« first day (2649 days earlier)      last day (2293 days later) » 
00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

7:05 PM
@MarcusAndrews most often I use IntelliJ's integration which stages all changes. If I need to commit individual files, I can select them in a list of changes or if I need to commit individual blobs within a file, I drop to the command line and run git add -p
@MooingRawr I do the same. Like 10 commits just to implement one 10-line function
 
Good news: the other week I made a one-character PR to a firefox addon I use, and it got accepted yesterday 🎉
I am becoming increasingly efficient at contributing to the open source community in the smallest observable way possible
 
So many versions of Kevins, a perfect example for the infinite universe hypothesis.
 
Sep 8 '16 at 18:44, by Kevin
Jul 17 '14 at 13:52, by Kevin
All apparent Kevins are just the 3d cross-sections of a single four dimensional hyperKevin as it intersects our universe.
 
@thefourtheye cbg
 
7:25 PM
I once made a one-character PR to a golang proxy that's now shipped with kubernetes, so you could say I'm a big deal too
 
All the Kevins are big deals :D
 
The only way to avoid an Ozymandias-esque dissolution of your legacy is to get some of your work integrated into the Linux kernel
 
wim
nobody wanted to throw a del vote on that dumpster fire? really??!
 
Doesn't look that bad to me
 
wim
It's one of those annoying "how do I do <thing that fundamentally requires loops> without using loops" questions
I tried to edit into a salvagable question, instead of downvoting, and some punk rolled back my edit
 
7:40 PM
Does that accepted answer even work? Do sets have guaranteed iteration order in 2.7?
 
wim
Yes, we established that they do.
the order can only change after insertions/deletions.
 
Ok cool.
 
while "how do I do <thing that fundamentally requires loops> without using loops" questions may be annoying, if they've given a good try, and provided an MCVE, I see nothing wrong with those questions
 
wim
but questions that attract crap code like dict(map(lambda x: (x, x), s)) should just be deleted imo
 
once again, I see nothing wrong with a question that produces sub optimal code. It's clearly a homework type of question, but if the effort is all there, there's nothing wrong with it :\
maybe I'm just more forgiving than you are
 
7:43 PM
Wellll I'm not seeing a lot of effort in that Q
 
wim
the thing that's wrong is that it produces sub optimal code
 
Well I'm not saying this OP and this specific question is any good. my statement was aim towards the "how do I do" type of question
sub optimal code could be the best solution for sub optimal questions :\
 
wim
maybe if there is a defensible reason why there must be such a restriction, but roll-back guy asked for clarification on that and there was, predictably, no response from OP
 
"Here is some code that does something unrelated to the thing that I want to be doing. How do I do the thing?" sometimes feels to me like a hack designed to keep people from asking "what have you tried?"
"How do I make a calculator in Tkinter? So far I have print("Hello, world!") but the window with all the buttons and stuff doesn't appear"
 
"here's what I've tried to solve this questions with random constraints for academic purposes, how do I get it to work" is perfectly acceptable, even tho the code would be sub optimal, yes the OP should learn how to code "properly" but that's a different discussion.
 
wim
7:45 PM
dict(thing) iterates the thing which is done with ... a .... loop ... :P
 
shhh don't tell them that :D
 
wim
why not tell them that?
 
I meant that comment as a joke... as it will break their purpose but eh should have put a /jk on it
 
wim
we're not here to encourage sub-optimal approaches to programming and neither teaching
 
Naturally there is an enormous gray area here, where the OP puts in a good-faith effort to do the thing, but lacks the insight necessary to even get close to doing the thing. It is possible to miss the bullseye and still have a good question.
 
7:48 PM
We're here to answer programming specific questions, whether it's optimal or not is irrelevant, unless the site specifically state those type of questions aren't allowed.
 
Hi :)
 
cbg
 
DSM
I'm torn. There is merit in learning how to do things without explicit loops. Sometimes it makes things cleaner, while other times it makes code nine kinds of ugly.
 
