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00:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

18:25
Wow... that doge hasn't drifted off up the screen yet :)
@JonClements It's a three day week here, because of Thanksgiving
So it's more like a Thursday than a Tuesday
Ahhh okies...
You may know it as "good riddance to those stuffy puritans day"
Then Friday will simultaneously feel like a Monday. The rare one day week.
Have fun?
So errr, is this basically another time of year that Turkey's really aren't too happy about?
It's the second round of the pan-winter "eat lots of food all the time" superholiday
beginning with Halloween and ending with Valentine's day
I think Friday will be productive for me. I suspect most of my coworkers will take off, so it will be nice and quiet
Unless any one other coworker also employs the "come into work when no one else does" strategy, ruining it for both of us
user559633
18:32
Eh, you can do a truce. I used to come in at 5am to get things done before the office roar started.
user559633
The architect/marketing jerk that successfully promoted open floor plans should be shot.
user559633
Repeatedly. Forever.
Unfortunately, open offices really are more efficient for people that need collaboration more than they need long stretches of uninterrupted concentration
Which is apparently everyone but coders. We're victims of a trend that's useful to everybody else.
user559633
"Open floor plans, for when your job isn't hard"
Haha, well, that's one way to put it
18:44
I finally wrote the inplace() context manager I was thinking Python could do with: stackoverflow.com/questions/20224912/…
to rewrite a file, in place, without having to use the fileinput module, with all its limitations (such as reusing sys.stdout as the output filehandle for the new file, limiting you to text-only file modes).
@MartijnPieters ahh nice idea - will have to look at that in a mo' :)
@MartijnPieters hasn't there been some momentum recently on contextlib - ie, people starting to think it would be useful to have stuff in it :)
19:08
Someone help for this question stackoverflow.com/questions/20225020/…
tMJ
tMJ
I have a two player game (like chess) whose backend rules and all are already written in python. I was making a webapp for it on GAE but that is on hold. Meanwhile, I have to make a GUI for it. Which Python module would you suggest. I have heard a lot about pyGame.
I have done a little work in Pygame. It gives you pretty low-level control over everything. You construct the loop yourself that consumes game events, and you direct what pixels get drawn where on the screen.
If you want your interface to primarily be based on familiar UI elements like text boxes and buttons, then you may find yourself frustrated reimplementing these things.
tMJ
tMJ
@kevin I want a minimalistic GUI only. Nothing fancy. It is more of like a project to be shown so as the "not-so-geek" can understand what I've been upto. The only constraint on my part is that it should be fairly easy to implement, and should conserve my time.
I plan on spending not more than a day, learning + implementing combined.
It shouldn't be too hard to implement a simple chess-like game. Click on a piece to choose it, then click on where it needs to go.
Implementing animations, drag and drop, and more fancy things will require additional time investment
tMJ
tMJ
Yep. That's what I need to do. But as you mention that it's pretty low-level control, does that mean common high-level constructs are unavailable. And if so, is there any other module I could use.
I typically would want drag-n-drop. ;)
19:20
Hi guys! Why do i get key error 9 from this? for a in range(len(list)):
if list[a]==str:
@Rasovica, could it be that you are removing items from list elsewhere in this loop?
Then the list will have fewer than ten elements, but the iterator will go from 0 to 9 regardless
no this is the whole function def retrive_base(list,str):
base={}
for a in range(len(list)):
if list[a]==str:
base[a]="X"
return base
when i run this function it raises key error 9
Could it be that base is too small?
er, wait, it's a dict
so of course it's not too small
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "tictactoe.py", line 304, in <module>
if check_win(list1,pc):
File "tictactoe.py", line 118, in check_win
moves=retrive_base(list,str)
File "tictactoe.py", line 113, in retrive_base
if list[a]==str:
KeyError: 9
tMJ
tMJ
@Rasovica I would suggest you add it to the question pool with the code (so others can understand what you're doing wrong) and I bet your problem would be solved pretty quickly.
19:24
okey! will do that ty
Are you sure list is a list?
KeyErrors usually occur when you're trying to access a dict
@tMJ Nothing built-in comes to mind for out-of-the-box drag and drop support.
tMJ
tMJ
Hmm, will keep looking. Searching is worth the effort here.
