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00:00 - 14:0014:00 - 00:00

00:00
you could just +=1 for your range
also IPv4Network.hosts() returns an iterator over the subnet
good night
00:22
@AndrasDeak g'night
wim
wim
00:36
@JosephLeClerc worked perfectly, thanks!
00:48
evening cbg room6
01:04
@wim Glad to help!
cbg
@ldjaw I always wondered why it's room 6. Since ../rooms/python is not valid and /rooms/6 redirects to /rooms/6/python it seems unnecessary, right?
I think this room can be renamed to <anything> and it will always be referenced by id
kinda like how the rest of SO works
with names
yeah that makes sense
01:33
my OCD is kicking in with davidism's lone grey star on day 11.
Yeah I need to catch up on those, but I can at least report that all of my stars are golden
Oh wait...actually I didn't submit the answer to day 5 yet. Whoops. Sorry.
did you add your repo to the wiki?
and you can join our leaderboard too!
info is to the right in the pinned messages
Yup I'm on the leaderboard, thanks though
was day 11 that A* one? I remember people were having no end of conversations here about using A* for one of the problems
It sounds like he is holding out for finishing some special implementation
01:43
I think it was for 13 and people started applying it to 11...but I'm not too sure
I've barely read 11...I'm on 11 now
01:56
@ldjaw Wow the problem statement on #11 is...really long
haha yeah...that's why I wanted to wait until I can really concentrate on understanding it
It's definitely one of those problems that someone came up with, and then went on to figure out how to make a backstory for it haha
yeah he really put in a lot of work on this.
I sent some money his way to support
dedicating enough time on this, I think it is well deserved
yeah I agree
I'm not familiar with him, is he well-known or something?
Cabbage. Just a brief visit...
@idjaw Yeah, that's pretty funky. And the bass player is amazing!
02:07
@PM2Ring glad you liked it! 😀
@idjaw And here's one I think you'll like that I first saw a couple of weeks ago. I guess you might already know about her, since she's from your part of the world. :) Marie Eve Fournier singing Led Zeppelin's Since I've Been Loving You at Bistro à JoJo. The crowd's a bit noisy at the start, but she manages to sing over them. :)
@PM2Ring Nice....love what happens right before the 3 minute mark
She sure has a lot of power! The bistro has a good atmosphere, but I'd love to hear them perform under better conditions. Her drummer's a classic: he's like a French Canadian version of John Bonham. :)
02:26
@PM2Ring yeah that's a very popular place here
cbg
@davidism How goes day 11?
02:41
the united front of helping davidism get that part 2 gold star
02:59
I'm watching Captain America Civil War. It's really bad.
03:20
cbg
@idjaw aww, don't tell me that. I haven't seen it, but I need to watch Avengers: Age of Ultron first.
@Code-Apprentice I've been finding each following Marvel movie less and less interesting
there's just too much in one movie.
I know what you mean. I think Batman vs Superman was definitely that way, too.
Have you seen trailers for the new Spider Man? It is from Marvel Studios instead of Fox.
Yeah. Maybe Marvel will do something that will be more welcoming than the last reboot attempt.
But, looking at the upcoming Marvel movies, the only one I'm really looking forward to is Guardians of The Galaxy 2
03:42
I still need to see the first one
I'm uncertain about the new spiderman. I just think it is good to have the continuity with Avengers that wasn't allowed due to IP issues.
I've been more a fan of watching a series now, because of there being more build up, details and character depth.
not necessarily for Marvel, but in general.
03:59
what series are you into?
Once I catch up with Westworld, all the shows I watch are between seasons. But in general, the few coming to mind right now are Game of Thrones, The Americans, Mr. Robot, Broad City, Marvel shows (Daredevil, Luke cage, Jessica Jones). I'm probably forgetting a few other favourites.
GOT is awesome. I have a lot of catching up to do with it, though. I can't even remember if I finished season 3. I really want to watch Mr. Robot. And I just heard of Westworld recently. Definitely sounds interesting.
I caught a few episodes of the most recent season of Mr. Robot. But I couldn't really understand the plots because I haven't seen any of Season 1.
I really like the theme music for GOT
04:40
Cbg
Doing some analysis on day 16 if anyone is curious / wants to contribute: pastebin.com/raw/EZk95wkJ
05:21
hahaaa :D
I went to sleep earlier
woke up at 6:30 naturally :D
I think it paid off :D
not even wrong answers
nice I'm almost done as well
wim
wim
marcus beat me by 2 seconds!!
really paid of to make a reusable asomething :P
wim
wim
05:33
yeah, I should have done that but .. busy real coding at my job :(
I need about ~100 to get back to leaderboard hmhm :(
wim
wim
did you get in top 100 today?
I want to make an animation for this
63 for ** and 58 for *
wim
wim
05:37
some guys have solved before I've even read the problem description
somewhat disappointed again, another graph problem :/
they must have had the algo ready as well
I didn't do any mistakes, started writing to that algo, tried to anticipate everything and that's where I got...
wim
wim
I didn't do any mistakes either
@MarcusS this is a programming contest, not project euler
wim
wim
but I chose a bad state vector (just a number 0-15)
