Actually though, @Pigman168, if you're using HTMLParser you can get the string 'http://www.chiang-mai.ch/storage/images_design/scharf.png?__SQUARESPACE_CAC‌​HEVERSION=1434903844741' already? In which case - do you want to dump the ? and everything to the right of it, or is the problem more complex than that? If it's just that then have a go at it and come back if you hit problems.
@AnttiHaapala No idea. I haven't turned on my computer today. I wasn't well & spent the day in bed. I'm currently using a Chromebook that my Dad had hiding in the garage. :)
@AnttiHaapala I got a random downvote on an oldish SE.Mathematics answer a day or two ago. It's not a great answer, but it had 6 upvotes. It'd be nice to know what the downvoter didn't like...
The meetup is having a 2 week game jam whose theme is "death". Unfortunately, the match-3 game I was working on all night previous to the announcement doesn't really qualify.
I guess if people have made a match-3 game about street fights, I could make a match-3 game about death. It's only one step further into the realm of absurdity.
I have mixed feelings about doing that in production code, though. I'd probably consider it better style to write a function to do it, and then call access_dt_property(df["col"], "hour") or something.
At some point I'll have to enter one of those, to keep me humble.
user559633
1:39 PM
For webdevs in here that use uWSGI: do you use it in emperor mode? i was thinking this weekend about emperor vs standalone mode (specifically wherein running as non-root) and if there were any benefits (performance or maintenance) that pushed you in the emperor direction.
@Ffisegydd: I've budgeted for four months of funemployment (and it's been great so far, with reading and attending sports!), but I'm not adopting any new hobbies until things are settled. :-)
user559633
"Help improve outcomes for shelter animals" Solution A: Adopt all the cattes and doges
The best way to improve outcomes for shelter animals is to add a "cares for the welfare of animals" term to the value function of your bootstrapping world-conquering AI. Everything else is just shuffling deck chairs around on the Titanic.
Ehh, a small improvement in some problems is negligible, but in others matters enormously to the people involved. Probably the same holds for animals..
There seem to be some really easy cheats that you can do, for example most animals are transferred around 9am - presumably because that's just when the staff do it regularly :P
I feel kinda bad using that as a feature though, if you're trying to actually do proper prediction.
With nose, if I'm patching out some functions, what's the best way to have those patches only apply to the tests that don't care about those functions?
Eg, if I have test_foo and test_bar. bar calls foo, and foo takes a long time to run, so in test_bar I'd like to patch foo to something that just returns precomputed results.
But I still want test_foo to call foo.
I have module.foo = lambda x:x, but that breaks test_foo.
@davidism Ooo, perfect. I'm using nosetest right now, but should I switch to pytest? I just started writing this test suite, so it wouldn't be too bad to switch.
I noticed something interesting yesterday. When I take off my glasses and look at the lenses, any light sources reflected on the glass have a green tint. But when I put them under running water to clean them, the reflections have a pink tint. I wonder why this is.
I bet the answer includes the word "polarization".
@Kevin I'm guessing you need to add a thin layer of H2O between the interference coating and light source in the diagram in the wikepedia article. Then do Math on it ;)
> When the thickness of the film is a quarter-multiple of the wavelength of the light in the medium, the reflected waves from both surfaces interfere to "destroy" each other. Since the wave cannot be reflected, it is completely transmitted instead.
I don't really understand the math, but conceptually it sounds like changing N1 from air to water changes the wavelength that gets attenuated.
Correct. The refractive index of air is only slightly higher than that of vacuum, but the IOR of water is around 4/3, (IOW, the speed of light in water is ~ 3c/4). So the water makes a radical difference to what the thin films are doing. At a guess, it totally wrecks what the outermost film is supposed to be doing.
As long as we're talking glasses... there are two optical effects that I've always assumed are related to glasses but never really confirmed. It's possible they're caused by humidity I suppose.
1) Streetlights at night (and light sources in general, including the moon) have a halo around them. It looks like a rainbow that goes all the way. 2) When turning your head while looking at multi-colored Christmas lights, the red and blue ones appear to move at different speeds.
I would expect red and blue LEDs to require different PWM rates in order to have similar perceived brightness. So when you move your eyes, the dotted light trails would have different periods. If you're talking about conventional bulbs though, I don't know what would cause that.
The christmas lights is based on the strings hanging off people's houses at a large distance. It's obvious because the distance between the bulbs appears to be changing in a confusing way.
Not eyes, head. I forget if you see it when moving your body. I originally noticed it just walking down the street, but I may have been incidentally rotating my head.
Well if you have a lens that exhibits chromatic aberration and rotate it, say, 90 degrees, then the red rays would sweep over a slightly smaller distance than the blue ones, in the same amount of time.
I think when you move around, the main perceptive effect comes from the saccades you involuntarily do
like when you're looking at the side of a projected screen from a beamer, you can see r/g/b strips as the three colours are being projected one after the other
I will perform experiments 7 months from now and come back with my findings. I'm pretty sure it happened when sitting still, turning my head, and keeping my eyes focused on a fixed object (the Christmas lights) though.
I may have to look into hosting sometime soon, though. I think this is the year I finally try to monetize my random Python data skills (for beer money, not for salary), and a consulting service without a webpage is going to seem strange,
After hearing Morgan mention it, I tried for a few minutes to listen to a podcast at faster speed. Couldn't take it. I need to think about things I hear, and faster input just causes a thought bottleneck.
Pretty sure they're magic pips. Late to the party, but I use nanoc for static site generation. Have found it easy and developers responsive (sshh, it's in Ruby)