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00:04
deprecated
one can use __next__() though
I thought that was a magic method that meant one could do next() on that object providing it
Python page for datetime module is so long
 
2 hours later…
01:44
Okay, I wouldn't normally do this, but I've been frustrated before by the lack of a good, canonical "don't do that" answer on SO to the "how do I dynamically create variables?" question that pops up from time to time ... so I tried to write one.
1
A: Importing data and variable names from a text file in Python

Zero PiraeusThe answer is: you don't want to do that. Dictionaries are designed for exactly this purpose: the data structure you actually want is going to be something like: data = { "a": [1, 2, 3, 4], "b": [11, 22, 33, 44], "c": [111, 222, 333, 444], } ... which you can then easily access us...

if people here think it's better than the other alternatives, it would make me very happy if that answer got enough upvotes to get seen when people search for a canonical answer to link in comments, close-as-dupe, etc.
If people don't think it's all that great, I'd appreciate assistance in imporving it, because I don't see any other candidates that make the "don't do it" point strongly enough.
is good Answer
print ("Hello World")
print('cbg')
Hi @SahibjotSaggu :-)
01:59
Im new here (but not new to Python), what do we talk about
Pretty much anything ... with a bias towards leafy vegetables and OrderedDicts of lists of tuples of dicts.
The room's pretty dead at this time; some of the more active members are based in Europe, so they're either asleep or partying right now.
Where are you based, @SahibjotSaggu ?
02:05
Cool :-) I'm in Chile (but originally from the UK).
Well ... it's nice in summer. The weather's pretty atrocious right now.
It's winter right now?
in Chile?
Yeah, southern hemisphere.
Forgot about that!
The earth is tilted so that the southern hemisphere is facing the sun
02:09
Although as a Brit I'm obviously used to freezing cold and horizontal rain ;-)
So how have your Python adventures come along?
Can't complain :-) The first language I used in any serious way was Visual Basic, and I once had a job working with PHP, so even after a few years Python is a delight :-)
have you made anything interesting recently with Python?
Nothing spectacular really. I have a grandiose, vague idea at the moment about building a replacement for Gmail, but that might fall into the same category as the thousands of people who think they're going to replace Facebook.
If you're around at the same time as @PeterVaro you'll have to ask him about the GUI code builder he's working on. It looks kinda awesome.
How about you @Tshepang - doing anything insanely cool at the moment?
@ZeroPiraeus no :)
never did anything kool with any language
am not inventive enough really
just wanna solve boring problems, that's all
02:24
what would you consider to be "boring problems"? @Tshepang
@ZeroPiraeus that @PeterVaro thing is real kool; can't wait to play
@SahibjotSaggu at work I developed this ugly code to transfer files to an SFTP server, each type having different rules when and how it gets transferred
It's very pretty ... if it's intuitive to use as well (hard to tell from a video) it could be lots of fun.
@Tshepang The challenge is to make it beautiful then :-)
I also maintain a front-end for Debian package management
@ZeroPiraeus it takes forever to test, and it's to mess up
02:27
Which one?
@Tshepang spent a ton of time on it; it's still ugly, but you should have seen it when I started
it evolved from a bash script, and you can still see evidence of that
Neato! I pretty much use aptitude for everything.
@ZeroPiraeus I use it's show command in wajig, for it's a lot better than that of apt-cache
it's search output is also nicer
but it's noticeably slower
so which software project do you guys find most exciting?
From outside, I think the attempts to shake up the phone market are very cool - Firefox OS and Ubuntu Phone etc. Maybe doomed, but valiant.
I was actually wondering which of those 2 projects is more beneficial to humanity
Ubuntu Phone seems kooler, but I'd vote for Firefox OS
other than it being from a more trustworthy organisation, it also embraces the web more
02:40
Whichever one wins, I guess. Would be great if there were room for both, but it's a pretty crowded field at the moment. I think we can safely say WP8 isn't going to dislodge Apple, at least.
current situation of one having to learn both Apple and Android platforms is not efficient
Yeah, "everything is the web" is an interesting approach.
not to mention the languages of those platforms aren't exactly loved
WP8? what's that?
Windows Phone 8 is the second generation of the Windows Phone mobile operating system from Microsoft. It was released on October 29, 2012, and like its predecessor, it features the interface known as Metro (or Modern UI). Windows Phone 8 replaces its CE-based architecture used on Windows Phone 7 devices with the Windows NT kernel found on many Windows 8 components. Current Windows Phone 7.x devices cannot run or update to Windows Phone 8 and new applications compiled specifically for Windows Phone 8 are not made available for Windows Phone 7.x devices. Windows Phone 8 devices are man...
02:45
Ok, I think I'm going to call it a night - wind down with a bit of QI.
im back!
Heh. I'm really making use of the auto-wikipedia links at the moment ...
QI (Quite Interesting) is a British comedy panel game television quiz show created and co-produced by John Lloyd, hosted by Stephen Fry, and featuring permanent panellist Alan Davies. Most of the questions are extremely obscure, making it unlikely that the correct answer will be given. To compensate, points are awarded not only for right answers, but also for interesting ones, regardless of whether they are right or even relate to the original question. Conversely, points are deducted from a panellist who gives "answers which are not only wrong, but pathetically obvious," typically ans...
@ZeroPiraeus auto-wikipedia?
If you paste a wikipedia URL, it gets converted to one of the snippets above.
02:48
oh, it's called one-boxing
Ah, right, I knew there was a name for it.
Anyway ... I'm off. See you later @Tshepang @SahibjotSaggu ...
enjoy
 