05:39
what I mean is that no way they did code from zero
wim
wim
I should have used a 2d vector again because enumerating the next states was really verbose
wat -- not saying it has to be! My contention is that there is a wider variety of interesting programming problems he could be using
well, yes :d
wim
wim
I agree with marcus
this and 13 and 11 are all so similar
it was much harder to find a proper heuristic for 11...
and it was the first graph search for the year
wim
wim
05:41
11 didn't need any heuristic
What heuristic did you use for 11?
nothing
but it was slow
I was a little confused by the number of people using A* on 11
Maybe they're seeing something I'm not, but I feel like proving that a heuristic is admissable for 11 would be pretty tough
could have used the min-move-distance that martijn used to solve the whole thing
A lot of those implementations / closed forms are right-for-the-wrong-reasons and make unproven assumptions that don't hold in all cases
wim
wim
05:42
martijn's didn't work for my input
well, even "how many moves does it get to move these minimally ignoring all conditions"
wim
wim
he was just lucky
would have been a good heuristic.
wim
wim
not really
For example you could represent each state as an integer and map a transition matrix, and I am sure you'd find all sorts of spots with very clear patterns of streaks leading to the finish -- but if your input doesn't lie on such a streak, a closed form may not work there
05:42
@wim was it below or above
wim
wim
a heuristic should tell you whether a certain branch is a good state to go down or not
and that doesn't really help you there much
you'd have to brute-force your way to the nearest streak and then close-form your way there
@wim nope...
a* heuristic just need to find the lower bound of the cost from that node to target.
wim
wim
ohhh a green Xmas tree has appeared on the landing page :)
nice
If h(n) is always lower than (or equal to) the cost of moving from n to the goal, then A* is guaranteed to find a shortest path. The lower h(n) is, the more node A* expands, making it slower.
any heuristic function for a state is good if it is not too high.
wim
wim
05:51
I think I have to make new release of aocd which does data.strip() automatically
because these new lines at the end of the data can really fuck you up
hehe
my Data wrapper does that already
wim
wim
yeah, I saw
I can't imagine him using whitespace in the data
OK, I've just released v0.3.4 which strips automatically. you can pip install -U advent-of-code-data to upgrade it
hmmm
I could clean up mine a bit :D
no need to hash in 2 places
lol my heuristic was even wrong :D
typo
wim
wim
06:23
he must have had to be careful with the data for this one
because the solution for part A may not be necessarily unique!
there could be more than one shortest path to target
It's possible that he just stored the lengths of the shortest / longest path as answers and had a server-side implementation run the directions for the shortest path to verify that it reaches the goal in the designated number of moves
or... more likely yeah just chose inputs with unique solutions XD
wim
wim
I doubt the code verifying solutions is anything clever
wim
wim
marcus your solution is almost exactly like mine
and you submitted answer exactly 2 seconds before mine
it is very easy to iterate all paths, I guess he just chose random inputs for which there is only unique shortest path
anw I like the fact that after these puzzles I can write A* in my dreams.
06:30
haha
close call!
wim
wim
I was actually able to legitimately use a quintuple chained comparison in this one! --> github.com/wimglenn/advent-of-code/blob/…
LOL
first time I've ever seen such a check done in one large chain like that
wim
wim
but in one hit
right
I wish the next graph puzzle is in 3d. I want to see how wim uses complex numbers there...
wim
wim
06:33
I will use numpy vectors
btw you don't need to slice the digest in that zip
same for @MarcusS
Hm, yeah, true
index only reaches so far
wim
wim
ah, ok
@wim you can start with best_depth = 0
wim
wim
no
06:35
yes
wim
wim
no, because then it returns 0 for the case where all doors and all paths get shut
that's incorrect, it should return None
:D
it should raise typeerror
so you can start with -1
wim
wim
-1 doesn't make sense
there are no "-1" steps
None is correct here
it is a lower bound, and you can get rid of the if-else
wim
wim
doesn't matter
I prefer code that models nicely , than shorter code
don't like magic numbers :)
06:39
it is not a magic number, it is distance < 0, which doesn't make sense
Hm for some reason it's no longer picking up the edit I made to remove the string slice on git
Oh there it goes
I guess it didn't update on the site immediately
 1)  711 *****************  marcusstuhr
 2)  463 *****************  Antti Haapala (AoC++)
 3)  463 *****************  wim glenn (AoC++)
 4)  449 *****************  vaultah
 5)  135 *****************  kms70847
 6)    5 *****************  DSM
 7)    0 *****************  adeak
 ....
Not much snow to work with, but @LaClusaz have still sorted a decent track for this weekend's world cup. Good work! https://t.co/oLugAGmPWW
hoho funny :D
wim
wim
06:55
@AnttiHaapala hey, actually, I don't need if-else anyway because it's breadth-first search. next depth will always be >= depth , no need to check it
don't need the max at all there
wim
wim
is_target = lambda n: n == target < is_target = target.__eq__
 
