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00:35
rhubarb
00:59
@idjaw Ha. That is my worst nightmare. :P
@MorganThrapp I couldn't get through reading the question
Anyone knows if there are kid-friendly question-and-answer website for kids learning python? meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335769/…
01:14
Invent your own computer games with Python, from inventwithpython.com is targeted at kids. The author moderates a subredit for questions related to the book.
@idjaw I just read the title.
Ok. Thanks. i will check that out. I believe python would be a good programming for kids to start.
 
1 hour later…
02:44
please don't post huge blocks of empty lines
You can ask your question, but do it concisely.
cbg @MartijnPieters
 
1 hour later…
04:15
Cabbage
 
2 hours later…
06:10
What is it about code that makes people adopt this weird arrogant narcissistic mindset that they are infallible despite ALL evidence?
Zed A Shaw and reflective soliloquy
Cabbage. LOL at Zed.
06:47
seriously,
70 % are wrong!
Should API docs use indicative or imperative mode? "Adds an item" vs "Add an item".
:D
and cbg
The tyranny of the majority? ;)
14 hours ago, by Antti Haapala
> sorted(iterable[, key][, reverse])

Return a new sorted list from the items in iterable.
Use functools.cmp_to_key() to convert an old-style cmp function to a key function.
^so who did what?
I should return? :|
here's a function that would pass the Turing test
filter(function, iterable)¶

    Construct an iterator from those elements of iterable for which function returns true. iterable may be either a sequence, a container which supports iteration, or an iterator. If function is None, the identity function is assumed, that is, all elements of iterable that are false are removed.

    Note that filter(function, iterable) is equivalent to the generator expression (item for item in iterable if function(item)) if function is not None and (item for item in iterable if item) if function is None.
07:04
@AnttiHaapala Imperative. From PEP-257: The docstring is a phrase ending in a period. It prescribes the function or method's effect as a command ("Do this", "Return that"), not as a description; e.g. don't write "Returns the pathname ...".
@PM2Ring yeah that is wrong :D
because the docs do not follow that
@PM2Ring lol, there is even past tense:
 remove(value)

