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ANW
11:01 AM
@Ilja maybe, but I will try PyMySQL as a last resort, because I just even run /usr/bin/python3 -m pip install MySQL-python and already got a huge error ending with ImportError: No module named 'ConfigParser I've already had tons of problems with this error 4 months ago ..
not really worth it
 
@XuMuK are you sure your multiply defined rules are not contradictory?
 
ANW
PyMySQL installed without issues ...
 
that's because it (mysql-python) is not python3 compatible
 
is it not possible that a later run replaces different stuff?
 
ANW
@Ilja but /usr/bin/python3 is actually 3.4 not 3.3
 
11:02 AM
You have a Python 3 at /usr/bin/python3? Then what was all this crap earlier with /opt/…?
 
@AndrasDeak yes, completely. I have found the mistake - it is necessary to add ',' to the end of lines
 
ah:)
 
@ANW I do hope PyMySQL works for you, they at least promise that it should be a (python3 compatible) drop in replacement for MySQL-python
 
hi
i have string like this "ID: 4 SSID: "NOKIA Lumia 630_1223" BSSID: null FQDN: null REALM: null PRIO: 301" how to convert is dict
plz help me
 
>>> s = 'ID: 4 SSID: "NOKIA Lumia 630_1223" BSSID: null FQDN: null REALM: null PRIO: 301'
>>> { 'foo': s }
{'foo': 'ID: 4 SSID: "NOKIA Lumia 630_1223" BSSID: null FQDN: null REALM: null PRIO: 301'}
There, a dict.
 
11:05 AM
I thought that would be unnice:P
(crossed my mind too)
 
ANW
 
Just because this is a chat room, that does not mean that you can just dump your questions without actually thinking about what you want to do and what you are having problems with.
 
ANW
It's just explaining issue, and lacking enough experience with python .. I don't mean no disrespect
 
@poke i need like this {ID: 4 ,SSID: "NOKIA Lumia 630_1223" ,BSSID: null, FQDN: null ,REALM: null ,PRIO: 301}
 
@ANW I'm not sure poke was addressing you:)
 
11:08 AM
@ANW My comment wasn’t directed at you ;) No worries. You are having some weird problems, but you have been working with us together trying to fix this.
 
Although you did bash python3........ :P
 
ANW
hehe, sorry ^
 
^ yeah. Hard to forgive you for that :P
@ReeganMiranda That’s not valid Python syntax. Also, what have you tried?
 
@poke i have string like this ID: 8 SSID: "TP-LINK_35F094" BSSID: null FQDN: null REALM: null PRIO: 1115 i have need only ID value and ssid value only how to filter it a dist obj i will easily filter out so i need i dict obj how to convert
 
11:19 AM
cabbage @Jon :)
 
@JonClements hello:)
have you fully recovered from the curry by now?
 
yup - thanks
 
There was something about ninja cats the other day...
perhaps in another room
 
>>> {k.rstrip(':'):v for k, v in zip(*[iter(shlex.split(s))] * 2)}
{'PRIO': '301', 'REALM': 'null', 'SSID': 'NOKIA Lumia 630_1223', 'FQDN': 'null', 'ID': '4', 'BSSID': 'null'}
 
I wanted to ask you something about it, but I no longer remember:(
 
11:25 AM
@Andras it was important then :p
 
but it was!:P
maybe
 
@JonClements Wow very thanks
 
@Reegan welcome - but you'll do yourself a favour to not just blindly use it but understand what it's doing - and take note of what @poke said - we're more willing to help when you've shown what you've tried or thought about and there's a problem we can help you with rather than just dumping code on you.
 
see bee gee
 
@idjaw you on the rum already cap'n? :p
 
11:29 AM
one of dem mornings pup
 
I thought he misspelled syzygy
 
sybygy @idjaw
 
@idjaw I was disappointed earlier - you need to get some more biscuits in... just leave 'em in the cupboard under the cutlery drawer and I'll pick 'em up later :p
 
@JonClements maybe I'm getting better at hiding them.
 
@idjaw that's how you get horse heads in your bed
or chewn-up slippers
 
11:32 AM
and squirrels
or is that just cats?
 
depends
I know a guy whose greyhounds eat cats up. Literally.
 
RHubarb all, Have exams tomo. Need to study.
 
