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wim
4:03 PM
yes I got it working
I have four layers of fixtures :
hold on, it's quite complex to code dump here, I'll create a gist instead
now, in the library code you can create and close session instances as you like, using the Session , and the changes will still be rolled back between tests
you may also work with detached instances, expunge them from a session, and merge them into a new session, which was the key part that I was missing in my previous simpler setup.
so now, it is not really necessary to pass a session around everywhere (but you can, if you want to, and it's by no means a bad design)
 
@idjaw nothing :D Nothing at all :D
 
wim
4:25 PM
🎶 I used map, and I liked it !! 🎶
another innocent zed victim
–1 just for using LPTHW — wim 1 min ago
 
Flies, honey, vinegar
 
Yeah that seemed a bit unnecessary
 
@poke ---v
in CHATLAB and Talktave, 2 hours ago, by rayryeng
This plugin is great. I've encountered many a time where I know for sure that the question is a duplicate, but I didn't edit the question with the proper gold tag to do so
 
4:41 PM
I'm a bit out of my depth when it comes to file encodings. If I have a text stream (like sys.stdin) and I want to pass that to a function that expects a binary stream, how would I go about that?
 
I think you can either reopen stdin in binary mode or there's something in io that can wrap and convert
 
@MooingRawr I think so! I'll give that a shot, thanks. (And I now feel stupid for asking this question without googling first btw)
 
4:57 PM
    yield the_session
    # you don't actually need to use this session if you wan't to, but it can be convenient.
    # new sessions created from Session() will also be bound to the test engine's connection.
    the_session.close()
    transaction.rollback()
    connection.close()
^^ nice! @wim
@MooingRawr You see the Eberle news?
 
Is this a confusing way to differentiate the lite/pro versions? imgur.com/a/QCpi7
or does it make sense
 
well one will have a $$$ sign flashing next to it so it should be clear;)
I probably wouldn't even notice the difference in title
 
5:16 PM
Wow, the docs are straight up lying to me... "The mode argument can be [...] 'rt', 'at', 'wt', or 'xt' for text mode." But then, ValueError: Invalid mode: 'rt'
 
wim
Python version?
 
Nevermind, I was reading the wrong paragraph. Turns out gzip.open and GzipFile don't support the same file modes.
 
@AnttiHaapala Thanks for the comments! Entirely new to all of this, so in a way I'm just hacking things together at this point. The np.array came from the way the list of commands was created (I'm brutally computing a function of 10 parameters for about 10 different values of each parameter, so there's a huge array of inputs I'm looping over) but you are probably right that it can be avoided all together. The comments that follow hold even moreso!
 
ummm why the yam does this exist?
is it really necessary?
@wim ^^ you're my go-to test person to make fun of things or validate. Have you used this?
this is the first I hear of it, and just saw it in a project internally, and don't understand why we are using it.
 
5:32 PM
It was only a test. You passed.
 
Hey I just met you, And this is crazy; But here's a question,
0
Q: How to download and convert .data file to .csv?

Allen MoreI would like to download and convert a data file from the UCI machine learning repository (specifically this one: https://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/Arrhythmia) to test a classifier with and I am unsure of how to do this. I'm working with python/pandas as far as file parsing goes, is there ...

 
@wim - took a stab at a len-less solution...
 
5:51 PM
@MooingRawr thanks for the warning
 
wim
@idjaw that looks awful
self.assertThat(blah, Equals(...)) what...???
I didn't know it was possible to make unittest look any less Pythonic, but there you go ...
@PaulMcGuire oh, thats pretty nice. like itertools round robin
although, I think your solution (in fact any solution) has to consume the entire generator first regardless. So perhaps that's needless sophistication.
 
This guy says neither gzip.open(sys.stdin, mode='rt') nor gzip.open(sys.stdin.buffer, mode='rb')work for him, but gzip.open(sys.stdin.buffer, mode='rt') does. That doesn't make any sense, does it?
 
@wim Thank you. I saw this and questioned why we are doing this, why we are using it, and it makes no sense to use it.
it's ridiculous
 
@wim - "needless sophistication" is my middle name
 
Hi there folks
Didn't want to open a stackoverflow question about this, so decided yo see if someone could help me
view_tabela_plana_estrutura = self.base_dir + '{destino}/tabelaplana/view_tabela_plana_estrutura.sql'.format(destino=self .host_destino)
 
6:05 PM
@PaulMcGuire do they nest? Paul "needless 'pyparsing' sophisticaion" McGuire ;)
 
The long line above violates PEP8 suggestion. What is the proper way to split the line into multiple lines?
 
