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18:05
I just awarded a bounty that brought the user to 19,997 rep
In hindsight, I should have made it a bigger bounty.
multiprocessing is evil.
grumble I wish I could get the "name" of a variable as a string (yes, I know it makes no sense to think in these terms)
user2555451
@Ffisegydd - What's your use case?
have you met our lord and saviour dict?
    def set_variables(self, a, b, c, d):

        if a is None:
            self.a = 1.0 + (random.random() - 0.5) * 0.5
        else:
            self.a = a

        if b is None:
            self.b = 2.0*np.pi * (random.random() + 0.5)
        else:
            self.b = b

        if c is None:
            self.c = (random.random() - 0.5) * 0.5
        else:
            self.c = c

        if d is None:
            self.d = random.random() - 0.5
        else:
            self.d = d
I think I'll use a dict.
18:17
this is a switch-case, which I usually map to a dict...
>>> x = 23
>>> names = [name for name, value in locals().copy().iteritems() if id(x) == id(value)]
>>> print names
['x']
Please don't do this.
lol
this is awsome
My only problem is a lot of the time a, b, c, d will all be None, so using a dict isn't that easy.
As they'd all be the same key, no?
abc
abc
Why not x is value?
18:18
yeah I get what you're saying
two can be true, that's the real problem
buy you could consume them one by one, or take in a list instead of separate args (best?)
@abc No particular reason.
abc
abc
hmm
Yeah the args would be one way to go, and then have a list of default values and zip them.
yeah like: map(lambda x: x[0] if x[0] else x[1], zip(args, default_args))
user2555451
18:22
@ReutSharabani - a if a else b is too verbose. Just do a or b.
I think he'll want to have a list of things he does not allow
but I guess you could do (x[0] not in ban_list) or x[1] .. makes sense...
So you can do: lst.sort() or lst[0] ? :)
    def set_variables(self, a, b, c, d):

        defaults = {'a':1.0 + (random.random() - 0.5) * 0.5,
                    'b':2.0*np.pi * (random.random() + 0.5),
                    'c':(random.random() - 0.5) * 0.5,
                    'd':random.random() - 0.5}

        for key, val in defaults.items():
            if locals()[key] is None:
                setattr(self, key, val)
            else:
                setattr(self, key, locals()[key])
Abusing locals() ftw.
I just saw an advert for "Armani Code". Do...do you think it would make me a better programmer?
What class is this guy taking, "dark magic programming 101"?
assigning without assignment... Why would you ever need to do that?
It's like in Harry Potter when they learn to cast spells without speaking.
user559633
@Kevin to f- with the intern
user559633
18:36
WHAT ARE YOU DOING? ASSIGNMENTS ARENT HANDLED BY C. THIS IS WHY PEOPLE SAY PYTHON IS SLOW
grabs popcorn
user559633
List pop, del list[element], list append, all atomic. Why do you think lists are so fast?
I suspect the assignment is actually "other than the first equals sign in "f = lambda", your expression may not use "="."
Effectively denying the use of default arguments as a quick fix for early binding behavior.
@Kevin , how can you do that?
this will make python super functional for me
You can do fake regular assignment with locals().update({"name": value}), although you shouldn't
user559633
18:40
i'd write a class and override __add__. how you say, come at me bro?
well, if you can get the module object, you can use getattr and setattr
But this isn't suitable for the guy's exercise because it causes an infinite recursive loop if you just do locals().update({"f": lambda x: f(x)+1})
The teacher should come hang out on SO
maybe he knows why multiprocessing.pool behaves.
No one knows anything about multiprocessing.
Leeloo Dallas Multiprocessing?
18:42
Ah, got it
>>> f = lambda x: x*x
>>> locals().update({"f": (lambda g: lambda x: g(x)+1)(f)})
>>> f(5)
26
abc
abc
Is it okay to use "either" in "What do you prefer - A, B, C or D?" - "Either one is fine."?
"Either" usually implies there are only two choices.
I'd go with "Any" there
Yeah.
abc
abc
Yeah, this is why I asked :)
Or "Woteva m8"
abc
abc
18:43
Thank you :P
Looks like Claudiu had a similar cheaty idea as mine, although mine only changes one value in locals :-)
you should post yours
I'd want to know that if I'd end up there
If he undeletes his post, I'll probably just attach mine to his as a comment, since they're so similar.
