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1:00 PM
Maybe you have been moved permanently?
 
did you break the internet?
 
Oh, you must be using the --301 option.
 
@Ffisegydd are you behind a proxy?
 
@Jon yarp.
 
1:01 PM
Proxy should be set up as HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY are both set.
 
then it sounds like what Jon's mentioned... ^^
 
Ta JonJon. It doesn't solve my problem but it gives me somewhere to begin.
 
aaa implementing an undo/redo queue is a pain in the butt
 
Step 1) Use React. Step 2) You're done!
 
"done" is quite vague.
 
1:10 PM
I had a fairly functional UndoableAndAlsoRedoableDict class that let you (un|re)do any setitem or delitem event. Then I thought "but what if the user wants to undo many events at once? I know, I'll let them add a "marker" event to the queue, and implement undo_to_last_marker and redo_to_next_marker functions". Now I am in fencepost error hell
 
Yeah that is a good idea
 
when you undo to the last marker, should the history index point to the slot before the marker, or should it point at the marker? What if I want undo_to_last_marker to rewind to the very beginning of the event queue if it doesn't find any markers?
 
Fencepost error hell - a suburban kind of toasting.
 
That's four opportunities for off-by-one problems right there. Double that for redo_to_next_marker
 
There are two hard things in programming: cache invalidation, naming things, and fencepost errors.
 
1:12 PM
:D
 
nods. It is known.
 
(With apologies to Jeff Atwood: twitter.com/codinghorror/status/506010907021828096)
(or whoever it was that originally came up with it...)
 
I believe it was the Oracle at Delphi
Or was it someone trying to interface with Oracle in Delphi? I forget
 
Do you want the 1st person that said it? Or the 0th?
 
What are people's opinion on this? stackoverflow.com/questions/32740530/…
It seems a little weird.
 
1:17 PM
Well - I want you to tell me who had it before its 6th transmission. IS THAT SO HARD ?!?!?
;)
@MorganThrapp A little odd, maybe, for a Q/A pair. There's probably a dupe. If you replace the key tag with name, I'm sure it's been asked before. A user trying to drum up some rep, probably.
 
@JRichardSnape Yeah, I don't think it's spam or anything. I just wasn't sure what to do.
 
Seems like it's attracting some DV's (not me, my bar is notoriously (too) low)
 
I thought it was okay to answer your own question?
 
It's fine
 
It is OK, but I think it's quite difficult to do well
 
1:22 PM
it's just an odd question to pick for that, in my opinion, and not particularly well articulated.
 
Generally I see it done to create a good dupe target, or to share something interesting and obscure about the language.
This one just seems... Pointless.
 
You tend to end up with a wildly underspecified question that is just a lead-in to the answer, or something that reads as an oddly-reorganised blog post
and hence to situations like:
-11
Q: Some users are not reading the questions that they are reviewing

inorganikRecently I posted a question and answer that was marked as a duplicate by five users who clearly must not have read any answers to it. The question itself is unique. Nobody had previously asked how to use the SF font specifically. And it has a unique answer as well, if you actually read it. In t...

 
What can I do if I believe that my question was wrongly marked as a duplicate? [duplicate]
 
(Twilight zone music plays again)
 
When imgur gets it right? imgur.com/gallery/45E8B
 
1:27 PM
Nice edit there @jonrsharpe, BTW
 
unclear/too broad, attracts (bad) answers stackoverflow.com/q/32740682/2301450
 
SO makes me a bad person.
It makes me willing to punch people.
Me sad. Mama told me I should be a nice boy, and never play with guns.
 
Would you shoot a man in Reno, though?
 
I'd do it just to see him die
 
In this episode of Legacy Code Disasters, our hero discovers that the error messages are hard coded and completely irrelevant as to what data is actually missing. (╥_╥)
8
At least it only took 2 days to figure this out.
 
1:39 PM
yeah, but when I hear that whistle blowing
I hang my head and cry :'(
@MorganThrapp that would be a nice version of House MD, but about software troubleshooting.
 
casts eyes around for a guitar
 
@bereal It's not SEGFAULTS. It's NEVER SEGFAULTS.
 
