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13:00
I remember reading somewhere, I'll send a link.
I don't think anyone is refuting "consumer rights laws exist". We're refuting "consumer rights laws give unsatisfied users the grounds to sue us"
remember the clauses in most licenses "WE ARE INDEMNIFYED FROM ANY TORT ARISING FROM THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE"
how sadly you misunderstand law
I'm refuting everything. I've closed my eyes and thus you don't exist.
NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW... INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE
(sorry for the caps)
(from gpl 3.0)
Thing is, it's better to be safe.
13:03
We're not using GPL 3.0 though.
and afaik licenses like apache or mit don't do anything harmful
(no harm in applying them)
sorry... was tired of the spiel
There's safe, and then there's too safe. If you put up a disclaimer to prevent a one in ten million chance of being sued, then you should never leave the house, to prevent a one in ten million chance of being in a vehicular accident.
uhm you could have just told me I was spamming the chat? anyways I didn't notice I was spamming the chat
(devil's advocate: no, Kevin, that's an oversimplification of the risk-reward analysis. Maybe the chances are similar, but the expenses of preventing it are not. Disclaimers are cheap, becoming a hermit is expensive)
13:05
(unless I'm misunderstanding Jeff Atwood)
sheesh sopython anyway has an indemnification clause
nvm
black beans
Likelihood of being sued: 1/10,000,000
Expense of being sued: $1,000,000
Time required to choose and upload a disclaimer: 1 hour
Expected per-hour gain from choosing and uploading a disclaimer: $1,000,000 * 1 hour * 1/10,000,000 = $0.10/hour
It would be a more productive use of one's time to go outside and look for coins to pick up off the street
anyways I was talking about the source code, not the website
and sadly it turns out the website does have a indemnification clause
I still really don't understand how that article says that people could sue us.
13:10
the thing is the law is somewhat ambigious in regards to software
(devil's advocate: ok, kevin, now replace those measurements you made up in the first three lines with actual empirically determined values, and see if it's still a poor choice. Maybe if you stand to lose a hundred million dollars, then it turns out that creating a disclaimer is literally the most valuable thing you could do with your time)
depending on how good the prosecutors lawyers are you could get sued for creating a bad product even if its free (just like how you can sue a hospital if they botch up a free eye surgery)
sorry for off-topic
Which country are we talking about, anyway? I assume the laws vary wildly across the world.
many countries have such laws, I'm pretty sure, at least the eu and us
They do.
13:12
even india has consumer rights
Many countries have laws, yes, but there are a lot of differences in such laws.
@Kevin adding the disclaimer should be as simple as editing a template
so more like 20-25 minutes at worst
Reminds me of the stories about how passersby in China won't help people that get hit by cars, because they can open themselves up to liability by getting involved, even if it's clearly not their fault
sopython.com is created and hosted in the US probably so it's a moot point
unless the CEO's disagree @Ffisegydd @Kevin - this is the end of this discussion please
@RamchandraApte actually, it's in the UK - get your facts straight
13:14
I should have meant western developed country. ok enough OT
Wild topic change. For Christmas I asked for a valuable Magic: The Gathering card that I have had my eye on for many months.
For Christmas I just want to not get sued ;-;
For Christmas I'm not going to get anything. Go figure.
When I play with it at the kitchen table with my friends, I fear it will be too amazing and good, and I will win too much. This is a problem. If I win all the time, my friends will stop playing with me at all.
oooooops
13:15
So I may end up owning the card just so I can say I own it.
meant to click "user profile" - f*ing track pad
(and possibly to bust out during tournaments where fabulous prizes are on the line)
I just hit enter on prompts :(
Did you un-RO yourself again? They should make that button harder to find.
13:17
@RamchandraApte I'm sorry for Jon kicking you again. It was an accident, please do feel welcome here.
apparently I just k/b'd Ramchadra :(
@RamchandraApte I apologise - that kick was not deliberate - it was a pure f* up on my behalf... sorry
haha I was nearly going to ragequit
@Ffisegydd @Kevin sorry :(
anger inside fumes out
So, I wanted to say that I didn't ask anything for christmas
Apologies all around :-)
13:21
hah, I've been banned for longer than a measly 4 minutes
that's more like respawn time ;)
I'm not even bothering with a turkey this year
got some gammon and a chicken coming from the local butcher
We always have beef.
ugh, christmas probably means some fireworks maybe
(this is india, fireworks are crazily loud)
sadly, the local farmer doesn't keep cows, just pigs and chickens anad sheep
@Kevin: guilty as charged.
