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20:13
anyone here?
double nope
cbg @JonClements
cbg @Peter
how are you?
cbg?
I'm trying to run a python file via ssh and I've added the -X flag after ssh, and I'm still getting the tkinter.TclError: no display name and no $DISPLAY environment variablea error.
Heh
Didn't know about those
what's the point in them?
So you have a GUI that you want to run on something that doesn't have a display? What do you want it to do exactly?
@MiKenning absolutely nothing -- this is the meme of this room ;)
@JonClements In short, I want it to run the game I made.
@PeterVaro I like it.
"it" being what ?
20:27
@JonClements I'm logging onto my university's ssh server, and I'm trying to run a python file from my drive on the server. I just get that error back
Yeah... but how do you expect a shell server to run your program which expects user input from a gui?
@JonClements I don't know. I just kind of expected it to work. I'm really new to this.
It works when I run it from my mac
Sure it does, but your mac has a windowing environment
your uni server doesn't - ssh is just a remote shell in this case
Any way to fix that?
There's ways around it, but I really don't have time to go through that...
20:30
Any idea what I should google?
Why do you need to run it on the uni server anyway?
Because that's where my program is being marked.
It was programmed at home, and there's no other real way of running it I don't think
Well... won't the people marking it, be running it their end, rather than you running it from a remotely?
Ie, you upload the code, they run it with a windowing environment or copy it and put it on a machine that whatever...
I don't know in all honesty.
I went to the library here and tried to run it. Probably didn't work because I was running it from a shell again.
Probably didn't work because I don't know how it works.
Hello, Python!
20:34
WOOP
time to learn some argparse
@Code-Guru howdy
@JonClements How ya doing?
Not bad... busy... tired... same old :P
yourself?
@PeterVaro what about youtube.com/watch?v=iRYvuS9OxdA ?
Still working on sf2github
making some good progress in the two days I've been working on it.
20:44
balls - what was link again?
@JonClements :) a bit better ;) youtube.com/watch?v=Qc5McwotQro
Umm.... it's different :)
So far I can import milestones and issues
Now I'm working on connecting them
gotta figure out how to iterate through the pages of issues
Ta... I'm a following ya :)
just having a nosey at a few bits... Loungechat ?
Something someone in Lounge<C++> thought up and I forked it in case I can find some way to contribute.
20:49
Ahh...
supposed to be another chat room platform. Who knows if it will take off at all.
My real baby is github.com/codeguru42/bbct. The rest of the repos are just other random stuff I'm toying with.
@PeterVaro just under 6 days now... :p
@JonClements umm.. I'm lost.. what is under 6 days ?
So I have the following string:
'<https://api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=2>; rel="next", <https://api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=5>; rel="last"'
What tools does python and/or requests provide for getting the actual URLs?
Do I have to resort to string.split()? Or is there something higher level available?
@Code-Guru umm... how have you got those?
21:01
The string comes from a JSON response from GitHub.
response.json()['link']
and that's the string it returns ? weird... I'm guessing you parse out between < and > then
@JonClements AAAAAHAHHAHAHAAAAAHHHAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!!
errr...nvm, it's in the headers
ATM, I'm only interested in getting the one with rel="next". I'm sure I can parse it by hand, but I wonder if requests has something to help.
Nope ... requests has done its job - ie - got you the data... :)
yah, I kindda figured. Thought I'd ask anyways
21:19
@JonClements Thanks for following me on GitHub. I need to warn you that my sf2github testing is going to spam your inbox with 132 mails every time I run it...maybe more.
Fair enough
I have a question. Do employers often look at a person's github account when hiring for a technical position?
Some actually ask for one... some may even look at it... I'm guessing any employer worth their salt will take into account whatever they can about a person by their public participation... github/SO/mailing lists/etc...
worst question of the year award goes to...
21:38
Wow - it does have some actual technical terms in it though
That is true...still though I was amazed at this one and I don't often vote down but wow
Can you provide a link to the actual question?
-5
Q: How to implement a reliable transport protocol in python?

user3002621Like should I go with the basic sender and receiver or checksum or CRC thing or tcp protocols

