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5:00 PM
"I didn't know murder of someone called Philip Boddington on a Tuesday was forbidden, as the general law against murder isn't specific enough"
 
"well actually" type arguments only work on nerds, not judges ;-)
 
atexit.register seems like a fairly reliable way to get a function called at the end of a process.
 
user559633
yes, that's true ^
 
Try to get the jury of your peers to all be IT professionals.
 
The truths of Aaron
 
5:03 PM
Thank you all for confirming my biases.
 
That could be confirmation bias, though.
 
A sufficiently determined attacker can prevent the registered function from running. But then again, a sufficiently determined attacker can thermite your motherboard, so it's pretty hard to defend against them in general.
 
I'd like to offer to buy pizza for everyone, but the logistics would be difficult.
 
user559633
I use it for my dev scripts -- start redis/postgres/etc on startup, atexit, shut down
 
Time to hit the road. Rbrbrbrbrb
 
5:05 PM
@Kevin mostly because there isn't a specific law against that
 
Is there an easy way to sort a list based on the ordering of another list? Like this example.
a = [1, 2, 5, 6, 2, 3]
b = [6, 2, 3, 5, 1, 2]
assert sorted(b,key=?) == [1, 2, 5, 6, 2, 3]
 
user559633
@RobertGrant y'see judge, he claimed die hard 2 was better than die hard 1, so i had to cave his skull in with the leg of a table. no law against it
 
@MorganThrapp What would the result be if b was [2,2,2,5]?
 
I can't into map
 
5:14 PM
Hmm, I'm not sure I get this week's Codeless Code. What is the apprentice's error? Is this a birthday paradox thing?
 
@Kevin B will always be a subset of a.
 
Or is it just "calling hashCode on a byte array will return the hash of the array's address rather than its contents" or something?
Or is it "we can't trust the user to maintain a good copy of the page on their machine"? Ok sure, but if they're doing something that clears out the cached copy, wouldn't that also clear out the ETag value?
It would be weird if they deleted one but not the other.
@MorganThrapp I'm thinking something like
import collections
a = [1, 2, 5, 6, 2, 3]
b = [6, 2, 3, 5, 1, 2]
c = collections.Counter(b)
result = []
for item in a:
    if c[item] > 0:
        result.append(item)
        c[item] -= 1

print result
Not sure how to make that one line, if you're golfing.
 
I am, yeah. Maybe that won't end up being shorter, but I figured I'd ask.
 
If we're allowed to destroy b, you could do print [x for x in a if x in b and not b.remove(x)]
 
That would be perfect! I didn't know remove returned anything.
Oh, duh, that's the and not.
 
5:25 PM
Yeah AFAIK it always returns None. I'm just using it for the side effect.
 
Just saved me 9 bytes!
 
I found the "program that outputs a picture like starry night under N bytes" problem funny. Turns out the solution is to just embed the picture in your code and have a little rendering stuff.
 
Yeah, it's always interesting seeing the loopholes people find.
 
Figuring out jpg rendering may improve it more. Probably more real code, but the algorithm compresses so much better.
 
Figuring out which compression algorithm to embed alongside compressed data, in order to conserve as much space as possible, is itself a compression problem :-)
Interestingly this means that there must be at least one string where just printing the uncompressed literal is the shortest possible program to produce it.
Although which string that is, varies from language to language.
 
5:39 PM
What?
 
FIGURING OUT WHICH COMPRESSION ALGORITHM...
 
Grats on the most domain-specific use of the word "Interesting" ever.
 
Angry client who demanded that an issue be fixed by 9:05AM today AT THE LATEST just sent me an email saying they just got to work.
So, good thing I rushed that fix, huh?
 
Boy I know that feeling. Once I worked overtime to finish a thing, which then didn't get pushed to production until two weeks later.
 
The last time I was put in that spot, angry emails and a panicked recruiter quickly happened.

But come monday, the deadline failed and literally noone said a thing about it.
 
5:45 PM
It's just yet another reason why I've been applying to new jobs. :P
 
You know C++? I can try and get you a spot at GreedCo.
 
DSM
Speaking of jobs, is there a good place to find Python/JS contractors with flask + JS frontendy skills? Not sure where the cool kids advertise these days.
 
Peter "literally" Noone is well-known for his adherence to deadlines. #dumb_callback
 
I do not. :/ I learn quickly though.
 
@DSM At least two people in this room got their jobs from SO Careers.
 
