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12:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

12:13
Anybody here?
cabbage @ZeroPiraeus
Wotcha :-)
this is massive: 15 hours later...
I am not a cabbage.
Yeah ... dead as a very dead thing.
12:15
heya @Wooble 'sup?
@ZeroPiraeus is this about a friday in august at the end of summer?
@Wooble like it or not, it seems we are all cabbages. Or Brassicaceae, as I have occasionally considered trying to introduce around here.
@PeterVaro Could be ...
I am definitely not a cabbage. I'm an Episkopos of the Discordian Society and we will not stand cabbage infiltration.
someone is alive °_°
iHolah! @PaoloCasciello
I'm mulling a question that I don't think is on topic for SO: essentially "Why was file() removed from Python 3?" Is that the kind of thing that would work at Programmers.SE, or somewhere else?
12:19
@ZeroPiraeus I guess because in python there should be one -- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
and we have the with/as statement for that with the open function
Yeah, that's the kind of answer I see when I google it. But dict() returns a dict, set() returns a set ... open() seems like the one that should have kicked the bucket to me.
well, dict, set, list, int, float, bool, etc. are also pretty complicated functions
Seems to me with file(path) as f: is less awkward.
if you call them without arguments they return a a default value
12:22
if you call them on some 'other' types they will convert them to their types
@PeterVaro That's true.
like dict(list of tuples) -> {}
Morning @JonClements :-)
since readability is a really important thing in python @ZeroPiraeus (the most important thing of all) if you look at this statement as a sentence: with opening the filename as a file -- makes sense, but with file-ing a file name as a file -- does not
cabbage @JonClements!!!!
maybe they prefer open over file because opening a file has a side effect (the file becomes open). A verb better conveys the idea that something has happened, compared to a noun.
12:26
Ah, but I read it as with <this thing> as <this name>: ...
@Kevin Another good point.
Was a little surprised not to find a PEP with the rationale; I'm sure there is a documented rationale, but I can't find it so far.
Anyway ... anyone spend enough time at Programmers to know whether it's a decent question there?
Dunno
@Kevin I was thinking a lot on this 'nested box' thing, and I figured out, that I have to do it that way with pyoneer, if I want to: 1) be more like python, 2) be more intuitive, 3) being an educational purpose language 4) don't loose any functionality that the textual version has..
so I have to rewrite almost everything:/
It's one of those questions that either has a single canonical answer that can be sourced to an official doc, or can never be answered unless you kidnap and interrogate Guido Van Rossum.
@PeterVaro It helps express the idea of encapsulation too, doesn't it? A box just works; if you want to know how, look inside it.
@Kevin Heh, possibly true :-)
@ZeroPiraeus OK, but in a textual code you don't have to look inside, since the scope is for example indented or on curly braces (depends on the language)
it makes a lot of things truly harder, to handle -- but makes sense in a way, that neither the loop nor the branching has nothing to do anything about what's going on inside it's scope
except the fact the number of times it runs: branch: 0/1 loop: 0/len(iterable)
12:39
@Kevin Nonsense, I'm sure it was discussed ad nauseum on python-ideas
I would guess the rationale is "you never should have been using file() to begin with in Python 2"
@PeterVaro We do have folding in decent editors (although I only use it to collapse functions, methods and docstrings, you could fold on indentation).
i never used file() in 10 years of python :D
Me neither (well, maybe before I knew better) ... but that's only because docs told me not to. For some reason I woke up this morning thinking "but whyyyy .."
@ZeroPiraeus sure thing, but that is newly added feature to texteditors not for the language itself! -- I only used them for reading pretty large XMLs (like a tmLanguage file)
True. But from what I've seen, Pyoneer is a kind of editor, isn't it?
12:46
it's and IDE and a language at the same time -- you can't divide it since it is not a plain text that you can open in any kind of editor
Fair enough.
IIRC - open's a factory function, where as file was more a type
@JonClements I was searching for the discussion about removing it (which I didn't find) and came up with a checkin where a unit test opens a file, calls type() on it, and has a comment "sneaky way to get the file() constructor". :)
@Wooble I was having a look as well, I'm sure I remember seeing something either from GvR or a senior core dev as to its removal
(but my google-fu is going as well as yours at the moment :))
Weird, innit? I'd have expected to find discussion of removing a builtin more easily.
