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12:04 AM
This is ridiculous ^^^^
 
Ha ha o wow
What??
"We're processed your papers and we're ready for you to start working here, all we need is for you to put on this glaive collar and we're set."
...
"Oh relax. The password that activates the collars is nine characters long. Nobody's gonna guess that."
"Is it 123456789?"
"You really weren't supposed to look at the whiteboard in the staff room."
 
12:29 AM
I would have guessed "password1"
 
Pff. That was last year's password.
 
sorry, "password2"
 
Yeah, like we're going to repeat the same mistake we made in 2012. Come on.
 
I do remember one job where my boss got mad at me for picking a password that he couldn't remember - cause he needed my password for something once
and then he got really mad when I told him what it was and it still didn't work for him
...granted I told him it was the first equation to the Euclidean algorithm - but it's not my fault he didn't know science
 
12:49 AM
having a key under the mat at your front door is like the real life equivilent to setting your password to "password"
 
Where did I get your password? I kind of just guest it.
 
 
3 hours later…
3:29 AM
one day I will get research data that is not malformed
 
 
2 hours later…
5:12 AM
morning
 
 
1 hour later…
6:18 AM
anyone has used pyodbc and connected to mssql server from a centos server?
 
7:00 AM
CBG all.
@Sajeetharan could you tell what your issue was ?
 
 
1 hour later…
8:01 AM
Take any Facebook/Instagram photo URL. 👉 append `.txt` → ASCII art 👉 append `.html` → colored ASCII art E.g. https://scontent-ams3-1.cdninstagram.com/t51.2885-15/e35/11906246_1700002456899911_1391970345_n.jpg.html
 
8:15 AM
doesn't seem to work
 
8:40 AM
Mornin' cabbage
 
Sup brah
 
You're in FizzyCorp early
 
FizzyHours are 0830-0530 though I usually get in around 0750.
 
yeah couldn't find anything for which that'd work
 
Touche. This morning sees the start of the new IntrepidHours routine - trying to get in early so I can get some work done
In early, home early
 
8:56 AM
Yeah that's what I do. I usually knock off around 1700.
 
@Sajeetharan apologies. We ask that users don't share their new(ish) questions in chat, and instead wait a few days to see how things play out on the main site itself.
@The6thSense didn't realise that you had a newly asked question on site, and if he had done then I assume he wouldn't have asked you to link it.
 
@MartijnPieters ok. I can't figure out how to get the direct image link for some reason. oh well, it's ok
 
9:29 AM
@Jerry I used my browser developer tools.
I can't get it to work with every image, and I can't even find a reference about it in our internal docs here.
So it appears to be a bit of an undocumented easter egg.
 
yea I guess it doesn't work with all images. I was browsing with dev tools as well without much luck
ok, managed to find it. had to expand some stuff
and yup I can confirm from my end that it works :D
 
9:59 AM
Hi all.
1. Isn't it meaningless to use multi threading in python because of the GIL factor? 2. Will GIL factor affect us even after converting our script to exe using pyinstaller.
 
1) No. Depending on what you want to do with the threads.
2) Yes, because all that is doing is "jamming" the python interpreter and environment into a single handy .exe file
3) Have you looked at the `multiprocessing` module?
Hope that helps @PythonGuru?
 
Succinct
 
@IntrepidBrit yes it does thanks :).
 
Good luck!
 
user559633
Hey @IntrepidBrit, good to 'see' more of you lately
 
10:29 AM
Cbg
 
user559633
cbg
 
10:47 AM
ᴄʙɢ
 
KGB
sry, wrong window
 
user559633
CBGB
 
which reminds me to switch spotify on
 
too broad: gimme codes or links stackoverflow.com/questions/35058974/…
 
user559633
Heh. 'please write a code which deals with the problem or a link.'
 
10:49 AM
"Please write a code",
 
How can I make an animation of a plot in Python?
I am looking for a tutorial on this
 
Cheers Tristan, I tend to pop into the room when I'm actively coding Python.
 