2 hours later…
08:46
any one having django's model knowledge?
0
Q: Error in adding a coloumn in model of django after migration also, the database had some values before

jayant singhIn django i had a Post model and using xamp phpmyadmin i had some entries it then one day i added a column Post_filter_keywords in this model then after migration i got this error given below -> THis is the model . class Post(models.Model): Post_id = models.AutoField(primary_key=True) ...

@anttiHaapala
Please read the room rules sopython.com/chatroom
Tl;dr, Don't link your recently asked questions here
ok sorry
user6568562
09:47
Last night faulty wires started a fire in my dad's house
user6568562
Also, cbg
We no longer see any nice Python question in the community. Most are like "do this for me" OR syntactical issues
re-cbg
@randomhopeful Yikes! I hope nobody was hurt, and there wasn't too much damage.
user6568562
@PM2Ring Hey PM [ : Fortunately, the dog started barking and woke my dad up as soon as the fire started. No damage at all, except clothes that hang too close to the outlet. They're made of highly flammable material, so good riddance anyway. The wall and the ceiling will need a new coat of paint, but all in all, they were really lucky
@MoinuddinQuadri I agree that good questions are pretty rare these days, but they do occur every now and then. And most of those are variations on old questions but have some little twist that prevents them being closed as straight dupes. But even most of those could probably be closed as dupes anyway, with a bit of explanation in the comments, or with a small answer that shows how the linked answers in the dupe target can be applied to the new OP's situation.
@randomhopeful Phew!
My theory is that most new questions are posted by people who are too lazy or too incompetent to make a decent search for an old question that addresses their problem. Or their communication skills (or English skills) are so poor that they can't express their question in a way that makes a search possible.
And of course, when they post their semi-coherent, poorly specified question on SO it'll probably get closed anyway, unless we can somehow assist them via comments to get their question into an answerable state.
@randomhopeful Did you see the song clip I linked earlier today?
user6568562
10:20
@PM2Ring I'll check it right away !
user6568562
She's really amazing
The "duel" from La Voix with Audrey Fréchette vs Marie Ève Fournier is fun too. They're doing G 'N R's Welcome to the Jungle
@PM2Ring True
I stopped visiting the /tagged/python questions. I think I should visit them once a day to mark questions as dupes.
@BhargavRao Even Martijn does that from time to time: he writes a brief answer that specifically addresses the quirks of the new question, and then hammers it before anyone else can write an answer. :)
My last answer was 2 months back. :D
Aah, Martijn has overtaken me again data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/425986/…
11:28
cbg
@randomhopeful there was a fire just a week ago in a Helsinki apartment. I'd suspect the mom of the family of Ghanaian origin had lined laundry inside the apartments' sauna... Dad was working in night shift; mom and 3 pre-school children died possibly because just carbon monoxide poisoning.
*sorry one of them had gone to school already.
user6568562
@AnttiHaapala Man, that's horrible
11:47
@randomhopeful better get a smoke detector in case dog doesn't wake up :(
12:09
Hi - newish to python.. simple question - if using a while loop, does it end if it encounters a return?
Or only for 'break'
@JakeStokes Sure! In fact, using return instead of break is a common way of breaking out of nested loops.
Okay.. next question then. Is there a way to use a return statement without breaking the loop/ending the function?
@JakeStokes Nope. But there's a thing called yield which lets a function send results back to the caller as they're calculated. A function that uses yield is called a generator.
Okay thank you
Do you think it would work with something like the following:
functiondict = {
    'x' : function_x,
}

