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2:00 PM
I considered doing x = '"70"' but then I worried OP would go "what's this triple apostrophe wizardry?"
 
By comparison, escaping the quote marks seemed less likely to be misinterpreted
 
@Kevin Speaking of triple quotes... x = """'70'""" :)
I guess that should be x='''"70"'''; OTOH, the OP is calling " an apostrophe...
 
It seems that Kevin is climbing up to his place among the stars.
 
@PM2Ring You aren't seriously running through all possible seeds!?
 
2:06 PM
That is one ugly list comprehension.
 
@BhargavRao I so want to answer that with Yes, there is!
 
@Ffisegydd ?
 
0
Q: slicing a list for list comprehension but keeping sliced values

user2242044I would like to replace items[1], items[2], items[3] with a boolean value based on whether or not the value is None. This works but eliminates items[0], items[4], items[5] from the output. I could insert/append the values back in, but I'm thinking there must be a way to do it in a single line. m...

 
Just answered a language-agnostic question with itertools and I bet I'm going to regret it. "Uh, thanks... Now how do I do it in VB?"
 
@JonClements Um... no. Just xrange(10000) but I'll kill it soon.
 
2:07 PM
Also I provided a lazy O(N!) solution when an O(N log N) one exists. The latter is a lot harder to write though ;-)
 
@AnttiHaapala nope, sorry. Never really had to build an exe.
 
I've added a much nicer non-list-comp part to my answer. Python programmers can get too caught up in one-liners :/
 
@Ffisegydd Indeed. The for loop block is much easier to read.
 
Ta @Vader, I see you managed to change your name? :P
 
2:15 PM
@Ffisegydd yes @tristan showed me how to exploit SO to change my name.
I asked a mod to do it yesterday in the Ubuntu room, but he didn't want to.
 
So, knowing the secret weakness of all Linux authority figures, you said "SO sucks because you can't change your name easily"?
 
@Kevin what also works is describing to solve the problem the wrong way, then everyone will correct the wrong way of doing it. They would rather prove somebody wrong then help the first guy.
 
Yep :-)
 
Also, I hate finding files in Linux, I actually think windows does it better. :D
 
:D
@Vader howso? :D
does it better as in spends much more time to find them
 
2:26 PM
@Vader wow, I've never heard of someone liking windows search before
Not since Windows 98 or something
 
I'm happy as long as I have grep and fgrep
 
I am on Linux Mint right now. When I press the super key to launch the menu I can search for application and files.
A. It never finds the files
B. If I want to find the files I have to go to my file manager and search from root, which takes forever
C. Windows can search contents of files, e.g. .txt, .py or whatever you want
D. Windows search is super fast
 
that's because Windows indexes certain folders
 
I hate Windows search because of reason C, myself. "gotta find derp.txt, I'll just search for 'derp'..." and then I get one billion text files that contain the word "derp" in their contents, but not in their names
 
and when I'm searching for a program, I don't want web results or file system results
 
2:31 PM
@Kevin well you can turn it off if you don't want it I think
 
If I want to search files, I use the appropriate tool, if I want to search the web I have a browser
 
(Now someone will come in and say, "you dolt, you can restrict the Windows search to names only, and here's how", and thus my troubleshooting via trolling will be a success)
 
When does it give you web results? Isn't that Ubtunu?
 
try typing something into the search, and hit enter, and you'll get web results
 
@Kevin That method would be very effective in IRC
@JonClements in Windows?
 
2:32 PM
yes
 
8?
 
yes again
 
When I use 7, it does not give me web results.
 
might be an 8 thing then
 
Hmm, I wonder if I should put "Tkinter doesn't play nicely with threading, but the documentation never tells you that" in my regular "Tkinter grievances" file, or my "Tkinter documentation grievances" file.
 
2:34 PM
add it to your "Why am I still using tkinter?" list
 
Warning, completely rewritten answer alert: stackoverflow.com/a/28045889
 
user559633
I'd say both @Kevin
 
@Kevin you should write a definitive "Kevin rants about tkinter" as a sopython.com wiki :)
@MartijnPieters 404?
 
