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00:00 - 16:0018:00 - 00:00

00:10
I can't remember if "Object-Oriented Programming" is superior or inferior to "functional programming" on the whole hierarchy of python competency thing.
cause it depends on where you came from & are using python for
Is that a joke/meme?
Ie. CS and other science majors will learn functional first more often; while developers tend to learn OOP then Functional (if I take superior/inferior as "where would you be in your Python learning")
I have a low opinion of these questions that state an error message, for which the only answer is to repeat the error message.
"It says I can't multiply a function by a float. What's going on?" "Well, you can't multiply a function by a float." "Oh wow cool good info here's upvotes!"
I ran into a question like that earlier
I'm not quite sure what to do in those situations though...
00:17
You downvote.
I usually just ignore the answerer (if it is a low rep/seems like a new user) and just downvote the question (flag where appropriate) but this is 1k so downvoting the answerer seems appropriate
How is that question +3/-2?
If the answer at least had an actual solution, I would let it slide. Of course, the question doesn't have an MCVE, so an actual solution is not possible.
Complete guess but the OP is a college student, might get upvotes from classmates (I know some who do this)
@JGreenwell I was thinking in general; I remember seeing some sequence of them somewhere. I was operating under the presumption that it was contingent on the application being appropriate to the form.
So if you can as easily use a function as creating an object, which ought someone to use?
00:22
btw. LMAO at your profile picture TigerhawkT3
I guess that's possible, but the upvotes are probably coming from ordinary users who think like the asker and the answerer.
I assume function, but I suppose it's a bit of a weird thing to be making generalization about to start with.
659
Q: Python progression path - From apprentice to guru

MorlockI've been learning, working, and playing with Python for a year and a half now. As a biologist slowly making the turn to bio-informatics, this language has been at the very core of all the major contributions I have made in the lab. I more or less fell in love with the way Python permits me to ex...

