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00:48
HI guys, I am using csv reader and when I read: "Mon 10:00 AM-09:00 PM \nTue 10:00 AM-09:00" it escapes the newline and I get this: "Mon 10:00 AM-09:00 PM \\nTue 10:00 AM-09:00" How can I ignore this?
 
5 hours later…
06:00
cabbage
 
3 hours later…
09:06
morning
09:31
cbg all
Cbg!
I'm getting a problem with non-blocking read on Popen
import sys
from subprocess import PIPE, Popen
from threading  import Thread

try:
    from Queue import Queue, Empty
except ImportError:
    from queue import Queue, Empty  # python 3.x

ON_POSIX = 'posix' in sys.builtin_module_names

def enqueue_output(out, queue):
    for line in iter(out.readline, b''):
        queue.put(line)
    out.close()

p = Popen(['youtube-dl', '-l', '-c', 'https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYlb-7TXMxM'], stdout=PIPE, bufsize=1, close_fds=ON_POSIX)
q = Queue()
t = Thread(target=enqueue_output, args=(p.stdout, q))
09:49
cbg
I just realized that we recently overtake c++ in the amount of questions.
CBG @aIKid
wow
this is good and bad at the same time :D
That is actually expected because python allows people without much experience in programming to build stuff
So, more people are into it
Hahaha
Yeah
python are definitely easier to use
Well, they are two different worlds though
@aIKid Can you take a look at this stackoverflow.com/questions/21329324/…;
10:04
@Ufoguy Hum..
I don't handle threading often.
Wait for @Games or @thefourtheye for this.
Maybe Jon or Poke.
O
k
Ok
Sorry :)
Anyway, i've got to go
10:58
@aIKid @Ufoguy Nope... I also have never done threading :(
anyone here written a book before?
@aIKid What does he have to wait for?
@Ufoguy Why are you using both Subprocess and thread?
@Ufoguy You can use a separate thread, and just do os.system() and pass it the arguments
@thefourtheye I doubt he knows what he's doing.
@GamesBrainiac which question bro?
11:34
@thefourtheye The uf guy.
@thefourtheye lol turns out the guy is trying to download bikini pics
For some reason, I don't feel like answering any questions today :P
@GamesBrainiac I just pasted the first youtube URL that popped in my history bar!
@Ufoguy And it was about bikinis
lol, i still can't stop laughing
Unfortunately yes
11:50
BTW can you check the question again. The previous problem is solved, but I have a new problem
@GamesBrainiac
The code I have is printing whenever there is a new line.
But youtube-dl is updating the download % in the same line.
So, the % is never printed until the download is printed
Heya
@GamesBrainiac LOL
CBG @aIKid
@Ufoguy CBG again!
Ah
dinner time
rhubarb again
12:45
how are ids usually generated? Probably a dumb question
@Crowz urandom in *nix environment is good... :)
wait... it's just randomly generated? Wouldn't there be a possibility of collisions with that? (however very small)
Cabbage!
@aIKid I’m just a “maybe”? sadface
@GamesBrainiac subprocess is favored over using os.system.
@Crowz What kind of ids? id(object) ids? In CPython, they have something to do with the memory address, but that’s not implementation detail. Another possibility would be to simply have a counter of objects, and whenever you create an object, your assign it id ++lastId.
13:04
@poke I think the best example I can think of is in jsfiddle, when you save your fiddle and then it generates that little code in the url
Ah, I see. Historically, the approach for this was to just have incrementing numbers. But for many purposes, this is not really good as it requires you to (1) synchronize the process, making it slower, and (2) gives an idea of a history that’s not really relevant.
So then these kind of ids started appearing. Usually, they are just (trimmed) hashes of something random.
There is a chance that they are already used, but with a good hashing function and an acceptable length, the chance is relatively small—and if there’s a collision, you just draw a new id again.
id = getNewId()
while db.hasId(id):
    id = getNewId()
^ something like this :P
Cabbage @Jon, don’t try to hide.
@poke I wasn't trying to hide... I was just waiting for someone to notice me :p....
My benchmarks are still running Jon… :(
heya @jon
@paolo cbg :)
@poke umm.... were you actually expecting it to take anywhere near this long?
13:15
No. I was hoping it would finish around wednesday evening..
@poke still has a chance of doing so... if by Wednesday evening you meant the 29th :p
I guess I suck at estimating :P
lol
Or... you suck at writing code that completes in a reasonable time... either way - it's not looking good :)
lol
I was trying to restructure our sopython code yesterday, but I’m not really happy with how that’s usually done with Flask… :/
Ahhh okies....
13:25
So I’ll think a bit more about it, and do it completely different xD
In assembly ?
Yeah.
Or in apples.
Apples are cool... powered by potato batteries?
yeah, while sitting on lots of cabbage.
Sounds perfect - I won't bother asking how long you expect that to take :p
13:29
lol
yay guys I made Earth
whatever that means
I'm messing around with WebGL... I made a rotating Earth in space
Does it look like Google’s earth in maps?
Does anybody know of a library for USB modems (3g/2g)?
13:47
hi
I need some help.
I have a script that writes a number grid to file
like this
89 83 56
57 13 74
02 49 97
this is the code
def gen_grid_to_file(x, y, file_name):
    from random import randint
    f = open(file_name, 'w')
    f.truncate()  # erase anthign in the file
    for line in range(x):
        f.write(' '.join([str(randint(0, 99)).zfill(2) for i in range(y)])+'\n')  # generates the numbers
    f.write('\b')  # back space
    f.close
I want the output to be like the one i posted up there ^^
instead I get this
63 94 49
17 53 69
27 46 27