@Vader It's my niche. When I answer Tkinter posts, I'm competing with like three other users across the whole site, and half of them are in a different time zone, so I'm not even competing directly with them.
I can go browse the break room vending machine and still be the fastest gun.
 
@Kevin I find it funny that you have this whole thing figured out, : )
 
2:37 PM
Most users tend to have their niches.
Kevin's is Tkinter. Mine is matplotlib and a bit of pandas. davidism's is Flask and SQLAlchemy. DSM's is pandas and some other scipy stuff. Martijn's is...all of Python...
 
How come python tells me the exact place my code fails but java script only tells me what failed?
 
user559633
Because Python is a better language. Obviously.
 
Your js thing tells you that it failed? Luxury. I just get a blank screen.
 
SyntaxError: Unexpected token ( , thanks, very helpful
 
@Vader ahh... you're using KevinScript? :p
pleased to see @Kevin's got past - "oops"
 
2:41 PM
Yesterday I spent 20 minutes trying to figure out why my script wasn't running. (I had a i++1 instead of i+=1)
 
good job sir, good job :)
 
@Vader you are tlaking about JScript :D
 
Incidentally, KevinScript does not respond well to Syntax Errors. You usually get something like "shift-reduce conflict in row 23, column 42", and those coordinates refer to the parser's symbol table, not your file.
 
@AnttiHaapala yeah, not sure how many semicolons I need
 
2:43 PM
@Vader locate
install locate
 
is that a tool for JScript?
 
and use the terminal, the GUI is a hoax anyway
no, for finding files :d
 
terminal this terminal that, why am I do I even have a Desktop environment installed :P
 
for finding files with context, one uses grep
grep -r 'myfunction' **.py
it takes less time to enter the command than to find the search in windows :d
 
Windows search is just super key
 
2:47 PM
@Vader But yeah, depending on how you build your parser, it can be impossible to report an approximate line number for syntax errors. Ex. LALR parsers give very ambiguous reports, while recursive descent parsers do much better.
 
@Kevin yeah but at least it could report where the comma is
(btw that sounds an awful lot like mysql) :D
"#1064 - You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near ',' at line 1"
 
I think we can all agree that SQL is terrible.
 
I think SQL is amazing.
 
@Kevin: That I agree, but not only SQL, but MySQL too :D
 
@AnttiHaapala edits don't hide your true feelings
I saw your ninja edit :D
 
2:52 PM
grr
rbrb
 
I gtg too, bbl
 
@JonClements Initial edit of the link was incorrect, already fixed.
 
heya @Padraic - welcome
 
@JonClements mostly recovered from my sickness :-D
(if you remember that)
 
@RamchandraApte yup - glad you're feeling better - always sucks to be yucky
 
2:58 PM
Pedantic note: use —.
 
I stopped being officially sick last Friday. Not sure if I ever mentioned that.
I've been advised that I'll still have the cough for several more days, though. A little forget-me-not from the flu.
 
everyone - say hi to @Padraic - very active with some great answers on - didn't know the room existed until now apparently :)
 
Hey man
 
Welcome.
 
user559633
Oh hey and welcome @PadraicCunningham
 
user559633
3:02 PM
Also, it will probably improve your experience to read this: sopython.com/salad as we sometimes speak in a nonsense language made up of re-purposed words
 
@PadraicCunningham here ... Cool ... Welcome Sir ...
 
Eh, I didn't learn any of this salad non-sense; I'm able to extrapolate the meanings.
 
user559633
@RamchandraApte really, i'm happy for you.
 
I acknowledge the malevolent typist's typed response.
 
user559633
:]
 
3:06 PM
You can signal that you're part of the in-group by using their special lingo. Or you can signal that you're part of the in-group by conspicuously refusing to use their special lingo. Two sides of the same coin.
 