def looping(x):
    while True:
        if not x:
            print("Breaking")
            break
        else:
            print("Ideally not breaking yet...")
            return functiondict['x']()
I'm essentially running function_x() in the else statement, which works, but ends the loop.
I'd like it to not..
I'm not sure what you want that code to do. You never modify x, so the if test will always give the same result.
12:19
That was a mundane example of what I was doing in simple terms, at least an attempt at it
in reality, x is altered by function_x
well perhaps you should explain in English what you're trying to achieve...
I'm essentially running function_x() in the else statement, which works, but ends the loop.
I'd like it to not..
So I guess.. is there a way to run the function in the functiondict from the else statement, without ending the while loop?
The only way I know of is using return
wat? return doesn't "run functions"
it returns values.
how about you just do functiondict['x']() without return
@JakeStokes How does function_x alter x? You aren't passing anything to the function, or returning anything from it/. I think you need to give us a more realistic example, otherwise we'll just end up making wild guesses. :)
Yeah I know, but it's returning the function object from the dictionary value, which I'm adding the () onto to execute it
12:22
In the mean time, here's a really simple generator demo. This is just an illustration, you wouldn't normally use a generator for something this basic.
def doubler(n):
    while True:
        yield n
        n *= 2

for i in doubler(1):
    print(i)
    if i > 100:
        break
#output
1
2
4
8
16
32
64
128
I am terrible at explaining this properly. If you don't mind I'll try again, perhaps a bit clearer
the problem is that you're explaining how not what
you're explaining how you're trying to do X and failing, instead of what the X you're trying to do
because your description of how doesn't really tell what is it that you're trying to achieve here :D
The x is irrelevant, my question is simply can I execute a function from the functiondict within the else clause without ending the loop
but I think I have a better explanation I'm just putting together 1 sec
yes...
you can.
you just remove return
user6568562
@AnttiHaapala I know, man, I know. We had a long talk afterwards. I already told them about taking this kind of stuff seriously. They got robbed last year, now the fire. Safety discard's gots to go
12:29
it executes the function from the functiondict... but it doesn't return the result. but it matches your description
Excellent, i'll try that now, thanks
function_dict = {
    'one' : function_1,
    'two' : function_2,
    'three' : function_3
}

def somefunction():
    while True:
        if condition:
            x = input("whatever")
            print('breaking')
            break
        else:
            print("ideally continuing loop")
            function_dict[x]()
So that is essentially what I was going for
which reminds me that I need to put my smoke detectors in place
Apologies for my bad explanations earlier
@JakeStokes then... if you want to do a command line interpreter, like python interactive shell, you should look into module cmd
Thanks again Antti
12:36
Here's Sadie Johnson & friends with some sage advice from Brother Ray Charles: youtube.com/watch?v=tCrnr4ANaRU
cbg
I liked today's AoC
@AndrasDeak see my solution :D
in a bit, I'll polish my own and push it to github
ah forgot, you're not using gist
not anymore, but I'd be polishing anyway
pushing is 10 secs in addition:)
OK, done
let me see
@AnttiHaapala hmm, you're abusing your helpers:P
12:54
:P
as always, I'm happy with my dumb solution:D
I am ready for the day that the solution actually needs A*
any day now:D
although the maze-walking one was much faster with my A* than with my dilation one
but my A* now can solve several distinct problems in one function
If you already did dijkstra's, A* is barely more work
...if I remember both correctly. I might not
12:56
a) shortest path, b) number of nodes visited in n moves, c) all paths...
@KevinMGranger that'd be correct
Freezing-rain-on-untreated-roads-cbg, by the way :/
Tokyo Drift
@AndrasDeak but too many people create actual 2d maps instead of making a generic version of a function that yields neighbouring nodes.
the 13 digit integer from pymongo changes to numberlong
the NumberInt don't even works for pymongo
which works for shell
any suggestion?
12:59
wat?
cbg
Have you tried using a numberwang?
@GandalftheWhite I think you're complaining about a 13 digit integer being a long integer in 32 bit Python 2. But you haven't explained why that's a problem. BTW, the long integer type doesn't exist in Python 3.
13:14
omg....I want a coles note of day 11
I keep starting to read it and I get distracted
@PM2Ring I guess @GandalftheWhite is more about the distinction between different storage types in PyMongo, not that it should matter in any way
@PM2Ring well done, sir. Very apropos.
:)
unclear / too broad too stupid to code stackoverflow.com/questions/41199000/… And that answer's a 💩 as well...
13:33
> This video is not available.
Sorry about that.
just this, no "you're in a wrong country"
weird
you're in the wrong country haha
cbg
@PM2Ring I usually count 1, 2, 3, 4, etc.
but that's just me
@AndrasDeak Does this one work? youtu.be/LS75NtlH3gI?t=1m5s It's a scene from "The Court Jester"
13:43
it works...thanks:D
it's awful
woooow young Angela Lansbury, haha:D
Ok. Finally read day 11. Minimum steps. Oh boy. Ok. Today is a busy day don't know if I'll have time to start. At least I read the question to think about it now
day11 is fun, it'll keep you occupied for a week:P
"fun"
that's my least favourite day so far
Joy. I was hoping to finish AoC by Christmas
I'm annoyed I got stumped on day 10. It wasn't hard I was just dumb
:(
my day9 working solution is partly "hope for the best"
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