    Removed the first occurrence of value. If not found, raises a ValueError.
@AnttiHaapala For years I used the indicative mood in my comments, but I switched to using the imperative not long after I started writing Python (although occasionally I lapse back into my old ways :) ). I think the imperative is cleaner, and often shorter.
... how is it cleaner that you use imperative to describe what the function does and to describe what the user should do?
you've just been brainwashed :d
07:24
@AnttiHaapala Fair point. I give the description of what the function does first, and then (when necessary) I follow it with instructions for the user. Also, I tend to be fairly terse in the description part but a little more conversational in the instructions, so (hopefully) readers can tell when the description ends and the instructions begin. :)
isn't it easier to just note that 3rd person descriptive indicative is about something that the function does or is, and 2nd person imperative is something that the reader should do :D
@AnttiHaapala I guess so, and I suppose that's the way I used to do it in my pre-Python days.
Hi there guys! I have an issue with loading Python 3.4. Can anybody help me with that?
Fatal Python error: Py_Initialize: unable to load the file system codec
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python34\Lib\encodings\__init__.py", line 31, in <module>
ImportError: No module named 'codecs'
@NaseefUmmer Weird. What happens if you type this at the CMD prompt?
python3 -c "import codecs"
FWIW Naseef just asked this on the main site
07:39
@NaseefUmmer: Please read our room rules, especially the part about not asking here about your recent questions on the main SO site.
Okay. I am sorry. I was not aware of that rule. Thank you.
08:01
Cabbage
@poke Are you familiar with the PEP8 naming convention for instance variables? The name requiredNamed is not compliant. — A-B-B 52 mins ago
When will people learn to stop arguing about PEP8 with me?
as long as you won't respect it?
It's funny how so many people seem to not read the PEP8 introduction
08:18
cbg
:33283096 Yeah, making lots of these edits.
Never mind the introduction: the original title says a lot: "A Foolish Consistency is the Hobgoblin of Small Minds"
cbg, all
I try to be PEP-8 compliant, mostly. :) The main non-PEP-8 thing I do is use triple single-quotes instead of triple double-quotes for my docstrings. But yeah, PEP-8 was originally just a style guide for the Python code in the Python standard library itself, but it has become a de facto style guide for all Python code, and I do find it annoying to read Python code with identifiers that don't adhere to PEP-8.
OTOH, I totally understand using non-PEP-8 identifiers so that you can be consistent with a code base that's not PEP-8 because it's written in another language.
My main violation is using tabs and not spaces
I like my tabs
😢
08:29
PEP-8 itself recommends conforming to the naming styles of existing code.
I like using my Tab key to indent (and Shift_Tab to de-indent), but space + tab issues have caused so much pain in Python that I think it's a Good Idea to just avoid using tabs in Python source. If you want to use tabs for your own private use that's perfectly fine, but please run them through a tab -> space converter before inflicting them on the rest of the world. :)
@holdenweb Indeed!
"Thus spake the Lord: Thou shalt indent with four spaces. No more, no less. Four shall be the number of spaces thou shalt indent, and the number of thy indenting shall be four. Eight shalt thou not indent, nor either indent thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to four. Tabs are right out." -- Georg Brandl
> If you were doing any professional Python, your code would easily be rejected by a static analyzer.
See
This is why I don't like documentation
Endless battles over style guides
Oh yes.
08:36
@PM2Ring Python 3 should give an error if you mix tabs and spaces by default, so it's a bit less of an issue than it was
@Carpetsmoker True. And even Python 2.6 allows you to specify the -t which issues warnings about inconsistent tab usage, and -tt to issue errors.
Yeah, although it's not on by default and can still bite you
You could easily use a static analyzer to reject such code… *rolls eyes*
Note to self: It’s a bad idea to listen to a Python talk while writing JavaScript. You end up using Python syntax inside JavaScript.
@vaultah Fixed. Please feel welcome to make such minor edits yourself in the future. I believe I would still be notified. — A-B-B 4 mins ago
At least he's consistent. Such minor edits are still discouraged though
As an aside, don't know if it's such a bad idea to take some python ideas over to Javascript these days, what with the generators and stuff
