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1:08 AM
@wim Yes but thousands of departing users telling them why is the only 'feedback' they might even react to. Or not.
@roganjosh "Far over the misty mountains cold, To dungeons deep and caverns old, We must away ere break of day, To seek the pale enchanted gold."
 
user11585758
1:50 AM
@ParitoshSingh @roganjosh guys model outperformed 0.92 in just 1 epoch :), after changing some tweaks
 
5:45 AM
cbg guys o/
 
 
1 hour later…
7:11 AM
@shad0w_wa1k3r I tried with interactive shell even I am getting error at the items like that element is not found code is this dpaste.com/26AAS8F but in the website url the xpath is correct can you help me?
 
cbg
 
@mathematics very nice!
 
7:41 AM
simple typo - OP just did not read in the header row, thus attempting to reference column names throws KeyError Why is Pandas giving KeyError?
[CORRECTED URL] simple typo - OP just did not read in the header row, thus attempting to reference column names throws KeyError Why is Pandas giving KeyError?
 
hi, I've been searching online (unsuccessfully) what the difference is between installing libraries on the system and importing them in a script
do i have to do both to use the library?
 
yes
first you install, then you can import
 
both pip and conda work this way?
 
yes
 
awww okay
thanks :)
 
7:50 AM
no problem =)
 
8:02 AM
@smci While hammers fell like ringing bells that one's closed now :)
@mathematics Nice going :)
 
user11585758
8:49 AM
:) thanks
 
stackoverflow.com/questions/60429131/… The close target doesn't make any sense; people have just seen a scope issue and gone into auto-pilot.
 
There possibly is a good target and maybe it should be closed, but it shouldn't be that one
 
9:37 AM
Hello I am trying to scrap the email based on name from this search.rutgers.edu using selenium code is dpaste.com/26AAS8F when I run this everything working fine opening in google chrome the results page after search but the email I want to scrap I want to print the email for that name but it is not printing anything even I wrote the print statement can you help me ??As I asked yesterday and tried through the python interactive shell even getting anything
 
@stack Please don't repost your previous questions. If you are not following along with what I said previously, I don't think you'll follow anyone else's solution either.
 
Yes I followed @shad0w_wa1k3r but I just copied the element Xpath and kept in the code and then also it is not working
@shad0w_wa1k3r and sorry for reposting
 
My instructions were there so you could debug things on your own. I'll try & post a dpaste (once I get free) with things that I tried, so you can see how I approached the problem.
 
Ok ThankYou @shad0w_wa1k3r
 
9:58 AM
@roganjosh added stackoverflow.com/questions/9264763/… as target. I'll hammer if reopened. I'd rather we didn't reopen probable dupes.
Actually, I can reopen and hammer again
 
@AndrasDeak thank you
 
You should delete your comment
 
Done, just got back from breakfast :)
 
11:01 AM
does sort() start with the largest or smallest?
 
trying not to come off as rude, but it's about as much work to try it out as it is to post that question in chat
 
yeah true
 
anyway, every sort function that I've come across until now was ascending by default
 
11:43 AM
Hello, what is identity of an object? For example, if I have something like integer, and my list is l = [1, 2, 3] , then the assertion 1 in l is true, here 1 act sorta identiy, what if I have to do the same thing for objects in general?
like some class instance?
 
@AjayMishra unclear what you're asking
 
t = [node([0,0], 5)]
print(node([0,0], 5) in t)
I tried something like this ^, I am getting false.
 
it's not identity that matters, it's equality
>>> a = 'potato # potato'
... b = 'potato # potato'
... a is b
False

>>> a in [b]
True
your class needs to implement __eq__ in a way that gives reasonable results for your instances
I suspect the implementation should compare the [0,0] and 5 for both instances, assuming there's no hidden state that might distinguish instances
 
Fine, I did it, these dunders are cool stuffs.
 
@AjayMishra you can read about most (all?) dunders in the data model
 
11:49 AM
thanks. :)
 
hello guys.
 
hi all
 
what is the best way in python execute more then 20 long running task parallely ?
 
depends on whether your tasks are CPU heavy or not
main tools are either threading (if they are not CPU heavy) or multiprocessing (if you have 20 CPU cores)
rhubarb for now
 
well is it possible running thread within process?
 
12:09 PM
I have a easy question for all.
 