Only the One True Kevin is so magnanimous.
18:47
yeah it's already got all the info
I think the double nesting lambda trick is actually what the assignment is about. That's what "think about how a local frame binding for saved value of f, can be created" is referring to, IMO
DSM
DSM
Morning cabbage for all.
I think it's the def default argument actually
default argument would work fine, if you consider that use of "=" to not be "assignment". It's a gray area.
cbg @DSM, you've changed timezones then?
18:50
More like mourning cabbage, because it's Wednesday, and I don't like Wednesdays, so I sort of feel like I'm at a funeral, ok I'm really reaching, nevermind.
DSM
DSM
Really it's mountain cabbage. Mountain Standard, that is..
Wednesdays would be more tolerable if they were more sensibly spelled "Wensday" or something.
actually you're right
Also, can we nix the first R in February?
didn't think of that
there is assignment there
@AirThomas some numbskull rejected your edit ... want me to reapply it, or do it yourself and we can wait like hawks to approve this time?
Darn, I liked that edit.
@ZeroPiraeus It was the OP via a conflict. I'm on it.
Two more approvals required ...
19:05
@Zero as for the reverse dupe, that one leaves out the "no assignment" requirement, so it's more general...
In all likelihood it's the same issue and OP forgot to include that requirement, but until that's confirmed, not sure it's a legit dupe?
Title: "How to change the functionality of a lambda expression without assignment and composition?"
DSM
DSM
The question title says "without assignment and composition".
And yet the OP accepted an answer that uses assignment
they are obviously taking the same class
Eugh, requirements mentioned only in titles
DSM
DSM
19:07
The other day there was a post where the question was in the title and the body was just a code dump.
@AirThomas OP might not actually understand their own question :-P
Eugh, students who do their homework via SO and don't even understand when the answer is wrong
given the bizarre nature of the problem, would either of those ops even recognize the "correct" answer?
@ZeroPiraeus Ya think? /s
People will mention the language they're using in the title, tags, and body, but we're lucky if they mention the problem requirements even once.
@davidism Signs point to "no"
19:08
(Anyway, I didn't see the title, so yeah. Dupitty dupe.)
black magic questions are more for the amusement of the answerers, really :-)
DSM
DSM
Is there a word for writing a beautifully elegant answer which the OP could never use because there's no way the prof would believe the OP wrote it?
@DSM I think you just implictly coined it :-)
"".join("ein wunderschön elegante Antwort, die nutzlos ist, weil die Urheberschaft in Frage gestellt wird")
Ha, ha! German compound word callback.
:-)
(needs a split somewhere, I think)
19:14
That was in the voice of Phil Ken Sebben, for those Birdman fans in the audience.
Ha ha! Cookies on dowels.
If it were actual code, maybe re.sub
user2555451
Is there any word in the Python community of when ugly % formatting will finally be deprecated oficially? I have to tell so many people to use str.format in modern code.
reduce(lambda a,b: a.replace(b, ""), " ,", sentence)
@iCodez The closest thing I've ever found is a rather weak endorsement in the official docs saying "try to use format instead, where possible, if you feel like it"
DSM
DSM
I don't think it's going away any time soon.
19:19
They seem to have very carefully not said the word "deprecated"
user2555451
I'm hoping it dies with Python 4. Which, we are at 3.5 already, so hopefully that is only a few more years. :)
@iCodez It's never going away. See: lots of discussion on the python-* mailing lists.
here it is. "The formatting operations described here exhibit a variety of quirks that lead to a number of common errors (such as failing to display tuples and dictionaries correctly). Using the newer str.format() interface helps avoid these errors, and also provides a generally more powerful, flexible and extensible approach to formatting text."
It doesn't even say "stop using this". No recommendations, only statements of fact.
user2555451
Meh. Why would Guido and them still support it? str.format killed % in functionality. There is really no reason to use %.
... in fact I think previous, more negative language was specifically altered there to avoid giving the impression it's deprecated.
@iCodez Sure there is: for simple cases it's often both shorter and more expressive.
