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01:35
I have been good. Thank you.
How about you?
 
2 hours later…
03:15
can you insert into a queue, and have it sort by a certain attribute?
@Crow have you looked at heapq... might be what you are looking for.
03:44
heapq, read the docs twice on the subway, still not quite sure about it.
 
2 hours later…
05:33
beginner Python here - wat is the usual best practice when having to define a long list of args for a class method in Python?
ie. i want to avoid def myFunc (A, B, C, D, E)
i was going to make it into a dict but wasn't sure that was normal practice
def myFunc(*args):
ah, then I assume the user would then need to explicitly name the args needed?
ie. def myFunc(*args)
then when calling it
myFunc(A=1, B=2, C=3) ?
nope, simply myFunc(1, 2, 3)
In the code, you can use args[0], args[1], args[2]... to get the arguments
To get the total number of arguments passed, you can do len(args)
ah right - thanks that helps!
 
1 hour later…
06:52
Is there a way to reverse all integers in a list provided the list contains only one digit or two digit numbers?
 
1 hour later…
08:00
Morning.
 
2 hours later…
09:47
cabbage Sunday all
cabbage
@Aशwini a name change now? :p
@JonClements Just added a couple of Hindi letters.
Less radical than your other changes for sure :)
10:29
@MartijnPieters Picked up a question for you :)
4
Q: Python: multiple assignment vs. individual assignment speed

abersaI've been looking to squeeze a little more performance out of my code; recently, while browsing this Python wiki page, I found this claim: Multiple assignment is slower than individual assignment. For example "x,y=a,b" is slower than "x=a; y=b". Curious, I tested it (on Python 2.7): abersa...

zmo
zmo
cbg!
cbg @zmo!
zmo
zmo
I don't get it… why did the vote queue went from a few hundreds yesterday to 29.9k ?
It's now the stuff that has 2 close votes on them
The ones with 3 got completed, so they put the next batch in the queue
zmo
zmo
ah! ok
I did'nt know they split the queue
11:38
@Aशwiniचhaudhary Just finished watching Aashiqui 2 yaar... I thought that it will be a romantic movie... But it is about a drunkard and how he brings everyone's life down... Sigh
And then I found this... mumbaiboss.com/2013/04/29/the-vigil-idiot-aashiqui-2 Seems perfect :D
But songs, hands down... Amazing, fantabulastic (did I invent a word :D)
@JonClements I have two questions for today for now.. 1) why are there third party mallocs, like jemalloc for example? The original is not enough? or buggy? or?
@Peter you might want more fine grain control..... you might use malloc/calloc to allocate a large chunk of memory in one go so that 1) you know it's available and 2) it's faster than a lot of little requests.... then, your custom allocation function, manages handing out bits of those chunks...
oooohhh... i c now
but basically those third party mallocs are also using the standard malloc, right?
Well, malloc might do other stuff behind the scenes that's not desirable, so other allocation functions may interface directly with the OS/framework they're running on to request memory in other ways
okay, so this is super-low level stuff I don't need to worry about atm
:)
11:47
I wouldn't worry about it at the moment
(you say super-low level or sub-low level? ;) )
Just "lower level" would suffice I guess
now the second one question is not that theoretical: 2) if I have a dynamic library compiled in my local folder (the same place as my main.c file is): libs/include/somelib.h and libs/lib/somelib.dylib how to write the proper make file to get this thing work? (in main.c the include looks like: #include "libs/include/somelib.h")
Haven't done any make files in ages... I think most IDEs will build one for you anyway
cbg @Martijn
I just hate it when an OP thinks they know better and tell you your answer is wrong, because they don't know the first thing about methods. :-(
should just delete his answer. Take his ball and go home.
Yup, downvotes still upset me.
11:49
@JonClements well, I don't use IDEs, I want to learn what is going on and then if I know it, maybe I can switch to an IDE..
I noticed you got downvoted on that random one
Yup, but that's just because I dared answer, I think.
@Peter well, like I said, I haven't had to do any manual make files in yonks... you're on your own...
I learnt from @isedev how create simple .h & .c -> .o and how to compile them together to a single binary executable
but idk how it is working with dylibs
The function equality question got two downvotes, and an OP trying to reopen the question because he found 'proof' that I was wrong.