Bleh. What's the easiest way to run shell commands as if it was me physically typing at the console? I realise that subprocess is the answer but I have various things in .bashrc that I'd also like to work with. Is the answer to do subprocess.call('source ~/.bashrc') at the start of my program?
 
user559633
Does each subprocess run in a vacuum?
 
I don't understand why just using shell=True doesn't work though.
I would have thought that is the point.
 
10:59 AM
@tristan Yes. IIRC. Let me check the docs...
 
10
A: Python subprocess.call a bash alias

Martijn PietersYou need to set the shell keyword to True: call("myAlias", shell=True) From the relevant documentation: If shell is True, the specified command will be executed through the shell. This can be useful if you are using Python primarily for the enhanced control flow it offers over most system ...

 
user559633
Yeah, that's what I thought too. The docs are sort of tl;dr and I'm in the middle of a thing
 
Fanks Margin.
 
user559633
Yeah, that makes sense for what I thought of subprocess -- need to either shell=True and pass in the right executable, or inline all your calls.
 
I just had shell=True, so it wasn't accessing my .bashrc config
 
11:02 AM
From class subprocess.Popen "Execute a child program in a new process. On POSIX, the class uses os.execvp()-like behavior to execute the child program. On Windows, the class uses the Windows CreateProcess() function."
 
user559633
e.g. call('/bin/zsh -c "source ~/.zsh_tristan; do_thing"')
 
Also, "On POSIX with shell=True, the shell defaults to /bin/sh." So that's not going to run the .bashrc
 
I need to bruteforce myself
 
Anyone know of a good duplicate question explaining __radd__?
 
@M4rtini this maybe?
 
11:14 AM
Ye it might work. Thanks
 
good morning
got a list of 100 elements, all 0, and 1, and want to illustrate how the average is moving
there are a lot of 0 in the front which is failing, and it gets better(1) over time, want to illustrate that somehow
 
something with accumulate if you use python 3
 
@hmmmbob you can draw some graph. For example least squares approximation.
 
Sounds like you want a rolling mean
 
i thought about a loop, cutting more and more off my list, building the average of those, adding that to a list of averages
yes i want exactly that, did not know the english term
i am sure there is a slick way to do it, mine would be rather clunky
 
11:20 AM
moving_average = [acc/i for acc, i in zip(itertools.accumulate(a), range(1, len(a)))]
something like that maybe
 
24
Q: Pandas: rolling mean by time interval

AnovI'm new to Pandas.... I've got a bunch of polling data; I want to compute a rolling mean to get an estimate for each day based on a three-day window. As I understand from this question, the rolling_* functions compute the window based on a specified number of values, and not a specific datetime r...

 
@hmmmbob depends whether you want a rolling mean or an expanding mean, they're different things.
 
Wikipedia discusses the basic techniques en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_average . Depending on your data a simple rectangular window may be adequate, but you may want to investigate other possibilities, like exponential or gaussian, especially if you intend to make a plot.
 
oh i dont know that distinction
 
I'm partial to a bit of EWMA myself.
 
11:23 AM
i will try first the way i figured it
so learn something :)
not elegant of course :)
 
puts hand up Also a fan of EWMA - the ease of calculation (not having to keep the history) is often very attractive.
Hello again all BTW
 
Hey @AnttiHaapala: you know about mmap. Any ideas? stackoverflow.com/questions/35060084/…
I haven't really used mmap myself... and I'd never considered using it on /dev/mem which I admit is intriguing, but also somewhat scary. :)
 
c-b-g
@PM2Ring not enough information. if this is a memory mapped device then it can be that it needs to be written 2 bytes as a time
 
11:43 AM
Makes sense. Although the man page says that "/dev/mem is a character device file", so I'd expect it to be byte addressable.
 
@PM2Ring...
/dev/mem is a character device does not mean anything
character device means "this is not a block-device"
where "block-device" means "this is a device whose contents are cached in the block cache"
 
Yeah, ok.
 
/dev/mem is the physical memory,
if you memmap its contents, you map the physical page in another location
and if it is a memmapped io device they usually have some restrictions, for example that you must write the both bytes at the same time...
which could fit here
 
Interesting scenario.
 
