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16:00
@Kevin: actually, yes. The point of questions and answer is to be useful to future visitors.
@Kevin: the original problem was that there was an assumption about how if x or y or z == 'blah' works.
@Kevin: So rewording that question to focus on the actual problem, without invalidating the existing answers in the process, is perfectly fine.
@MartijnPieters, I think I understand your reasoning quite well. All of this occurred to me as a possibility before I made the post. In the end, I decided I would rather be chided for making a post too similar to an existing one, than to be chided for making an edit that was too radical.
I think, in the future, I'll choose the other way.
I think I am mostly ticked off because this does feel like a hijack attempt, redirecting attention from my answer to yours. Yes, you made yours a CW answer, but it still could have been posted on the original question instead.
How much rep do you need to vote to close?
Is there a python module that will allow me to intercept any audio signal going out of the computer?
As in not playing the music from the python program
argh
I mean
@abhi: You can flag to close already, before you can vote to close.
16:07
imagine putting a python program in between the actual output jack and your speakers.
something like that
Joe
Joe
an embedded python program? @ShannonStrutz
Yea...kinda. I mean something entirely software, but the only way I can visualize it is like a little pod that is palced between the signal source and the speakers
It would capture any audio coming out of the set speaker device in windows and then just re-output the audio
Joe
Joe
why would you want to capture it at the jack level? You could catch the audio as binary code
I don't want to capture it at the jack level, I would like to capture it as w/e it is before it leaves the computer
I don't want an embedded program, something entirely in software
16:12
so why do people make such awesome modules for python?
Joe
Joe
oh you want to capture actual audio.
yeaaaaa
I wan't to capture it, run analysis on it, and then shoot it back out
Joe
Joe
couldn't you use some type of audio-recording code?
Yea I think so but I don't know where to start. I'm hoping there is a python module for htat
@Crowz: Because Python itself is so awesome?
16:14
I just mean, every module I've used for python has been incredibly intuitive and just does what it's supposed to do
@MartijnPieters 3000 rep is a long way to go for me.
In python, can you query a list and find out which element holds your value?
Joe
Joe
@ShannonStrutz you firstly need an input device. You can't capture audio without a mic
@abhi list.index(value).
like for example: lista = ['China', 'Mongolia', 'Korea', 'Japan','Russia']
I want to query this list to find out the position of 'Mongolia'
16:16
@Joe you are speaking of a physical input?
So ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'].index('bar') returns 1.
also is this possible with a dictionary?
If you want to search for the key matching the value, you have to search manually.
I know there is a way to put a virtual audio cable in the computers settings and then set it as the output device and then you can manipulate the data going in and out of it
can virtualenvs be scp'd somewhere and then used in that other area?
16:16
There can be more than one key that matches.
and there is no order in a dictionary, so there is no 'first' such key.
[key for key, value in dictionary.iteritems() if value == 'bar']
how about a dictionary like this>
would return a list of all keys that map to the value 'bar'.
d = {"CountryA":"China", "CountryB":"Mongolia"}
Joe
Joe
@ShannonStrutz I believe that item may exist. I question its price.
16:18
now I want to know the key for Mongolia
[key for key, value in dictionary.iteritems() if value == 'China']
is it CountryB
would return ['CountryA'].
@MartijnPieters cool.
@Joe sorry forgot to do the @ thing : the code is here, but it is in c++ and honestly kind of confusing github.com/rdp/virtual-audio-capture-grabber-device
16:19
python's lists are really powerful. I am familiar with similar syntax in C#, in case you've used it.
Python is really powerful.
Agreed.
Joe
Joe
@ShannonStrutz sounds like its doing what I explained. Capturing the audio on a machine level, not output level.
@MartijnPieters Many of my friends disagree from the performance front.
16:21
That depends entirely on what they mean by 'performance'.
Why are you asking a close-vote on Anne's question?
@Joe yea thats exactly what its doing, although Its not entirely "open"
and much less easier to follow
I think it'd be a good idea to make a python equivalent
@abhi: it is a duplicate.
