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user559633
02:45
@davidism I use gandi, yes. It's quite good. There's a lot of standard features -- whois guard, mail forwarding, etc. If you register a domain with AWS/route 53, you're actually using gandi (but you get fewer features).
user559633
You also actually own your domain with gandi, as opposed to godaddy, who retain rights to your property.
user559633
Unguarded recommendation for gandi as a registrar.
Cool, thanks. I don't really have a problem with Namecheap, I don't think they're evil either. They have whois guard and mail forwarding as well. They seem to trade off on which is cheaper.
Oh, they include whois guard? That's nice, namecheap charges extra for it.
user559633
No problem :) I haven't heard negative things about Namecheamp.
user559633
Yeah, it's included by default.
user559633
02:53
1000 mail forwards, 5 mailboxes if you care about that.
05:44
Yeah, I like gandi
Morning all
 
3 hours later…
09:07
Cabbage
Cabbage!
09:43
cabbage @joncle
good cabbage - how goes it?
Quiet in here today - seemed like just me an vaultah...
Very well thanks. I have a job for the foreseeable now, so things feel a bit more settled.
No doubt something will come along to unsettle that, but that's life
great to hear :)
yeah - I was pleased :) How are things for you? Keeping busy?
Always busy
sometimes productive though
What's the new job doing?
Cabbage!
@poke cbg! and good timing
hm?
oh the "hm?" is - what's the cleanest/advised way to clone a git archive, without it staying in git?
09:55
@JonClements lecturing Engineers about, well, engineering. And maths. Lots of maths.
@JonClements “without it staying in Git”? What do you mean by that?
I'd like to "checkout" the files
but have no working remains of a git repo left
So, you just want a snapshot of the current version?
yup - want the files - not the repo
Okay. Do you already have a local repository which you can work with, or is it just somewhere remote?
09:58
So I've pulled the repo, then checked it out to a local working directory which seems to do the trick
(as with everything git related - I'm not sure that's the most elegant/best approach)
Yeah, there are multiple ways. If you just clone the repository locally, you already get the freshest version checked out by default. if you then want to get rid of the Git history, you could just delete the .git folder.
If you have a local repository, and you just want to get a static copy, you could use git archive to create an archive of it.
And if you haven’t cloned anything, you could look if the remote repository hoster gives you an ability to download a static copy (e.g. GitHub, Bitbucket, and even gitweb allow you to do that).
Otherwise, if you just want a “throw-away” clone just for the purpose of getting the newest version, you could clone just a single revision using git clone <remote> --depth 1
Brilliant - thanks - got the search terms and ideas to move forward
:)
 
1 hour later…
11:25
0
A: The sum is always 15

CSᵠPython2powered by RegEx: 158 bytes Made in python with love and almost no math. Or Regex Math if you will, unary math. 'Real' math used only to 'fix' the last requirement: If the sum of the final vector is less than 15, then a number must be added at the end to make the sum go up. Codegol...

in pandas, how do I map/make easily a column that is the linear mapping of another column to a given range?
12:07
@AnttiHaapala example?
I have df['foo'] with values (300 ... 750), i want to map them to 0 .. 100 by (n - 300) / 4.5
Can you use pd.cut ?
(but automatcially)
pd.cut does classes (we do that too)
custom function and then .apply/.map then?
yeah that too but I mean something dummyautomatic :D
I guess there is none
12:13
the answer is no then :)
btw, stackoverflow.com/questions/16349389/… trying the first one here
or something similar, I get unsupported iterator index from the df['status'] = labels[df['status']]
1
Q: Panda-Column as index for numpy array

FooBarHow can I use a panda row as index for a numpy array? Say I have >>> grid = arange(10,20) >>> df = pd.DataFrame([0,1,1,5], columns=['i']) I would like to do >>> df['j'] = grid[df['i']] IndexError: unsupported iterator index What is a short and clean way to actually perform this operation? ...