@wim thanks for that remark, I completely missed the itertools recipes until now
 
@Kevin I think this is really you.
 
@AndrasDeak heh
 
6:08 PM
Synced up turn signals are beautiful because they don't happen all the time. We'd be sick of sunsets if the sky was orange 12 hours a day.
 
wim
@AndrasDeak most of them are worth missing tbh
 
@Vini.g.fer How about:
view_tabela_plana_estrutura = os.path.join(
    self.base_dir,
    self.host_destino,
    'tabelaplana/view_tabela_plana_estrutura.sql'
)
 
wim
many of them can be done better, clearer, more pythonic by just using plain old loops and comprehensions
 
Or, hmm, maybe I better double check to see if path.join actually accepts more than two args...
 
wim
it does
but if any of the arguments passed to path.join has a / in it, then you are doing it wrong
 
6:11 PM
@idjaw I have now.... wow....
 
yuuuuuuup
 
@davidism Beartato is me on a good day. Reginald is me on average. The All-Powerful Wishing Eye is who I strive to become.
 
wim
and Pathlib is so good that seeing os.path.anything is a code smell to me now
 
Harrison has no metaphorical meaning, as is typical of Harrison.
 
@PaulMcGuire , remember this question? I had been able to write the parser which is able to parse at different levels for sentences joined by AND, OR etc. and I created a regex out of an entire expression. I edited the question to add an MCVE version of the code.
My question is that now I have a string which has regexes separated by '&&&' (to denote AND), and '@@@' (to denote OR). I want to now search my text with this regex, which can sometimes be a composite of multiple regexes joined by &&& or @@@. Also, I have added a number at the end of each subunit regex which tells me what would be the search parameters of the regex search (like which line to search, if there would be a %s` unit in the search etc.). So to solve this I wrote this partial code-
rule_parameters=defaultdict(list)
for i in range(0,len(rulelist)) :
    andsplit=rulelist[i].split('&&&')
    if len(andsplit)>1:
        for ii in range(0,len(andsplit)) :
            orsplit=andsplit[ii].split('@@@')
            if len(orsplit)>1:
                for iii in range(0,len(orsplit)) :
                    if orsplit[iii].endswith('456'):
                        rule_parameters[rulelist[i][:-3]]=['AND_rule','OR_rule',['gs1','sent','r'+str(i),'456']]
						...and so on....
Is there a more efficient way? Should I write this as a question?
 
6:13 PM
@wim Ok, so I gather you would prefer:
view_tabela_plana_estrutura = os.path.join(
    self.base_dir,
    self.host_destino,
    'tabelaplana',
    'view_tabela_plana_estrutura.sql'
)
Assuming we're committed to using os.path in the first place
 
cbg
 
@Kevin - pathlib.Path is the new hotness for these functions
 
wim
not just that. but also that the values of self.base_dir and self.host_destino must also not contain slashes in the content.
 
I'm a little hesitant to endorse passing consecutive string literals to join thanks to the sneaky coalescing behavior of abutting literals:
>>> os.path.join(
...     "a",
...     "b" #oops
...     "c"
... )
'a\\bc'
 
@idjaw I wonder if it was just a cap space. It seems like a lot of people didn't want him back... But to only get Strome in return (not to say Strome isn't good or anything)
 
wim
6:16 PM
there are some fun surprises e.g.
>>> os.path.join('a', '/b', 'c')
'/b/c'
^ this is actually correct behaviour. but it trips a lot of people up, because they are misusing path.join
 
"correct" = documented in this context?
 
I see how a leading slash could be a problem, but what about internal slashes? Is it harmful for base_dir to be foo/bar/baz, for instance?
 
I've heard this surprise before but I still find it odd, despite I can't give a better expected result (other than an error?)
 
wim
@Kevin yes, it is incorrect
whether it is harmful or not depends on the context
but it is a sign that you are using os.path.join wrong
it's like adding bytes and unicodes on Python2. not necessarily troublesome in itself, but evidence that there exist problems earlier.
 