I have a crap anonymous function in python
is_numeric = lambda var_: str(var_).isdigit() or str(var_).isnumeric() or str(var_).isdecimal()
 
I think in this case it'd be an acceptable solution to remove the arbitrary restrictions from the question
 
7:49 PM
It works if is_numeric(0xFF)
 
If you're too good at trying to do the thing, then you will actually succeed at doing the thing, and you won't actually need to submit your question.
 
wim
The thing is, if you edit out the arbitrary restriction, the accepted answer is still a good answer
 
But it doesn't work with is_numeric("0xFF")
 
wim
And the other answer is garbage
 
DSM
@MáximaAlekz: it's not really anonymous, you gave it the name "is_numeric".
 
7:49 PM
How can I make it work?
 
wim
and the poor guy that posted {x: x for x in s} got downvoted and deleted his answer
 
@MáximaAlekz define, not working
 
wim
when his approach is actually the most pythonic and correct way to do the thing
that's why I don't like these kind of questions, they attract garbage
 
is_numeric(0xFF) >>> true
is_numeric("0xFF") >>> false
 
@wim it is the best answer if it didn't have the constraint, but that's the catch I guess :\
 
7:50 PM
When it should be
is_numeric("0xFF") >>> true
is_numeric(0xFF) >>> true
 
@MáximaAlekz But is that really not the expected output? 0xFF is an integer, and integers are numbers. "0xFF" is a string, and strings are not numbers.
 
But the string is (inside) a number anyway.
 
Counter question where would you expect it to fall under in your lambda... it - ugh kevin'd
 
Should be true.
How can I make it work, then
 
wim
use try/except
 
7:52 PM
((woot?))
 
So it sounds you want behavior like: return True for any value that is a number, and for any string that would be a number if it was interpreted as a literal; and return False for anything else
I'm thinking something with the abc and ast modules...
 
wim
try:
    int(s, base=0)
except ValueError:
    return False
else:
    return True
 
I'm just trying to make a function that works as PHP's is_numeric function.
 
Or, no, not abc. What's the module that lets you do isinstance checks on things using an abstract type?
 
DSM
isinstance(ast.literal_eval(str(x)), numbers.Number), maybe, but it would return True for a wider range of numbery strings.
 
wim
7:53 PM
@DSM that has bugs
 
Ah ha, it was numbers. 1 quatloo to DSM.
 
DSM
(And of course we'd have to bracket it in a try/except to avoid non-numbery errors.)
 
Okay, with int() but fails by its base 10
 
wim
>>> ast.literal_eval('1-800-123-4567')
-5489
 
but -1378 is still a number :D
 
wim
7:54 PM
oops, literal eval thinks a phone number string is an integer
 
DSM
Oh, yeah, as part of a consequence of the complex handling. I knew that at one point.
 
wim
every time I've tried to do LBYL , it failed some way or another, and I came back to EAFP.
 
DSM
I guess we could loop over the options (int, float, whatever).
 
I think we don't have enough information to know what's the best approach here. Depending on what Máxima is actually trying to do, it might actually be correct to consider a phone number as legitimately numeric.
 
No, no. Just a number
Not phone-number
numbers like
 
7:57 PM
But what is a number?
 
DSM
Fortunately I know nothing about how PHP works.
 
0xFF
15315412.56123
-1
 
is "ABC34XYZ" a number? why not?
 
wim
@DSM PHP works?
 
7:58 PM
if it's a hexadecimal (number) is a number.
@wim ...
My company begin moving from PHP to Python, but I think it's a very bad idea.
 
wim
what's wrong with the try/except solution I already posted
 
DSM
@MáximaAlekz: I agree. Anyone not working for my company or any company I depend on should definitely write in PHP. ;-)
 
brb gonna go complain to the PHP room
 
So it sounds like the criteria is "if the string is any kind of single literal that evaluates to a numeric object". Maybe something with ast.parse...
 
@wim It does.
 
DSM
8:00 PM
@Kevin: I was experimenting with things like isinstance(ast.parse(s).body[0].value, ast.Num), but unary ops at the start complicate things.
 
Wonderful(ly)
@DSM "0x"?
 
DSM
@MáximaAlekz: what about "0x"? That's not a number.
 
@DSM Oh, so -42 gets parsed as an UnaryOp node that contains a Num node? I was just about to check that myself. That's a shame.
Hmm, should we consider --------------------------23 a number?
 
DSM
Depends. As usual, we should find out what PHP does, and copy that slavishly.
(Since I think wim's approach is probably the right one, this is all just blowing bubbles.)
 