@Padraic you are allowed to talk you know? :)
cbg @davidism
 
cbg
 
tl;dr nobody cares whether you use the cabbage cabbage or not
 
DSM
Morning cabbage for all.
 
user559633
What if the coin lands on its side @Kevin what then? Side coin
 
3:07 PM
cbg @DSM
 
Assume a two sided polygon in a vacuum...
 
DSM
I call seven rotations followed by inexplicable hovering and hen noises.
 
Real-life coins are so impractical with their three dimensions
 
Two sided polygon?
 
DSM
He probably just means a line segment, and is trying to be all sophisticated.
 
3:08 PM
@DSM I don't think a line segment is a polygon. It's a degenerate polygon maybe.
 
Oops, I meant "polyhedron"
 
user559633
pythonhedron
 
@JonClements Most probably, he's out there helping some guy with his answer :)
 
user559633
Where is "out there?"
 
DSM
3:10 PM
@RamchandraApte: it was the degenerate case I'm thinking of. We're very much an F_1 kind of room.
 
@DSM I thought I got that reference, but it turned out to be from Dilbert rather than The Colo(u)r of Magic
 
F₁?
What's that?
 
Although I do think there's a scene where Rincewind correctly guesses the outcome of a flip twenty times in a row, due to being in a high-magic disaster zone
 
Hm.. the chance of guessing it right is 1 out of a million. That means if everybody in the world flipped a coin, ~7000 of them would get it right.
 
IIRC, Some of the guesses were "edge" and "coin becomes an egg"
So a little harder than one in a million ;-)
 
3:12 PM
harder than one in a million?
 
DSM
@RamchandraApte: the field with one element. Obscure math humour for the win!
 
Should I upload pictures to stackoverflow questions? Or wait to see if people ask. I have a questions regarding some xhr requests firefox makes and I'm not sure how to attach them
 
Ah, F₁ is field like Z or Q
 
@ReutSharabani I usually upload them right away
 
bye going to add more hours to my +600 hours in a FPS game
rbrd or whatever it is
 
3:17 PM
Rbrb
 
@JonClements thanks Jon ;) Hi everyone
 
Hi Padraic
 
user559633
I snooped on your profile @PadraicCunningham. Galway is an absolutely beautiful city.
 
@tristan thanks. It is a particularly cold city today!
 
@Padraic so yeah, this is the room - it's normally quite busy - some random talk goes on sometimes, but it's all fun - or we discuss Python and questions posted on the site and stuff... think you'll enjoy it ;)
 
3:27 PM
@JonClements, thanks , I am sure I will :)
 
@PadraicCunningham Wanted to ask you this question since the day I saw you on SO, What are you drinking/stirring in your profile pic?
 
We've got our own site at sopython.com - so we've got some wiki articles, and some common questions that can be used as references for dupe closures and stuff - might be worth a read - always looking for input into that kind of thing :)
 
user559633
I'm writing a generalized dashboard/status handler. I'm thinking about doing a fileglob from a directory of json files for each service/item and allowing json POSTs to update "status" (up/down/unknown state). Can anyone think of another really convenient data exchange format for python/shell/go/java?
 
DSM
People with ~40k rep should know the difference between comments and answers. #themoreyouknow
 
user559633
i'm thinking that because any popular language can easy generate valid json and then put it to disk or post it, it's a convenient approach
 
3:34 PM
cbg
do some of you use squirrel on linux ?
 
What to do for stackoverflow.com/q/28049316/3005188? It's a dupe of an earlier question where the OP forgot a bit of the problem.
Should it be closed as a dupe, and the OP told to edit his earlier problem?
 
Definitely make the OP aware that editing is possible
 
Quick, possibly obvious question: What's the failproof way to exclude a module from being built during a build? I've tried both leaving the module commented and uncommenting said module in Setup...but it doesn't seem to change whether or not it is built
 
I usually reserve dupe votes for targets that have an answer. Although you might handwave that away as semantics
 
3:40 PM
@Kevin the old problem has 2 answers for the old (very similar) problem.
Basically the OP forgot that he had a list in his dict he'd have to take care of.
 