Incorrect in what respect
 
6:21 PM
i generally don't put any slashes in the arguments for os.path.join
 
I put slashes in my arguments constantly and would therefore appreciate a concrete example so I can determine what percentage of my projects are going to burst into flames
 
@user1993 I will comment on this general approach, but this particular project has gone beyond the amount of attention I can give it. If you are using your parser to create objects which create a new string which you are then parsing again, then you are going backwards with this final step. Put the AND/OR regex processing logic into the And and Or node classes. All you are doing now is just hacking out another kind of parser with split, endswith, etc. which looks like it will be pretty fragile.
 
I'll look into path.join. Thanks for the help!
 
wim
@Kevin because the whole point of using os.path.join is for platform independence
if you have a / in the "component" , you don't have platform independence
you may as well just use string operations
 
If I explicitly use slashes I just do str.join or something
 
wim
6:24 PM
@MarcusS yes, and that's fine
 
@MooingRawr there were some controversial statements made a little while back. Wonder if there was truth to it.
 
wim
anyway, Pathlib cleaned this mess up greatly with PosixPath and WindowsPath objects
 
<3 pathlib <3
 
pathliebe
 
Hi does anybody here have experience in developing gui app with pyqt? I need some help
 
6:26 PM
Oh, if it's just OS compatibility then I'm fine. The vast majority of programs I write that use path.join are one-shot scripty things, so they're already inextricably intertwined with my specific local environment anyway
 
steam store broke :| worse than a macdonald's ice cream machine
 
dir = "C:/users/kevin/desktop" isn't going to work on Linux and neither is dir = os.path.join("C:", "users", "kevin", "desktop")
 
it's the first day of the steam summer sale...
 
@AmitSingh You've been here long enough you should know the room rules by now. If you have forgotten them maybe re read them here: sopython.com/chatroom Mainly you should just ask your question.
 
why can't I buy any ice cream from steam?
 
6:28 PM
pretty sad
 
Oh sorry. Just gonna do that.
 
The steam is too hot, and it melts the ice cream
 
steam is hot, it melts the ice cream
BAH KEVIN
 
:>
 
wim
how to search your starred questions on SO?
 
6:29 PM
I'm not sure you can
 
Perhaps the data query maker thing could do it.
 
VoteTypeId==5 is the key apparently
@MooingRawr he wants to search them
 
wim
figured it out
infavorites:674039
 
oooh, haven't seen that
 
@AndrasDeak Oh, I assumed there was a search function built into that oops. sorry
 
wim
6:32 PM
(sub the user id of the user you want to search, obvs)
 
I'm trying to make itunes like title bar. Been successful in combining the Qtitlebar with the Qtoolbar but how can i move the QAction buttons to the right of the right of the maxmize button like this tinypic.com/r/65zor5/9
 
wim
@poke I'm not sure I agree with that
 
wow, it's even documented in the advanced search tips...
I rejected that possibility without checking
 
@PaulMcGuire OK. What I was earlier doing was to create entire regex search queries along with their search parameters while processing at the single regex level, like - lambda a: "re.search" + "(r'((?:(?<=^)|(?<=[\W_]))" + a + "(?=[\W_]|$))' %gs1, sent, re.I)". This when sent to the And/Or nodes, would give me ready-made regex search queries with the correct AND/OR precedence.
But people on chat later suggested to not have the entire regex query as one string, rather have just the regex as the string and send the paramaters separately to make the actual searching. So should I think of something different than both these methods?
 
wim
having an answer which demonstrates eval, that is massively downvoted, is actually useful IMO
it says to the reader "oh, this one is bad"
 
6:34 PM
I know a user who has two right now:P Then again the worst noob readers surely ignore vote counts and find the worst solutions...
 
@wim it was my comment......so..how do you say? come at me bro!
 
wim
as opposed to saying nothing at all, and then they find eval on their own later
 
j/k
:)
 
wim
I know it was yours, that's how I saw it - starred up on the top right there
 
Yes. I do agree with what you said about that heavily downvoted eval answer.
It does indicate exactly what should be shown.
So readers understand what not to do more explicitly.
 
wim
6:35 PM
worst noob readers... well if they intentionally shoot themselves in the foot, that's a different thing from accidentally shooting themselves in the foot.
 
but some of these morons have users :(
I should revisit some of these eval answers in a week or so, and add a specific string input as an example
s = '__import__("subprocess").call(["touch","GOTCHA"])'
eval(s)
 
lol
 
wim
found it. this is the question I was digging for in my favourites :
 
Woah, there are a lot more people in here than I expected
 
wim
174
Q: Why doesn't os.path.join() work in this case?

chrissygormleyThe below code will not join, when debugged the command does not store the whole path but just the last entry. os.path.join('/home/build/test/sandboxes/', todaystr, '/new_sandbox/') When I test this it only stores the /new_sandbox/ part of the code.