9 hours later…
12:14
11
Q: What are the criteria used to represent Stack Exchange sites on the sites page?

kiamlalunoI noticed that the sites' page on stackexchange.com has been changed, and by default sites are shown by balloons. What is not clear to me is why some sites are shown with a bigger balloon than other sites. For example, WordPress Answers has less questions, answers and users than Programmers, b...

interesting
12:29
'morning
Evidently all is quiet 'round these parts
indeed
last week Saturday too
not terribly surprising given folks' tendency to sleep on Saturday morning
the most active (AFAIK) guy in this room lives in Europe
12:38
So that'd be what, 1AM there?
err...
it's UK, so 12h38
yeah - got my signs flipped ^_^
12:59
it's 3pm in sweden atm
cabbage
It took me 14 hours to find out, I misstyped a method name
:(:(:(:(:(
my own method..
sad experience
I get too many of those
I did everything, completely restructured the whole system
13:05
that's when a 2nd pair of eyes help
how idiot is this?
sori
heheh
yeah, well, my dog still can't understand python
maybe u dont take enough breaks
he is quite good at turtle though;)
@Tshepang sure I do, yesterday night (today's morning, whatever) I watched a movie;)
don't you call that a break?:D:D
13:07
last time you mentioned working on this for like 12hrs a day
maybe that's too long
but except a few exceptions, like this one -- I make progress in every hour
and actually, when I'm lying on the bed, still thinking about the code -- or reading something useful on my iPad..
and this is not because "I want" -- this is how my mind works.. really hard to turn it off, if it gets excited.
:D
anyway, howdy @Tshepang?
I good sir, thanks.
have you found any project to work on/with ?
are you writing tests, @PeterVaro?
@limelights you mean unittests?
13:13
yeah
sure thing
But the error I had now, would never appear in a unittest
only if you do know what you are looking for -- you can write a test for that
how come? (wow, it sounds really douchy but i dont mean for it to be)
for example, in my case
it was binding a funtion to an event thru my observer
and when the time comes, the object tells the observer, to restore the original binding
ah so kinds like object.add_listener('yourFunction')?
and I misstyped in the code somewhere
bind instead of unbind
and the code was working correctly, all the bindings was done
the unbind function was working
except that one function was rebind instead of unbind
13:16
@PeterVaro I am working a bit on wajig, and I want to finish my tutorial on Pyramid; why?
@Tshepang oh I was only curious
@limelights yepp it's something like that
I also find Gittip interesting, and wanted to add a feature to it.
taht's a good choice! gittip is kewl.
what feature?
13:18
wanted to work on it some time ago, but was hindered by failing to get started
it was really a documentation issue
when will you start working on it?
after trying for too long, I sorta gave up
13:20
but the issue is fixed now
@PeterVaro no ETA
sometimes one just needs a poke :)
is there a practical and good way to manage todos on github other than issues->enhancement?
don't think so; is it messy?
no it's not, but I don't like mess the todos, and the issues
maybe the name of this feature bothers me
I know you can schedule milestones.. but..
what I want is a pretty simple, very easy task management
well, some projects have a TODO in their root directory
I do have too
but.. hmm.. that's not the same
13:29
what's the diff
well, I want a UI for it -- it doesn't matter for me if it is still stored as a plain text -- but how about drag-and-drop ordering, auto-sorting, done/cancel/progress/etc buttons?
easy assignment and a lot of other stuffs
sure you can do this in a textfile, by typing it..
but I think you get my point
have you looked at Trello; maybe it could handle such
oh i have a lot of tool for this
some of them are local some of them are online
but none of them is integrated to github like the issue handling does
anyway
I gotta go now
rbrb in 3 hours or so:)
~
13:47
enjoy
 
