 
whoa! it went from ninety nine members to one hundred factorial members VERY quickly
 
DSM
3:59 PM
@inspectorG4dget: phase transition.
 
are there advantages of using gevent over async.io, when using flask.
 

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