:)
You could even have a cranky old programmer called Lupus
 
@RobertGrant Lupus Tuberculosis.
 
"but this method is called getSomething(), it's not supposed to mutate data" -- "everybody lies!"
5
 
1:44 PM
Also, I wish I was kidding, but the error message is displayed when it fails to find the specified fee and instead of displaying what fee is ACTUALLY missing. It just displays the hard coded one that does in fact exist in the database.
(ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
 
Pretty irritating
 
Maybe I should have a separate queue for my event markers...
This un-complicates the undo/redo code, but re-complicates the update_history code
 
Gaaaaah - not the vignere cypher again
 
@JRichardSnape if by "plenty" you mean "thousands"...
 
1:49 PM
@JRichardSnape FWIW, Folsom Prison Blues was derived from a then-recent hit, Crescent City Blues. I guess Folsom Prison was intended as a dark parody of Crescent City.
 
@jonrsharpe Oh, duh, right. I've been working in AnotherLanguage a lot recently. I forgot that Python does actually mutate things.
 
@jonrsharpe I purposely withheld my definition of plenty ;)
 
@MorganThrapp splitter!
 
@MorganThrapp everybody mutates things!
 
In being nice and leaving a comment, I lost the opportunity to vote. BOOM.
 
1:50 PM
Delphi is... Weird.
 
Theory: anyone asking a cipher question is automatically a bad person because anyone with rudimentary google skills can find a perfect working implementation instantly.
 
Ugh I have to find a way to look up the virus definitions patch for the most 'popular' AVs and I'm getting no where.
 
@Kevin I have yet to find a counter example.
 
Evening CBG
How is this even an answer
 
"[for your key argument, write a lambda expression that] return[s] a tuple of the two keys"
Which is exactly what the accepted answer does
 
1:56 PM
But it has no code or anything it is more like a suggestion or comment
 
IMO it's not a very good answer, but it's an answer
 
It is an answer @Vignesh
 
@JonC still enjoying it Jon...still enjoying it...IT'S F**KING BRILLIANT...
 
So just giving pseudo is an answer nice. Then I don't have to waste my time making a big code
 
Watchya actually doing with it, Fizzy?
 
1:59 PM
I'm configuring some VMs so I can remote desktop into them.
The most important lesson I've learnt from this experience is "F*** Linux"
 
Whoa, hey!
 
Don't "Whoa, hey!" me. I'm in an unstable frame of mind and Linux has driven me to it.
 
wait, what....?
 
I'm likely to snap and fly to California to slap you with a fish.
 
steps back - Leicester is a lot nearer to Cheltenham than California
 
2:01 PM
Well, the fishing is very good here right now. Try to slap me with a Yellowfin or a Bluefin, those are worth ~$200+ in sashimi.
 
I installed Mint in a VM recently - what's the problem?
Holds up GK Chesterton letter
 
My weapon of choice is a battered cod - the batter makes the whole experience much more cutting
 
Mmm battered cod
 
Just you try that in Johannesburg! Being battered with battered cod is...it's like Christmas!
But enough about Zulu tradition.
 
@VigneshKalai It's a bit vague. :) FWIW, from the data in the OP, I'd be using all 3 fields in the key function: lambda e: (e[1], e[2], e[0]).
 
2:09 PM
I want a chippy tea now -_-
 
Chippy tea? :o
 
It's like bubble tea, but with wood chips instead of bubbles.
 
ahh, a chippy tea does sound tempting.
 
Yeah I need the extra fiber
 
cbg
 
2:12 PM
Protip: don't get the "particle board" flavor. Splurge for "dark mahogany" instead.
 
Should have mushy peas, but the internet is incomplete in this regard
 
I thought that was fish and chips? :o
 
UK dialect chippy = fish and chip shop. (somewhat Northern specific) Tea = the meal you eat when you get home from work.
 