5:47 PM
And I have some experience with more low level languages via Delphi, which is basically Object Pascal with a better stdlib.
 
DSM
C++ is tough to pick up quickly. Not because it's that difficult per se, but because the language is soooo big. (To be fair, people usually restrict themselves to the saner portions.)
 
I really should just learn it.
 
I feel like the problems you have in C++ are different from most other languages too. You're really forced to think about memory addresses a lot compared to say... Python.
 
I should learn Flask. [newspaper_cat.png]
 
@MorganThrapp Nah. Learn one of those specialized guaranteed 6-digit salary languages like Salesforce. Trade your joy in programming for money.
 
5:52 PM
I did just apply for a SAS developer position. Which is apparently some semi-graphical proprietary language.
 
Yeah any TLA that starts with SA pays well
 
Dec 9 '15 at 16:08, by Kevin
Recently at a family get together my cousin-in-law very excitedly told me about his "sass" classes, and a confusing conversation ensued until 20 minutes later when we determined I was talking about SAAS and he was talking about SAS.
 
Yeah, this is the second one.
 
I was thinking of SAP
 
He eventually showed me his class' textbook. It doesn't use curly brackets as a flow control token, so it's sort of Pythony...
 
5:56 PM
Ideally I would find something that pay slightly more than what I make now and is also fun. And has free beer. And I don't have to commute. And there are magical rainbows and unicorns.
 
Although I don't think its whitespace is significant, so it's more Visual Basicy.
 
Realistically, I'd settle for just the making slightly more.
 
Oh, you only have to go to work when you want to as well. Gotta get that on the cover letter.
 
Oh, yeah, of course.
 
Gotta be upfront about that stuff so the hiring manager knows you're a real rockstar.
 
5:59 PM
I prefer to be a ninja, but I would also accept rockstar positions. I'm only 8.5x though.
 
My ideal job is to be owner of a tucked-away curio shop which sells what the buyer needs and not what they want, even if it isn't apparent at the time.
 
"Yes ma'am, you also get a jar of air"
 
Ex. I persuade them to buy a tire jack even though their car is fine. The next day, they help a disabled motorist on the side of the road who turns out to be Richard Branson in disguise.
Branson gives them a ferrari as thanks and when they return to my shop to express gratitude, there is only an empty alley way, seemingly decades old.
 
So you're like a reverse-cursed curiosity shop...
 
I just want one of those book shops that never sells any actual books so I just keep them all but I somehow still make a living.
I'd walk round in a dressing gown and open whenever I wanted.
 
6:04 PM
Yeah. By my reckoning, a curio shop can occupy any category of the DnD alignment chart. The one from Gremlins is chaotic good, for instance.
"Have an adorable animal, but also don't shoot your foot off with it, GLHF"
 
I hope you aren't still referencing the dressing gown with "open whenever I wanted"
3
 
Kinda like Black Books but if you combined Manny and Bernard into one person.
 
The Lawful Neutral shop would just be a regular shop. Possibly operated by robots.
 
@JRich maybe I am. Maybe I'm not. Who would stop me?
 
"Lawful" implies "obeys the laws of physics" so you can't pull that disappearing act at the end.
You might be able to get away with very confusing street signs.
Depending on local ordinances.
@Ffisegydd Most of my business ideas start with the assumption that I'm already a millionaire and am just working to amuse myself.
 
6:08 PM
@JRichardSnape while this gets a star, you get a verbal slap on the wrist for "referencing" instead of "referring to"
 
So "somehow make a living" is handwaved away by drawing continuously from my enormous savings.
 
Oooof. Viva failed. Doctorate lost.
 
Huh?
Oh, I see :)
 
Can't have doctors referring to referencing when they should have been referencing referring to.
 
I assumed the revenue was from selling your shop's security camera photage to Spielburgian directors.
 
6:13 PM
I just get my business partner to enter the store as a customer and I sell them a couple gold bars for a dollar. Then they sell them elsewhere at market value and we split the profits.
 
I think I agree with Nate Silver - "data scientist" is redundant.
 
Cool story.
 
@Ffisegydd time to go on JSA
 
I know, right.
 
You gotta differentiate them from the "Gut feeling scientists" somehow.
 
6:14 PM
I kinda hope Morgan gets that SAS job, though it's a pain to write.
 
Me and FizzyGirl can get on the Jeremy Kyle Show.
 
Solution Architect is too - surely everyone is coming up with solutions
 
Pretty sure I produce more problems than solutions.
 