@Kevin if re.sub('/\-+/', '-', '--------------------------23'), sure.
:v
 
wim
8:03 PM
you still didn't answer what's wrong with the try/except
 
it doesn't accept floats!
...or ints, for that matter
 
wim
right so we iterate
@Rawing counterexample pls?
 
DSM
@wim: the base=0 breaks it if you pass an actual int.
 
>>> int(3, base=0)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: int() can't convert non-string with explicit base
 
wim
as it should
 
8:04 PM
I think at some point you have to talk to management and say "if we accept only base 10 digit sequences with a single optional minus sign at the front, then it will save us 16 man hours of implementation, testing, and maintenance. Do we really have to accept inputs like -0xCOFFEE?"
 
wim
this is for use with strings
 
So, int(-1, base=0) raises.
 
DSM
@wim: to be fair, MA mentioned earlier he wanted both strings and the numbers themselves to give True.
 
I think we can pretty trivially separate the "is this string number-like?" functionality from "is this object itself a number?". That's not the hard part.
 
14 mins ago, by Máxima Alekz
When it should be
is_numeric("0xFF") >>> true
is_numeric(0xFF) >>> true
 
wim
8:05 PM
ok
 
DSM
@MáximaAlekz: do you care about complex literals?
 
wim
if you don't know whether your input data is a string or an integer, then your problem exists earlier and should be solved earlier.
 
@DSM What does it mean, taking in mind that I barely unstertand what is everyone saying
 
import numbers
def is_numeric(obj):
    if isinstance(obj, numbers.Number):
        return True
    else:
        try:
            int(obj, base=0)
        except ValueError:
            return False
        else:
            return True
@wim Agreed.
 
wim
don't copy the design mistakes from PHP into Python
because the whole point of porting to Python is (likely) to clean up those design mistakes
 
8:07 PM
Cause my english raises
 
DSM
@Kevin: add a loop over [int, float], maybe?
 
@Kevin Sounds good.
 
@MáximaAlekz In Python, 1+1j is a single number. Should "1+1j" be considered a number?
 
DSM
@MáximaAlekz: I meant whether you cared about something like "3j" (as Kevin is mentioning.)
 
Well, so is_numeric("1e100") raises.
@Kevin raises.
 
wim
8:09 PM
is_numeric('nan') ?
 
@Kevin Not really.
 
DSM
@wim: nice.
Also inf, I guess.
 
I smell a redesign coming :D
 
DSM
Do we need to preserve negative zero? #loopyquestions [And yes, I know we're not returning a number, I just like negative zero.]
 
wim
ugh, negative zero
another bug in IEEE 754 ... :P
 
8:12 PM
Yes, an input of negative zero should return negative False
3
 
@DSM -0 exists?
What the hell..
 
DSM
It's the new math.
 
wim
why would anyone "like" negative 0
but if you like it, maybe check out one of my very few self-answers about it here.
 
import numbers
import ast

def is_numeric(obj):
    if isinstance(obj, numbers.Number):
        return True
    elif isinstance(obj, str):
        nodes = list(ast.walk(ast.parse(obj)))[1:]
        if not isinstance(nodes[0], ast.Expr):
            return False
        if not isinstance(nodes[-1], ast.Num):
            return False
        nodes = nodes[1:-1]
        for i in range(len(nodes)):
            if i % 2 == 0:
                if not isinstance(nodes[i], ast.UnaryOp):
                    return False
1 True
-1 True
1e100 True
1.2 True
-1.2 True
inf False
two False
1+1j False
1-2 False
0xFF True
---23 True
-+23 True
-0 True
Ok, I'm done
 
DSM
@Kevin: so how's your C# bugfixing going? ;-)
 
8:20 PM
is inf not a number :D ?
 
inf isn't a number, but float("inf") is
@DSM I eventually came up with a solution, which was thankfully only 10% as hacky as the average hackiness of the five approaches that preceded it.
The trick is to add an invisible DateReticulatedUnixEpoch column to the table, and sort by that.
 
"20 years from now, people will be baffled on why they have an invisible column on that table"
 
I added an apology comment to one of the source files that I changed in the process of this bug hunt. Future generations will be able to find my reasoning if they still have access to the changelog data.
But if they can only see the source, and they're looking at WidgetTable.aspx and not WidgetEntity.cs, then they'll be baffled
 
Thank you all for the replies
 
Anyway it's not even the first invisible column on the page so at least I can say that I didn't start the descent into madness
 
8:26 PM
And thank you @Kevin for the closestststst answer, did it good!
 