@khajvah it really is time for me to move to Debian, then
@BhargavRao break a leg:)
 
@BhargavRao good luck!
 
11:35 AM
Thanks :) ...
 
Good luck @BhargavRao
 
Hello
I was following this post on using df.replace. The example works fine but it doesn't work on my dataframe. Any thoughts? There are no errors.
 
"doesn't work"?
 
The string doesn't change
 
did you try the answer rather than the question?
 
11:39 AM
The code doesn't error. Nothing happens/changes
 
and are you sure the regex matches?
 
Yes I tried the answer.
I am trying to change CA to CANADA. I tried mttt_pings.replace({'CA': 'CANADA'}), mttt_pings.replace({'CA': 'CANADA'}, regex = True), mttt_pings.replace({'CA': 'CANADA'}, inplace = True)
 
does the middle one return a changed dict?
mttt_pings = mttt_pings.replace({'CA': 'CANADA'}, regex = True) seems like something that should work
 
@AndrasDeak what does that mean and how would I know?
 
wait, there are comments complaining that the answer doesn't work
I've just failed installing pandas, so I won't be able to actually try it
 
11:43 AM
Once my code re-runs, I can check my version.
 
have you tried both?
regex and inplace?
 
At the same time?
No.
 
dear friends, I need a complex stuff done using pickle... My current need is a sample program to store a file with a name and email address ... if that name and email address came repeatedly can check and control it ... later I need to load the file and list all name and email address
 
you seem to need regex for the newer pandas api, and you need inplace to mutate your dataframe rather than returning it as a new one
mttt_pings = mttt_pings.replace({'CA': 'CANADA'}, regex = True)
#or
mttt_pings.replace({'CA': 'CANADA'}, regex = True, inplace = True)
these seem to me that should work ^
 
@AndrasDeak I will check the last one.
Give me ~3mins for run time.
 
11:45 AM
OK, though I'd try everything on small dummy test cases
easier both for you and us
 
@AndrasDeak the example works fine for me.
My dataframe just doesn't comply
 
does it have 'CA' in any of the fields?:P
 
Of course.
 
@JonClements i will definitely address that in future and this is what i'm trying. I'm trying to get a list of access points in an area using a device. While doing so, the device throws a string like mentioned.
@JonClements I tried to parse that string in python and store it as a dict. but python bit me with errors. I am a newbie in python. so i posted this question out here. I learnt how dict comprehension and list comprehension using your answers. Thank you very much for introducing me to these new concepts.
 
Okay, I need regex = True and inplace = True
 
11:48 AM
@ReeganMiranda if you tried it, you should've shown us what you've tried
then we can tell you what you're doing wrong, and we can see the effort on your side:)
 
It worked too well now. It changed CA to CANADA and CANADA to CANADANADA
 
@dustin cool
 
Thanks @poke and @JonClements for your help.
 
@dustin '^CA$' then? {'^CA$': 'CANADA'}
 
@AndrasDeak okay thanks. I will give it a try
 
11:49 AM
I'm only guessing, but if it's regex, it should work
 
What does the carat and dollar sign mean?
 
carat is the "start of string" anchor, dollar is "end of string"
 
Okay thanks.
 
so ^CA$ in regex should be "'CA' and nothing else"
 
Understood thanks.
 
11:51 AM
it doesn't work
 
It doesnt?
 
it does
with regex=True, it does:)
I just forgot that in my dummy test case
(installed pandas in the mean time)
df = pd.DataFrame({'a': ['1\n', '2\n', 'CANADA'], 'b': ['4\n', 'CA', '6\n']})
 
Nice, you got the install to work.
Worked for me too.
 
In [693]: df.replace({'^CA$':'CANADA'},regex=True)
Out[693]:
        a       b
0     1\n     4\n
1     2\n  CANADA
2  CANADA     6\n
the fact that the shell prints it means that it's not mutated in this case, but returned
 
Would there be an easy way to do 20 or so of these.
 