13:02
Maybe it's trying to make us forget it ever existed....
What builtin ?
Damn... see - they also had me there....
I tried googling "python file" and didn't get anything relevant. I give up.
At the bottom of the page, under "Builtins"
"Removed file. Use open()."
aw, execfile was removed :-( I liked to use that when playing in the interactive prompt.
13:07
@Volatility ... yeah. That's a little terse :-)
;)
There doesn't seem to be a PEP for it
Well now you only have to search the newsgroups occurring before 3.0 came out.
I'm not sure I'm that intrigued ... ;-)
Okay... anyway, from what I remember, file was the type, and was effectively replaced by the io module, the idea of open was that it would be a factory function, so it would be possible to just do open('http://www.google.com') or something, and have it translate to urllib2.urlopen or whatever... but I must have missed that if that happened.... (so in that case file is the wrong word...
anyway, rbrb
13:09
But it's amazingly difficult to find any posts/articles that I've seen that make me think that's the case...
Indeed.
I'd like to think I have a healthy imagination, but then I'd also like to think it'd make stuff up, that's a lot more entertaining than stuff about Python's IO
back in the 2000 Guido was talking about refactoring of the file thing in py3k... :D gossamer-threads.com/lists/python/dev/240463
@PaoloCasciello yeah... that'd be the io module, which got back ported.... and in 3.x was a complete disaster
exactly the io module :D
13:14
@JonClements ...and then they stabbed the PHP user who snuck into the planning session and didn't do that. :)
Maybe it's more a python-list question. Some people with long memories there ... although then if an answer is forthcoming, it'll be buried in a mailing list archive. SE has taught me that mailing lists are not good repositories of knowledge.
hmm... I am having syntactical trouble with something.
I want to check if an object in a list does not appear in any key but one in a dictionary, if that makes sense
@ZeroPiraeus well, I'm been going through the list archives... and I'm struggling to find it
Rather amusing XY problem:
0
Q: How can I disable the mouse for a given amount of time?

user2304540I'm developing a rather big GUI with Tkinter for my cocktail-robot and now I'm trying to disable the mouse for a few seconds, so that no click on the screen will cause any event. The reason why I need to do this is that the programm crashes if there're to much incoming events. Because I'm using ...

@Crowz for all the items in the list? what output do you want?
13:21
Morning everybody
@Kevin sweet :)
@ShannonStrutz cabbage
@JonClements Cabbage!
Morning @ShannonStrutz :-)
@JonClements Quite possibly you need to track down when the python 2 docs started saying to never use it. By the py3k design time it may have been obvious to everyone. :)
The user's problem is essentially "occasionally, my program completely locks up for a few seconds. If the user clicks on the window during that time, then Windows will think it's not responding.". Instead of asking, "how do I make a more responsive application?", he asks, "how do I stop the user from clicking on the window?"
13:22
@Kevin sounds legit.
How are you guys doing this morning?
I use an application that says "Please wait" when you're starting it up, and if you don't, crashes horribly. :)
I like the idea of throwing up a "Go away, I'm busy" modal dialog. Users, who needs 'em?
Oh wow... umm... what horrible code.... https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/comp.lang.python/jon$20clements%7Cso‌​rt:date/comp.lang.python/C1sSLNJhls0/JFAWdX8chrMJ
@Wooble well basically, the idea is I have data by month. I want to check which items show up ONLY in a specified month (ie, this month) and not anywhere else.
13:25
Add text over the window saying "click here to crash the application". Tada! The bug is now a feature.
And I used file!!!!
@Volatility cbg
@Kevin fantastic logic ;)
Yep seems about right
Although for me, "becoming a hermit" is a career aspiration, not a fear. Somebody's gotta operate those lighthouses.
13:34
@Kevin agreed. I identify the most with 3, 11, and 19....and not because I love cats
Oh, the fun one could have operating a lighthouse ;)
#11 hasn't been a problem for me since I got a car. Always have an escape plan.
Nice, thats a good call. I should get one
@ShannonStrutz A lighthouse?
(on a side note, #20, that woman is awesome)
@ZeroPiraeus what about a lighthouse? That was Jon and kevin
13:36
Anyone else dread being asked "what's new?" at parties? I've considered doing one radical thing each week just so I have a good response.
