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00:58
@onebree Thank you for taking care of better specs. It's a great site.
I haven't responded to your note on github yet because... busier than a one-armed paper hanger.
01:13
Evening
01:39
Howdy
Wayne how are ya? Everything go well at the hospital?
Yes, very well, thanks. The recovery will be No Fun, because back surgery, but the surgery went perfectly. Dad was a bit of a mess waiting.
Glad to hear it man, yeah in those situations everyone handles things differently. It's not fun, at least you were there to support yoiur family
 
5 hours later…
06:35
Morning!
> That's... beautiful but inefficient. I mean, th(n^n) vs th(2^n) kind of inefficient. And yet it's beautiful. (re codewars.com/kata/reviews/516f30217c907a79f20001ec/groups/…)
06:54
I cannot view it sadly
Morning
07:15
is this the best approach to do recursive replacements?
nil while str.gsub! /.../ {...}
 
5 hours later…
11:55
@JanDvorak That's clever. Not best, but I like it anyhow.
Whis is the usual one?
Can't you just leave off the nil?
Argh. haven't woken up yet.
When I first read it, I didn't see the block. Why the nil and the block both?
The block is meant for the gsub
Oh, not for the while. Yeah, duh.
Actually, no. I can't improve on what you've got there. It's good.
12:02
Gah. Waking up is not what it used to be. There are too many miles on this engine, and parts are hard to come by.
I'm trying to get logged in. I signed up for codewars (I think) before I started using a password vault...
Here's my solution. I'm looking forward to yours ;-) codewars.com/kata/reviews/5564d1d017229acdc800003b/groups/…
Soooo I signed up to codewars with the old email address that I can't access from home. When I get to work, I'll get the password reset instructions and then be able to see it.
If it's an exercise I haven't done yet, will I be able to see it?
You can see a solution only after you solve or forfeit the challenge yourself.
Just hit an interesting challenge: a nim variant with memory. Off to drawing the state tree :-)
12:19
Sounds like fun. I don't know if I'll have time for it, but I hope to.
 
1 hour later…
13:31
Note to self: in a game where removing the last stone loses the game, if there is only one stone on the board, you do NOT want to move first.
14:02
> This can hardly count as best practices, but sure it looks awesome :-D
15:00
@JanDvorak I can't see the solution, which is no surprise. What is a surprise is that there doesn't appear to be a link to the problem anywhere on that page.
OK, I followed your previous link. It's good.
interesting challenge? No eval!
I want to do that one. Maybe not today (busy!). My go-to tool there is recursive descent parsing.
The Codewars site itself makes me a little crazy... it doesn't honor Unix cute and paste, which makes working out the solution in Emacs (my preferred env) a bit of a chore.
!!s/env/operating system/
I was going to call Emacs an "IDE", but I thought I'd get objections.
But yeah. Emacs is a kitchen sink, bowling score calculator, and video game with an editor thrown in just for fun.
expr ::= factor ( mulop factor ) *
mulop ::= '*' | '/'
factor ::= term ( addop term ) *
addop ::= '+' | '-'
term ::= number | '(' expr ')'
number ::= /[+-]\d+(\.\d*)?/
I think that's the grammar.
Expressed in way extended BNF :)
15:27
Hi, I'm not sure if this has been asked before on Stackoverflow. I couldn't find it, but maybe it's there, so I thought I'd quickly ask here first: is there a good way to use Ruby to detect which flavor of tar is installed on a machine (i.e., gnutar or bsdtar)?
Interesting question, and possibly OS specific. I think the only thing Ruby will be doing here is running shell commands to, for example, the package manager.
So Ruby will be using system or the backtick operator to run some command and then check the result.
@WayneConrad Okay, thanks for the suggestion! I can go poke around Unix.SE and see if I find anything there.
I hate those hidden requirements in "integrity tests" on codewars. "don't modify your arguments, duh". s/x.sort!/x=x.sort/
Yeah, but... what fool modifies the arguments? :D
15:37
I speak in jest. I modify arguments, but I make it explicit via comments that I'm doing so. Otherwise, the rule is that argument should be left alone.
My co-workers sometimes modify arguments that shouldn't... so "freeze" to the rescue.
Yet another "factorise the input" task :-(. I swear I'm going to do it once more at max., then no more.
0
Q: An Employee - Coworker shift relationship

