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14:03
cabbage, how do i unzip a .zip file from ubuntu terminal? i used "unzip file.zip" but got an error
i changed working directory to the folder in which my zip file is located
even tried unzip filename*.zip
It's kind of funny that people are using Django 1.7 alpha2 and opening questions when they face problems that might be bugs with the framework.
14:19
@Bibhas "I'm using the alpha / public beta" - it doesn't work... help!? :p
@Sword "got an error" is not informative. unzip file should work. What does apt-file find $(which unzip) show?
the error is zip file not found
its name is "Spell corrected datasets.zip"
:|
escape the spaces
do i require double quotes?
before spaces Spell\ corrected\ datasets.zip
either should work
14:27
worked
thanx man
@PeterVaro @Jerry cabbage
why do you space in file names? -_-
cabbage @Sword
well if i hadnt , i wouldn't have learnt this
;)
before i leave
import @Ffisegydd as stewie
stewie.ping("PING")
Sigh.
rhubarb :)
14:29
seems like you've got a fan @Ffisegydd
Closed chat again…
meh
@poke wow... I've done it once by accident - not sure I've done it twice in a couple of hours though :)
:(
Today is odd
it's a Monday... 'nuff said
anyone ever pulled data from wordpress? looking to get top popular posts from entire network...
something similar to trending in twitter
14:41
Puzzling question. The format parentClass.method(instance_of_subclass) should work...
Don’t they offer something like that?
ya just found it, fairly strange took fair bit of diggin "freshly pressed"
I think the method representation unbound method Boost.Python.function is a clue... Shouldn't that be "unbound method filtertype"? Maybe some weird decoration is going on
ooh, 3.4 is out
Woot! Python 3.4.0 (final) is released!!! http://www.python.org/download/releases/3.4.0/ Thanks core developers!!!
No installer for Ubuntu :'(
DSM
DSM
cabbage, all.
14:56
@DSM Cabbage :) Py 3.4 :)
Hurray :)
still yet to migrate to 3, on 2,7
DSM
DSM
Yeah, it's neat! Although those of us who answer a lot of Python questions should hurry to make ourselves familiar with the new stuff. Most relevant seem to be pathlib, enum, statistics, and maybe singledispatch.
@DSM I'm keen on asyncio and selectors :)
DSM
DSM
I've never needed async i/o for anything I've written..
Here's hoping every 3.3 user migrates to 3.4, or else the old "are you using 2.x or 3.x?" question will mutate into "are you using 2.x, 3.3, or 3.4?"
I guess that didn't happen for the 3.1-3.2 migration, or 3.2-3.3. Keep that trend going!
15:02
I assume that code written for 3.3 will work for 3.4? Just obviously won't take advantage of the new features?
Unlike 2.x compared to 3.x.
Yeah, but all of our clever solutions that use singledispatch won't do any good to slow-to-migrate OPs
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: looking at the What's New suggests there are a handful of cases where 3.3 behaviour won't work under 3.4, but they seem pretty rare.
I wonder if asyncio will have a way to abort an input prompt after N seconds? That feature gets asked for on SO every once in a while.
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: yeah, it's a tough call. Lots of people are working in environments where they can't simply migrate.
I think I'll migrate, all my python work is either hobby work or coding for work where I'm the only one who uses the analysis methods so it's pretty easy to upgrade.
IIRC 3.4 is now the default python version on Ubuntu though
DSM
DSM
15:11
Is that a typo? 3.4 came out yesterday.
No, I remember reading somewhere that Ubuntu will be porting with 3.4 as standard
DSM
DSM
Oh, so you mean "will be", not already is. I did an install not so long ago and I think I'd have noticed that. :^)
IIRC, development for 3.4 was quite frantic, in order to meet the Ubuntu deadline
wiki.ubuntu.com/Python "Although it is too early to know right now (there won't even be a PEP until 3.3 is released), but we expect Python 3.4 to be the current release by the time of the 14.04 LTS."
Yeah should have explained it better :P it's good that they're pushing it though.
my film double major is finally coming in use!
@JonClements You are not the only one Puppy
How do I use asyncio in a WSGI application?
@thefourtheye he probably should have kept up with the development of tulip then :)
@Ffisegydd I am afraid I am not going to upgrade. Video driver breaks the installation everytime :(
I shouldn't be as excited as I am about the pathlib module...