Wow just wow
It's pretty comical...what I don't understand is how the person started at 1 rep, got 5 downvotes and is now at 4 rep?
Btw stumbled across this last night, if you haven't seen this it's pretty awesome: stackoverflow.com/questions/184618/…
21:46
Does python have a function to trim whitespace from the beginning and/or end of a string?
read it in order of votes btw, there's about 3 pages worth of pure gold
nvm...found it
strip()
@samrap wtf? How did that Q get an upvote?
Someone probably laughed so hard they figured it deserved some recognition
There should be a 'worst question` badge on SO
Get 20 downvotes before the question is closed. This badge can be awarded multiple times.
22:11
key = urlStr[1].split('=')[1][1:-1]
lol, what a monstrosity
That's to get the next ?
That parses out the string 'next' from <https://api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=2>; rel="next"
Does anyone know why some websites who use php files don't have the .php extension at the end of their url? Is it something to do with how the host/server stores files?
url = urlStr[0].strip()[1:-1] parses out the URL
@samrap How do you know that the website uses PHP?
Assumption, I guess, don't pretty much all social networking sites use php at some point in their site?
Even if not, why doesn't the .html ext show up?
22:19
It's quite possible that they name the file on the server withou the .php extension and the web server still recognizes it as a PHP file that needs to be run through the PHP interpreter.
@Code-Guru normally done by the rewrite rules on apache2
@samrap now that definitely depends on the technology they use.
heya @badger! :)
@JonClements assuming apache2 rather than IIS ;-)
Ah I see. Thanks guys, I'm learning PHP right now and it led me to thinking
22:20
@code good point :)
either way, I guess there's a way to configure the server to recognize which files are PHP scripts, but I don't know enough about webservers to give details
@JonClements Cbg puppy. :)
What are you up to?
@badger not a lot ... you?
@JonClements So is my code as ugly as I think it is? Or is it just that I"m unaccustomed to Python syntax?
Wondering if I should program on python for fun or php for uni because the deadline is tomorrow.
22:23
Do you know if it's going to be th first one ?
@Code-Guru excuse me, why do you parse html by hand?
@Deck if you look - you'll notice it's not html
@Deck I'm parsing (part of ) an HTTP header, not HTML
my bad
of course, if you have a suggestion of a way to do it more easily, I'm all ears ;-)
22:26
Gotta get my homework done, I'll see you guys later tonight if you're on
@samrap laters
s = '<https://api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=2>; rel="next", <https://api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=5>; rel="last"'

import re
matches = re.findall('<(.*?)>; rel="(.*?)"', s)
# [('https://api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=2', 'next'), ('https://api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=5', 'last')]
print next((url for url, rel in matches if rel=='next'))
# api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=2
Or, even better:
regex seems like overkill
import re
matches = dict((rel, url) for url, rel in re.findall('<(.*?)>; rel="(.*?)"', s))
print matches['next']
# api.github.com/repositories/14474500/issues?page=2
Not if you need to references the other things :)
hrmm
oooo....I like that second one
makes the dictionary all in one line!
Plus by using regex here, it makes it clear what the criteria is, it's a bit more obvious than splitting and slicing...
22:29
true dat
one question....what does '.*?' mean? Specifically, why the '?'?
Does that avoid an empty match?
Take it out and see what happens :)
aww, you make me work for the answers!
hmm....* greedy matches
So the '?' makes the '*' not greedy?
correct
22:38
okay, I understand now
thanks for being my google bot ;-)
Random question: Is {} or dict() preferrable for creating an empty dictionary?
{} as it's done by the lexer and doesn't require a name lookup... dict can be shadowed
d = {} will ways be an empty dict, but if I did dict = list, then d = dict() won't be {} :)
k, that's what I've been doing, mostly out of ignorance (or forgetting about, rather) the existence of dict().
Same to prefer [] for an empty list over list()
only call the type if you need the facilities offered by it... eg dict.fromkeys etc...
Hi guys, I am trying to do this:
FROM:
[{acc : 281312, amount: 1.00,name: xyz},
{acc : 921312, amount: 2.00,name: jsak},
{acc : 281312, amount: 8.00,name: xyz}]
TO:
[{acc : 281312, amount: 9.00,name: xyz},
{acc : 921312, amount: 2.00,name: jsak}]

Any suggestions?
22:46
You can use a defaultdict
let's see if I can find an example - it's been asked so many times :)
Yeah, that's what I am trying, but I will endup creating a new dict which looks something like this: c[entry['acc']] += entry['amount']
and then I will need to merge that with other data
What other data...?
name: jsak
So this is being grouped by account ?
Okay, now I have a loop that looks like this:
A
while <condition that depends on result of A>:
    B
    A
B
22:51
@jon Yes, its grouped by acc and amount is summed
Is there a better way to structure this code to get the same result?
In C++ or Java, I'd use a do...while
@zengr well the approach you've got at the moment is okay... create a new dict for acc->value, etc...
@Jon Alright. Thanks!
IMO, its not very pythonic. But it works :)
@Code-Guru hard to say without some context
heya @Frenchguy
@JonClements yah, I probably overgeneralized it. However, asking the question helped me find a potential soution
@Zengr I'm not sure about counter with non-ints as values
@Jon I see, working on it
Don't you hate it when you need to work, you get interrupted by emails and other things quite often, but then when you are stuck and need a break the interruptions are all gone?
I just get used to not having a break :)
23:06
when I get stuck, I need at least a short break
of coruse, all my coding atm is for myself, so I have a little more flexibility with that
That certainly helps :)
doesn't pay as much, though lol
23:24
Right, I'd better turn in... busy day tomorrow
gnite
in C#, Nov 14 at 16:15, by JLott
"My mom walked in and I started watching porn because it was easier to explain"
I assume he meant as opposed to explaining what he was programming
23:50
aww, I hit my GitHub API rate limit.
nvm...it's because I"m not sending my credentials

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