11:52 AM
well, use a list of dicts to set the rules?
wait
pd.replace accepts lists
 
I have no idea what you mean. My python experience was always in engineering, math, and orbital mechanic so this type of programming is foreign to me.
 
replace(self, to_replace=None, value=None, inplace=False,...)
        * list of str, regex, or numeric:

            - First, if `to_replace` and `value` are both lists, they
              **must** be the same length.
            - Second, if ``regex=True`` then all of the strings in **both**
              lists will be interpreted as regexs otherwise they will match
              directly.
{'^CA$':'CANADA'} <-- this is a dict, it has a field named '^CA$' with value 'CANADA'
you should be able to do something like
 
Just make 20 separate replace statements then?
 
df.replace(['^CA$','^US$'],['CANADA','UNITED STATES'],regex=True,inplace=True)
 
Okay. Curly brackets around it?
 
11:55 AM
no, these are lists
curly brackets are dicts
 
Okay, thanks.
 
In [695]: df = pd.DataFrame({'a': ['1\n', '2\n', 'US'], 'b': ['4\n', 'CA', '6\n']})
In [696]: df.replace(['^CA$','^US$'],['CANADA','UNITED STATES'],regex=True)
Out[696]:
               a       b
0            1\n     4\n
1            2\n  CANADA
2  UNITED STATES     6\n
so push all your (source) patterns to one list, and your (target) replacements into another list
and you're ready to go
 
Can I group two list items? That is, US and United States map to United States of America?
Or does that have to be entries, separately?
 
I suspect the latter
I've never used pandas, as you see
 
Okay, thanks.
 
11:57 AM
so I know as much as you do on the matter
 
Me either. Only 3 days in.
 
look at the manual, and experiment
use small dummy cases to understand how it works
then move to your actual problem when you're confident it should work
 
Alright thanks.
 
if you're stuck, feel free to ask, we'll figure it out:)
 
Alright thanks. I will be lurking all day since I am at work.
 
11:58 AM
but I can't (won't) replace the skill of solving basic problems
@dustin sure
 
@dustin What exactly are you trying to do?
 
@JonClements Clean up country names in a dataframe.
 
cbg people
 
hey
 
What's up
 
DSM
12:20 PM
Fellow fans of terrible questions may enjoy this one, which is admirably up-front about its goals demands.
 
Ah yes. I enjoyed reading that one.
 
"What if I don't like pickles?"
 
lol
:D
by his name he is from bosnia
can i post code directly here or over pastebin is more apropriate, because i have one question about it
 
Cabbage.
 
12:32 PM
cbg :)
 
@DSM I wrote a little comment... but I didn't get a chance to close-vote.
 
@MarkoMackic depends on the length, but usually pastebin is better unless it's a few lines
 
i'll go over pastebin
 
umm
something odd is happening with my firefox:D
oh, it's just gnome that crashed
phew, I'm relieved:D
 
now if you look at it in function check values i tried to add print "hello" at the beggining .. and process never prints it
 
12:36 PM
your indentation is disturbing:)
 
user559633
@IntrepidBrit Why, what's up?
 
@AndrasDeak sorry about that
 
it's OK
 
user559633
More complaining about non-programming stuff and wankery?
 
@tristan Very SJWy
 
12:37 PM
@MarkoMackic it doesn't enter the if, then
does it?
0 is probably in countofnumbers:P
 
@idjaw I found a mini wiki for MTL tourism, so hopefully that helps some :P
 
however i tried with this
def check_values(i,listofnumbers,listlength,total):
    print "Hello"
just that
not working
 
There was some well meaning discussion about mental health, well-being and community support - but there were times the people giving the discussion immediately readjusted their terms to something more SJW-friendly
 
like process isn't started at all
 
user559633
@IntrepidBrit lol. of course they did. the "we want you here section" of the site has a couple of items that suggest that they want to treat adults as children
 
12:40 PM
@MarkoMackic are you running windows?
 
user559633
>We will provide a clearly-marked designated quiet room. This room is intended to be a calm and quiet place for anyone who needs to have a break from the bustle of the conference.
 
yeah
 
@tristan wat:D
 
user559633
lol. i hope there's free access to a hugbox with the admission price too
 
user559633
Child care
We know that attending a conference with your children can be difficult.
 
12:40 PM
i have a linux vm, to try it from there ?
 
Have you looked at something like this?
 
user559633
don't bring your child to a conference. you're an adult responsible for another human being. you should be able to figure this out on your own.
 
note the if __name__==__main__: bit, that seems to be important on windows systems
so that workers don't spawn their own processes or something
 
morning everyone
 
user559633
morning crow
 
12:41 PM
I'm not sure it's related, but people usually do stuff this way to be compliant with windows
 
@corvid morning
 
cbg(corvid)
 
@AndrasDeak ok , will tryy it :) and yeah i've read that whole page
 
user559633
@corvid I'm about to live near you. A fellow Masshole. A Somervillian.
 
