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02:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00

15:00
@Code-Apprentice Merry Christmas to you too! I've kind of stalled; taking a bit of a break.
yup, it seems to be the print statement
@AndrasDeak, yeah, though in py3 it gives the error xrange undefined
ahh...looks like you are working on something else. @heather
you see, exp1 if cond else exp2 assumes the value of either exp1 or exp2; putting a statement/function that doesn't return anything there is abusive
and abuse is fine with code golf, but a statement won't even run
@heather in py3 vanilla range is xrange
@AndrasDeak what's the difference between xrange and range?
15:02
you don't need xrange in code golf...
because it seems like range works...
@heather xrange doesn't generate the whole list for you, it's a generator
@heather There is no executed code here, just a function definition.
@PM2Ring Cool Heather! Yep, nothing compared to their situation. Terrible.
@Code-Apprentice, yeah, but running it still gives an error =)
15:03
I get "None"
Night folks I think. rbrb.
oh...that was your earlier code
@heather That won't work, but this will:
print 0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1
@heather python2 xrange === python 3 range, they don't contain the entire range as a list. Python 2 range returns a list. The python3 equivalent is list(range(...))
@PM2Ring it won't
15:04
Here are some alternatives:
will it?
print int(not isinstance(2**n-1,Integral))
print [1,0][isinstance(2**n-1,Integral)]
But I'm not sure what you expect isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) to do
>>> print 0 if 0 else print 1
  File "<stdin>", line 1
    print 0 if 0 else print 1
                          ^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
@AndrasDeak Sorry, copy & paste error. :)
aaah, nice:)
@heather because in PM's example the print statement acts on the ternary
equivalent to print (0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1)
15:06
@PM2Ring it should return True or False depending on whether or not that first expression is an integer
@AndrasDeak huh, that's cool
@AndrasDeak which can be simplified to print(int(isinstance(2**n-1,Integral)))
@Code-Apprentice yes, but that's another matter, and needs a negation
as PM already noted it
oh...right
hmm...could you then do the same thing with the next layer of if statements?
like print 0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1 if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)) 1
oh, wait, that gives an error
> else 1 if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)) 1
15:09
@heather The ternary operator needs a result from each "clause" (before the "if" and after the "else"). print() doesn't actually return a result.
@heather Well, 2**n will be an integer if n is an integer. If n is a float, then 2**n will be a float, even if mathematically it equates to an integer.
and I forgot an else statement in there...
@heather yes
and you'll probably need parens for nested ternaries
it works with print 0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1 if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)) else 1
hmm, now for the final layer
does it do what you want?
there's 2 possible groupings for that
(0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1) if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)) else 1
0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else (1 if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)) else 1)
15:11
@AndrasDeak I think so, yes.
it doesn't have to be clear for code golf, but make sure it works:P
@heather You could simplify all of m() by replacing print with return. Then print(m(5)) or whatever value you are passing in.
@AndrasDeak most vexing parse, eh?
if you do returns, you don't need else clauses either
@AndrasDeak you don't?
but if the objective is to print the stuff, you might not be able to get away with it
15:12
wouldn't you need to be able to return 1 for false?
A return halts execution.
but if there is no return, and it carries on...?
@heather for the last else, possibly, yes
you still have the later return, just not the else.
but you can probably spare some elses
15:13
@AndrasDeak not really, it's code golf.
for code golf, it might be better to use the one liner like Andras has above and just a single return in front of it.
stupid things to do on days off. Make fun of "slack bots" for sending messages on days off.
def m(n):
 if n<3:return 1
 if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)):
  return 0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1
 return 1
does that do the same ^ ?
removed x from xrange...
return (0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1) if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)) else 1
@AndrasDeak seems to, yes.