13:24
I'm soo lazy, I was supposed to take a break of 10 minutes. Well, guess what, 10 minutes is now an hour.
Gammon... That's, like, a difficult riddle, right? My butcher never gives me riddles :-(
@MartijnPieters Much appreciated :-)
game on maybe?
Gammon is like backgammon, but upside down.
Gammon is amazing.
13:25
rbrb guys
@Kevin you can't tell me seriously that Gammon is not eaten in the US ?
Maybe it has a different name.
Gammon is hind leg of pork, cut from a side of bacon after curing (either dry-salting or curing in brine). It may or may not be smoked. Like bacon, it needs to be cooked before it can be eaten. It may be sold on-the-bone or boned and rolled. It may be served as a roasted joint, or as steaks or rashers. It differs from ham in that ham is cured after being cut from the carcass, and the curing process for ham may be different. Gammon hock (or knuckle) is the foot end of the joint, and contains more connective tissue and sinew. Joints of cooked gammon are often served at Christmas. The words gammon...
Pretty sure we eat all conceivable permutations of pork over here.
>The words gammon, ham and bacon are sometimes used interchangeably. And in the USA in particular, the word 'ham' may refer to raw, uncured hind leg of pork.
so you'd call it ham.
13:27
Ok. Yes, ham is a common food here.
@Martijn thought you were a veggie?
'fancy ham'.
@JonClements I am.
Doesn't mean I am ignorant..
yeah, I'm vegeterian,^
@Martijn I hope I never implied that
you implied that. Everyone makes mistakes.
(I think this is probably derived from the stereotype that vegans always butt in conversations on meat in a bad way)
13:30
I could imagine a "vegetarian since birth" not knowing the names of cuts of meats. A convert would probably still remember them from his previous stage of life, though :-)
To be fair, I'm quite ignorant of vegetarian cooking.
I'm vegeterian since birth. I know a cursory amount of meat types.
(though not gammon obviously)
@RamchandraApte if @MartijnPieters was truly offended, he has my email and my phone number to protest - ultimately, I don't think he gives a beep if I choose to eat meat or not
@JonClements in the context of me just clarifying what a certain meat name means, you did, I think. But you probably just asked if I was vegetarian apropos of us talking about meat. I won't hold it against your cute puppydog face. :-P
@JonClements I didn't imply he was offended.
13:32
Implication is confusing! Let's all just read the exact literal meaning of things.
My mind is blown.
@Kevin Are you implying I am confused?
You are confusing me.
I'm confused by your confusion, and in turn am confused by my own confusion.
awwwwwwwww..... a cute kitty
blue eyes in cat's are very rare I think
13:34
@JonClements depends on the breed.
It's probably breeded to have blue eyes, they probably sell for more.
kitties are boring yawn
give us some python photos
well my last cat was an "American Shorthair" or something
wait a sec pythons can eat cats I guess. conflict-of-interest
@JonClements short for 'mutt breed from the US'
:-P
We have American Shorthairs.
With a good dose of Main Coon in them. They are huge.
afaik all cats are of the cutey breed
13:38
@RamchandraApte The Sphynx breed is stretching that to breaking point.
stackoverflow.com/q/27521836/3005188 hammer please, unutbu's answer in the target is infinitely better than mine.
@Martijn Tom weighed at a stone... gorgeous... cried when we put him down though...
:-(
* a few people google stone
I assume a stone weighs about as much as... A stone.
13:39
@Kevin what happened?
Nothing, just commiserating with Jon
ta Martijn
one night he even "buggered off" for about 3 months
oh I didn't read the last few words
photos?
if I may ask
I don't have photos from 15 years ago :)
13:41
@Jon a friend of mine had a cat that did that. They bought a new cat after 6 months (as the kids missed having a cat) and then one day he strolled in 8 months after going missing...
I don't have photos of my current dog, but I think she has a facebook page.
(junior detectives, make a note of this fact in your "let's doxx Kevin" clue book)
Kevin's though process seems pretty similar to mine. I also have "devil's advocate" thoughts popping up.
@Ffisegydd cat's are very independent - although I love both, I'm more a dog lover
If no one wants to argue with me, I argue with myself :-) gotta take me down a peg.
Kevin plays DA for the group, and himself, and his own DA.
13:44
sometimes I think I'm split in half; i'm pretty indecisive
Incidentally, Devil's Advocate is a great film.
@Ffisegydd it's not bad
@RamchandraApte Are you sure about that?
I am pretty indecisive.
like today I was wondering if my favorite video game was dying
found it
the knapsack program ran and get results... took it a while
brb... need to manually look at stuff
13:48
@Kevin - why 'lambda *args: <stuff>' and not simply 'lambda: <stuff>' ?
lambda *args: stuff is bad practice is it even works
Why is it bad practice?