4
You ought to use whichever makes more sense in your program.
You mean this one
00:23
@TigerhawkT3 I feel like there should be some canned closing criterion for "What it said on the tin."
@JGreenwell That is the thing I was thinking of; thanks!
I guess I could make a self-answer for a canonical "upvote and accept the interpreter's error message" dup, but it would feel silly.
Hm. Still. In fairness, I can see a lot of people writing off legitimate but poorly-written questions written by people who intend to ask after a solution, but improperly convey themselves.
People who ask, "How do I resolve this error?", but want to know, "Why is this error being thrown? What is the actual problem here?"
Not that it excuses a poorly-framed question, of course.
I would flag that guy's answer as NAA, but it would just be declined as "well, it's cruddy and useless, but it's still an answer."
I think that's legitimate. Rather, canned flags are simply inapplicable sometimes, and for certain bad answers, you just need to write your thoughts.
v( o_o )v
But I also dislike canned rationale for reason that it gets used sloppily fairly often.
Know what? I'm flagging it. That answer should be a comment, like "maybe it should be called? or return a float?".
00:35
Oh, I see.
No, I feel like he's answered the question properly.
It's just that the bulk of his short answer is an explanation of what we already know.
No, he mimicked the interpreter and then tossed out a couple guesses. That's not an answer.
If the answer is, "Oh hey yeah you gotta throw () after that shizz, brah!" and it resolves the problem, then where's the problem?
Did he? I'll take a look again.
He literally ends it with "(perhaps calling the function to obtain the desired value - I'm not sure what the intent is)."
Like, maybe the script needs an if to determine whether the first operand was a function, and if it is, then do some other processing. It's NAA.
00:39
I'll defer to you, because you've been working on this for longer than I have. XD
The question seems a bit of a mess, but I also haven't really scrutinized it.
Although it is curious: What do you do when a well-received question is actually asking something obvious?
I do exactly what I did here: downvote. If it has a dup, I hammer it.
Q: "`33/a` is throwing an error! Why?!"
A: "Sometimes `a` is zero, like the exception says. Add a check for falsey `a`s."
Actually that's too stupid an example.
Nevermind.
The other day, I nearly hammered an old question with hundreds of upvotes (if..else in a comprehension) because it was just a slightly more specific version of a question with thousands of upvotes (inline if..else).
True enough-- questions like that probably already have posts.
"Nearly?" What changed your mind?
And there's no "too stupid an example." I got a ton of rep for stating that 0 and -0 are the same thing.
00:44
Mercy?
Oh, I knew it would just be reopened and I would get a stern talking-to.
O, the politics of open help communities <3
Q: "Why was this edit declined?"
♦: "The wind. It was coming from the north. I've approved your edit."
If that many people think it's an awesome question, my unilateral closure decision would not go over well.
Yes, it took me four minutes to remember "unilateral." I shame famiry.
I'm closing the tab and putting it out of my mind. Not worth my time.
@TigerhawkT3 FIRST-ORDER STRATS.
00:53
First-order Strategy? Means it makes the overall better even if it negatively impacts the immediate
I've also heard it applied to something like: "using a strategy that gives the best ratio (least investment of resources when compared to return on investment) rather than one that gives the best return on investment"
The definition I know is that a first-order strategy is one that wins or draws in every situation.
A first-order optimal strategy is one which does so in the fewest operations.
....and a bunch of other stuff actually. Fricking business people cannot have a standard definition for something
Silly me. I didn't even think of the gaming definition
And formal logic situations be like, "lol, economics :y"
I made a game tree for tic-tac-toe during my undergraduacy.
I can't remember if tic-tac-toe has a winning FOS or a losing one, but I do seem to remember that the game is either strictly winnable or strictly unwinnable.
I assume my strategies that you're referring to are all of them.
There were some basic rules I applies to make life liveable.
Neither side is allowed to blunder.
01:01
Tic Tac Toe, played properly, can only end in a draw.
A blunder meaning failure to prevent a singly-preventable loss, or failure to commit an immediately-winning move.
Played properly by only one side, it will end in a win for that side.
@TigerhawkT3 Exactly.
There are no inescapable defeats.
if you know the tree
that is.
Which by extension, means there are no assured victories.
I did something similar in my undergrad (was the take 1,2,3 boxes until 1 is left - last one to take a box loses)
Mm.
I wonder what I ever did with the chart I made..
01:05
I don't know about this tree thing, but my TTT program has an undefeatable AI with 30 lines.
I mean, the hard AI function is 30 LoC. The whole program is bigger (Tkinter).
I found the chart and oh my hell, I wish I hadn't.
=_=;
I found my TTT program and it's filled with clear inline comments. :)
You should be nicer to future you.
Literally every statement is commented.
Past!me doesn't know a lot of the things that piss present!me off.
I didn't have the Time Ripper then. -_-
I was an idiot then.
(Don't tell past!me I said that, though, or she'll start smoking.)
In this whirlwind world, it's nice to know that some things stay the same.
Mm.
Past!me has entirely too many ways to take revenge on present!me.
It's possible future!me has been dropping dimes on present!me.
Sometimes, I think I should do something about it now, but I have a few rules about prevenge.
01:17
Grandfather Paradox and all that
cbg - quick question about a django problem.
I'm using a django server to do some CRUD operations and I'm using my ajax jquery to communicate with it. My html is within
the templates page, and it ajax's url:'/somePath',
but my views.py is not picking it up using a function called def somePath()
I can elaborate more on this, but I think the reproducable bug thing is quite hard with an entire server so I don't want to bother the entire chat room with it :/
01:33
of course that all depends on if time is based on time and effect or is a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey stuff
It's more like various "mes" across different divergeant timelines can all interfere with eachother, as long as they have a Time Grabber, because the Time Grabber is external to all timelines. It isn't really a paradox until we start screwing with eachothers' [access to the] Time Grabber. So we don't.
Oh, and as long as nobody tries to find out where the Time Grabber comes from. It really hates looking at itself. Like, reeeeeeaaaaally hates it.
Something about being a member of a set that isn't a member of itself, that is a member of a set of sets that are members of themselves. Because there is only one Time Grabber, and apparently it lost its membership card. It's pretty janky stuff.
That sounds like Douglas Adams
It's great for passing secret messages, though, like if I forget the CVN on the back of my card or something. :y
Well, I think I've now installed the Python package with the longest name. multidimensional_urlencode.
So you can parse webpages from different dimensions! Or, I guess, for different dimensions?
01:49
That sounds way more awesome.
It is until you need to know what version someone else has.
Also, I think I just found an error in one of Martjin Peter's answers. He forgot a comma. He's not infallible after all!
@MorganThrapp -watches the stars begin to blink out of the night sky-
To be fair, it's an answer about a super obscure part of an obscure PHP CRM. But I just never thought I'd get to have my name next to his like that. :D
02:01
That's an interesting bit of prestige. XD
02:21
evening
Evening? It's barely lunchtime.
03:21 here :P
18:25 here.
hmm
I'm past the ballmer's peak
gpomg tp s;ee[
going to sleep
Have a good one. :P
02:28
21:28 master race. :P
I doubt I will have
I'm not wondering or suggesting, I'm ordering. Have a pleasant sleep. Or else!
The point where you're drunk enough for a hangover, but not drunk enough to just don't care anymore.
hehe cya
 
