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user559633
14:00
:] let me know if it doesn't work and i'll play along
The site that must not be named suggested using the center attribute, which works but it's an attribute and not a style and that annoys me
I'm pleased to see text-align does what I want, and doesn't require me mucking around with JS
user559633
:] i spent about 2 weeks doing CSS in november, which is more weeks of it than i wish on anyone in here
I just need to render a table as a simple grid for the Friday project.
A little border-collapse, a little min-width, and we're good
14:12
When I have a tricky CSS question I ask Tab Atkins Jr, who wrote the CSS Syntax spec. He's a regular on the xkcd forums, with username Xanthir. Here's a typical post from him.
Ah! 10 min period collapsed on that ques!
user559633
man, those are some strong opinions on css
Well, he's thorough and made a Big Lebowski reference, so he seems p. cool
Here's a nifty little password generator he wrote in JavaScript. I must admit that the lack of <html>, <head> and <body> tags is a bit disconcerting, but if a member of the W3C does it, I guess it must be ok. :)
14:21
@JonClements I could have answered that
there is exactly enough information :D
In JS why do they sometimes do x = +d rather than just x = d? Does + do something special?
The reason is that variable.split() will only return non-empty strings, whereas variable.split(' ') will create a list of n + 1 strings for a string that has n spaces; if you have 2 consecutive spaces, you will get an empty string '' and that will lead to ValueError. — Antti Haapala 27 secs ago
@Ffisegydd yes
@Ffisegydd +a is "coerce to number"
Ah! Bloody weak typing.
That...answers a lot of problems I had.
Obligatory link to the page explaining how to use simple addition to get "NaN23"
Or at least there would be a link there, if I had one :<
Fizzy, wanted to speak to you about the pinned post on the right ---> Are there any qualifications?
14:22
I removed it a while back and then suddenly everything was a string, I ended up using parseInt instead.
'' + (+{}) + 2 + 3
@Ffisegydd Yes. It forces d to be an integer instead of a string.
Might have been "23NaN", if that makes your life easier.
@Bhargav not particularly. An interest in data visualisation and the willingness to learn/contribute I suppose?
'' + (+{}) + 2 + 3
"NaN23"
I had done a project on data visualization. Visualizing the LAK dataset
14:24
@Ffisegydd It's a bloody stupid idiom, but it's very common; I guess it's faster (and shorter) than doing a function call.
Arhghgh... what's the name of the pandas function that gives you a summary of the dataframe?
summary?
Ahh... describe
Ah Kk. For a second I thought you meant head.
@Ffisegydd My compromise: x = 0 + d. It's not much better, but it's a little more explicit.
14:29
Fizzy, Are you entering the competition? (I am confused, I like Data Viz, it is my topic for Summer Research Project)
@Bhargav I may enter yeah.
All the best. (If there is need for any guy to fill the void, if any, please tell me)
Emailed the Environment Agency to a generic "contact-us" email with a question about their API. Had no hope that they'd actually reply. Not only did they reply within 2 days but they'd contacted other people within the agency and had an actual detailed answer for me. Very impressed.
spree killing in US
:-(
14:34
missouri
Rbrb guys, have a good weekend
@RobertGrant Rbrb
@Ffisegydd Nice
They even offered to search for extra historic data that isn't available via their API.
cabbage
14:46
Cbg
@BhargavRao you pinged?
about my post being not indented properly?
Yep! But it was edited, so deleted
tried to FGITW that
That was too fast, I had typed the same half way in my interpreter
Check out the paths in my edit: stackoverflow.com/posts/28761379/revisions. Making SO a happier place! :)
14:54
@davidism nice :P
His user name is the english version of yam?
How strange!
at least there was a question hiding there
@AnttiHaapala Your FGITW, 7 upv, Will reach 10 soon and you get two more badges :)
15:05
buh :| having OAuth problems here... again
Have you noticed that OAuth doesn't seem to really standardize anything? Every site seems to do it a bit different anyway.
Are you using an OAuth library?
Man, do I really have to implement my own version of random.choose in js :-I
@davidism yes, but it's in javascript, and seems to abstract a lot of the details away
@Kevin random.choice(['yes', 'no'])
15:12
which is good, until I had to change the redirect uri
@Kevin there isn't even really a random_int in JS
stackoverflow.com/questions/28767977/… answered this question, and then suggested:
0
Q: VBA Offsett in Python

