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00:10
What does the name "StackOverflow" mean?
 
4 hours later…
04:14
Cabbage no one!
04:38
@samrap Cabbage :)
Nice picture @thefourtheye :)
@samrap Thanks man :)
Adding my AlgebraSolver project to github right now!
github.com/samrap/AlgebraSolver (If you're interested)
05:15
Going to a demo man... I ll check that when I come back
rhurb
Awesome thanks, and have fun!
 
2 hours later…
07:22
cbg!
 
2 hours later…
09:13
cabbage
 
1 hour later…
10:37
Cabbage!
cabbage @Fenikso
Seems very quiet here, as Python chatroom was not on the first page. Unexpected :-).
11:04
Yes, it's been really quiet as compared to last night
Everyone should have local time somewhere on their icon, when you hover. It is 12:07 pm for me.
sounds like a good feature request =P
15:08 here; or 3:08 pm
I hate when CM tool gives you a warning style message box instead of info style to let you know "Operation completed successfully". Even after seven years it still scares me each and every time.
11:43
Its 5:15 PM India
Sublime Text 3 upgrade... Yay :)
BTW, Cabbage all :)
cbg everyone
Cabbage Earthlings
@Kneel-Before-ZOD Cabbage spacling :P
@Kneel-Before-ZOD Reading about you...
11:57
that I'm a good guy? :)
@Kneel-Before-ZOD So, Superman has to be afraid of you... Not thefourtheye... :p
well, any non-Kryptonian in my way needs to be afraid :)
Have you ever seen anyone with the fourth eye?
sure.....on halloween days :-P
But here I am, for real
12:01
I'm a Kryptonian soldier; that doesn't scare me
Did you use to go by another name?
you kinda seem familiar
@Kneel-Before-ZOD Nope :) Always thefourtheye :)
cool......recently joined the Python community?
You must be popular in this room. People have been talking about you recently
@Kneel-Before-ZOD Yup :) Learning Python from SO
nah....the room is just very friendly; we welcome everyone and make friends easily :)
oh....and we speak our own language too :)
Potato?
12:05
lol.....it's called Salad
lol. Potato means How are you in Salad... :p
lol....I know; I meant the language is called Salad
If I hadn't known that, I wouldn't have known Potato means How are you :)
lol...that's true
@JonClements Bow... wow.
12:09
@Kneel-Before-ZOD I think @thefourtheye spends more time here than you do mate :)
@thefourtheye woof... woof!
Saw my photo?
Indeed.... that's angry puppy :)
cbg @JonClements
pats the puppy @JonClements; longest time!
It's like my evil side has materialised into a separate entity! :)
@Kneel-Before-ZOD woof... how's things?
Heya @abhishek :)
12:11
oh yeah......it seems like your hairy twin is your exact opposite
@JonClements very good......things certainly look a lot brighter next year
ha ha ha... Good that I have earned Hi Ho Silver :p
ummm.... hats & madness :)
I wish I write something in chat today, so that somebody will star it, so that I ll get some hat.
Sshh... Martijn is in the house already
12:32
rhubarb
going home
safe journey
@Jerry rhubarb :)
12:44
Hey guys
I have a question
today = datetime.today() this gives a result like this format : 20/12/2013 12:44:20
I'd like to get only the day not the day and hour , like this
20/12/2013
How can I do it?
You could use the date object instead
>>> import datetime
>>> datetime.date.today()
datetime.date(2013, 12, 20)
After you can also change the string for obtainer the first path
And you can control the string representation of a datetime with strftime
>>> datetime.datetime.today().strftime("%d/%m/%Y")
'20/12/2013'
@Kevin Hey, nice hat...s!
Thanks
12:53
I'm using it in a view I can't be a string
it should be a DateField to correspond with my model
Ok, does that mean my first suggestion will work? It doesn't involve strings
this datetime.date(2013, 12, 20)
but I dont have a specific date 20/12/13
it will change everyday
Right, that's why I'm using datetime.date.today()
the third line there is the output, not something you type in
oh yes thanks a lot
13:10
hey-hey-hey
how can I get only the hour ?
@Kevin can you explain to me what is the difference between the OpenGL "Regular" and the OpenGL ES ? I know that ES means embedded systems, and it is somehow a subset of the regular opengl, but how? what are the limitations? functionalities or number of polygons.. or?