12:43 PM
@tristan It was a bit cringey to listen to. I persevered through what I thought would be the extent of it in the "Wellbeing" section, but the hand-wringing and attempts to not offend literally anyone detracted from the content
 
Now you have to be a hipster, somerville is the hipster city. But it does have great food, try this restaurants: Pepe Bocca (Napoli), Snappy Ramen (Japanese) and The Painted Burro (Mexican)
 
Tristan seems like a hipster to me.
 
@AndrasDeak Nothing to do with that. For multiprocessing, you need the main block otherwise forks will also run the main block, which is… let’s say suboptimal.. but that’s not Windows-specific.
 
@poke is it not? I was under the impression that this is only an issue on Windows
 
@Programmer when are you going to Montreal
 
12:48 PM
@poke I read it here
 
@idjaw Probably going up the 15th and spending the night and the most of the next day there.
 
Do you mean that it won't throw an error, but still spawn processes on linux?
 
@DSM: I just managed to score an accept on a mpmath answer to a sympy question. :) stackoverflow.com/questions/36286862/…
 
not bad
you're missing a tl; dr
 
user559633
@Programmer Why do you think that?
 
12:55 PM
@AndrasDeak is the list version of pandas replace supposed to be slow?
 
user559633
@corvid lel. somerville doesn't seem to be a hipster city to me. most of the bars play sports on tv
 
@dustin I have absolutely no idea
 
@tristan Your passion for reddit is one example. :)
 
you can try a series of single replacements, see if that's faster
 
@Programmer yeah 4chan is way better
 
12:58 PM
I think a function of if statemens and then panda apply might be better
 
you can try looking around the web if somebody else asked this before
@dustin whatever floats your goat;)
 
@AndrasDeak anything that doesn't move exponentially slow floats my goat
 
user559633
@Programmer well, "hipster" doesn't mean a thing anymore and hasn't since people that shop at urban outfitters started being called hipsters. i just hate reddit because it's terrible.
 
I support that
@tristan I think it's mutual
I mean, reddit seems to hate SO
 
@khajvah I don't share that opinion.
 
user559633
1:00 PM
every complaint i've seen from reddit about SO has been "le meme i posted a HV question and got told to explain myself. jerks. le meme"
 
@AndrasDeak why would anybhody hate SO
 
@tristan the other day I saw someone riding a unicycle to work in Somerville
 
user559633
@khajvah basically
 
@corvid he/she must not have been too tired.
 
user559633
@corvid hahaha awww. it's like seattle 2006
 
1:01 PM
@AndrasDeak Hmm. Okay, but you should still do that on other systems too :P
 
@poke of course of course, portability is important;)
 
;D
 
I just wish there was a way to skip an unnecessary block of indentation..........
@khajvah I don't know, we're darlings!
I like myself in particular.
You all are OK too of course:)
 
I bet those whoever hate SO would lose their jobs the day SO is closed
 
1:11 PM
@AndrasDeak I'm not sure whether to agree or disagree, because I don't know what you mean. :)
 
Does anyone know of a good site that explains how to parallelize the cores in Python?
 
@dustin you already got answers in the chat
 
@khajvah considering I never asked this, I don't see how "I" already received answers on this.
 
@PM2Ring I mean "I'm generally lazy to include that if __name__==__main__ block since only I use my scripts and I use linux and adding an unnecessary level of indentation seems wrong"
 
user559633
@dustin Hey, I'd search around SO for 'multiprocessing'
 
user559633
1:14 PM
What are you working on? There may be other solutions as well
 
anyway, you'll probably disagree, it's bad practice to break portability, and bad mojo to hate indentation:P
I've used multiprocessing.map before, it was fun
 
@dustin ok it probably wasn't you. There was a discussoin about multiprocessing
 
@tristan I am working on cleaning up country codes in a dataframe with 13million rows.
 
@AndrasDeak If you ever plan to reuse any of the modules you write, then you should not have code running at the first identation level that does something.
 