Arnold_SandersI have two models that I need to Join. An employee model and a shift model. I first joined them by a 1-Many relationship. That worked for a while. Now I need to add the concept of a coworker. The shift will also be able to belong to a coworker. I am trying to implement it like this. Whats wrong...

I don't even know what "factorize the input" means.
as in integer factorisation
Down to primes...?
15:39
yes
thank you guys for introducing me to code wars
Ah. I don't think I've ever done that.
@Arnold_Sanders Welcome, and good morning.
16:00
Nice.
@WayneConrad some one posted a link on here to code wars
@Arnold_Sanders That was @JanDvorak. Are you involved with Code Wars?
I'm about to be
Cool!
I've got a little clan on there. @JonathanMusso is the only other member. Anyone want to join it? I have no idea what the effects of being in a clan is... I think you get to see each other's progress, is all.
hey say im on branch develop on git
i just made a push i want to undo
how do i do that?
i see that git rebase -i HEAD^^ could be used
but i dont understand that git command
16:06
can't you just roll it back?
If you've pushed the commit, then "git revert <sha1>" is your best best. It makes an "undo" commit that you can then push.
If you roll it back, you'll have to do a force push. This is bad if anyone else has already fetched the commit that you erroneously pushed (the one you are undoing).
Because their merges will reinstate the rolled back changes?
ahh okay
"git revert <sha1>" sha1 = my commit hash?
Because if you force-push, you're changing history. Their branches will all of the sudden make no sense at all.
@cleong That's right.
yeah i see alot of answers in SO to use force push, just didn't sound right to me
16:09
what if I just move my branch pointer a few commits back?
@JanDvorak That's alright if it undoes commits you have not yet pushed.
Whether you can get away with force push depends entirely upon whether there is anyone else using the branch you pushed. If there isn't, then you can. If there is, then you probably can't.
@WayneConrad I've done that before. It took my server down
I guess you can always summon a SWAT team to "handle" the clients.
@JanDvorak That old show NYPD Blue used to make fun of SWAT teams. We need more fun made of SWAT teams.
Ugh. Looked at the Cobol code starred here. It looks like what Assembly would look like if Sun made it.
16:17
Haha! Yeah.
Sorry that hasn't been updated
They gave me an actual thing to do on the product
@Cereal I think you should push codewars to support Cobol.
"You've spent 4 hours learning COBOL, here's the 60 year old product. Make a change kthxbai"
I'm not even kidding. This is a comment at the top of this file
Haha! "kthxbai"
   PROGRAM-ID. OMXMAIN.
  *  OPTICAL EXPERT MAIN CONTROL PROGRAM
  *  VERSION 5.0  -  SEP 1995
16:19
literally, or roughly?
  ******************************************
  * CHANGED SEPT 1988 FOR MID-SOUTH OPTICAL.
!!wiki 1988
1988 (MCMLXXXVIII) was a leap year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar (dominical letter CB), the 1988th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 988th year of the 2nd millennium, the 88th year of the 20th century, and the 9th year of the 1980s decade. In the 20th century, the year 1988 has the most Roman numeral digits (11). 1988 was an important year in the early history of the Internet—it was the year of the first well-known computer virus, the 1988 Internet worm. The first officially sanctioned online commercial e-mail provider debuted as well. The Soviet...
> January 1 – The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is established, creating the largest Lutheran denomination in the United States.
> September 29 – STS-26: NASA resumes Space Shuttle flights, grounded after the Challenger disaster, with Space Shuttle Discovery.
There's so many lines in here commented as Y2K
y2k        05  ORD-WANTED-DATE               PIC X(8).
First 7 cols of a COBOL file are reserved
16:23
COBOL programmers made a fortune by writing bad code, then being called out of retirement to fix it.
And then there's me, the 21 year old who's going to have an incredible resume by the time they're done milking me dry here
Languages known:

ASM
COBOL
JAVA
I'll be set for life
Haha!
Rule of resumes: Never list something you don't want to do.
SWAT teams
don't hate on java man
That needs to have tutus photoshopped into it.
16:30
its my first love
If I wasn't in the imddle of something, I'd get photoshop going, but my computer has a hard enough time with one IDE as it is
Also, the col limit in COBOL makes some branches really messy
       IF (ORD-OD-JT-FULL OR ORD-OD-JT-UNCUT) AND
          (WS-FF-TYPE = ORD-FREEFORM-RT OR ORD-FREEFORM-LT)
          AND (ORD-ACCOUNT-NUM < WS-START-ACCT AND ORD-ACCOUNT-NUM
            > WS-END-ACCT)
And don't get me started on that naming convention
Hungary gone wild again?
Shoulda had a snickers
One thing I do like is I can compile a program, add it to the main lib, and test it without restarting the program
Since it's loaded when it's used rather than loaded at run
ORD is the code for Chicago O'Hare airport.
IF ORD-ACCOUNT-NUM >= FROM-ACCT AND
              ORD-ACCOUNT-NUM <= TO-ACCT
FROM-ACCT and TO-ACCT are strings.
This is very confusing to me as a high level language developer
16:37
afternoon
It's going to (I presume) do a lexicographic comparison.
Hello, Jonathan.
I assume so too
Hi Wayne how goes bud?
@JonathanMusso It's alright. It was better, then @JanDvorak made me think about a codewars problem and now I don't want to work on what I am supposed to work on.
I should probably just go do the problem and get it off of my mind.
:D
I need to start working on those problems to strengthen my coding at some point.
16:58
The curse of a programmer's mind: You work very diligently, just not one what you're supposed to be working on.
2
I wrote a script to take images from imgur and recreate an input image in a college last summer
Took up a couple days of my work time ._.
The thing that interests me just kind of distracts me from waht I should be doing until I finally just work on the distracting thing
@WayneConrad String comparisons are done via ASCII values
@Cereal If the account number strings represent decimal numbers, and they are zero filled to the same width, it'll work.
17:24
So my final project is huge, larger than all 3 Rails apps I have built combined. My mentor recommends I start with building the front-end with all placeholder content so I have something to work with and then start digging into the Rails User Stories.
17:34
@JanDvorak Here's my solution
A sign in page is your solution
God I hate accounts
@JonathanMusso The best way to eat an elephant...
@Cereal then what are you doing here?
@JanDvorak I signed in with google
@WayneConrad Is with what, another elephant? XD
17:36
:D
I prefer blue cheese dip and a lot of beer
Still can't bring myself to like beer
You're alright despite that.
depends. I like some brands
I like Gambrinus and Staropramen
oh man I've been getting all the imported beer now, love it
17:38
@WayneConrad O_O
@JanDvorak What can I say? I read the dragon book, etc. I think in terms of lexical scanners, parse trees, etc. So... obviously, a recursive descent parser is the way to go.
I love the first line of your solution (the gsub with recursion).
Please tell me it's autogenerated ;-)
I wrote it all.
It's large, but it's navigable. I like your solution, actually.
And now I'm signing up becuase this is too intriguing
> To join you have to prove your skills
17:41
Your if mul_match[0] == "*" then acc * value else acc / value end could be acc.send(mul_patch[0], value)
true. I tend to forget about this kind of dynamic dispatch, thanks
I'm impressed by how few lines it took you to do it, compared to my leviathan. Those regexes, wow.
The downside is they're write-only
Yeah, I was kinda thinking that.
I think regexes were invented so that APL would have competition.
Did Codewars seriously just chop off my solution in half in the "compare with your soluiton" box? Or it's just their console sucking at escaping HTML and the browser sucking at displaying certain comment nodes?
Anonymous
17:47
Hello all.. What is the difference between if/elsifelse` and case/when/when/else in Ruby?
