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00:00
What do you think?
I asked Ton Roosendaal loads of questions but he didn't have the time he told me.
Anyway he's kind
I think it really good!
you should post it on BA!
@JebediahKerman: Really?
there are no other books like it
(it was an english book at first)
some images are a bit low quality, they look like gifs
00:02
english project
I know, that's because I exported it to .pdf
I don't know if you have Word
Because you are using Linux
I have a word-equivalent
also the star bubble (e.g. page 15) is a little bit old fashioned I think
Uploading..
a small simple text annotation would be cooler
I am definetly going to read it though
have to install libre office first
00:06
This is getting off-topic. Talk to me via email#
I like the topics you chose
got it
I'm sorry going to bed
Bye!
okay
see you some other time
Thanks for your help (remember my email)
yeah, I sent you a quick mail btw good night
00:08
Good night
yeah
is it possible to run python in the web like java does?
has anyone used rasberry pi?
00:35
Yey i got a bounty!
2
A: Choose adapter dynamically depending on librarie(s) installed

aIKidA flexible solution, using importlib. This is a complete, working solution that i've tested. First, the header: import importlib parent = 'servicelib.simple' modules = {'.synchronous':['.alternative', '.alternative_2']} success = False #an indicator, default is False, #changed to True when the ...

00:49
@JebediahKerman I've got a Raspberry Pi
It's pretty cool
Nginx cannot read the root server from a HOME folder because it doesn't have permissions
How can I give the read, and write, privileges to Nginx?
 
3 hours later…
04:29
So, does the Python chat room go quiet on the weekend "night shift"?
It seems
All the people is looking at the PyCon events
04:50
googles PyCon
Might as well, I'm already awake at this god forsaken hour
05:20
Cabbage everyone
Cabbage
 