2 hours later…
16:14
Hey, quick question, does anyone know why this code: codepad.org/NgB7ZVTa would still create empty subdirs with empty subdirs within them? The len should be preventing it, no?
16:26
@Interrupt shouldn't the one line be and len(os.listdir(fullFileName)) != 0?
Hi everyone, for some reason the default keyword in argparse does not work as I expected. I used parser.add_argument("algorithm", type=str, action="store", default="md5", choices=list(hashlib.algorithms)) but when I try to omit the keyword it says "too few arguments".
Hmm, it is supposed to be deleting the files attached to that path. Not that path itself. When I use != it seems to get rid of everything I used shutil.copytree for :D
Crap I probably should have said it was an ignore list for copytree. :P
@Interrupt not sure what you want to do; you wanna attach all the relevant code?
@phoenixyz works well for me
16:42
@Tshepang what exactly did you do?
same code
unless I no understand ur Q
Are you using python 2.7?
yes
tried first with 3.3, and hashlib.algorithms is not available there
What you are saying is you don't wanna have to specify the algorithm, hence the default keyword?
yes, if nothing is input it should assume md5
did you parse the args when you tried it?
because even if i comment out the rest of the code, so it's only the initialization of the parser, the one add_argument and the parse_args, it still says too few arguments
it would work though if you had --algorithm instead
16:50
Tshepang: pasted the tool here- codepad.org/lGvqUKm0 -- the ignore list function is the one. Someone tried it and said it doesn't create the empty dirs and subdirs within the Exports folder. But it isn't working for me. It exports them, but it also creates empties. :D
but then i would have to enter the keyword everytime i wanted to change it right?
@phoenixyz hold, you can actually use nargs keyword
try nargs='*'
Ahoy~
wsup
ah, you are right, it works, but it seems nargs="?" is suited better. thank you very much Tshepang!
16:58
koolnes
yes, "?" looks more suitable
I just posted an answer to a question that was honestly quite terrible, telling the OP to stop using eval (read the revisions), and got downvoted "for being mean to a noob" (a mod also nuked the comments). I wonder why I even try sometimes.
-3
A: Python - How to run a defined command in a list that while it is a string?

HirotoWhat you are actually doing here is trying to assign variables locally in a function, and expecting them to be added to the global/module variables without explicitly returning them. def jill(hair, glasses, gender, beard, moustache, hat): hair = 'blond' + h1 glasses = g0 gender = g...

lol! Maybe it was the "humor you" part?
the icing on the cake?
Little bit :P
one of the -1 commenters actually posted this:
As written jill is a function that creates a bunch of local variable based on its arguments and then implicitly returns None and discards them all. I think you need to declare a Person class and use arguments passed to its __init__(self, hair, glasses, ...) constructor method to define instance attributes. This is usually done by assigning values to the instance argument i.e. self.hair = hair, etc. You might want to add a name argument/attribute for identification purposes. — martineau 14 mins ago
right after posting the comment
17:37
@Hiroto honestly, the "humor you" bit tips it over the line from firm-but-fair to condescending IMO.
Actually, the original had this:
@Interrupt solved it yet?
Well, I'll humor you with a lesson in Python objects.

#Stop trying to keep both a string representation of an object and the object, just so you can eval the string.