"My girlfriend left me when my profession was called redundant by someone on the internet."
 
the term, not the profession.
 
6:15 PM
Unless they're coming up with building designs involving mixtures of substances
 
scientists that don't deal with data are called...
 
Theoretical physicists
 
Biologists.
 
maj
Sorry to interrupt, but to solve my issue from earlier, I now tried to use the nquad parser from rdflib, but I'm getting this error message, does anyone have a clue what I could do? (docs: http://rdflib.readthedocs.org/en/stable/_modules/rdflib/plugins/parsers/nquads.html)
>>> g.parse(data, format="nquads")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python33\lib\site-packages\rdflib-4.2.1-py3.3.egg\rdflib\plugins\parsers\nquads.py", line 64, in parse
self.parseline()
File "C:\Python33\lib\site-packages\rdflib-4.2.1-py3.3.egg\rdflib\plugins\parsers\nquads.py", line 85, in parseline
 
No Python in the Python room!
 
6:16 PM
Bobby G may be right, but I'm pretty sure biology is heavily grounded in empiricism.
 
The thing about "Solution Architects" is, it's not really talking about Solutions, or Architecture.
 
I was more insulting biology, the natural enemy of physics.
 
The point of the title isn't to really describe anything. It's to convince executives that they're not wasting money on useless 'programmers'.
 
Yeah that is exactly it
 
@AaronHall Thanks. :)
 
6:20 PM
I figure it's good for you, them, and Python.
 
DSM
Someone with almost 20k on math and 6k on SO should know better than to answer blatantly off-topic questions. Bah.
 
In that I figure you'll spread them a bit of Python.
 
Got an email about working for Jive software. Anyone heard of them?
 
They program in Jive talk?
 
I should reply to the email like that, Jive brother!
 
6:22 PM
Hep cats.
Plus anyone who uses SAS (aside from schools) probably has money.
 
Based on my sample size of 3, you generally get paid better based on how impossible it is to get anything done, so it's helpful to learn enterprise languages.
 
user559633
So what about FP languages? No one actually gets anything done in those ;)
 
Exactly, because they can't modify state
puts down Become a Software Architect in 21 Days
 
omg I hate my prof
 
DSM
Probably loves you too.
 
6:37 PM
what did professor do?
 
user559633
@paul23 great, be sure to keep us up to date on things we can't change and details aboout how someone you're paying to teach you is assumably failing
 
Last examn one of the solutions was - (answer sheet, solution too kmore than 4-pages with only equations solving):
This equation cannot be satisfied because there are no terms in the left hand side to match the x ^ 3 term in the right hand side. So there is no solution that satisfies the requirements.
 
Let me tell you about the service I got at the coffee shop we went to today. It was average.
 
user559633
@RobertGrant How average?
 
OH don't even get me started on how little there is to say about it
 
user559633
6:39 PM
Wow, that seems remarkably average!!!!
 
Sounds horrifically normal.
 
user559633
notably non-descript?
 
He's a prof who stated at the start of course: "hello I'm your proffesor. I like research but sadly I have to educate at least 10% of my time, so here I am. Go to my TA's for questions I won't reply on any mails."
 
It was so normal it didn't inspire me to write 10 minutes of dialog about tipping that people seem to love but is actually pretty inane.
 
user559633
@paul23 "hello, i'm your room owner. this is a not subtle hint to review the above snark and take it as a hint to stop"
 
6:40 PM
@tristan I omitted the "ue" just for you
 
user559633
@RobertGrant "normalue?" i don't understand EN-GB at all
 
Don'tue?
 
DSM
Ouch ouch ouch.
 
ue! I just stepped in dog doodoo
... and I think a friend just caught the flue
 
6:48 PM
Ouch! Chimneys are heavy.
This job title is awesome: cv-library.co.uk/job/203503579/…
 
@inspectorG4dget what was your friend doing in the chimney? :p
 
hey puppy! good to see you after so long
 
you too - I hope all's well!?
 
he was trying to be santa claws
 
@JonClements [oh_youe.jpg]
 
6:50 PM
as well as can be, I guess
 
Our cleint's defence business...
cleint's...
 
translation: we are publicly hiring spies
 
Recruiting doesn't reqiure spelling
 
fank rod four tat
 
what's all this fuss about recruiting? I don't get why people can't just cruit once, and be done with it? Why would you want to do it again and again?
 