That looks fine to me.
I deleted my post because it wasn't the most correct among existing answers, but here's my justification:
> It's not strictly necessary to use *args here, but I habitually do it for consistency purposes. The other mechanism Tkinter uses to register events, bind, will pass an event object as the first argument to whatever function you provide it. the *args does a handy job of discarding that event object if you don't actually want it to be passed.
tl;dr: I'm lazy and can't remember the function signature that Tkinter's event binding methods use.
So I just use the one method that I'm sure will work correctly in all contexts.
@RamchandraApte How do you know it's bad practice if you don't know whether it even works or not?
@RamchandraApte Why is that bad practice? What if you want to produce a callable that works regardless of arguments passed in (e.g. explicitly ignore the arguments)?
(devil's advocate: when using the command parameter, you know with complete certainty that no arguments will be passed by Tkinter, so including *args is entirely unnecessary. You're confusing the reader just to save yourself a few seconds of consulting the documentation yourself)
(this is the kind of behavior that leads to black magic development. "Hey steve, why did you put *args in your lambda here?" "Oh, Kevin does that all the time, so I just assumed it was necessary. Best keep it that way just in case")
Maybe this conversation will help me remember Tkinter's event registering function signatures in the future :-)
14:02
I'm out for a bit... need to review a 112 page manual guide thing
after 2 pages, I'm not in high hopes
(reverse-devil's advocate: there is substantial value in being able to code an application without the mental context-switching that is required to minimize Notepad and open the documentation. If you can develop ten times faster at the expense of a slightly idiosyncratic design, then it may be prudent to do so)
(devil's advocate x3: you have two monitors. Keep notepad open in one, and the docs open in another. This reduces the context switching expense to a minimum)
14:15
cabbage all
it's raining really hard here, I got soaked on the few steps from my car to my office
Greetings
@davidism was same here in France this morning
and cbg btw
I hope it remains sunny here. I left my umbrella at home.
@Jon thanks for merging that :)
14:31
@davidism in the future and if there's any changes to content (no source code change) are you happy for me to just commit them directly? I'll do the squash stuff so it's one single commit etc
yeah, that's fine
and don't worry if it's not perfect, we're here to mess around and learn after all
What's a squash
git rebase -i or hg histedit
allows you to edit a chain of commits or collapse them into one commit
That's good, I need this
only do this with commits you have not pushed publicly yet
as it changes history and doesn't go out and change everyone else's copies
user559633
14:39
cbg
Welcome, stranger
what if I pushed a branch that I'm about to delete?
can I squash it to only several commits?
you can safely rebase only if you know other people have not pulled the previous commits that are about to be altered
I like the recent question ending with "...in scapy paython"
and if they did?
14:47
Paython is like Python, but you have to insert a quarter each time you run it.
I'm not sure what ARP spoofing is, but this guy is pretty ambitious to base his very first program on it.
Seems like it would be easier to start with "hello world" or "guess the number"
it's an intra-net attack I think
uses the address resolution protocol..
too broad, and possibly morally repugnant
If OP comes back and says "no, no, I'm trying to collect the passwords of users on the website that I myself own", it's still fairly sketchy.
Hooooomes.
15:01
Needs reproducing code
Well, needs any code at all, for starters.
@Ffisegydd Are we slowly reciting the lyrics to the Fresh Prince of Bel Air opening? Yooo hoooomes, smelllll yaaaaa laaaater
Alas, no.
Oops, that's "holmes", I think. I'm not up to date on mid 90s slang.
The L is mostly silent.
@Ffisegydd Please explain the actual context.
I'm...uh...back at home for Christmas? It's not as exciting as I made it out to be.
I think the plural threw me off.
user559633
anybody know of a page that serves up a simple "ok" or something so i can test this healthcheck script?
user559633
15:11
httpbin does great stuff, but it's all json
user559633
user559633
yeah, it's a command line check, so i didn't want to have to copy a huge html body into the comparison section
user559633
e.g. isup --server (server) --text (body to check)
example.com is insufficiently simple. The rounded corners on that box are too elegant.
That weak password question is awful
From his "we'll have a user name list, unlike the bad guys" comment, I'm guessing he's trying to get into the penetration testing business. Like, he'll get permission from the companies before attacking their servers.
Which is fine, that's a useful service and not evil. But asking this question is still a silly way to get started.
What does it mean when someone says "Your specific heat capacity is low"?
satirical ?