How can the same language be so different? Confuses me sometimes
 
Chippie is also a carpenter
It is not part of my context-free grammar
 
2:22 PM
Yeah, so a chippy tea could also be a strong brew made for the guy making your partition walls
 
Don't worry Programmer. Sometimes, people in the UK just make things up to wind up outsiders. Case in point: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhyming_slang
 
you havin a giraffe, @intrepid
;D
 
Sausage and a slice, mate
 
Guys. I don't get sockets and how to async
 
yes, we've noticed
 
2:25 PM
 
@corvid I thought that was an entry requirement for the room
 
Ahh, BSOD, my old foe, we meet again. It's been a while.
 
every time I go look at asyncio and the like, I end up asking "why bother?" and walking away
 
@JRichardSnape So long RAM. You lived a good life.
 
Async is great though, I just don't get how to handle specific things
 
2:26 PM
It's because your desk is such a mess. It's crashing so you'll get off the computer and organize it.
 
Chippy is also an artist that specializes in computer-generated imagery for Magic: The Gathering illustrations. They are highly mysterious and may be an AI.
 
@davidism If only you could see the full horror
In fact...
 
Nice.
 
Mine is pretty brutal too...
 
This could be a kind of Kim's game. How many objects can you recognise / remember
 
2:31 PM
I like to cram all my clutter into drawers so I don't have to look at it.
 
Unrepresentative abundance of C++ references there, I note. I never use C++ these days.
 
But Kevin, what do you do when the drawers are full? <---- My dilemma
 
I'll get a new job.
 
^
|
----- Also my dilemma
 
Time to share your desks, everyone
 
2:33 PM
I don't think BigCorp would appreciate me doing that.
 
Mine is actually fairly clear, but only because I ignore forget about any paper that people give me.
 
Especially given how many pieces you'd need to cut it into to share it with all of us
 
Once I wanted to take a picture of the carpet in the hallway because one of the tiles was rotated 90 degrees with respect to the pattern of the rest of the floor, but my coworker advised against it
If carpet is classified, my monitor probably is too
 
I have nothing much to show, I'm just an intern
 
2:36 PM
Just enough clear desk for elbows. My 3D printing area was a bombsite this morning until someone tapped me on the shoulder and informed me that it was a fairly significant health risk
 
You all need to work on your organization.
 
I'm convinced that @davidism doesn't actually work. He knows how to suck up to corporate bigwigs :P
 
Well - it's different than posting pictures of cats
 
@IntrepidBrit if you think that's a health risk, you said, you should've been here when the bomb went off
 
2:40 PM
@IntrepidBrit If I knew how to suck up successfully, I wouldn't be stuck in this freezing concrete block with no windows.
 
Jon, do you have chewed books on your desk?
 
Oh, the answer to the Alembic thing from earlier was I needed to turn on type checking in Alembic's env.py.
 
@davidism any doors?
 
@IntrepidBrit but of course!
 
@IntrepidBrit no, I had to crawl out through the ceiling tiles
 
2:43 PM
 
@MorganThrapp you have too many windows open
 
I only have 12. That's low for me.
 
Refer to my screen, where I have a total of three windows, and one firefox tab.
 
And only 14 chrome tabs, which again, really low.
 
notes delinquent receivables for future debt consolidation campaign
Also, Bobby and Jason do sound similar
Okay, I'll stop.
 
2:47 PM
I'm glad my picture came out blurred
 
Delinquent receivables?
Oh, the stuff I'm working on. Duh.
 
user image
8
 
very clean Kevin!
 
^ The best picture painting
 
@Kevin you need to get a better camera, I can see the pixels in that picture.
 
2:50 PM
Why does the mouse go to the right monitor, and the keyboard to the left?
 
Not pictured: the wallet, keys, notepad, pencil, flash drive, and backup coffee cup that comprise the nomadic detritus of the desk
@IntrepidBrit I don't know. I'd have to go around the back to find out.
 
there's so much garbage (literally) on my desk :d
 
I'd be interested in a picture of the wiring ^^
 
My desk is filled with food
 
@Kevin what are the three floating pixels supposed to represent? Dust?
 
2:51 PM
Whoops those are vanishing points I forgot to erase.
Although there are some spots of chipped paint on the wall I'm facing, that they could approximate
@IntrepidBrit Most likely they both eventually snake towards the hub that holds up the laptop
 
Spoilsport :P
 
@intrepid you are my desk brother.
 
oh yam! client is here. PANIC
tidies up desk
 
@davidism - you are an inspiration. A minimalist essence that I feel I will never achieve.
 