This is an utterly *stupid* and *awful* way to use python.
Yeah, that's worse ;-)
The OP was calling eval(group[5]) which was a string, had several functions all doing the same thing with different variables, and was...
you know what, read the question.
Read the full code he posted and cringe
17:40
@Interrupt not sure if this should work, but here's my attempt: codepad.org/8KIeg8dW
@Hiroto I agree it's a pretty terrible question (and have downvoted it).
means you didn't have to call the listdir() function, since it's called for you by copytree function
I decided "you know what, I barely answer on SO now, I'll go ahead"
17:53
@Tshepang: Makes sense, tried it though and with that it ends up exporting everything not just the files needed. :P As weird as that sounds.
oh
@Interrupt it doesn't look like you can do what you want though
you may have to delete the directories later on
after the copytree thing that is
looking at your code again, I can't find what's wrong
@Tshepang: hmm okay I'll keep fiddling with it. Thank you for trying. Trying to insert shutil.rmtree & os.rmdir(path) everywhere. :P
@Interrupt can you ask on the main site
just include the copytree call and the ignore_list() function
I would love to know what we missed
18:15
I've installed a package into build/ using pip install. How do I import this from my code?
@Tshepang: kk thank you :)
@thameera you are using virtualenv?
@Tshepang Just installed using virtualenv, and it works. Thanks :)
@thameera how did you do it the other time?
@Tshepang Just tried to pip install in the folder my code was in. I'm actually pretty new to this.
18:27
and it worked?
what OS is this?
No it didn't. I'm just trying to setting up a project. It's Ubuntu. Started working after I created a virtualenv and installed it there.
Does anyone have exp in making android app in python...python is my favorite language, but I am forced to learn Java...
@thameera I suppose it gave errors and you prayed that it would work anyway :)
@Ecce_Homo there's tools out there that allow you to use Python for Android developemnt
like kivy
@Tshepang Lol, sort of. I'm still kinda uncertain how to setup a dev env properly.
@thameera which instructions did you follow?
for setting up virtualenv that is
18:35
@Tshepang I have seen kivy, but ADT(Eclipse) is much more supported, with many tut...
@Ecce_Homo indeed; but I think if you wanna use Python there, you'll have to stick with Kivy
@Tshepang And is it worth it...
you are already swimming upstream by choosing an unblessed language
@Ecce_Homo no idea
@Tshepang Mostly this: http://www.pythonforbeginners.com/development/development-environment-in-python/
This isn't a Flask project though. Just a console-based app.
never did Android dev
@thameera what do you want to do though, and what app did ya install (via pip)?
18:41
@Tshepang Installed gitpython with pip. I want to test this app in various dirs; seems like with this approach I have to always source venv/bin/activate to run it. Perhaps the other option is to install the packages globally.
@thameera is this library not available from Ubuntu repositories?
@Tshepang Apparently no.
well, am using Debian here, and it was first uploaded in 2008
it's called python-git
if it's in Debian, it must be in Ubuntu
unless you are using a very old version of Ubuntu
Yeah, that sounds like it. Is it recommended though, to install packages globally for development?
nope, @thameera
for development especially, use a virtualenv or similar
you want to know when something isn't there when developing, not when you deploy :<
18:48
I see. Thanks!
@thameera depends if you want to ship the code, or if you just messing around
it's overkill if you are just writing scripts you'll be the only user of
in that case, just use Ubuntu packages
@Tshepang I'm hoping to publish the code eventually, so sticking to virtualenv for the moment.
Is there any standard as to where the virtualenv should be created? Atm, I've set it up in the dir where my code is in.
@Tshe
ack @Tshepang: :D created thread, stackoverflow.com/questions/18165343/…
18:58
@Interrupt you got to fix the indentation
@thameera I don't know if there's a standard, but I'd create it elsewhere
@Tshepang Okay, thanks!
@Tshepang Okay, thanks!
@thameera the virtualenv should be created in a directory for your envs, say like ~/env. your actual code should be in a directory of the same name in a projects directory, say ~/projects. (This isnt a concrete rule; it's just how we do it at work)
makes things really easy though
sounds good
@Interrupt still there?
we have a venv script in /usr/local/bin, so you can just just venv bookshelf and be in the bookshelf git directory with the virtualenv activated
nice
19:34
hey @JonClements
heya @Tshepang - how's you?
Another quiet day I see...
is ok
not so quiet
(was just reading catching up on the transcript)
Umm... who's the "most active guy AFAIK"? :)
you sir of course
1
Q: Python - empty dirs & subdirs after a shutil.copytree function

InterruptThis is part of a program I'm writing. The goal is to extract all the GPX files, say at G:\ (specified with -e G:\ at the command line). It would create an 'Exports' folder and dump all files with matching extensions there, recursively that is. Works great, a friend helped me write it!! Problem: ...

Umm.... hope not ;)
19:37
@Tshepang can you see any issue on this one @JonClements
@JonClements u got 14k msgs, runner-up being Inbar @8.4k
do you know where he's located?
I think Israel
that's maybe UTC+3
or +4
oh, it's +2, just like South Africa
That sounds reasonable
@Interrupt I fixed the indentation for you on stackoverflow.com/questions/18165343/…
@Tshepang thank you!
19:44
hehe... I found an insanely huge tkinter bug
;)
@PeterVaro oh?
if you use itemconfig method of canvas on an item in canvas, while you are doing the same on an other item -- the second configuration kills the first one
hi Jon! thank you for helping me, you were spot on with that ignore list function for exporting stuff w/ shutil.copytree.
but if you use move or coords -- which are basically for the same reason
those are working
@Interrupt np - I see you have another issue though ;)
19:51
Got my screenshot function working in python :-)
I had to struggle with ctypes for a few hours. Pointers are not much fun!
Pointers are great fun...
@JonClements I know, right? Tough it's being a noob. :) nothing critical though. My new function extracts the files I need. This time I'm left with a mess of empty folders I can't seem to delete.
Lovely breed, except when they leave a steaming Access Violation on your desk
19:53
wow, wrote that weird. * tough being a noob
@Interrupt you could os.walk over the tree first, filter to just the wanted files, and if none exist, don't copy it, otherwise, use copytree with those params
@JonClements I did try os.walk, forgot what the error was. I'll try
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