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AAB
AAB
06:27
@roganjosh @WayneWerner thanks for help and info flask development server does hang and cause other requests to get timed out
 
2 hours later…
08:48
I'd be interested to know what happens if you launch with gunicorn
09:24
Throwing datetimes and pandas together makes for an interesting debugging experience.
I'm super tired so I might be missing something obvious in this question. Otherwise - what the yam, pandas?
Ok, I've got past "30 days has September, April, June [...]" to verify that indeed the date should be valid. It actually just packs in for many other valid dates in 1672
10:15
Plain Python datetime handles dates back to 1 AD, using the proleptic Gregorian calendar. That is, the modern calendar projected backwards from the date that it was first proclaimed by Pope Gregory. However, if you need to actually handle old dates, it's a nightmare, due to the chaotic adoption of the Gregorian calendar. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… for the gory details.
I'm sure I've spoken about this stuff before... :)
10:38
Indeed. I think the issue here is that numpy will only encompass 500 or so years. I'm interested now in how polars gets around it
I can't see them expanding on 64bit representation, so they might lose precision? TBC
The sad part is that I'm pretty sure I've come across this before and should have known the answer, but alas, I guess that fact just got pushed out of my head by some other weird quirk I needed to remember with pandas
10:53
In the old days, people kept dates and times separate. But when your system gives you numbers with lots of bits, it's tempting to stuff everything into a single number.
But then you get problems because your span of dates is too small for some users. Or your time precision is too coarse for other users.
I'm now wondering if that's the case with polars. It'll possibly be in the chrono crate
> January 1 of this year (1601-01-01) is used as the base of file dates[1] and of Active Directory Logon dates[2] by Microsoft Windows. It is also the date from which ANSI dates are counted and were adopted by the American National Standards Institute for use with COBOL and other computer languages.
> All versions of the Microsoft Windows operating system from Windows 95 onward count units of one hundred nanoseconds from this epoch as a counter having 63 bits until 30828/9/14 02:48:05.4775807.[3] April 1 of this year is the earliest possible calendar date in Microsoft Outlook.
So you'd expect that people in the Windows universe would at least do proper date handling for dates from 1601 and onwards, even if they don't even bother to get it right before 1601.
 
7 hours later…
18:07
Um, anyone else having the problem that vscode's debugger opens a duplicate tab of a file? Like, I have foo.py open, I set a breakpoint, run the file, and as soon as it hits the breakpoint I get a 2nd foo.py tab. And if I set a breakpoint in another file, it never gets hit, even though it should. For some reason it's having trouble identifying files
And the worst part is that everything works as expected if I try to reproduce it with a new file with minimal code
It's the exact same file path

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