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19:00
@rlemon Not finding it...
Drat, that wasn't the one I was thinking of
i need urgent help
like dead urgent :-/
@darkyen00 Damnit, Jim! I'm a programmer, not a doctor!
19:03
I am trying to sniff transaction details from sms's [love android]
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and track them for myself
should i just implement compare and extract stuff ?
like simple diff the sms ?
like simple diff the known sms ?
and figure out the details ?
or write a parser ? and stuff ?
@rlemon Looks like a meme to me
"Meme me up, Scotty!"
19:08
@darkyen00 I'm afraid it's a bit over my head to be able to give you an answer that would likely only coincidentally answer your question correctly
@Neil -_- stop trolling
here is an example
@darkyen00 No troll. :(
I'm familiar with javascript, not smses
I make smesses
I have approximately one day to choose a framework for our touch site. It is mostly displaying data from our DB in different pages. I was recommended angularjs but after looking at it I was wondering if that will be good enough or if there's something "better"...
@Neil I wrote the interceptor
19:10
I've been trying to compare all of them and played with angular a bit. But all I know is I would like to not use Sencha. Any recommendations from the experts?
Thank you for using your HDFC bank DEBIT/ATM card ending 5491 for Rs.251.00 in NOIDA at PAYTM97998 on 2015-01-27:23:38:54.
@Neil ^
that has info about the Bank which i am string comparing
Debit Card that i am string comapring
the card number (ihave no clue how to extract) but for now i just split the string by indexOf('ending') + 6 -> indexOf('in')
same for money and at and Date
@darkyen00 Oh dear
is there a better way ?
@darkyen00 /card ending (\d+) /
19:13
Not unless they give you a better interface there isn't
they won't give api'[s
Just email the CEO and demand an api
is there a way to save data to the elastic search with angular APP without using any service?
and i have 1641 sms from banks on my phone
@NickDugger I had a talk with one of the bank guys here (and my mom works in a bank too) 3p api's are not allowed because of 'privacy' concens.
are you a billionaire?
19:14
@Sajeetharan you're really having no luck eh ?
searchception
@rlemon i have done the search and filtering
now need to save data
is there a way
You could write a regular expression to extract it, and verify that the number of matches on the strings is equal to the number of messages (make sure you're not filtering out results)
no clue.
@Neil that will only solve one bank :-(
here is the other bank i use
19:15
Or if you are, you can check which one it doesn't match and rewrite the regular expression to take it into consideration
@rlemon thanks anyway
Thank you for using your SBI Debit Card 622XX3412 for a purchase worth Rs100 on POS 470000000005344 at Paytm.com Paytm.com txn# 232654.
@darkyen00 You could try with a list of regular expressions then, one for each bank
If it doesn't match one, it moves to the next
hmm :-/
the first part of the message tells you which bank it is
19:16
thats a pain in the ass to manage
but i guess thats all i gotta do
"... your SBI"
@ssube yeah i string cocmpare it
Agreed, but that's about the best you can manage
!!> "Thank you for using your SBI Debit Card 622003412 for a purchase worth Rs100 on POS 470000000005344 at Paytm.com Paytm.com txn# 232654.".match(/\d+/g)[0]
"... HDFC"
use that and switch through a map of regexes
19:17
@rlemon "622003412"
use named captures in the expressions to pull out each part
@rlemon it was XX -_-
it's not great
the card number can have 0
so can't replace with 00
@darkyen00 I assumed that was you redacting your number
19:17
@rlemon its a 12 digit number :D
someone who makes sense wanna explain the problem?
the XX make it hard
@rlemon I have over 1400 sms's from banks
Reminds me a bit about all the times my boss hands me an excel sheet and says, "Just put it in the database." "Which database?" "Which server?" "What are the types for some of these columns? Is 05/02/2012 month/day/year or day/month/year?" Boss: "How the hell should I know? You're the programmer, you figure it out."
i really don't wanna go through SMS's to track transactions
!!> "Thank you for using your SBI Debit Card 622XX3412 for a purchase worth Rs100 on POS 470000000005344 at Paytm.com Paytm.com txn# 232654.".match(/[0-9X]+/g)
19:18
@rlemon ["622XX3412","100","470000000005344","232654"]
I'd prefer to do it via a self baked solution
now you have all relevant numbers, in a predictable order.
