« first day (1105 days earlier)      last day (4072 days later) » 

02:12
is there any python module to do realtime compute?
02:38
what exactly is "realtime compute"?
 
3 hours later…
05:31
hello
06:01
hello
nobody here?
 
2 hours later…
07:55
hai
 
1 hour later…
09:05
0
A: CSV file , can't add record from csv file

Games BrainiacTry the following code: import csv from pprint import pprint INFO_LIST = [] with open('sample.csv') as f: reader = csv.reader(f, delimiter=',', quotechar='"') for i, row in enumerate(reader): if i == 0: TITLE_LIST = [var for var in row] continue I...

I tooootaly overkilled the answer :)
@GarethRees You sneaky devil, I didn't notice you come in :P
Shell programming seems too hard for many people
It's common to see people asking for help with scripts in which every line is wrong in some way
For example,
1
Q: script- loop through files and directories

SureshI have written the script, which unzips a zip file (passed as argument to the bash), loops through directory and files, then perform different actions based on directory or file. It is working fine. However I would like to know some things: Is it possible to do this without the unzip command? ...

Or here:
3
Q: Bash script to test if a given user can read a directory and all files inside?

MichaelI need to test in a bash script if a given user can read a given directory with all files and sub-directories inside. The script runs as root. Assuming the given user name is $user and the directory to test is $dir I added the following line to the script su -m $user -c "test -r $dir && test -x $dir" if [ $? -ne ]; then ...

Dear lord.
You write long answers :P
You ain't seen nothin':
6
A: What about my Pong game?

Gareth Rees1. First version I can't run it: >>> import game ImportError: No module named Vec2D There's no Vec2D package available from the Python Package Index. So where does this come from? I guess it must be your own vector package, but if so, you need to post it here. Similar remarks apply to the c...

Makes me wonder if anyone reads to the end
09:16
LOL
@GarethRees Now, I don't feel so bad about my long answer :)
Code Review is different from Stack Overflow, obviously
10:04
cbg all
hey guys :)
Anyone know how to make a loop through the axes names in matplotlib?
i mean something like for i in range(3): ax**i**.plot(stuff)
which would generate ax1.plot, ax2.plot etc
i guess more generally, i want to convert i to a string and use it to build names
10:48
Hey guys :)
Howdy guys
11:22
hey
@JonClements seems like only the two of us is really online..
@aIKid maybe there's been an alien invasion and most of the planet has been wiped out... and I've just been a bit too busy to notice or something - hello there fellow survivor! :)
heh..heh...heh...
Nope, there's just too many hunters and mongooses out there.
alien
Hii!
i mean, just hi.
11:26
Cabbage
@Haidro My MUUUUUUUUDDDDDDDKIIIIIIIIIIIP
where have you been?
no, mudkip
well is me a question?
I have been procrastinating
I have exams next week
And have done pretty much nothing
Thats awesome
Studying will get you nowhere.
11:30
I think not studying is normal exam prep. isn't it ?
Just like me :)
Trust me, I got shit loads of A*s in both GCSEs and A Levels
nothing happened
@JonClements but studying is no fun..
@JonClements You know, you actually end up styding a lot if you answer SO questions.
You never notice though.
Bah.. but who answers SO questions....
Playing with SO data is where the fun is :)
11:33
I know, I'm querying the database as we speak :D
@JonClements how.. me too.
I'm also playing with the data right now :D
0
Q: NEED HELP python

user2800975It calls for a file called parentesis.py benParentizada design a function (s) that returns true if the string s is well placed parentheses. Only consider the characters '(' and ')'. A string is well placed parentheses if First. analyzed from left to right are never more open than closed parenthe...

what an amazing title
@Games bet you're not querying stuff built from real time data :)
@JonClements yes I am ;)
ooo :)
What ya doing, what ya doing?
11:35
I got access to the Redis db! :)
Don't you have access?
I'm just using the realtime streams... what else is there to use?
Oh, like twitter.
No, you can make queries to the redis db
And where's the info on that?
11:38
Well, its a secret :P
And I ain't tellin, muhahahahahahha
Useful... :)
I know :P
So, what have you been up to?
Watching corny music videos
11:49
Answering a question that everyone answered because I gave mine
:(
Morning
Its like, I just went to test my code, and two minutes after there were like 4 answers.
@Paco hai
@Games i just heard about redis.. can you use it on windows?
@Paco evening here. :)
@aIKid, afternoon actually here, but it's always morning, no matter what time it is
@aIKid Well yes, but its experimental
11:53
I should post that somewhere, and link it every time someone asks me :P
I gave such a good answer too :)
@Games well, how can i get it?
0
A: Find if a sentence is completely capital?

