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09:05
So weird... sometimes the mobile app notifies me way before the main site, and other times it's about 20 minutes after the event
SO official app not supported by my cell. i'm considering an upgrade to moto g
There is an official app ?
I saw non-official apps.
For Android yep, and the iOS is in beta (or alpha)
 re2 = re.compile(r'(?:(road|apartments?|building|layout|nagar|block)?)\s+(phase\s\w+)')
this is causing problems
it returns these words followed by phase
@Sword and what do you want instead?
09:13
cbg @Peter
if these words come before "phase" , then extract phase and word after phase
45 mins ago, by Peter Varo
hvítkál! -- in today's episode of "cabbage around the world" we introduce: icelandic
@Sword are you familiar with the non-capturing parenthesis?
@Peter how many world languages are there? Do we have enough for the year? :p
yes.. quite but not a pro yet
like: r'\s+(?:phase)\s+(\w+)'
that should be the end^
09:15
india alone has more than 500 languages
@JonClements we have more than enough :)
ohhh..
and how says it is a daily show?
@Peter are you working on 5 minute YouTube mini-webisodes for later incarnations of it? :p
@Sword you can also use positive look-ahead
> (?=...)
Matches if ... matches next, but doesn’t consume any of the string. This is called a lookahead assertion. For example, Isaac (?=Asimov) will match 'Isaac ' only if it’s followed by 'Asimov'.
@JonClements 5 minutes...?! that is a very long time..
09:18
thanks..
@PeterVaro
@Sword is it working?
\s+(?=((phase)\s+(\w+))'
@Peter Well, you could do a quick sing'n'dance, and include footage of Coltrane in a cap for 4:50 seconds if you wanted :p
@Sword btw the apartments? will cause you trouble
since it means, it can be there or can't either way it will be matched
it dint work :(
09:20
@JonClements what a magnificent idea ;)
apartments? means s will come once or 0 times , right?
oh sorry, you are right, yes
@Sword yeah.. I'm not sure what Peter's saying... the s is optional
(I think Peter's thinking of (?:apartments)?)
or simply: (apartments)?
@PeterVaro @JonClements is the ?= implementation correct?
s+(?=((phase)\s+(\w+))
09:22
@Peter introduces a capture group inside a non-capturing group though
but you also want to catch the word right?
r'(?:(road|apartments?|building|layout|nagar|block)?)\s+(?=phase)\s+(\w+)'
or
nope.. if those words are present , ignore them and extract one word that occurs after phase
and phase too
I meant the word after "phase"
yes
Cabbage!
09:24
heya @Fenikso 'sup?
wb @Fenikso
@PeterVaro so the above exprr should do it,right?
@Sword can you show me a small chunk of the text you are trying to capture?
@PeterVaro Nothing special, just using one language to generate another to generate another again. And hey, this time it is not a webpage :-D.
@Fenikso sounds awesome ;)
09:25
yes sure
@Fenikso also sounds a but overhead -- but hey, who cares, it's monday, right?
;)
@Peter good practices don't apply on Mondays? Is that what you're implying? :0
actually idk that.. I lost my sense of time a long time ago.. :P
@PeterVaro Well, there is not really a better way. Or maybe is? I am using Python to generate a C code based on XLS spreadsheet, then compile it with Matlab LCC compiler. Then when I run the model apart from other computations etc. it also generates CSV file with debugging information.
stri1 = "523 , 8th cross , j p nagar 3rd phase near old" #normal case extract 3rd phase
stri2 =  "a4 202 elita promenade , jp nagar phase 7" #exception case extract phase 7
09:29
Seriously, the OP here doesn't know what he accepted: stackoverflow.com/a/22295521/100297
haha @MartijnPieters i was the 2nd person to downvote
@Martijn and the answerer even had the cheek to ask for upvotes
you can upvote me to tell other guys you got your answer...thanks — MortezaLSC 10 mins ago
@JonClements I actually like that. Going to print it with big letters. "Good practices don't apply on Mondays."
@Fenikso okay... but I get 90% of all revenue generated
@JonClements Can we settle down on 5%? :-P
09:31
Oh, sure, if you only want 5%, I'll take 95% then... thanks - very kind of you! :p
they're too lazy to check for answers on another link
@Sword so, the delimiter is the ',', right? and what exactly do you want? a list without 'phase's?
no.. just 2 words from a string
you wanna see my entire code?
its a function
nope, I don't think I that
@MartijnPieters Man, three downvotes on one page? My record.
09:33
the mission is not clear to me
:)
ohkk . so just help me with this exception
if those words come before , extract "phase" and word that follows
what do you want to be the output of stri1 and stri2 ?
stri1 -> phase old and stri2-> phase 7 ?
cbg all
stri1 = 3rd phase (i have implemented this and works)
stri2 = phase 7 (i get nagar phase with current code)
cabbage @Ffisegydd
09:35
Try calling that accepted function on the root directory of your computer..
Sit back, it'll take a while.
@Ffisegydd Cabbage!
@Ffisegydd STEWIE!!!!!
Right, afk for a while. rbrb!
@Martijn rbrb
@Sword I see the problem now
09:38
@Jon BRIIIAN!
o_O what is it?
user559633
@JonClements cbg
@Sword the problem is you have two patterns here:
catch a word-like thing before "phase" if it is not (road|apartments?|building|layout|nagar|block) and catch word-like thing after "phase"
but the explicit rules are not clear
the strings are unstructured
they do not have any proper format
I can see that :)
09:45
@PeterVaro
its about 3 million addresses
so had to come up with rules manually
that's ok, but when the rule is: pattern = r'(?:road|apartments?|building|layout|nagar|block)?\s+(\w+\s+phase\s+\w+)'
then you always end up with:
@Martijn that os.walk answer got deleted
['3rd phase near']
['nagar phase 7']
because how can we tell, if "near" is needed?
usually phases are denoted by words before them
but if you can add a rule, like: digit-like token + "phase" or "phase" + digit-like token
then it could work
like "3rd phase" and "phase 7"
09:48
@Martijn which is odd, as I thought accepted answers had some form of "protected" status on them...
but in some cases , if it is preceded by a pure integer or those words i added, it has its details in the word follo it (i.e word foll phase) @PeterVaro
that it is impossible to create an algorithm for it
some addresses have block 3 phase 4 .. now what :P
it is possible
You can have a very complex regex.
yes.. look at my code
def phase_st(str):
    re1 = re.compile(r'(?:\d{1,4}\s)\s+(phase\s\w+)') # rule 1
    re2 = re.compiler('(?:(road|apartments?|building|layout|nagar|block)?)\s+(?=phase)\s+(\w+)')# rule 2
    re3 = re.compile(r'(\w+\s+phase)\s+(?:near|behind).*')
    p = re.compile(r'(phase\s\d{1,3})|(\w+\s\w?\s?phase)')
    results = p.search(str)
    for rx in [re2, re3, re1]:
        m = rx.match(str)
        if m:
           return m
        elif results is None:
             return ''
        else:
            return results.group()
09:49
@InbarRose I guess that is the end of the regexes
just for "phase"
I mean in that case it is better to use a complex lexer
or something
Ahh, the owner of an accepted answer can't delete it, but 3 20k+ users can...
That seems weird
@PeterVaro just a regex for extracting phase and next word if those words in OR appear before it
You have much better ways of doing this.
09:51
thats it.. my regex is working fine as of now..only thats a problem.
@InbarRose like?
Give me some sample input strings.
with the word phase?
Including some that shouldn't pass.
a4 202 elita promenade , jp nagar phase 7
f block 404 , purva fountain square
# 16/10 nandi garden , phase 2 , avlahalli jp
flat no a202 , gr pinnacle , jp nagar 6th phase ,....
40 e5 fernhill gardens hsr layout phase 6 opposite bank
here you are @InbarRose
expected results:
phase 7
(blank)
phase 2
6th phase
phase 6
09:58
Right... gotta run for a bit... rbrb guys
cbg @tila
cbg @JonClements
cbg all
10:09
Okay - I did something that I think you will like....
import re