11:50
okay, well, thanks @JonClements
@Martijn given some of the comments that were along the lines of "too lazy to look stuff up" it kind of figures it's one of those punishing any answer :)
I never could get that attitude; the inability to self-reflect and wonder if perhaps you might be wrong.
@Martijn bah... I don't have to worry about that malarky... I'm always right :) coughs
coughs some more and starts choking
one more thing @JonClements I know now how to write a Stack or a simple Linked List -- but I just wrote them for practicing, my question is: in real life applications does C programmers use these kinds of data structures? I also wrote some basic class-like structs, with constructors and destructors -- how bad is it to use OO approach in C?
11:56
Umm, is my comment on this one fair, or am I missing something?
@Peter of course those kinds of datastructures are used... They're not just theoretical you know :) Writing OO style in C is possible, but very manual as you don't have the compiler on your side... so it's best avoided
and what is a good practice -- create as general and universal stacks and linked lists as possible, or create them for specific types? I mean: if I want to create a list for a lot of different data, then I should use a struct, and then linked those structs together or just put them into this general-purpose list? I'm asking this, because in Python for example it doesn't matter what type of data you are storing in a list..
but is it C-ish to do such thing like that?
You'd have a common "header" kind of struct...
Which'd basically be a void* to an area of memory, and contain a struct/type
Then you'd store those structs in an array...
(or whatever structure you want)
and when you want to access the data, you cast the void* to the correct type and access it through the struct
okay, I think I got it..
it is very sad, that it is really hard to find these advices and good practices -- the internet is full of helloworld examples, and explaining types and pointers, loops, and basic things like that
@PeterVaro a not too bad example of emulating OO in C is the CPython source
Have at look at how PyObject works
oh my long term goal is to interface my things with python through the C API
I already read one third of the official documentation
but I want to learn and practice more before I start to do that
anyway, thanks for the quick tips @JonClements
12:10
@Martijn well, you're back to 0 for that answer, and Mr Stubborn has two downvotes...
I went up to +1 I thought.
Oh... well, it went back to 0 when I voted
Was before I started talking to Peter though
12:33
Gah!
What is it with the downvotes today!
I think that disgruntled functions OP is stalking my answers..
in which case it'll all be reverted, but still.
@Martijn I'm jealous - I don't think I've had a stalker yet... I'm obviously not that important or controversial to warrant one :)
wb @Johan
@JonClements Just anger any stubborn 'I know this better' question asker of your choosing.
gotta run
heh, he accepted my answer :-)
@Martijn rbrb :)
cbg @Jerry
cbg @JonClements
12:50
@Jerry potato?
@thefourtheye I don't know anything about this movie, but I've heard from my friends that the movie is a disaster. Yet some people watched it twice. Ouch!
:(
Does anybody here like Russell Peters?
@Aशwini They couldn't believe it was so bad that they had to watch it a second time to make sure it was indeed awful? :p
:D Good guy Russell Peters, he also knows 99.99% Indian movies are awful.
12:56
Checkout the other 5 mins video where he talks about Indian movie and porn... ;)
@JonClements Sprouts, banana
currently working on some telecom data, and finding out the stuff that were incorrectly recorded/calculated and such, so sprouts if I reply a bit late ^^;
@Jerry that's freaky... one of my clients is a telecom company... and was doing something similar last week :p
13:20
:)
that's why I'm in Madagascar right now
I'll be basically doing this for the remaining weeks and going over any issues with the telecom company
ahh okies... well, errr, enjoy? :p
13:45
wow python 3.3.5 is out
-- that was quick..
Not that quick... since 3.3.4 :)
Isn't 3.4 due next week?
@JonClements (1 month)
@JonClements idk where can we find the release date?
I only see the last RC date, nothing more..
@JonClements do you know why colorsys module doesn't have HSB is HSV or Lab support?
14:06
3.4.0 candidate 3: March 9, 2014
3.4.0 final: March 16, 2014
@thefourtheye thx
Actually, do we really have a plan? How the language is going to be in the forseeable future?