5 hours later…
10:11
Cabbage!
Cabbage, cabbage, cabbage!
CABBAGE!!!
Talking to myself...
I am not responding...
This may take a few years or so...
Please wait while Cabbage finds a solution to the problem....
Would you like to quit?
Yes!
Are you really sure you want to quit?
Are you really really sure you want to quit?
Yup I guess so! See you!
11:12
Anyone there?
Top of the morning to you :)
Erm afternoon, I mean :)
I'm having trouble with my Python program
I keep getting a syntax error in my try-except block even though I typed exactly what was written in the Python documentation
Does this have to do with my Python version by any chance?
could be; what version you using?
2.7.2
Should I post the code?
not here
in some pastebin somewhere
11:16
pastebin?
I like Github Gist: gist.github.com
Is it really necessary to upload to Github when it's 22 lines long?
yes
it does not look good here
if it was 3 lines, maybe
and it's not so much uploading, as it is pasting
What if I posted a question on Stackoverflow?
Actually, the whole idea of asking on chat was that I felt it was easy to solve, so I didn't think it was worth it to post a whole new question
you can do that
but why not just use Gist?
11:20
Sure, I've just never used it before
just open the link, and see
it's easy, I promise
I already did
Is the code only visible to the people I send the link to?
it's public
unless you choose to make it secret
I see
How do I control who sees it afterwards
you can always delete it afterwards I guess
11:22
I meant if I select secret, how do I control who can see it
Do I set a password?
no idea
Or do I just send the link
looks like you can send a link even with a private one
line 12 and line 19
missing closing brackets
sorry, line 11 and line 18
11:29
Ah...
Sorry
I was wondering what the problem was
I'm used to Xcode and Eclipse that add the brackets automatically
yeah, the error message could be better
Yea, SyntaxError: invalid syntax is not very descriptive
now how do I delete the gist?
there's an icon somewhere on that page
Hi HI
@Tshepang where would that be..?
11:42
top right
At the top right of what? at the top right of the page I see "sign in" and at the top right of the text area where it shows the content I see "see raw" and "permalink"
Sign in first..
Were you the one who posted that code?
oh, I see
an anonymous user cannot delete own Gist
LOL
That's nice
Seems I can't edit it either
I'm logged-in, that's how I could see it
11:47
right
it's likely that if you sign in, Github will use your cookie to determine if you created that Gist, allowing you to delete it
Just a quick question, if I handle an exception and add except Exception as e and I throw the Exception with raise Exception("Error") what method can I use to get the "Error" text?
so, you don't have a Github account?
No
I never used it
@Arc676 You can just type raise and it raises the last exception.
11:50
@InbarRose What's the "last" exception
try:
    # code
except Exception as exc:
    log.error('oh no, I got an error: %s' % exc)
    raise
What's the last raise for
You can even do: raise exc
But what do I get out of it
To raise the exception if you want to
For instance....
11:51
Wouldn't that make the whole try-except block useless?
By throwing the exception again?
try:
    # code
except Exception as exc:
    if exc.code == 2:
        log.error('unrecoverable exception')
        raise
    log.warn('handled exception')
Ah I see
This way you can sometimes raise it, and sometimes not. depending on the conditions.
So you should only re-raise the exception when you can't handle it within the application
Indeed.
But there may be other situations
11:53
Thanks :)
Like? What other situations
For instance. sometimes you always want to raise the exception. But you want to make sure that it is logged (the data being parsed for instance) and that the finally block will get done even with the exception..... But you still raise it.
try:
    # code using some data
except Exception as exc:
    log.error('failed with data: %s' % data)
    raise
finally:
    # close some resources
Why use Python, and not any other language?
So the finally block gets executed on what conditions?
ALWAYS \
@TimTimmy Just learning the language, and "practice makes perfect"
@InbarRose I see
11:56
Note: even if there is a return statement in the try/except/else anywhere. the finally will still be used.
Cool
It's like "do this no matter what" kind of like the %r formatter
Though better not to rely on that. It's bad programming practice. It's more of a side-effect, but one that you should be aware of.
What do you mean by "rely"
@Arc676 depend on it.
Like add essential code in the finally block?
11:57
I mean, don't use the finally block to run code after a return statement. Just be aware that it will - meaning, don't put return statements in your try/except/else/finally block.
If you are using a finally.
If there is no finally - then you can use a return if you want.
Another pro-tip. Only have 1 statement in your try block. and have the rest in the else block if the statement passes.
My Java experience teaches me not to put lots of code in a try-catch block
@InbarRose unless you want to catch multiple exceptions?
It can get hard to find the exact point where the error is being caused, even though Eclipse tells you where the error was
@Tshepang It's possible to catch multiple exceptions
is that a question?
Just add multiple except blocks or add many types of exceptions in brackets
12:01
I know, was just responding to @InbarRose
Which question?
the pro-tip one
if you hover over my message, you will see it will grey the message I was responding to
try:
    f = open(some_file)
except OSError as oserr:
    if oserr.errno == errno.ENOENT:
        log.warn('file does not exist; try again')
        continue
    log.error('Unhandled OSError: %s' % oserr)
    raise
except Exception as exc:
    log.error('Unknown exception for file %s' % some_file)
    raise
else:
    some_function(f.read())
finally:
    f.close()
That is a good flow.
Even though you should use with open(some_file) instead. This is just an idea.
@InbarRose what if I want to open 2 files?
refactor.
Each one is a function. That has a similar code block.
12:03
hm, sounds good
Hey, I've never seen continue used like that
I only ever used it in loops
kool
Yeah. Well it is assuming there is a loop or something
Hence the "try again" part
could just have a break there.
Isn't break only used in while loops?
oh, ok
any loop
for loops, too.
12:05
the example is just to show that some exceptions you throw, some you keep, some you ignore. some you inform about...
for i in range(6):
    if i < 2:
        continue
    else:
        break
What purpose does the continue statement have?
I feel it is confusing you... I just put it there so you get the idea.
Won't the execution continue anyway since there is no break statement?
try:
    f = open(some_file)
except OSError as oserr:
    if oserr.errno == errno.ENOENT:
        log.warn('file does not exist; try again')
    else:
        log.error('Unhandled OSError: %s' % oserr)
        raise
except Exception as exc:
    log.error('Unknown exception for file %s' % some_file)
    raise
else:
    some_function(f.read())
finally:
    f.close()
Imagine it was that.
12:07
So continue will cause the else block to get executed anyway?
NO
continue is for loops.
forget I used it. it's just confusing you now.
Actually, confusion is just even more of a reason to understand it :)
In my own defense, I did just start learning Python 2 days ago
just imagine there was a loop surrounding the code block that was feeding file_names.. if it gets to one that doesn not exist, no need to kill the whole program. just skip to the next one.
Ah, I see
continue is a common language feature
12:11
Does this mean that if I were to have all that code in a for loop with some sort of file array adding continue would skip to the next file?
yes.
And in Python we use lists not arrays.
Is there any difference between a Python list and an array in any other language other than the name
depends on the other language
PHP arrays are like a dog breeding with a cat (mix of list and OrderedDict)
....?
PHP is way down on the list of programming languages to learn
PHP is just so bad.
12:18
why?
Soo badd
What makes Python and PHP so different?
Python is built by mathematicians
Everything is well-structured, well-planned.
The opposite with PHP.
I wouldn't say everything is well-structured - there's plenty of warts... :)
datetime and logging... ;x
You've got a point.. But the language overall, it's well-structured.
12:24
logging with its java-ish api and datetime with a bunch of WTFs (timezone handling, timedelta.total_seconds being a method instead of a property)
What do you think of visual csharp?
c#
Visual C#?
You mean just C#?
Yes
Has anyone had experience with OpenGL or DirectX?
12:26
Depends... maybe someone else has an experience in it?
@aIKid What do you mean that PHP isn't well-structured
The language and its stdlib are crap.
func(needle, haystack) vs otherfunc(haystack, needle) (strings/arrays) for example
@ThiefMaster for think of functools, itertools, and all the other goodies python has :)
namespaces? :P
But yea, datetime is kinda stupid
12:30
@aIKid Why would you have two methods with the input reversed?
namespaces are one good honking idea :)
Also nampedTuple
is one of the best data-structures I've ever used. Its just friggin amazing.
'fooo' == 0 and worse, '12crap' == 12 - i think rasmus was high when he did that ;)
btw
mod_python is back
we might just be able to give php a run for its money
in an embedded way that is
does it still allow/promote shitty coding like php newbies do?
12:34
i.e. dumping all the code inside htdocs and having foo.py, foo.py/somefunc?
but i don't like the mixing of presentation
and logic
@ThiefMaster lol
that just sounded wrong.
I dunno why.
heya @allonhadaya
hello
What brought all of you to this fine chat room on this early Saturday?
@allonhadaya I got here cuz I wanted to hear opinions on an edit I made
I wondered if it was too radical
@allonhadaya Um.... we've already done Saturday... :)
12:40
:)
@Jon
that's what I get for staying awake through it
Sunday*
@Ts
I just want it to be Sunday forever
@Tshepang too radical?!
@allonhadaya It's probably less that we're here early on a Sunday, and more that we still haven't got around to leaving from a few months ago :P
12:43
Are you guys in UK?
I am
US (east coast)
It's 12:42 here
It must be really early in the US!
Oh yes...
What do you want to do with the code?
Has this question been answered?
Blender!
12:46
Not unreasonable @Tshepang. I'd put back instead of though
Python + Blender = AMAZING!
Why do so many people hate PHP?
I have never learnt it before.
@JonClements is too overloaded
used for SQL select for example
Not responding.
@Tshepang yeah.... but no one looks at the new tag by the looks of it :)
@Tshepang I have to agree
12:47
I'm a beginner so I'm sorry I can't answer anything. :(
maybe there's a better tag
@TimTimmy It's almost 8am here
@Tshepang ignore me - it's fine...
@allonhadaya ?
13
Q: What's the best resolution to the overloaded "select" tag?

Ben VoigtRight now select is used for multiple things (and the tag wiki even reflects some of this). The POSIX select() function (also present in Windows Sockets) The SQL SELECT keyword (select-query tag perhaps) jQuery and CSS selector attributes The HTML <select> tag Text/widget selection (focus-relat...

welp, I suppose that's the best option in that case. There just isn't a lot of traction yet.
btw, I like the benchmarking article on your site. Interesting results
oh, me
thanks :)
12:55
welcome :)
'night everyone... time to sleep
Gotta run for a bit... laters
enjoy
13:15
YEAH! Less than 100 reps to 2000 XD
13:46
@GamesBrainiac did you install it?
@aIKid why you looking forward to 2k?

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