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00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

00:06
Wait, did that question get closed?
what, huh, which one?
What?
What
What was reopened?
I'm at school right now
cabbage @ChristianCareaga
00:08
14 votes for that metanpost
woo hooo... 4th for the week... not that I'm going to be able to do another day like today...
metapost*
I got a downvote on an answer just now
@ChristianCareaga how come ?
Downvoted for while loop with counterproductive condition, counter variable tracked with += 1 instead of a for loop, and unnecessary break after return. — user2357112 1 min ago
not a very good answer ahaha
00:11
Wow - you got some constructive critcism at least
hahah yeah maybe ill see if it gets 3 downvotes before deleting it lol
lol
I just hit 500 rep on meta
all from questions, too
i will eventually get that badge!
nice!
Wow - a discussion between two users, one of them just flagged the other's post.... Best of luck then. Suggest you learn a touch more about CSS and page layout. I tried to help. Good luck and fuck you
ohhhhh!
angry programmers
00:22
It's like angry birds but without the fun
hahahah yeah
00:49
Hi there guys, just got chat privilege
Came in just to say hello
@pabce nice to see ya - welcome
How you finding SO ?
Hey @Pabce :-)
Well it's a great community, it's nice to be part of it
Very useful! Haha
Just so you know: it's generally preferred not to sign off questions with "Thanks" etc. on SO ... you might find someone edits them out at some point. It's kinda part of the culture here: "we're an informational resource, not a forum" sort of thing.
Also: you might be interested in this proposal for a new Stack Exchange site: area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/42810/…
Oh, ok, thank's for the advice
00:58
Much less formal here in chat though :-)
Yup - we natter about all sorts ;) We have a lot of friendly people come to this room as well ;)
Wow, stack overflow in spanish! Looks good
Although I get on quite well with english anyway
@ZeroPiraeus not sure if you knew already - part of the sopython.com project was also to include python tags and cleaning up of wiki's, as well as canonical dupes etc.... (not sure if you were aware of the project...)
I'm getting off (3 am here!) Nice to speak to you :)
Feel free to pop by anytime!
01:18
@Pabce Have fun :-)
@Jon I think I followed the link there from your profile at one point ... will take the time to check it out more thoroughly soon.
Wow - people read profiles then ;)
Possibly just me :-)
01:39
Nearly 3am... so - rhubarb ;) Catch you laters
 
3 hours later…
05:05
Cabbage
05:50
cabbage
06:04
cabbage
06:51
Cabbage
 
1 hour later…
08:21
cabbage
cabbage
anybody has experience with fabric and gunicorn
08:37
nope sorry
@Volatility question
"In terms of its shape the island mass of Australia has very few major indentations - the obvious exception being the Gulf of Carpentaria in the north and the Great ______ _____ in the south"
fill in the blanks :3
@lovesh No, but I have a question about "gunicorn" is that like.. "gun" and "unicorn"?
@Haidro Australian Bight?
Sorry, was just having dinner
You're a legend
But surely you knew that already?
Nope
Well, probably last year
08:56
Well. Its final. We are all going to die. dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2370100/…
We were all going to die anyway
Well, so you can't say I am lying :)
09:29
heya
09:49
hey
10:19
@InbarRose Not stalking you, someone linked the question.
Yeah, I did
Also, daily mail - there is your problem.
the first message was in response to something you said ages ago
about me responding to a question from even more ages ago
I got an extra 5 upvotes from that :D
10:38
Damn rules must have been so relaxed in 08
@Haidro dare you to downvote Skeet ;-)
I didn't :p
I think he can take the -2 hit.
@Volatility I cry when I do homework on Shakespeare
I am the opposite
Writing in iambic pentameter is quite satisfying
10:44
Writing? That's all you do? We analyse
Well we did only start a couple of days ago
The analysis part is probably going to come in due time
Prepare for crying
But Shakespeare is nice to read too
Oh yes. But not for analysing
10:50
@Haidro to misquote E B White: "[Literature] can be dissected, as a frog can, but the thing dies in the process and the innards are discouraging."
cabbage
cabbage
Happy Monday to all or something ;)
what's happy in monday??? :D :D
errrr... well, they both end in Y? :)
11:01
lol
20 rep today (yay)
@Haidro I turned into you yesterday :(
Heh nice 320 :D
Yeah.... minus 2 unaccepts an accept just over the cutoff point :)
11:36
pheww.... the refactoring morning seems finished x_x
Hahah... except now - someone will decide it was okay as it was? :)
lol no... I decided it was time to do it :D
11:48
LOL Haidro
Sheesh - we're even updating the same things @Haidro ;)
Huh?
list of dicts Q :)
answered 1 sec apart... and edited similarly ;)
dammit jon I didn't even notice you answered
xD
I think technically you beat me by 1sec, but at least I had 3 lines and a with statement ;)
I have a link to the docs :D
11:54
Yup - laziness on my behalf - was going to do that on one edit, but figured it just looked like copying ya ;)
Oooo... and Martijn also did the same answer...
Yea
he posted after me
Awww - that's nice of him ;)
Where the hell is jamylak? I haven't seen him in ages
I have a strange question.
Something I just wondered.
@JonClements Dammit Jon
@JonClements Mine got accepted then changed to yours xD
12:04
How come this works:
>>> try:
	f = open('')
except:
	print 'blah'
else:
	print 'woo'
finally:
	f.close()
if there is an exception, shouldn't f not exists? and throw an exception?
>>> a = open('')

