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01:00
@MartijnPieters Since you're a mod, I thought I'd attempt to bring this to your attention. Before any further damage is done to the account at least.
-11
Q: Ban users James_Parsons and icktoofay

David JamesJames_Parsons and icktoofay are stupid. please ban them. They are being rude to me on my post http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32292000/issue-with-allocating-memory-in-c. I dont have the reputation to downvote them.

I have a feeling the current owner of that account isn't the original one.
To get straight to the point; because in the glaring difference in writing style, I have a feeling that account has been compromised
01:17
@Daedalus: the account has been suspended already. I'll pass on your concern however.
@MartijnPieters Thank you.
 
1 hour later…
02:42
cbg
CABBAAAAGE
Whut up, cybot?
You're over 900 points ahead of me now! Well on your way to 5K.
I slowed down in the past week; been busy :P.
Still impressive, given that, like me, you aren't collecting interest on ancient answers...
Has it been a good busy? Are you working on something fun and exciting?
Not a particularly good busy; nothing too bad though, and that's done now :).
Now I'm going to be busy with better stuff :D.
02:50
That's cool. Gainful employment or speculative side-project?
A friend of mine referred me for a possible contract/part-time job at a startup, plus a couple projects of my own.
That's great! I've been spending far too much time here, mainly on a single answer. Thought I had more time until the bonus was over, but the questioner awarded it 5 days early...
Ah, those tricksy bounty questions.
Yeah. It was fun, though, or I wouldn't have dug in.
So I have a thorough answer that IMO is much better than the one that got the bounty.
Bounties work though; I got a bounty a few weeks ago for a question I probably wouldn't have bothered answering otherwise, because I don't know anything about HDFS: stackoverflow.com/questions/31860630/…
02:57
I read the first two paragraphs of the question and I still don't know anything about HDFS.
But bounties do work extremely well, just like the slot machines in vegas.
In fact, in my case, I kept working after the bounty had expired because I had a better answer struggling to get out...
Meanwhile, I just happened to be in the right place at the right time for this answer and collected 75 points in about 5 minutes of work, vs. the 50 points I didn't get from two days of work on the bounty answer.
It's not really about HDFS; it's more about caching on a remote filesystem, and the OP just happens to be using HDFS.
That makes sense.
Ah yea, you just barely beat me to answering that question :P.
OK, that's two :)
:D
Wow, you did put a lot of work into that bounty answer.
03:05
Well yeah, it also pissed me off that the awarded answer lies about the complexity, so that was even more work...
Anyway, now I know a bit about networkx.
03:22
0
A: How can I generate following output in python programming?

CyphaseI think this should give the exact output you showed there: print("""How many students?: 2 How many units?: 3 What is the name of student 1: John What did john get in Unit 1? 34 34 out of 100 is a Fail. What did John get in unit 2? 67 67 out of 100 is credit. what did John get in unit 3? 52 52 ...

That'll larn `em! (Well, probably not, but it was funny anyway.)
stackoverflow.com/questions/32292819/… Nobody could possibly top cyphase's answer anyway!
I think that will righteously give you one of those badges for a gazillion upvotes on an answer to a question with a gazillion downvotes.
The Reversal badge; I saw that the other day.
Only 224 awarded. I probably won't get it for this, but who knows :).
Someone downvoted my answer; either the OP, or someone without a sense of humor :P.
03:37
How could you possibly distinguish those two cases?
Anyway, one more to close -- your answer will shortly stand alone...
Unless, of course, I make a competing answer with sys.stdout or sys.stderr...
04:19
Yeah, whatever. BTW, I don't know how the "people reached" metric is calculated, but it's about the only one I'm beating you on. Work on it, will you?
04:42
Yea, I noticed that :D.
I was struggling with trying to make a constructive comment on this answer and now I'm struggling with "Who the hell voted that up and what are they smoking?"
^^^^
05:21
davidism's here. Must be past my bedtime.
It's past my bedtime too. :-/
Went and saw Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation. It was awesome.
Haha yeah, it was a fun movie
That motorcycle chase was so cool. Definitely my favorite sequence.
I liked the part with the face masks :P
05:36
Pulling off the face mask is always the best part. :)
I saw there's a new James Bond coming out too. It looks better than the last two, but I'm wary.
The only Craig Bond I really liked was Casino Royale.
I've actually never watched any of the James Bond movies. Always meant to, but I never got around to it
I'll probably have a James Bond movie marathon some weekend
My favorite XKCD: xkcd.com/123
Hahaha, that alt-text
06:01
Aw, that question got removed.
There can be only zero?
06:34
Cabbage
@Cyphase Oh well, it was fun while it lasted. :)
06:53
Hey up all
07:47
Hey Cyphase, I wonder if we'll ever hear from Rock, Paper, Scissors guy again...
Accepted answer includes return CustomException in try/except block instead of raise CustomException: stackoverflow.com/questions/32294214/…
@Paul Yuck! BTW, you need a body in your class InvalidCommand(Exception): definition, eg pass.
08:02
Thanks. ipython let me get by with a semicolon and some carriage returns :-)
Naughty ipython!
There's a lot of rock paper scissors questions going around. Must be first week of class again.
Most of the codes for these are really verbose, especially since it is a beginner exercise in if statements.
I answered a rock paper scissors lizard spock question 2 weeks ago. Initially, the OP accepted my answer, then a couple of days later they un-accepted it and tried to vandalize the question title with random garbage. I was not impressed.
@Paul Yeah, I don't expect compact code from people writing rock paper scissors, although you do occasionally get code that uses modular arithmetic instead of a huge if...elif...else block.
Lovely. Afraid of the cheat-sniffing-dog that scrapes Google, no doubt.
08:25
No doubt. We don't get a lot of that here on SO, but it's fairly common on SE.Mathematics. I guess that's because it's hard to get help with part of a mathematics homework question - it's an all or nothing thing.
@Paul Cute!
@Ffisegydd In the USA, the commercial use of paper airplanes is heavily regulated and may require filing advance flight plans.
Luckily I live in a country with more Freedom: God save the Queen!
 