Joe
Joe
@ShannonStrutz test it out in VLC
@MartijnPieters ok
16:21
@abhi: there are already questions on the site that answer the points.
@thefourtheye: if by 'performance' they mean response time to certain actions, and other factors (such as network latency, etc.) have been ruled out, you can still use C to build Python extensions. cython makes that almost childs play.
@MartijnPieters Yup. That was the suggestion made this morning.
In the meantime, try re-factoring a Java application to add a new feature, and see the Python developer do the same task in a quarter of the time.
Ofcourse time to market is very less in Python :)
Joe
Joe
@MartijnPieters what's your opinion concerning functional languages?
@Joe well it works....but I still don't know anything about it
Joe
Joe
16:29
I think it will be easier to do analysis on a machine level. Audio recordings are just sound. writing programs to analyze sound itself seems a lot harder to me IMO.
@Joe: Not enough experience to form much of an opinion.
I've stayed away from them, mostly.
Joe
Joe
@MartijnPieters I once read a post by a guy bashing C and its lineage, but the disclaimer was: I've built a commercial Haskell IDE
that completely debased any sound arguments he could make
@Joe Alright, well I guess i'll go ahead and buy that $20 DSP and push ahead with the build of my physical audio interceptor
Joe
Joe
@ShannonStrutz my post above was referring to the Haskell IDE, not our discussion
Oh! well....oh well
I know the discrete audio stuff better than software
Joe
Joe
16:38
@ShannonStrutz What exactly are you trying to accomplish with your project?
Just run basic FFT on it
on the music I mean
but not like a 512 point fft
I'm talking like a 4096+ point fft
Joe
Joe
I get what you're trying to do, but to what end? Just curiosity?
Yea for the most part.
Joe
Joe
From the virtual audio recorder, you could do analysis on it depending on the format. What output format did the recording have?
well for the VLC example, it just palyed back exactly what i was hearing. so it was infinite echos basically.
Although there is an example that uses the ffmpeg codec to record the audio and store it in an mp3 file
Joe
Joe
16:43
the thing about the recording part makes it seem like a self-defeating purpose. if you arleady have an mp3, can't you just do analysis on that?
Cabbage!
No, I don't have an mp3. the idea is to take audio from any source be it Youtube, spotify, anything
Cabbage @poke
then the virtual audio cable will record w/e is going out and put it in an mp3
Joe
Joe
@ShannonStrutz aah now that was a critical point.
yea, I probably should've said that before
Joe
Joe
@ShannonStrutz It will be easier to use that virtual one. My suggestion for it would be to build some type of link to a server that is running that piece of code. It captures the link, and let's whatever sound is coming out be virtually recorded
16:46
or maybe re-streamed through the python code?
Joe
Joe
You could use python as the buffer to make sure the stuff is playing. I don't see why you should rewrite that C++ tool though.
Yea, I don't need to re-write that, although I wish you didn't have to select it as a tool.
or the device I mean
Joe
Joe
I think I may have yet another solution
Build a streaming tool within VLC itself.
I'm having a little trouble understanding how CherryPy (and possibly Python) work. Take this for example: pastie.org/8482956 With the cherrypy.request field how is Python and/or CherryPy able to keep requests separate if there are multiple concurrent requests coming in?
Joe
Joe
VLC does support .flv format (Youtube). The audio converter only captures audio
@SpencerRuport define multiple concurrent?
16:51
Well say two people browse your site at the same time and get routed to that method. How does CherryPy provide a different instance of the request for each? It seems like one would overwrite the other.
Hi all,
is there anyone here that also understands django? I need to implement a js code that sorts dynamically added fields in my html...Help?
@Joe - Like I said it may be that I'm misunderstanding how Python works. I've only been using it for about a month.
I just don't understand how that field can provide a unique instance for each browser request.
@nitzanwe do you have a question on SO?
@MartijnPieters how's your Django?
I made a living with Django for the past 6 months. Does that count?
Not that I set up the project from scratch, mind you.