with one extra line of whitespace
f.write('\b') <-- why?!
@poke in the line that generates numbers I need to add '\n' so that It writes to the nextline
it will also add the '\n' for the last line though
going home, rhubarb
and writelines just writes all of it on one line
do you see my problem?
You haven’t answered my question yet.
13:58
the earth looks alright, but it needs a bump map or something
@poke I use a for loop to write each line of the file.
than at the end of each line I need to go to the next line
I do this using the '\n'
The problem is that at the last line of the file the '\n' still gets inserted, causing a blank line at the end of the file
I do not want a blank line at the end of each file
how can I get rid of it?
You did not answer my question. What do you expect \b to do that you add it to the end of the file?
I expected it to do a backspace
Well, it’s a character. That character just happens to be a control character that is often interpreted in a special way. It is still an extra character occupying an additional byte.
And regardless of that, the backspace character usually does not go back a line break.
Instead: Just don’t write the last new line.
is there a way I can just delete the last line though?
14:09
@JebediahKerman you could generate your strings (each "line" effectively) in a list and then use '\n'.join(list_of_strings) which will add a \n between each string. Then just write that to the file.
Also have a look at the with statement, makes your code all pretty :P
Also note that (I believe) if you open a file with the w argument then any previous file with the same name will be erased, meaning you shouldn't need to do f.truncate()
okay, thanks
Okay, imgur is back. @Crowz
did you make that @poke?
1 message moved to Trash can
No, that’s Google :P
ohk
hmm now my code is not writing to the file at all
def gen_grid_to_file(x, y, file_name):
    from random import randint
    lines = []
    f = open(file_name, 'w')
    for line in range(x):
        lines.append(' '.join([str(randint(0, 99)).zfill(2) for i in range(y)]))  # generates the numbers
    f.write(('\n'.join(lines)))  # join list of string with new line and write to file
    print ('\n'.join(lines))  # debug
    f.close
14:23
Perhaps it's because f.close is a no-op. If you want it to do something, remember the parentheses!
from random import randint

