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12:00
How Twisted allows event-driven model?
Cabbage all :)
heya @thefourtheye
@thefourtheye cbg!
@PeterVaro Hi Pete :)
@KDawG Potato?
@thefourtheye salad?
@KDawG Yup :)
12:12
Our tennis player goes at it again:
0
Q: Getting invalid json in RoR

nishI have an array sku = ["MAPNQ20673"]. On converting this to json I'm getting "[\"MAPNQ20673\"]". This is an invalid json. I need to pass this array to a python script. And therefore am getting the following error on decoding the json in python script: raise ValueError("No JSON object could be de...

user559633
12:22
morning all, morning @JonClements
@tristan morning
@PeterVaro okay... well, I can see why it's different
@PeterVaro what was your exact problem again? :p
@tristan up to much?
user559633
@JonClements making an svg from an image for a project that i'm working on
user559633
using inkscape though
user559633
pretty shitty!
@JonClements I'M HERE!
//sorry I was on a walk with Colti
so, I know, that problem is, that the expression is built in a very easy way: in order as the interpreter called the different arithmetic methods it will put these methods one after another
but at the end: it shouldn't since we want to 1/x first and then expression-1/x but we got (expression-1)/x or something similar
so it needs some kind of knowledge, that what comes after another
which I thought the interpreter will take care of
so what is your suggestion @JonClements ?
12:40
@PeterVaro one sec - replying to the reply of my email
yay :)
Well, have you noticed your first op is a rtruediv and not a truediv ?
nope.. so what does that mean exactly?
12:44
okay - maybe back a step
x+1/x//3*4-9-1/x I think it should be the 1/x
bodmos ?
operator precedence?
I don't know what bodmos is but I know what op.prec. is
okay
Trying to think of an easy way to explain the multiple issues here
:)
don't try to be soft on me
gimme the hard TRUTH!!!!
//btw heya @Kevin
12:46
Morning
Delaying tactics worked - Kevin's here :)
Er, have you tried turning it off and on again
I'm sure I could turn Peter off - whether he turns on again though is another issue
umm, reboot the world itself?
@Kevin unless you happen to have some degree of Necromancy experience?
12:48
@JonClements although I'm pretty fast while working, but the booting process takes hours..
Yes, I think the problem is in the logical construction of mathematics itself. Probably just some dust in the connectors. Please reset Universe to factory settings and restore from backup.
//I guess I'm not a well optimized system..
@Kevin why do you want to restore it?
if Universe uses some GA I want to see the new direction here
:)
@JonClements I just ran some numbers w.r.t our national debt. Found some interesting/alarming information
soooooooooo @JonClements what about the bodmos and operation precedence ?
(now I know what bodmos is) :)
@Peter it's probably best you take apart an existing implementation
Or... hang on... something that might make it easier
12:53
BODMOS: B rackets, O rders, D ivision, M ultiplication, A ddition, S ubtraction
BODMAS!
BOMDAS!
DAS BOM ?
you SAD MOB
:)
@JonClements I'm hanging.. still hanging.. and.. still hanging..
12:55
anyway.... @PeterVaro maybe it'd be better if you took a few steps backwards of what you're trying to do.... and start with a simple calculator
I thought it can't be simpler than the one I implemented..
What is 1 + 2 / 3
ask cleverbot.....
1?
Yup. Python confirms that :)
@JonClements it can be: ((2).__truediv__(3)).__add__(1) or
12:57
5/3
@JonClements Silly me...
print 1 + (2 / 3)
((3).__rtruediv__(2)).__add__(1)
and also can be: ((2).__truediv__(3)).__radd__(1) and ((3).__rtruediv__(2)).__radd__(1) -- since addition is associative
so @JonClements where are we heading?
@JonClements 1K :) :) :)
13:00
or commutative?
sorry, it is commutative -- I know these math phrases in hungarian but this is a whole new world in english
:/
Start by simplifying your expression
cabbage you too @AshishNitinPatil
This chatroom feels like the third home :)
@JonClements ..okay?
13:07
One sec... trying an example
Third because, I live in a hostel :|
Thinking of a good example and best way to explain... this might take a while...
take your time -- and thank you very much for that precious time ;)
250 First Post reviews \m/ Another Silver badge on the way :)
@AshishNitinPatil I just got Gold badge today ;)
13:12
@thefourtheye Of?