11:52 AM
I wonder in passing whether ketchup's self.word_size is set correctly for the data they're trying to write.
although the second option should work unless there is some constraint on writing sequentially, I guess.
mumble, mumble - should do some work
 
ok i am circling my problem, managed to get the averages in a list, all i have to do now is plot the thing somehow :)
 
Hello guys, i'm on a project that is not mine, and i'm a little lost. It using Django and Django REST Framework. I got a question about OPTIONS request, anyone able to help here ? : )
 
@Addict what's the problem
 
Oh you're the one who helped me the last time : )
I'm gonna try to explain it.
 
I think I have a more minimal example with that mmap problem that exhibits the behaviour.
 
12:03 PM
Psychic-debugging: Your problem is to do with CORS.
 
Hmm nah, maybe not
 
I got a OPTIONS request that is made to a url '/performances'. I need to add field to this request, but i don't know how. The request answer looks like this: pastebin.com/TmJZxXgt . I need to have league and team fields at owner/choices (Because all users have league and teams associated to them). But I can't found anything helpfull with Google.
Everyone talks about Metadata Classes and things like that, but in my project, there is nothing like that. I can show you the serializers and the models if you need. I noticed that my Player Class in my model got a __unicode__() method that return the Players's name, but can only return a string apparently.
@khajvah :)
 
@Addict look at your view for '/performanices'
 
everything should be there
 
12:10 PM
I gave you the view, it only saying wich model, serializers and http methods that are allowed
 
@Addict I am not sure where it gets choice info
does it print whatever it is in the databse?
Also, you should post PlayerSerializer too
@Addict \this is connected with PlayerSerializer, as owner is Player
 
12:32 PM
XYWTF of the day: stackoverflow.com/questions/35061020/… . The original version had a horrible typo, but at least the OP fixed that when prompted.
Oh well, I guess the OP decided to cut his losses on that one.
 
12:46 PM
cbg
non-schengen-lounge-cbg
@MartijnPieters lolphp material in python?
 
1:06 PM
hmm
so silent here
snow day? github offline?
 
national holiday for me. Feels bretty gud
 
Cbg
 
@AnttiHaapala In a presentation.
 
@khajvah I'm back sorry internet problems
pastebin.com/f9V1tcUW PlayerSerializer
 
1:25 PM
@khajvah I can do return self.name + self.league + self.team as a string and split it in frontend but it seems so bad to do :/
 
@Addict BTW, that doesn't seem to be the correct PlayerSerializer
are you sure it's the correct one?
Note that an object can have many serializers
 
I'm gonna pastebin you my serialize.py if you have a doubt
 
CABBAGE!!
 
How can a big company with 700+ programmers have a website which can't even handle signup properly.
so weird
 
1:32 PM
@khajvah maybe those 700+ are working on the signup simultaneously.
 
And I wanted to apply for a job there.
@PatrickBassut and nobody is able to handle merge conflicts
@Addict Ok, I am not really sure what's going on but take a look at this: django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/metadata
 
Yeah Metadata Classes i've already took a look at it but nothing similar appear in my project :/
 
In short check your Metadata clas
 
The one who coded this must have done some homemade things
 
@Addict where does DEFAULT_METADATA_CLASS point to in settings.py?
 
1:39 PM
It doesn't exist
`REST_FRAMEWORK = {
# Use Django's standard `django.contrib.auth` permissions,
# or allow read-only access for unauthenticated users.
'DEFAULT_PERMISSION_CLASSES': [
'rest_framework.permissions.AllowAny'
],
'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'rest_framework.pagination.PageNumberPagination',
'PAGE_SIZE': 25
}
`
 
what about views? is there anything about metadata_class?
@Addict even if you do, you gotta give metadata_class
 
pastebin.com/6ZFgwDQV here are the views
Nothing about metadata_class :s
 
I don't know then, sorry
wait for somebody better than me
:)
 
Hmm, bs4 seems to stop parsing my page right around <div class="onebox ob-image"><a rel="nofollow" href="//i.stack.imgur.com/e0nBT.jpg">. I wonder why.
I guess I'll try using lxml, which is more lenient... Oops, it's not installed. Oops, when I try to pip install it, it says "can't find vcvarsall.bat". Oops, when I include the path to visual studio in my environment variables, it says "Could not find function xmlCheckVersion in library libxml2. Is libxml2 installed?". Oops, when I try pip install libxml2 it says "no matching distribution found". Oops, maximum frustration depth reached.
 
what is the equivalent of a scrollable textbox in tkinter...when you append a new line it scrolls automatically to show the most recent entry...?
 