ShalafisterI would like to add the returns of a json to excel cell by cell, like 2003-1 2003-2 2003-3 2003-4 2003-5 2003-6 2003-7 2003-8 2003-9 .... number number number number number number number number number .... Here is my code, but as can be understood it only pastes to the first ce...

if they would have done tag-based matching, it could have found a better match...
Well, do you want to answer more? :-P
I am not sure
could still take 11 upvotes
@davidism re. your answer in Rotating Knives. I wouldn't even engage/reply.
Marty's answer tells me that I should answer like in a blog.
15:22
125 rep already
it seems that friday is good for rep
135
Congrats! I opened my account today with an upvote on a two month old answer The OP had tanked me!
Done
Was "Hmmm, the downvote mob has just arrived" the main reason you've made changes to the rules?
That comment, That day!
15:34
@61612 Do you mean the room's recent "wait ten minutes before closing" rule? Yeah, IIRC the main motivation is to improve the appearance of fairness
"fairness"
meh this is bizarre... requesting permissions, getting them in the prompt, but they're not added to the json :\
Hey should I flag this? One of my comments like this was flagged! --- stackoverflow.com/questions/28768641/…
I like to think we were plenty fair before, but if waiting 600 seconds makes the guys on the receiving end happier, then it's not too dire of a burden for us
Indeed, I think the vast majority of the time we were perfectly fair.
15:36
It also prevents a flood of links to the room, since many bad things will be closed or fixed within 10 minutes without a link from here.
It's just the occasional time where we closed a Q, the OP then edited it to make it re-openable, but we didn't stick around to re-open.
Sounds like bad design. I would do a main function then for command line usage, it really is not a good idea to make a function do something completely different just because __name__ == '__main__'Antti Haapala 12 secs ago
sigh :D
This gives the OP 10 minutes to edit/receive comments/etc.
@Ffisegydd Yeah, "it makes us less likely to close prematurely" is a close second
15:39
what we should do is a queue
But appearing fair is more important than being fair ;-D
soemthing that will check the queue for reopen cands
Maybe scan for posts that a room regular voted to close, which had an edit by OP afterwards
@AnttiHaapala I have plans. A bot that lets me tag things as "check in 10 minutes if I still need to link this", as well as tracking if edits are made to reopen.
yeah that good too
15:41
Seems like a good RABBIT feature, assuming it doesn't flood us with pls-reopens. I guess it depends on how often OPs actually edit after a close
Now all I need is some time to work on my se api wrapper.
because: I just answered 1 question that gave me 8 upvotes, and was fun...
it took less time than 1 crappy question and tracking whether or not to close it and trying to understand it
Yeah, there's a lot of overhead involved in playing nice with close votes, which I hope to address.
Then we can focus on answering good questions.
@AnttiHaapala Not much I can say there other than what James Kent already said. configure is the method the OP wants.
I would write up a working implementation, if only OP had provided an MCVE.
0
Q: How to install libxml2 2.9.0 for lxml for Python 3.4.3 on win 7 64?

foosionI'm using lxml 3.4.2 for Python 3.4 on a win 7 64 computer. I got lxml from http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#lxml. One of its parts is libxml2 2.9.2. I'm having a problem that a user of lxml 3.4.2 with libxml2 2.9.0 is not having, so I'd like to try libxml2 2.9.0, but can't figure out ...