DSM
You didn't start the fire?
 
It was always burning / since the invention of FORTRAN
Thought about making a half-rhyme there involving "Turing" but meh
 
DSM
I'd have been okay with that. My opinion on Joel's songwriting skills is a matter of record.
 
On an off topic note, I'm sad there wasn't any musical anime this season :(
 
cbg!
@MooingRawr I am currently following Girls' Last Tour
 
8:31 PM
Anyone like Warface game?
:7
 
DSM
"musical anime"? What, like K-On? Or Cantabile, that sort of thing?
 
K-on, girls' last tour, shigatsu, idol anime... idk something that put music on the fore groind
I'm willing to trade one of the ramen anime for a musical anime
 
DSM
Which show had that "Girls Dead Monster" song that got so much airplay?
 
I thought idol animes get churned out like clockwork. They're like cosmic background radiation.
 
@DSM Angel Beats?
 
DSM
8:33 PM
@MooingRawr: maybe, never saw it, only heard the song.
 
Why python doesn't have Switch?
 
GDM is band that belongs to the SSS group from Angel Beats
 
Angel Beats was decent.
 
Yes, better than Clannad After Story at least
 
8:34 PM
@MáximaAlekz IIRC the canonical answer is "because Guido didn't want it in the language"
 
DSM
See, "Angel Beats" is generic enough that I'd never remember it. GDM, on the other hand, is impossible to forget. That's battery-staple level memorization candy right there.
 
... Yes, stupidly. Python should/must have Switch.
 
Which doesn't so much answer the question of "why", but the question of "what can I use instead?"
 
It's okay any one who likes Angel Beats will instantly know when you just say Girls Dead Monster.
 
DSM
I wouldn't mind a switch, but I don't really miss it, not having one.
 
8:36 PM
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I'll pretend I didn't see that
 
HAH! After Story was a mistake
Wrong best girl. :L
 
Nagisa isn't your type?
 
When comparing so many times a single variable, it feels like need it.
 
DSM
Am I surrounded by fools? Tomoyo. Every time.
 
Nah man, Tomoyo was better
I think they released a couple of alternate ending specials
Both of them were better
 
DSM
8:38 PM
Clannad gets points for a very beautiful OP.
 
@DSM Pretty much what GVR says in the conclusion of PEP 3103. "Python is fine without a switch statement"
 
DSM
I think I miss do/while more than switch.
 
And presumably when he wrote that document, he would not have minded a switch statement, or else he wouldn't have written the document.
 
The fact that it was ultimately rejected might imply that he changed his mind later tho
Ah, I overlooked the specific rejection justification: "A quick poll during my keynote presentation at PyCon 2007 shows this proposal has no popular support. I therefore reject it."
 
8:40 PM
wait you don't like Clannad AfterStory? I thought it was well written
 
So all @MáximaAlekz needs to do is rally popular support for switch, really get everybody foaming at the mouth for it, and GVR will shrug and say "all right, let's put it in"
 
I mean you can write your own switch with dictionaries :\
 
If you're asking me, then no. I don't like how melodramatic it was, and I'm not a fan of the route they picked from the VN to animate
 
but but you get happy ending :D
 
Was the art good? Sure... was the music good? Sure... did I shed a tear or two? Yes. But... eh
 
8:42 PM
@MooingRawr Partially agree. 99% of the time dictionaries can be used where other languages might require a switch, without any loss of concision. But there's that last 1%...
 
I thought yesterday was Tuesday, I went home expecting to watch Antarctica, but then I was disappointed to find out it was monday
@Kevin if OP hits that 1% that needs something other than the classic Dictionary combo, I don't know if I want to know what issue OP has hit :\
 
Like, if you have
switch x:
    case 1:
        y += 23
    case 2:
        z -= 42
Then that does not lend itself well to dictification
 
why not ?
 
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I've seen it. I was very very confused until I realized it was alternate ending :D
 
Can someone with a Mac and Anaconda3/Miniconda3 help me debug a problem? It may require a few installations but I can provide detailed instructions.
 