Should we change our DPs and show our support to Python 3.4? ;)
DSM
DSM
15:24
DPs?
@DSM display picture... ( I think )
Display Pictures :)
>>> p = Path('/etc')
>>> q = p / 'init.d' / 'reboot'
>>> q
PosixPath('/etc/init.d/reboot')
Cute, although I don't know why you'd want to do this
May be it normalizes the path?
Reminds me of how C++'s iostreams overload the left shift operator. Always struck me as a seriously weird convention.
std::cout << foo << bar << baz is not especially more expressive than printf("%d%d%d", foo,bar,baz")
15:26
What's that " doing there? :p
@Kevin true, but does mean the formatting can be deduced from type, rather than a possibly erroneous format string
Um, what "? Must be dead pixels on your screen. ;;>_>
@Kevin But << offers flexibility (by sacrificing performance)
I deny the existence of all syntactically incorrect quote marks
@Kevin okay... it must be dead pixels that are moving up my screen then... :)
@JonClements Uh oh, must be ants
DSM
DSM
15:28
@Kevin: don't get me started. Thankfully I learned saner languages first and so I'm forever immune to the C++ people saying their overcomplicated silliness makes sense in Stockholm syndrome fashion.
so... I'm a bit lost as to what the syntax for a dict comprehension is.
Anyway. My point is, it's weird to use left shift for anything other than shifting left, and it's weird to use / for anything other than division.
@Kevin well, with unicode, why not use the division character for division... I argue it's odd to use / which is obviously a forward slash and nothing to do with division!
DSM
DSM
@Crow: what about it is confusing you?
15:30
When you really get down to it, why do symbols represent concepts? What's the deal with that?
What is the meaning of meaning? What is the purpose of purpose?
@Kevin yeah... this written word thing sucks... what use is it?
@DSM well list comprehensions seem fairly straight forward because it's one value. [v for str(v) in my_list if type(v) == int] or something along those lines. But when I see dict comprehensions, it looks like it's still one value {v: for v,k in ...}. How does that work?
@Crow you're not looking at correct dict-comps...?
Maybe you're actually looking at a set comprehension, which uses curly brackets but only has one value.
>>> {x**2 for x in range(10)}
set([0, 1, 4, 81, 64, 9, 16, 49, 25, 36])
the colon you see is caused by dead pixels or ants.
DSM
DSM
@Crow: that's not a valid syntax, though. It needs to look like

{k: v for k, v in some_source_of_pairs}

For example:

>>> d = {1: 2, 3: 4}
>>> d2 = {k: v*10 for k,v in d.items()}
>>> d2
{1: 20, 3: 40}
15:35
oooh okay then that makes sense. I can, theoritically, modify the keys then, even if that's a bad idea?
There's nothing inherently bad about it. You can do, say, {k+10: v*10 for k,v in d.items()} without any problems
hey guys
can someone help me please
0
Q: facebook authorization error (fandjango)

Armance WissalI'm trying to make my first facebook tab app with django. I did some resarch and found out that fandjago is the best. So I'm using it , but when I try to require users to authorize I use the decorator facebook_authorization_required see : https://fandjango.readthedocs.org/en/latest/usage/au...

Although watch out for key collision if you do something like {abs(k): v*10 for k,v in d.items()}
for some reason {k,v: ...} looks so much more right
@ArmanceWissal nope - I've put a bounty on it for you... could you stop keep asking it here now please? :p
15:41
Thanks and I'm sorry if I'm bothering you I have to diliver the app today and I've done everything I just have an redirect url issue
Hmm, maybe it would get more visibility if you added the tag
Congrats on passing 1000 @Ffisegydd!
I'm so proud :-)
@Kevin your little boy's growing up !
15:45
This is too much responsibility, I need to go downvote something...
@JonClements Me me me me me
rep cap was reached via rep from upvotes *only* on 81 days
earned at least 200 reputation on 100 days
Yeah... I was going for the legendary badge, but then got bored of playing FGITW on all the easy questions that'd make that wasy... think i got up to 20 days or something
@JonClements Me learns JavaScript as well :)
New mission - get legendary badge from all "Great Answer" badged answers :)
@thefourtheye Where do you see that?