 
1 hour later…
1:32 PM
Sorry to bother, but does anybody knows a bit about ECC (Eliptic Curve Certificate) validation in python? stackoverflow.com/q/60368192/1718174
 
@Vini.g.fer it looks like there's an error on the continued line in get_modulus(). Have you tried putting it all on one line? Just something to try...
 
Cbg
 
1:50 PM
I have, but still get the same error @MattDMo
 
Also, that same way (2 lines) work with regular RSA certificates
 
Fresh cabbages everyone
I just started using selenium and got a doubt, anyone up for helping me with a few lines of code? It's more of discussing the best approach for getting some information...
 
@PaulMcG but you just reopened it...
 
2:01 PM
Yes, because the dupe target wasn't that helpful after all - I'm picking a new one
 
the middle example of OP means it's too broad
Do they also want to apply nlp?
@PaulMcG you know you can edit dupe target lists, right?
 
Did not know
 
well now you do ;) "edit" link in the top right of the close banner (you have to be a gold badger)
Are you closing it?
I'll just hammer it before it gets more answers
acutally the original dupe target covers the middle example so I'll add it back
 
Ok thanks
/me getting coffee
 
Revitalized cabbage then
 
2:07 PM
I see the "edit" link now.
 
I am getting some information from yahoo finance using selenium. I have a list of companies I wish to get some info, I've managed to do this by finding all the XPaths for the elements I wish to get. However, it seems that this Xpath changes daily. Any idea on how to work this out without me having to manually adapt the xpath everyday?
 
Not comfortable giving advice on how to end-run Terms of Service.
 
Can you give us an example company and the info you're looking for?
 
Yes sure, any company is fine, I have a list of 50 companies I'm iterating with my loop. Here's the link I use with the browser finance.yahoo.com/quote/CODX/key-statistics?p=CODX
 
@PaulMcG true. Doesn't Yahoo have an API? I've used Pandas with it before to get stock prices.
 
2:13 PM
If they are taking steps making it difficult, its probably because this is not a mechanism they intend for you to use.
 
Well it is a so-so thing, Yahoo uses its API with symbols as index, the problem is I'm missing this symbols, so the only thing I can do is search the company by name in the search bar and then access to the information
An alternative is indeed search the company, get its symbol and use it with the Yahoo API, that indeed is a possibility.
 
@CeliusStingher Just remember, searching by XPath alone isn't the only way of finding a link. If you have a general idea of where to look (i.e., a certain div), you can search for link text, too.
I'll leave it to you to work out the implementation details. Also, check out the API, especially if you're doing this work for business purposes. That's why it's there.
 
So, for instance this is my code (simplified version)

url = 'https://finance.yahoo.com/'
driver.get(url)
driver.find_element_by_xpath('searchbar').clear
driver.find_element_by_xpath('searchbar').send_keys('company_name')
time.sleep(2)
driver.find_element_by_xpath('searchbar').send_keys(u'\ue007') #Enter to select the first result in the search bar
new_url = driver.current_url
symbol = re.findall('(?<=\/)(.*?)(?=\?)',new_url)[0].split('/')[-1]
new_url = 'https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/'+symbol+'/key-statistics?p='+symbol
Yeah, what I've noticed is that these divs is what's beeing added/removed daily which is messing up with the XPath I set
 
XPath has much more functionality than just ids. You can select elements based on parents, which number child it is of its parent, any tag parameter, etc.
However, given the fact that Yahoo 404's the URL when entered directly is a pretty clear indication that they don't want you doing exactly what you're doing. You could very easily find your IP blocked if you keep doing it, especially at a larger scale. Research other ways of obtaining the info you're trying to get. Yahoo Finance isn't the only game in town...
 
2:31 PM
Thanks Matt, I did not know about this. I find it strange you are getting 404, but I am totally new to this, I only asked compliance and the legal team to ensure there was no wrong doing nor the company would get in trouble, however, how yahoo deals with this it's absolutely their fair game and I respect that. Since I'm too new I might not understand these signals you mention, so I really thank you for telling me, last thing I want is to get myself / business in trouble! ~Troubled cabbage
 
Definitely. I got the 404 when I clicked on the link you posted. It works now, because I've been on the site and have a session cookie (I'm assuming). Good luck with your work!
 