They're quite similar, but you usually pass a value to compare against to case
Semantically, pretty much no difference. Anything you can do with one, you can do with the other.
Can't view solutions before solving. Grumble
Syntactically, if/elif/else/end is usually preferred over the "case with no expression" (which I use so seldom that I forget it exists and never use it).
@Cereal Hold on, I'll throw up a gist.
Nonono
I'm going to solve it
17:49
be sure to throw us the link afterwards
Anonymous
Well, the if statement, each if/elsif compares name to a string. And a couple elsifs have name == 'Transfer' || name == 'Dial' || name == 'Park', so I saw the case as more efficient
Ok, no gist, then :)
%w{Transfer Dial Park}.has_elem? name
when 'Transfer', 'Dial', 'Park'
Yeah... case is often better
Anonymous
17:52
Okay thanls
Anonymous
thanks*
Is regex bugged on codewars?
clarify?
ah
-e:12: syntax error, unexpected $undefined p expression.gsub(/(\d*)\s*\+\s*(\d*)/, (\1).to_i + (\2).to_i)
Just had an idea, since gsub accepts a hash, but getting that before I Can actually try it
Also errors with ? instead of *
18:14
Ew, code pasted in as text.
The standard here is to use "Y" and "N" as boolean flags instead of ... booleans
._.
.___________________.
@Cereal There are databases that don't even have boolean types (cough Oracle cough).
ohgod
I'm modifying code that was written before I was born
@Cereal Replace (\1) with $1 and (\2) with $2
Magic!
18:34
That's the right answer? I was just guessing. ;)
18:49
Ever heard of the language PL1?
I've programmed--just a bit, and a long time ago--in PL/M, the baby version of PL/1.
Funny... I remember the library I was in, the seat I was sitting in, the table... all that from when I read a book about PL/M.
19:20
Here's a fun comment from one of the solutions of that Kata:
#I'm sorry
It's not obvious why the author is sorry, though.
Actually, yes it is. It's a gigantic function with deep indentation.
Does it have so much indentation it goes around and becomes unindented again?
2
Haha!
The next solution has this comment:
################################################33
which looks like "cat walked on the keyboard" to me
This one is recursive descent like mine, but lighter weight. I like it.
19:36
The level 2 katas seem to have been written to appeal to a language geek. I like 'em.
I want to do the befunge interpreter now.
just stumbled upon it, too
I'm at 4 now... if I recall, doing katas 2 levels higher than your current level counts for more.
ah, I stumbled upon a brainfuck interpreter codewars.com/kata/…
should I write a cleanish state control?
I've never really looked at brainfsck.
20:26
facepalm. ary.fetch past array boundaries returns the set default value. ary.fetch within array boundaries previously expanded by an out-of-bounds write returns nil.
That's... hmmm. Inconsistent.
> Expected: "54Zm", instead got: "54.00000000000001Zm"
Why should dividing an integer float by an integer float ever produce anything slightly different than an integer float?
oh. Right. The input isn't exactly what it should be.
20:46
:)
solved using rationals but it doesn't feel exactly right (even though "exactly right" is why I had to switch to rationals)
<3 rationals BTW
I'm confused. How did any of your floats end up with a non-zero fractional component?
they get rounded when converted from Bignum, not when divided
I wish there was a "return an int if exact, otherwise switch to floats" kind of division
I had to write one of those for basic101, if I recall.
21:48
Oh, heck. All the sysadmins have left, and I made the mistake of being visible...
go home
go home before you get recruited
Too late. Forgot to keep my head down :(
By "left," I mean "left the company."
oh.
I thought you meant after office hours
I didn't use very precise words.
ssh leo
yay for mouse focus gone wrong ;)
I hope "leo" means "low Earth orbit" :-D
21:52
:D All the workstations on the floor are named after constellations. But I like Low Earth Orbit much better.

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