"reuse"?
oh, I see, yeah
 
1:16 PM
import script_that_i_just_wrote
:P
 
user559633
@dustin Ah, okay, if it's already-or-being-loaded-into memory in the Python interpreter, going with multiprocessing will mean having to copy the contents of memory into another process. Is it possible to chunk up your data so you don't have to worry about synchronization or coordination between processes?
 
@tristan 4 replaces in pandas takes the time from ~3mins to ~8mins and I need to do 20+. I tried 15 and it was still running for ~30mins before I stopped it.
 
Also, the if-main-main-main pattern also allows you to have a clearer logic flow and declaration order.
 
@tristan what do you mean by chunk up?
 
user559633
e.g. 1GB file, split into 4x250MB files, then run a process on each 250mb chunk, optionally with its own threads
 
1:18 PM
It becomes very important when you start writing scripts that are longer than 50 lines.
 
@poke yeah, I figured
and I get what you're saying, I'm trying to remember what it was exactly like
 
@Programmer thats soon. I'll start putting together that email
 
@tristan how could I split a file like that?
 
user559633
@dustin all kinds of ways, to be honest. can you put some example data into a pastebin or gist?
 
@poke yeah, I thought that I should put that __name__ check in my function, which I import from somewhere else later
 
1:19 PM
@AndrasDeak Well, for small scripts if __name__==__main__ isn't really necessary. But it is neater to put the bulk of your code into functions, and have if __name__==__main__:main(). Doing that means you can safely import the script. And it means you aren't putting a bunch of stuff into your global namespace.
 
so it was indeed indented already
 
@idjaw No worries, I was just letting you know I wasn't as lost as I was before.
 
so are you implying that if I import my_script, then the function inside it will see __name__==my_script? give or take quotes?
 
does pycharm do profileing ?
 
@tristan here is some sample data. For instance, I am then doing df.replace(['^a$', '^b$'], ['America', 'Baharain'], regex = True, inplace = True)
It is from a previous question
But the data outline is the same.
 
1:21 PM
@PM2Ring That, and this:
def main():
    # here is the flow of your program, right at the top
    # utility functions are defined *below*

def utility1(): pass
def utility2(): pass
def utility3(): pass
def utility4(): pass
def utility5(): pass
def utility6(): pass

if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()
 
Of course, sometimes you do want some executable code in the global space, even in a script that's intended to be used as a module. It's a handy way to initialize stuff.
 
If I'm importing a script that wasn't intended to be imported, I'm going to have to look at the source and adding if __name__ == '__main__': is the least of my problems.
Always doing if __name__ == 'main' is best practice I guess, but I like how there's 0 boilerplate code without it.
 
@poke I tend to define functions before I use them, so my main is generally at the end of my script. I've been using that pattern for decades, and I have no great motivation to change. :)
 
It depends
 
user559633
@dustin kb.iu.edu/d/afar check out split
 
1:28 PM
@QuestionC Before I started answering on SO I was diligent about encapsulating stuff and using the if __name__ == 'main' stuff. But I don't often bother doing that in my SO answers. However, it really is a Good Idea™ to not pollute your global space with executable code. locals() exists for a reason.
 
@tristan okay I will take a look
@tristan I cannot perform the split in Python? My work has us use Windows so it is tragedy.
 
user559633
@dustin Oh, yeah, you can. split() :)
 
What's the script for SoPyCon? Do we have a page on the site?
 
@tristan I cannot find the documentation on split(). I only see str.split()
 
user559633
@dustin you could probably adapt something like this stackoverflow.com/questions/16289859/…
 
user559633
1:39 PM
i might have made it more complicated than it needed to be though. i'd try multithreading first to see if that will "just work" and go down the route of multiprocessing later. the thing i was trying to avoid was having to make that decision in code of "how far does each worker thread/proc go into the data, where does it start?"
 
@AndrasDeak Sorry, I missed that post earlier. Here's a tiny script that illustrates what __name__ does.
def func(): print(__name__)

func()
 
When a changelog says “Fixed top crashes”, that means that they are still aware that there are multiple other ones, right?
 
If you run that script it prints __main__. But if you save the script as myscript.py and then do import myscript it prints myscript
 
@IntrepidBrit SoPyCon program goes up on Friday.
 
@tristan I think I might just ask a question on the site about using replace and additional options for better performance.
 
user559633
1:43 PM
@dustin sure, but it's important to know how to measure "better performance" and know your bottleneck
 
DSM
@PM2Ring: well-played! I had a look at that question the other day but didn't have time to track down what was going wrong on the sympy side.
 