windows users?
15:52
Umm... FB is recommending a friend's hamster as a friend... Why the hell has my friend created a FB account for his hamster?
@MartijnPieters done
@AnttiHaapala I was going to check for md5s digest output too; you already have my upvote.
I am on FGITW mood today
@AnttiHaapala in a FGITW mood or on FGITW form. Pick one!
Ahh why the -1 ? :( — Illusionist 1 min ago
"Because that's not valid Python."
15:57
in a FGITW mood
to my defense, during my whole life I have spent less than 4 weeks in total in any English-speaking country, so sometimes these mistakes happen.
@davidism someone upvoted that...
yeah, that's why I posted it here, I would have just left it otherwise
omg
yeah the "oh poor user, lets upvote"
@AnttiHaapala: why did you remove the .decode('ascii') again?
@MartijnPieters added it back :d
noticed i was testing in python 2.7
some day I will uninstall python 2.7
16:02
>>> from hashlib import md5
>>> md5(b'foo').hexdigest()
'acbd18db4cc2f85cedef654fccc4a4d8'
>>> from binascii import hexlify
>>> hexlify(md5(b'foo').digest())
b'acbd18db4cc2f85cedef654fccc4a4d8'
roight.
i was like "oh it does produce str" :D
yeah.. .:(
@MartijnPieters aww, I was just about to update my answer with the same thing
@davidism is the Ninja being mean? :)
stackoverflow.com/questions/28769357/… offtopicish but this is a common need...
could write the last paragraphs to better just ask "how can I rollback all the changes in teardown"
16:20
@MartijnPieters I feel like we've gone too far with that ping :)
you also might want to handle stderr as well, just in case
and DEVNULL is python 3.3+ :(
@davidism keep up! My answer already covers that! :-P
16:49
Do I really have to write my own array.count method in js :-I
@davidism: the OP accepted both answers. Yours won!
17:06
Okay, I think I have a legitimate reason to call in the mob :-) This accepted answer to a basic but legitimate question is terrible, but has a ridiculous number of upvotes. This answer on the other hand is very good. We can't do anything about the accept, but maybe we can redress the balance a little ...
Oh and cbg by the way :-)
I don't know, that answer is about as good as the question.
There's nothing wrong about it either: that's how you raise an exception.
Actually, now that I look at it again, the other answer gives the same basic advice at the top, but in a much better form.
So yeah, go for it everyone.
cbg
woohoo
I just went to eat dinner
It's been viewed 207161 times, and the accepted answer, while technically correct, is terrible advice. Obviously the Q doesn't show any research effort, but it isn't close- or deleteworthy.
when I got back, I have now 200 :D
it took less than 1 hour
Yeah, for being so visible, that should not be the top answer.
17:12
ah we could delete that answer :D
<g>
Very tempted to edit the answer with a big fat bold DON'T DO THIS - READ THE OTHER ANSWER INSTEAD.
@AnttiHaapala can't see a delete reason - it is an answer after all.
I was just being eval() there :P
I think the strikethrough is under-utilized in answers
whenever giving an example of something that is incorrect, I think it is best to show very clearly.
17:20
-4
A: Manually raising (throwing) an exception in Python

thanosBTW You can throw any object >>> for exc in "String Error", Exception("Real Exception"): ... try: ... raise exc ... except Exception,e : ... print "Caught:", e ... except: ... import traceback ... traceback.print_exc() ... Traceback (m...