2:50 PM
Any obvious optimization of this code, other than implementing the priority queue in the form of fibonacci heap? I think most of the work is being done in searching the minimum and presence of node in cl(closed list)
 
3:05 PM
@AjayMishra - can you make cl a set instead of a list? Will make your 'in' checking O(1) vs O(n)
 
3:22 PM
Did it, saved from heaps. thanks!
 
"thanks a heap"
 
I came to know after looking solutions that there is a library named heapq in python
 
yes, standard library
 
 
2 hours later…
4:57 PM
Alright, I've got a kind of silly question my statically typed brain cant handle. I am using VSCode and I write this line: mydataframe = pd.read_csv("input.csv"). Now intellisense is interpreting the output as a "TextFileReader", but I'd really like to see the functions of DataFrame. At runtime it appears to just create a Dataframe so I'm ignorant about what's going on here with the types
 
intellisense is wrong, it's a dataframe
you can try to beat some sense into intellisense with a type annotation: mydataframe: pd.DataFrame = pd.read_csv('input.csv')
 
ok. Let me do that. Thanks.
 
Morning cabbage
 
lunchtime cabbage
 
evening cabbage
 
5:09 PM
cabbage cabbage duck
 
5:21 PM
Semi oxidized cabbage
 
only semi oxidized?
why not totally oxidized?
 
Because it's barely past midday, 14:35 to be precise
 
5:36 PM
I'm triggered. The tutorial for Tkinter has us "from Tkinter import *" but it only works with a lowercase t. These are the official docs...wtf?
I had to do "from tkinter import *" (notice the case diff)
 
that's written for python 2
and I'm not sure if I'd call effbot the official docs. They're the best docs, sure, but official... not really
 
Alright
switched over to tkdocs.com @Aran-Fey is that an improvement?
 
I mean, I literally just called effbot the best docs
But I have to admit I've never heard of tkdocs
 
It's written for Python 3 though
 
I don't think it matters much, as far as I know the only difference is the name of the module
 
5:43 PM
Anyone here good with tkinter?
 
*scribbles on notepad: bot should automatically respond "yes, me" to "Anyone here good with X" questions*
 
Can you help me or not?
 
I don't know, we'll find out once you ask your question
 
@Aran-Fey I am a bot, I can do anything in X that I am given instructions to do.
 
@Govind75 A bit brash, ol' chap.
 
5:51 PM
@JossieCalderon What does he expect from that sort of response
 
@Aran-Fey I do like the layout from this tutorial though tkdocs.com/tutorial/firstexample.html
Sketch, then program
@Govind75 I would just ask the question about tkinter that you had
 
@Govind75 Nothing, because I'm not interested in engaging when you ask that kind of question
Not everything said in here is directed at you
 
note-to-self.py
Has anyone here bought sublime text 3? Is it worth it?
Do you feel as if there's enough return on investment?
 
6:12 PM
@Govind75 Tk is reaaaaaaly easy, what's your question G?
 
cbg guys
 
wim
7:11 PM
@JossieCalderon yes and yes
I use it everyday, it's an excellent editor.
 
@JossieCalderon Several of the senior devs in my office use it. I like PyCharm myself, and willing to give VSCode a try.
@Govind75 Tkinter goes back to the dusty early days of Python, trying to quickly bolt a UI lib onto Python 1.x or even 0.x. Tkinter originates from Tcl/Tk (pronounced "tickle-tee-kay", hence "Tkinter" should be "tee-kay-inter", not "tee-kinter"). Tcl being "Tool Control Language" and "Tk" being "Toolkit". You might find some Tcl/Tk docs to be as or even more helpful than Tkinter docs, especially if you get a grasp on a mental translation from the original Tk API to Python's Tkinter impl.
 
wim
I will use PyCharm for bigger projects. But it's a little too slow/heavy/buggy for simple scripts and edit yaml files or that kind of stuff
 
It is slow. I think its mostly memory hogging.
 
wim
tickle-tee-kay tickle-tee-kaaaaay, so that's what these guys were singing about all this time
 
Lately I'm just keeping around a running PyCharm project pointed at "misc" directory, and then creating my quick-and-dirty scripts in that.
I tried to watch a Tkinter YouTube video (don't even remember why), and after hearing "tee-kinter" for the 10th time just shut it off.
 
wim
7:20 PM
guess that's one way to avoids the startup time
Aug 10 '16 at 17:38, by wim
A: knock knock
B: who's there?
(...long pause..)
A: ....java
 
Very nice!
 