Hmm, don't know much about that, I've never experimented with ES
@ArmanceWissal, datetime objects have an hour attribute
this datetime module is one of worst modules in python standard lib
they are so unnatural and unintuitive
anyway, you told someweek earlier, that you are also interested in raspi -- but you are interested in the microcontroller if I understand you correctly -- have you checked micropython @Kevin? it is the 3rd post in the starred section ------>
I'll check it out
*I mean interested in controlling the microcontroller in a low-level way
@PeterVaro What would you change?
My primary grievance with datetime is that it contains a class with the same name as the module
leading to a lot of confusion. "why won't datetime.today() work, I know that's a valid method!"
Definitely unintuitive. You can't troubleshoot that problem by inspecting the line. You have to check your import statements to see if you're doing import datetime or from datetime import datetime.
It's kind of a "spooky action at a distance" thing
So what would you change?
13:38
If I didn't care about backwards compatibility, I'd change the class names to use CamelCase. Then you could unambiguously determine the module datetime from the class DateTime
is it only me how having time-out with this room?
Obviously, backwards compatibility is important, which is probably why it hasn't been changed already.
I don't disagree with you that there's something confusing about datetime.datetime, but I note that other modules which have a member with the same name as the module include time, timeit, calendar, array, pprint, copy, random, and glob. So what makes datetime especially confusing?
@PeterVaro, no problems here
I tried to send my message for at least 20 times :(
13:39
Perhaps those modules are exactly as confusing, but are less commonly used by novices?
I think random would be the next most commonly used module, although the random function I suspect isn't as popular as randint or choice
Also mmap, binhex, socket — I'm sure you can think of more
Exercise: programmatically determine all built-in modules that contain a class/method with the same name.
I use timeit.timeit and pprint.pprint a lot more than I use datetime.datetime, but I guess I'm not a novice
I guess it's not really a falsifiable theory unless I provide a good definition for "novice"
Otherwise, when you show me a novice that uses pprint, I can just say, "no true novice would use pprint"
13:45
Greetings
@Kevin: How goes the hat collection?
I was successful in getting Johnny Three Hats yesterday, and I got the Frosty hat overnight.
I see you have a dashing bounty hunter helmet
Cabbage Martijn :)
Great for hiding one's identity.
@MartijnPieters Aah... Now, I can type your name without needing to look at your profile
:)
13:47
Yeah, I was actually trying for the IG-88 hat!
@thefourtheye: :-P
The IG-88 requires you to not get a bounty..
oh darn :-D
I'm an expert at not being rewarded bounties ;-)
def reduplicates(modules):
    for m in modules:
        try:
            if m in dir(importlib.import_module(m)):
                yield(m)
        except:
            pass
I appear to be the front runner for this bounty as well. Drat!
>>> list(reduplicates(modules))
['popen2', 'Bastion', 'copy', 'BdfFontFile', 'pprint', 'crypt', 'Canvas', 'CodeWarrior', 'datetime', 'ConfigParser', 'ContainerIO', 'Cookie', 'dis', 'Dialog', 'DocXMLRPCServer', 'pyximport', 'Explorer', 'random', 'FileDialog', 'Finder', 'email', 'repr', 'FontFile', '_builtinSuites', 'Foundation', 'fcntl', 'GdImageFile', 'fnmatch', 'GimpGradientFile', 'select', 'GimpPaletteFile', 'setuptools', 'HTMLParser', 'sha', 'shlex', 'gestalt', 'Image', 'getopt', 'signal', 'getpass', 'gettext', 'glob', 'ImageDraw', 'socket', 'ImageFile', 'ImageFileIO', 'ImageFont', 'Imag
That's more than I expected :-o
13:52
It's a common pattern
The list of modules comes from help('modules')
Ah, I was just about to ask that :-)
StringIO.StringIO(), copy.copy(), bisect.bisect(), yup.
You'll find fewer such matches in Python 3.
I'm still willing to bet that datetime is the most commonly used among these, although I have no way to prove this without gathering usage data from all Python users everywhere
where module names at least have been normalized (mostly) to fit PEP8 conventions.
I guess datetime.datetime may be the first time someone has to understand the concept of a namespace
13:56
random.random() is used pretty often in beginners books.