ah this gem: "it is possible to throw any object: see for example here how I raise a str"
NO.... LEONARD NIMOY HAS DIED :((((((((((((((((((((((
@ZeroPiraeus maybe tone down the "see other" part of the message: "see the other answer which describes the correct way to do this"
@Jon ;_; oh no
end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
@davidism feel free if you like. I'd rather not ping answerer twice myself by editing again; don't want to antagonise them more than necessary.
@JonClements Boldly gone :-( He both lived long and prospered, though :-)
17:25
There is now an article on the leading Finnish newspaper how the whole faculty @ department of psychology at uni Helsinki spent the day thinking about the colour perception in a certain photo of a certain dress...
It's dumb. There is no mystery here. That optical illusion has been around forever.
user559633
Wow, schools are really bad in Finland
no, they say it is not that kind of an optical illusion
Today's big news: colour balance is a thing.
Augh, I got burned so bad by js. Spent half an hour trying to debug this function until I discover that "" == 0 is true
17:28
@JonClements This has ruined my day.
@ZeroPiraeus it is not about colour balance but perception
oh yeah, I've seen that picture. don't know what's the problem with it, though
bc ppl are very sure the damned dress is white and gold
@Adam sorry... although... misery likes company - I'm somewhat gutted :(
can't you..measure it?
or holt it under different light?
*hold
17:29
People just have crappy monitors, and it's a bad photo. The real way to solve it is to just look at the yammed dress IRL.
is it some optical illusion?
@ZeroPiraeus you didn't read then: there were some photographers who said:
@Carsten It's either an overexposed blue and purple (right?) dress, or a white and gold dress with a strong shadow on it.
"the fact that this dress, which is by the way in white-gold, looks like blue-black to someone is blablabla"
I couldn't see the white no matter how hard I tried, viewing it at home or work, in the dark or in the light.
17:30
@JonClements Spock's usual oath seems a little disingenuous here, but live long and prosper Mr. Nimoy.
Then, after having forgot about it for an hour, I tabbed over to it and OH SWEET JESUS suddenly it was white
DSM
DSM
It-looks-white-gold-to-me cabbage for all.
... And then became blue after I looked again.
@AdamSmith Yeah. Both possible. I'd guess the darker one because that image is highly over-exposed
@AnttiHaapala It's absolutely about colour balance. The dress is blue, but the photo makes it look white because it's a bad photo. Perception doesn't come into it - the photo makes it look white/gold, but it isn't, because it's a bad photo. Did I mention that it's a bad photo?
17:31
paint.net says it's #889ABE and #605132
@Kevin however "" === 0 is false
@Carsten turn off the lights and paint.net says it's #000000
@ZeroPiraeus I mean, there was an article on 2 photoshop guys one of which explained that the dress is blue-black, and the other that it is white-gold
comeon js 101 here
For the Kingdom Hearts fans: Leonard Nimoy as the best villain
17:32
@JonClements Here's to you Mr Nimoy. o7
@ZeroPiraeus I can't, and I haven't seen it as white-gold, even if I try.
@Antti you're weird :-P
dang thats aweful... Leonard Nimoy RIP
you know, I was thinking I should watch some Trek... after a looong time
@AnttiHaapala For the last eighteen hours I really thought this was an elaborate troll.
But now I think it's an optical illusion with an extremely challenging "cross over" point
17:34
2 minutes later joncle says Nimoy's dead.
@JoranBeasley Yeah, the solution is simple, just took me a while to realize
... And now my code is broken, but in the opposite direction.
It was outputting 18 when I expected 2, now it's outputting 0
DSM
DSM
Fascinating.
console.log(2)
problem solved
Suddenly I see the merit in not using callbacks everywhere. It's so your debugger can actually figure out what you're doing.
user559633
17:39
s/your debugger/you/