def gen_grid_to_file(x, y, file_name):
    with open(file_name, 'w') as f:
        str_list = [' '.join([str(randint(0, 99)).zfill(2) for i in range(y)])
                    for j in range(x)]
        str_out = '\n'.join(str_list)
        f.write(str_out)
NOW it looks like google earth
Thanks @Ffisegydd that works like I want it to. Thanks @Kevin @poke
14:41
Today I learned that I can't spell "icosahedron" on my first try.
I've been saying "isocahedron" my whole life. The shame!
What is that?
It's a platonic solid, most often found in real life as a twenty-sided die
Why 20-sided?
Well, "eíkosi" is greek for "twenty", so it wouldn't make much sense to have a different number of sides ;-)
@Ffisegydd i see that you used the variable name str_out is that a common standard?
14:47
As for "why does one of the platonic solids have 20 sides and not something else like 32?", that's a hard question. One may as well ask, "why are there four primes smaller than ten, and not something else like six?"
It's an interesting line of inquiry, really. Why do simple mathematical rules lead to a particular kind of emergent behavior, and not a different kind?
so I just saw an awesome movie
You remind me of an IRL friend of mine that likes to tell stories. He tends to engage his audience by dropping vague sentences in conversation, with the expectation that the other person will ask him to elaborate.
I'll bite: what movie did you just see?
Cat Soup
I've heard of that film.
14:56
Back in high school, my friends and I would watch AMV Hell 3, which contained a few clips of that movie.
I think I'll check it out tonight
yeah. I'm always looking for abstract or borderline meaningless movies
Ever watch Paprika? A large portion of the movie takes place in people's dreams
Pretty surreal throughout.
Rhubarb!
Today I want to make an abstract syntax tree constructor for my parser project
15:11
Welcome
Thanks
15:25
sounds really good I will check it out Kevin
so a school near me offers "affordable" student co-op housing. Apparently "affordable" is $2000/month for a student co-op
Whoaaaaaaaaaaaa
That's ridiculous.
@Crowz where (about) is that?
Boston
If you want a free book on jquery, it is available on amazon today.
@abhi Thanks! I don't know Javascript at all, but I bought it.
@JebediahKerman No not really, it just kinda described what it was (a string that you wanted to output :P)
@abhi Thanks for the heads up.
cabbage
16:45
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21337917/file-tests-in-python
Millionth dupe of "how do I check if a file exists?"
@Kevin yes, I was once gonna ask that same question, but then i just goggled it
In fact, googling "python file exists" is how I found the dupe target
Pip
Pip
17:10
cabbage
cbg @Pip
Pip
Pip
I'm being a rep whore on GameDev :D
I need 98 more rep
can anyone.... help?
I know a good doctor :)
Pip
Pip
17:18
I meant with the rep :P
thanks :D
only 48 more :D
now 43
anyhow, thanks to whoever did that!
rhubarb guys! have a nice weekend!!
rhubarb Paolo
Pip
Pip
rhubarb
@PaoloCasciello you too!
Pip
Pip
17:41
cabbage @VarunAgw
Pip
Pip
18:02
cabbage @JohanLarsson
quiet in here today
18:13
Agh, I've got analysis paralysis
There are like a dozen things I want to change in my old project
But I don't feel very comfortable implementing any of them unless I can hold the whole design in my head
That's not easy to do, though... Like putting a sleeve of Fig Newtons back in the plastic wrapping
 
2 hours later…
Pip
Pip
19:45
quiet in here still :(
@Kevin you here?
Yep, trying to unravel this problem of mine
Pip
Pip
mm
@Kevin can I have some upvotes?
I want to be able to parse any grammar expressed in BNF notation, but in order to produce the parse table for the grammar, I first need to parse the BNF grammar itself... I need a parser to parse my parser
Pip
Pip
lol
@Kevin may I ask for some upvotes on GD SE? I need 41 more rep
I would feel kind of weird upvoting someone just because they asked
Pip
Pip
19:50
alright
that's fine
I want to get to 500 so I can review
 
1 hour later…
21:16
@Pip Asking for up votes is just wrong.
You shouldn't do that.
Pip
Pip
21:36
@Ahmad I disagree
but, okay
Cabbage
Alrighty , I need someone who is experienced in python, so much that they may call themselves an expert if it was needed, for a problem I am facing. They cannot tell others about the task assigned for this code is strictly confidential. Any takers?
Pip
Pip
@JVarhol talk to @JonClements
Is he even here right now
@pip might care to elaborate on why you think so?
Pip
Pip
on why I think what @Ahmad?
21:48
what's the whole point of upvotes then?
why you think, that asking for upvotes is right
Pip
Pip
@Ahmad it is neither right, or wrong, to me. It only matters what you use the rep for
@JVarhol imgur?
@JebediahKerman It was on imgur
same pic, different link tho
ohk
Why do you ask...
ROFLMAO
21:57
Becuase I have seen it before on imgur
yea lol
lol
should the one about your mom cause a recursive depth error though?
havent seen it
ROFLMAO XD
fail
i gtg you have fun
The intresting question though is how he got tattooed
22:11
LOL XD
#That_Happend_In_My_State

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