Either way, it must be a tricky conceptual step
and it depends on what you are trying to do with your code.
It may not involve dates at all, but you could be using glob.glob().
And there's time.time too.
Shouldn't datetime's classes be in CapsWord format, if it wanted to comply to PEP8? Does the module precede the style guide?
It is following the convention of built-in types.
list, set, frozenset, dictionary, etc.
Yes, many old modules don't follow PEP8
13:59
datetime, date, time and timedelta all fit into that pattern.
The datetime module is relatively new.
Newer than PEP8.
And written by Tim Peters, who definitely knows about PEP8. :-P
But not new enough for PEP8 to have been enforced on the standard library
Jon Skeet close voted a Python question. stackoverflow.com/q/20704843/1903116
I suppose DateTime can wait for the next version that's allowed to break backwards compatibility. waits patiently for Python 4.x
From that question,
> Just wondering if anyone know that the rationale expressed by the designers of Python for this is?
Myself, I often wish I understood the decisions of the designers.
SO needs a well-funded sister site to hunt down tech authors and interview them on their controversial design choices.
@thefourtheye He follows the tag.
Or even just something like Skeptics where the only valid answers are ones with careful citations.
14:07
@MartijnPieters That picture was a deperate attempt to get a star, to get Winter is coming hat... :p
There you go. :-P Goodness knows I've been fishing for hats..
Like, "'Python has significant whitespace because at the time my keyboard didn't have any keys for curly brackets' -- GVR, BDFL"
ha ha ha... Thanks Marty :)
Marty? :P
Where's Doc? :)
Still in the present
14:09
Ahhh....
Have you ever thought about how today is the yesterday of tomorrow?
Strange, I thought the Zen of Python contained "it is better to ask forgiveness than seek permission", but I don't see it here.
The simplest solution being, I've fallen into a parallel universe where the Zen is slightly different
Cabbage!
That's my go-to explanation whenever my expectations don't match reality
Welcome
14:20
rawr
@poke @JonClements Cabbage :)
> I rewrote Python from scratch
Kick-ass
Impressive
@Kevin I’m pretty sure that’s not the reason :P
I encourage you to seek the truth :-)
While you're doing that, I'll be on the couch eating mini pretzels.
14:26
:P
@Martijn I really wonder if that micro python will be as good as he claims it to be…
It sounds a bit too good to be true.
The description looks competent.
See further down the project page.
Yeah, I know, but still…
> Memory is managed using a fast, non-precise, mark-sweep garbage collector. This eliminates reference counting overhead in flash code size and object RAM size. A fast CPU and small amount of RAM means that a complete garbage collection takes under 4ms. The garbage collector RAM overhead is 2 bits per 32 bytes = 1KiB for 128KiB usable RAM.
You don’t simply rewrite Python 3 and lots of built-in libraries from scratch on your own..
> Size of int object: 4 bytes, stored on the stack or directly in a tuple/list/dictionary.
inlined integers.
He could have re-used loads of parts.
14:30
> Micro Python produces equivalent byte code (up to optimisations) to the official CPython version 3.3.
I'm guessing the guts must be really similar to the official version, if he can guarantee this.
hmm
@Kevin soo.. do you like it?
:)
Looks quite neat.
This looks like a strange way to find a number's digital sum. It would be easier to do return sum(int(d) for d in str(x))
@Kevin another unnecessary use of recursion... even using the name xs... :)
@Kevin I voted to close that one as a dupe of the Python's Slice Notation question.
14:41
Yeah, close-vote-plz in any case. Just your typical "what is slicing?" question
Key Stage 2 results revealed the majority of East Surrey's schools were above the national average of 75 per cent of children achieving Level 4 in reading, writing and maths, despite the tougher literacy and numeracy targets being introduced this year.

Level 4 indicates pupils can spell properly, start to use grammatically complex sentences and employ joined up handwriting in English.

In maths they are able to multiply and divide whole numbers by 10 or 100 and use simple fractions and percentages.
Does that mean that 1/4 can't spell properly, use grammatically complex sentences or employ joined up handwriting -- is it just me - or is that not good
How old are these children? 7, 17?
The only thing I know about the British education system, I learned from Harry Potter. What's the median NEWT score?
it would appear that they're 11
@MartijnPieters About micropython. Again confusion... micropython.org says
Micro Python includes a complete parser, compiler, virtual machine and runtime system.