Thanks, DSM!
 
@poke cheers
 
I guess I ought to check out sympy some day... :)
 
@PM2Ring symbolic computation is really really interesting
 
DSM
1:55 PM
I was sceptical when it first started -- Python syntax doesn't really lend itself well to symbolics -- but there's a lot of really nice stuff there. I may use some of my upcoming free time to play around with the new symengine core.
 
I don't like windows :|
 
DSM
.. so don't use it! Other than rdesktopping into a box to use Excel, I haven't used windows in six months.
 
unfortunately ubuntu doesn't have the packages needed, gotta have touch-screen support and a few other things
 
@khajvah I'm sure it is. I used to dream of stuff like that in my younger days, before things like Mathematica existed. But since the dream has become reality I haven't had the motivation to investigate them. But I have written my own simple Polynomial class in Python. :)
 
@PM2Ring every time I learn a new language I say to myself that I am gonna write a symbolic computation library but then I find out it already exists
 
2:01 PM
Morning cabbage.
 
Before I learned Python I did some crazy stuff in awk: doing derivatives of polynomials and manipulating Taylor series. I was working on finding a good approximation function for the Spiral of Theodorus .
 
One venti Morgan please
 
You know you have too many test folders on your desktop when you need to tab four times to get to the new one…
 
putting folders on your desktop, but, why?
 
DSM
@corvid: huh! I haven't done any UI stuff needing touch-screen support, but I thought there'd be lots of touch-y stuff starting about the time Unity came in. Hmm.
 
2:05 PM
It's a specific driver for a specific touch monitor, so it can be a little annoying, also one of the devs prefers windows
 
@corvid just for testing stuff temporarily
 
DSM
I find it hard to answer questions which say "I wanna".
 
would it be a bad idea to create a mongo collection, create a git webhook which sends to a url that inserts into that collection, then use that collection on another desktop application to check for new releases?
 
~\Desktop\testest\example\node_modules\angular-cli\node_modules\ember-cli\node_modules\broccoli-babel-transpiler\node_modules\babel-core\node_modules\regenerator\node_modules\defs\node_modules\yargs\node_modules\cliui\node_modules\center-align\node_modules\align-text\node_modules\kind-of\node_modules\is-buffer\test\basic.js
Oh, Node…
 
oh....oh my
 
2:19 PM
Needless to say, that path is too long for Windows, so I can’t actually delete the folder now.
 
@PM2Ring The only magical thing for is finding analytic solutions to let's say integrals. I can imagine how will find the derivative but analytically solving integral demands creative thinking
 
@poke I can't stand that error on windows :\
 
DSM
Didn't I hear somewhere that flat is better than nested? ;-)
 
@khajvah Sure. Derivatives are a lot easier than doing symbolic integration of an arbitrary function. But I was trying to solve a functional equation: find polynomial function f such that f(n+1) = f(n) * (1 + i / sqrt(n)), where i²=-1. IIRC. :)
 
@PM2Ring yeah this is hard
 
2:37 PM
I found out a few months ago that there's a clever way to do it, but it's too hard for me to understand. :) I did it by "man-handling" a symbolic Taylor series and then solving for the Taylor series' coefficients. I got quite a good 11 degree poly, but after that the coefficients start to diverge.
 
Taylor series....wow I haven't heard that in a long time.
 
They're a beautiful thing: If a function is smooth (i.e., it and all its derivatives are continuous) , then the value of the function for every value of x is totally determined by the values of all its derivatives at any one value of x.
But it's getting rather late here, so I better say rhubarb.
 
Day 13 of my new job. Still waiting for my computer to arrive.
 
DSM
2:53 PM
HugeCo's IT dep't is testing you.
 
Yesterday I worried that upper management was dragging their feet while they did a cost-benefit analysis on firing us and hiring an offshore team. But apparently outsourcing outside of the US is against company policy.
So I got that going for me, which is nice.
 
then how are you typing this? Are you telepathically bound to this chatroom?
 
I brought in my personal computer.
I'm also telepathically bound to the chatroom, but that consumes a lot of psychic energy.
 
Telepathy runs the Kevin down quickly
There's only so big of a coffee battery
 

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