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00:23
@Ernesto Oh this is the most annoying thing ever
xkcd FTW.
yts
yts
00:52
but do computers always guess letters?
Who knows... depends on what mood the computer is in I guess :)
yts
yts
although..there are many more words to choose from than characters, so that still makes the random words more secure
probably best to combine both
oh, and Cabbage!
yts
yts
haha
yts
yts
01:11
can I college student who's taken a few programming courses get/(know enough to properly do) a job? I feel like I'm still a beginner compared to what employers want in a developer
About knowing enough to do a job I think it depends on the job and also what you know.
Accurately assessing how much you know can be tricky though, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
yts
yts
I'd say the main extent of my python knowledge is from reading through the python tutorials. My classes have been in Java, my last one being in data structures
and I don't think I suffer from illusory superiority..
Just reading through question on SO make me feel small and puny. The classes were mostly a breeze for me, but they were in community college and I feel that they were on a pretty low level
01:29
@yts The dunning-kreuger effect is not just about overconfidence :)
yts
yts
It's about overestimating their competence compared to other people, no?
@shuttle87 I've read about this thing a lot.
Well, doing a job is not the same as knowing something.
@yts People can be under-confident too
@aIKid it's quite fascinating and I think it explains many otherwise paradoxical things that happen in the software development world
@shuttle87 Hmm.. like what?
Like how really unskilled developers can think that they are more skilled than they really are.
And at the same time people who are more skilled can be less confident
01:42
@shuttle87 Or skilled developers think that they are more skilled than they really are.
Well I guess its a matter of self awareness, people of any level of skill can have a certain level of proficiency and be overconfident. However I think the trend is that once you start knowing more you start to see that there's simply more information out there than you can possibly ever get to know.
I think that sometimes happened to me, too
What in particular?
I feel a bit overconfident of my skill sometimes.
But meeting new people usually make that feeling disappear XD
I used to be more overconfident in the past, but life experiences have completely changed everything for me in that regard
01:47
Life's simple when you're a dog... if I can't eat it or hump it... I pee on it and walk off :)
02:09
Hello, Python!
Finally was able to push my changes for today: github.com/codeguru42/sf2github/tree/json
Wow... :)
Now when I query the Milestones that I create with that script, I only get the open ones.
I'm a little confused
gist: GitHub milestone query returns open milestones even when I request closed ones., 2013-11-17 02:16:27Z
milestoneNumbers = {}

for state in ['open', 'closed']:
    print("***" + state)
    stateJSON = {'state' : state}
    print(json.dumps(stateJSON))
    response = requests.get(
        'https://api.github.com/repos/' + username + '/' + repo + '/milestones',
        data=json.dumps(stateJSON),
        auth=(username, password))

    milestones = response.json()
    for milestone in milestones:
        print(milestone['title'] + " " + str(milestone['number']))
        milestoneNumbers[milestone['title']] = milestone['number']

print(milestoneNumbers)
I probably should post a SO question
oops...didn't know that gists get oneboxed
I take it there are open issues?
I didn't know that either - but it's actually useful to know :)
umm...none of the issues are marked with milestones
that's what I'm trying to do now. Both issues and milestones are imported. Now I need to connect them.
Ahhh... well... time for sleep for me
See ya laters I gues
02:18
In order to do so, I need the milestone "numbers"
ayight, gnite, man
Looks like you're most of the way there anyway!
getting there...
good luck - have fun
thanks, you too
sweet dreams
 
1 hour later…
03:31
Cabbage all
04:04
Hello, @thefourtheye
ready for some more noob questions tonight?
04:21
Okay, I have a list of dictionaries named tickets and a single dictionary named issue. How do I find the dictionary in tickets such that tickets[i]['summary'] == issue['title']?
print [for ticket in tickets if ticket['summary'] == issue['title']]
@Code-Guru Hello :)
okay, I could write my own for loop, I guess...
was hoping for some library function ;-)
Use list comprehension whenever possible
There is a library function called filter which can be used for this purpose
oh...I guess I'm not all that familiar with Python's list comprehensions
I"m a little less of a Haskell noob than I am a Python noob, so I'm familiar with filter, map, etal.
but list comprehensions are better than filter
04:26
I guess there's not really any algo better than O(n) for such a search anyway...
I answered there as well :P
Agreed, unless we index based on the field we search on
yah, originally I thought I could do that...then I got a compiler error for giving a string as the index to a list ;-(
didn't take long to figure that one out...then a cute girl sat down next to me at the coffee shop and I lost all concentration on finding a solution to that particular problem
I believe you atleast said hi ;)
that's the point where I lost my concentration on coding
There is no fix for that :P
04:32
lol, true dat
    print filter(lambda ticket: ticket["summary"] == issue["title"], tickets)