@BhargavRao, that was in malaysia drinking watermelon.
 
Woah .. Malaysia truly Asia !!!
 
The problem gets deeper. An answered on his old question asked him to post a new question.
 
Right, my DB copying has been done, time to try a few things before dinner... rbrb for now
thanks for coming @Padraic - have fun! See you later
 
From a practical standpoint, I feel for the OP because he's unlikely to get further attention on an old post that already has replies.
 
3:42 PM
yep. been t to S.E Asia quite a few times,
 
I don't think he's trying to game the system or anything here, especially if one of the answerers prompted him
 
@JonClements, thanks chat to you in a bit.
 
(someone might want to explain the if @Padraic isn't familiar with it pls!?)
 
DSM
I think people have complained about the fact that "This question has been asked before and already has an answer" strictly rules out using it as a close reason for an exact duplicate of an unanswered question before, to no avail with the Powers That Be.
 
I think the powers that be, want you to answer the old question, and only then vote to close ;-)
 
DSM
3:45 PM
The Powers That Be can answer it their own darn selves if they're so sure it's easy..
 
3:57 PM
...surprisingly nothing on StackOverflow about excluding modules from being build during a build...
 
user559633
What do you mean?
 
I don't know what "build" means in the context of Python
That sounds like a term that would be used in compiled languages
 
when installing Python on a system that doesn't have a packaged install already
...so you have to go through wget, ./configure, make, make install
 
user559633
yes, if you install from source, you have to build it for the target os.
 
Right...looking to exclude a module from the "list" of modules to be built. But...I think I found an answer so disregard for the moment
 
user559633
4:00 PM
You don't want something from stdlib in your Python install?
 
Looks like what I thought was an answer, wasn't. Back to square one. And @tristan, I'm trying to exclude ctypes
 
user559633
haha okay, good luck with that plan
 
Crap.
I sense sarcasm
 
user559633
I was laying on the disinterest pretty thick, yes
 
Er...disinterest or sarcasm? I think those are two different things...
But, either way I assume excluding ctypes is not possible
 
4:03 PM
What if you completely deleted ctypes from your Python directory before packaging?
 
Or highly problematic
 
You can restore it once you're done.
 
Worth a shot @Kevin. Thanks.
 
4:21 PM
Hmmm. First time running make after removing dir the build progressed. Second time...after altering Setup...build wanted to compile ctypes...threw fatal error about dir not being found.
 
Have you looked at trying to cross-compile Python for embedded platforms?
 
Found some code in setup.py that may need to be tweaked to allow _ctypes to build properly, so I'll copy it back and go from there
 
Might be some clues in there
 
@IntrepidBrit - Good question...yes I did, and I've applied a few of the patches (manually, blech)
 
Welp, I'm going to duck out in case I get asked increasingly hard questions
 
@IntrepidBrit - no worries...I won't
 
Managed to cross-compile Python for arm once before, I have no desire to go back to that part of my life
xD
 
Heh
I'm building ON Android
Not cross-compiling
and I like to exhaust as many avenues as possible before asking for help. breaking stuff is all part of the fun
 
It's the only way to learn imho
 
4:26 PM
Exactly.
 
I was thinking of groupby for that Q but wasn't sure how to format it. I think DSM and Ashwini answered at the exact same time :P
 
I was writing a groupby solution as well :-D
 
DSM
I beat him by one second. :-)
 
I ended up with [list(v) for k,v in itertools.groupby(linelist, lambda x: x != "") if k]. Wish I had thought of using bool instead of lambda.
 
DSM
This is probably a dup, though. I'm sure I've answered similar groupby questions in the past.
 
4:32 PM
I wish you could have a context manager that would convert all generator (range, map, groupby, etc) objects into lists.
 