Virtual machine and runtime system? Are they both entirely different?
If I'm reading it right, the 75% score is counting pupils that got level 4 in every category
So the other quarter could be mostly students who have only a single weak subject.
My cursive writing is pretty bad. I only know like three capital letters
Which happen to be my initials ;-)
14:50
@thefourtheye there are three run modes: bytecode, bytecode cached as native instructions (aka Psyco mode), and native instructions.
So I imagine that thats where the runtime system comes from
there is also a whole boot procedure to implement.
So, bytecode is interpreted, bytecode cached is JIT Compiled and native is native compiled. Is that right?
I didn't study it in enough detail, but I imagine so.
Now, the question which always bothered me...
Interpreter vs Virtual Machine.
What does python use?
lunch, bbiab
15:03
while not True and True:
will this run an infinite loop?
unless both values become true?
No, because not True and True is False
So the loop does not run at all
@thefourtheye Python runs on an interpreter
@thefourtheye Python is a bit of a hybrid
Half interpreter, half virtual machine
@GarethRees I am encountering an infinite loop situation here.
so I am puzzled.
I have two functions in place of True and True.
@GarethRees Which part is interpreted?
15:05
I want the loop to run infinitely unless both conditions become True.
@abhi then you want while not (func() and other_func())
gotcha.
thanks
@JonClements
@JonClements Have you got Winter is coming hat? :)
@thefourtheye nope - bored of the hats :)
@thefourtheye It doesn't divide up like that: what I mean is, it uses a mixture of both strategies
15:07
ha ha ha... But Its just for two more weeks...
@GarethRees So, what do we gain with VM? Security?
@JonClements Somebody gave you that hat :p
Who is "we" in that question?
@MartijnPieters have some "shameless pugs" :)
@GarethRees We - all who use Python :)
15:09
@thefourtheye huh?
@JonClements Oh, is that your family?
I'm not sure I understand the question. Without the "VM-like" parts of Python (e.g. the bytecode) it wouldn't run at all
@poke no idea... when I took the photo - I had to run away pretty quickly afterwards... didn't seem appropriate to ask them :)
Haha
@GarethRees The interpreter can't make the machine execute the bytecodes?
15:13
I still don't really understand what you are asking
The byte codes are executed by this bit of code in ceval.c — without this, there'd be no Python
I am trying to correct a prime number function. This function fails for multiples of prime numbers. Classic example is 121.
def testOfPrime(number):
#isprime = False
#print number
if number == 2:
isprime = True
elif number == 3:
isprime = True
elif number % 2 == 0:
isprime = False
elif number % 3 == 0:
isprime = False
else:
isprime = True
"""
#Debugging Only.
if isprime:
print isprime
else:
print number
"""
return isprime
@abhi code formatting plz.
Anyone here interested in learning Scala so that we can play battlecode?
I think I need to introduce some kind of square root logic in that function.
15:19
@abhi Uhm, that’s not something that can detect primes.
yes. I am now writing a similar function in my native language.
That’s only a isNotMultipleOf2Or3 function.
then I will translate that to python.
isprime = lambda p: p in {2, 3}
@GarethRees Hai man! :D
Long time no see.
15:21
@GarethRees Sorry. I was filling up SO survey.
@GarethRees That's neat, but something that I am finding difficulty in getting to grips with.
Our courser course did not have any information on lambda
(it's a joke!)
Ok!
@abhi What are you actually trying to do?
15:22
I am trying to clear levels on CheckIO.org
Each level has to be cleared with a python solution.
basically a snippet of coed
code
that will pass their automated tests.
Well, what is your task for this one?
This requires me to find the smallest prime number
after the user has input a number.
@GarethRees Wow... Thats the Python interpreter code? :)
so if you input 2, then the smallest prime number is 2.
if you input 18, the smallest prime number is 19.
the automated test is failing for 118, since my function thinks 121 is a prime number.
@thefourtheye That's the bit of the interpreter that executes the byte codes
15:24
So you want the next prime number after the entered number
That's the most VM-like bit of CPython
Or if the entered number is a prime, then that makes it the smallest number.
Yes.
@GarethRees So, that itself is the VM?
@abhi You should first solve the problem to find primes then. Because you didn’t manage to do that at all.