I wonder if I still have the 3d rendering of my office that I used to plan arrangements when we were rearranging furniture...
Found it.
I'm the one by the window.
 
DSM
3:02 PM
Morning cabbage.
 
cbg DSM
 
@Kevin you're invisible?!
 
DSM
Maybe he's standing by the window and so the greens blend in.
 
I am invisible, but only to 3d rendering software
Not... Not a very useful super power.
 
DSM
Could win you a bar bet, maybe. If your opponent had a laptop with him. And some Blender experience.
 
3:06 PM
"No no, you haven't captured my essence. That's why your depiction of me is still visible"
 
I've searched for the sorting, that's why I wrote "sorting", otherwise I would have used the word "ordering" (which in fact I have googled at first), cause it's more my natural vocabulary. I just didn't get the idea to use it like that. — bortran 1 min ago
You didn't think to use sorted for sorting? You're right, that is confusing.
 
The bartender interjects. "I worked at Pixar, may I? Maybe if I add a little joie de vivre..." does so, then wireframe fades out of existence. "Pay the man"
 
@MorganThrapp I'd like to (vote to) close that as a dupe. But the question is so basic that it's hard to find a (dupe target) question that's sufficiently generic. :)
 
DSM
That's a terrible question, but I think the comments (while both true and justifiable) are maybe a little unconstructive..
 
That's an impressive number of downvotes.
 
DSM
3:10 PM
18 downvotes and no delete votes is a little unusual.
That one has the abs issue though.
 
I mean, really it could be a dupe of any answer that uses sorted.
 
@DSM Yeah, I didn't look at the answers until after I posted the link. :oops: The question title was good, though. :)
 
Found a repost and neither have an answer yet :[ stackoverflow.com/questions/30974500/…
 
@MorganThrapp But all the sorted() examples I can find want something a little more complex than a plain sort - they tend to want fancy key functions. So they aren't really suitable. Really, the question is too basic for SO. It should be answered by reading the docs.
 
@PM2Ring Agreed.
 
3:20 PM
Anyway, it's closed as too broad now.
 
And on cue, here is another low effort sorting question
 
DSM
Not sure that makes sense as a CV reason, but if memory serves official position on Meta is not to get too hung up on what the reason is if it deserves to be CVd.
 
@Programmer just leave them, they'll get cleaned up by the roomba eventually
 
annnnnd back
 
@davidism I wasn't sure
 
3:23 PM
@IntrepidBrit Desk now a vision of pared down efficiency, I presume
 
It's about the same. I dragged the client (wisely) into the conference room
 
The client excuses himself to use the restroom. "No, not that door!" says IntrepidBrit as he reaches for the bulging doorknob. Too late! All of the junk he crammed in there comes spilling out, carrying the client into the hall in a comical wave of stuff.
 
And that was only the third law suit of the day
 
His ruse unveiled, IB can only shrug at the camera as his Spacely-esque boss revs up for a lecture. Iris out, roll credits.
 
3:37 PM
When I try to open a key using winreg it says it can't find a file, but only for paths with a space in them. I've tried using r"" but that isn't changing anything
 
@KevinGuan: Sorry about my last comment: it's getting late. :) You weren't using list as a variable name. :oops: But your new code is better, since using l=[] is definitely preferred to doing l=list(): it's shorter & it saves a function call.
 
for i in f doesn't feel entirely idiomatic to me -- I like to preserve i for integer indices -- but that's splitting hairs
 
3:49 PM
I know how you feel. Some of my early languages automatically declared variables whose names started with [I-N] integers (although you could override that with an explicit declaration), so that pattern is kinda ingrained for me.
 
DSM
IMPLICIT NONE
 
Hence the old FORTRAN saying: "GOD is real, unless declared integer".
 
Ah, had I panned left in my earlier picture, you could have seen "Numerical recipes in FORTRAN 77"
Another weighty and barely used tome
 
DSM
I had that book!
 