08:52
JS has an import system whose syntax looks a little like Python's
(Cbg)
Wow, this is the third time he rewrote the comment and pinged me with it (because he edited it after the grace period so he actually deleted and rewrote it)
I know I'm going to have to find/implement itertools in JS at some point, if someone hasn't already done it
@vaultah You’re such a troll. Great job.
@RobertGrant Except it’s backwards :(
Yeah :)
I hate that so much when using editors with code completion. You have to write import {} from './some-file'; first, and then you can go back to the brackets and trigger auto complete…
Instead of writing something like from './some-file' import { oh-look-auto-complete…
@IljaEverilä Try ramda
08:57
Perhaps editors could use that inverse syntax and then after autocompletion rewrite it to the proper :P
heh xD
My worst is in Eclipse when I want to write <!-- somewhere, and it automatically adds --> to it, which I have to delete/cut and then put where I want it
@Robert Can’t you select the code you want to comment out and then use some magic keyboard shortcut?
Yes
But I don't always want to select, especially if it involves scrolling while doing it
I see
08:59
(I can probably turn it off, I just prefer to complain)
Complaining is fine
09:35
cbg
09:47
I’m glad everyone on SO votes based on content quality instead of personal issues.
Cbg
@poke do I sense sarcasm?
Maybe a little bit
what personal issues can you have with iinternet enemies?
10:07
Depends how personal you want to make things
I try to separate the behaviours from the person: I'm not stupid, but I sometimes do stupid things
I mean, I understand that some people use Python 2 but you gotta keep yourself calm, you know.
Python 2 for life!
runs
Well, that's what people get for making programming language choice a religious issue
The religion of "only Python" is potentially just as dangerous as any other religion
Python 2 and Python 3 are just competing sects, like the big-endians and the little-endians (Brobdingnagians?) in Gulliver's Travels
10:23
@Carpetsmoker Life ends in 4 years.
@holdenweb I agree but people who use tabs are straight from hell
Like browser tabs?
@poke Wow - that's hell of a punishment for someone using Python 2.x... :)
Not my idea though! It’s PEP 373’s fault
Nexus-6 replicants are programmed with Python 2? That would explain a lot.
10:31
youtube changed its design
Can I just appreciate the following line and the choice of this PEP number?
> There will be no Python 2.8 (see PEP 404 ).
they optimized it for touch screen, which is bad
PEP 404: Python not found
3
@khajvah You can still leave the beta by clicking the button in the bottom-left corner
nope
10:35
Oh ... I can
Just did so now in fact
they shoved it on my face
Can you show a screenshot of that new Youtubez? I don’t have it yet
That actually doesn’t look too different from the current version
That's not the new version I think
10:38
oh I just got it
the searchbar is bulky
If you leave the new version the search bar ends up like that, probably a bug
clearing cache and/or using a new tab fixes that
Cabbage
Visited IP (Finally). It seemed like an office. It did not have any classrooms. I spent some 10 minutes there and spoke to the receptionist. I informed them that I need to meet the profs before taking their course, But they mentioned that the profs will call me back. I also asked them to call me back once the profs arrive. (CC @AnttiHaapala).
my thumb picked up gamer illness
but I don't game
11:07
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39872159/stripe-asking-for-card-‌​details-up-front#39872159 not programming-related
11:22
dang it. Whoever gave me the pronounce-mcve-as-muckvee advice, now I tried to write [muckvee]
11:37
[mukluks] are what eskimos wear.
Did I miss the tavs versus spaces fight? I can lace up my gloves
Hey @WayneWerner I noticed in the recent transcript you using _ as a temporary variable, eg all(not any(_) for _ in yourlist). IME, _ is conventionally used as a loop variable that you don't need, i.e., it only appears in the for statement itself, but nowhere else in the body of the loop.
If you want a throwaway variable that does get used in the loop body, just use a short name, eg i, j for indices, k for a key, u, v for general values. Of course, this is only a convention, so feel free to ignore me. :)
12:10
@BhargavRao nice
@BhargavRao as I suspected...
@AnttiHaapala Actually, Not nice. I wanted to speak to the teachers.
... what teachers...
What he said.
@AnttiHaapala The fake ones :D
@KevinMGranger tavs? Wow... so there's a 3rd competitor in the ring then? :p
12:15