15:50
I'd be happy with just one Great Answer badge. 76% there...
@Kevin I'm 88% I think...
26 days… wow I’m lazy :P
days represented 613
rep cap was reached via rep from upvotes *only* on 49 days
earned at least 200 reputation on 63 days
earned 26 reputation from suggested edits
rep cap was reached via rep from upvotes *only* on 2 days
earned at least 200 reputation on 2 days
;_;
15:51
days represented 1214
rep cap was reached via rep from upvotes *only* on 26 days
earned at least 200 reputation on 35 days
earned 0 reputation from suggested edits
When I joined SO, suggested edits didn’t exist.
I think Martijn's would shame us all :)
Or Jon Skeet :P
Yeah...
There use to be a button at the bottom of that, that said "trigger re-calc"
Pretty sure Skeet hits the rep cap just by all the old answers..
and yet, he continues to contribute like crazy.
days represented 235
rep cap was reached via rep from upvotes *only* on 81 days
earned at least 200 reputation on 100 days
earned 58 reputation from suggested edits
15:54
He's remarkably good at writing posts... he deserves it all imho :)
of course
How come you've got 34.4k rep in 235 days? :)... okay, I stopped seriously going for answering everything I could in late 2012, but still...
DSM
DSM
What happens when Martijn surpasses Jon Skeet? Total protonic reversal?
@Jon Yeah, fourth will go past us soon..
@DSM That’s pretty much impossible
@poke not if we slip stuff into his bowl.... :)
15:56
Martijn said sometime before, that even if Skeet stopped doing anything, and Martijn would start full-timing on SO, the old answers would still continue to give Skeet the daily rep cap making the race take months.
@JonClements @poke Don't know. May be because, ever since I got to know SO, I stopped going home and sleeping. Or, you guys have something which I don't have... Life :D
@Jon I’m still hoping he gets as bored as we got from boring answers :P
Yup - I think Martijn aims for 10 accepts a day...
@thefourtheye ouch. lol
@JonClements You too brutus :P
15:57
@poke yeah... I think volatility got bored fairly soon after 10k, and haidro after 20k
:D
I've definitely slacked after 10k. Feels good man
@Kevin yeah, but there's no useful new toys until 20k... protect is useless at 15k
According to that graph on SE, I really went slow after 10k too..
Viewing deleted posts was my last desired superpower
15:59
And then started again with 20k
DSM
DSM
@poke: graph?
Pretty happy that I got a 23+ answer today :)
anyone good with screenflow? :|
16:01
ouch
Woot - updated the python-3.4 tag wiki :)
DSM
DSM
When I try that I get a bar chart instead. :-/
MEH – That is a straight line!
@poke Man, you know Python for 4 years :)
Anyone else want to add the other whats new bits into the tag wiki ?
16:02
@thefourtheye Longer actually
How long? :(
I should head back to SU and WA someday stackexchange.com/users/94480/bibhas?tab=reputation
@thefourtheye I think my first activity with Python dates back to ~2008/2009
@poke lol, I didn't have my own computer at that time :D
16:04
:D
Well, I’m actively programming since I was 11.
@poke 5 here :)
why does python have such amazing documentation? It's awesome
Wasn't very good admittedly but :)
@Martijn cbg!
and, no, no cv-pls (yet).
16:05
@Martijn how many repcap days have you got on your /reputation ?
@poke By 11 I was shocked to know that there are other languages apart from my mother tongue :D
(just to make us all feel really, really small)
@JonClements Everything?
@JonClements Well. I don’t count that stuff I did with BASIC on the C64…
rep cap was reached via rep from upvotes *only* on 559 days
earned at least 200 reputation on 596 days
16:06
FML.
@Martijn you had a couple of bad days then :)
That’s almost as many as Jon represented.
So, pretty much from when you bothered going all answering-ninja - you've pretty much rep-capped :)
Sorta, yeah.
are there any major benefits in moving from python 2.7.1 to python 3.4?
16:07
@Crow Yes.
All the things.
@Crow I'd say so.
There are some nice things in newer Python versions
unicode <3
like what? I mostly do web dev related tasks
oh good, it supports flask, that is a must because I luhh flask
16:11
I like using unittest.mock; for python < 3.3 that is a separate install.
@Crow sopython.com runs on Flask with Python 3.