@tilaprimera it could be satirical I suppose? I mean the specific heat capacity is a value that describes how much the temperature increases when a given amount of energy is given to the system.
Heh, I wrote "mostly looks fine" for that question but I keep finding problems. Good thing the edit window was still open.
(voted, btw)
15:25
Yeah there are a fair few issues
it was nice of you to invite @ClaireDodd, @Ffisegydd, but they don't have enough rep to talk...
I was gonna be smarmy and say "help and the docs are all the cheat sheets you need", but I do remember finding one-page references useful as a neophyte.
Ah god >.< sorry :(
I think I got most of the big ones in my comment.
ooh, I think some of the things under "sequences" should be under "lists" instead. Ex. append works on lists but not all seqs
I'm defining methods (say a linear func y = mx + c) as part of this class. Would you say it's sensible to add the function as a function variable, say in string for? Example:
def func(x, m, c):
    return m*x + c

func.str = 'm*x + c'
15:34
Maybe, if you have a solid use case for when the client would use such a feature.
Probably no solid use case, it was more a way for the user to check what the function is doing rather than looking in the docs.
Just having good docstrings should suffice. They can view them with the help function from a REPL.
Ah good call.
It's simple for linear equ, but for sin(f*x + c) + d it's good to have some definition
abc
abc
cbg again
I can imagine it being useful to have both a docstring and a str attribute. Like, if you want the docstring to be detailed ("this is Newton's method, useful for approximating [etc]") and the str to be straightforward ("x1 = x0 - f(x0)/f'(x0)")
... But only if I think the user is going to e.g. iterate through all the functions in my module and put their str attributes in a dropdown list or something.
15:41
Yeah I'll stick with docstrings for now, I need to learn rst really.
@davidism do you have your linkedin message to hand for OT reasons?
hold on, lemme find it
This question appears to be off-topic because it is a customer support request, not a question about a programming problem. See [this meta post](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/255745/why-were-not-customer-suppo‌​rt-for-your-favorite-company) for more information.
user559633
15:51
cheers
and the follow up:
Unfortunately for LinkedIn, that announcement doesn't suddenly make these types of questions appropriate here. See the link from my previous comment for more information.
user559633
and the follow up to that:

`t(._.t) please stop shitting in my playground`
@iCodez nice hat :)
user2555451
Thanks. I ordered it in biggy size!
user2555451
I just signed in to SO, so I was checking my mail before I said "cbg" here. Cabbage all!
15:56
cbg dude
user2555451
I'm trying to get the sailboat hat because I love ships. My reasoning is that I need to hit the rep cap and get "upboated". Hopefully, we'll get a good catch of questions today. :)
@Ffisegydd : /
Maybe they were really being literal. "you're cold even though I turned up the heat? You must have a low specific heat capacity"
I've only hit the rep cap once. ;_; The pitfalls of only answering two smaller tags.
no comfort hat for being downvoted?
user559633
16:01
do you want a trophy just for showing up?
Should parenthesis be enforced on trenary expressions like 'something ? yes : no'
@tristan Yes, yes I do.
If you get downvoted and upvoted, you get a hat.
^ On the same day.
user2555451
I only use parenthesis if I also have a comparison operator. Such as : (a == b) ? c : d
16:03
@iCodez that's what I thought
thanks
@iCodez That's not how to get the sailboat. Would you like to know, or are you avoiding spoilers?
user2555451
No no, don't tell me just yet. If I can't get it in a week, I'll come in here and whine.
Python's ternary-like a if b else c doesn't require parens. although I'll add them if I think it enhances clarity.
Especially if I have two if/elses in one expression.
user2555451
@Kevin - There is rarely a good reason to smash all that on one line. :)
OK. Remember it's actually a hairboat. And that's a Stack Exchange-specific reference. If you give up, there's a thread on MSE that gives secret hat criteria.
16:05
OTOH, the parser chokes on non-parenthesized expressions like 1 if 2 if 3 else 4 else 5
Silly Python, can't you see that I mean 1 if (2 if 3 else 4) else 5?
@iCodez Agreed.
user2555451
Did you guys know you can do 1if 2 else 3 without a space before if. I saw an SO post about this once.
I vaguely remember hearing that before, yeah
And yet, 1if 2else 3 is invalid. What's the deal?
user2555451
Aside from golfing, that behavior only encourages sloppy code. It's funny Python permits it considering its strong focus on readability.
user2555451
That's because 2e is a float.
oh, maybe it's because else starts with e
oops, beaten
1if 2e3else 3 is valid, as expected
16:10
Discrete math final in 10 minutes... what need to know?
user559633
just does the nedful corvid
First, know what discrete math is.