1:55 PM
Oh, gohlke's got a wheel file available. Ignore my previous message.
@deostroll Try the Text widget.
 
Morning cabbage.
 
@khajvah True that. Raise your hand who never committed your code first when you heard you coworker was going to do it before you.
@MorganThrapp morning
 
2:13 PM
if i want to write a recursive function, how can i " keep a value"
 
morning everyone
 
like i have a function(a,b) but i have to keep the value of a fixed
 
@hmmmbob fixed related to what?
 
i take 2 numbers in, i want to subtract 1 from the first number in each recursive call, but i still need the original value of that number in each of the recursive steps
 
Pass it along all the way and don't change it?
 
2:18 PM
case closed.
 
def xxx(a,b):
help=a
if i do something like this
help will always be reassigned
 
I guess, we'll need more details, otherwise, it's an XY-problem.
 
Making changes to a local variable in one spot on the call stack should have no effect on local variables elsewhere on the call stack with the same name.
 
want to find the biggest common divisor of 2 numbers
 
So reassigning a should only have a visible change in the one function call you made the assignment in.
 
2:20 PM
@hmmmbob You don't need recursion for that!
 
i know but the task is to do it with recursion
 
The code you showed us with help=a does not replicate your error. Please provide an MCVE.
 
def gcd(a, b):
    ''' Greatest common divisor of a and b '''
    if a < b:
        a, b = b, a
    while b != 0:
        a, b = b, a % b
    return a
Or even just
def gcd(a, b):
    while b:
        a, b = b, a % b
    return a
 
from fractions import gcd
 
That too. :)
 
2:22 PM
bug he needs recursion, that's an exercise.
 
I always thought it was weird that gcd isn't in the math module.
 
def gcdIter(a, b):
    if a<=b:
        help=a
        if help==1:
            return 1
        elif a%help==0 and b%help==0:
            return help
        else:
            gcdIter(a-1,b)
 
Hint: when calling a function recursively, it does not automatically pass the return value of the inner call out of the outer call. Try replacing your last line with return gcdIter(a-1, b)
 
@Kevin But math is mostly float stuff, and gcd is an integer thing. And it kinda makes sense for it to be in fractions, since you need it to reduce fractions to the lowest denominator.
 
Hm, what database is good for geolocation optimized queries? Still postgres with PostGIS?
 
2:25 PM
Also probably change the name from gcdIter to something else because it doesn't use iteration :-P
 
thanks Kevin
i think i am not too far off , still when i call it with 4,6 it gives me 3
so something is wrong here :)
 
elif a%help==0... is a little weird to me. a and help are always equal, so a%help==0 is always true.
 
yes thats exactly my problem
of my first question
because one of them has to be fixed
but i assign them to be equal
that is why i asked how i can accomplish that
one of them has to be counted down, and the other has to stay the same
 
So, what, you only want the assignment to happen the first time you call the function? And not in any of the inner calls?
 
exactly, thats what i need
because if i have 4 and 6
it has to count down all the way to 2
 
2:28 PM
@hmmmbob Yeah, your algorithm is wrong. Why are you subtracting 1 from a in the recursive call? You can subtract b (or a multiple of b) from a, since gcd(a,b) = gcd(a-kb, b) for any integer k
 
Do you know Euclid's algorithm?
 
yes i know that :)
 
There's probably a way to do this without "one-time assignment" tricks. Probably using the hints from the messages directly above this one :-)
 
gcd(a, b) = gcd(b, a % b)  # assuming a > b
 
cereal i am aware of that :)
 
2:30 PM
But if you're dead set on your current approach... Have they taught you about default variables yet?
 
nope
 
Darn, they might have been useful here.
 
so, add edge conditions to the formula above, and that's the implementation.
 
its ok , you all helped me !
edge conditions ? :)
 
like when to stop the recursion.
 