You can also use `filter` function like this
cool, I'll try out the list comprehension. I should probably learn about Python's version of those.
This should get you started docs.python.org/2/tutorial/…
yah, that's exactly where I was headed...thanks for saving me the google search ;-)
:) :) :)
@Code-Guru I included a little time measurement as well.
04:46
I saw that. Thanks
You are welcome :)
I love how googling programming questions often leads back to SO
05:21
@thefourtheye Thanks for all the help the last couple of nights. I'm out...time to go home and to bed.
@Code-Guru You are welcome :) Good night. Have a dreamy sleep :)
06:22
Hoolaa, cabbage!
Cabbage @aIKid. Potato?
Banana :)
Yey i've got the deputy badge
But i think it will be impossible for me to have marshal..
I should've stay under 3k to have it -__-
Awesome :) I wonder what the difference is between voting and flagging.
A bit different..
You do review, right?
When you flag question, someone else will check it. I think not when you vote to it.
If you're above 3k, a moderator will check the flag, i think.
But after 3k, it's mostly the same thing.
Except for comments, answers, and some others.
I think when I flag moderators will check and when I vote people who have enough rep can see that
06:27
@thefourtheye Mm.. me thinks so, too
What are you doing right now?
It's sunday, so not in the office right?
Office ;)
Really?!
You have to be in the office, or you just want to be there?
I just want to be here
with the computer
06:30
Hahaha
By the way, you went to college?
Yup
But didnt study much there :'(
Mathematics?
What were you studying?
CS, sounds logical. Where do you work now?
There is a company called CSC
06:33
Woohoo
You are a student, right?
There?
A highschool student, haha
Great. I wish I were a student
06:40
Whyy?
because
Because?
Because students don't have to worry about payingn bills
Ah yeah i see your point
@aIKid What programming languages do you know so far?
06:52
I'm pretty advanced in Python
Knowledgable in JS
A little in C and C++
@Domecraft You are just 14? And yet you know the pain :P
@thefourtheye I've observed my parents reactions when the bills arrive in the mail
@aIKid I'm mostly proficient in Ruby, just learning some python right now and made some projects in Github. Also know a little bit of C++.
@Domecraft Where do you started programming? Why?
I think I read a book about how computers work, and it talked about computer programming.
So I think I started learning with a BASIC compiler.
@Domecraft I believe BASIC is interpreted
06:59
See... I still have much to learn XD
We all have a lot to learn
Yeah. I also started programming because I was lazy, and realized that I could make programs that solved different mathematical questions for me. So I made programs that would solve for Pythagorean theorem, Distance between two points, etc.
Good :)
@Domecraft You're still two years younger than me :)
You can be much better, you've got some potential!
07:21
@thefourtheye have you close voted this?
0
Q: Database that works in a similar manner to a python dictionary

Lifeless MangoAre there any databases that work in basically the same way as a python dictionary? I'm working on a project and I just need a nice, simple, easy to use DB. Basically it just needs to have a similar functionality to a python dictionary. As in Database[item] = value Database[item][subitem] = ...

@aIKid Yup.
Kay, nice
By the way, you've been harvesting rep recently..
Crazy, 12th this week.
I am looking at early retirement ;)
07:27
I'm also trying to learn Corona SDK for iOS and android development. The only problem is that I'm carrying along baggage from Ruby, so a function that does something in Ruby will do something completely different in Corona SDK. I think the problem is I'm trying to learn too many languages at once.
Learn to unlearn
Instead of learning languages, learn computer science. Once your knowledge covers it, any language is not a problem.
@aIKid that's pretty good advice. I've noticed that a lot of the general concepts are the same in all programming languages.
@Domecraft Yep,
Once you know what the inside is, programming languages are just different tools. You can learn to use it quickly
 
2 hours later…
09:05
?
09:16
Nothing, just testing
haha
09:55
stackoverflow.com/questions/20029330/… duplicate of his own previous question - please close.
 
1 hour later…
11:27
Do any of you guys know this guy?
11:37
lol
This account is temporarily suspended to cool down. The suspension period ends on Apr 27 '24 at 7:54
Believe it or not, i think it's a two-year suspension.
The last post is from 2011
Eh nope
Eh yeah, the last rep change was in 2011..
By the way @thefourtheye
cpx
cpx
What happened to his rep score?
He is suspended, and his rep is grounded at 1.
Depending on the severity of the problem behavior — and at the complete discretion of the moderator — your account will be placed in timed suspension for anywhere from 1 to 365 days. That means:

Your account will be locked at 1 reputation.
Your user page will have a visual indication that you are in timed suspension, and for how long.
You will be unable to vote, ask, answer, or comment.
At the end of this timed suspension period, your reputation will be recalculated, and your account will resume as normal. We don’t hold grudges. The point of all this is to address the behavior. If the beha
Jeff Atwood on April 06, 2009

Are you familiar with the Penalty Box?