I prefer discreet math because you don't have to show your work ;-)
~~~*~*~*I believe in you @corvid*~*~*~~~
user559633
and that you're always employable in fast-food -- fast-food workers are even lobbying for more pay because some adults somehow think it's a job they should not try to get out of as soon as possible
buh, how would (k+3)! be simplified?
16:13
That's as simple as it gets
You could complexify it to (k+3) * (k+2)!, does that help?
user559633
.~:*:・’゜☆。corvid is adequate。☆゜’・:*:~.
Strange, I see that message on the starred list, but I don't see a star next to it in the transcript.
user559633
☆.。.:*・°☆.。.:* sometimes being a programmer makes me depressed・°☆.。.:*・°☆.。.:*・°☆
Ah, there it goes.
I thought it might have something to do with the star character in the comment itself.
user559633
hah, i wish. i'd use that everywhere
user559633
16:15
i think i might write a chrome plugin to drop emoji stars in my stack answers and comments from now on
"messages with a unicode star character automatically appear in the star list" would be a hilaribad bug.
user559633
。.:*:・’゜★。、:*:。.:*(。◕‿◕。) perhaps you want to look into __slots__ if you want to save space on obj instantiation 。、:*:。.:*:・’
user559633
don't even tell me that wouldn't be amazing to just have around all your answers -- especially if it was tunable to only show up on JS and Ruby questions
That's downright magical.
user559633
god i wish that bug existed.
user559633
16:21
it would be the best for appending "that's what she said" to starred posts
user559633
cbg. hahaha your avatar looks awesome with that hat
user2555451
@tristan - You need to get the football helmet. Two football helmets are always better than one!
user559633
Is that answer +7?
user2555451
Yea, give a +7 answer.
user559633
16:23
Hmm. I'll have to wait for a softball ruby question.
user559633
Weird, someone just dropped by one of my old answers to downvote, which is pretty hilarious because it fit the question's use case bang-on.
user559633
Alright, I guess I should do some work. rbrb
@tristan Alternatively, find an upvoted rant on MSE and agree with it. Upvotes! Upvotes everywhere!
user559633
MSE?
Meta Stack Exchange
user559633
16:25
Oh, meta
You can earn hats there.
user2555451
You can't get hats on Meta. Only actions on the main site give you the hats IIRC.
@iCodez MSE is a "main site"
user2555451
oh, I thought you meant Meta SO. sorry.
Op didn't want to share what his method actually did, he said, just make it up, it's not relevant to the answer, so I went with:
> For example, if you calculate difficulty as the number of parrots a problem has times ten if the problem is older than 30 days, you would use:
16:28
:-)
I like to include "phase of the moon" as a dependency when describing mysterious methods.
(although I can think of one program that really does care about the phase of the moon - the roguelike game Nethack confers luck penalties during a real-life full moon, and lycanthropes are harder to kill)
I came across some cool python library that did calculations like sunrise/sunset, moon phase, etc, but I can't remember the name of it.
That would actually be quite useful for a building energy efficiency calculator.
I think there was one that didn't require google location, but yeah, like that.
I just liked the idea that after 30 days of parrots flying around, you've got to have a pretty difficult problem.
Or you might just have a dead parrot.
Replace "parrots flying around" with "rabbits doing rabbit things" and I can see the problem
I heard recently, I think it was on NPR but I can't find the program, John Cleese in an interview saying that sketch was originally a used car sales sketch.
17:07
The source code for pandas.DataFrame is sickening. It's class is 4000 LOC long. Never mind the fact that a lot of the functions/methods are defined in other files.
user2555451
@Ffisegydd - Is it at least spaced out, or is it a wall?
'Abbage Python! Came to see what hats pears and peaches are wearing :)
user2555451
Crabs are all the rage in here. :)
I don't have much to choose from. The candles fit my squareness best.
17:14
cbg @Unihedro
It's all about Spock.
Gotta figure out how to embiggen it. Doesn't look like much at chat resolution.
user2555451
@Kevin - You can click "show controls" in the hats menu. Moving the red circle increases size.
Thanks :-)
Need to find out how pandas manages to get nice looking docs from docstrings without needing to use rst...
Is there a way to generate docs for a python program, like extracting all the comments above classes? Or you have to document them yourself in text files?
17:23
It can remove the docstrings from the top of each class/function.
And format it as HTML.
Hooray! That was what I was looking for, since I was used to writing Javadocs. Thanks!
17:45
almost 8k
it's a terrible balance between actually getting work done versus answering
17:58
Yeah true D:

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