3:52 PM
Rbrb :)
 
The massive downvoting and the "put on hold as too broad" by 5 users clearly shows once more that the mechanisms, which were ment to make stackoverflow a solution oriented platform, are totally disfunctional in the way of keeping human emotion out of the process. It's a simple question that has a simple and distinct answer. Rage over something else, how about? — bortran 28 mins ago
I can't even.
nathan_fillion_from_castle.gif
 
"My question is bad, and that's your fault!"
 
I still think it did not deserve that many dvs.
 
now it did
 
Yay he earned another downvote
-46 22 secs ago 23 events Python: for el in elements sorted
 
DSM
3:57 PM
It's never been entirely clear whether we should up- and down-vote to bring the total score toward the score it "deserves", or whether each decision should be taken independently so the total score something has is basically a function of how many people see a question.
 
Just to be clear here: don't downvote just because everyone else is and you like big numbers. A question deserves the evaluation of each user who votes independently.
 
There's no reason for him to be rude to other users
 
@DSM I finally delv'd that question, since you mentioned it earlier
 
DSM
Yeah, but that's not a good reason to DV a question, IMHO. Rudeness can be flagged as nonconstructive.
 
I don't think the roomba will get it since it has upvoted/accepted answers
 
DSM
3:59 PM
@PM2Ring: yeah, it's not rage, more like astonishment. "python sorted elements" brings up the howto as the first result for me..
 
I downvoted because it shows literally no research effort at all.
 
Yeah I never downvote anything but that was very simple
 
Believe it or not, I haven't actually down voted on that one. I think he's got more than enough downvotes. OTOH, I reserve my right to dv if he gets nasty.
 
Hey @Kevin, I had a quick question. I'm thinking about giving a talk at my local developer meetup, and I was wondering if I could use your lambda fizz-buzz in it. I'd give you credit and whatnot.
 
4:06 PM
Ok, fine with me.
 
Thanks. :) Follow up, I lost the link to it. Do you have it somewhere?
 
Straight assignment dump: stackoverflow.com/questions/32744240/… & the OP's not responding. I say we give the OP a couple more minutes and then CV. Sorry, the OP did respond. With a line of nonsense code.
 
@MorganThrapp ideone.com/iNV1ix
 
Sweet, thank you!
 
DSM
Sometimes I wonder why people don't break down the stuff they don't understand into pieces and try to get help on the different parts. Then I wonder if that itself is a skill which takes practice and which beginners don't have.
 
4:09 PM
this guy is using subprocess.Popen as a glorified goto and it upsets me
 
DSM - imho, it definitely is.
 
@Kevin - From what unholy abomination did that (lambda fizzbuzz) arise??
 
the skill is to figure out what's relevant to the problem, and that's already half an answer.
 
@JoeKington The original context gives more detail and has a less-obfuscated version. Short answer: it's church encoding plus a gratuitous amount of copy/paste
 
4:12 PM
like "I'm using notepad to write this program which saves a variable into a file on my memory stick"
 
Impressive!
 
It's my dumbest creation, but I am strangely proud of it
 
I think that's well worth being proud of!
...In a mad scientist sort of way...
It's alive!!!
 
DSM
It's proof of concept! For something, anyway.
 
@DSM It's definitely an important fundamental skill to programming. I think it's partly "instinctive ", but it can be improved with practice. And most newbies seem pretty bad at it.
 
4:14 PM
I often find that my work is more "interesting" than practical. I wish programming performance art was a viable career path.
6
 
@bereal Good call.
 
Practicality is overrated
 
Is it a bad idea to teach a beginner git via command line? Are there better tools?
 
@JoeKington You like mad stuff? Then take a look at my binary Collatz sequence calculator, "written" in Conway's Life:
 
Impressive indeed!
And also, today I learned what a Collatz sequence is, so thanks for that, as well!
 
4:26 PM
@corvid I really like Sourcetree.
 
@JoeKington My pleasure! Here's an explanation for how it works, although it may not be easy to understand unless you're a Life enthusiast.
 
DSM
I have bad memories of the Collatz sequence. One of those "oh, I'm sure I can solve this.." puzzles from my youth.
 