 
6:38 PM
hi @faceless. Welcome
room6 is always a party
'aint no party like a room6 party
 
hi @idjaw is this a general room or question room or both?
or neither??
 
@wim the second answer looks nice
 
@faceless Read our chatroom starter-guide! :) sopython.com/chatroom
 
wim
yes, the second answer is the correct one.
 
ah fantastic, Room6 will be fun
 
wim
6:40 PM
> Even one slash ruins it.
^ this
the first/accepted answer just parrots the docs, not particularly useful.
 
plus "use an OS-agnostic reference point", makes a lot of sense
 
@AndrasDeak Reminds me of an answer of mine I was pretty proud of, which shows some semi-practical ways to break eval
 
@user1993 The biggest question I had about what you are describing is, why did you prepend "re.search" to that expression? So that you could just call eval on it in the node? Doesn't everything get re.search'ed? Just send the regexen to the And/Or nodes, and have them call re.search on the provided regex strings, and then apply your boolean combination in the node classes.
 
@Kevin now now, just because we hate it doesn't mean it's right to be hurtful
 
I have nothing more to say about your project - good luck
 
wim
6:41 PM
also the comment from S.Lott
-1: No string should include a "/". One whole point of os.path.join is to prevent putting any slashes in the path. — S.Lott Dec 22 '09 at 12:29
 
AH-HA! Now we know Kevin's real name from the path in his answer...it is Kevin
!!!
 
None of those will defeat a password system that the programmer took more than fifteen minutes to design, btw. So evil-doers won't get much utility out of copy-pasting these 'attacks' without understanding them
 
@Kevin ooohoohoo you sneaky little devil
@wim at least that's brightly visible, I spotted it instantly when I looked at the accepted answer
 
@wim Thanks for digging this up, it's informative :-)
 
@PaulMcGuire thanks a million for all the help. Your contribution was immense and I will make sure to acknowledge it when I publish the work. I will also try to incorporate what you said in the above comment
 
wim
6:45 PM
@Kevin 👍
 
I have a bit of a silly question about globals and functions calling functions with Parallel from joblib. Function main() sets jc = 0, and tc = 0. It then runs Parallel(njobs=num_cores)(delayed(function2(input) for params in paramarray). Inside function2 I have some scenario in which tc+=1 and another in which jc+=1. Now, if not parallel, these numbers update nicely. But of course if they are run in parallel they all take the current value of jc and tc and update them in parallel.
How do I make sure the parallel iterations of function2 update the values jc and tc inside main() 'globally'? I tried putting global jc and global tc in both functions but that doesn't seem to do it
 
In Windows, both "/" and "\" are treated as path separators. I wonder why this is not also the case in other OSes. Other than "this is the way we've always done it" and "Why should I change my convention? He's the one that sucks", which are entirely reasonable
 
@Kevin wait, does / work in windows, and not just via python?
 
C:\Projects\WidgetFrobnicator>cd c:/users\kevin/desktop

c:\Users\Kevin\Desktop>
 
neat!
@user129412 I don't think that's a silly question, and I guess the reason is that the parallel workers are separate processes that don't see each other's workspaces? You probably have to manually take care of the sharing of those variables or their values in some way
but then it might matter in which order those numbers are incremented...which might be a problem?
depends on what you're doing with those variables, probably
 
6:50 PM
It wouldn't matter in which order they were incremented for what I am doing
I'm just keeping track of how often a certain procedure is performed
 
perhaps you can collect all the increments from every process and sum them up at the end, in this case?
 
can someone explain an epsilon to me?
 
it's a Greek letter between delta and zeta, unless I'm mistaken
 
Hmm, I'm not so sure how to do that, in terms of collecting the increments. I could perhaps just append 0's and 1's to some list, but then that'd need to be some global list, which of course kind of brings me back to the original problem
 
It conventionally represents a very small value and/or a margin of error.
 