ah found
@CSᵠ I thought the Sum is always 41..
Sum 41 is a Canadian rock band from Ajax, Ontario, Canada. The band was formed in 1996 and, as of 2015, consists of lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Deryck Whibley, co-lead guitarists Dave Baksh and Tom Thacker, bassist Cone McCaslin and drummer Frank Zummo. In 1999, the band signed an international record deal with Island Records. The band released their debut album, All Killer, No Filler in 2001. The band achieved mainstream success with their first single from the album, "Fat Lip", which reached number-one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart and remains the band's most successful single...
@PeterVaro 42
@JonClements the very last episode (S09E11) -- now that was something I've been missing for two seasons!
@Peter yeah, I enjoyed that one... but sighs
12:17
mmmhm "cannot reindex from duplicate axis"
but S09E10?
(the dumbest way to write out a character..)
Capaldi as the doctor should have been great - but the writing is beep
well.. I still think Capaldi is a bad actor.. (especially compared to Matt Smith or David Tenant)
but I've told you this when he first appeared as the Doctor..
Indeed... but I was willing to give good faith
Actor's great - writing's beep
@Peter have you watched Jessica Jones yet?
nope, but it is on my list!
I've heard vey good things about it..
12:22
put it on top - fantastic - I gave it a try, ended up watching the entire thing in almost one sprint
well, I think I have a pretty cool program for the holidays, don't I?
;)
I hope so :)
@JonClements let me make you some suggestions as well: Code of a Killer, Mr. Robot, Endeavour, Grantchester and The Knick
ty - on the list
How good was Heaven Sent
12:28
@P.Andrews 7.5/10
(10/10 compared to any episodes in the Capaldi era)
@JonClements oh, and Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell ofc
Yeah true, I found that some the plots are a bit stupid and aimed at a younger audience recently
I have no problem if it is aimed to the younger ones -- what I hate is dumb and inconsistent writing and poor acting
does anyone know c++?
I think a few million developers do :)
mmm
why is pandas so damn hard
12:37
@AnttiHaapala I thought you are humming because you wanted to say: "no one really knows C++.."
c++ is a pain to do sockets in
C++ is pain to do anything in it.
only if python was a compiled language
@P.Andrews Python is a compiled language, news at 9.
12:39
What cany you compile python scripts? How?
@P.Andrews you can always try Cython (though I'm not a huge fan of it, but still an option..)
I got no clue how to use it, where do you get the header files from?
@P.Andrews well, the question is: what do you mean, when you say compiled? I think AnttiHaapala was referring to byte-code compilation, which is a thing that our CPython interpreter does..
but there is also a Just-In-Time compiled implementation of Python..
Cython is compiled to binary for example, while putting static typing into the mix
you can also extend python with C or C++ via the Python C API -- so the question really is: why do you need a compiled language, as you call it?
Cᴀʙʙᴀɢᴇ
to you as well, dear sir!
12:44
because an exe that should be in the kilobytes is 20MB using py2exe
why do you have to distribute your software as an exe?
(this can be a valid scenario, I'm just curious)
hello
@P.Andrews Well py2exe doesn't give you a machine-native binary version of your Python script: it just packages the Python stuff up with an interpreter so people without Python installation can run it.
cbg @Kalisto
Its for my colleagues who do not have python as they have windows not linux or osx, plus all the imports can be a problem as many people dont even know what python is
12:48
@PeterVaro I think most users do not know how to run a python scripts (common users)
sure, sure, these are valid reasons! (that's why I asked)
maybe
did not mean to send that ^
How does cython works?
@P.Andrews you can do the other way around: not extend python via the Python C API, but embed python into your application! (docs.python.org/3.5/extending/embedding.html)
Compiles the pyc files ?
12:50
(you can control how large portion you want from the standard library, etc -- you can reduce the size if you want to!)
@Kalisto basically cython generates the C glue code for you, and then compiles the generated C file to a binary
(well this is pretty vague, but you get the point I guess)
Nice
Yes
Are there any easy socket library for c/c++, like the python socket library.
@Kalisto the only downsides are: you have to know another language (Cython is a superset of Python and you have to know Python, C and Cython as well) + generated code will never be as human-readable or even well-performed as a beautifully manually crafted one
But i less propense to have errors :P
fair enough :)
12:54
@P.Andrews have you checked github?
THough i have used sockets in c before, let me check
The ones i've seen I cannot understand
@PeterVaro wouldn't it better to translate pyc code to assembler directly?
I don't think that's as easy as it may sound!
like winsock, no clue what to do, I wish you could translate pyc to assembly
There are projects like pyastra
But they all pretty much discontinued
It must be like translate intermediate code of a compiler to final assembler
But idk