1 hour later…
09:54
@davidism finally got around to finishing the southern reach trilogy
 
2 hours later…
12:07
I think this is the earliest in the UTC day that I've hit my rep cap.
And after losing 109 rep to a migration and a removal earlier. :P
12:47
Nice work. I've never hit the rep cap. I answer too many newbie questions. :) But I just got an upvote for a glorified comment :)
13:09
+1 for RK4. I love RK4.
Runge-Kutta 4
I only mentioned RK4 as a thing to avoid because it gets so much airtime. Leapfrog integration pwns RK4. :)
if all else fails, you can use RK62
13:14
When the usual means of attacking a mathematical problem are just not aggressive enough. :)
@AnttiHaapala FWIW I undeleted and edited that property question
and got a downvote :D
maybe I missed something
Hey Antti, I answered a question yesterday that could possibly be given a better answer using some fancy metaclass tricks, but I don't understand metaclasses well enough. My fairly basic answer scored a few points, which is nice, but it'd still be cool to see a metaclass answer...
13:38
@PM2Ring I'd rather keep metaclasses out of this. but a decorator could be nice
Good thinking. I should be able to do a decorator version of my answer...
so you can put the decorator outside the term, and reuse it everywhere
13:54
@PM2Ring python 2 problem. of course I have a solution, it is python 3 only
So what does the repr() of a function look like in Python 3? It's not easy to find out by Googling. :)
Just a sec
In [2]: def foo(): pass

In [3]: repr(foo)
Out[3]: '<function foo at 0x10b604488>'
<function __main__.<lambda>> :P
<function term.<locals>.fn at 0x7f39788a1d90>
@PM2Ring about time you'd install python 3?
@AnttiHaapala Ok, That's a bit more informative.
@AnttiHaapala I suppose so...
14:31
@PM2Ring answered
('__call__') -> ('__call__',)?
is it still there :P
@vaultah it works as a string only too
oh cool
but you're right that i meant it to be a tuple
it did have 2 items initially :P
I'd mention that getclosurevars is new in 3.3
14:37
id not
anyone who's using 3.2 ought to die by fire :D
nothing works in 3.2
no one targets 3.2
@AnttiHaapala Wow!
@PM2Ring awful, isn't it
import antigravity
14:40
It's a bit scary. And you're using a naked except:...
Can't you just replace func.__qualname__in the decorator? If I'm reading your code properly, it looks like it has to do a fair bit of stuff each time repr() gets called on the decorated function.
@PM2Ring well the point is that it does not have that overhead when there is no repr
ok. I guess it depends on how often the user wants to call repr() on a given function. And since it's mostly for debugging purposes I guess the time factor's irrelevant.
Hello all
Nice to see Runge-Kutta getting a mention. My favourite name for a numerical method.
cbg @antti
14:49
@JRichardSnape It's my favourite too!
It's even funnier for us, because "kutta" means dog in Hindi
:)
I learn something every day
Woot! I have just built my first Python API client for Duedil. Feeling very satisfied
Pretty vestigial right now, but I think I've got the structure right.
Hmm, 25 points that I lost to a migration seem to be counting toward my daily rep cap.
15:29
@MartijnPieters: You got the numbers a bit mixed up in the last line of stackoverflow.com/a/32297398/4014959
@AnttiHaapala -- I got sucked into removing edges, and can now do it in O(n**2) instead of O(n**3) for the special case of (what was) the worst-case graph, and can do linear graphs in O(n) instead of O(n**2). The other answerer got all butt-hurt about me calling him out on his mischaracterization of the complexity, but at least he removed any reference to the complexity from his answer (after, of course, his mischaracterization earned him a bonus).
15:56
cbg
16:18
cbg
errr... more cbg?
rhubarb
rbrb @PM2Ring
Cabbage for all! (Except PM 2ring will need to take a rain check.)
And now rhubarb for all as well.
17:02
rbrb @PatrickMaupin
 