@poke probably explains why it's AWESOME
Well.. there are other reasons too…
the common questions are incredibly helpful, I must say
I have a feeling that lots of people are downloading 3.4... the download is slooooooooooooooooooooooooow - think I'll wait a few days :)
@poke oh - did you see sopython.com/wiki ?
16:16
Is that an auto-list?
@JonClements Took me a full hour to get it
Someone needs to set up a torrent! :-D
Took me almost 5 minutes to find the correct download link.
Not me, though. My firewall will zap it to pieces
poke can I add stuff to the common questions? I can probably think of a lot of fairly helpful ones.
I don’t exactly like the new site..
@Crow Sure!
16:18
it'd be nice to include decorators in the common questions
@poke Same here... :( Had to click two or three links labeled download
@poke I've done a bit to try and make the job board work for the new site, but there doesn't seem to be any momentum on it
“Downloads” -> “Download” for release -> scroll down -> “download page” -> 64bit installer
MEH
I think I found a bug or unhandled exception of sorts in sopython actually
that’s possible.
just don’t tell me you pressed delete
@Jon job board?
16:23
@poke for the new python.org
I press the edit button, but it doesn't really do anything. I assume I don't have privileges, but it doesn't display any info as to what the problem actually is.
oh
@poke there's a whitelist for edit/delete requests
@poke except, if it's denied, I don't do anything special, just not do anything... so whether it's a bug is debatable :)
@Kevin are you watching (have watched) the True Detective ?
cabbage people!
No, although I've heard about it
16:25
@JonClements for sopython? That's why I just said it seemed like an unhandled exception. Maybe add a modal window to say "you don't have privileges"?
ALLOWED = {
        1561176, #Inbar
        1903116, #thefoutheye
        3005188, #Stewie
        2188562, #Peter
        1252759, #Jon
        216074,  #poke
        953482,  #Kevin
        100297,  #Martijn
        1578604, #Jerry
        487339, #DSM
}
well, I think you should.. it is great! I can only argue with the very end of the season, otherwise it is very good 9/10
rbrb, need some time to concentrate…
@poke I'll re-write the wiki bit at some point...
@poke rbrb then
@JonClements what is that?
16:27
@Peter Santa's Naughty List.
^ makes sense ;)
hey Jon, do you think I could send you something to add to the wiki under 'common questions'? I think including python decorators would be a great help and I don't see any info about it. Definitely threw me off first time I saw it.
It's the whitelist for SOPython's Wiki, presumably
@Crow have a word with @Ffisegydd / @Kevin - they're on top of the wiki side :)
@Crow do you have a good SO Q/A for it? If so link it and I can add it now.
16:30
I've got time, @Crow. I'll add it if I deem it worthy ;-)
(although I'm pretty strict about the entries being actual common questions. "what's a decorator?" might be a useful tutorial, but it's not actually asked much)
Something like a caching decorator, or an exception suppressing handler, or something would make a kind of good question
Did 3.4 implement the ignored context manager?
@Ffisegydd well there's the official documentation, but making a super minimal example might be a little harder. I am deriving an example from Martijin's answers to one of my questions actually :|
@PeterVaro I'll add it to my queue. Wikipedia's synopsis of the first episode sounds a bit gruesome, but if I can stomach Criminal Minds, I guess I can handle this :-)
@JonClements Puppista, you are missing an r ;)
16:33
@Ffisegydd: it is called contextlib.suppress
It did except it's called suppress, this makes me happy.
Ah thanks @J.F.Sebastian
@Kevin this show is absolutely not about the crime itself (sure, it is important, but), more like a drama about the real flesh and blood characters -- mostly about the two main stars of the series
@thefourtheye oh yeah - sorry :)
(I got the ID right, which is the important thing)
anyway, I like the rhythm/tempo of the show, the beautiful photos, the meaningful conversations and most of all the mood of the series
Yet another question about printing and receiving input in tandem. Save us, asyncio!
16:36
@JonClements Yup, I am able to edit :) Thank you :)
God darn it @Ffisegydd... I just read asyncio in Harry Potter style! Damn you!
Sufficiently advanced modules are indistinguishable from magic.
And looking at the twenty-part documentation of asyncio, I'd say it's pretty dang magic.