2:32 PM
You could have done something like def gcd(a,b, original_a_value=None): and then in the body if original_a_value is None: original_a_value = a and then each time you call the function recursively you'd do gcd(something, something, original_a_value). That would ensure that the assignment occurs only once.
I'm not saying that's the best approach. It's just the first one off the top of my head.
 
ppl, original value is not needed.
why
 
You could also do something with nonlocal variables and nested function definitions...
 
And metaclasses! Everything is better with them.
 
Now for something completely different. I finally got my star list parser working. I'm way late to reply to whoever asked "what are the most starred messages" days ago, but here they are.
33: "Ok, you go to bed and see another girl instead of your gf - that's ValueError. You see a raccoon - that's TypeError." -- bereal
31: "The sandbox is a good place to star things for hats.  This room is not." -- davidism
22: "PSA: To format code in chat, press CTRL+K." -- poke
21: "Gentlemen... the day has come... I've finished my bloody thesis." -- Ffisegydd
21: "you lose 1 PythonPoint? every time you use a semicolon" -- roippi
20: "CONGRATS TO @ChristianCareaga FOR THE 200,000TH POST IN THE ROOM... - IT WAS "LUCKY!!"" -- Jon Clements
 
\o/
 
2:35 PM
I don't think roippi's original comment had that question mark in there. The unicode got mangled a bit. It was probably a (tm) or (R) or something.
 
@hmmmbob: If you want to see code for the extended Euclidean algorithm and how it can be used to solve linear equations in integers, see this answer I wrote last year. However, it may use stuff you haven't learned about yet.
 
Looks like the formula for lots of stars is: enormous personal accomplishments; administrative policies everyone agrees with; general pro-Python propaganda; and/or high quality tech humor.
 
Or sexual implication.
 
I loled all over again at #19:
Oct 30 '15 at 13:14, by Jon Clements
"If I'm ever on life support - unplug me... Then plug me back in again - see if that works" :p
I was going to run the parser on Lounge<C++> but they have 900 pages of stars 0_0
 
C++ room is no fun :\
 
2:50 PM
Grrr. I hate it when people ask Numpy questions without mentioning anywhere that it's a Numpy question. dupe stackoverflow.com/questions/35064359/…
 
Lounge<C++> is 4chan of SO
 
Maybe I'll run it in the background. Should only take ten minutes or so.
Somewhat related. Is there a built-in function that strips all the characters out of a string that would make it an illegal filename?
ex "foo?bar/baz" -> "foobarbaz" assuming your OS forbids "?" and "/"
 
4chan is occasionally funny though
 
4chan is a firehose that spews 10% interesting content and 90% excrement.
Drink at your own risk.
 
2:55 PM
136
Q: Turn a string into a valid filename in Python

Sophie GageI have a string that I want to use as a filename, so I want to remove all characters that wouldn't be allowed in filenames, using Python. I'd rather be strict than otherwise, so let's say I want to retain only letters, digits, and a small set of other characters like "_-.() ". What's the most el...

Answer to my own question: not really
 
I like b64 encoding guy. It's a little bit mad, but would work
 
ugh my internet is killing me
just found the fishest poker website ever. So fishy that If I quite my job and play there whole day, I would earn more
 
rhubarb
 
I'd definitely go with b64.
Simple and fool-proof.
 