1 hour later…
18:21
Cabbage :D
cbg @AlexanderHuszagh
Hey up
Hey Ffisegydd :D
18:49
Rhubarb people
Rhubrb @thefourtheye
19:30
stackoverflow.com/q/32296201 user posted exact dupe
@davidism you mentioned the other day that you work on Flask-as-an-API projects. What package do you use or do you roll your own? I've seen Flask-RESTful and Flask-Restless so far in my researches.
I rolled my own. I used Marshmallow for serialization, although I deeply regret that now, there are way too many quirks.
@PM2Ring Thanks; it was more a division vs. multiplication there that I got mixed up.
Both Restful and Restless are good, if they fit your use case. The filtering that Restless provided was not how we wanted our api to work, and Restful didn't seem right either, so I didn't use them.
Hmm okay, cheers.
From what I've seen, rolling my own would be not-unreasonable to do anyway.
19:41
It was actually really straightforward. Instead of render_template, I wrote my own function that takes a Schema, some data, and possibly some validation errors, and returns a JSON response in a standard format.
Need to look into SQLAlchemy again and remind myself how it works. Also look into PyHIVE for accessing the Hive warehouse.
The function will serialize the data if a schema is passed, or assume it's already serialized if not, and will add pagination data if it's a pagination object.
That's pretty cool.
Good thing I went and looked at that question with the sql injection again, another user posted the same terrible advice: stackoverflow.com/a/32290810/400617
Downvoted
Damn dude you're close to 20k. Hadn't realised how far ahead you'd gotten. I can't remember the last time I answered a question :(
19:55
sooooo tempting to link to little bobby tables
Yeah, I had to avoid that.
Me too. Dv'd and upvoted your comment to alert the user to the reason
The op posted another question with the same vulnerability too. It's such an easy fix, I have no idea why they insist on doing it. I added the same comment there.
Imagination failure.
I'm hopefully soon going to be finishing porting a 2004 PHP system to a Django 1.8 system
oh - what fun I've had
19:56
That will feel like blessed relief, no doubt
The result is still returning an invalid password response. Not too worried about injection attacks as its only for a college project. Just need to work out why it wont decrypt the password when im trying to log in — Ricky92d 2 days ago
@JonClements puts me in mind of the cat in the hat
Antti already replied to them about "just a college project".
Oh... that's an interesting leap of thought there...
ah - I didn't clock that as the same user - remember antti's comment there
I'm sure the cat in that hat says something like "Oh the fun we've had..." turns to google
19:58
@Ffisegydd you've become an expert at Java, right? Now you can reap the big rep. ;-)
@Ffisegydd fight against the Skeet!
And Angular. Truly I am become God.
My current project I've managed to avoid the Java backend entirely, just focused on the Angular frontend. I need an underling to do the Java for me.
Week 3(?) and looking for an underling :)
Coming up on start of Month 2 soon.
Within the next week we should have a new set of graduate starters (so what I was a month ago)
20:06
Underlings ahoy!
I will teach them the ways of the Java and then a month from now, they can get their own underlings.
You are, of course, duty bound to talk to them as if you'd been born there, it's so long since you started :)
I'm positively an old hand.
The amount of blood and tears I've poured into work there, it's as if the building is family.
By "teach them the ways of Java", i'm assuming you mean "take them for a coffee"?
How the cabbage did this get 2 upvotes?!
20:11
@Ffisegydd reminds me of the Fry and Laurie sketch "you're standing in my children"...
... somewhere in this one youtu.be/kVyDDXWRs7k?t=24s
@JRichardSnape I'm having to intentionally limit my coffee intake to 3-4 cups per day ;_;
Such is the curse of having a free coffee machine 10ft from my desk.
@Ffisegydd now that's discipline :)
That's hard, man, hard
I'm also on a diet, but they keep on bringing in pizza and donuts at lunch ;_;
Not everyday, thankfully.
:( I ought to go on a diet, but my willpower is as weak as... something very weak.
20:18
@Ffisegydd I had that problem too.
I solved it by ending any sort of diet during work hours.
Although, I must say I wish I had a "they" who brought me pizza
I'm doing well so far, I've just decided to have the occasional pizza and donut but be extra-good the rest of the time.
virtuous Fizzy is impressive.
We also have pub lunches every Friday where we drive to a different pub. My cross to bear.
Especially as, iirc, you don't drive? I suppose it's only reasonable to struggle down a drink...
20:21
I don't have a car, but may look into buying one sooner rather than later.
Ah, I see, limited by the lack of motor, rather than licence
This BigCorp you speak of sounds good. Might end up fishing round for stuff sooner rather than later myself, if academia doesn't turn up something interesting by the end of the year
@JRS I can refer you for money-money-money which I'd be willing to split 100-N:N.
My mum will be getting rid of her Toyota Aygo around Christmas, I might buy it off her.
:D
I'll bear that in mind. I've got a couple of irons in the fire for some European funded projects, but if they don't come off, i might well be interested in such a referral :)
I can give you more details on the company via some-other-communication-method if/when you're interested.
20:43
mh. I dont quite seem to understand the way pythons various networking engines work... Particularly, I am trying to find a way to basically just send messages to all connected websockets, while filtering these messages per client beforehand
but apparently, the asyncio coroutine approach really does not pan out very well with that, since you need to have your entire program built around their producers/consumers...
while I was hoping to have a more socketserver-esque approach, with a single function that syncronously handles requests as they come in, and a send() method...
the socketserver stuff works really nicely, but mimicing that behaviour with websockets seems hard, if not impossible, why is that o.o
@Ffisegydd thanks. I'll send details of my carrier pigeon's markings as and when.
I look forward to your telegram.
And on that note, I must away into the night.
 