@PaulMcG Pretty sure it's getting better though, this latest iteration is only taking 155-600MB with two projects open.
 
wim
I currently have 3 projects open an it's eating 3.1 GiB (v2019.3)
 
7:39 PM
I'm right in thinking that it doesn't have any in-built IPython component?
 
Hello guys!
Anyone worked with google-speech-to-text?
 
@roganjosh Just tried loading a .ipynb, and looked for plugins, nada
 
 
Gosh, then 3GB is a huge memory footprint then. Even with Spyder holding data in a central namespace, I'm rarely close to that unless I've been piling things into the ipython console. I've never used PyCharm
 
7:54 PM
So, uh, poetry vs flit. As far as I can tell, poetry can do everything flit can and more. Or am I missing something?
wait, it's 9PM? Why's Windows's clock 1 hour off? Wow
 
wim
@Aran-Fey that is correct
poetry is a much more ambitious project
 
Ok, thanks. Could I pick your brain about packaging and general workflow stuff for a bit?
 
wim
but sometimes, smaller is better (e.g. docker vs venv .. both related to isolation, but wildly different scope)
 
For example, how do you test your module before publishing? Is that what CI is for? If so, which one would you recommend?
 
wim
yes that's exactly what CI is for
I use travis-ci but there was controversy about that recently. I didn't have reason to move off of it yet (it ain't broken), but if I was starting a new project I'd be trying using github actions first, and if that didn't work for me then i'd try circle-ci
tox is very popular (I'm not a huge fan)
 
8:06 PM
Ok, looks like I'm gonna have like a million tabs open and a lot of reading to do
 
wim
coveralls.io is a good one to use too
 
Then, in what kind of scenario would you use flit over poetry?
 
wim
if you don't need python 2 support, and you don't need to manage a deployment, flit is usually enough.
it has just the packaging parts, no bells and whistles.
 
"you don't need to manage deployment" meaning it's a library and not a standalone program?
 
wim
more or less
if you have a server and you're grepping through logs, you're probably managing a deployment.
if you're just publishing a package to PyPI, you're not managing a deployment.
 
8:11 PM
alright. Then, one more thing: Could you give me a short step-by-step description of everything that happens from setting up to publishing a project? Like, "step 1: run poetry new", "step 2: set up a virtual env", etc
oh, actually I have one more question
 
wim
I think the docs for this project are fine, no need to regurgitate them here.
 
Hmm, I thought some steps like "set up the CI" were missing from there, but alright
 
wim
ah yeah it probably doesn't really talk about CI
for that, I only really have the experience with travis and jenkins
jenkins should be avoided at all costs :)
 
that's good to know, one less thing to read
 
wim
travis is easy, you just have to login with your github account and flip a switch.
there should be a .travis.yml file in your project root on github saying where/what to build and test
 
8:18 PM
Having trouble putting this last question into words. Basically, it's about how to structure your project in regards to... entry points, or console scripts, or whatever mechanism allows your users to actually run your program. The obvious beginner way to do it is to have a python script that imports all the stuff from the module and does the job, but of course the problem with that is that they get ImportErrors because they don't know how to actually make their module importable
So I've been offering them the easy solution of putting the module and all the executable scripts into the same folder. Would you say that's an acceptable solution or is that gross?
 
wim
I would say that's gross
end users should be installing a release file, not cloning or installing directly from git
it's the job of your release file to setup scripts and entry points etc and put all files to the correct place in site-packages or wherever.
 
What's this "release file"? First time I've heard of that
 
wim
well, it's the job of pip strictly speaking. but your release tells pip exactly what to do.
 
oh, you mean the pyproject.toml?
 
wim
not exactly ... pyproject.toml describes how to create a release file.
it's not the release file itself.
in packaging parlance the release is sometimes called a "distribution"
 
8:23 PM
ah, like the wheel or egg or sdist zip (?)
 
wim
think of it like an artifact like a .tar.gz file, a .whl file, a .zip ...
yes
 
gotcha
 
wim
there are tonnes of formats, but most everyone just uses .whl for bdists and .tar.gz for sdists these days
 
huh, Windows users can deal with .tar.gz files? Most surprising thing I've learned today
 