2 hours later…
04:57
Cbg
05:08
cbg
05:18
sometimes I feel like I'm spending 80% of my time configuring an IDE rather than coding
@JGreenwell I just noticed that IntelliJ has a "Settings Repository" plugin, so it will sync your ide/project settings across installs
now you tell me ;)
I've gotten very proficient at repeating my config on new installs. All that skill will go to waste now.
I wish I could say that using Notepad++ meant I didn't have to worry about that, but there are still default language settings, tab settings, completion settings...
eh, my JetBrains is working well right now. Testing for new job interview requires Visual Studio (for both python & C#/ASP.Net) setups and now I'm changing everything based on how they want it.
05:38
@TigerhawkT3 is that a python hammer in your hand to pass python based verdicts?
It's not for passing verdicts. I smash dupes with it.
you look really happy with that hammer.
Happiness is a warm hammer.
Questions like this one:
0
Q: How do you count the total number of characters in a string of input? (Python 3)

zeurosisMy code so far is word = input() for elem in word: howMany = word.count('a') + word.count('b') + word.count('c') print(howMany) which only counts the number of "a"s, "b"s and "c"s in the string. I want to make it so it counts all characters in the string (which includes all letters, numb...

It's kind of funny that the answerers skipped the part about typing "+ word.count('_')" for every single possible character and started messing with collections.Counter.
Also I want the output to be just the total of all characters in the input..
They just saw .count() and buzzed in.
wh--
So all they need here is len?
But they got sidetracked by the individual-characters aspect?
That's a little embarrassing.
At least that answer can take comfort in the knowledge that it's thinking completely within the box. =_=;
05:58
And now the OP is saying the dup isn't applicable because it doesn't answer his question and uses the wrong version of Python (like len() is different between 2 and 3). I'm gonna love hearing the explanation for this one.
Wait, he says in a comment on the remaining Counter answer that he does just want the total length of the string.
OPs who ask a dup question, get their question accurately closed, and then pretend the closure is a false positive should get a suspension.
With 30 rep? I doubt he's pretending. I'm pretty sure he genuinely believes it's unique.
I think he's looking at the question about Counter that some random person (who didn't read the OP's question any better than anyone else except I) linked in a comment.
That sounds about right.
One of the answerers EDITED HIS QUESTION TO COPY THE DUP I LINKED AND GOT ACCEPTED.
I am beyond pissed now.
hue :v
New users. What can you do?
06:13
I am so angry that I am literally feeling lightheaded.
I'm going to make a meta thread about this shit right now.
why are you angry
So angry.
it's just the internet, nothing happened to you
I'm angry because someone asked a large, rambling question, and then a bunch of people did a shit job at reading it and started dumping out wrong answers, and then the OP complained that the bad link some random person dumped was not a good dup (of course it wasn't), and then one of the bad answerers changed their terrible answer to basically be a copy of the highly-rated dup I linked.
@TigerhawkT3 you need to chill out. 50%+ of your interaction with the room can't be rage at post quality.
06:18
@TigerhawkT3 you should know how to use that hammer well .. :P
I don't think it's 50%.
Over what time period?
Over the time period of 5 minutes ago, I'd guess it's 100%, but that's not a very good sample. :P
I was going to say yeah, over the past three or five hundred seconds, you don't look so good.
There are probably better places to vent, but it's not like there's anything going on here to disrupt, either, so..
This is the best place to find people who can feel your pain, though.
Where should I vent, then? Nowhere? Because I can't just not care about people dumping garbage, complaining when I try to clean it up, and then getting rewarded for it. I can't do it. If my curation efforts are useless and I can't even talk about it, then I won't curate at all. I can't handle that.
06:22
"There's nothing else going on" is not a justification. It's ok if the room is quiet. This isn't really a discussion, I'm telling you not to whine about posts so much. If you can't handle it, it's time to take a break.
@TigerhawkT3 For what it's worth, I don't think you're off base. v( o_o )v
@davidism Me, or Tiger?
both of you now
Pff. I wasn't justifying anything.
Anyway, if you're telling me to shut up, I can do that, too. :y
@davidism Which is better, a glass Flask or a plastic Flask ;)
A Python Flask.
06:25
so is it a really teeny-teeny python or a humongous flask?
It scales.
HYEH YEK YEK.
@davidism Can you suggest a room where I can discuss these topics?
06:28
I'm kind of surprised there isn't a lounge or something more sophisticated than Trash Can.
Well, not 'surprised', exactly. What's the word? That mild feeling that raises one, but not both, eyebrows..