I am following appel's book for compilers in ML
:P
12:57
what do you guys think of lua
It’s not Python.
Its also amazing
So easy to code and you can generate proper binaries
@P.Andrews check github.com/jaibedi/sockets
I used it once to configre awesome wm
But i did not like it (the syntax is a pain in the ass xD=
Yeah I know does it work on windows?
lua?
13:01
sorry no the socket library <sys/socket.h>
I thought it was unix only
no
they're the unix libs
but you can use the precompiler if you want to make it multiplatform
Translating Python bytecode directly to machine code rather than doing it via C like Cython does would be painful. And if you expect that machine code to be more efficient due to direct translation, forget it. A good C compiler is generally better at producing efficient machine code than a human is, except for trivially small programs. But while we're dreaming, how about a chip that runs Python bytecode as its native machine code? :)
@PM2Ring Interesting idea
thanks
@PM2Ring someone already tryed with JVM bytecode and failed :P
13:04
@PM2Ring even for small programs, you can make it very efficient (both space and speed vise), if you consider using an alternative libc implementation, like musl
The bytecode itself will probably easy to implement in hardware. But the whole memory management won’t…
@poke oh please.. no cygwin..
@P.Andrews using the precompliler you can select wich code is going to be compiled depending on flags, you have to code the socket things with the unix and win32 libs and compile them separately
@PeterVaro It’s not my answer.
(I hate cygwin to death)
cygwin?
is that a compiler?
(i am not an english native speaker, as you can see xD)
13:06
@Kalisto no it's a terminal for Windows (Google is your friend :P)
Cygwin (/ˈsɪɡwɪn/ SIG-win) is a Unix-like environment and command-line interface for Microsoft Windows. Cygwin provides native integration of Windows-based applications, data, and other system resources with applications, software tools, and data of the Unix-like environment. Thus it is possible to launch Windows applications from the Cygwin environment, as well as to use Cygwin tools and applications within the Windows operating context. Cygwin consists of two parts: a dynamic-link library (DLL) as an API compatibility layer providing a substantial part of the POSIX API functionality, and ...
@poke I don't expect it'd be easy to make a chip that can work nicely with Python objects as its native datatype... but, hey, with the right microcode...
Is easier to ask (? :P
It’s a software… platform-thingy, that basically gives you a unix environment on Windows allowing you to compile native applications for Windows with Unix libraries.
@Kalisto it may be easier to ask but then you're taking up someone else's time to answer, rather than just your own :/
13:07
It’s the super lazy attempt at trying to get cross-platform compatibility for things that simply weren’t built for it.
I know, sorry :P
Java ftw! (???)
@poke Cygwin can be very handy. However, I understand why people think that it's an evil thing that should be killed with fire. :)
@Ffisegydd I think that argument will make me want to ask everything -- why spend my own time, when I could find idiots who will spend their times for me? :P:P:P
@PM2Ring Not saying that it’s not handy or bad. It’s just super lazy.
@Peter because we'll kick your question-asking-butt out of the room? :P
13:08
there is another temrinal emulator for win that is good
i cant remember its name
There's no questions allowed on a Question and Answer site, of course.
You probably mean MSYS, it’s the better kind.
Oh Javascript I love thee.
Sometimes I worry that asking questions, even trivial ones, is a natural and essential part of human interaction and shunting 99%* of queries off to an automated system is inadvertently robbing us of useful conversational flow
@Ffisegydd when did this room become so aggressive, huh? :P wanna fight?
13:09
(*replace this number with whatever you think it actually is)
Come at me, brah!
... But only sometimes.
@Kalisto That’s an entirely different thing to cygwin though.
is an eviroment too
But idk, i do not use windows.. :P
13:10
@poke Cygwin's bad when it doesn't quite behave the same way as a proper *nix environment does so you end up going around in circles playing with various quirky things to try and make it do what you want. And hoping that you haven't neglected some obscure corner case that will come back to bite you when you least expect it.
I thought it was the same
It's something of a pet peeve of mine. When it's something like "What is X?" it kinda gets on my nerves when that is really googleable (now if they'd searched for it, worked out what it was, and said "Yeah but why is it useful? What is it really used for? Whatever?" then that's a different matter)
Yeah that's a justifiable reaction. I don't think there's an easy solution for this perceived problem.
@Ffisegydd run for your life!
13:12
@Kalisto Cmder is actually just a software package around a powerful console host. It may look linux-y, but it’s actually just the standard cmd.exe that’s running in there by default.
/me asd
They should add that command
I wonder what day of the week you're least likely to get stars. Seems like Tuesday or Wednesday, but that's an assumption.
When Kevin’s around