16:58
@MartijnPieters You liked Django?
I prefer more flexible servers (swap out the parts), but what I saw was mostly well constructed.
@MartijnPieters I have a (real life) friend here that needs help with Django and JS, I can help with the JS part but I'm rather clueless about Django, she has a pretty simple problem that probably has a simple solution... would you mind having a look?
@MartijnPieters Me too :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum: Please post questions here in chat (so others can help too) or as a question on the site.
I started with Django and settled with web.py
That way you don't have to rely on just me.
I am for hire if you all you want is my help. :-)
17:00
@MartijnPieters @nitzanwe go for it - this guy is really good and I've seen him provide clever solutions to answers in SO multiple times.
@MartijnPieters You are? That actually might be interesting. Where are you located? Do you have an online CV?
I am in the UK.
I am about to commit to a 3-4 week project for a client in the US.
but something small on the side should not be a problem.
Ok, tnx Benny.. I Have an TabularInline in my form, and in it there's a field with a huge list in hebrew that i'd like to sort. the problem is, I need it to be sorted each time a new line is added to the inline
for now, all i've manged is to sort the first row, because I just use the hard coded hook, and tell my js to pick it up when the page finishes loading
Well, I'm from a small (but well funded) start up from Israel, we're rapidly growing now (from 4 people last year to 15 now to 25 which is where we'd like to be in a few months) it's called TipRanks (check out the site tipranks.com ) - if relocation is possible let me know. We're looking for coders that love coding and community participation is definitely a strong indication of that.
the problem it that when the fields are dynamically added, I can't use that "on ready" function
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe haven't I tried helping you with 1 of your Django problems?
17:05
Anyway, shoot me an email at benji (at) tipranks (dot) com if that's interesting to you @MartijnPieters we pay competitively :)
Sorry, we won't be relocating anytime soon.
I can come visit from time to time, and work as a remote consultant.
don't know...up to now, SOF haven't been helping me that much in my django problems..
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe I look at some Django problems and they're too unique to be helpful to anyone else reading them. SO doesn't like those questions
@MartijnPieters Sorry, not really what we're looking for right now. If you ever change your mind though - feel free to shoot me an email :)
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum bad idea to be recruiting from a chatroom, even if @MartijnPieters is talented
17:07
@Joe Yeah...I figured..
@Joe why?
@Joe Her problem seems pretty simple now though.
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe give me the link to your issue on SO, I will look into it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum ask yourself if you'd take a guy in a chatroom serious that promises you a job?
@Joe lol, than I'll have to go write one
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum if tipranks.com is really you guys, I would find that tool pretty useful myself.
@BenjaminGruenbaum: Not a problem. I am an independent consultant by choice. :-)
Joe
Joe
17:10
@nitzanwe do so, because there are definitely more talented coders out there who can help. Plus you're female, which however sad it sounds, guys will be more helpful for some reason.
@Joe I didn't promise him a job, I said we'd like to have him and that if it's interesting to him he's welcome to send me an email. It might surprise you but hiring from coding communities is an extremely valuable hiring strategy. We'd rather hire based on GitHub repos or SO answer (but not rep) than by HR or reading CVs. It shows that a) the candidate actually likes coding and b) They're usually way above average.
And yes, that's us. You're very welcome to download TipRanks, we have a free version you can use for free and a really kickass premium version. We also have a Windows Phone app if you have one of those with a lot of other exciting stuff on the way.
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum your analysis fails to tell you that not all talented programmers are using SO or github.
@Joe lol.. I'm just the concept of a female right now. I'm a blinking line on your screen
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum I wouldn't use it on my phone, i'd use it in the browser next to charts, etc.
@Joe: But GitHub or SO participation at the very least lets you taste a little, before you buy.
17:12
@Joe Yeah, the browser plugin is really awesome imo.
@nitzanwe: On the internet, noone knows you are a dog..
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe Believe me, even a concept of a female works. Ask Lara Croft.
Can anyone explain to me how cherrypy.request can provide a request instance since, from what I understand, cherrypy is multithreaded?