@Neil that's when you walk out
hmm thats perfect :D
I will share the code on git, for you guys to crit :-)
but this simple chat opened up my brain a lot :D
He's given me a csv file once.. he thought it was an excel file because you could open it in excel.. oh dear oh dear
@ssube When I get the time and energy, I'm going to get myself another job in fact
19:19
@Neil that will never happen
@ssube Aren't you mr. inspirational?
@Neil no
waiting until you have time and energy while working a shit job is self-defeating
Sounds almost as bad as my boss, Neil. Except he is also a programmer so should know better
you'll be there forever
Hey room! Does anyone have any idea on how to make the following work without an actual proxy server: I have an image at a different domain, I download that image, then I draw it into a canvas object's 2D context, doing stuffs in the canvas, and as a last step I want to get it back with the toDataURL or with the getImageData methods without having SecurityError because violating the Same Origin Policy?
19:21
You're probably right, but I can't really risk to leave my job before I get another
you have to wait until you have enough anger, then just go out and get a better job
or maybe this is a completely impossible mission?
@PeterVaro impossible without CORs
or you could proxy it on your own server
but yea, not possible unless XYZ line up
hmm. I see.. that's what I thought too
thanks
You don't need a full on proxy, you can make a very limited reverse proxy.
that should prevent most abuse
19:22
how's so @ssube?
yea your proxy can be very simple
but you still need a server
little math problem!
@PeterVaro limit it so x.y.z/proxy* maps to http;//z.y.x/*, but nowhere else
rather than an open proxy
trivial to set up in apache (or nginx), can restrict it pretty narrowly
much safer than x.y.z/proxy* maps to *
user1596138
@towc I think 7
@Jhawins nope
user1596138
19:27
Yea jus bumping for you
oh XD
@ssube sorry => my wifi went away
now reading your post back
@towc I've got a problem for you. Suppose a man works at a lottery ball production plant. He's instructed to open one of the lottery ball kits, use numbers provided on the two strips of digits 0-9 to write the number on the ball, then save the unused digits for later. He then repeats this operation for the next number.
Assuming he starts with 1, what is the largest number that he can write before he runs out of digits?
@Neil He'll run out of room on the ball first.
@ssube Yes, likely :D
But assuming that's not an issue
19:33
I don't really think I get the rules: can he only write 1 number on each ball? 2 strips on the ball or available for him to use? Sorry, I'm really not familiar with the lottery
@towc One number per ball using whatever he has in reserve of digits and the 2 new digit strips made available for each number
@rlemon how 'bout using this trick?
In other words, ball 1, I use sticker "1" and put it on the ball, I put 2 of all digits except 1 and 1 of digit 1 into a bowl to use later
Then I make ball 2, use sticker "2" and put it on the ball, I put 2 of all digits except 2 and 1 digit of digit 2 into a bowl to use later, etc.
user1596138
@Neil The ball only holds 2 digits?
@towc I feel like that math problem may be underconstrained.
user1596138
19:35
98...
user1596138
I'm not understanding the problem either.
@Jhawins Assume the ball can contain any number of digits
So you use all the numbers on a ball: 99887766554433221100
user1596138
Why not use all the numbers
19:36
@SomeKittens as if my schoolmates knew what does tangent mean
user1596138
Yeah @ssube that's what I was gonna say lol I don't get it
@ssube You still have everything you've saved up until that point
Is it possible to mock an object which was imported/required in NodeJS (in a test)?
user1596138
Sometimes it's cute the way @towc talks
You don't throw away unused digits, you save them for later
user2620028
19:36
i just had three syntax errors upon compile. It is definitely way past my bed time lol
@Jhawins ...He's ESL
For instance I have an object which uses request to talk to some remote server, I want to replace it with a mock
@Neil how many strips are there? how many copies of each number? what are the requirements for each ball? your riddle is confusing
The request object is not passed in, but is imported with
@ssube This would be the biggest number you could write with only 2 strips of digits from 0-9.. You're not taking into consideration all the digits you've saved up
19:37
import request from 'request';
user1596138
@SomeKittens I know I wasn't making fun
@Neil but you said there were two strips
user1596138
Schoolmates tho
@ssube Yes, per ball
Is it possible?
user1596138
19:37
Idk people should talk like foreigners who learned English well as a second language it'd be cool
After I'm done with ball 2, I have 3 1s, 3 2s, and 4 of every other digit
@Neil I need some wireframes, the desired UX, required scalability, and hardware estimates before proposing a solution.
How many balls are there?
If I'm understanding correctly wouldn't we end up with some number around 10^20 ish?