@poke yes.
Sieve of Eratosthenes
15:27
for example, yes
To the (somewhat) limited extent that CPython can be said to "have a VM", that's the most important bit
Being a dynamic scripting language, every component interweaves into each other anyway, so individual distinction is not that clear.
Yes, that's right. "Virtual machine" and "interpreter" are kind of fuzzy ideas here
For other platforms like .NET and Java this is a lot simpler :P
There's a continuum from something like the Java Virtual Machine, where nearly all of the execution of a program takes place in the VM ...
... to classic interpreters for languages like Scheme, which execute directly from a representation of the source code
Python sits somewhere in the middle
Some of the execution is via byte codes, but a lot of it is not
15:32
@poke Here's my function in my native language:

http://pastebin.com/n2zRynBz
I couldnt agree more. I always get confused. Using a separate set of instructions make them a VM?
Now to translate this to python.
As you gain experience as a Python programmer, you get a sense of when Python is executing in the byte code, and when it's not
also there are variants of python on the .NET platform.
they execute inside a VM.
You can often speed up code by translating it so that it avoids byte code where possible
For example, for element in iterable: sequence.append(element)loops in byte code.
But sequence.extend(iterable) loops in native code, so is faster
15:33
@abhi Yeah, that looks more like a prime number test. Although it’s not a sieve of eratosthenes.
@poke this is very basic code.
A for loop in C# for (int i = a; i < b; i += c) { ... } translates to this in Python:
for i in range(a, b, c):
    i
Damn I have to miss this interesting chat.... Have to run to get dinner. :( BRB
Here the range part is Interpreted and for loop is in native?
Poke's loop runs in byte code
Note that everything is still byte code first, just that some instructions are relayed to the native level.
15:38
Try the following:
import dis
dis.dis('for i in range(10): print(i)')
The output is:
  1           0 SETUP_LOOP              30 (to 33)
              3 LOAD_NAME                0 (range)
              6 LOAD_CONST               0 (10)
              9 CALL_FUNCTION            1 (1 positional, 0 keyword pair)
             12 GET_ITER
        >>   13 FOR_ITER                16 (to 32)
             16 STORE_NAME               1 (i)
             19 LOAD_NAME                2 (print)
             22 LOAD_NAME                1 (i)
             25 CALL_FUNCTION            1 (1 positional, 0 keyword pair)
You can see that there's a loop here: there's a JUMP_ABSOLUTE instruction that goes from the end of the loop back to the start
But try instead:
dis.dis('print(range(10))')
The output is:
  1           0 LOAD_NAME                0 (print)
              3 LOAD_NAME                1 (range)
              6 LOAD_CONST               0 (10)
              9 CALL_FUNCTION            1 (1 positional, 0 keyword pair)
             12 CALL_FUNCTION            1 (1 positional, 0 keyword pair)
             15 RETURN_VALUE
No loop!
Well, to be fair, it also produces a completely different output…
print(*range(10)), then
with a sep='\n' :)
Still not a fair comparison.
Who said the comparison was fair?
15:43
Well, I said it wasn’t :P
I'm trying explain the distinction I made above between "running in byte code" and "running in native code"
And as I said, everything runs in byte code. It’s just that some (most) byte code instructions are relayed into native code :P
Maybe you would prefer I used different words. But do you understand the distinction I am making?
(actually all, some are just more complex than others)
@JonClements LOL
cbg again
15:47
I do understand it, but I wasn’t having problems seeing the distinction :P
@Martijn cbg :)
cbg Martijn
So what should I have written instead?
Don’t ask me :P It was @thefourtheye who was asking about this ^^
Hmm, interesting hat placement:
15:50
@poke this is probably a syntax error.
for i in range(startno, number, startno += 2):
in python.
@abhi leave out the startno += part; just for i in range(startno, number, 2)
Gotcha. The 2 is the step part.
of the for loop.\
Thanks @Poke
range’s parameters are start, stop, and step.
You’re welcome
@Kevin Keeeevin!
Hi
15:56
How ya been man?
Ok. I have a tingling sensation around my right ring finger that comes and goes. It's most prominent when I'm washing my hands in hot water.
I suspect it's due to typing strain.
some tendon just a little too tight, you know
Thanks for sharing...
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