@Joe Of course they're not. I don't need all talented coders. I just need like, 10 :P. They're a lot easier to get on GitHub or SO than from HR.
Joe
Joe
@MartijnPieters I agree most definitely. It's a great way to find talent, but my point was that not every talented guy is using either of them
17:13
wof wof
@nitzanwe I'm sure that if you show @MartijnPieters and @Joe your fiddle they'll be able to help you.
Joe
Joe
@SpencerRuport Spencer didn't I ask for more info?
@Joe: Then perhaps those talented people, if they want to be noticed online, should participate a little. :-)
@Joe - I responded to your question.
Joe
Joe
@SpencerRuport I left here, could you repost?
17:14
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm on it
Joe
Joe
@MartijnPieters I suppose if the guy was looking for a job he might. But now if i'm the chief architect for microsoft office since 1999, i doubt I'd want to do that.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Does @nitzanwe work for you?
@Joe No, she doesn't. We have no work affiliation. She's a friend from university.
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum aah that's good to read. I don't know anybody personally here.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I must say you Israeli people come up with really good ideas. I'm impressed.
@Joe: The talented people in such positions have enough trouble keeping recruiters at bay.
They don't need to self-promote anymore.
Joe
Joe
17:17
@SpencerRuport Are you new to python?
@MartijnPieters I bet you don't either. 20 years of exp is bound to get at least 5 recruiters a year.
@MartijnPieters Which is why we don't even talk to recruiters. I know I hate the emails I get from recruiters - they're aggressive and annoying. I send them "legal" emails so they leave me alone.
@Joe - Yeah. I've been developing with MS technologies for a while now but I'm trying to get more Linux experience. I started Python about a month ago.
@Joe: I don't know, most go into the spam box automatically.
Joe
Joe
@SpencerRuport It looks like the instance is actually an object spencer.
@MartijnPieters I'd personally feel honoured to get a recruiter email :'D
@Joe I get 5 emails a week if I'm lucky, they go to spam so fast. The market here is crazy ( a lot more demand than supply). Since my StackOverflow name and my Facebook name are the same (surprise surprise my real name), and since I'm active in a lot of groups - I get a lot of offers - most of them completely boring.
Joe
Joe
17:19
@nitzanwe just put my name in your reply. I will see it when I get back and I will try to find a solution for you.
The 'recruiter agency' recruiters you want to avoid. HR recruiters directly from the company looking to hire are perhaps interesting.
Mostly to sell them my consultancy services..
Which is why I'd much rather reach to people like @MartijnPieters here, and not through HR, he'd never open an HR email and here I can actually talk to him. Here the discussion is based on shared interest (we both like coding). If it goes through HR it starts with a negative connotation.
@Joe - All I'm trying to figure out is since I assume when there are two concurrent web requests which each spawn a thread how cherrypy.request can provide the appropriate request context information.
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum If somebody offers me 80 grand for my services, I'd consider it with a smile.
@SpencerRuport I'll answer when I get back.
@Joe K, tnx :)
17:20
Anyone offering 80 grand and over per annum for software engineers also knows how to recruit properly.
7
@Joe Right, and we can probably do that for @MartijnPieters - however, I haven't seen your answers in SO before and I have no idea who you are ^^
@MartijnPieters - Hear hear.
Ever done a round of Google or Amazon or Facebook recruiting?
I feel like working at those companies would be awful.
Actually Amazon would probably be okay. Working on their web services platform would be fun.
@BenjaminGruenbaum - Where about do you live?
17:28
@SpencerRuport Israel
Cool. I would like to move out of the U.S. someday so it's good to hear there are healthy markets for developers other than the bay area.
@SpencerRuport Yes, as a market, we're about 2000 developers short.
Wow.
That's awesome.
@BenjaminGruenbaum - What's the average rate of pay?
@SpencerRuport Varies greatly. From 8000 NIS for QA in good places to 40000NIS for very high specialization in a certain field. Web is usually in the 12000-24000 range.