The little "this is where your current line is" arrow sees me using forEach and it's like "forget that, see you at console.log("finished");"
with js the answer is always $.getJSON("/some/path/to/json")
the researchers say they actually do not know why the perception is not identical from person to person... some ppl just do not have a color correction in their brain
and then use python to make the json :P
This is a good question, I think, the guy who originally wrote it didn't realize asking for a module is the wrong approach here, I edited, think we can reopen? stackoverflow.com/questions/28767896/…
17:42
Fine, voted
@AaronHall I think it is still awful
A touch broad, but maybe it's more answerable to domain experts
nope
there is no way to make a regex that would match "all" possible XSS
Ok, well, when we reopen it, feel free to close again ;-)
@Kevin think about percent-encoding
one can percent encode every second character for example...
17:44
@AnttiHaapala Actually that's pretty informative. You could write an answer like "You can't, because..."
now that is some fine branching.
then we need an answer to tell him how his approach is wrong
@AnttiHaapala I agree with Kevin, you should answer like that then.
DSM
DSM
I dunno, if there were a function urllib.urlcheck which detected suspicious URLs, that seems to me like it would be a valid answer. And if a question could have a good answer, and it simply doesn't, then it can't be that horrible a question, IMHO.
With the proper decoding beforehand, isn't it as simple as checking if there are still unescaped bad characters?
17:45
well you can expect that it is not percent-decoded
good point too
most of the times...
Or, the reverse, always re-encoding it to nullify the injection.
the right answer is you cant really ... you can try a bunch of stuff but none of it is bullet proof ... instead you should be using that string with a template library that cleans it prior to using it (most template libraries you need to explicitly mark stuff that should be htmlish with safe)
when embedded in a string
yeah
just use a frikkin templating library that does autoescaping
17:46
yeah, that's what I meant :)
@JoranBeasley Yep, that. And use explicit whitlisting instead of blacklisting if possible.
<a href="{{ my_user_input_url }}">{{ my_user_text }} </a>
should be pretty dang safe
in any template library (at the very least the big ones like jinja)
actually:
the problem can be reduced to a halting problem
actually:
the only thing you can check is if it contains a " quote
thatsit
in other words you can mathematically prove that it has no solution?
that would be an interesting answer for sure ...
17:48
so, you filter for <script>
my url is microsoft.com/"; onclick="here i can have javascript that uses &encoding;"/
Yeah I'd upvote that proof all the way
the only thing you can do is to filter out all urls with " < & etc...
also, you could probably publish it in a journal
18:07
man I am really learning to hate abstraction
@MartijnPieters this is a pretty big coincidence after the other ping question this morning
different user, basically the same task in the question
@davidism I noticed, yes.
the account does have a year-old Area51 associated account.
which has some reputation there..
Could be a login-mixup, perfectly innocent.
After living long and prospering, Leonard Nimoy is no longer with us.
question; is there any method which makes a list unique, maintains the order, and removes all duplicates after the first occurence?
you mean an ordered set?
DSM
DSM
18:16
list(OrderedDict.fromkeys(somelist)), maybe?
List members would need to be hashable, though.
@corvid didn't we show you how to do that with an OrderedDict when you were constantly asking dict related questions about a year ago? :p
@JonClements probably, I had no clue what I was doing
Hello!!! Could I ask you something about asymptotic bounds?
@evinda just ask, no need to ask to ask.
18:22
@MartijnPieters How can I find the functions f(n) such that f(n)=O(f(n)^2)?
0
A: How do I catch javascript code injection in URL using python?