Funny, the Collatz sequence fascinated me in my youth. I aspired to find a loop, but I didn't get my hopes up.
Nevertheless I found it to be a useful exercise for getting acquainted to the syntax of a new programming language. It's the first thing I'd try after "Hello, World!"
 
Trying to solve the Collatz conjecture's a certain path to madness. :)
It's fun to play with it a bit. But you've got to know when it's time to walk away.
 
From reading the Wikipedia page I knew that there wouldn't be any very short cycles, so I mostly resorted to seeing if randint(1, INT_MAX) looped or not
When the analytical approach fails, try throwing a dart at the board.
Emergent complexity is very interesting to me. Collatz sequences, the Ulam Spiral, The Mandelbrot set, formulas for calculating Pi...
 
4:40 PM
Sure. I tried expanding it to the Gaussian integers to look for patterns, since 2D patterns can be easier to see than 1D patterns, and because complex analysis can give great insights into problems that arise in the reals. But it didn't really help. :)
 
Infinite detail arising from a finite equation seems like it ought to violate a Universal law
 
I think if I'd encountered more mathematically puzzles along these lines I would have enjoyed various math classes in undergrad a lot more... As it was, I just stumbled through the usual Calc1-X, lin alg, diff e, pde sequence without really getting very much out of it. ...And then I became a geologist and forgot anything I'd learned.
 
@Kevin Emergent complexity is what got me into doing stuff in Life. I really ought to get back into it, butit can suck up a huge amount of time. I'm not an expert on advanced Life theory, but I'm reasonably good at putting stuff together. I'm not a Life scientist - more an engineer. Or a plumber. :)
 
@PM2Ring That's interesting. Is there an equivalent concept of "odd" and "even" for gaussian integers?
On the topic of extending systems into new dimensions, Smoothlife is a cool variant of the Game of Life, and also a little gross to watch
 
Well, you can just apply the usual "is it divisible by 2", but that's a little boring. 2 isn't a prime in the Gaussians: it can be factored into (1+i)(1-i), so the Gaussians of the form (±1±i) kinda take the place of 2 in the Gaussians.
But it's getting very late (again), and I should say "rhubarb"... So I will.
rhubarb
 
4:46 PM
rhubarb!
 
rbrb PM
 
Numbers of the form a(1+i) + b(1-i) seem pretty even.
 
@DSM Reminds me a bit of the opening chapter of "Surely you're joking Mr Feynman", where he fixes his neighbor's radio by deducing what's wrong before opening the set.
If a child can impress an adult in this manner, then critical thinking skills must be pretty rare.
 
5:04 PM
Why can't I find stuff to answer :( maybe I'm just lazy
 
I found two students from the same class.
@vaultah , here, have a question: In terms of R, How many pairs of integers a,b are there, such that a^2 + b^2 <= R^2?
 
@Kevin makes me wonder if that ever happened to me lol
 
Do you mean fixing radios by thinking, or asking the same question as another student, or finding the lattice points that lie inside a circle of some radius?
 
Oh, okay now I understand the question :p
 
Always assume that a circle is involved when people start talking about R ;-)
 
5:12 PM
Asking the same question as someone else in my class
 
Maybe. I hope the OP doesn't think I'm trying to catch him in the act or whatever. I just thought it was funny.
Doesn't matter to me if a question is a homework question, as long as it's a good question. (it usually isn't)
 
Teachers never give all the necessary tools is part of the problem
 
@Kevin at first I thought you asked me about the programming language, then I thought about ℝ lol
 
You can write the answer in the R programming language if you so desire. I won't be able to read it, though.
 
@Kevin Is a heart worth more than a star? If only you answered that first classmate's question... :)
 
5:22 PM
Pfft I'm dumber than Gauss
 
Stars have little economic value because if you bought one, how would you keep everyone else from reaping the benefits of it?
Giant opaque domes get pretty pricey, even for bulk orders
 
Since professors probably wrote these questions, what are we to conclude about the reputability of today's CS instruction?
 
I can tell you, I learned a lot more online
 
hmmm...
 