SO Close Vote Reviewers

This room is for support and discussion about reviewing and co...
maybe try $ cat and type your message into that chat room
Thank you; I'll use that in future.
They'll get just as tired of it if you go at it with the regularity and zeal you do here, but at least it's specifically on topic there.
06:40
I'm not sure if I should defend the quality of my chat presence here or if that would be considered complaining/whining... =\
Not gonna lie-- Resisting the urge to chime in is taking a lot of restraint over here, too. =_=;
does any one know if this setup works for dual monitor setup ? HDMI to VGA plugged into vga splitter HDMI TO VGA and VGA splitter
i have two monitors that only supports VGA and one HDMI port in my laptop
@someone welcome, what does that have to do with Python?
Wait, if that room will get just as tired of me as this one... what's the difference?
Never mind.
@davidism well it's about setting up your workstation so it does relate to python somehow
:)
i'm asking this because i'm sure programmers have setup similar to this
06:45
Please ask Python questions in the Python room.
@TigerhawkT3 Many hands make light work? :/ Divide your time? Iunno..
thank you
07:01
I've been watching a good bit of YouTube lately. This means YouTube ads.
There is an ad for Red Lobster. When I see it, I get such a craving for shrimp you would not imagine.
I have Yt ads blocked. Every so often, though, Opera will misbehave, and I'll hop over to iexplore or something to listen to music with that.
And then come the ads.
And I remember why I miss them, and why I block them.
I don't have a ad blocker installed because i don't find the YT ads too annoying.
The cheddar biscuits and the cheese and the butter and the grilled veggies and the high definition crustaceans...
I tried some adblock plugin a while ago, but the first thing it did was pop up a nag screen trying to guilt trip me into paying for it. I immediately unplugged it.
ublock origin is the latest and greatest nowadays
I don't really notice a difference from adblock plus
07:12
Plus, there's these Capital One ads with Jennifer Garner in them, and I somehow can't get mad at those ads.
some ads are pretty interesting
nike's most watched/successful youtube ad
and there are all the doritos commercials
It can't be an accident that the Nike ad's thumbnail is that particular frame.
07:29
Marketeers are never unintentional when it comes to unclad women.
Does it... does it have unclad women?
Two Dollar Bills is good too, it inspired me to try it
everybody loves getting a two dollar bill
What kind of printer is he using in "Two Dollar Bills" that immediately prints everything he types? Kinda weird. He can't even go back to fix his typos.
07:41
@TigerhawkT3 A... pen?
(Didn't watch. <3 )
@Augusta Ha, it's like the "Space Jam works with any mashup": youtube.com/results?search_query=space+jam+mashup
You should watch at least a few moments. It's some kind of wacky printer with a keyboard right on it that automatically prints each character as he types it.
Space Jam, Guile's Theme, Fresh Prince
I bet I could clear this room by linking Freaky Forest.
I just found out you can't have a set inside a set because it can't be hashed.
07:48
frozenset
oh right, my python's pretty rusty
but actually a list would be fine also, I just used a set because the values are unique
nvm actually i made a mistake and so there's a set containing a single set (when it should just be a set containing my items)
Time for some garlic butter lobster dinner!
And by garlic butter lobster I mean Top Ramen.
08:29
Okay, I'm not comfortable closing this as a duplicate of Isn't “Max retires exceed with url errno 10013 or 10060” a bug of multiprocessing.dummy library? [on hold]. Still, the code is too long to be a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example and this question is as off-topic as the previous one. — vaultah 3 mins ago
What do you think?
08:48
Hey guys! I have a question about relative imports because I couldn't seem to find anything out there.
package/
__init__.py
main.py
foo/
__init__.py
foofirst.py
foosecond.py
bar/
__init__.py
barfirst.py
barsecond.py
In barfirst.py
from ..foo.foofirst import Class
this gives me Parent module '' not loaded, cannot perform relative import error
81
Q: Relative imports in Python 3