The penalty box (sometimes called the sin bin, bad box, or bin) is the area in ice hockey, rugby football and some other sports where a player sits to serve the time of a given penalty, for an offense not severe enough to merit outright expulsion from the contest. Teams are generally not allowed to replace players who have been sent to the penalty box.

It’s not something we looked forward to, but as of tonight, we’re instituting a penalty box on Stack Overflow. …

By the way, who is actually Jeff?
He was once a founder?
11:47
He was a cofounder
@thefourtheye Does string variables are also passed by reference?
def test(a):
   a += "abc"
Then why doesn't this work?
@aIKid Every variable will be passed by reference
Because, strings are not mutable so a new string is created and a will be replaced with that reference.
Ahh
That's the point i was missing.
def test(a):
   print id(a)
   a += "abc"
   print id(a)

b = "Welcome"
print id(b)
test(b)
print id(b)
print b
Try this, this might help you understand better
11:51
Yep, i see.
I understand it already.
Thaanks
@aIKid You are welcome :)
@aIKid Yet another unicode error :'(
I am not comfortable with that
@thefourtheye Hahaha
/waiting for the next question..
 
1 hour later…
13:03
morning all
13:17
Cabbage all :)
cgb @Games
How goes the day?
@JonClements How ya been mate? This place seems rather quiet these days
Well so far so good.
It is Sunday I guess
Hmm
So, what have you been up to
something interesting?
sunday bloody sunday
13:22
@paolo indeed :) Welcome scrooge :)
Well, I was playing with ruby last night
Morning Cabbage... This phrase conjures up some strange thoughts.
I imagine that strange thoughts are never far from the tip of your mind @Inbar :p
13:27
Cabbage all
@thefourtheye cabbage
Gotta love little comments that make it answering all the more worth while sometimes...
Jon this isnt the first time I have used snippets of your code! Amazing stuff, thanks a lot. — SMNALLY 15 hours ago
I'm guessing it works or something - or they just haven't found bugs yet... either way - that's nice :)
yeah that's really nice when it happens :)
Better than the "THANKZ MAN - U SAVED MA LIFE!" - and then that's it...
Unless there's a real life "Saw" kind of thing, and the only way to survive is by answering Python questions - in which case I could understand the rushed thank you and vanishing act...
but you gotta admit "you saved my life" makes you smile a lot :P
Yup - you never know... could have talked them through a buggy couple of lines of code for the automatic pilot of a jumbojet and saved hundreds of lives - never to be acknowledged as the true hero :(
13:34
boy you sure can dream :)
or they were on the jumbojet debugging a malfunctioning autopilot and you saved all their lives
how do you fire up ipython notebook?
Guys I always use Sublime and CPython. What do you use?
For what?
making extensions?
For development and answering questions in SO
13:39
CPython is best
Why so?
because its the version most people are using
or it comes with Ubuntu? ;)
nah not really
its the version most people are using anyways
Guys, I would like to draw a diagram only and explain something to the OP. Do you guys know any good and free website?
13:51
What kind of diagram?
Hmm
well then use that
Seems like you can share the link
But it asks me to register to save the file. What you see now is temporary :(
@thefourtheye I use pypy for my development
@JonClements You use iPython don't you? How do you fire up the notebook?
13:54
I'm trying to churn out all possible combinations of a list of elements in Python. How could I do this? I've tried itertools.combinations but it's just doing nothing
@MiKenning How are you doing that?
@GamesBrainiac not that often - umm... never bothered with the notebook :)
ahh
arrite then
So @JonClements also uses CPython?
@thefourtheye He usually used iPython for questions, it gives good error messages.
13:57
@JonClements There should be a graph "Python Questions Answered - Lives Saved"
@InbarRose it's gotta be the next xkcd Python strip :)
@thefourtheye I have a list of colour names—say ['blue', 'green', 'yellow']—and I want a method to produce a 2D list of all possible combinations of that list.

I have considered converting the list to numbers, for example [1, 2, 3] and then working out all possible combinations and converting back to colours since that would be more easy for the program to handle.
So each string of a colour correlates to a number, then you work out all the possible combinations of those numbers, and convert back to colour strings afterwards.
"All possible combinations" Of what length? or is just ['blue'] a valid combination?
colours =  ['blue', 'green', 'yellow']
import itertools
for item in itertools.combinations(colours, 2):
    print item
@MiKenning easier if you just show us the code that isn't working :)
13:58
lstToWork = list(lst)
        numCombination = []
        allCombs = []
        colourCombs = []

        for i in range (0, len(lstToWork)):
            numCombination.append(namesToNumbs[lstToWork[i]])

        allCombs.extend(itertools.combinations(numCombination, self.nomPegs))
Itertools are your friend.
take for example that the 'lstToWork' is ['green', 'blue', 'yellow']
I've tried using itertools and it doesn't like me

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