19:23
Brevity is a reason.
devil's advocate: "%s"%x is fewer characters than "{}".format(x)
double beaten!
user2555451
You can use the format function in that case. I never use str.format for just a single format field.
DSM
DSM
I do, mostly because it's more robust to perturbation.
Time to go to a pot luck office meeting that I didn't bring anything for. I shall swallow my shame in much the same manner that I swallow the food everyone else brought.
:-)
19:25
Maybe there will be rhubarb.
DSM
DSM
Just be extra friendly, so that you can say you brought good cheer!
Hmm, sammitches and Stewart/Colbert for me I think ...
My office had a potluck yesterday. We all had to bring food or an entry fee.
Interestingly, "you don't have to attend at all" wasn't an apparent option, which bugged me. Help, I'm being made a debtor without my consent!
DSM
DSM
Probably if you insisted you could have escaped, although that can come with its own price.
Making a big stink about it would have cost more social capital than what the entry fee was worth, so I swallowed my pride and also a hoagie.
DSM
DSM
19:29
I like the "X(1)-ed a Y and also [X(2)-ed] a Z" pattern. Reminds me of Harper Lee:
> He gave us two soap dolls, a broken watch and chain, a pair of good-luck pennies, and our lives.
So, asking how I can represent data is not an SO question? It's ok to ask how to read a file, how to create a list, how to do any of the most basic operations, but not something that actually takes a bit of discussion and consideration? Sometimes I feel like this site is turning into a Q and A for people with an extremely narrow point of view. — Arash Saidi 3 mins ago
Is it worth the argument?
@DSM "zeugma"
There's a specific latin-root-y word used to describe the sentence construct where you use a verb both figuratively and literally, as I just did. I saw it in a blog centered around goofy writing gimmicks.
@AirThomas, that's the one.
Well, the blog used the word "syllepsis", but same concept.
DSM
DSM
Now that's an impressive pull.
(I guess I meant "greek" not "latin")
19:32
My package is beginning to come together. Soon I shall not be plagued by having to generate random data for SO questions, this should increase my FGITW speed on my matplotlib questions considerably!
@Ffisegydd "turning into"? We're already there.
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: probably not.
Pah. They said I was mad...I'LL SHOW THEM!
user559633
u mad irl @Ffisegydd
@ArashSaidi the question could also have been closed as "too broad". Stack Overflow is good at some questions, and not so good at others; a close vote doesn't inherently say anything about your question except that it's one of the ones SO isn't so good at. — Zero Piraeus 24 secs ago
19:45
cbg
The OP marked all three answers as accepted..
@ZeroPiraeus Well put.
DSM
DSM
I'm not sure I've ever seen a question timeline before. Plus: ninja in boat is cute.
@DSM /posts/<postid>/timeline. Works for all questions. Old view that still works and is very helpful for many support issues.
4
I have an extension that adds it as a link on the post: stackapps.com/questions/2138/…
The original purpose of that script, autocompletion, has long since been folded into SO of course.
And, thanks, I am sticking to the boat because it works so well. :-P
20:09
That extension is very useful.
Alex Martelli is back answering questions, after a 3+ year absence.
But now I want to go correct the abuse of backticks in his posts.
Seems he is sticking to Google App Engine support.
user2555451
@MartijnPieters - Maybe he saw that you beat him the in All Time list and wants revenge. :)
DSM
DSM
When all other problems fall before your talents, what's left? Customer support. Best of luck, Mr. Martelli. :-)
@iCodez He's got 10k votes to catch up to there. But he's got 40k reputation on me still.
Oops, looks like last month's binding ritual didn't take. I bet we used violet candles instead of black, rookie error...
20:12
@DSM Yeah, a little surprised at that. Switch to a quieter role?
I have a feeling that this is a dupe of some existing "how do I run a function on each element of a dataframe?" question
I think this question is too broad. Thoughts?
No response from the user as to what they actually want to return.
so I voted to close as Unclear.
GOOOOOOOOOOOOONG
I now got a comment as to what they want, but it is not very clear.
20:23
We can always reverse-GOOOOOOOOOOOOONG it if necessary.