find_digit_re = re.compile(r'(\d+)')

def check_phase(s):
    words = s.split()
    if 'phase' not in words:
        return None
    phase = words.index('phase')
    if phase in [0, len(words)-1]:
        return None
    for word in [words[phase-1], words[phase+1]]:
        ms = find_digit_re.search(word)
        if not ms:
            continue
        return 'phase {}'.format(ms.group(1))

s = """a4 202 elita promenade , jp nagar phase 7
f block 404 , purva fountain square
# 16/10 nandi garden , phase 2 , avlahalli jp
>>>
phase 7
None
phase 2
phase 6
phase 6
what about 6th phase??
well, this is the best I could come up with:
import re

pattern = (r'(?P<group>road|apartments?|building|layout|nagar|block)?'
           r'\s+(?(group)(\w+\s+phase)|(phase\s+\w+))')

stri1 = "523 , 8th cross , j p nagar 3rd phase near old"
stri2 = "a4 202 elita promenade , jp nagar phase 7"

print(re.findall(pattern, stri1))
print(re.findall(pattern, stri2))

# Output:
# [('nagar', '3rd phase', '')]
# [('', '', 'phase 7')]
Do you need the "6th" isn't it better to be standard?
but I gtg now.. (btw it is using yes-pattern|no-pattern regex)
nope.. the city addresses cant be modified :(
@PeterVaro could i use re.search ??
10:11
City addresses? What?
instaed of findall?
sure you can
(I admit - I came at the end of the conversation)
but as you can see, once the result is third in the list once it is the second
the problem is @InbarRose there is almost no real pattern here
or I should say, pattern that only a human can find
even if we find a good solution, I can't guarantee it will work for all kind of forms @Sword showed is
That's why I barely use regex.
The idea is to find what phase...
so that's either "xth phase" or "phase x"
SO that's what I did.
10:13
that's what I thought
but @Sword sais it could be words not just digits
what, like "phase nine" ?
something like that
That's impossible to grab in regex, especially if you don't know if the "number" will be before or after the word.
25 mins ago, by Sword
some addresses have block 3 phase 4 .. now what :P
Whoever is writing these input strings needs to learn how to standardize.
That's what./
10:15
27 mins ago, by Sword
but in some cases , if it is preceded by a pure integer or those words i added, it has its details in the word follo it (i.e word foll phase) @PeterVaro
Screw parsing. teach the people making the input what to do.
@InbarRose that's what I said
there is no way to find an algorithm for this
regex can't work on this non-structured input.
and it has to be work on 3M addresses <- and that's also what I said, if the other addresses are the same non-structured as these are
we cannot guarantee we won't make mistakes
yes true
@InbarRose the addresses are entered manually
it wont ever be phase nine
people use short forms
10:19
but you said it will be "word foll phase"
which is == phase nine
i mean any thing that follows
hence word.. because theres nothing called as layout phase , apartment phase and so on
so the info on phase will be the word following it
i have about 3 conditions and 2 default ones.. this works
@InbarRose @PeterVaro you guys helped a lot .. May Allah bless you both
with knowledge and success
@Sword oooo knowledge AND success? :)
yeah.. nothings better than knowledge and success
success = respect in society + a good character \morality + enough money( to have 4 meals a day , a cell phone all necessary items etc )
knowledge = stackoverflow rep 99999999 , nobel peace prize for the most complex regex ;)
cbg all
@isedev cabbage
10:36
@Sword One thing you learn spending time working with user generated data is that you never ever ever trust user input. People will input phone number in the address field if they can.
user559633
what are people using nowadays for encrypting passwords?
@isedev do you have any experiences using cairo graphics with opengl?
none, I'm afraid
okay, well, it worth a shot ;)
10:48
Eclipse, please stop eating my keystrokes
@IntrepidBrit I think it's time switch to a native IDE / text editor
+eclipse is so damn ugly
@PeterVaro Already switched back to vim until Eclipse decides to behave
And I'm surprisingly productive on Eclipse. When it's not doing its best to troll me
But yes. Cabbage all!
Anything exciting going down in leafy town?
11:08
cbg all
cabbage @MartijnPieters
11:39
@JonClements You cannot self-delete accepted answers.
But community moderation can still delete it.
(as can a moderator).
That was a terrible answer.
@tristan people usually don't do it themselves. Everyone depends on frameworks to do it for them.
12:06