John Smith OptionalI want to import a function from another file in the same directory. Sometimes it works for me with from .mymodule import myfunction but sometimes I get a SystemError: Parent module '' not loaded, cannot perform relative import Sometimes it works with from mymodule import myfunction, but ...

Why is that?
thanks
09:49
Is there a thing in ConfigParser that lets you write interpolation values?
For instance, if I have two options with value "Mama Luigi", and I want them both to point to an interpolation key _spaghetti = "Mama Luigi", is there some way I can put that back into a ConfigParser object?
Hm, I wonder if it takes them as regular strings, as well..
10:37
Oh. Yeah. Duh. Ha ha.
10:54
Cbg :)
 
1 hour later…
12:13
Just read a funny comment thread along the lines of "thanks for your answer, but it's still not producing the right result" - "you should accept this answer."
12:39
Hello everyone...
12:55
Cabbage. FWIW, I disappeared suddenly last night due to a blackout.
@TigerhawkT3 Oh dear.
Pro tip: stop drinking before you black out.
Not that kind of black out. :) FWIW, it's very rare for me to drink alcohol.
*chortle of intentional misunderstanding*
13:15
Is this not spam?
Looks to me like an ad for the software/service it refers to.
I wouldn't flag that as spam.
It's awful though.
I guess I connected the "we" in "yes we can" to the terrible English and figured "spammer."
Since my flag on it was declined, should I flag it as VLQ?
Flagging things as spam carries a massive penalty to the user, so you have to be really sure.
Downvote and move on with your life.
Ok. Wasn't sure what to do with it.
Your sarcastic comment here doesn't really help at all.
13:22
LOL IT WAS ACCEPTED
Why so shocked? It answered the question, whether it was bad or not.
It did?
Both the question and answer look like a coordinated ad/spam.
"how can is we am do this?" "yes we can, with fine produt X!"
There's no need to mock people for their use of English, it's inappropriate.
My intent wasn't to mock it; it looked like spam. Spam is intentionally bad English.
No it's not. Spam is unsolicited messages that typically advertise some product.
13:27
I thought that's what it was. Usually such messages have poor English, intended to weed out the more savvy folks.
The fact that they can have poor English does not define them as spam.
It was that, and the tone, and the fact that it was basically just "search for X."
What defines them as spam (in the context of SO) is someone writing some content just to specifically advertise their product.
It was a bad question, and a bad answer, but I really doubt it was spam.
Again, I thought that's what it was. In fact, it still looks like spam to me.
Maybe I'm a cynical old coot.
I think you are. For starters, the "product" is actually an open source product.
13:29
/sigh
So it's not as if they'd be making mad cash from spamming their free product
This day has gone on long enough. I'm gonna just call it a night.
13:41
This question needs attention.