Actually it is quite new to me that we have a module like this colorsys -- I used to implement one myself, but I do it differently: I created a general Color object, which stores its value in RGB [0..1], and you have methods to get this value in different representations. I think it is way better then to provide functions, since you can easily define in which range you want to provide your colors values, eg: HSB->H [0..360] or [0..1] ?
all you have to do is to provide the min/max values when you create the Color object
or call a different method with a specific name
@JonClements I am, to the best of my ability :)
14:22
Have you ever wanted to use the identity function?
lambda x: x
why good morning friends
Sorry - was eating lunch...
(my bad - forgot to say rbrb)
I think this assignment my professor gave me is actually deceptively easy when implemented in python...
14:37
odd question, is it possible to sort the keys of an OrderedDict to match the order of an array?
@Crow easier to rebuild the odict
Hrmph okay. I am trying to translate from C to python here so bear with me hah
Just stumbled upon this. Not a bad article.
@JonClements can you give me a C homework? A bit advanced, but can be solved without 3rd party libs?
14:53
@Peter err.... ?
which part is "err...." ?
You're probably best disposed to pick an area of interest that you could work towards...
very nice Ahmad, I like it
:)
I actually do know a lot of these, this makes me feel smart. I've been getting a lot into list comprehensions lately, one day it just kind of... clicked
the only thing that annoys me about them... this statement: [x for getattr(p, x) in dir(p) if not x.startswith('__')]
14:58
@JonClements okay, I'm interested in GUI (as always) but for that I need to use GLEW and GLFW and both are dylibs atm, and I still don't know how to compile those to my main executable binary. So I'm waiting for some help, but until then I want to do something useful, just to practice and to use the design thinking in C
@Ahmad Unfortunately found nothing new there. :p
I did knew most of the things, but some where new
I'm so lost on the translation of C-style linkedlists to python lists ._.
@Aशwiniचhaudhary Same here... but thought it'd lack modesty to say so :P
15:07
bit of an ambiguous question, but is it common for people in different software engineering fields to approach problems in completely different ways with different conventions, even if it's the same problem?
@Crow Check for yourself: rosettacode.org/wiki/Rosetta_Code
But in general, not really
It might look very different depending on how extensive the standard library is or how much the language is laid out for the specific task
bah. Dict comprehensions are difficult... this should be a simple one
15:24
Well, that's all the models done and the API setup
Can't do much more now until the client agrees the final workflow/business logic stuff
@Jon Do you freelance or work at some company?
freelance (effectively)
(some is done as self-employed, other work is done by my company etc... - it's an interesting setup :p)
Sounds nice
I'd like to end up doing freelance as well
what's freelance like?
@JonClements okay, one other thing come to my mind: when I test if a returned pointer value of function is NULL or not, what is the preferred way: simply test the pointer as a bool value, like if (ptr) or: test for the specific value of NULL, like if (ptr==NULL) ?
15:40
@jon cool.
@Peter be explicit... if(ptr == NULL)
is there a side-effect if I'm implicit?
Cabbage!
@poke cbg!
heya @poke cabbage
15:41
@poke cbg!
@Peter well, null needn't be 0 - although I believe the language spec says it should be... but err...
@PeterVaro NULL is defined to be 0, so if (ptr == NULL) is the same as if (ptr == 0), which is the same as if (!ptr) (there are no booleans in C)
@poke I know that thank you, I'm asking if it is safe to use if (ptr) instead of if (ptr!=NULL)
Yeah, it is
umm.. now it 1 against 1, Jon said I need to be explicit, you said, I can be implicit on this..
/me confused
15:47
I just prefer it because it makes it clearer to me...
sunday cbg for all
== NULL is pretty much screaming that it's dealing with pointers
heya @isedev
cbg @isedev
@JonClements that is a good point
15:48
“Is the abbreviated pointer comparison if(p) to test for non-null pointers valid? What if the internal representation for null pointers is nonzero?”“It is always valid” (c-faq.com/null/ptrtest.html)
if you're going to use timeit on a class method within a class, is there any setup needed?
```Abbreviations'' such as if(p), though perfectly legal[footnote] , are considered by some to be bad style (and by others to be good style; see question 17.10).`
@Crow You probably need something like from __main__ import MyType
@JonClements I want to copy that
it is not helping..