Hey, I have a big debate over using something like service locator or dependency injection. I don't understand why DI is not used in python. And all the arguments are talking about the wrong benefits of DI (stackoverflow.com/questions/2461702/…)
My need for DI is to have loosely coupled code (other implementations are now known by a class or module that is going to use it)
And the ability to define the specific context outside of the application logic. For example to have different behavior for different environments and modes of operations and for tests.
So in my mind I don't see any difference between allowing to use mysql, postgres or mock driver for db access.
Am I totally missing some Pythonic point here ?
12:27
@VitalyPolonetsky Did you read the accepted answer for the question you linked ? Service locators or DI are not uncommon in python, they're just so dead-easy to implement that you don't even notice them.
If you want to formalize that you can take a look at the Zope Component Architecture.
It's really not that horrible. :-)
Pyramid uses that under the hood to handle registrations.
This Programmers answer of mine uses a brief ZCA example.
12:51
Ooops
Gotta stop closing the tab
13:11
Thanks, will read! Actually, I just wanted to hear an "OK" from python community :)
13:39
Hello Fellas !
It would be great if somebody could guide me on this question:-
Are you working with Python 2 or 3?
@Ahmad
@pramod
And now?
lol
i have problem in django query
And why did you think I know django?
Sorry this makes no sense to me right now
13:53
sry
No problem
user559633
@pramod if you have a question, use a stackoverflow post. this isn't the place to ask people directly to solve your problem
user559633
@Bibhas ah, I guess you're right. e.g. this cool mediacrush site uses flask + bcrypt github.com/MediaCrush/MediaCrush/blob/master/mediacrush/…
i have send the question in stackoverflow
14:18
@pramod Assign each country an integer id and then have a two dimensional array
So location[country_id] = [ state_ids ]
1 message moved to Trash can
@pramod I am sorry - but the room policy says please do not post your questions here.
1 message moved to Trash can
@GodMan I am sorry - but the room policy says please do not post your questions here.
Really? there are no questions allowed in here?
That's news to me
We ask not to promote new questions.
Everyone that currently is interested in answering new questions is already following the appropriate tags.
There is a whole website dedicated to just exactly that - posting questions. This is a chat room, to discuss Python - the fact that your question is related to Python does not mean every question you ask on the site about Python should also be posted here... Can you imagine how annoying that would get?
14:32
Ah I see
Ordinarily, I'd argue this: posting your question in chat signals that you're highly engaged, and willing to answer follow up questions and make edits. This provides value to potential answerers, since they feel more secure that they aren't working on an abandoned question.
But that argument is defeated using evidence one page up: GodMan didn't reply to my "2.7 or 3.X?" query ;_;
Most of the time, you see people with less than 100 rep, who post a question, wait 2 minutes - get no answer - then come here and post it along with a message like "help me please I just posted a question and didn't get an answer"
If the question has been posted for more than an hour or two - that is another matter..... if the user is known or not a new user that is something else... but most of the time.... and that is why we have a policy... you are welcome to discuss a problem you are having but just coming here and posting a link to a question is not nice at all.
Unfortunately illustrated by his lack of response to me ;)
@tristan I also use bcrypt usually
Cabbage!
14:44
@poke Cabbage!
14:59
@poke Cabbage!
15:19
zillionth integer division question. Do we have a canonical target for these?
VTCed with the 'force float division' question.
15:43
@MartijnPieters Just left this comment in the other question
What is wrong with this answer? Why the downvote? — thefourtheye 10 mins ago
@thefourtheye Yeah, I know, I saw.
Really, downvotes for suggesting `not in string_literal'?
That too two downvotes :(
And yours too, don't know what exactly people expect
DSM
DSM
NMDV, (hopefully) obviously, but x not in string_literal will only work if we know that x is one character, which was never stated, although it seems a plausible enough assumption. Maybe someone's very particular?
@DSM But in the question, OP is trying to do this
Which post are we talking about?
15:46
if  fields[9] != ('A' or 'D' or 'E' or 'N' or 'R'):
The "multiple OR" question, I'm guessing
1
Q: Multiple 'or' condition in Python