Perhaps python can
 
wim
8:25 PM
yeah .tar.gz should work fine on windows
 
Anyway, thanks, learned a lot... and have a lot of research to do, still
 
wim
.whl is declarative (I'm a zip file with metadata that tells pip what to put where), .tar.gz is imperative (I have a setup.py file inside me, extract me and execute that file and it will do whatever it needs to do to install)
setup.py can literally do anything, up to and including wiping your hard disk or spinning up a bitcoin miner ...
 
to be fair, the wheel can do that too... when the user launches the program they just installed
 
wim
@AndrasDeak correct tar, gzip.
 
wim
8:32 PM
@Aran-Fey ...or by specifying a dependency on a project which publishes an sdist !
that's why I was surprised to see dependency from github links allowed. you could have something that appeared harmless at the time that you last checked it, but then got swapped out for something harmful at a later date.
 
this assumes that everyone does due diligence in verifying dependencies...
 
I don't really see the problem, to be honest. Every module on pypi can "swap out" harmless code for harmful code by releasing a new version
 
wim
yeah but people can at least guard themselves there by pinning versions and using the verify checksum features of pip
if you're just getting dependency from some random git url, who knows what will be there at any given time
 
hmm, true
 
Can't you use a commit's URL?
 
8:37 PM
but pypi doesn't accept releases with github dependencies, right? Pretty sure I read that somewhere
@AndrasDeak yeah, you can, actually
 
8:53 PM
...and github release artifacts are essentially a commit url IIUC, and so changing it would be pretty hard to spoof?
 
rbrb all
 
yeah, the malicious code would have to have the same commit hash
 
wim
thought you could just use any url , not necessarily a github url
 
Neo
9:27 PM
Hi, I need some assistance with a script
I am able to grab certain amount (3 in this case) before a text match but having hard time getting after match
lines*
 
are you trying to build your own grep?
 
Neo
Example, if "interface" is the keyword string, it should return the lines containing interface and 3 lines above and 3 below
I can not utilize grep is data is not being saved to a file on linux
as**
 
the most straightforward approach is to use the iterator directly, and call next on it to three times
alternatively you could split the problem into two, where part 1 iterates on the desired +3/-3 lines, and part two looks whether line 0 contains the key
 
Neo
lines = config.split('\n')  # read all lines into a list

    for index, line in enumerate(lines):
        if "interface" in line:
            print(line.rstrip())
            #print("".join(lines[max(0,index-3):index]))
            print(lines[max(0,index-3):index])
            print()
            print(lines)
This worked for after but not before
I am trying different things but not getting desired results
 
@Neo well, why would it? you only include index-3, not index+3.
so just using lines[max(0, index-3):index+3] should be enough, if I got you right
@AndrasDeak true that :/
 
Neo
9:43 PM
I tried index+3
 
what happened?
 
Neo
let me run and post
 
*kaboom*
 
Neo
Ok, I tried this: print(lines[max(0,index-3):index])
The one you sent works
print(lines[max(0,index+3):index]) #I mean this one
Can you run grep on a variable instead of greping a file?
via python
grep -i 'interface' config -B 3 -A 4
This gives me a clean output .. It would be awesome if I could run grep and pass the variable instead of file 'config'
 
grep -i 'interface "$filename" -B3 -A4
and of course nothing stops you from passing the equivalent to subprocess...but you should consider whether you really need to go into python for this
 
Neo
9:59 PM
yes, but the output is coming from an API and saving to a file is not an option
 
yo! peeps! I've kinda sorta always been of the opinion that del mydict[mykey] was a bad idea and I should use mydict.pop(mykey) instead. But why?
 
@Neo so pipe it into grep?
oh, you mean you have the file's contents in python and want to perform that grep on it
@inspectorG4dget because you're weird. They have different semantics.
 
Neo
Yes, I have the config string output in python
 
@inspectorG4dget No idea? Possibly a hang-up from learning like when I thought while True was some existential question?
 
Neo
but cant save it to a file and then grep it
 
10:01 PM
@Neo technically you could, with a tempfile, but I get it
 
probably a bit lot of both, tbh. What's the difference in semantincs?
 
Neo
I wish we could pass variable with config as source instead of file
 
@inspectorG4dget the first says "delete this key", the second says "give me the contents for this key while removing this key"
 
aha! gotcha. Thanks
 
@Neo you can pipe stuff onto the stdin of grep...but I'm not sure that's a nice solution when you're in python
Is the end result what you grep, or are you doing further things with the output of grep in python?
 