Thanks yaar :)
hello
who's here/?
hey, hey @DanMiller 'sup?
13:13
I have 1 & only 1, Unsung hero :)
Hello @DanMiller
nun, just testin sum ish
need some help
where yopu from?
testing the time zones
me? from hungary? does that mean I can't help you?
:)
India UTC +5:30
nice
can you guys enter here test.easyroulettesystem.com
and tell me what hours you see?
for the matches
20:00 20:30
?
13:14
Montpellier vs.Saint-Étienne
nice!
and India?
20:00 & 20:30 converted to 13:30 (both)
All three I mean
For today's matches
can you please provide me with a screenshot?
Yup sure, hold on
nice! thank you a lot! g l
You're welcome :)
13:27
cbg @all!
cabbage @inspectorG4dget howdy?
cbg @inspectorG4dget
@JonClements any progress?
I'm grappling with a really weird problem that I need to solve in order to test my solution for a neural networks assignment
Prof gave us an image that looks like this
@Peter nope - everytime I finish an email - I get another one from someone else in the chain sighs
@inspectorG4dget okay - it's a golf flag - now what? :p
13:30
I have to convert it into a string of '1's and '0's (1 = black square, 0 = white square)
problem is, I'm doing this by hand, and I can't verify if I've done it right
lol @JonClements
umm.. is it vector graphics?
@PeterVaro, Here's my own shot at your idea: pastebin.com/FzcnLDqL
I suppose
Still trying to come up with a nice way to do unary operations
check in a sec -- and thanks!
13:32
@PeterVaro: it's in a PDF. How could I check if it's vector graphics?
@inspectorG4dget then I realized it doesn't even matter
user559633
brain not working yet
Well, I need to convert it into that bitstring so that I can use it for my neural network to OCR
user559633
say that i have a list like '["file", "source"]' and i want to use it to key a json lookup, how would i make this eval to ['file']['source] ?
but I can't find a way to convert it that doesn't involve my shifting visual fields
@tristan: that's a string repr of a list
13:34
@tristan, myJsonBlob[list[0]][list[1]]
Or do you want it to work for lists of any size? That would be interesting
user559633
list of any size, yeah
user559633
sorry
user559633
this is not a complete view of the thing i'm trying to write
One moment, I've done this before
does anyone have thoughts on how I can get my bitstring?
@JonClements: good to see you again. How's the throat? How'd the conf/meeting go?
user559633
13:35
i'm taking a string input like 'a:b:c' and splitting it into a list, then using the list items to build a json key lookup
user559633
awesome, thanks kevin
@inspectorG4dget interestingly... involving a lot of emails at the moment... throat still sore though.... feeling a bit better - just kind of "jet lagged" kind of feeling
def deep_access(json_blob, keys):
    for key in keys:
        json_blob = json_blob[key]
    return json_blob
Hmm, could have just used an iterator there... Updated
user559633
for key in keys?
@JonClements: well at least it's getting better :)
13:37
Probably some clever way to do it in one line with reduce too
@inspectorG4dget I wonder if OpenCV would help? I don't know much about the library but looking at their questions on SO, it seems pretty powerful
@inspectorG4dget How about redrawing it to BMP by hand and reading and converting it to your string?
@Kevin: that seems like a little too much heavy lifting, given that I have zero experience with openCV (thought I might have to go that way, if all else fails)
Or another image format for that matter, anything you can read easily.
@Fenikso: how do I redraw to a bitmap?
MS Paint? How much data do you have? How many images?
13:40
Or maybe you could just do something simple with PIL. If the gridlines are the same offset + size in every image, then you can find the center of each cell, sample some nearby pixels, and look at the average to determine whether the cell is black or white
@Fenikso about 15 images
@Kevin +1
@inspectorG4dget 15 minutes by hand then.
This assumes that the images are in a form readable by PIL, of course, png, bmp, jpg, etc. Embedded in a pdf would be no good.
user559633
@kevin that's basically what i had. i'll show you what i end up with when done
This may call for liberal use of the print screen button and MSpaint
13:41
d = {'a': {'b': {'c': 'hello'}}}
print reduce(dict.__getitem__, 'a:b:c'.split(':'), d)
# hello
I would redraw them by hand and then read it by PIL and convert to string.
@Kevin: I could screencap the images like I did for the above post, but the screencaps would need to be recut around the bounding box to compensate for human error
+1 @JonClements, that's what I had in mind
@Peter I'm getting there... slowly...