DSM
DSM
Right before I left for vacation, I had to spend a few days converting a colleague's Excel spreadsheets into C# by way of Python with the aid of some not-particularly-helpful "documentation" he wrote. I don't think I'll be wrestling with ambiguous SO questions for a while.
20:42
Hey guys - any of you familliar with inter-process communication? Trying to send a string from my python script (python.exe) to chrome.exe :)
@Benjamin don't ask what we know, just ask: sopython.com/chatroom
@davidism Yea, how does sopython work? Haha.
Thankies :)
press up to edit your posts
you can also remove posts with the menu on the left
The Popen class has a communicate method, IIRC
Not sure how receptive chrome is to receiving messages via stdin, though.
I suddenly want to write a straight-faced blog post about how you have to send strings in ALL CAPS to communicate with software that was originally released before 1998, because older programs tend to lose their hearing
20:45
@Benjamin did you still have a question to ask?
@davidism Yea, how does sopython work? :D
How does the site work?
It's a Flask application: github.com/sopython/sopython-site
Uh, I am just a bit confused, because it sends me back to this chatroom. Is sopython a Q&A type site? Not sure what it is :/
It's a wiki, it's a community, it's Q&A...just confused.
DSM
DSM
sopython is in all of our hearts!
It's primarily the web space we use to host Python-related content that doesn't fit into Stack Overflow's strict Q&A format
20:53
sopython brings all the coders to the yard.
and they're like, my style conventions are better than yours
hmm, distutils changed something about how they parse development versions, now my local builds are messing up
Lol, didn't understand why I was getting pings
Hah. It was because we missed you!
@Terfin github.com/emirozer/fake2db may be of interest to you after your question yesterday
21:07
cbg dude, how's your mum doing?
@Ffisegydd She's sleeping right now, but is making some progress. The Physiotherapist was quite impressed this morning (or so I'm told)
Thanks for asking :)
Good to hear mate.
Night shifts tend to be quite boring. Nothing much happens, so I start walking into chatrooms, etc. to talk to people, to stay awake
Thanks :)
How's your day/night/evening coming?
Not bad, I've travelled home myself today. Been coding most of the evening.
yay! Holiday coding at parents' dining table is awesome
btw, I see that you are wearing the same hat I'm wearing. Any idea how you got it?
21:11
Upvote an old high-quality question or answer.
Q gives one, A gives another.
ahh! That makes sense :)
I just activated my hats now, and got a bunch, so I couldn't tell which action gave me this hat
argh, "-dev" is no longer permitted, you have to use ".dev"
Really? :/ I suppose it keeps it more consistent with all decimal points -> 0.1.2.dev
they still use -dev at least one place in pep440 though, so good job on proofreading
actually, I provisionally take it back, it might be ... my fault
*gasp*
time to update my version parsing answer though
can I use recursion in generators?
21:24
How do you mean?
sure, why not?
of course, recursion in Python is generally a bad decision
nm I did something wrong. still can't figure out what exactly - but now it's working
did something to generate all numbers in a certain base
An insect just crawled onto my screen. That's one of the freakiest moments of my night
user2555451
It's especially bad if it is one of those small gnats that rarely moves. You start saying "Did that letter just move?" and thinking you are crazy. :)
ooooh, I hate small gnats! They love to perch on my laptop screen when it's the only light source in the room. way to ruin my immersion
Also there's one at work that likes to bonk into my nose. There is no food in there go away!!!
21:29
It was a mosquito which crawled onto my screen from the black edge (macbook)
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: :P I was writing up a partition-based approach, but now I don't have the energy.
21:53
Whoops, meant to post it in JS, can a RO move the messages please?
(Sorry, mobile chat is horrible)
Move to JS for you?
Or Trash?
To JS, yeah.
DSM
DSM
Oh, you have to click on "room" to get a move-messages option.
@Ffisegydd why close?
Explaining how to debug code? It's a bit broad for SO.
I think a simple example of pdb is what he is looking for
And by "a bit" I mean "insanely" but I'm British and we're given to understatement.
close leaves option for comments?
22:10
The fact that you know the answer doesn't make it a good question.
cbg briefly
I don't think he's looking for a pdf intro. The guy needs someone to show him the ropes of his IDE, which he has failed to identify
cbg @JonClements! Banana?