Splitting a sequence by unusual criteria is fairly common
 
So with simples: # do whatever you need to and don't worry about calling list on every bloody thing.
 
@DSM And me by 7 seconds
 
user2555451
You could make a context manager.
 
with do_what_I_mean: ...
 
DSM
4:33 PM
@BhargavRao: yeah, but you went in another direction, one which explains how to fix it, so that's good. I think lots of questions should have two answers: one which shows how to get the OP's approach to work, and another which shows the canonical way.
 
@iCodez I wouldn't know how to go about it, converting all generators to lists automagically.
If you can make one, I will give you my finest stallion.
 
user2555451
Eh, I'm bored now anyways. Gimme a sec. :)
 
@DSM No wonder I got upvote. I was afraid after seeing both your answers
 
Sounds like something that would require the darkyst magicks
 
DSM
.. hey, why did I get a DV on that answer?
 
4:35 PM
It was from a synesthete that didn't like the color of your post.
 
It was from a racist that didn't like you being Canadian.
 
Next time, try to type more strawberry and less cherry.
 
DSM
.. but it's the same colour as Ashwini's, I assume. (Not being synaesthetic myself, I can't tell if it's too spicy or too soft or whatever.)
 
I guess it is by mistake
 
DSM
Could be, but is probably by an antifan. I have a few.
 
4:37 PM
He will retract. Make sure you edit once
 
user559633
@DSM I just follow you around and downvote your answers so that you don't stop developing that lovely personality
 
DSM
Figures. Well, I'll show you: I'll delete it.
 
user2555451
@Ffisegydd - A crude implementation would be:
 
user2555451
>>> class as_list:
... def __init__(self, val):
... self.val = val
... def __enter__(self):
... return list(self.val)
... def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
... pass
...
>>> gen = (x for x in range(10))
>>> with as_list(gen) as mylist:
... type(mylist)
...
<class 'list'>
>>> gen = (x for x in range(10))
>>> with as_list(gen) as mylist:
... mylist
...
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
>>>
 
user2555451
Eh, excuse the formatting. I thought chat handled that.
 
4:40 PM
Chat can't have text and code in the same message.
 
user559633
@DSM were you talking about your list of sublist answer?
 
DSM
There, see? Even though that would have pushed me to 80k, I deleted it. Take that, downvoter! :P
 
user559633
what? no, i was about to vote it up because it was a solid answer :(
 
user2555451
Yea, my mistake. Still, you get the idea. You need to overload __enter__ and __exit__ on a class.
 
@iCodez ah yeah I knew how to do that, but I wanted some magic that would turn all generators into lists so I could do:
with magic:
    a = range(10) # a is now magically a list
    b = map(str, a) # b is now magically a list
Which is, I understand, insanely more difficult :P
 
DSM
4:46 PM
I think your magic is called "Python 2.7".
 
with the_one_true_python...
 
DSM
(Yeah, yeah, only range and map, not all generators. Still.)
 
user2555451
Sure, I'll just need a research team and five years. :P
 
@DSM Where's your answer? I refreshed the page and it magically disappered
 
DSM
@BhargavRao: I deleted it. Unless you have a certain level of rep -- 10k or 20k, can't remember -- you can't see deleted answers.
 
4:51 PM
I know ..
But why did you delete it?
 
It's 10k. And I'll be there soon!
 
@Ffisegydd actually, it might be possible by using something like pytest's monkeypatch module
also, slow down, I need to catch up first
 
user2555451
It's not as cool as you think. Your SO pages get cluttered with them.
 