Currently, my responses usually revolve around computers or Magic: The Gathering, neither of which go over well in mixed company
@Kevin take it something like: "Allocates size bytes of storage, suitably aligned to represent any object of that size, and returns a non-null pointer to the first byte of this block." would be much of a conversation continuer either then...
Nope.
Umm... here's an idea... "I'm thinking of buying a lighthouse..."
Who wouldn't want to know more...
13:45
Quoting documentation out of context might go over well amongst the artistic types, perhaps. "That is so kafkaesque..."
(note: I am aware it isn't kafkaesque, but the imaginary artsy partygoer doesn't know that)
I'm back
Umm... "it's the first time they've let me out this year..." ?
@PeterVaro hi back - how are you?
Careful with that joke, it's an antique
There should be a comic book superhero who lives in a lighthouse.
heya @JonClements I'm fine, well.. sort of.. realised yesterday night, that I have to change a LOT OF THINGS in pyoneer, to make it more like python and to have all the features the 'textual version' has..
how r u?
13:48
Wow - why the hell did someone send me a link to this: urlesque.com/2010/09/20/open-beer-bottle-without-bottle-opener
@ZeroPiraeus "Lighthouse Man" to the rescue of ships perilously close to shore... sounds like a must read/watch ;)
Catchphrase: "To the lighthouse!"
Thankyou, thankyou, I'm here all week.
It's also not a particularly secretive base either... by its very nature...
He disables crooks by blinding them with his lighthouse's beacon. Very effective, but geographically limited.
Luckily, the first national bank is right next door, for some reason!
Some sort of special powers involving a beard and pipe would seem appropriate.
@JonClements you didn't say anything about the sonic screwdriver I sent you a few days ago..
13:55
Wow... we've almost got a pilot going here ;)
The base dosn't need to be all that secret ... criminal masterminds are notoriously lazy, and that's a lot of stairs.
@ZeroPiraeus maybe he could be the manager of a bunch of secret agents, that are members of the classy strip club at the bottom of the lighthouse
Umm, @ZeroPiraeus do you have a beard and pipe per chance??
13:59
Haha no ... well, bit of a beard right now, but that's just laziness. I'll have to be the villain.
Umm... I could be like the dog in the inspector gadget cartoons
Whoa, I got all comment privileges (twice?) even though I'm at 49 instead of 50 rep
Umm... think you had 51, so would have lost 'em
So one of the strip club agents is called Virginia, and her power is lycanthropy ...
This sounds like the end part of Dusk till Dawn, but a slight plot twist to involve werewolves and not vampires
14:06
@ShannonStrutz MSO told me I have a privilege that I should be hundreds of rep from getting yesterday.
@Wooble is it active or are they just taunting us like, "yo uare almost there!"
No idea, I haven't had the desire to create a tag synonym on meta :)
hi @Sudipta
Ok, I can't actually suggest any. I'd post asking WTF is going on, but I don't care that much.
oh, found it. I got rep from a post that was later deleted.
so I technically did have the privilege when the notification was sent, but not when I actually first saw it.
Cabbage @JonClements and everyone
14:10
Also, I was only dozens of rep from it, not hundreds.
@Sudipta cole slaw.
new syntax added to the language , is it? :)
@Sudipta nah... @Wooble just doesn't realise the full extent of the infiltration... so is attemping to sabotage its progress
so now when we are at it..how much has it progressed?
Think of something that hasn't moved at all...
and errr, it'd be one of those....
I tend to do this.. join the room just to post a VTC request..
cabbage all!
14:16
@MartijnPieters cbg
Hey @MartijnPieters
wow. I just realized I wrote 1000+ lines of code. what am I doing with my life
@Crowz just out of curiosity - how many of those lines actually work/make sense?
@JonClements all of them work, none of them make sense
@MartijnPieters I may be turning Dutch. stackoverflow.com/questions/18261383/… is a reference to my answer further down, I think.
14:20
"lines" of code...how we love loopholes!
there's no comments!
@ZeroPiraeus You are channeling me! Yay! :-P
And meep, I got downvoted.
Without an explanation. On an accepted answer that works..
@MartijnPieters that's the beauty of SO;)
Perhaps they meant to DV the other answer, which is rather... short on detail.
@MartijnPieters or they're just out to get the ninja
14:26
@MartijnPieters you didn't answer me yesterday, or the day before yesterday, that are the PSF guys are working from home too? Or do they have an office?
hmmm I don't see where this is quite going wrong. Should be a simple operation.