15:15
@heather OK, so that's how I meant that you can spare some elses:)
from numbers import*
def m(n):
 print 1 if n<3 else 0 if isinstance(2**n-1,Integral) else 1 if all(n%i for i in range(2,n)) else 1
^this is what I was using
@heather don't need a newline after def if it's a oneliner
oh, okay
in code golf, do you count whitespace?
yes
you count weird character encodings as well
it's not characters, it's bytes
15:16
phew, that's 128 bytes.
so then taking out the right else statements...
I see now why I won't really be using ternary statements outside of code golf.
yup
btw you should heed PM's remarks about testing integrity of your numbers
>>> isinstance(2,Integral)
True
>>> isinstance(2.0,Integral)
False
so much bytes lost for naught
I'm still not sure why you're doing isinstance(2**n-1,Integral). 2**n-1 is guaranteed to be an integer if n is, so why not just test n?
@PM2Ring oh, good point.
I didn't realize that.
15:18
It looks like she wants to check if a float is an integral value.
@AndrasDeak I'm not sure I understand what you mean. I'm using Integral because int doesn't work for large numbers.
BTW, in Python 3, range(2.0) will raise TypeError, Python 2 just throws a deprecation warning.
@heather Since 2 is an integer, 2 to any power n is also an integer if and only if n is an integer.
DSM
DSM
Prebreakfast cabbage for all.
prebreakfast?
is that like first lunch?
15:21
You can pass isinstance a tuple of types:
>>> a=2**100;isinstance(a,(int,long))
True
cbg @DSM
@Code-Apprentice oh, i understand that, I wasn't sure what he meant by "integrity of numbers" or how that was costing me bytes.
DSM
DSM
@Code-Apprentice: no, just before breakfast..
@DSM, cbg
We hosted our first holiday dinner yesterday, and we finally understand what holiday leftovers are like.
So. Party at my place. Show up whenever.
15:22
And in Python 3, long doesn't exist, all integers are just int
DSM
DSM
(pm: edit that.. there we go!)
okay
My excuse is that it's 2:22 :)
DSM
DSM
@ijaw: my sister's family will be eating turkey and ham for the next week..
so if you do (a, (int, long)) is there no need to have the Integer or import of numbers?
wow...
15:24
How big will your numbers be?
The program should work for values within python's standard integer size.
so, all over the place.
DSM
DSM
The way we're splitting ints and floats here feels weird. Do we have a link to the original Q?
18
Q: Is it a Mersenne Prime?

FlipTack A number is a Mersenne Prime if it is both prime and can be written in the form 2n-1, where n is a positive integer. Your task is to, given any positive integer, determine whether or not it is a Mersenne prime. You may submit either a function which returns a truthy/falsy value, or a full p...

DSM
DSM
In code golf rules we're allowed to assume that the argument is a positive integer ("given any positive integer"), then.
the first rule of code golf club
15:28
so I guess there's no need to worry about the input 2.0, for instance.
I thought I linked you to my Mersenne prime code the other day...
@heather I don't think you need the isinstance() test
you know, that's true
because 2**n-1 will be an integer if n is an integer
and we're given that the input will be an integer
so we really just need to find if a number is prime
15:29
/me nod
DSM
DSM
Well, no, we need to test Mersenne-ness too.
What DSM said
but a Mersenne is a prime n that can be written in the form 2**n-1
@heather be careful, you are given a number n. You need to determine if there is another number m which makes n == 2**(m-1).
IOW, you need to make n of the form 2**k-1, and then test that n is prime, which it can only be if k is prime (the converse isn't* true). Or just use the damn Lucas-Lehmer test. :)
15:31
A number is a Mersenne Prime if it is both prime and can be written in the form 2^n-1, where n is a positive integer.
according to the question^
exactly
when you write def m(n) the n is "a number", not the exponent in the formula
oh, darn
IOW, the n parameter is not the same as the n in the formula
that's what confused me.
okay, i'm going to rewrite the program.
so I'm getting the hang of the grouper() recipe fromitertools. Now I need a modification where I get the last incomplete group without any padding.