katzeI have a little code issue and it works with IDLE and not with Eclipse, can I write this : if fields[9] != ('A' or 'D' or 'E' or 'N' or 'R'): instead of this : if fields[9] != 'A' and fields[9] != 'D' and fields[9] != 'E' and fields[9] != 'N' and fields[9] != 'R': Thank you.

Yeah
Closed now as a dupe of the 'x or y or z == blah' question.
@DSM fields[9] seems to imply a string is indexed, and the OP was certainly trying to test against a series of different one-character string literals.
DSM
DSM
@thefourtheye: Say fields[9] == 'AD'. Then fields[9] not in 'ADENR' is False, but fields[9] not in ("A", "D", "E", "N", "R") is True. @MartijnPieters: I actually assumed it was field #9, not character #9 of a string called fields.
And another downvote elsewhere.
DSM
DSM
[To be clear, it seems perfectly reasonable to me to assume that we know it's a one-character string. I might have mentioned it if I were writing the answer myself, but at best I'd have commented, and certainly not downvoted.]
15:52
@DSM mmmm, that is a possibility :)
@MartijnPieters 410 already., three downvotes don't matter at all, right? ;)
@thefourtheye Every downvote affects me. If someone is on a downvoting spree that also poisons the well for others.
This weekend as well; someone is going round downvoting a whole lot more than usual.
@MartijnPieters Agreed, actually I just stopped answering.
downvoters gonna downvote
Pet hate: downvoters who downvote without giving a reason
@markcial last time this happened a perma-banned user had created another bypass account.
15:56
@markcial They don't give reason, they downvote even correct answers
i was only jokin xD
if people downvote don't get mad
7 downvotes in 2 days is not the norm.
DSM
DSM
@MartijnPieters: you-know-who, d'you think?
@DSM I am certainly on the look-out, yes.
people that downvote w/o reason are unable to be constructive
and by extension people that doesnt deserve any attention
15:58
@DSM I also want to know :)
so get rid of this by ignoring them
if u get mad they win
rhurb guys...

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