6:53 PM
Cru it right the first time and you won't have to again.
 
otherwise you will incru my unhappiness
correct cruing is crucial
 
user559633
@Ffisegydd It's french for "money key"
 
user559633
clé ints, if you will
 
Well first you get cruited into the world when you're born. Every other cruitment after that is necessarily a re-cruitment.
 
but that assumes that there's only one kind of cruitment
 
6:56 PM
Whether companies can cruit people, depends on the extent of corporate personhood. Can Google have children?
 
does a brainchild count?
 
Their newest child beat the European Go champion.
 
No, the soul exists in the duodenum, so a brain in a vat grown from a cell culture doesn't have the qualia necessary to be cruited.
 
I wish I worked with the Google cru. =(
 
Oh yeah it's been more than a year since dismally failed a google interview
I should really try again
 
7:03 PM
Sounds like you need a FizzyInterview at FizzyCorp.
 
DSM
I've heard mixed things about working at the Worldmind.
 
7:15 PM
That sounds like the kind of gig where your pension plan (or possibly employee orientation) consists of being fed into an ever-hungering maw.
 
The health plan is pretty good because it's in the maw's best interest to keep you fit while it digests you for a thousand years.
 
Ooh! Can I interview to work at FizzyCorp?
 
I'm encouraged by the Worldmind's good record of employee rention.
 
@inspector we do have an office in Toronto...
 
hmm... I expect to be in Toronto in the next few months
but I do have to graduate...
 
7:20 PM
If actually serious, we can talk (out of the room) and I could probably put in a referral for you.
 
you know my email. Ping me on gchat?
I can't be super serious for the next little bit (school and such)
 
DSM
sopyconTO!
 
I'd go
 
DSM
Well, drop me a line when you're within travelling distance of the [large Canadian city]. Not fair that only our British friends get to meet up. :-)
 
Small victory today. I was explaining to my manager that Create and Update should not be the same operation, and while he was nonplussed I caught a nearby coworker afterwards reading about CRUD in Wikipedia.

Now I just have to wait a couple years for that co-worker to get promoted to some decision-making role and the world will be a little better.
 
7:28 PM
I'd go too. I can go visit my grandparents and talk about snakes.
 
mmm snakes... is there anything they can't do?
 
Be backwards compatible.
 
really?
 
Have you ever seen a snake backing up?
 
I meant about the dream thing
 
7:39 PM
Roughly 78% of the time I'm lying, so maybe?
 
After additional googling, it seems that snakes can go backwards, but they prefer not to because it rubs their scales the wrong way.
According to randos on Yahoo! answers
 
if you weren't lying right now, would you say that now is one of those times that you were lying?
 
DSM
The first google result for "do snakes dream" tells me "Snakes lack the area of the brain that allow dreaming", and what more evidence could I need?
 
Hey guys, I noticed that len(str(None)) returns 4
That said, I'm iterating over a dictionary. I want to check that every value is not empty string or None

Is this good enough:
for k,v in some_dict.items():
assert v is not None and len(str(v)) > 0
 
Why not just assert v?
 
7:41 PM
that's sufficient? Well, f.
 
interesting post just popped up... and martijnbot nuked it right away: stackoverflow.com/a/35046521/198633
 
@HEADLESS_0NE that will check that it is a Truthy value. None and the empty string are both Falsey.
 
DSM
@iG: I remember the first time someone used that on SO. Blew my mind.
 
Right, but what if it's not a string
For instance, my v right now is a Decimal object
 
Oh dear, people doing weird and wonderful things with Python for loops. Who would ever use for a[-1] in a:?
3
 
7:42 PM
Could it be 0?
 
yes
it can be 0
 
then assert v fails
 
If you want to check that something's not None or empty string, then just check those two conditions
x is not None and x != ''
 
DSM
A dictionary with None and strings and also numbers? That sounds like something has gone weird.
 
Yeah I assume that you only had strings. Which is both my fault for assuming and your fault for not being specific :P
 
7:44 PM
@davidism thanks, 'KISS'
 
Mosly mine.
I should know by now.
 
v = some_dict.values();
assert not '' in v
assert not None in v
?
 
@MartijnPieters I'm surprised that's legal syntax. And yet it runs in my REPL.
 
Did anyone click on that link in the Lounge flag?
I did not, but am intrigued.
 
7:45 PM
Hmm, yep, targetlist can contain subscripts. Good to know...?
 