:P
Well, either way is technically correct then, you just have to decide on a style... I sit in the ptr == NULL camp
15:52
35
Q: C/C++ Checking for NULL pointer

Bryan MarbleIn a recent code review, a contributor is trying to enforce that all NULL checks on pointers be performed in the following manner: int * some_ptr; // ... if( some_ptr == NULL ) { // handle null-pointer error } else { // proceed } instead of int * some_ptr; // ... if( some_ptr ) { // pr...

Some more opinions.
To make it even easier for you :P
Thing is, NULL might not be defined, depending on your #include's...
okay, then I change the question to this:
if (ptr) or if (ptr!=0) ?
@isedev I’m pretty sure, NULL will be defined by the compiler :P
/tmp/file.c:6:12: error: ‘NULL’ undeclared (first use in this function)
15:55
@PeterVaro if (ptr). Because if (ptr != 0) adds some int-semantics in my head.
gcc 4.7
Really? One sec..
int
main()
{
    char *p ;
    if (p==NULL)
    {
    }
}
@isedev:
> In C NULL can be defined as 0 or as ((void *)0), C99 allows for implementation defined null pointer constants. So it actually comes down to the implementation's definition of NULL and you will have to inspect it in your standard library.
It's in stddef
15:56
yes
Most of the time people import stdio.h which includes that, so don't notice its absence
Yeah, most libraries will have it… stdlib, stdio, cstring… so I’d say you probably won’t not have it :P
well, okay, thanks guys for the links and opinions; for me testing it implicitly is more obvious, I think I stick with that one (as it is already familiar from Python:):) )
still, counting on probability when compiling something is not all that great... in particular, when you may not need to include the std libraries. Including them just for NULL is overkill.
^ that is +1 reason for testing it implicitly
16:02
It’s unlikely you will ever have any code that doesn’t depend on stdlib or stdio. So you already include the library. Adding the header is zero overhead.
Like literally zero.
@poke on the compilation only those parts will be copied and compiled into the binary which are needed, right?
so if I include a huge lib, will it be optimised by the compiler?
I have plenty of libraries written that don't rely on stdio, stdlib or unistd... anyway, not really worth a long discussion. Choose the style you prefer, variety is not evil per se.
@poke :D:D
@Peter Headers are processed by the preprocessor and compiler, so you can include thousands of header files without any impact. If you need a library, you tell the linker to link it—and that links the whole library regardless of how much you use from it.
and including a header doesn't lead to extra stuff being compiled if you don't use it (assuming a well written header).
16:06
hmm that is interesting.. so it won't check what I used from the header, which can be found in the lib so it chooses the item from it..
I thought there will be some kind of optimisation for size..
hello
Unfortunately not, no. Libraries are always linked as a whole
cbg @Vader
I need some help with python, I am writing a script for the 3d app maya
@JonClements cbg
@isedev Can you give me an example of such a library? What are those doing then?
16:07
# get the index of where the numbers start/end in file name
for file in os.listdir(path_to_imgs):
    for exentsion in extensions:
        # if an image
        if file.endswith(exentsion):
            left_bound = file.find('.')
            right_bound = file.find('.', left_bound+1)
            # get the name of the file, e.g "diffuse.1001.tif" -> "diffuse"
            name_of_file = file[:left_bound]
            print left_bound
            break  # should break out of all for-loops  ###
last line, how should I break out of all for loops?
should I put it in a dummy function?
+1 for consistenly misspelling “extension” :P
or is there a proper way of this
@poke I must have misspelled it the first time, for the other ones I just used autocompltete
@poke consistency is good :p
@Vader putting it a function and doing a return is probably the simplest :)
16:10
okay a dummy function it is
You could use the for’s else too
@poke I tired that but that will only work if the break is not executed
for file in os.listdir(path_to_imgs):
    for exentsion in extensions:
        if condition:
            break
    else:
        continue
    break
@Vader You could also break twice in a row, once where the break is right now, and setting some dummy variable to true, and then on the indentation level one less, check the variable and break if true
@poke low-level system libraries, e.g. networking, or crypto stuff, maths utilities, etc, where memory management is separated out in other files.