Kevin The StarButcher
Well, Kevin included :)
13:15
Kevin?
Kevin.
You guys should really be tracking my star cycle, the bimonthly sinusoidal curve that predicts how funny I am on a particular day.
@Kalisto Kevin Kevinson, the father of the infamous KevinScript
Actually I think I'm in a nadir right now, so get those stars while the getting is good.
This sounds like a job for Kevin!
13:16
I've heard rumours of this mythical Kevin - does it exist?
Wow - that guy's brilliant - we should hold an RO election and get him on board!
@JonClements but what if he gain too much power..?
aren't you afraid? after all, we are talking about the Kevin here..
many, many stars?
> My god, Kevin is full of stars!
13:19
I wish we were actually talking about another Kevin.
how's so?
wait, wat? There's more than the "The True Kevin"?
Kevin Johansen (?)
Sep 24 at 15:24, by Kevin
We're all just four dimensional projections of the five dimensional ideal Kevin, that casts its baleful shadow on your universe.
@Kevin how great is he? just quoting himself, instead of retyping everything he ever said..
brilliant, just brilliant..
13:26
So, guys
Do you study/work?
(I am here to socialize(?))
btw, @Kevin are you up to a challenge?
Its actually 1AM im just trying to mess around with a buffer overflow
@Kalisto work work
oh here its 10 30 am :o
I study, at least pretend to
13:28
Where are you from @P.Andrews ?
Aus
you?
working here too
Argentina
Alo
Alo
Hello, I got an issue trying to install a python package called leven. I updated a post here: stackoverflow.com/questions/34061962/… but I've been stuck with the problem for 3 days now..Hope you guys can help
13:29
do you work in python @poke?
sorry @Alo i use linux :P
I don’t, I work with Microsoft technologies.
.net?
yeah
I really like c#
Alo
Alo
bummer @Kalisto
13:31
did you know that you can write a proper os in c# really easily using cosmos
no :o
i only used it using monodevelop
i always wanted to program a os from scratch
but its too big
nice!
I have made an OS, but from skeleton
NachOS
@PeterVaro Maybe later. Today is shaping up to be busy.
In the university
But lately with work and study i just want to grab my guitar and be a hippie
Not to program another thing
13:38
do you know that even linux is backdoored(through bad coding)
cabbage
yes @P.Andrews
probably openoffice is a backdoor
(and its multiplatform)
:P
@Kevin too bad.. anyway, ping me when you find time and interest in some adventures :)
13:39
You could mae big $$@ if you find these vulnerabilites, it is open source so it should be alright
Alo
Alo
ok so.. my question was put on hold because it is off-topic, unless it involves tools primarily for programming.. My question is about installing a Python package to continue a programming project. Can someone explain how is that not primarily related to programming?
its open source
but you always download the binary
:D
I am not a hacker, i do not know a thing about security :(
Alo
Alo
also, the error I'm getting is a c++ compilation error of a file called levenshtein_impl.h , if that's not mainly programming.. idk
Honestly hacking is the most fun you can have.
Yeah, but i am lazy
14:02
Morning cbg.
hi @MorganThrapp
Young Timmy's edited his question since it was mentioned here yesterday. It's even worse now. stackoverflow.com/questions/34049643/…
Hey, 4theye! Good to see you're still above water.
@BatScream Heya... I am safe as of now.
@PM2Ring But most people in Chennai are not :'(
Water level is till their hips/chests in many places
Hope Chennai recovers soon
I am moved to a hotel
I took my brother also with me
I bet it'll be a smelly mess when the water recedes.
:c I'm glad you're okay
14:09
Yup, but we can live with that I guess
One of my colleague's wife is due delivering a baby
She couldn't go to hospital and he doesn't have any juice left on his phone
We are actively searching for our colleagues
We havnt heard from many of them in the past two days.
That's what is disturbing
All the cliches of a disaster movie, in real life. Hope you stay safe!
90% of the places in Chennai have no electricity and over 30% of the places have water till their hip level.
Jeez, I'm sorry. I hope everything turns out okay!
Thanks guys. Even I am wishing that this will pass soon without much damages
People who wanted to leave Chennai also are stranded in the middle.
The thing which is more scary is there are snakes and other venomous creatures are there in the water.
:'(
14:15
Man, you really can't get a break. :/ Snakes and flooding.
I'll update tomorrow morning/evening/after-noon people. I'll go get my current roommates for food.
@MorganThrapp Snakes on a floodplain...
@PM2Ring I'm tired of these monkey fighting snakes on this monday to friday plane.
14:32
I hope Vignesh Kalai is ok, he hasn't been on SO for 22 hours.
Yesterday I saw a video of a plane being swept away in the Floods. :O
Floods can be pretty devastating. But people insist on doing stupid things that make the casualty & fatality counts even higher. :(
14:49
I really wish there was a sum but for multiplication. I can roll my own, but I need two imports just to do it. :/
Yeah, I saw that.
> Thanks, but no thanks;
Guido at his best
I hate to say that, but I agree with Guido
Wow, I have more rep than Guido
:D

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