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<pyshell#203>", line 1, in <module>
    a = open('')
IOError: [Errno 22] invalid mode ('r') or filename: ''
>>> a.close()

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<pyshell#204>", line 1, in <module>
    a.close()
NameError: name 'a' is not defined
Like that.
F doesn't exist, yes
That's why it raises a NameError: name 'f' is not defined
but ti doesnt
cabbage
Try it
I did
I get 'blah' then the NameError
12:06
hmmm
maybe i have an f somewhere in my shell
lemme restart it
ah, yeah
damnit
sorry for bothering :P
I was like.. "what the yam.. why is this working?
Lol
Oh, @InbarRose, tell me what the output of this is
Make a new file, script, whatever-a-magig, and do:
import sys
print sys.argv[1]
Now when running it:

$ python file.py aa#$#aa
What's the output?
file.py
no
sorry
aa#$#aa
It's not my actual file name
Interesting, mine is aa#0aa
12:10
Oh, you want me to run it?
I am just guessing
Please do :)
@Haidro well of course it will be - the shell subs it before hand
@JonClements What do you mean? And why did this not happen with @Volatility
jon@forseti:~$ aa#$#aa
aa#0aa: command not found
Doesn't happen on Windows
12:12
Yeah. it is OS dependent
$# has a meaning in bash for instance
Ah
because I noticed this when answering stackoverflow.com/questions/17769543/…
Try $$ - which will go to the PID of the shell
Cool
I have yet to learn this stuff
Well, say you did ls /home/haidro to do a simple check it was okay to delete, instead of retyping /home/haidro you could then do: rm -f $_ and it takes the last argument to the previous command and subs it in
12:17
But don't do that.
Because that will remove your home directory. :)
There should be a warning label instead of a cute puppy on your icon that reads: "WARNING: May contain nutts"
"The Mutt's Nuts" ? :)
hmmm
How about "WARNING: Missing some bolts"
reduce needs to be imported now?
lol
12:34
Similar in nature - yeah ;)
heya @Tomassino
Hello hello!
Thought I'd visit this Zen as I'm getting my Python on today
Ahhh yes.... I was pissing by the door, when I heard two shats. You are holding in your hand a smoking goon; you are clearly the guilty potty.
Arhghghgh - that's what you do when you say 'Allo 'Allo! :)
Glub!
12:42
What's on the Python schedule today ?
Data analysis tools mainly, tied to an SQLite database
Nice... sqlite seems an odd choice, so I'm guessing it's not vast amounts of data ;)
Correct, only about half a million records
works nicely too :-)
Hehe, love this on a question: I don't know what '{}\n'.format does, but someone suggested it in a previous question, so I thought it'd work here, but it doesn't.
Gnight
@JonClements Lol where is that
stackoverflow.com/questions/17787461/… Is len(str(... not pythonic?
night
In that use case - it's not really required... not sure about the "un pythonic" though ;)
I wouldn't lose sleep over it - night!
0
Q: Howto deploy python applications inside corporate network

RazerFirst let me explain the current situation: We do have several python applications which depend on custom (not public released ones) as well as general known packages. These depedencies are all installed on the system python installation. Distribution of the application is done via git by source...