@QuestionC is .values() more efficient than my for loop iteration? Just curious
 
Doubtful
 
I struggle to think of a situation where for name[key] in iterable: would be actually useful though.
 
@Kevin for target_list in expression_list.
Just like assignment.
@Kevin for instance.property in iterable:..
or how about
index = 0
for listobj[index] in iterable:
    if condition:
        index += 1
That would make for an interesting algorithm hack..
 
Might be fun for a golf challenge :-)
 
7:49 PM
queue = [None]*len(L)
for queue[i], e in enumerate(L):
    print("adding", e, "to processing queue")
 
Yeah, that's where I'm seeing this being useful.
 
It's useful for making your code's maintainer cry.
 
now, that won't really work, but you can see what I'm trying to do with it. Anyone got a way to make that idea work?
 
L=[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
queue = [None]*len(L)
for e, queue[e] in enumerate(L):
    print("adding", queue[e], "to processing queue")
 
Nice.
 
7:53 PM
That's some of the ugliest code I've written, and I golf.
 
Using e in the same target list where it's assigned... @_@
 
Really stretching the definitions of 'useful' and 'nice' here.
 
I'm honestly surprised it works. Interestingly, it doesn't work the other way around. I can't access queue[e] in the index variable.
L=[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
queue = [None]*len(L)
for queue[e], e in enumerate(L):
    print("adding", queue[e], "to processing queue")
That won't work.
 
@MorganThrapp because assignment order.
Assigning from left to right.
 
That's what I figured.
 
7:56 PM
So e, queue[e] works because e is assigned to first, then queue[e].
 
L=[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
queue = [None]*len(L)
e = 0
for queue[e], e in enumerate(L,1):
    print("adding", queue[e-1], "to processing queue")
 
Could you have a lambda expression?
 
@Ffisegydd SyntaxError: can't assign to lambda
 
Robbed.
 
I know I can do a=b=5, so can I do for i, queue[i]=e in enumerate(L)?
 
7:59 PM
You can have anything that you could normally put on the left hand side of an assignment statement, if I read the docs correctly.
 
@inspectorG4dget SyntaxError: invalid syntax
@Kevin Sounds right.
 
class Fred:
    def __init__(self):
        self.x = None
a = Fred()
b = Fred()
for (lambda x: a if x else b)(1).x in range(10):
    print a.x, b.x
 
My god that's absurd.
 
It's like watching a car crash.
 
8:02 PM
Interestingly, it precomputes the lambda result.
class Fred:
    def __init__(self):
        self.x = None
a = Fred()
b = Fred()
for (lambda x: a if x in (1, 3, 5) else b)(1).x in range(10):
    print(a.x, b.x)
Oh, wait, never mind.
 
it's interesting that we can't do multiple assignment in the loop variable
 
class Fred:
    def __init__(self):
        self.x = None
a = Fred()
b = Fred()
for q, (lambda x: a if x%2==0 else b)(q).x in enumerate(range(10)):
    print(a.x, b.x)
 
I tried to hack it with a globals().__setitem__(queue[i], e), but that gave me a "can't assign to function call"
 
Dear god, why.
 
DSM
8:04 PM
I wish for unhappy things to happen to everyone involved in this. Does that make me a bad person? .. analysis: No.
 
@MorganThrapp because it's the gift of the human imagination
 
The answer to "why is this allowed" is probably "because forbidding it would require more work", which is the justification for many language quirks that one normally never encounters.
We already have a perfectly good target_list grammar item, and making an extra identifiers_only_target_list for for-loop clauses would end up with a lot of code duplication in the parser.
 
I just read that as "The answer to "why is this allowed" is probably "because forbidding it would require more work", which is the justification for KevinScript"
 
If KevinScript did not exist, it would be necessary to invent it.
 
@Ffisegydd "No, we don't want him to jump the gorge on a motorcycle. But we also don't want to build a fence around the whole thing. There's nothing valuable or irreplaceable down there, so, we're just going to let the problem solve itself."
Also, "Youtube monetization."
 
8:14 PM
@Augusta: if you named your son Caesar, would he therefore come to be known as Augusta's Caesar?
... which also works for your drink at the bar
 
@inspectorG4dget Only if the father wasn't named 'Julio.'
Then I would happily defer to him being "Julio's Caesar."
Although on second thought, I kind of don't like where that would end.
 
So actually, my answer is, "Yes."
 