DSM
DSM
Temporary cabbage for Jon!
Cabb @Jon
@inspectorG4dget how's your mum doing mate?
22:14
@JonClements She's sleeping for now. This is actually the most she's slept continuously. She's slowly recovering and (I'm told) surprised her physiotherapist this morning with her ability to intentionally move certain muscles
@JonClements: @Ffisegydd asked about her earlier, too. I'm really loving the support I'm getting from you guys. Thank you so much. I give internet hugs
@inspectorG4dget sounds like she's recovering well then - the body has a way of healing itself that I think we still don't understand fully, but good news - something to be pleased with at least :)
cbg @iCodez
absolutely! My nieces (whom she adores) visited today. They were an absolute riot and she loved every bit of it!
user2555451
@JonClements - Hi. I've actually been here, I just briefly closed my browser. :)
22:18
@iCodez this puppy still says hello/welcome back regardless :)
I'd say "Hello" to myself, but this room's very "Hotel California" :p
@JonClements Where are Martijn's chambers? I must gather for the feast
user2555451
For some weird reason, FF made my tab bar disappear when I relaunched it. I had to go digging through the options to get it back. Don't just love it when your applications suddenly decide to go crazy for no explicable reason?
Now that there is an expected output, perhaps we can reopen this:
thanks, it's open now.
cbg @MartijnPieters. I was just talking about you
@inspectorG4dget My chambers are wherever my keyboard rests.
22:28
@MartijnPieters what's on the menu for the feast?
@inspectorG4dget Bytes and electrons?
But tomorrow a Christmas Pub lunch where 53 people from the same company are going to mob one of the local pubs.
@inspectorG4dget access to "the feast" requires passing "passing the shuriken test"
@MartijnPieters Electrobytes! I love it!! May I stab it with a steely knife?
They have been forewarned.
Last year they served christmas lunch to a total of 150 people over December.
This year it'll be a few more with those 53 being served all at the same time. Poor pub.
but I'm calling it a night, peeps
night dude
22:31
rhubarb all!
@Martijn was I was a younger pup - did some work at a pub, had to do the kitchen for xmas... can't say it was fun :p
@Martijn rbrb
good night/sleepyTime @MartijnPieters
oh b*llocks, think I just destroyed a relatively new pair of ear phones by sitting on them
abc
abc
:(
note to self: don't put earphones on your chair, then plonk yourself down on said chair, when half asleep
what earphones were they?
ok, so how would you guys flatten a list of lists?
single nesting that is
I love a specific way that I see no one uses
abc
abc
chain(*lst)
@inspectorG4dget oh... a £180 set of ones :(
22:41
flatlist = [i for s in nestedList for i in s]
what about sum(list_of_lists, []) ?
list(itertools.chain.from_iterables(nestedList))
abc
abc
Don't do that
try it out
user2555451
22:42
@ReutSharabani - Goodness no. The docs even say to not do that.
lol, I didn't know that, I use that a lot!
but why not?
user2555451
@ReutSharabani - For one, it is terrible on readability. Also, it is quite inefficient.
@JonClements: that's very unfortunate! Also, what the heck?! Are they encrusted with diamonds or something? Do you have a link to these earphones/
abc
abc
Worst case is quadratic complexity
that's the case for not doing it? I'm not impressed.
22:43
@davidism Oh? How so?
Answered OP's question with "It's not possible" and I suspect I'm not gonna get an upvote or accept because of it :P
abc
abc
@ReutSharabani well, you should be
DSM
DSM
If quadratic complexity isn't enough to convince you not to do something, I'm a little worried about how bad something would need to be before you wouldn't use it..
Why is it inefficient by the way?
user2555451
@ReutSharabani - Internally, sum is just adding things together. So, you would build a new list for each list in your list of lists.
22:45
this poor soul needs to be shown elif
@DSM Travelling salesman!
@inspectorG4dget bah... they cost more last year :(
Where do the docs mention not to do it?
user2555451
I saw it somewhere once. I'll have to go digging though.
It's not under sum
so under list?