@davidism btw nvm the question I'd asked => the proper way way to deal with such thing is through real DBs
 
@DSM You wasted one of my upvotes :(
 
4:52 PM
so I finally get the courage and started learning how SQLAlchemy is working
and IT IS AMAZING. just AMAZING.
 
you make a context manager that patches the builtins, wrapping them to return lists, then on exit you undo the patch
@Peter yes, sqlalchemy is great! And Flask-SQLAlchemy will manage the connections and sessions for you, so you don't even have to worry about that
 
wow.
well, atm I'm at the beginning of exploring how SQL is working, what it can do for me
but I think I couldn't find any better way to learn it, than through Python's native expressions via the SQLAlchemy's ORM
it is just brilliant.
 
user559633
@PeterVaro what materials are you using to read about it?
 
user559633
@davidism oh, i should probably use flask sqlalchemy then -- i'm currently just using sqlalchemy directly to return objects
 
the tutorials on SQLAlchemy
 
4:58 PM
fantastic - in the middle of another power cut
 
it is quite great => also on the site you can always switch to plain SQL mode
so you will understand what's going on under the hood
 
user559633
Ah, yeah. SQLAlchemy is pretty neat. I need to read the official documentation
 
The extension has a lot of fluff and leftovers, but they're slowly being fixed and phased out. It's main use as a session manager works fine though, very convenient.
 
what are the leftovers?
 
There's a really clunky change tracking mechanism that's not needed anymore due to improvements in SQLAlchemy's events. I have a huge PR waiting for review right now that simplifies and deprecates it.
 
5:03 PM
(btw @davidism use Recoll if you are not doing so already, because it is just amazing => a superb alternative to the OS X's fantastic Spotlight)
(it also has a daemon for realtime system indexing)
 
A lot of the internals are not easy to get at, so you're locked into using their base model, session, query object, etc. unless you do a bunch of non-obvious subclassing.
@PeterVaro I don't tend to do full text search. The most I need completion for is launching programs by name. I use Kupfer.
 
I use Alt+F2 (Application Finder) on XFCE for that
but when I need the wider search options Recoll is fantastic
 
I did improve the automatic table naming recently, it was pretty limited before.
 
I see -- are you using some sort of "screen-locking"?
it is using i3lock and scrot and creates a screenshot of your current screen, adds nice blur to it, and places it under i3lock
 
DSM
Aargh. Mysterious file called provlab_cleaned_20140829.txt, obviously generated by me as a preprocessing step, but I can't find the tool that generates it. :-(
 
5:08 PM
simple and elegant, and works on multiple displays too
 
@PeterVaro xscreensaver with rss-glx helios is the only way to go :)
 
that's way too complex and heavy for me :)
 
hyperspace is even neater, but it makes my gpu fan spin up a little
 
I finally build my new system => GTX 770 OC with 4GB of vram
it can do amazing things when it comes to real-time rendering
(also 32gigs of ram, 4cores i7 on 4GHz + 4 hyperthread)
 
wow I hate you
gimme
 
5:12 PM
:D
 
errr... I've shown you that before surely @Kevin? :p
 
Here I am with my dual core laptop
 
I used that a dual core laptop for over 5 years (nearly 6)
 
How much did your build cost you @PeterVaro?
 
so I feel your pain bro'
 
5:13 PM
@PeterVaro Damn, your cores are faster than mine :(
 
:)
the prices are in HUF :P
 
You have good taste in hardware, that's for sure
so $2k, not bad
 
thank you => and I also have two 27" widegamut monitors as well :)
 
@JonClements Shown me what?
 
(that's not listed there, because I already had those)
 
5:16 PM
@PeterVaro yes, good, keep piling it on
:D
 
:D:D:D
 
Make sure you properly cool your GPU.
I broke my old desktop GTX 580 with blender
it reached 120C
 
O.O
 
DSM
melty.
 
@DSM That is literally what happened to part of it.
 
5:22 PM
anywho -- I'm from work now
rhubarb(all)
 
byebye
 
Hi
 
howdy
 
Ï need the libcairo-2.dll file. But i cant find Bin releases of cairo who has it.
Can someone help me? :)
 
I can't, as I don't have Cairo.
 
5:34 PM
same here. but you can google libcairo-2.dll
 
DSM
Googling and reading the download page makes it seem like the easiest way to get it is to pull it from the GTK+ people, e.g. here. I'm assuming you've tried that and it failed?
 