16:11
@blueygh2 I really want to avoid setup up dummy code
@poke this continue is new to me. I will check it out
@isedev Other files or other libraries? Because if it’s just another file, then you still have the header somewhere, so there would be no harm in just importing it too.
@blueygh2 I am familiar with the techniques presented there, non of the top one feel pythonic
@poke thanks this is just what I wanted it to do. Absolutely brilliant.
Can someone double check my thinking on ... I'm sure I'm right, but umm... stackoverflow.com/questions/22284430/…
@poke perhaps you misunderstood... I didn't say including the std headers causes harm, just that I think it overkill just to get the definition of NULL. So yes, there's no harm in doing so. Then again, I don't see any harm in not doing it and using if (ptr) or if (!ptr) expressions :P
16:14
@isedev Okay, yeah, I absolutely agree with that—I’m usually in the if (ptr) group too :P
Still, I’d argue that it’s somewhat rare that you would want to check a pointer and don’t have NULL around ^^
lol
But yeah, I guess we can just stop discussing this then ;D
@JonClements I was really confused until I saw your comment that OP queried for number=5—as the question was already edited
Oh brilliant. Revenge downvoters…
@poke ta for looking... good comment
*sigh*
It does not matter how queryset is. It is Example.objects.filter(user=request.user). This queryset return two objects. First object has value mynumber = 15.0 and second object has value mynumber = 48.0. I except data with value {"mynumber": [15.0, 48.0]}user3398153 3 mins ago
I love that bit It does not matter how queryset is...
grrgrgrrgrr....
wb @Aशwini
16:24
def random ():
    return 4

a = set()
while True:
    a.add(random())
errr... browser crashed.
+1 for random function :)
Not mine though, but you probably know that.
she is good:
16:27
(blah-blah in different languages you don't understand)
@PeterVaro There’s a language called “Pizza”? :P
sure :)
No German :(
Also, the Japanese had to much R-rolling.
^^ yeah
dissapoint
And judging by the two Englishes, it really was very blah blah
16:31
@PeterVaro lol
wtf
lol
people are quite puzzled by the German language
16:32
lol
@Vader :D
Obviously that's what we say in germany ;)
@Ahmad are you German as well?
Yes
cool
I am from Berlin
16:33
Oh cool :)
<- from hamburg
I never get those…
I can scream BUTTERFLY too.
@poke who ever made that one did it wrong
@poke they are supposed to be done like this. OR this is the only way they make sense to me
just had to verify. not exact, but close.
16:35
There are others that are better too:
Denevérember <- hungarian
@poke hehe
Also a classic:
16:38
I seem to have gotten an accept for that question... but not sure if anything's solved at all... or the OP just got fed up with me
anyone familiar with really basic OS structure? (like really basic). I just can't figure out where the processes are supposed to go and what the ready queue is supposed to hold
I’d guess they noticed a terrible mistake, and to no further embarrass themselves, they just accepted it without further comment..
@poke can you help me on makefile and dylibs?
@Aशwini one of my favourites :)
16:40
@Crow Basic yes, forgot the rest :P
define "really basic OS structure"
@PeterVaro No idea about dylibs, and my makefiles always have been very basic..
So not sure if I can help :P
well, okay then
Well, right now, working on PCBs on a "simulated operating system". I make a process by instantiating a class, eg p = process.Process(pid=5) but I don't see... I suppose where it belongs in memory, ready queue, etc.
Um... my phone has decided to go into a "keep rebooting itself" cycle
16:45
@JonClements yay. which ROM?
I'll have a look in a minute, but it seems to be fixed after taking the battery out
yeah, keeping the battery out for few seconds solves is some cases, did once for me
@isedev can you hop in to Lounge C for a sec?
Android 4.3, Kernel: 3.031-2168382, Build No: JSS15J.I9300XXUGMK6 if you really wanted to know :)
@Crow which library is that? is that multiprocessing.Process?
Applied for Canada visa, I hope it's accepted. -_-
16:57
@Bibhas where are you atm?
India
do you want to move to canada?
@Vader Umm no. Going for PyCon next month.
ohk, I see

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