@Crowz Measuring programming progress by lines of code is like measuring aircraft building progress by weight.
2
@Sudipta haven't looked at my LOC a long time now I see it's like, well over 1000. I felt like I maybe programmed closer to 200
just Artichoke-ing :)
14:52
Wow... when silence descends - it does a pretty good job :)
15:11
@PeterVaro sorry, I missed that question.
I don't know where the PSF people work.
GvR is working at Google, right?
The Python Software Foundation is a non-profit however, that's just the governance organisation and staffed by volunteers.
Guido no longer works at Google.
He left Google for Dropbox in January, I believe.
that means -- everybody in the core developemnt team of Python has a "normal" job
and they do the python developing as a hobby?
or what?
15:13
@PeterVaro I imagine some are paid employees of the PSF... but a lot are volunteers
interesting..
@PeterVaro mostly, yes.
Zope Corp hired several core Python devs, including Guido, in one go, because another company that tried to build a consultancy around them had failed to come up with a viable business.
That was then called Python Labs.
I thought PSF has the money to hold a core developer team, that can work on python 0-24
nope, if only.
that's not good...
15:16
But Zope corp changed a lot and people moved on elsewhere.
But a lot of employers understand the value of Python and 'sponsor' by allowing their employees to work on Python 'on the clock' as it were.
I know Guido did work on Python in Google's time, for example.
Many other core devs are freelance consultants.
Their time is their own.
but this is one of the reasons, why the python development is soo slow.. right?
can someone tell me what I am doing wrong? It never prints my else statement so something is clearly going wrong with the 'not in' statement
first of all @Crowz: TypeError: append() takes exactly one argument (2 given)
@PeterVaro oops meant for that to be a tuple
yeah, I thought so
15:22
it's not a compilation error I'm getting -- it's a list of values that are not unique.
Victory!
6
Q: Manual specification of code block with <!-- language: python --> fails

EricAccording to the editing help: You can use either one of the supported prettify language codes, like lang-cpp or lang-sql, or you can specify a tag, and the syntax highlighting language associated with this tag will be used: <!-- language: c# --> public static bool IsAwesome { get { ret...

Minitech set the highlighter to Python. Fi-na-ly!
@Crowz you don't do the list(set()) on returnList
@PeterVaro Is it slow? I think it is just the right tempo, really.
Python is an Open Source project. If you want it to go faster, contribute!
@MartijnPieters we talked about the func(*args1, *args2) -- as an example
that this ^ is in a PEP for a long time..
and still not in 3.3 and wwon't be in 3.4
@PeterVaro nope, that didn't get it. I'm sure it's something wrong with my final for loop because it never prints that else
15:25
@MartijnPieters I'm far from there.. I'm a user here not the creator;)
That's because the core Python dev community prefers thinking things through properly.
If the PEP isn't approved, the change doesn't go in.
Hrm, another long shot at gaining a populist badge..
@MartijnPieters +1 for using nonlocal
:D
I have concluded that I am retarded.
The problem was I was referencing the wrong list in my if statement.
@PeterVaro :-P Only 12 upvotes to go, versus 4 for the accepted answer..
This one already scores more that double, but the 'competing' post has gone down into the negatives, so that's not really a contender either.
@MartijnPieters well - you can't have all the badges can ya ;)
15:36
Another one where the competing accepted answer has received some... feedback..
@MartijnPieters edited by yours truly as well ;)
The post was subsequently edited to come down to the same thing as what I answered, but hey.
That makes this one the only real candidate for the badge, with only 2 votes away.
(I just parade that one here once in a while.. :-P)
Tut Tut :)
@JonClements Nope, I hope to never earn the Unsung Hero badge. Or Tumbleweed.
@MartijnPieters I don't think Unsung Hero is likely now....
Ooo... just one more needed on that question now then
looks like your not quick so subtle plan has almost worked
Now... if I upvote Ashwini ;)
You gotta get another 4
errr, 3
15:45
1..
Ashwini got to 11 now.
I need 23, and no more votes for Ashwini.
Yup, but if I upvote him for a laugh anyway ;)
one more vote. :-/
You need to get 25 :)
@JonClements: Then you can say your holiday money goodbye?....