4 NIS is about 1 dollar.
And we're talking monthly of course
@BenjaminGruenbaum - Nice. How is cost of living there?
17:42
hey guys
@SpencerRuport Pretty expensive, rent is ~4000 nis in OK places. A very nice apartment in a really central location with no roommates can be up to 6000-8000NIS however, Tel Aviv is one of the best, funnest, nicest cities to live in in international standards.
Joe
Joe
@SpencerRuport i'm looking at your issue now.
@Joe - Thank you.
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum not forgetting that at any given time a rocket might be shot from palestine/yemen/syria/egypt
@Joe Not really, no. You're a lot less likely to die from something in the US. People in Israel live longer in average, and have safer lives in average. Mugging, murder etc is a lot less common here than in the states.
Joe
Joe
17:44
@BenjaminGruenbaum You probably won't want a guy like me on your team. I might wield my influence too much :P
Not saying that the whole Arab thing isn't real - but I'd still feel a lot safer here - even during a war than in most places in the states.
@Joe How do you like TipRanks so far? Enjoying it :)?
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum I haven't signed up, but there are a few features that I might add in myself to it. Create an API and if I get down to it, I'll pull your data to do so.
@BenjaminGruenbaum hopefully you're serious and you're not a mossad agent :'D
@Joe haha, no, not at all :P
@Joe We have an API, it's just not free.
Joe
Joe
@SpencerRuport would you prefer learning django instead of cherrypy?
@BenjaminGruenbaum what's your stack?
@Joe Our stack for the NLP takes 4 pages to describe ;) It's mainly C# though.
17:47
what's the best way to connect to a remote database in django using ssh?
@Joe - Well I'm really just curious how that can work at all. I may end up using django anyway but I'm just trying to get a better handle on python.
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum 6000 dollars a month? darn thats pretty good pay
@hanleyhansen have you read the docs?
@Joe yes i have
Generally we use the Microsoft stack since we have BizSpark plus. We use Azure for hosting (works like a charm). C# for logic, Java for other parts of logic that require certain NLP (natural language processing) capabilities. Some domain specific languages for NLP. Lots of JavaScript. Some Python for automation, some Node for prototyping. ASP.NET MVC and ASP.NET WebAPI for RESTful backends... that's really just the start.
Joe
Joe
@SpencerRuport I'm working through a tutorial myself that does a great job of explaining exactly how django works. it goes beyond the docs. I've referred about 4 people here to it already.
@BenjaminGruenbaum sounds like a bit of overkill. But you guys are obviously planning to go big with the idea.
17:51
@Joe Why overkill? We're doing complicated things, every choice was made carefully. It's really not a huge stack but we use a lot of libraries that do useful things. We're not just building a blog or a CMS, we have software that can actually read and understand text.
@Joe - Ok. I'm not asking for a whole tutorial. I'm just curious how request contexts are handled using cherrypy.request. I don't understand how that can provide a request instance.
@Joe i'm trying paramiko's example. i was looking for a recommendation based on personal experience not a link.
Joe
Joe
@SpencerRuport is the code you showed just the declaration of the class? I would think that each request would be an object instance of that class
@BenjaminGruenbaum Can I apply as well?
17:53
@Joe - This is the full extent of the code.
import cherrypy

class server(object):
        @cherrypy.expose
        cl = cherrypy.request.headers['Content-Length']
        def default(self,*args,**kwargs):
                return "It works!"

cherrypy.quickstart(server())
Joe
Joe
@BenjaminGruenbaum Sounds like you better build a secret tunnel for the NSA :P otherwise they're gonna build one for themselves to steal your IP :D
posted it...tell me if it's missing details
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe I definitely read this post last night!
@abhi Apply - sure.
@Joe didn't post it
Joe
Joe
17:57
@nitzanwe Did I see into the future then?