Games BrainiacYou can just call the isupper function, like loc.isupper(). Punctuation does not affect this. Let me demonstrate: >>> a = "CHEESE-CAKE" >>> a.isupper() True >>> b = "SAN JOSE" >>> b.isupper() True Take a look at the documentation for it. isupper only takes alphabetic characters into considerat...

its not documented everywhere.
@aIKid Where you'd expect, redis.io/download
@GamesBrainiac oh, there it is. Thanks X)
Nothing but a copy-pasted problem description.
12:06
Greetings @Kevin
Hi
“The following example serves no other purpose but to have some fun” you like doing that, right @Games?
@Kevin Alredy did :P
heya @poke
@poke Yes, guilty as charged :P
12:07
/me waits patiently for pokes cabbage and picture offering.... :P
Cabbage everyone! (I give up with the random gifs at this point, don’t want to appear spammy)
@poke Or should I say ":P".isupper()
Oh, well, if you’re waiting.. I’ll look for one..
Night all
@Haidro Good night!
12:08
Wooo hooooo
night night @Haidro
@poke awwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww
Those two are just too cute *_*
We're not technically meeting the requirements of "cats".... but heck.... who cares when it just makes you wanna go awwwwwww :P
Well, “cat” is relative:
So errr.... we just add hot water to 'em I guess, some foamy milk, a sprinkle of chocolate and whack the top on it ?
12:11
@poke that one is great!! :D
Adding water to a cat is not recommended.
@poke no - I was referring to the rabbits in the cups
That was a thorough edit there @Kevin :)
@JonClements Oh. No, don’t do that.
yup.. add water to those rabbits... then some carrots... heat them up.... and ta-daa.. dinner
12:14
I need to stop editing post that I'll vote to close anyway
@Kevin it is something you appear to do though...
That question has gone through like four edits from people with different formatting opinions
(mine is the best, of course)
I wonder if it's kind of the same thing that makes people "clean up a bit" before their cleaner comes round, so the cleaner doesn't think they're too messy
Martijn hates me.
The world of competitive editing has no room for feelings!
I'm not sad at all that both of you overwrote my edit
... :'-(
@poke shaisse
Well, if you look at revision 3, you can see that I only further improved on your edit :P
lol
battle of n10K-ers :P
Okay. What the hell.
Isn’t there some edit conflict detection?
12:20
You know, Martijn doesn't answer the really hard questions.
There was one question that asked about exception context, and I was sure Martijn was going to answer it.
The annoying thing is, the really hard questions aren't asked by people that can understand and appreciate the answer... it's mostly people that have an XY question, and explaining how to fix it is not going to be worthwhile most of the time :(
Most hard questions I see are 1) easy questions, communicated very poorly, 2) configuration problems with rarely-seen combinations of third party libraries, or 3) open-ended theoretical problems
Wow, that is pure magic: stackapps.com/questions/2116/…
@poke I caught martijn :P muahhahahaha
@Jon Absolutely true.. And often they are that specific that they don’t draw in a lot others who would just read it to learn and then upvote.
12:25
@poke if someone I did actually know form the Python community was to ask a stonker of a question that had me thinking... wow... I know that can be done, and they've demonstrated they know enough to actually want to do this, and will be able to appreciate an answer, but boy, oh boy, is this going to be some f*ing about with the internals and head scratching... I'd go for it though
I noticed the copy-pasting of comments, but it's best not to comment on it. We want to create the illusion that we care about fresh-off-the-boat users, or we'll hurt their feelings.
14
Q: Finding out an exception context

thg435tlndr: how to tell in a function if it's called from an except block (directly/indirectly). python2.7/cpython. I use python 2.7 and try to provide something similar to py3's __context__ for my custom exception class: class MyErr(Exception): def __init__(self, *args): Exception.__ini...