@JonClements okay, I'm still reading @Kevin 's code
13:42
@Fenikso: redrawing by hand has same problem - how do I know what I've drawn is what's on the handout?
user559633
awesome @JonClements
@inspectorG4dget, I suspected as much. But maybe PIL plus manual recutting is still faster than a robust computer vision solution.
@inspectorG4dget First, verifying your image vs drawn image should be much better than string vs image. Second, should not NN be able to compensate for a small errors? :-)
rhubarb
@Kevin: I was hoping it wouldn't come to that. Bah! I guess I'll have to set foot down that road
13:45
Another possibiility: How about asking prof for some computer readable format?
I wonder if it's possible to extract images from pdfs. That would be useful
@Fenikso Ooh, social engineering. I like it :-)
rhubarb
@thefourtheye you off?
@Kevin Maybe I would also mention considering computer vision algorithms for extracting the data :-D.
@Fenikso: yes, NN can compensate for the errors; but there is no telling that the prof/TA won't say something like "oh you intentionally altered the image to make your shitty code work for these transformed cases" or "the transformed cases represent a training set that I did not provide, which was especially made with some special properties to test your NN implementation. Changing it affects that"
13:48
@Kevin actually -- after reading your code which is working -- if I replace the representation of the stored operations to symbols instead of dunder methods, then yes, mine is working too
without 3 extra classes
but if you want to use the dunder methods, for example an operation like the unary __abs__ then yours will never work
Wheeee, serial downvote! I must've done something right for once.
maybe I'm wrong, but that was one of the problems I was facing yestrady
heya @MartijnPieters howdy?
I think I could do unary, although I'm not sure how I'd address the many disparate ways of displaying them
@inspectorG4dget If you and lets say another person would not see any mistakes in your redraws, I bet your prof would not see it either. Or at least consider it intentional. Hmm, how about checking the converted bit strings with your fellow student?
13:50
Or, actually... hmm
@Kevin how will you do __divmod__ ? it's binary
and your example can't provide that atm..
@Fenikso yeah, I'm checking with a friend. Gotta ask the prof to provide readable data next time
@inspectorG4dget Next time? Ah, deadline on Monday or something? :-D
@Fenikso: well, he wouldn't do it for now, anyways
@PeterVaro, I can partially support it. If I add divmod: "__divmod__"to my method_names dict, then print divmod(x, 3).eval({"x":10}) gives (3,1) as expected.
print divmod(x, 3) will give back x ? 3, though, since there's no symbol for divmod
13:55
@Martijn hello stranger
sorry, busy times.
@MartijnPieters How so? Not like lots of work on and it's coming up to Christmas or anything... :)
@Kevin let me check your code one more time :)
Add in having to litigate against someone in a foreign country, and you get the work-load..
@martijn that is fun... Why I prefer contracts subject to the law of England & Wales - then if you do have disputes, I don't have to pay for international/foreign advice on top :)
14:01
This is over a contract to buy a house. We were the sellers.
@PeterVaro, ooh, idea. I could modify __repr__ to make the expression look like a function call as a last resort. example
And I am reasonably well versed in our rights there; the homeowner transfer insurance helped out and made it clear we are in our right to demand the remainder of the outstanding payment.
It's just that the buyer has gone radio silent for 4 months now. So it is time to drag him into court and make him pay.
@Kevin check!
fridaycbg
that's nice, yes
hey, hey @PaoloCasciello potato?
@Kevin I think your idea is pretty kewl, and ofc it is working -- I need more time to find some problems with it :):):)
so thanks!
14:07
Well, thanks for the interesting problem :-)
Good experiment for a Friday
indeed it is:)
but this was the easiest part of what I want to do -- so be prepared -- there is more where that came from :P
I wonder if there's a nice way to support == as if it was a binary operation. Python might freak out if __eq__ returns an Expression instance instead of a boolean.
it won't
and that will be the next step
since I want full equations and inequations to be stored
like as x/2 + 1/y == x*4%2; x > 2; y >= 7
// I don't know if this ^ has a solution
I guess it's fine as long as you don't use any collections that care about equality. sets and dicts, namely, might act weird
hmm, nope, no solution. x*4%2 equals zero, and x/2 and 1/y are both positive
I'm really hating the docutils documentation
no examples :(
14:14
Okay, I'm having a (good natured) debate with a colleague. We personally find that Python can be a bit of a nightmare for large scale projects. It becomes more tolerable with good "office" practises such as TDD and BUD. What do you guys think?