Neo
10:04 PM
The would be the end result and display on the web
displayed*
 
"display on the web" means it's not the end result (so just grepping the output of your python script is not an option)
 
Neo
I mean, the result will be passed on to flask and displayed on the web page
I am not doing any further operations on that data
 
yes, hence "you [are] doing further things with the output of grep"
passing it into a template or whatever, rather than just printing it into a file or stdout
 
Neo
the grep output data can be saved in a variable right
If not, it wont work in my situation
 
yes...but jumping back and forth between python and shell utilities seems clumsy
Can't you just pass the data into an 8-length deque and emulate grep?
 
10:08 PM
@Neo What does this Flask app do? Are you trying to show config for an unrelated system?
 
Neo
probably but I have no clue how
The flask will just display the output on the web page
 
That's... not helpful. I'm asking for context on what you're trying to do
 
Neo
Ok, we have switches in our network that have configuration txt file saved on a server. I am creating a tool, that will let users search anything from all the configs and display on page
 
There are plenty of people who can address the Linux side better than me, but I'm wondering if there is a gap to be bridged. Andras is asking what the data is going to move on to
 
Neo
for example: If I want to know which server has L3 IP "10.10.10.1"
I will put it in the tool and it will get the config from which ever switch has it
I can add line up and down to see full vlan config
Grep data will be saved in a variable in python
 
10:13 PM
So how are you going to translate front-end search parameters into grep?
 
Neo
grep -i 'interface' config -B 0 -A 2 #The config is a variable and not a file
I am trying to do something like this
 
That wasn't what I asked
A request comes in from the front-end and you need to translate that into some kind of command. How do you intend to do that?
 
Neo
sorry no idea what you mean
which request are you talking about
 
"I am creating a tool, that will let users search anything from all the configs and display on page". I'm focusing on the search. That's either freetext or a dropdown. It doesn't matter in this case. You have to translate their input into some action that retrieves relevant data
 
Neo
ah ok
so the webpage has an input box where the enter lets say "Vlan101". I used that keyword, and run a sql query to the database of the server where config are stored
The server returns the config file contents that get stored in a config variable in python
 
10:20 PM
Those two sentences make a non-sequitur for me. The first I understand, the second I do not
 
Neo
I then need to only show line in the config that has VLAN 101. The page also has a drop down for lines up and down
so if user want to see 3 lines above the search term and 4 below, that is what I need to do in python and return to webpage
User enter a search term on a page, when user hits submit, the python scripts gets called via flask. The python script then uses that search term user entered to run a sql query to config server
 
^ I'm ok with that part
 
Neo
the query result is stored in 'config' variable but it contains the full config
 
^ that part doesn't make sense to me
 
Neo
python script queries the database and get the config file contents back as a string which is stored in a python variable
import os

config = '''
    !
    no service pad
    service internal
    service counters max age 10
    hostname test_sw1
    !
    interface GigabitEthernet0/1
     switchport access vlan 101
     switchport mode access
     spanning-tree portfast
     spanning-tree bpduguard enable
    !
    interface GigabitEthernet0/2
     switchport access vlan 102
     switchport mode access
     spanning-tree portfast
     spanning-tree bpduguard enable
    !
     interface Vlan101-105
     no ip address
This is what I was wondering if it can be done
instead of passing in file, we pass the variable
 
10:39 PM
I'm getting a sense that something is very wrong with your setup so I'm really struggling to address your problem. The best that I can suggest is that the config should be parsed into its own table so that it can be used in filtering queries. I will say that you've crossed multiple different domains of knowledge (Linux and now into Flask) and I think you've confused us all. That might be a trigger to learn more about what you're doing
 
Neo
Unfortunately I dont have access to database. All I can do is query it and get full config
3rd party software is using the database
I can however
create my own and save all configs there but that would be a duplicate
 
duplicate of what?
 
Neo
data
same config data on 2 DBs
and it changes so keeping it up to date will be a challenge
the 3rd party software polls network devices and updates daily
 
Come on now. "data" is a crap answer. I've really done my best to try and understand the situation
 
Neo
config data
configuration text
 
10:45 PM
prepending "config" doesn't change anything. We can't see the data
 
Neo
I added the snippet of data in my original question
 
I've given up. You aren't the Chosen One because even the Matrix sequels weren't so difficult to get through
 
Neo
Lol .. It goes both ways
Thanks for trying to help tho
 

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