8:44 PM
Because varname = {1: "y", 2: "z"}[x]; globals()[varname] = globals()[varname] + {1: 23, 2: -42}[x] is awful
 
14
Q: Fatal error in extension: PyThreadState_Get: no current thread

kdheepakI've seen several posts that have stated the same error, but looking and trying out the answers in those posts have not helped. I was wondering if someone could look at this and see if something pops out? I'm building a Python extension for a CPP application, and there are no errors during the c...

I posted this stackoverflow question 10 days ago but haven't found a satisfying answer yet.
 
@Kevin I mean you could store the value of Y in the dictionary instead and make an update call reference, but okie I see where this is going
 
I'm on Windows, alas
 
DSM
Most of us are either on Windows or Linux, unfortunately for you. (kdheepak, I mean.) :-/
 
Thanks for the reply Kevin.
Oh noes
Thanks for the reply DSM.
Any suggestions on what I should do?
This problem is driving me crazy, I just want to know why it is not working on one of my macs but working perfectly fine on another mac with what appears to be the identical set up.
 
8:50 PM
@MooingRawr Yeah certainly there are situations where it makes sense to put y and z into a dictionary, but if you have a hundred existing instances of y and z later in the function, you might decide it will be easier to go with if x == 1: ... elif x == 2: ...
And then there's things like
switch x:
    case 1:
        try:
            with open("foo.txt") as file:
                z = file.read()
        except FileNotFoundError:
            q = False
    case 2:
        for i in range(5):
            print("Pancakes!")
 
DSM
@kdheepak: don't know enough about Macs to be any help, I'm afraid, and back when I was working on a Mac it was all I could do to get code running without UTF width problems..
 
Which you'll have a real dang hard time dictifying
Even if you do d = {1: funcWhichImplementsCaseOne, 2: funcWhichImplementsCaseTwo}; d[x](), it'll be a struggle maintaining the functionality of the original blocks, in regards to the scope of the variables created
 
but at that point do you really want a switch? I think that's bad design lol
switches should be made for cases where u do similar things , eh beats me then lol
 
How dare you question the utility of pancakeprinterfooreader.py
 
xD
Cause without our maple syrup, pancakes and waffles are NOTHING!
 
8:56 PM
Some foods are merely delivery mechanisms for other foods which themselves are not socially permitted to be eaten by themselves, and I'm fine with that
 
@wim I wanted to
 
You just made me realize that any switch statement in python would necessitate 2 levels of indentation and now I'm completely against it
 
the switch and case statements could be at the same level of indentation, no?
 
@Kevin and that would've been collections.abc I think
 
Wow it works
 
9:07 PM
@Rawing that would be unpythonic IMO
 
I agree ^
if we campaign for anything, it should be DSM's do-while
Switches are functionally equivalent to a bunch of elif clauses. Do-whiles are ugly to hack together.
 
@Kevin Will be awesome code like that for Switch implementation.
But, someone posted that there is a Python Translator Lib
Where you can make a C Like Switch
 
but why
 
And Python Translates the code to understand.
 
while True:
    #do stuff
    if cond:
        break
 
9:17 PM
yes
 
the horror of checking at the end :D
 
that's comparatively much uglier than using "elif var ==" instead of "case"
 
@MáximaAlekz switch are useful but not needed
 
10
A: Replacements for switch statement in Python?

elpIf you're searching extra-statement, as "switch", I built a python module that extends Python. It's called ESPY as "Enhanced Structure for Python" and it's available for both Python 2.x and Python 3.x. For example, in this case, a switch statement could be performed by the following code: macro...

Look at that Answer
Uses a lib to make an Implementation of Switch.
 
that switch even has fallthrough :/
 
9:19 PM
Isn't that what you'd want? Good old c switch...
 
then there's nothing stopping us from Duffing all the things
 
switch x:
case 1:
y += 23
case 2:
z -= 42
 
Let's just make everyone equally angry by adding goto to python
make how it handles with blocks undefined
 
@Rawing was that a double negative?
 
9:24 PM
I'm not sure, but I don't think it wasn't a double negative (:
4
 
9:54 PM
Wow, Rawing, you're churning out Kevin tier comments today
 
he almost deserves some more pity upvotes for that alone ;)
 
I'm blessed to be witness to Rawing's metamorphosis into a sentient being as illustrious as Kevin. May your comments be ubiquitously starred.
 