this is what I was talkin about
@GamesBrainiac I know... I saw that too... but when I saw it, it already had a perfectly good answer
This made me this, this guy
was a genius
@JonClements Yeah… but sometimes there are even those hard questions where I am personally interested in to end up spending a few hours working on until I completed it myself. It’s a good learning process for myself.
12:28
Nothing like doubling your rep with one answer :-)
@poke Same here, I'm really interested in learning more about twisted
Most people only get to do that once, when they go from 10 to 20.
For example back in 2010, there was this question where I had a lot of fun working on. Yet, I only got 4 votes for it but I don’t care… stackoverflow.com/questions/2887725/… (Warning: Not Python!)
@poke you did get a very heartfelt thanks though :)
@Jon Yeah, that’s always worth a lot :)
And the result looks nice ^^
12:32
I always love the "OMG MAN - YOU SAVED MY LIFE - THANK YOU THANK YOU", and I'm thinking - woo hoo, that's nice... "just bloody well accept the answer then..." :P
8
@JonClements lol
Generating an honeycomb... That's an interesting pronunciation.
And you know, Gareth writes the longest most descriptive answers.
My lord, that man has patience. Commendable patience.
@JonClements haha, yeah, those are great xD
I had an eastern European friend in college who would aspirate all his h's when he wasn't sure what the proper pronunciation was.
12:33
@Kevin you've reminded me of Stewie and his "wh-" sounds :)
And the puppy strikes again
2
A: Python regex - (\w+) results different output when used with complex expression

Jon ClementsThe first matches the a - one or more word chars. The second is one or more word chars immediately followed by a : which there aren't... [a-z,A-Z,_] (the equivalent of \w) means a to z and A to Z - it isn't the literal hyphen in this context, if you did want a hyphen, put it as the first or las...

I think there's a certain length where people upvote without reading, because your answer must be right if it's three pages long.
@Kevin ahahahhaa
Just don't fall into the middle area where they're too lazy to read, and not impressed enough to upvote.
Why did Hunter delete his answer though? I think it’s more correct than @Jon’s…
What does the SO etiquette say about voting to undelete answers the owner deleted? ^^
12:39
@poke It would be rude :P
@poke not sure... I've undeleted questions because the OP has got an answer, and tried to hide the fact they asked anything...
Only trusted users can undelete, right? So, there is no etiquette, since any decision you make will necessarily be the right one.
sorry for the inconvenience, the op forgot to ping me
That one falls in the "poorly communicated" category of hard questions.
I dread users who just discovered itertools, since they'll call anything a permuation, even if they mean combination or product
Then you write an answer for 20 minutes, and they reply, "oops I wanted the thing that gives you 20*11 results, not 20**11"
@Kevin ahhh... but without quantum computing - it doesn't matter!
12:46
@poke I hope the OP appreciates the explanation - +1 from me regardless
@JonClements Thanks, I hope that too ^^
@Games epic fail dude :)
@JonClements I liked the answer :)
12:56
@GamesBrainiac I think Jon refers to the “+!”
I forget when you (at) someone it automatically links to the last post
@poke I was referring to an answer that @games made
Are we talking about this question? In any case, the OP might want properly ordered results, so sets may cause undesired behavior.
@JonClements I realised now :P
Ah, I see ^^
I've been getting rid of a lot of dupes.
So, erm yea
My brain's become hardwired to remove dupes.
13:00
Ouch, the other guy got a "thanks" from the OP but no upvote or accept
@JonClements Corrected, and gave it a pure list comprehension solution :)
@Kevin yea, i hate those guys
@Kevin they just got an accept - the OP can't upvote
I figured that filter(blist.__contains__, alist) would have been evil
@JonClements Can’t you always upvote in your own questions?
Is that so? Perverse incentive right there. Why answer questions of new people? You're operating with a one upvote handicap.
woohoo
reached 200 for today
13:03
Ignore that last sentence - it was a mess...
you know, i should learn java
the questions in the java tags are just so dumb :P
@poke nope - just the restriction about commenting is relaxed...
I also need to get acquainted with pandas
I already know a puppy, so how hard can it be?
this guy, has been asking so many cgi questions
who uses cgi these days?
another john john or the same one ?
Oh him - so yeah... same john john I was thinking of
Well, if you know Python, don’t want to use PHP and have a shared host supporting Python.. why not?
13:08
The same reason I don't drink bleach I'd imagine...
@poke ^ what he said
we have a cgi course at uni
and it sucks
I have a json like this:

{
"3615": {
"content1":10
},

"1234" : {
"content1":10
}
}
but it's a lot of keys, a giant file. and I wont be able to know every key.. how can I parse this json, and fetch it like an array in a for?
after parsing it you'll have a dict
so, for key, obj in whatever.iteritems():
I suggest using the json module.
im using json module
jsonData = json.loads(jsonString)
now what should I do with jsonData?
13:21
See ThiefMaster's post. You can iterate through it.
for key, obj in jsonData.items():
    print(key) # this will be 3615, 1234 etc.
so if I want to read the content of 3615??
I got a downvote :(
just like an ordinary dict, jsonData["3615"]
Rightfully though.
13:23
@rogcg that will be in obj
jsonData[key].content1 ?
Nah, content1 isn't a valid attribute for a dict
gotta use square brackets.
jsonData[key]["content1"]
oh got it..
BTW cabbage!
Welcome, retroactively.
hehehe
@GamesBrainiac cool avatar. very creative.
13:25
Sorry guys - shopping arrived
Sigh, I want to refactor my project, but I'll have to change the inheritance structure for fifteen classes...
works like a charm!
That's interesting.... the websockets sometimes throw out binary messages...
What, like strings containing only 1 and 0?
13:30
Most peculiar.
Gave me a nice: exceptions.TypeError: compile() expected string without null bytes :)
Null bytes would occasionally trip me up, back in my C++ days. Some string manipulation functions consider '\0' a sentinel for the end of the string.
So printf("%s", "Hello\0World") would just print "Hello"
The times that people use to vaguely acknowledge that '\0' was an end of string indicator, so when it didn't have one, use to try and use strcat
I guess if you didn't have a '\0' at all, you might go past the end of the array and into undefined behavior land.
And people confusing the difference between strdup and strcpy etc...
13:36
I'll take Python's strings any day :-)
I don't mind if it uses an extra two bytes to track its own length, or whatever.
and they don't need to be COW :)
Please elaborate. Googling COW returns many unhelpful results.
copy on write
cabbage
Oops, got sidetracked looking at the wikipedia article for cows.
Did you know a wisent is a real animal? I thought that was something Wizards of the Coast made up for Magic. Sounds fake, like "strix"
13:40
@IntrepidBrit cabbage
Do not confuse wisents with wise ents.
Gawd, there are so many problems with unicode in python
Decode on input, encode on output!
@GamesBrainiac If you think Python has problems, ANSI C will cause you to have a breakdown :)
How's everyone doing?
I'm arrite
13:42
I'm tired, as I stayed up late last night for the screening of Rifftrax presents Night of the Living Dead
Any good?
For the unaware, it's the voice actors from Mystery Science Theater 3000 doing their usual mocking commentary.
I enjoyed it :-)
Awesome
I hadn't seen the movie before, and I was trying to enjoy it on both levels, as a horror and unintentional comedy.
heya @Sam
Sam
Sam
13:45
Hi :)
The pacing was quite strange (20 minutes of boarding up windows), but it was cool to see all the zombie tropes appearing for the first time.
I wish there some some really cool new Zombie like trope we can bleed dry
Everything just seems to be a rehash these days
How about... Mummies
That sparkle.
@GarethRees I see that Raymond assigned himself that issue... be interesting to see what's said... I'm wondering if they'll just go for the: "it's a bit late now to do a fix as it'll break stuff - oh well!" approach
@Kevin twitch
13:48
Rated R for strong language (mummies love to curse)
@JonClements (Talking about Python issue 19363.) I think it probably is a bit late to fix, but you never know. Even a mention in the documentation would be better than nothing.
@Gareth A doc fix is probably the most practical - might be worth submitting a suggested patch to that effect?
I'll wait for Raymond to reject the possibility of a code fix first
@Kevin I has to translate what an R rating is...
lulz.
So far, I've used python as a giant calculator. But now, I'm going to learn how to use it as a paint-brush :)
You know, I really like this chat room
So many people to talk to
So many diverse skills too.
13:59
Interesting, it hadn't occurred to me that MPAA ratings weren't used in other countries.
I'm proud to call you my friends, guys :) And grateful too.
yuck, movie ratings need some standardization!
Same, @GamesBrainiac

« first day (1105 days earlier)      last day (4072 days later) »