I so hope no one now upvotes Ashwini and it looks like me ;(
15:46
I'll not upvote Ashwini for a dollar.
Umm, you don't put much value on continuing the oxygen habit then do you @Kevin? Smiles nicely ;)
Oxygen is expensive these days. What do you think, I can just pull it out of the air?
I like eating too. And fresh fruit doesn't just grow on trees.
Oh, but for that one downvote..
@MartijnPieters it will come
Umm... I could be really mean and downvote Ashwini
that'd bugger the entire thing up completely
I think I'll play it safe and just go cook the steak instead ;)
16:05
I should totally throw a tantrum over that post.
Whah! And I only got three Nice Answer badges today! Whah!
16:19
OK, so @Kevin and @MartijnPieters this is what I have in mind, after tons of sketches and thinking.. what do you think?
Seems about right.
with this representation the while-loop, the if/elif/else statements can be visualized
although
I have NO IDEA how to implement this..
I guess in your language, append returns the list? Bit of a divergence from Python
well, in python you do have that return
when the next time you write the name of the list
but here you can't write a reference, you have to pull a wire from it
right
16:23
and that's exactly my problem atm -- how to tell my compiler that the list comes from the outside should stay as an "above the scope" and transform the input of the append widget into this list
and then output this appended list
Does it have to have an output?
Might be good to have an output square for the for block. Anything inside the for that wants to get out would route itself through there
The Python list.append() method returns None because the list is altered in-place.
@MartijnPieters if it doesn't have, how you pass the value on to some other function that wants to use it?
You'd connect to the same list object.
16:25
@Kevin I've tried a lot of cases that are similar..
somelist.append(i)
then somefunction(somelist)..
@MartijnPieters but in your idea, non of the widgets has outputs..
Although if you can easily detect when a wire begins inside a for block and ends outside it, it may not be necessary to have a dedicated output square
I mean, they are doing things on objects
in pyoneer, and almost in any VPL there is a lot of redundancy, because each woidget has a copy of the object
@Kevin one sec... I'm thinking about this..
@PeterVaro no, only for blocks that do not need to have output.
Does writing to a file need an output?
16:28
@MartijnPieters no, you misunderstand me.. there is going to be a print() and a draw() and a write() widgets, that doesn't have outputs.. that's sure
but
the whole VPL system is about boxes and arrows
and an arrow has only one direction
so an append can not put something backward
only forward
that means it has to have an output, where the modified stuff is coming out
I think this visualization lends itself well to a functional language, that doesn't have assignments or in-place updates.
yes, but well, the whole functional language stuff is not for beginners
it's really hard for advanced developers (in procedural languages) to learn how a funtiona language works
it is somewhat mind-blowing (like haskell)
@PeterVaro ah, so that precludes anything mutable then.
May as well dump list and stick to tuple..
@MartijnPieters yes.
Wow... another contact requests from Careers... LOL - busy month for that...
16:37
@MartijnPieters thanks for showing that up... I have a pretty big bug in the current code..
heya @CíceroVerneckCorrêa
hmm.. this makes me think of this whole immutability...
wow.. an other HUGE problem..
BTW, using [] for the input and output connection spots is constantly throwing me off; I keep reading them as empty list literals.. :-P
@MartijnPieters that would make two of us then... I thought that's what it was showing...
@MartijnPieters yeah, well those are just names, I can rewrite them anytime -- they are short, that's why I used them while creating the prototype
@JonClements thanks guys for the feedback.. I have to go for a walk with my dog, and start rethinking the whole thing...
probably this would be a bigger challange than I thought...
16:41
@PeterVaro woof woofy woof to Coltrane ;)
The best learning experiences are the ones that seem simple starting out, and then prove otherwise :-)
@Kevin yeah, well.. but in this case, I thought I have a good direction, and I achived something in the last 4 weeks... but now it turns out, I have to rewrite everything from zero...
Umm.... I have some sick mates
Oh, that's just morbid.
16:53
Some of my mates have posted some absolutely gorgeous pictures of ireland and devon.... and then, a couple of 'em are sharing that about... sighs
Ummm... @ZeroPiraeus I thought that looked familiar.... "You voted to close this question yesterday"
Always a decent chance that if it's got one VTC, it came from someone in here ...
Where all the cool people hang out, right? :)
Hell yeah, dude.
One you haven't had a pop at yet, then:
12:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

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