@Joe maybe you were dreaming :)
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe of an instance of an Israeli girl? I wonder why :'D
@nitzanwe aah this is the 1 I read: stackoverflow.com/questions/19180242/…
They're similar cause of the same classes
@Joe it was GOD telling you to help the jewish ppl
Joe
Joe
I knew I saw it before
@nitzanwe I can't help people who were lost in the desert for 40 years :'D
@Joe yeah, that's Ok...I just need help in django
Joe
Joe
18:01
@nitzanwe I'm kidding. don't go all anti-semite on me
@Joe well, it's the same project, so same models
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe does the language have to be hebrew letters?
@Joe lol...what ever helps me
@Joe yeah
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe can you not use english versions of hebrew words?
@Joe I don't think I understand what you're asking
Joe
Joe
18:03
@nitzanwe do you know what a transliteration is?
@BenjaminGruenbaum I am working on Microsoft Technologies at my workplace.
@Joe no...enlighten me plz
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe can you chat in hebrew with me using english alphabets? Like "Shalom" ?
@Joe yes, but why?
@abhi Right, but I have no idea who you are ^_^
Joe
Joe
18:05
@nitzanwe can most israelis speak english?
@BenjaminGruenbaum that's true.
@BenjaminGruenbaum just me and Benny do :)
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe therefore you don't need to translate your recipe names into the hebrew alphabet. Just use english alphabets
@Joe \:
Joe
Joe
18:07
And if you're doing this for some recipe-taking app, it's a lot of overkill.
i'm using the word kill too much . let me rather call it 'wasted effort'
@Joe I already have then translated. that's not the issue. I need to find the right place to call the sort function on them
@Joe they're in english in the db
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe why do you need to sort them each time? Simply sort them once on the server and then calls to them from the DB in the order they appear
@nitzanwe Are ingredient types all fixed or can users add their own?
@Joe all fixed
@Joe and all 500 of them are in English
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe Then you definitely don't need the client-side sorting them.
@Joe in the future we might use the same db for other languages, and thus, the db will still be in English
Joe
Joe
18:13
@nitzanwe so you want to keep the DB in english and do all translation and sorting tasks on the client-side?
@Joe yes
@Joe then a Spanish user can add a recipe in Spanish, Arab in Arabic and so on...
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe Have you ever considered just using a separate DB for each language? The logic of your solution doesn't look appealing to me, especially if it's a smartphone app.
@Joe this is not for the app, it's for the Blogers inputting their recipes
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe in fact, if the 500 ingredient types are fixed, why call it from a database at all? Unless you plan on adding more ingredient types in the future.
@Joe the app just pulls recipes from the server
Joe
Joe
18:16
@nitzanwe its pulling ingredient types too, which it doesn't need to.
@Joe first of all, it's an ingredient type. a Bloger adds am Ingredien. that is, an Ingredient_type + amount +description+units etc...
Joe
Joe
@nitzanwe I don't think you see my logic. Let me create a separate thread for us and I'll explain to you.
@MartijnPieters 80 Grand is not really a lot of money, when you consider all the money that taxes and insurance takes away. If you happen to stay in LA or NY, it doesn't last.
Joe
Joe
@abhi 80 grand is more money in a year than 2 billion people will see in a lifetime.
@Joe I beg to differ, as most of my friends have crossed the 100 K barrier. They are programming in MVC / Java / C++ on Unix.
80 grand in a city translates to somewhere around 3800 dollars a month.
Joe
Joe
18:24
@abhi you missed the point i was making.
mortgage alone would take away close to 2000 from this. anyway lets not talk about depressing facts of life. :)
anyone here use Visual Studio for developing in Python?
Joe
Joe
@abhi linux guy
you really can't do much non-MS programming in MS itself.
I have been developing in MS technologies since 1998.
VB6, VB .NET, Classic ASP, ASP .NET, C#, WCF, Powerscript, Windows Scripting Almost all of them
except VC++
In 2002, I also fixed some bugs in a VJ++ project, that I wasn't supposed to be officially working on.
Joe
Joe
@abhi This rule still holds: I'll develop in anything so long as it pays the bills
@Joe a good rule to have.
Joe
Joe
18:32
@abhi I assume it's what most developers consider.