next question would be: "how to sail to mars"
I think I should sleep now too
Rhubarb
rhubarb @Volatility
13:01
rhubarb
What's with all the rhubarb in here?
@Tomassino opposite of cabbage ;) - see: pastebin.com/z7zQqzCw
@JonClements Melon
Watermelon
"Why was this downvoted" comments on code that obviously wasn't tested are really starting to annoy me.
It's not like you're using C and need to compile something; it takes like 5 seconds to type your suggested code into the interpreter. C'mon, people.
13:10
lol... funny how some people think certain things are faster than others: stackoverflow.com/a/17788298/1561176
@Wooble Yeah, but they may not realise that was the reason for the downvote.
@Wooble - long time no see - how's things?
It should be obvious, but it's always worth making note of why a downvote is cast.
@Lattyware well, when they add "this code is correct" to the comment, I want to downvote the comment too. :)
The -5 answer on this one is bugging me as it's getting in the way of a badge ;) But at the same time, the OP appears to have some self-deprecation... stackoverflow.com/questions/17777749/…
13:14
I just found a HUGE bug in the Sublime Text 3 public beta: I ran into an infinte loop, and even after I cancled it, with the new Ctrl + C command -> it eats 30GB of my diskspace (means all the FREE space on my SSD), stopped my system, and almost my Mac was boiled ;) Umm...
Good old restart was the solution..
Umm, that sounds like a fairly impressive bug ;)
a sublime bug
@paolo I see what you did there ;)
@JonClements i love itertools :D
Gonna pop to the shop - brb
13:19
Cabbage, all.
what is all this about cabbage
why doth thou torment me so
That moment when you're Googling a question and you end up on DaniWeb
don't speak of that place.
@MartijnPieters Cabbage
@Crowz the horror... the horror
13:25
Can you help me close this: stackoverflow.com/questions/17788547/…
CV added.
I like the way this is going.. stackoverflow.com/a/17788298/1561176
is how I always mark those. :-)
because automated tools can find those more easily.
@InbarRose microoptimizing homework problems FTW?
also, yours is fast but it also violates the problem specification "every higher number" :P
The ones that rely on True being a synonym of 1 make me want to cry.
@InbarRose: add map(int, imap(bool, L)) to the mix too (from itertools import imap). :-P
13:34
I have no idea why he wants that... somewhere i'm thinking all() is really for him.
Not that that is any faster, just was missing it from the list.
ceil(float(num/some_arbitrarily_big_number)) is the best implementation IMO
@JonClements: ptto?
If all are 0 or > 0, then it's missing [{0: 0}.get(el, 1) for el in whatever] - just another alternative ;)
@Martijn not bad - bit warm - potato?
13:44
I know, it's not pythonic, to 'test before use', but I was wondering of a good usecase on function annotations, and my question is, Is this a good one?
def some_func(arg: int) -> None:
    if not isinstance(arg, some_func.__annotations__['arg']):
        raise TypeError('Wrong argument type.')
    else:
        pass
If you want to do that - you'd makei t a generic function decorator and apply it to functions you wanted to do the checking on ;)
No, it's not, because type checking is bad.
@JonClements just peachy. Good air conditioning at the office.
It's not testing before use that is the problem
the problem is you are testing for it's type, not it's capability
Testing before use is sometimes necessary, but even then, you should be testing for capability
be it through ABCs or hasattr() or whatever
@JonClements: that version recreates the {0: 0} mapping each loop iteration..
if you make it a constant, it does reasonably well, just not as fast as Inbar's version.
13:48
If you want something that behaves like an int, you want to check if it can behave like an int, not that is happens to be a subclass of int.
Although if you're being passed some kind of intlike objects something's probably gone horribly wrong :)
@Lattyware That's a nice tip!
@MartijnPieters I realise that - it was purely an example ;)
But probably if you test for some attribute
you can do that with a try/except, which is more pythinic IMO
Yes, but that doesn't work if, for example, you have to run some function with side effects to get the data
try/except is generally the best route though, yes
13:51
@Lattyware I know that, that's why I started my question that way: this is a stupid example, and the real question behind the lines is: what the hell is a good example of function annotations usage?
Well, sticking along the typing theme - I wrote a Java interpreter in Python, and had an interface for exposing Python functions to Java, which used function annotations to provide the Java typing information.
This morning I finished last week's Dumb Friday Project: a quine in Brainf_ck. It's a mere 5,619 characters long.
(this is on topic because I wrote the interpreter in Python)
Or say, you have an API that takes functions that can have a variety of arguments that are impossible to distinguish from each other, you could require that they have function annotations to define what they are.
I haven't seen too much use of function annotations, but they are there and I'm sure we'll see people using them in cool ways as time goes on
I decided to encode each character as an integer in [1,8]. Making a switch-case in BF is super annoying. I ended up with something like:
if (value != 0){
    if (value-- == 0){
        print("+");
    }
    if (value != 0){
        if (value-- == 0){
            print("-");