I think Pygame will have the smallest learning curve for going from "no experience" to "minimal working interface"
tMJ
tMJ
Thanks Anyway.
getting from "minimal" to "fluid, intuitive, attractive" interface may be hard no matter what tech you use ;-)
tMJ
tMJ
19:29
@kevin Yeah, I guess so. Maybe I'll try out Pygame itself. See where I am in 3 hours. ;)
19:45
@Rasovica: Don't use an external site for the code.
Post code in the question itself.
Preferably a short sample that reproduces the problem, see SSCCE.org
mang, I want my profile pic to change soon
20:05
Ok, job hunt related question: I just finished my Master's in Electronic Business and Systems Management with a perfect GPA and was just admitted to a post-master's program in Software Engineering, but I don't have a bachelor's degree in an IT related field (mine is in Economics). Do you think I would have trouble finding a job as a software developer because of my lack of a bachelor's degree?
Depends on the employer, I guess. Some places will simply filter out every resume not meeting their strict criteria
Then there are others that only care about prior experience, and apparent aptitude shown during the interview
20:21
Nov 9 at 21:05, by SineLaboreNihil
Well I have a bachelor's in economics and a masters degree in "electronic business and systems management" and now I am pursuing my second post graduate degree in "software engineering". Does that still make me an economist or a software engineer/computer scientist?
Did you read anything any one commented on last time?
20:32
I bet there are a number of companies that would be pleased to have a dev with an economics background
why must spotify torment me by putting on bad music in commercials. They should have an algorithm that knows I don't like that kind of music and will only respond negatively to their advertisements
user559633
@Crowz what music was in the ad?
@tristan Well I was listening to Therion and the ad was just some really obnoxious kind of hip hop
user559633
Oh, interesting -- I was expecting you to know the same of the artist and answer your own question about why they advertise obnoxious junk
user559633
just put on a song by therion. ᕙ(⇀‸↼‶)ᕗ
20:39
this was the song I was listening to, hip hop kinda kills the vibe
Useful commenting trick:
Can you edit in the full traceback? Where do you call addtoXarray? — thegrinner 5 mins ago
Linking to the edit page to make it easier to find for the OP
My medicine plate!:
I already ate the brown :)
user559633
what is that, a caffeine pill, an aspirin, and a fishoil?
@tristan 2 paracetomol, fish oil, decongestant tablet, ion tablet and CHOCOLATE!! :P
user559633
Invest in big homeopathics
20:54
Oh yes :)
I invested in alchemy. Only took the ashes of a powerful vampire and the blood of a fallen champion to craft my potion of immortality
Did you know? All chemistry used to be called alchemy. Back in the day you could be an alchemist, and still make real discoveries with observable reproducible effects.
Hmm... Interessant!
Not all of it was baking sheep's bladders under a full moon, or whatever. Somebody had to invent bronze at some point.
yeah but the more "real" stuff was basically taken from alchemy and transferred to chemistry, in a sense, which leaves alchemy to imply the more "witchy" stuff
21:50
@Crowz, if a champion falls, is he a champion anymore?
22:00
@abhi that's just my generic list of ingredients for any evil incantations
:)
What is the difference between position = (299,250) and position = [299,250]
it's weird that I've referenced that list at least twice today
For some reason, the previous code is working position = (299,250), but I am not sure how can I change the variables.
I want 299 and 250 to be represented by variables.
Tuples are immutable, not sure if you're using position = (299,250)
if I use x = (299,250), I am unable to change the values.
22:08
yes, tuples are immutable. Immutable means unchangeable, so to speak. Tuple is denoted by (). Lists, on the other hand, are possible to change the values of and are denoted by []... so if you want to change the value, you use a list
yes, but a tuple is what I need to display an image in a specific position on a canvas.
then I need to keep moving that image on a timer.
you'll probably need to make a new tuple with new values and then change the name of that tuple to the correct variable name
so in this case, how can I achieve that?
you just need to make a new tuple with the correct values and set it to the right variable name, I think
22:31
Anybody ever do any functional testing with a Tkinter app?
TDD
Thanks @Crowz I got my code working.
What is TKinter?
and where can I get IDLE?
IDLE usually comes with python when you download it, although it's not a very good IDE imo
I am looking for free.
I am paid to build code in C#. Python's just a hobby for me, right now.
Tkinter is a somewhat industry standard library for writing cross platform GUI apps that function on Linux, Mac, and Windows.
Thanks @WesGrant
23:23
@abhi which OS do you use? Windows, I assume because of C#?
in using disutils to do build rpms, how do i force it to install data files into the same directory as the project files?
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