This doesn't appear to have any helpful hints. ;-(
DSM
DSM
15:38
I might just do (list(islice(r, 3)) for _ in repeat(None)) or something, after making r an iterator over your object. Although that will give an endless supply of empty lists, so you'd have to decide how you want to handle the end.
hrm, I solved day 25 mathematically and now I'm disappointed star 50 was just given.
Is there any inbuilt way to get < within __lt__ function?
@MartijnPieters no part 2?
DSM
DSM
@MartijnPieters: there's no pleasing some people! FREE STAR?! (Plus spoilers..)
@MoinuddinQuadri What do you mean? Can you do a gist/pastebin of what you are trying?
15:41
@MartijnPieters Christmas present? 😛
you solved 24 days of puzzles....here is a gift....star 50
DSM
DSM
Maybe takewhile(bool,(list(islice(r, 3)) for _ in repeat(None))), then, that'll stop at the empty.
I am writing a decorator for magic functions related to comparison operators. In the decorator I want to raise TypeError if argument is not of the type expected for comparison. It would be great if i could show comparison symbol as the part of error message based on the function on which decorator is called. @Code-Apprentice
bah, humbug
:-P
For example:
`__lt__` - `<`
`__le__` - `<=`
`__ne__` - `!=`
..
okay...I have an abstract idea of what you are trying to do. Can you show some code for a more concrete example?
15:47
This is the decorator. I am looking for more elegant way to change this error message
@MoinuddinQuadri Not really. The simple solution is to pass the symbol as an arg to your decorator, assuming you're decorating all the rich comparison magic methods.
@PM2Ring Well. I had that in my mind. But since python maps these symbols to the corresponding function while making the call in code. I think there might be a way to reverse that mapping.
Was looking for that from around an hour. But didn't got any significant information on that.
FWIW, a decorator that takes args (in addition to the function that it decorates) is essentially a decorator factory. And I should mention that a decorated function is slower than the undecorated version, not just because of the extra work it performs, but also because you get an extra level of function call every time you call the decorated function. And that's going to be be really noticeable with comparison functions when you try to perform a sort.
DSM
DSM
Some grepping through the Python source suggests maybe it's not easily accessible, or at least there are places where vaguely similar mappings are hardcoded. I'd just do it manually and get on with my day.
yeah I was going to suggest going after
>>> 1<'foo'
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: unorderable types: int() < str()
And would something dynamic work with functools.total_ordering? If this question makes sense to begin with...
my vague idea is that if > is defined in terms of <, then it can't really write that in an error message
I might be completely confused
anyway, rhubarb for now
15:58
Hmm.... @PM2Ring comment makes good sense. Decorator is not a good idea to use here.
Thanks @DSM
@AndrasDeak For `__ne__` i am sure it makes a call like `not x.__eq__(y)`. There must be similar relationship for other operators as well
IME, custom comparison methods tend to slow things down, and are best avoided unless you really need them. And if you do really need them, don't decorate them, code everything into each method the long way.
@MoinuddinQuadri By default, __ne__() delegates to __eq__() and inverts the result unless it is NotImplemented. There are no other implied relationships among the comparison operators,
Here's some fun with rich comparison that Antti & I put together a while ago: stackoverflow.com/a/29867270/4014959
@PM2Ring should add a note that Python 2 also needs __ne__
My assumption was that there might be some kind of relationship between `__lt__`, `__le__`, `__gt__` and similar operators. I was totally wrong there
cbg @AnttiHaapala
16:11
@MoinuddinQuadri object.__ne__(self, other) will default to not type(self).__eq__(other) on Python 3.
other than that there is absolutely no relationship, and whenever you define __eq__ you must also define __ne__ on Python 2; and in any case consider using total_ordering for <, >, <=, >= (that is if your class has total_ordering, and I despise classes that use these for anything besides total ordering!!!)