        }
        if (value != 0){
            if (value-- == 0){
                print ".";
            }
            if (value != 0){
                #etc
            }
        }
    }
}
@Lattyware That seems like a pretty dumb example for me (no harm, I'm only curious, really) because if they are identical, then why do you want to distinguish? And if you want to distinguish, then why are they so identical?
14:02
As in, say the function can take a bunch of different string arguments, and you want to dsitinguish between them
it's a bad example because it can be done better by keyword arguments
I like function annotations, as a much better alternative of __doc__oneliners (like func(int, bool) -> None so I use them to document what my function does.. probably a bad idea, don't know..
although perhaps the distinguishing data being anything rather than an identifier could be more useful.
either way, it's an example pulled out of thin air, so don't think too hard on it
They can be helpful as documentation, but again, that pushes people towards the single type for each function mentality
which isn't good
well, it pushes people that way while they are not so complex they become unweildy
hmmm
this was exactly my first thought this morning
hmm..
14:50
I'm pretty disappointed that high-rep users are answering this "write my code for me" problem. You'd think they would know better.
I noticed that
As you can see I edited the question.
I notice that many high rep users do this.
Especially when its an easy to answer question... Maybe that's why they have such high rep....
I guess answering questions that no one else will is one way to get rep
Mostly they are users who have been using the site for a long time, it stands to reason that the regulations about soliciting answers from SO may not have been in place when they started answering questions, and usually its hard to teach an old dog new tricks.
It's an easy way to become a high rep user
simple questions like that get a lot of upvotes in answers as everyone can tell they are right
That question will be auto-deleted.
14:56
It's irrational, though. Encouraging rent-a-coder questions hurts the community, which devalues the worth of their reputation. Nobody cares if you're the grand poobah of a dead site.
eventually.
It has enough downvotes, the answers will never get enough upvotes, nor will it ever receive enough views.
Just trying to think of other ways of doing that list question :)
I've added a deletion vote now too.
make that 2 delvotes on it
There, now browser plugins can find it too. :-P
15:07
LOL
ls[::-2] <-- how you create this with ls.__getitem__(slice(????)) ?
None, None, 2
oh, I thought the first one is 0 by default
that's why I can't reproduce what I wanted
:)
thx
15:25
is there a str.replace(arg1, arg2) of some sort?
Yes, there is.
That's an actual method, and it returns the altered string.
Is there a make_tea(white, two_sugars) of some sort ?
'foo bar'.replace('foo', 'spam') returns 'spam bar'.
@JonClements: Yes there is. You simply walk to the tea room, grab a mug and a teabag from the cupboards, and use the Quooker tap to poor on hot water. Add milk and sugar to taste.
huh it's not working
I have a string like /3 for example, and I want to make it read 03
can you copy your actual code
>>> '/3'.replace('/','0')
'03'
15:28
if '/' in day:
   i=4
   day='0'+day.replace('/', '')
and give a sample value for day
@MartijnPieters I was with you up until walk... then my head started spinning and I got all confused what language you were talking...
@JonClements You don't inherit from the "Human" baseclass, so you don't have that method.
@Crowz a few days ago, hadn't we already been through this with suggestions on how to already process those kinds of strings... did we waste our time previously explaining that to you?
My Human instance has been placed in the Bromium environment, perhaps that is why I have that specific method..
15:30
@JonClements I was doing something else, that's fixed
@MartijnPieters that doesn't appear to be getting a 3rd delete vote
oh duh I see what's going wrong...
I had an if statement before that should have been an else so it was negating everything
because I'm an idyut
I use the delegator design pattern in my make_tea method. Magrat.make_tea() if Magrat is not None else Agnes.make_tea()
In the degenerate case where neither Magrat nor Agnes is present, the program should crash as early as possible. There's definitely no way I'm going to make my own tea.
@MartijnPieters WOW! That looks awsome!!! musthave/instantget
15:47
> the patented high-vacuum insulation ensures that the Quooker's standby usage is just 3 pence a day.
What is that in kilowatt-hours?
Cheaper than developers waiting for a kettle to boil..
True that
@MartijnPieters I thought that was what PA's and junior staff were for ;)
It's a funny way to measure energy, is all. Of course, money/time is a more useful metric for the person trying to justify a purchase. It reminds me of how football fields, Olympic swimming pools, libraries of congress, and Eiffel towers are used as de facto standards of measurement.
@Kevin you also missed out "the size of Wales" - which seems to be an odd one
15:53
@JonClements What do you mean? I regularly measure things that way! "My yearly commute is equivalent to the size of Wales" :-P
I like "miliHelen" as "the amount of beauty necessary to launch one ship"
Right, time to off. Rhubarb all
00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

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