1 hour later…
22:00
Does someone know a python library for image matching?
22:14
I uhh... this one seems suspicious (detecting systemwide keypresses, even outside the application, with no mention of an application? Sounds like a keylogger):
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/32301464/python-how-to-detect-a-keypress-and-then-do-somthing
22:53
cbg all
what should I do if I find a bug in the python documentation?
Cbg @shuttle87
I would recommend first that you confirm it is a bug and then either submit it via the bug tracker or through an email, which can be found here.
@shuttle87 the right address always used to be [email protected] - you should (as long as you don't go in convinced it's a bug) get a reasonably friendly reception from someone connected with the docs team. But if you want to run it by me I'll try and give an opinion (if I don't fall asleep first :-)
Basically a minor documentation fix required: docs.python.org/3/library/…
Yeah?
In this code snippet there is a bug, the command for the quit button creates a NameError
Fairly simple fix, either reference command as self.master.destroy or set a instance variable for root in __init__
Given my lack on knowledge about the coding conventions with tkinter I am not sure which of those is preferable.
23:03
With which name? root is global, so I dunno why you are getting a NameError
You did actually run the code, right?
yes I did run it'
I see that the bug report really should be in my own issues tracker!
root was not global in my code
Which I guess prompts a different question, when dealing with something like tkinter, does it makes sense to keep root as a global?
So you didn't run it
Sorry for using the python chat room as my duck
You ran something else.
fair point
23:06
NP. Better that than bother the docs team. But I would point out that if you'd taken the time to formulate this as an SO questions that would have been a very good duck too :-)
being that I do internal docs at my work I really didn't want to bother the docs team if I didn't have to :)
We're pretty friendly as a general rule. But the devs work so hard that they deserve the consideration of those assuming errors on their part. To a firest approximation, if you think you've found a bug, think again, harder
Not to say there aren't bugs, of course, but a bit of respect never hurts
I'd spent an hour on this before posting here
And would have spent another hour before posting to the bug tracker, I have a lot of respect for the devs.
Yeah, I once spent three hours wondering why db.conn.commitwasn't making the database changes permanent before someone else pointed out I wasn't calling it!
(I feel bad for wasting people's time here )
23:10
You were lucky. I'm up with the gf watching TV, and not absorbed in the programming
well thanks for the help with this in any case :)
There are those who would have been less forgiving. Nice to meet you!
Nice to meet you too!
Generally most people here are pretty nice as long as you don't ask 5x the same question though :D
Not me.
I'm curmudgeonly whatever, whenever, whereever.
(and with whomever)
23:13
K - gotta rhubarb out
rbrb, Steve!
rbhrb holden

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