I'm trying to make folders for each room's star list. I'm being lazy and just doing filename = room_name.rpartition("/")[2].
6/python becomes python, 10/loungec becomes loungec.
 
user559633
3:11 PM
@Kevin you forgot generic funny
 
Whoops, C's star list broke my script because one of the starred message was from an anonymous user. I assumed all titles have an "a" element, but this one didn't.
 
user559633
boss: you're fired.
mime: why?
boss: ...
mime: oh yeah
 
in Lounge<C++>, Aug 28 '15 at 13:58, by user3883753
chatroo mis reactiv then, i need someone to tell me rapidly the solutions of my errors
@tristan Yeah you've got a couple good ones in the top 20 :-)
 
user559633
@Kevin Aww shucks kicks dirt
 
@Kevin You're putting the messages inside a text file or the message is the filename itself?
 
user559633
3:17 PM
some of the starred messages are images
 
Jan 6 '15 at 20:31, by tristan
IF YOU ARE NOT THE INTENDED RECIPIENT METHOD OF THIS VARIABLE, PLEASE NOTIFY THE CALLING FRAME AND DEREFERENCE YOUR COUNT TO THIS VARIABLE IMMEDIATELY
@PatrickBassut The messages are inside the text file. The filename corresponds to the page number on the big list of all stars. The folder name corresponds to the room name.
 
user559633
i think this is my favorite thing i've ever posted in here:
 
user559633
Aug 26 '15 at 18:54, by tristan
its the year 2021. you download designer drug for your 3d printer off the bit torrent network. you go to get the drugs out of the printer but instead of drugs it printed a cop. Youre under arrest
 
user559633
i don't even remember where i got it
 
I guess the one Kevin posted is why you insisted on the "generic funny" category :p
 
3:20 PM
The poor punctuation on the last sentence really sells it :-D
ur under arest, scum
 
user559633
I considered making it ur're
 
user559633
a la: i can nevr tell the difference btween ur, u're, and ur're
 
shudder
 
user559633
u're under arrest for using vb.net, nerd
 
user559633
~*nerd crymez*~
 
user559633
3:22 PM
what's the opposite of test driven development? like when you write a test and it fails, so you move the goalpost by writing a little monkey patch in the original function. is that just called development?
 
ten minutes into web scraping 15 messages at a time, I wonder if there is an actual API for this.
 
user559633
ask them to build it as a TEAMZ feature
 
user559633
>>> 10 == 10.0
True
 
user559633
.___. i'm not a smart man and that was at the core of ~10% of my tests failing
 
@Kevin I was going to ask you this since you mentioned you're getting a anchor tag. Isn't there an API for this?
 
3:24 PM
Well yesterday DSM was able to get the number of stars of the top ten messages, and he did it like five minutes after I started complaining about html parsing. So either he's much better at beautifulsoup than me, or he knows the "official" way to query chat data.
Both are very possible.
 
After seeing Martijn's message earlier, I'm now really wishing I was going to FOSDEM
Hacking and a beer event. In Brussels. :( I should be there.
 
@Kevin I removed my cookies just in case
And there's an additional -H there
Nevermind, this is probably what you're doing atm. It returns your a messy html
 
I'm using urllib.urlopen instead of curl, but same principle.
But I'm now wondering if there's an undocumented messages_per_page parameter I could be sending...
 
@tristan CBADD - Can't be arsed driven development
 
@Kevin I just sent you the curl so you know how to replicate using urllib
 
user559633
3:30 PM
@JRichardSnape works for me
 
Ok, I'll play around with it, thanks.
 
You guys hear about the Python mail agent called spamalot? rimshot
 
@Kevin as I sad it won't help you since it spits out some html. And that's probably what you're already doing
 
Yeah although I'm fetching from http://chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/info/6/python/?tab=stars rather than https://chat.stackoverflow.com/chats/stars/6 so there's a bit more extraneous data to fetch.
Since bandwidth is a bottleneck, just getting stripped-down HTML may give a noticeable performance boost. I should do some benchmarks.
Or I could sit here for 140 more seconds at which point the loungeC query will complete anyway.
53: "We're officially the best room ever" -- Cat Plus Plus
45: "To those hat lovers who want this and especially this, star these instead." -- Mark Garcia
39: "By being in this room you agree to the Rules and giving us exclusive and irrevocable license for your soul." -- Cat Plus Plus
36: "Hitler on C++17?" -- Andy Prowl
35: "If you want reliable, high quality answers quickly, use SO. If you want to gamble and maybe get a useful answer, maybe get a good answer, and maybe waste y
our time, feel free to ask questions here :)" -- jalf
 
scraping stars?
 