6:52 PM
Would you say it warrants a separate question on the stackoverflow?
 
ah okay, that makes sense, thank you @Kevin
so abs(2.1345) would be == 2 ?
i can just try
dur
 
@faceless one example where I might use an epsilon -- if I want to see if a float x is "equal" to some value y, I might instead do something like abs(x - y) < epsilon where epsilon = 0.000001 or whatever deviation level is acceptable
 
Hmm, not sure how abs is involved with epsilon at all. AFAIK abs just returns the absolute value of a number, which shouldn't cause any loss of precision.
 
@user129412 I've only looked at multiprocessing in the past, but there are specific objects that let you pass/share data between processes, if that's really what you want to do
 
@Kevin abs takes care of misordering x and y. if y > x, then x-y is always less then epsilon
 
6:56 PM
wow...C#, C++ are places I'm glad I don't visit frequently
 
Oh, except that abs is often used as part of an expression to determine how close two floats are, as Paul indicated.
 
the number of flagged posts coming out of there is obscene
and over 90% of them are legit flaggable
 
@Kevin abs() used because x might be slightly greater than or slightly less than y
apparently there is a math.isclose() function, didn't know that -- cool
 
Yeah I was just thrown for a minute because you usually don't pass a single literal as the argument for abs in that case
 
interestinggg
x = 12345
epsilon = .01
numGuesses = 0
low = 0.0
high = x
ans = (high + low)/2.0
while abs(ans**2 - x) >= epsilon and ans <= x:
    #print low, high, ans
    numGuesses += 1
    if ans**2 < x:
        low = ans
    else:
        high = ans
    ans = (high + low)/2.0
    #print 'numguesses = ', numGuesses
    print ans, 'is close to square root of', x
Thats why i asked, sorry fellas
and gals*
 
7:05 PM
@user129412 this is all I've seen in the subject, but this is multiprocessing and not joblib
it's probably not that difficult to do, in case you really need it
 
wim
7:27 PM
@Kevin I think that only works on recent versions of windows (for some definition of "recent") and they probably added it to reduce pain
on linux, filenames may contain `\` characters just like any other character.
there are almost no restrictions about filenames on posix
windows has all kinds of bizarre restrictions and invalid filenames
 
Mm hmm, I thought that might be the case
 
Does anyone know how to solve for integers that will fail in the algorithm i posted above?
 
wim
I don't know if it's still like that, but it used to be if you had any windows filename called anything like CON, PRN, AUX, NUL, COM1, LPT2 ... real weird stuff happened
 
@wim except slashes
that's the only restriction that I know of
 
@wim - I had run into that before on something like WinNT 4, where I create a file named NUL and could never delete it. That is no longer the case on recent Windows.
 
7:36 PM
@faceless I'd put all of that into a function, cut out the print, add a return, and then iterate for i in itertools.count(1):, checking each number in turn with assert mySquareRootFunction(i**2) == i
 
wim
@AndrasDeak I think null characters are also prohibited iirc
 
Or, if your definition of "fail" is something less strict than exact equality, use that instead
 
awesome, thank you @Kevin
 
wim
what is windows equivalent of touch on posix?
to create or update timestamp of a file
 
Hmm, I'll have to think about that. With weird filenames they usually come null-terminated, but I don't know if that implies the illegality of nulls (probably yes)
 
7:38 PM
I don't think we have an equivalent for that.
I remember googling for a command to create a file, and I remember getting angry that I couldn't find one
 
>>> subprocess.call(['touch','asdf\x00'])
[...]
ValueError: embedded null byte
 
rephrasing question this time: ignoring app name for now (will change that later), thoughts on this color scheme for the icons (lite vs pro)? imgur.com/a/QCpi7
(I ask because the word "lite", when added, is really hard to read, so I need to find some other way)
so one idea, possibly, is to make one darker/greyed out, and one more vibrant
not sure if this is sufficiently clear though
 
wim
seems like just echo . > myfile.txt does the trick
and echo . > LPT1 still does weird behaviour
 
@AndrasDeak the arguments in C are provided as an array of nul-terminated strings
so naturally one cannot contain an embedded nul byte.
however that subprocess.call throws in such case is a damn good thing
think about argument '/do/some/evil\0/../good'
 
@MarcusS I don't think just color schemes is enough to alert me that an app is lite or pro, unfortunately. Regardless of what schemes in particular you use.
 