I was starting to be offended when I read "metamorphosis into a sentient being", but then I realized that wasn't the end of the sentence
 
hey, you gotta take what you can get
 
This is the python room, apache-related streaming tools are off topic
 
wim
10:14 PM
I miss neither do-while nor switch
 
You're a badger. Your natural habitat is deep in the woods, protecting yourself with shivs carved from leftover keyword arguments.
 
There's some loop construct that doesn't exist in any lang but I want but can never rememebr
Right, I want a loop construct with "execute only on first iteration" and/or "execute only on following iterations" without using my own status booleans
Eh, I bet perl 6 has it
 
An "execute only on first iteration" exists in every language. It's called "not a loop".
 
No, I mean at the end of the first iteration but before the conditional test for the >= 1 iterations
No, I can't remember the use case
The "only on following" use case is for reusing any interactive input parsing code with an "incorrect input, try again" message. I could just refactor the interactive part into a function but... meh
 
a do-while could do the same for you...
 
10:33 PM
Still requires a conditional.
 
yes, it's in the while
do:
    parsing()
    while not it_is_fine
 
do:
    nth:
        print("Incorrect, please try again")
    parsing()
while not it_is_fine
 
I'm sure the user can figure it out anyway
do:
    parsing()
    while not it_is_fine and print("Incorrect, please try again!"),
 
Doesn't print return None, which is falsey?
 
not inside a tuple
 
10:40 PM
oh I thought the comma was a typo
 
no, I gathered some best practices into that one line
 
cbg
 
11:01 PM
Apparently, Rawing is being memed with pity votes.
 
11:11 PM
Learning how to properly pass around contexts and chain commands properly and whatnot in click, and I can't help but feel like this is overly complex
There's already a way to keep context between several different function invocations and it's called a class
 
Are you talking about Python? Or something else?
 
"click"
 
wim
who's good with pytest?
1
A: Mocking a module import in pytest

wimpytest provides a fixture for this use-case: monkeypatch.syspath_prepend. You may prepend a path to sys.path list of import locations. Write a fake fwlib.py and include it in your tests, appending the directory as necessary. Like the other test modules, it needn't be included with the distri...

monkeypatch.syspath_prepend didn't do what I assumed it would do. How do you even use that thing?
If the library imports are already done before the monkeypatch fixture is entered, the whole idea is useless, and I refuse to believe the pytest authors are too foolish to have thought of that ..
@KevinMGranger huh. I've needed execute on last iteration a couple of times, now that you mention it.
 
else?
 
wim
no, that does something else pardon the pun
 
11:24 PM
Unless I'm misunderstanding, else is exactly what you want, no?
 
wim
it's like, the last iteration needs a special handling, but you don't know it's the last iteration until you get the StopIteration (afterward). it's a catch-22.
 
Maybe I'll write my own alternative to click called clinic that's simplified, uses type annotations and reflection more (but only just enough magic)
 
@wim you mean except-22
 
wim
groan
 
CommandLine Interface Not (as) Illustrius (as) Click
 
wim
11:27 PM
click shudder
 
Right, I need to keep track of these. kevin_m.things_liked_that_the_room_doesnt = "datetime click".split()
 
wim
what happens if you put a bounty on a question you have the only answer to, hoping someone can make a better answer than yours, and then no-one does?
bounty is awarded to dave null presumably?
 
yup
It always works separately: you lose the rep when you post the bounty, and then things happen. And none of those things are "you get the rep back"
either someone gets it, or someone gets half of it, or it's gone for good
 
11:43 PM
One day, jon skeet will retire from SO and will put all of his rep into a single question... solving the traveling salesman problem. This will coincide with SO rep being accepted as a cryptocurrency.
A brand new user named Parzival will show up with the start of a solution. They'll be hunted down in real life.
 
wim
why solving a solved problem?
 
> It is an NP-hard problem in combinatorial optimization, important in operations research and theoretical computer science.
 
wim
I know what TSP is ..
 
3 mins ago, by wim
why solving a solved problem?
 
wim
...
presumably you mean improving the solution to polynomial time
because it's p vs np that's not solved, not tsp
 
11:52 PM
Yes, I figured most would be able to infer that as my meaning.
 
wim
^heh
 
Is it just me or does re take some getting used to?
 
00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

« first day (2649 days earlier)      last day (2293 days later) »