@ssube Assume as many as your heart desires
@jdphenix 10^20 would be about when you break even with the number of digits being added and the number of digits consumed in average
!!urban ESL
19:39
@towc ESL Short for "English as Second Language", the term actually refers to people who use english as their second language. These people are often falsely thought of as morons, or generally a person of lower degree/intelligence. They often use their own version of English, mixing in some of their own words or their first language's grammar, especially when talking to other ESL, even more so when the other ESL's fir(snip)
You have all the digits you've saved up to that point.. you have a lot of digits, needless to say
@Neil So you have two of each digit?
@SecondRikudo two strips from 0-9 per ball, yes
what did I say wrong @Jhawins
user1596138
Nothing
19:41
@Neil Okay, so what is the question?
ok...
oh, wait... classmates?
What's the largest number you can write in this way before you can no longer write numbers on the balls
Ah, okay, I think I get it
user1596138
@Neil balls
It's a difficult question to answer with just one strip of numbers from 0-9
19:42
I have countably infinite balls, so I have countably infinite twice strips, with countably infinite twice ten-times numbers.
@Jhawins Damnit, didn't correct it in time :P
I put one number from each strip on each ball, except one of them, using some roughly infinite number of numbers.
Then I put infinite numbers on the last ball, making a number infinitely large.
user1596138
@Neil I didn't notice before the edit honestly
@Neil well, you'd have to reach 20 digit numbers just to stop putting digits away
@SecondRikudo On average, mind you.. some digits might still be growing in number depending on what number you're on
19:44
@SecondRikudo Don't think you're going to get that far
10......01 is going to consume a lot of zeros
@KendallFrey Why not?
@ssube You don't have these digits until you reach the number
Ah, okay, numbers in order
@Neil What do you mean? You said there was an infinitely large box with infinitely many balls with strips of paper and so on.
19:45
I bet it's something like 9876543210 + 9876543209 ... + 2 + 1
@ssube No, I said there are two strips of digits 0-9 per ball
When you start, you have no saved digits. You open the lottery ball kit, paste the digit 1 onto the ball, and you save digits 0-9 and 0, 2-9 into a bowl to use later
After ball 1, you have 19 new digits to use
Why is each ball in an individual box? If they're individually wrapped, why are you allowed to reuse numbers?
Same goes for ball 2, except you then have 38 digits, 19 of which were from ball 1, understand?
Step 1: Receive ball and two copies of each digit 0-9
Step 2: Label ball with next consecutive number (1 the first time) using any given or spare digits you have.
Step 3: Repeat.
Right?
@KendallFrey Yes, thank you for the concise description :)
user1596138
19:47
@KendallFrey So it never stops getting bigger...
not until you run out of digits
(the consecutive requirement and not having the extra digits until you've labeled a previous ball are extremely important)
10^19?
user1596138
!!> Math.max()
@Jhawins null
19:48
@Neil Should I take into account the fact that 6 and 9 are interchangeable?
@ssube Yes, otherwise it would be a trivial problem :P
Everything else is infinite
I don't think it will matter, but
user1596138
Well it's null if Caprica is doing it
However, I would still solve this as I was taught in high school: get high, put the balls in the back of a truck, and drive down the freeway chucking them at nicer cars.
@KendallFrey It wouldn't matter, but assume they are not interchangeable for simplicity
user1596138
19:49
@Neil write out the problem wit js
I'm fairly certain you will run out of 1's first
user1596138
You'll get new 1s with each ball that isn't a 1
but only 2
user1596138
Still you just keep getting more
@Jhawins You always get 2 "1" digits.. then you write the ball.. you may or may not use them
19:50
@Jhawins not enough to keep up with requirements
user1596138
Same with every other digit?
@Jhawins Yes
user1596138
Yeah.. don't worry about it I don't need to get it.
@Neil Given the following situation - the man is on number n and doesn't have a required digit for n, then number n-1 is the solution?
I suggest you start by identifying what digit will be the first you will run out
@jdphenix Yep
19:51
@Neil It has to be 1, right?
@KendallFrey Yes, very keen
for a single strip?
I feel like this will be trivial to code, but will OOM.
You would get a much higher result if you were given a single strip
19:53
@Neil wuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuut?
You can't find the result through brute force, I'll tell you that right now
You have to be more clever than that
@towc take 10 digits (0-9), then multiply it 109 times and you end up with 1090 digits
109 of those are going to be 1s digits.. unless every number prior required a 1, there's no way it would end there
Food for thought, I'll be back on later
/afk eating
I think the answer for 1 strip is 199991
I don't know how to extrapolate that

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