7:46 PM
a filename also naturally cannot contain nul.
there is no syscall that would work for those...
 
At least in the Android app ecosystem, there isn't much of a common visual language to indicate that kind of thing. So your greyed out lite version might sit next to three other apps on my home page which are also grey, but which are not lite versions. Or vice versa.
 
yeah :/
 
99% of the time the user will be comparing your app's icons to the icons of other apps on their phone, rather than comparing the icons of different versions of your app. It's hard to convey meaning in that sea of noise.
Having a little ribbon label on the icon is fairly common: 1 2 3
 
maybe I should just release one free version and be done with it
wouldn't earn any $ from it but it would address a lot of concerns
 
7:55 PM
Having never released anything serious, I have no words of wisdom available.
I think Keats once said, the sun is always, uh... Darkest... At night.
 
8:08 PM
@AnttiHaapala ah, so it's not necessarily an OS issue
I mean it doesn't even reach the OS
 
since in Linux there is no system call that would return a filename and its length,
if there were a filename with an embedded \0,
it couldn't be opened, deleted, renamed, or anything such...
hmmh
gotta try :D
a sec
*it would also be listed incorrectly :D
 
an embedded null terminator?
can you even name it that way?
 
% dir
/bin/ls: cannot access 'somesillynamethatisgoingto': No such file or directory
total 12
drwx------ 2 root root 12288 Jun 22 23:12 lost+found/
-????????? ? ?    ?        ?            ? somesillynamethatisgoingto
this is what will happen :D:D
An empty file name somesillynamethatisgoingtogetanembeddednul in an ext2 image
then, I used perl -pi -e 's/somesillynamethatisgoingtogetanembeddednul/somesillynamethatisgoingto\0etanem‌​beddednul/' foo.img
so ls sees it in listing, but cannot stat it
 
hehe :D
#themoreyouknow
 
nice
 
8:20 PM
% rm somesillynamethatisgoingto
rm: cannot remove 'somesillynamethatisgoingto': No such file or directory
 
hey, try rm somesilly*
does that work?
 
however if you do ls -1, no error.
% ls -1
lost+found
somesillynamethatisgoingto
@WayneWerner they're expanded by the shell
% echo some*
somesillynamethatisgoingto
 
try \*?
I know some commands actually take wildcards
 
well you know, but:
they don't work here, because one cannot open a file except by its name
17
Q: Can a file be retrieved by its inode?

user43312I ran following commands in the order specified: $ln a b $ls -i a b 523669 a 523669 b $rm -f a $ls -i b 523669 b I concluded from this test that the command rm actually removes only the filename (a in this test) instead of the file, as the inode still exists and could be retrieved through anot...

 
can anyone here have a look at my question: stackoverflow.com/questions/44706852/…
 
DSM
8:25 PM
@FluffyMe: the room rules forbid re-asking recent questions from the main site here.
 
> Do not link your recent (< 1-2 days) questions in the room.
 
i can ask the question here again but that would take more time
 
@FluffyMe you got advice there 1 hour ago
act on it first!
Please work without the try-catch and print the traceback. — Willem Van Onsem 2 hours ago
 
i did look further in the comments
 
@FluffyMe there is the thing called edit <-- click there :D
 
DSM
8:28 PM
@FluffyMe: I don't think you drew the right lesson from that. :-) The problem isn't that we want a copy of the Q posted here, it's that until a few days have gone by we don't want it here at all.. important Qs are for the main site.
 
@DSM ow okey
 
DSM
8:42 PM
> "Performance is key here once there might dozens of columns and hundreds of rows in the original table."
Dozens of columns! Hundreds of rows!
 
Throwing it up there for anyone. I'm deep in this already, and a few people here finished it. It is extremely well done and a solid lesson plan for learning docker properly
 
you're not a pro if your table doesn't have dozens of columns
 
when did you guys start to get the hang of understanding algorithms? Or at least when youre trying to understand an algo, do you try and iterate through all execution or do you just iterate through the first execution of the program?
 
DSM
@idjaw: oh, fine. There, some company just got 15$ of NumberFi my hard-earned money.
 
hehe :) that's the spirit
 
8:51 PM
@faceless algorithms class :)
 

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