22:48
@JonClements: I used to be a huge fan of in-ears. They provided an awesome balance between blocking the world and not having to play music very loudly. However, I found that with my extended usage, they didn't allow the sweat in my ear to evaporate, which lead to sores and such. Thus ended my stint with in-ears, and I switched to over-ears
abc
abc
It was under " Immutable objects" header but still:
> This means that building up a sequence by repeated concatenation will have a quadratic runtime cost in the total sequence length.
is possible, to find the smallest number to multiply a list of floating point numbers (all are in the range of 0.0 and 1.0) to get integers? for example, if you have [0.0, 0.25, 0.5, 1.0] => then the magic number is 4 => the result is [0, 1, 2, 4]
btw cbg(all)
@inspectorG4dget I used to have this one (which was amazing):
but it is nothing compared to these:
which I have now :)
viva la over-ears and closed-studio headphones
abc
abc
Use max and Fraction.denominator?
Some form of bisect method maybe?
@abc min will almost always ends up giving 0.0
@Ffisegydd ?
abc
abc
22:56
Yeah, I meant max
I have these, which I wouldn't give up for the world:
DSM
DSM
Take the lcm of f.as_integer_ratio()'s second element.
those looks fine too!
user2555451
Ah, the float.as_integer_ratio() method. Probably the ugliest in all of Python.
22:57
why is it the ugliest?
user2555451
It's long. Why can't it just be ratio()?
you mean "ugly" as the method name
not the method itself..
I see.
@iCodez oh, there's a module or two I'd probably vote for that position
datetime.
user2555451
Yea, datetime.datetime.strptime is not very pretty.
22:59
@DSM thanks mate, I think that would work ;)
"With that being said, the way our platform is designed, you can use a floating IPv4 address between Linodes as long as they are on the same subnet. It won't matter if the addresses are on the same subnet or not." Um... What??
DSM
DSM
Remember that fractions already has a gcd, so you can get the lcm that way.
abc
abc
Rbrb all
rbrb(@abc)
23:04
Counter.most_common() returns (key, count) tuples. If you didn't care about the count, how would you throw it away?
DSM
DSM
@Peter: I mean that x*y = lcm(x,y) * gcd(x,y) and you already have fractions.gcd. (Have to check the convention they use for the 0 case, but that's easily handled.)
I like name, _ = ctr.most_common(1) but I tend to use something more clear like name, unused = ctr.most_common(1)
user2555451
_ means unused by convention.
@DSM I think I'm too tired to understand that -- I will read that back in the morning :P (frankly I have no idea what lcm is and where is it coming from.. is it the lowest common divisor multiple?)
rbrb @abc
23:06
@iCodez When I talk to my coworkers about programming conventions, their eyes glaze over and their hair starts smoking
lowest common multiple and greatest common divisor
oh yeah..
I was meant to write that one :)
user2555451
You could also do: max(ctr, key=ctr.get)
DSM
DSM
@Peter: least common multiple. It's kind of like the opposite of the greatest common divisor. So if you have 2/3, 3/4, and 4/9, you could rationalize them by multiplying by the lcm of (3,4,9) which is 36.
user2555451
Counter objects are really just fancy dictionaries.
23:08
@DSM and that's exactly what I'm looking for
thanks guys -- I will use that tomorrow morning :) I can't keep my eyes opened..
Yeah same here, I'm off guys.
DSM
DSM
Rhubarb to all! (Changing time zones means everyone's up at a new hour compared to me..)
me too
rbrb(all) // thanks again!
user2555451
I'll be leaving too. Gotta go run an errand. Rhubarb to all as well!
23:12
@iCodez Good idea. Rhubarb.
@iCodez @Ffisegydd rbrb :)
good night @PeterVaro @Ffisegydd
@AirThomas I'm pretty sure setting up new frames is expensive both in time and memory. There's also the relatively strict depth limit.
setting up new frames has to be expensive in the whole time-space continuum
Frames in general are expensive, I wanted to frame 4 posters and ended up spending way too much.
23:22
Cabbage everyone!
I came by to say hi :)
cbg @Lucio
woah, just learned something new:
in the python interpreter, _ stores the result of the last expression
mad
sweet
What is the ~ operator?
what's it called
23:38
~
nm it's "tilde" :)
with French accent ;P

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