Antti HaapalaIt would be really hard to do a regular expression that would know if an URL is an attempt at script injection or not. To match the example you gave, searching for <script would be enough. But a <script> tag is not the only dangerous thing in HTML: consider for example the URL http://example.com...

posted
now that is so bad question that even the answer is pretty awful.
@evinda No need to ping people either. I can't help with that question, sorry.
I am sorry... A ok...
@evinda: np. You may want to read up on how the room works.
-1
Q: Decrytion/Encryption Python

user4612856This encrypts so that (‘w’, ‘f’) returns ‘b’. How do I write the inverse of the code to decrypt it so that (‘b’,’f’) returns ‘w’? def char_encrypt(plaintextchar, keychar): result= chr(ord('a') + ((ord(plaintextchar) - ord('a')) + (ord(keychar) - ord('a'))) % 26) ciphertextchar = result ...

18:29
I vtc'd both those questions
can someone upvote that so i can close the other one that is almost the same
@JoranBeasley there
@DSM @Ffisegydd does the following look reasonable? It works, so I'm happy... just wondering if there's any other clever ways in pandas...
start_date = df['dt'].dt.date.min().replace(day=1)
end_date = df['dt'].dt.date.max()
drange = pd.date_range(start_date, end_date, freq='D')
although i upvoted the other answer ... so i coulda closed this one with that dupe i guess
oh well
18:31
Turns out I can remove my vote afterwards and the question does not magically reopen ;)
:P
my answer is kinda crap to be fair
actually, yeah, no vote
Ahh... that should be end_date = df['dt'].dt.date.max() + timedelta(days=1)
I just want to answer homework questions in a way that the teacher will go "hmmm I might want to talk to this student"
3
rot13 should always use codec :)
18:32
yeah
but its not rot13
its rotXX
where xx is determined by input from user
(that said its a questionable answer at best ... )
awful...
there is 1 comment that allows for prompt closure: "no itertools"
no i think its cause the other question is the same ... cept its using itertools all over
yes
but the comment allows for prompt closure
there is no reason a professional or enthusiast would say "no itertools"
-> homework requirement
18:34
I think the other question came from a stackoverflow answer in which the answerer clearly saw it as homework
I dont think its a requirement ... he was just saying thats the primary difference between their existing attempts
@AnttiHaapala maybe if someone wants to learn how something is implemented in itertools
itertools is written in C
You know what I mean
tbh theres no real reason to use itertools for that problem statement
of course not...
18:36
I think the other question that is simillar uses itertools solely because they copied the code
but it is not something that is a proper comment in question.
probably from a SO answer... in which the answerer clearly recognized the problem statement as homework... as well as little to no effort from OP
so answered in totally convoluted itertools to confuse the poster and the teacher
DSM
DSM
As much fun as that can be, I'm not sure it's really constructive.
I dotn think he was saying he couldnt use itertools ... he was just saying his attempt currently wastn using itertools
@DSM I agree ... but at the same time sometimes I cant help myself
what would be constructive would be to close the question as "lacks minimal understanding"
18:39
especially on questions whrere they litterally copy and paste their verbatim assignment with zero effort
it is the most constructive thing to do
and "just want the codes"
594
Q: Can we please have the "Lacks Minimal Understanding" close reason back?

Benjamin GruenbaumThat close reason Yes, I believe it was condescending and somewhat rude. However there is a mass of questions that fall under a crystal clear criteria: They're poorly written. They have formatting issues. They don't show any research attempts. They don't show any attempt at solving the problem...

Bloomin' heck - got 6 accepts today
stackoverflow.com/posts/28731665 ... here is an example where the code I wrote is not very clear (the question looks better now (OP pasted her attempt in a comment ... someone was nice enough to move it into the question))
but i wrote code such that a teacher of a beginning programing class would feel obligated to ask the student about their solution
18:43
in any case: page not found
*in any case, that question is offtopic
there is no clear problem statement etc...
there is just a question "i have this code, how do i decode it"
-1
Q: read score.txt and calculate number of points per person

Amanda HannaMy homework is the following: Python program that reads and processes the file, and that calculates the total number of points per person. Your program should print the name of the person who received the most points and how many points they got ! Hint: read the file line by line. S...

it is not useful to anyone as such
18:44
Well to provide you the scenario. The system currently stores the url into a db and I just want to throw and alert if it catches an injection when the user is providing the url. I am not using any templating library — Fizi 1 min ago
now it looks much better that someone edited the question to include the code
hwaaaaaaah
Also: morning
but one of her comments was exactly "I just need the code"
(she deleted that comment)
like that cv-pls above I am awefully tempted to write a solution with iter(some_method,"Y")
@Air: ?
ah, it's a link..
@Air: still don't see why Community Building SE needs to have [meta-tag:] links; you cannot just use `backticks` with a link?
@Air: You fail to state why there is such a pressing need for the syntax on Community Building, nor on any other site. Meta.SE is not more separate then when it was called Meta.SO.
Half this conversation seems to be invisible. Oddly, it's not the ninja's half.
@davidism I think Martijn is travelling in time
cbg everyone!
18:59
whew, I just spent 2 days trying to get yapsy to work

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