THX!! Found it there.
 
user2555451
stackoverflow.com/q/28051728/2555451 - Questions like this really make me miss the "minimal understanding" close reason. :(
 
Oh, someone was just talking about SQLAlchemy. The autoload feature is amazing for "first-iteration" database stuff.
 
DSM
@Emyen: I'm not sure how you missed it. I literally googled the filename and then clicked on two links.
 
5:40 PM
@iCodez Doesn't help that people answer it. A comment is enough to answer that question
 
user2555451
Sadly, SO considers these questions on-topic these days. Answering them is technically legit.
 
Also cool is PyQt stuff like QSqlTableModel, that automatically loads ONLY the data you are looking at. You can browse HUGE tables that way.
 
@BhargavRao if you only think the op needs that, then why did you post an answer? Don't put weasel words in your answer.
 
Sorry Sir
 
Either you know, and you answer directly, or you don't answer
 
5:43 PM
FYI guys - especially ROs: I will be away from tomorrow morning - and not particularly active again until either late Thursday night/Friday morning
 
I am a bit poor in grammar
 
which is why I'm correcting you
@Jon planning the downfall of the Dark Council?
 
Yeah, thanks ... Even that space before ? ... Was of real help
Thanks again
 
@davidism nah - not yet :) - client meet up
 
user2555451
He's meeting with his client who will help destroy the Dark Council.
 
5:47 PM
About the whole "Dark Council" thing - we could have picked a less ominious sounding name, surely?
 
But without the Dark Council, who will keep down the electric car? Who will make Steve Gutenberg a star?
 
user2555451
Cabbage Council
 
user2555451
cbg
 
@iCodez exactly, and then using "cabbage" as the random word placement - we could do anything with that :)
 
5:49 PM
The Council for the Advancement of mumble mumble
 
user2555451
We'd also have the cool nickname CC. Or C2.
 
@iCodez did you check out the sopython.com/wiki and sopython.com/canon stuff yet?
 
Joel Spolsky on January 20, 2015

(Note: This is a cross post from Joel on Software).

Stack Exchange Raises $40m

Today Stack Exchange is pleased to announce that we have raised $40 million, mostly from Andreessen Horowitz.

Everybody wants to know what we’re going to do with all that money. First of all, of course we’re going to gold-plate the Aeron chairs in the office. Then we’re going to upgrade the game room, and we’re already sending lox platters to our highest-rep users.

But I’ll get into that in a minute. First, let me catch everyone up on what’s happening at Stack Exchange. …

 
user2555451
uh-oh, did I violate a sacred cabbage rule?
 
user2555451
also, no. I'll read them now.
 
5:51 PM
I should just add the blog to the room feed.
 
@davidism Your grammar is damn good but yet why low contribution on english.stackexchange?
 
@iCodez nope - no rules broken... just think with your experience on the tag, you might be interested in helping out with the canonical questions and wiki articles we have )
 
I don't feel like putting that much time into it.
 
But that lone answer rocked, If only I had an account there....
 
DSM
"Please send me a detailed process to create android app."
 
5:52 PM
@davidism Whys that ? runs and hides
 
user2555451
Those are some cool pages! I wish I would have known about the common questions sooner (I've been bookmarking SO posts so far).
 
@iCodez I added you to the approved users, you can add/edit pages now
 
user2555451
sweet, thanks!
 
+1 @davidism
 
user2555451
Hey, the CEPs are in order. If we truly wanted to follow the PEP style, we'd be jumping all over the place. :D
 
5:57 PM
Cabbage!
 
cbg @Fenikso - how ya been?
@iCodez so yeah... if you find anything that you think could be a good dupe target, add it to the list :)
 
@JonClements Bussy. I have finally answered the question how much RAM do I need to host Python powered web (and to an extend how much do I need to pay for it a year). You? Everybody?
 
user2555451
will do! Although you guys have already hit most of the big ones.
 

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