9_9 Although, I suppose, if the father was 'Julio', it would probably be spelled 'Cesar'. </overthink>
 
8:17 PM
"Augusta wanted to watch the forbidden Pokemon episode. I obliged, because I wanted to see Augusta's seizure."
 
huehuehue :y
I got punched in the nose once. It was quite a blow to Augusta's sneezer.
 
ergh, so sick of meteor...
 
@corvid Did it leave an... impact? :y
 
when Augasta visited Russia, she went to their wax museums and took a picture with three tsar statutes - the thir d one was Augasta's C-Tsar
 
cough Sorry. I was in the wrong place there.
@inspectorG4dget I think you could have gotten away with "3-czar" there, too.
 
8:21 PM
touche </overthink>
 
The guards of my secret volcano base have simple orders regarding the capture of invading secret agents. "Accost us? Seize her"
 
Dual Camera iPhone 7 Plus Could Offer 'DSLR-Like' Quality now we don't have to buy expensive cameras to be photographers!
 
I'm writing accounting software that double-checks manual calculations that may be expensive to correct later. if it will cost us, sees err.
 
@Programmer That actually made me lol.
 
Ok I'm done.
 
8:27 PM
new try-catch paradigm for graceful error catching and failure thereafter: cease err
 
@Ffisegydd thought you'd appreciate it...or your blood pressure would increase
 
Megapixels != Quality.
 
I million terrible pixels might disagree with that
 
"Digital zoom? How can I go wrong?!"
 
8:30 PM
"Depth of field? Naaaaaah"
 
"Who would ever want to focus a camera themselves??"
"No thanks; internal memory is all I need!"
 
"15 megapixels on a 6mm diagonal sensor is the same as 15 megapixels on 27mm diagonal, right?"
 
For some reason my Django South schemamigration command isn't detecting my app name to create a new migration, any ideas?
 
What button do I press to capture the pensive resolve and quiet suffering of itinerant dust bowl workers? Or do I need an instagram filter for that?
 
If Django is anything like me, it can't get past the word 'schemamigration' without giggling, and it's dicking everything up. But I'm also an idiot, so...
"Can I affix this camera to a selfie stick?"
(Just kidding: nobody who has a selfie stick would ever use the word 'affix' in regular conversation.)
 
8:38 PM
I want a new camera :(
 
Except possibly "my pickup truck needs a'fixin' "
 
@Kevin Or possibly, "She's inna kitchen, a'fixin' me a sammich." True enough.
 
..Now I'm imagining hillbillies with iPhones and it's super weird.
 
If Canon released a mirrorless camera tomorrow I would be over that sh** like nobody's business.
 
8:41 PM
Arnold could bend a selfie stick like a balloon animal if he wanted to.
 
Does anyone does freelancer work?
 
@Kevin What if it was fibreglas?
 
@Augusta he'd wave it around so fast that it would heat up from friction with air, and then he'd bend it about, like a baloon animal
 
I have no further questions.
 
8:44 PM
Thank you for your time.
-Closes briefcase, returns to cubicle, drinks for the rest of the day.-
 
label your desk "Chopper", so that your boss can tell you to Get to da choppa!!
 
@PatrickBassut We've had freelancers/contractors here in the past although I don't know if any are around right now
 
Thanks for the response, @Kevin. I was actually looking for contractors. I was going to ask a freelancer if he knew of any. :)
 
@Ffisegydd Fencing a bunch of super-rare Magic: The Gathering cards seems... Challenging.
 
8:52 PM
>>> pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(f))
TypeError: a class that defines __slots__ without defining __getstate__ cannot be pickled
>>> pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(f, -1))
<__main__.Foo object at 0x1129C770>
I think maybe that error message should be updated.
 
Selling big bundles of cards to a dealer/store will usually get you well below the sum of the market averages of each card. Selling cards individually on ebay or similar would net the most profit, but they'd have to be smart to avoid law enforcement monitoring for patterns of sales matching the theft.
There aren't that many The Tabernacle at Pendrell Vale s floating around the free market, don'cha know.
 
According to my copy of Goods Fencing for Dummies, getting below fair market value is normal.
 
If the buyer knows they're hot (and they will probably be able to tell if the binders have the store's logo or if a list of the missing cards is made public) then they're going to get super gouged.
 
lettuce cousin, @AnttiHaapala
 
8:59 PM
They should have stolen some other non-mtg stuff. Then maybe the article wouldn't have had so much circulation in the MTG community.
 

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