You'd think that docutils would have the best possible documentation
@Kevin well this was a stupid example, I hit the first operator symbol I found on my keyboard with random numbers :)
@IntrepidBrit, I've heard arguments that Python is bad for big projects. A compiled language can detect errors at compile time, and languages with explicit types can better enforce standards for what values can be passed to methods and returned.
Python can't do either of these things
@MartijnPieters I don't think I'd have been kind enough to wait 4 months
assert guards and thorough testing can provide pretty strong confidence in program correctness, but some may argue that this is busywork that wouldn't be necessary in Java/C#/C++
14:20
@Kevin Hmm, I agree. I've been getting more of an understanding of Python's limitations as I build more projects.
I mean sometimes my code is littered with hasattr
@Games I'd be interested to see where such code is necessary
I find these arguments logically sound, although I think our opponents may be overstating the magnitude of the errors that can be detected this way.
@JonClements When you use loads of mixins.
@Games I'd also be interested to see where such code is necessary :)
The bugs that you spend 90% of your time on aren't the ones that can be detected at compile time.
14:22
@JonClements Code with a lot of mixins in it.
:P
@Kevin aye, and with Python those kinds of bugs pervasive
@Kevin Program correctness isn't run-time correctness... So, in other languages, you'd need to throw in all sorts of RTTI style stuff that'd add overhead and lots more code to work around problems.... So...
For example an off-by-one error is as hard to fix in Java as it is in Python. It's an even playing field
I suppose in other words - it's easier to make Python behave more like C++, then it would to be to make C++ work like Python...
@JonClements But then you get languages like Scala.
i mean, I find Scala to be a mesh of dynamic and static typing.
But thats besides the point.
14:27
Statically analysing anything but very simple Python code is painful - but then, most of the problems are run-time anyway.... And since they're run-time, this is where the TDD/BDD testing should have come into play anyway... regardless of language :)
@JonClements Yeah, so I'm thinking to use Python large scale, TDD is an absolute must. Unless you hate life
@JonClements 1. What framework do you mostly end up using? 2. Could you give me a sample of a program that you've thoroughly tested?
I'd like to take a look at some more elaborate examples, than the simple ones I've tried so far.
@Games Anything of any significant scale I wouldn't have the rights to disclose... but I'll have a look around - should find something
@JonClements Please do, at this point in time, I'm trying to make my skills even better, but that gets hard to do once you've reached a certain point.
I mean I've made some trivial unittests, but nothing fancy.
can anybody help me regarding pyqt?
14:31
@PeterVaro banana thx
user559633
why are there so many gui questions in here lately?
@IntrepidBrit That could be a slogan: "TDD - not for masochists"...
Tis the season for pre-christmas-break school projects
@JonClements I like it
@IntrepidBrit Yeah... I should become a full time slogan writer...
14:40
The sad thing is, it's probably a real job title somewhere
user559633
Python: The language that won't kidnap and murder your family
Python: the language that won't run away from you
Ludum Dare starts at nine PM EST tonight, anyone participating?
They sure don't make it easy to figure out what the potential themes are :-/
@JonClements: there are additional circumstances; the house buyer has a young daughter with cancer. However, he is also a experienced businessman, and we do suspect he's hoping we will just drop the matter.
@Kevin Ah that seems curiously interesting. Might participate in another one
14:49
@Martijn oh okay - the daughter with cancer thing - I would be somewhat sympathetic to - but I'm afraid - a transaction is still a transaction and they entered in to it... so... while I have the greatest sympathy - they still have obligations to complete regardless :(
@Kevin what is that even?
I've never heard of this Ludum Dare thing
Short version: they announce a theme, and you have 48 hours to create a game from scratch.
Relating to that theme I'm guessing :)
Yeah
Pre-written personal code libraries are disallowed unless you publicly declare you're using them and publish the source.
finally figured out that problem. Got my mom to read out '1's and '0', while I wrote them down #lowtechsolutionsforhightechproblems
I guess I'll use this as my public forum: if I participate, I will almost certainly be using my geometry module.
14:53
Which can be reached via your github profile at... ?
I'll publish it if I compete ;-)
It's nothing special though, just a Vector class that I know works the way I want

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