Intro to CS professors have little incentive to innovate or write exceptional assignments, since it's such a basic class
 
5:26 PM
in SQLAlchemy I'd want to map __getitem__(self, name) of a model object to get a "child" with child.parent_id == self.id & child.name == name
 
There might even be a perverse incentive to write intentionally confusing questions, in order to filter the class size down to something more manageable for subsequent classes
 
I wonder if there is anything ready for this
 
Well my c/c++ teacher wrote really vague questions with little to no in-class discussion on the topic and graded harshly. Then we didnt even have him for the last month of class. Good times
 
I feel like you should show the students the process you go through to learn, instead of just "here you go, good luck"
So I run the following but it doesn't work when I use a path that has a space for some reason:
from winreg import *

def main():
    key = OpenKey(HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,
                  r"SOFTWARE\Windows",
                  0, KEY_ALL_ACCESS)
main()
 
5:40 PM
Omg 9 answers...
10 answers come on
 
Yeah Windows is kind of weird about spaces in paths sometimes
 
I tried doing underscores hoping that would work but I still get file not found error
 
11 answers wtf
Okay deleted my answer
 
I suggest not using a sub_key with a space in it
 
Actually, I guess it's some sort of oversight by me as to how RegEdit works in comparison to this library
 
5:55 PM
I'm fully prepared to blame any and all weirdness you're experiencing solely on Microsoft
 
Yeah, it shows me a completely different directory in Python
 
Rhubarb all!
 
rbrb vaul
 
Anyone catch Dr Who last weekend? I thought it was pretty good.
The whole "hover for spoilers" scene seemed a little too sensible for a show about a flying police box
 
DSM
(Spoiler rules in effect, please.)
 
6:04 PM
Apparently most episodes this season are going to be two parters? It's an interesting approach.
 
DSM
Huh. Two episodes is a good length for a story, if the writers don't write a one-episode story and then pad it out.
 
The AV Club is worried that this will make quality uneven, as DW has a tendency to "backload" all the good stuff into the second half of multipart stories
 
DSM
Sometimes I like the exploration part (figuring out what's going on) more than the problem-solving side, which has a tendency to invoke the Rule of Cool more than it should.
 
Reminds me of the crossover episode where the three Doctors try to atomize a door by running a complex mathematical operation in their sonic screwdriver for centuries. Then it turns out the door isn't locked.
Sometimes the coolest solution is not the best solution.
I expect to see a lot of incredibly dire cliffhangers in the future.
 
DSM
Aaargh, Tropes led me to the expression "grim reaper on a mountain playing an electric guitar", which is going to be in my mind the rest of the day.
 
6:15 PM
Haha. Incidentally, either hover for non-plot-related episode spoilers, or they just got a convincing body double.
 
DSM
I should mention I haven't seen the episode yet, so I can't risk the hovering.
 
Speaking of spoilers, is GoT good? Everyone raves about it but I only have netflix lol
 
What's the polite way to tell a co-worker "just figure it out"?
 
"I'm a bit busy right now, can you look into it by yourself for now?" Idk something like that I guess
 
I only caught the first season of GoT but I liked it.
@corvid "It will be a good learning experience if you discover the answer on your own"
 
DSM
6:20 PM
That could sound a little condescending, though, esp. if you're not the coworker's superior.
 
Do we have a dupe for "Why does assigning print to things break the world?"
 
6:36 PM
@MorganThrapp People do that?
 
-4
Q: Error from division operator

ablynSo, Im quite new to python 3.5.0, recently Ive been working on a sleep calculator, however Ive encountered an issue, this is my code so far... its been annotated with tags/comments: #sleep calculator, user enters there hours slept over a nicght and the program #will work out different facts ab...

 
Python devs please make print(expr) return the result of expr
Problem solved B-)
 
@Kevin The problem was that I was using regedit 32 bit not 64 bit (which is what shows up by default in search). God I love Windows sometimes.
 
@corvid we don't know, we've been trying to tell you for years now :-P
 
You've won this round, davidism
 
6:48 PM
@davidism I was going to see what solution he came up with and just say that everytime he asks a question :^)
 

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