19:00
My LoC for the day is -400
@Crowz: guru :D
or you are fixing code of a php dread turned into a pythonista
cabbage anyhow
javascript shenanigans actually... part of my code was very redundant
javascript is not the language for me
javascript's pretty good, if you only take the good parts :P
I mean, I think it's awesome... when you're good at it
I'm just figuring it out
do you have for loop like syntax in python? I want to do something for(I=0;I<10;i++){PRINT I}
I know there are iterators
19:10
@abhi: you don't
I want to compare the contents of two arrays
by elements in a position.
abhi how?
if (array1[0] == array2[0]): print True else: print False
I want to do this for the entire length of the arrays.
array1 == array2 ?
both arrays are of equal length.
19:11
or ah
no I want to do an element by element comparison.
check iterator
for i in range(len(array1)):
 print(array1[i] == array2[i])
depends on if there are runtime requirements
OR
then you can do:
19:13
len(set(list1).intersection(list2)) == len(list1)
for a, b in zip(array1, array2):
    print(a == b)
@AnttiHaapala thx.
that's what I will use.
but that assumes the elements are sorted
should not make jokes in C++
"I want to compare the contents of two arrays
by elements in a position."
@ttback
19:15
yea
but that doesn't say the two arrays are listed in the sorted order
right?
it does not, but it also does not say you want to compare them as sets
if he just wants to verify that array1 is exact copy of array2
it is pretty easy
also your code happens to be wrong as it assumes elements are not equal
?
if they are all equal, you end with full set of intersections
I want to reduce the lines of code on this snippet. Perhaps someone can do short work of it.

if pos[0] < 50:
print "my card :", 1
elif pos[0] > 49 and pos[0] < 99:
print "my card :", 2
elif pos[0] > 100 and pos[0] < 149:
print "my card :", 3
elif pos[0] > 151 and pos[0] < 199:
print "my card :", 4
elif pos[0] > 200 and pos[0] < 249:
print "my card :", 5
elif pos[0] > 251 and pos[0] < 299:
print "my card :", 6
elif pos[0] > 300 and pos[0] < 349:
print "my card :", 7
elif pos[0] > 351 and pos[0] < 399:
i am pretty sure I don't need those many if conditions
but this code does do exactly what i want.
19:19
ttback: say [1,1,2] and [2,2,1] are equal?
@abhi store the value of pos[0] in a variable... :P
also, you do not need the > conditions here, it is an ELSE if
i guess you meant it assumes that the elements are unique
then just need a way to loop it so that you get the upper value
@ttback yes
it does if using set
so you're saying 99,149,199 should all be stored in a list?
sort and iterator will prob be a better solution
19:22
the general case is:

>>> from collections import Counter
>>> Counter([1,1,2]) == Counter([2,1,1])
True
>>> Counter([1,1,2]) == Counter([2,2,1])
False
nope
this is better
@abhi: that would be one way...
@abhi for i,x in enumerate(my_array) should work
@abhi or: why is it 50 on the first iteration, but not 100 in the next iteration
@abhi if it was 100, 150 and so, you could get the upper limits as easy as range(50, 501, 50)
it is less than 50 less than 100
should read like this:
if pos[0] < 50:
print "my card :", 1
elif pos[0] > 50 and pos[0] < 99:
print "my card :", 2
19:37
i think you could have an list of ((min, max)) that you can loop through to compare, and the card num is idx+1
@Crowz i'll check on that for i, x in enumerate()
i refers to the index and x refers to the actual value
Dan
Dan
cabbage
oh god all my code is going away and becoming smaller more manageable code! ;_;
I am completely missing things that are intuitive to me in c#
Thanks @Crowz
Dan
Dan
19:47
so any django folk in the room who have used 1.5 and have read what's new in 1.6?
is it amazing stuff?
@abhi your code is wrong, values 99 and 100 are not mapped to any card
i need to step out. perhaps we'll have this conversation again in a while. there is a thin line of 1 pixel width between each card.

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