Here's another fun example, this time using all the comparison methods: stackoverflow.com/a/30141885/4014959
I think the question I linked in this comment is a good dupe target, but I don't know Windows well enough to be confident: stackoverflow.com/questions/41333484/…
@AnttiHaapala does that mean that doing self.__lt__(arg) or self.__eq__(arg) in __le__(self, arg) is not a good practice? Do we have any document related to this?
@PM2Ring I didn't remember having written any of these ...
@MoinuddinQuadri there is total_ordering decorator that you should use instead
they might be the best practice, or not...
it really depends...
I think it won't be a good idea to use a decorator based on the comment by PM2Ring earlier as it would slow down the execution due to extra level of function calls.
@AnttiHaapala total_ordering is slow
16:18
Any way, if we do not want to use decorator in order to prevent extra function call. We shouldn't be calling the other operator functions due to the same reason
Exactly
Note While this decorator makes it easy to create well behaved totally ordered types, it does come at the cost of slower execution and more complex stack traces for the derived comparison methods. If performance benchmarking indicates this is a bottleneck for a given application, implementing all six rich comparison methods instead is likely to provide an easy speed boost.
Rewriting the same thing again is not to be considered as good coding style. I am not able to make my mind on it.
It is Performance V/S Coding best practice :(
Yes, it's annoying isn't it. :)
- python sucks
16:27
For this case, Performance takes precedence, since you often need to call comparison methods in loops, so they should be as optimised as you can make them.
FWIW, I did my first program using asyncio today. To be honest, I just stole the asyncio code from J.F. Sebastian, but I managed to modify it slightly without destroying it. :) stackoverflow.com/a/41284244/4014959
@PM2Ring: Thank you for clarifying the doubt. And that makes perfect sense. But with that comes a new doubt. Is it a good idea to make type checks within the comparison function? Because even if done explicitly for each function, still these check will be done for each call
No one dares to say "Python sucks" in Python chat room except @AnttiHaapala . It needs a lot of guts :P
Ah. I see that J.F. Sebastian has now hammered that question to a different one that he also answered, but which uses threading rather than asyncio.
@MoinuddinQuadri Personally, I'd try to avoid making those checks in the comparison functions. It'd probably be more efficient to assume the objects being compared are of compatible types, and use try: ... except to deal with incompatible objects, unless there's a high probability that callers of the comparison methods will pass incompatible objects.
Python's try: ... except is very fast when the exception isn't actually raised, much faster than the equivalent if-based code. But handling exceptions when they do occur is fairly slow. So if you expect the exception to occur more than 5-10% of the time, if is better than try:...except.
16:55
Using try...except is better choice in that case. Thanks for the insights :)
@PM2Ring depends on the if case too...
but most of the time the expression to if is not much different.
and hasattr is implemented in terms of getattr, so the following code:
@AnttiHaapala Agreed. That 5-10% is just a rough guide, you really need to profile to be sure.
if hasattr(foo, 'bar'):
    value = foo.bar
really does foo.bar twice in success case and once in the failure case, suppressing the exception, so the hasattr is actually always slower
<3
17:19
Switched to ubuntu today :D
3
from what?
windows, IIRC
OK here, have a star
17:37
In Python, how do you implement methods that can take different number of arguments? I'm not talking about var args. I mean something like range() where if you only give one argument, it means something different than if you give two or three. That is the single argument version is not the same as the two argument version with a default value for the second argument.
hmm...that's probably not very well worded, but I hope it's somewhat understandable.
well, range itself is implemented in C
and it doesn't accept keyword arguments
so is it implemented with C's varargs?
>>> range(stop=5)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: range() does not take keyword arguments
@Code-Apprentice it's still args
CPython varargs
17:39
you just parse the *args on input
if len(args)==2 ...
so you'd code this in Python using
so the internal logic of range() checks the varargs array to tell if there is only one arg.
as Antti said, it's C
def range(*args):
      if not 1 <= len(args) <= 3:
         raise TypeError('range takes 1, 2 or 3 arguments')
      if len(args) == 1: ....