3:37 PM
Absolutely eerie synchronicity: both of our rooms' #2 messages are about hats, and the #9s are about hating java.
@rlemon yes.
 
fun stuff.
 
The also seem to have issues with "Why are you all so mean for not answering my perl question in the Python room. They're both code."
 
I scraped our (js rooms) entire transcript.. since beginning. 3.8gb of data :D
 
@Kevin Tried pagesize which is the parameter for number of questions per page, to no avail.
 
@rlemon D-:
 
user559633
3:40 PM
""Hi I have a question about my retirement fund" "Sir this is a convenience store..." "I know but it's the only thing open at this hour"" -- Borgleader
 
user559633
is pretty amazing
 
LoungeC is a mere 77.3 MB (raw html) or 7.4 MB (jsonified data)
@tristan That's chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/10?m=21250999#21250999 if you want to link it to others.
It's also that if you don't want to link it to others.
Your desires have little impact on reality at large.
 
user559633
in Lounge<C++>, Jan 30 '15 at 2:30, by Borgleader
"Hi I have a question about my retirement fund"
"Sir this is a convenience store..."
"I know but it's the only thing open at this hour"
 
user559633
:) it's so good
 
user559633
@Kevin The dollar is pretty strong right now in the world economy.
 
3:45 PM
And we thank you for your personal expenditures stimulating the economy, which accounts for about 0.00001% of the total effect.
Twist: tristan is secretly a Koch brother
 
@tristan The context makes it better. Someone was asking SQL questions in the C room "i am here because it's the only active room at the moment"
 
user559633
@QuestionC Yeah, I figured that was the case
 
user559633
I actually spend almost no money. I spent maybe $300 in the past month.
 
Where the heck are you?!
 
The Motherland.
 
3:46 PM
That can't include room and board.
 
user559633
Russia. It's kind of misleading to say that I spend that little per month, because my spending happens in spikes -- e.g. new laptop, buying a bunch of clothes at once so i don't have to shop, series of flights.
 
user559633
I don't own a car or pay rent
 
Jesus, if I cut my expenses down to just the bare minimum, it'd be $1200/mo. And that assumes I don't eat, or drink, or put gas in my car.
Oh, yeah, that helps.
 
user559633
Or shower or go outside, but no one asked
 
paying no rent / mortgage is a good way to have low expenditure.
 
3:49 PM
Read that as "series of fights". Disinfectant and "courage juice" costs can really rack up, yes. Even if you only buy one of them and use it for both purposes
 
user559633
vodka can be many things to many people
 
You are in the right country.
 
Gin4Life.
A short and brutal life, but a life nonetheless.
 
I made a ginger simple syrup the other day that goes great with gin.
 
user559633
Know what goes great with gin? Shut up and drink your gin
 
3:51 PM
@Ffisegydd fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fichier:William_Hogarth_-_Gin_Lane.jpg What it looks like outside on FizzyLane
 
Righto peeps - I now have a use case for a lightweight linux to resurrect an old notebook. Is Arch linux still my goto distro of choice? I don't think it needs to be as minimal as puppy.
 
user559633
@JRichardSnape How much ram? And are you wanting a desktop environment?
 
In the manner of Mr. Benn's shopkeeper as if by magic, @intrepid appears.
@tristan yes desktop - although clunky is fine - I do most stuff on the command line anyway.
RAM - not sure - hold on...
Mmm - 4GB - more than I thought.
 
user559633
Yeah, so anything would probably be fine. I'd go Debian + XFCE, but that's just my preference.
 
yeah - as you say - having discovered the spec is better than I thought, probs doesn't matter how lightweight.
 
And fades back into the shadows as clients wander in to chat
 
If only all question askers followed such a protocol.
Read that as "clients wander into chat" and started wondering which of the regulars secretly employs InterpidBrit.
 
I like to believe that the bad askers become a little better by seeing what a good answer looks like.
Too much of my life is invested in answering dumb questions otherwise.
 
user559633
waiting for the "do the needful and write a good question for me" "question"
 
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