http://stackoverflow.com/q/33855316/939986
Assume I have this: [([3.584, 3.717, 3.772], 1), ([3.407, 3.677, 3.724], -1)]. How can I count the minimum 3 numbers' label from the given array of lists so that I can return the max(label_count)? For instance the example will return minimum 3, as 3.407 from -1, 3.584 from 1, and 3.677 from -1, then after counting labels, count(label:-1)=2 and count(label:1)=1, the expected will be -1? I can do this with ugly for loops but I wanna know whether there is a better Pythonic way to do this?
@Burak Why don't you post this as question?
@SantoshKumar where it goes when you ctrl + left click on the exec and exec_ func? It's upto your ide.
@AvinashRaj I will if I still struggle to find an elegant way to do this, just asked if I'm missing an easy way to do this as still I don't have the enough Pythonic skills.
14:00
@Burak Is the data always like that list, or is it just a compact example? In particular, are those labels only ever 1 or -1?
14:11
raw wsgi vs framework. Any suggestions
wsgi framework
Reason??
@Burak It can be done with 3 loops, but you can make them fairly compact by using a list comprehension &/or generator expression. Let n be the number of minimum elements you want to test the labels of, so for your example n=3. Use a list comp to create a list of (data, label) tuples, sort that list, extract the first n elements, and sum their labels. Like this:
a = [([3.584, 3.717, 3.772], 1), ([3.407, 3.677, 3.724], -1)]
n = 3
b = [(v, lbl) for seq, lbl in a for v in seq]
b.sort()
s = sum(zip(*b[:n])[1])
print 1 if s>0 else -1 if s<0 else 0
Or if you want a hard-to-read one-liner:
s = sum(zip(*sorted((v, lbl) for seq, lbl in a for v in seq)[:n])[1])
@PM2Ring its just an example, and the labels may change, I've solved this with creating dictionary then assigning labels and values, then ordered by the values of the dictionaries, got the first 3 items, then got the most common of labels. However, your solution is much better than mine, thanks.
14:26
Here's an alternative that doesn't use that inscrutable zip(*) trick. :)
s = sum(v[1] for v in b[:n])
@Burak Oh, ok. If the labels may change then my sum thing won't work so well.
@WEBDEVPR because frameworks make you more productive
@PM2Ring just chaned that -1, 1 line as controlling the possible labels(already have that information) then it was fine, thanks again.
If you have several labels then the easiest way to find the most common one is to use collections.Counter. Here's a simple example:
print Counter('1223334444555667').most_common(1)
which outputs [('4', 4)]
14:41
@PM2Ring yeah I've already used it :)
Cool. :)
@SantoshKumar I realise it's after the fact now, and you've already deleted your question, but please don't just join and post a new question saying "Here look at this". It's against our room rules and more importantly is simply rude.
We typically ask that people leave a question for at least a day before posting it here.
Cabbage
@thefourtheye Wow, two downvotes for that is harsh.
Cabbage @poke :-) Its kind of expected in a question like that I guess :D
15:00
It’s even more weird that I do get upvotes now.
I only wanted to post something so OP doesn’t rage-quit completely…
Hey guys cbg! :)
I have a Python problem I need help with - it's not really as much of a Python problem as it is a deployment problem. I want to use Python and NLTK in a work project - usually we use Python for automating little tasks but I want to get it used in production here.
We're using Azure for hosting our cloud stuff (although I'd consider alternatives). We have the code running locally on our computer and I want to get a "production" environment with Python running. I haven't done that in years since all my Python is either automation or research.
Anyone feels like sharing their deployment experience? Bonus for NLTK
I actually have no idea what you are trying to do :/
Yeah what exactly are you trying to do? Have automated production servers set up?
Is it a web app? Are you using any particular frameworks?
Do you just want to replicate your production environment locally, or what?
I have code (in nltk, that does language processing), I want to deploy it to a server.
So other code can talk to it, no matter how - can be http
I don't have a Python production environment - that's what I'm trying to convince the people here to do.
15:32
rhubarb
@Ffisegydd I was just trying to seek attention. If not on StackOverflow, then where would I post link to seek attention? chatrooms here are my first priority. Then after comes the social media.
@SantoshKumar I don't know where you should go to seek immediate attention for your posts, some chatrooms may well allow you to, but please don't do it here in the Python room.
@SantoshKumar The room has pretty clear rules in sopython.com/chatroom - please do take the time to read them.
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