17:40
nailed it! :D
not as elegant as I was hoping ;-(
it's how you'd do any "polymorphism" like this in matlab (don't stone me if this is not polymorphism)
I see it as a kind of polymorphism
"function polymorphism"
@Code-Apprentice or... you could use some shit like
NOT_SET = object()
def range(start=NOT_SET, stop=NOT_SET, step=NOT_SET):
     ...
please don't let it be if end is None: start,end=0,start :D
17:42
I'm so used to Java and C++ where I can just give two functions the same name with different numbers of args. Granted, most of the uses for this in Java can be replicated with default values in Python.
@AnttiHaapala Why use NOT_SET rather than None?
are you seriously asking me that?
but you couldn't then distinguish range(foo) from range(start=foo)
anyway: because you're less likely to accidentally pass an object() to range than pass a None see Antti's proper answer --v
@AndrasDeak whatchya talking about,willis?
17:44
you can never create another object that would pass the is-test
oh, is, right!
however None is a singleton
so any None is None.
so the above is a fool-proof sentinel value
I know I've seen the pattern mentioned here before, but I didn't realize how profound it is:)
there is absolutely zero ways to break it, malevolent or ignorant...
Cool. Thanks for the info. I was just curious about this implementation detail. I don't actually have a use for it atm.
17:46
also, I hate positional argumetns
I often use kwargs for positionals too, for clarity
most of the time kwonly args are the proper way to do anything at all
(which is why python 2 is never the proper way to do anything at all)
DSM
DSM
Yeah, I don't think I'll be writing sin(argument=something) anytime soon.
yah, for methods that take more than one argument, kwargs are definitely useful.
that why it is most of the time
17:51
talking about which, when I provide a default value, that makes it a kwarg, right?
like def foo(bar=default)
all named arguments parameters can be bound using kwargs-syntax
oh...how do I declare a kwarg?
17:53
oh, so even def foo(bar):... can be called with foo(bar=42)?
>>> def foo(x):
...     return 42
...
>>> foo(x=13)
42
and any argument with default value you can call using positional syntax, except if they're keyword-only arguments (python 3):
so:
how do you declare kwonly?
>>> def foo(*, x):
...     return 42
...
>>> foo()
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: foo() missing 1 required keyword-only argument: 'x'
>>> foo(13)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: foo() takes 0 positional arguments but 1 was given
>>> foo(x=13)
42
any argument after * in Python 3 must be called using the keyword-argument syntax, or **kw, and must follow any positional arguments, and if it doesn't have the default value, must also be provided.
18:14
I just started a programming meetup in my area. I clicked back from the pricing screen several times to compare the "unlimited" and "limited" options. Eventually offered me 50% off for the unlimited option, so I decided I should do that.
@AnttiHaapala bit of trivia: my grandmother was from Norway.
And my surname is Danish
well, I know nothing about that.
Didn't know Apprentice is a Danish surname :P
well, now you know!
18:49
Is there a way to compress first stack-trace and message "During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:" when except block raises another exception?
I want just the last message to be displayed with the stack-trace
@MoinuddinQuadri yes, raise XException(foo) from None
but I wouldn't recommend it in most of the cases
Why?
Reason? Why do we want to show the internal logic of the code to end-user when all he should be knowing is the actual error?
@MoinuddinQuadri because you're making debugging harder. You should use it only very specific cases.
in any other cases, if you want to raise another exception within the exception handler, you should actually do raise XException from e
 try:
       1/argument
 except Exception as e:
        raise ValueError(f'Invalid divisor: {argument}') from e
I think syntax raise XException from e is not supported in Python2.7. It is again need be put in another except and raise Exception without from. Is it?