They're like tabs but when you go to replace them with spaces they threaten to "pop you in the gabber m8"
user559633
Ah, the typical chavs/spaces debate.
Tavs are typically m8 spaces wide
morning everyone
Morning corv
user559633
# chav spaced
def allow_patron_in_pub(patron, banned):
ASBOif patron in banned:
ASBOASBOreturn False
ASBOreturn True
12:20
oops, Did not read that.
one thing that absolutely sucks about cold temperature: indoors is always waaaay too hot after adjusted to cold
I know it's just a joke but you could just do return patron not in banned
Hmm, 4 answers 2~3 minutes after closing as dupe. That's some bad programming
user559633
@KevinMGranger needed more lines to show multiple tabs
I dimly recall there being talk of a feature that lets you post answers for a short period after a close occurs. I can't remember if it was just a meta proposal or what. But if it exists, then answering after hammering is a feature not a bug
user559633
12:24
good morning, starlord
Yo
Yeah, Its a feature. There's some gap (that can extend up to 15 hrs) on the client side before which they stop accepting answers.
I know, my eye just starts twitching whenever I see if something: return True; else: return False
Hopefully the type of people with the technical chops to fully abuse the system, are not the type of people with the inclination to fully abuse the system.
If you know enough to reverse-engineer the clientside scripts and grant yourself a 15 hour grace period every time, you probably don't need to be answering bottom-of-the-barrel posts to get rep
I guess the users who do that are naive and do not actually know that there's an issue that allows them to do so.
12:32
why don't they prevent that on server side?
From How was this answer posted after this question was closed? For users answering from a mobile device, there's no client-side restriction in place to begin with
@khajvah Because then it defeats the point of the feature. They want to prevent user disappointment of the form "I was writing an answer to the question while my internet connection was spotty, so I never got the 'this question has been closed, you should probably stop writing an answer' notification, and when it finally rejected me on submission I felt that I wasted my time"
"we'll just flat-out reject any submission that the server sees as occurring after the question was closed" is how it worked before.
Ooh that save the princess comic just came up in the PHP room grabs popcorn
Oh, it's already at the top of their star board. Good sense of humor, them.
12:48
It's more of a "to exact revenge upon" board, really.
I was surprised the Java answer didn't involve an AbstractRescueFactoryFactory
AbstractRescueFactoryFactorySingletonProxyBean
@BhargavRao That's now got an answer with 2 upvotes. :( I left a comment to the answerer.
Morning cabbage.
user559633
12:55
cbg
13:06
stackoverflow.com/q/39872556/344286 MCVE. Despite being asked for one and linked -_-
SVN docs: "For example, --verbose (-v) always means “verbose output,” regardless of the subcommand you use it with."
SVN in reality: Subcommand 'checkout' doesn't accept option '-v [--verbose]'
I think the order matters IIRC
so svn -v co works, but svn co -v doesn't
Hm
Or not
I'm surprised my machine has svn installed though
Nope, I did just that
I really wish git-svn wasn't so slow, or also lacking in verbosity options
I also just wish we were using git
hg4life
@Martijn wow - wasn't that docx answer to be accepted...
13:12
I've been meaning to learn mercurial eventually
I was just being extremely lazy
@KevinMGranger well, it does have to do svn and then turn it into git
@KevinMGranger mercurial is hipster stuff
Having used git and hg pretty extensively, I definitely have a preference for git.
@JonClements my, I imagined they wanted to do something more complicated than that.
13:14
when you don't want to go with mainstream choice you go for hg
@khajvah Mercurial is scalable stuff.
and we got some cool toys around it.
the biggest difference is that git branch/tags/names are all just pointers to commits
not gonna argue with Martijn
@MartijnPieters Not that you're an advocate of it at all, right? :p
in mercurial they're kind of their own thing
13:15
@JonClements nah, I have nothing to with it at all..
I just don't like the git commandline tool; only gpg is worse. And the gitk UI is some 1980s archaic unix UI
I hear hg branches solve this problem
@KevinMGranger They're using PHP and haven't given up on life. I'm pretty sure the only way to do that is with a well developed sense of humor ;)
This isn't me at all:
But gitk is so simple, and functional
13:16
> which checked in at 17 million lines of code and 44,000 files in 2013.
Also, this says a lot IMHO:

[~]% git help commit | wc -l
498

[~]% hg help commit | wc -l
59
@MartijnPieters Doesn't include Grumpy Cat - I therefore believe it's all lies! Lies I tell you! :p
@KevinMGranger Has there been a time when you've gone back and wondered what the branch names were for a particular commit?
so far I haven't :P
Yep. But not that I wanted to share that information. Git does now have the ability to out-of-band metadata through git notes, but it's still meh.
I think there is potential value, but honestly I put my issue tracker case numbers in my commit messages, so there you go.
user559633
13:20
I often will do a git branch with the issue/tracker number
There are some groups that make all commit messages only the issue tracker numbers, and track the impact of those change sin git notes, because they could realize that a commit did unintended stuff later
Just for your, Jon.
@MartijnPieters it's missing a speak bubble saying: "I love Mercurial"... <g>
@KevinMGranger that sounds terrible.
13:21
Grumpy Cat doesn't love anything
Meh, showing the notes in git log is but one flag away
user559633
Someone (not me) should faceswap that photo.
user559633
what a time to be alive that a cat is flown around the world and is a celebrity for having a grumpy looking face
it's living a better life than me
They made a movie, FFS
And several books
user559633
13:24
We should get rich and famous and have our sopython MTFL fly around the world being MTFL-like
user559633
Wait, books?
@JonClements SOPython is grumpy but not cute
user559633
user559633
13:25
uhm.
Pet peeve: blank lines that have spaces/tabs in them
user559633
your IDE doesn't automatically strip those?
Your IDE is usually the one responsible for creating those.
%s/\s\+$//g
user559633
PyCharm and my vim setup automatically strips those on save.
13:33
That works brilliant until you need to have lines with whitespace at the end
user559633
what
"need"?
Markdown, email signature markers
"--<space>"
Why is the space necessary?
13:34
Dunno ... that's how it's specified
Yeah that does sound familiar
If you don't add the space most email clients don't pick up on it
I would guess it's to reduce the chance of people using it by accident
user559633
I don't typically write emails in PyCharm or Vim, so I'm okay :)
user559633
Filetype based syntax too on both my IDEs (e.g. make support)
I once had a coworker who did the automatic space removing things, and removed all those spaces from the email templates we used and markdown files
Very annoying
13:35
Right, you use a real email client, like emacs. Right?
Hi, Is there any way to add the function to elastic search query using Elastic search query dsl in python
user559633
@KevinMGranger No joke, that's how I used to quit emacs when I opened too many screens inside of it.
The advantage of using emacs is that you can directly copy text from its IRC client to its email client. Very handy.
Pre an OS-wide copy-paste buffer, I guess
Guys. I can't tell you how frustrating shit like this is. Especially having to deal with comments like this over an… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/783287116524642304
13:39
How did you quit?
Who in the world never wants to use anything but Java?
That's why I use neovim, so I can use it's terminal feature.
user559633
@WayneWerner People that really like Java, I guess?
but... how does your brain get into such a state that using Java is a pleasurable experience?
user559633
oh yeah, i fucking hate twitter
13:42
is it electroshock therapy? abuse as a child? What could make Java the best thing?
Oops, I walk out for a moment and there's a Martijn Photoshoot that I missed
Sigh
You know the ending of 1984, where the main character finally realizes they *love* big brother while their face is meeting a boot repeatedly? That's what loving Java is like, I imagine.
user559633
how to do a twitter: type a thing. someone responds. feign offense and pretend it's bigger than a dumb disagreement. shitpost back and forth a bit. people return to their echo chambers. repeat.
Maybe the guy doesn't know any other programming languages exist
Problem with Twitter is that all sense of nuance is lost in 140 characters because, well, you have just 140 characters
user559633
13:46
@WayneWerner it's fast and reasonable.
Java is preferable to formless chaos, I suppose
user559633
@Carpetsmoker well, and the whole "talking to a crowd" thing, so certain types of people just perform for an audience, try to have the "correct" opinion, try to get attention
It does have the impression of a group of howling monkeys trying to outhowl each other. Or outmasturbate each other. It's sometimes difficult to tell.
user559633
thank you for this vivid picture...
I aim to please
13:50
[anything people do, ever, has] the impression of a group of howling monkeys
user559633
user559633
pictured: howler monkey very carefully making kool aid
morning friends
user559633
morning :)
user559633
i've learned that playing FTL in the morning gets me so frustrated that i'm happy to write javascript
13:54
haha
FTL is fun man
I did lose my savegame with all my unlocked stuff, which is annoying :-(
user559633
yeah, love getting to sector 5, then getting blown up because RNGesus hates me
@tristan that is such a massive layer of frustration - I errr, can't believe I haven't felt it across the globe!
user559633
@JonClements playing now and haven't lost yet. give it 30 minutes.
user559633
I feel like I haven't chatted with you in some time. How are things? Everything good?
13:57
Wife ok?
If my previous sacrifices were all for you to be able to write JS... I'm not sure what to think now :)
@tristan had worse

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