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2:02 AM
@shintuku customize in what way, and what has AI etc. got to do with it?
I can't fathom the mindset of someone who wants to try to get AI to solve advent of code problems. Like, just why?
2:30 AM
@KarlKnechtel well, it feels like the algorithms that determine what we're fed focus on the most click-baity, inane stuff it can find
everything the algorithms put in my feed that I haven't explicitly subscribed to sucks
it would be interesting to see if there was a way to train models to query these info hubs for stuff we'd actually find interesting or relevant
actually, lately youtube has been pushing me a lot of things from no-names that I would find interesting and not clickbaity. Unfortunately, youtube doesn't seem to understand that I use certain accounts for very specific purposes.
(and I can tell that it still builds a partial profile on you while logged out, presumably by IP address)
youtube is a serious offender. i once clicked on a video about a farmer cutting off excess growth on cow's feet. it wasn't actually disgusting and was super satisfying to watch
but then it treated me like a farmer for the entire week
(it also seems obsessed with the idea that I might re-watch things I've seen before, despite that I basically never do)
but see! what if we could replace or filter youtube's algorithm with our own models?
we already know cambridge analytica profiled people in order to determine who were susceptible to have their political opinions changed through targeted advertisement. like what if we're susceptible to these because we're tired from our day of work and go home and just don't have the will power to go look for interesting stuff and will just take whatever comes first
ye gads! my feed is ruined! But what if I were to get suggestions from ChatGPT and disguise them as my own preferences?
I had to give up on watching anything political on youtube because the "relationships" it draws between content are so poor.
2:37 AM
that's one of my big issues too. it absolutely SUCKS for political content. either extremism or complete idiocy, nothing inbetween
there are good channels in there but it just won't suggest them
i mean they're banking on the fact that we use up our willpower throughout the day for other things, i really feel like user-side machine-learning filtering models would do great work in terms of consumer rights and all that jazz
3:36 AM
@KarlKnechtel I used to get duplicates. But then every duplicate I saw I used the dismiss button on ('I've already watched') and then YT recognised I don't want to watch duplicates.
 
5 hours later…
8:19 AM
@shintuku indeed. I've almost got to the point that I don't want to watch anything political any more and I think that's sad. Watch literally one video and the dial swings hard and now suddenly bombarded with left or right wing crap. They really need to take their foot off the pedal for that content (though reality tells me it's probably a massive driver for the average audience)
 
4 hours later…
12:09 PM
Does anyone know a library for actual task scheduling in asyncio? So when tasks are waiting for a primitive (say, a Lock) they get woken according to a configurable schedule instead of FIFO or random.
Or more specifically, I'm looking for something that gives priority to older tasks.
12:25 PM
stackoverflow.com/questions/77599243 I moved too quickly on this one; given that the code correctly generates the output, the question should instead be a duplicate of What is the purpose of the return statement? How is it different from printing?
@MisterMiyagi Isn't FIFO the same thing as giving priority to older tasks?
@Aran-Fey I mean age of the task, not age of waiting.
So if Tasky Hawk and Uncle Task queue then Uncle Task should always go first.
Is it even possible to build something like that on top of asyncio? I think you'd need a custom event loop
12:35 PM
I would think that writing an event loop that's compatible with the asyncio API, counts as "on top"
Fair enough
Custom synchronisation primitives should be enough.
It's simple enough to build your own Lock, but I'm rather tired of reinventing async every week.
That reminds me, I still need to write a lock that throws an error instead of silently deadlocking
Something like an inverse-RLock that raises on recursion?
You can piggyback one on top of a regular Lock without much work.
Yeah, exactly. I've kind of avoided it so far because I'm not 100% sure how I want it to behave if multiple different tasks are involved
12:47 PM
It's probably^{TM} fine to just raise in the recursive acquire. If that one bubbles up to the initial acquire the lock is released and other tasks can run.
 
2 hours later…
2:25 PM
Has anyone used sqlmodel? I don't get it - it just looks like SQLA to me, what is the wrapper adding?
Looks like SQLAlchemy-slash-Pydantic. Ze besht of bosh worldz.
Unless we're all coding with SQLite, though, the database is sure to shout about poor typing
tiangolo is certainly a prolific programmer. It kinda feels the typing aspect on everything they produce might be going beyond the sensible with this latest venture
3:22 PM
Doesn't SQLAlchemy have typing support itself?
@roganjosh have you seen peps.python.org/pep-0727 yet? because if you squint enough, even documentation can be a type it seems
@MisterMiyagi yup. I've even swapped all my id fields to id: Mapped[int] = mapped_column(primary_key=True) in solidarity with the cause. I think. :P
@Arne yikes!
@Arne "... (e.g. an API with FastAPI, a CLI with Typer, etc)" what a surprise they're both written by tiangolo!
the upsides of having programmatic access to docstrings are great, would have loved that a couple times myself. but defining them using typing syntax in Annotated is just so counterintuitive that I wonder how the proposal even got so far
hmm, I put it wrong. "[...] having access to docstrings on an attribute / parameter / name level is great [...]"
3:43 PM
Hmm, has he become a core dev or something
I'm already now avoiding Annotated whenever possible just because it adds so much baggage that annotations become almost unreadable at a glance. Throwing in prose string and dummy type on top is quite an eyesore.
@roganjosh no, a number of peps have been authored by non-core devs
@MisterMiyagi I've just realised there's a handy async library coming your way (if the usual trends of his libraries exploding in popularity continues)
@MisterMiyagi i tried typer exactly once. it already uses this pattern, and came to the same conclusion as you
oh right, it's public too. look what I resorted to, just to get the signature to be readable again: github.com/a-recknagel/byecycle/blob/main/src/byecycle/…
4:09 PM
@roganjosh just looked through it. not a fan, and frankly I'm rather irritated that it still has the "Typing Support" promo plastered all over it.
Oh, my tongue was almost fused to my cheek with the pressure applied when I posted that :P Still, at least you might know what's coming on the async side
4:27 PM
On further inspection, that sql wrapper basically does nothing. Half the session code is deprecated already. Pointless wrapper.
Although it does have some handy methods like over where the function signature basically dominates everything in ways I never wanted
@MisterMiyagi Cbg, all. sqalchemy 2 has, as I understand it, fully integrated the typing goodness.
@Arne Of course using docstrings as data means you can never run with -O. Who actually does that nowadays?
You only have to look at my last link to see tiangolo's typing crusade in action. It literally just piles on the typing and then passes the arguments through to SQLA with zero alteration. It's rampant boilerplate
Yeah, I don't see that catching on. I'm always suspicious of new formats where my first thought is "I could generate all that from a much smaller syntax."
[Sorry: that = PEP 727]
 
3 hours later…
7:14 PM
Ugh, and OS can be paywalled?
 
3 hours later…
10:13 PM
Hi! I has a quick question. I found these questions having a common "topic" - they discuss different ways by which we select rows and/or columns in a pandas data frame in Python. What should this common tag be that describes this topic? In SQL, one would use the tag select. And in pandas?
* [Python: Pandas Series - Why use loc? - Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38886080/python-pandas-series-why-use-loc)
* [python - How are iloc and loc different? - Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31593201/how-are-iloc-and-loc-different/31593712#31593712)
* [What is the difference between using loc and using just square brackets to filter for columns in Pandas/Python? - Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48409128/what-is-the-difference-between-using-loc-and-using-just-square-brackets-to-filte)
Or should I ask this on Meta SO?

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