And I agree on the debugging part. It is useful
18:56
>>> def inverse(a):
...     try:
...         return 1 / a
...     except Exception as e:
...         raise ValueError(f"Can't calculate the inverse of {a!r}") from e
...
>>> inverse(0)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 3, in inverse
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero

The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 5, in inverse
ValueError: Can't calculate the inverse of 0
>>> inverse('42')
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 3, in inverse
TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for /: 'int' and 'str'

The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 5, in inverse
ValueError: Can't calculate the inverse of '42'
@MoinuddinQuadri also, who cares about Python 2.7?
I am writing code that is going to be used in the future, not in the past.
Makes sense. complete stack-trace will give more detailed reason of failure of code. But it could be changed based on need
Still most of the libraries should be compatible with the previous versions. Also, still most of the legacy projects are using 2.7 version
I am working on library that is marked as compatible for python 2.7
too bad
you can use the abominations from six then
ah no you can't :d
@MoinuddinQuadri note that that message comes only in Python 3, not in Python 2.
so you can use six.raise_from(NewException, None)
WOW. I wasn't knowing about six. For me it is the module of the day. Thanks @AnttiHaapala
six sucks mostly
it is not being updated and some things there are very wrong
it will also stop working on python 4 :P
19:11
For Python 4, it will come with update ;)
BTW, as of now I won't be using the six in order to prevent additional dependency. I think I may skip the part to suppress intermediate exception for now
now I urge that you don't use six but instead find out how to write them compatibly yourself
write a compat.py with only the stuff that you need
@MoinuddinQuadri you need this: bitbucket.org/gutworth/six/src/…
that's again written in a very stupid manner. stops working needlessly on 3.1, 3.0
it should have been written: first the condition for if sys.version_info > (3, 2), and then elif sys.version_info > (3,)
Also six's code uses exe() for executing code. Even though it is safe as six is not dependent on external inputs; but still I do not think it was the nice decision.
it is how you need to do lots of things...
@MoinuddinQuadri namedtuple uses exec
but six is using exec needlessly:
this exec is not needed, and actually the whole exec_ is rather stupid
Hello people. I've a Question that on SO people didn't answered.
Is it a new post?
19:20
Currently I've a E-Wallet App and the backend its in python/django
the issue is regarding Transactions.
There is any tutorial easy one. that I can learn to do a bank example. with tests.
lets say. deposit() withdraw()
this is my model.
and I use it this way.
@AnttiHaapala Idea behind creation of six was good. It would be helpful for writing compatible libraries. Even though six itself needs some refactoring and changes.
                                        with transaction.atomic():
                                            # withdraw Amount
                                            ClientSenderObject.withdraw(PaymentAmount)
@MoinuddinQuadri the problem is that now you have a dependency of some x version of six.
pastie.org is offline :P
Look lines 83 and 88
yeah you really cannot use orm for this,
you must use a serailizable transaction for the whole stuff...
and be ready to replay...
if you're serious at all
19:27
?
Is it with me?
I need to rollback if deposit fails
on my view I use deposit and withdraw
withdraw from user B and deposit to user A
but if withdraw fails and deposit does not. there I will have a serious problems in life.
I have a NP-reduction question, anyone around feeling keen to help out?
19:41
@eddwinpaz that's a hard problem and not something that I'd trust django orm to do properly.
@eddwinpaz you'd probably want to hold exclusive locks on the individual account rows
and then see for example 13.3.3.4 in this PostgreSQL documentation example
the problem is that the django orm rows are operating on snapshots of truth.
20:11
so raw sql directly to postgres is the best choice?
 
3 hours later…
22:43
no
Is this question a dupe? I wasn't able to find anything, so I posted it.
@Code-Apprentice if in doubt, why not ask first?
yah, I could have done that.
but then I feel lazy for not doing enough research.
at least I got my question answered ;-)
22:53
the bane of SO
I'll downvote it later; too busy now
23:05
@AndrasDeak Or you could just vote to close it.
02:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00

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