@Kevin ever tried reading Twisted manuals? :)
Oops. I wanted to see how to create a tag synonym. By mistake, I added one... Please help me remove that
Nope. Are they bound in human flesh? Would HP Lovecraft write a story about them?
16:39
Okay, I've downvoted it - it's on -1 - needs one more
Same
And it's gone
Awesome :) Thanks Guys :)
Gratitude for a downvote. Must be opposite day.
@JonClements Mhwhahahahahhaha. It's definitely a magic spell...
16:40
But if it's opposite day and the opposite of "opposite" is "the same", then today must be an ordinary day. Never mind then.
don't make it @Kevin goes into infinite opposites loop and melts-down day please :)
@JonClements Updated 3.4's tag wiki to include Guido's 3.4 release announcement in twitter... :)
Ever wonder why Bizarro is alive? Shouldn't he be dead because Superman is alive? Shouldn't he breathe dirt and only be able to move through solid objects?
@thefourtheye ah ha... well, at this rate, we all get a piece of the "has edited tag stuff" pie :)
@JonClements ;) My 0.02 :D
Call for the flaggers... Lot of low quality answers
0
A: Multithreading in Uniprocessor

Satyapriya KrishnaMulti threading is useful in uniprocessors because a process can be run simultaneously on I/O devices and CPU with the help of multiple threads.

16:47
Umm, might get sopython.com to download the python stuff, then get it off that later
@thefourtheye usually that means the question needs to be closed.
VtCed as too broad.
Wow that really is a slow download...
I voted with Questions about general computing hardware and software are off-topic for Stack Overflow unless they directly involve tools used primarily for programming. You may be able to get help on Super User.
Anyone know the correct syntax for wget to get files from python.org/downloads/release/python-340 or do I need to resort to reading the man pages :)
Not I
16:52
@JonClements wget -r https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-340/
It recreates the directory structure
That recurses... I just want the files
Ah huh, easier to get this lot from here: http://legacy.python.org/ftp//python/3.4.0/
people complaining about python 3.4 not downloading? mine downloaded in about 2 minutes
Okay, people. Time to leave. rhurb ;)
@thefourtheye rbrb!
@Crow really? Do you have scp?
Mine just finished downloading
After ~10 minutes
17:05
@Ffisegydd okay, I take it you have scp
I have WinSCP installed
no just live right near a large software development community, downloaded it directly from python site
@Ffisegydd can you upload it to [email protected] password: temp123 ?
Ah. Well I downloaded the Windows version :<
So you can have that if you want? :P
Sure - I've got the tgz downloading via carrier pigeon
17:08
Ok copying across now.
Man I'm annoyed by this OP:
work`s but i done it differently, where input was changed to binNum = str(input('Input your number: \n')) and if statement to if int(binNum[count]) == 1:Limannielkou 4 mins ago
If you already had a solution, why make a post?
@Jon ok it's copied now.
I guess the right way to get an accept is to use psychic powers to determine what the OP already used to solve his problem
Oops, he accepted it and now I'm a jackass for complaining.
Oh well vOv
@Ffisegydd ty!
Regarding this question, isn't this what pipes are for?
Shouldn't he do /../geos.py $variable | echo or something?
17:19
Does... http://sopython.com/static/python-3.4.0.msi work for people ?
@Jon yeah it does
@JonClements It gave me the "save file" prompt, so I guess so?
Cool, and hopefully it'll be quicker
Cabbage
@ddelemeny cabbage! potato?
17:20
cbg
@bohrax cbg right back at ya'
@JonClements rotten bananas with almonds, counter-potato ?
hrm. Is there an easy way to do a check if a datetime.datetime is within the last 6 months?
trying to work out what almonds are and how rotten awesome make sense but otherwise, bananas - melon :)
@Crow you can perform calculations with datetimes and timedeltas
17:23
could be awesome if it wasn't for that cough
@bohrax wouldn't that be fairly complicated, if you were to be exact?
are we talking DST and so on?
then it may be complicated
url(r'^api/AttrMyModelA/(?P<myModelAID>\d+)/?$', SOMETHING HERE. NOT SURE WHAT)
lol
or do you mean that months can have different number of days?
and leap years and seconds...
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta
>>> dt = datetime(2013, 11, 12)
>>> dt > (dt.now() - relativedelta(months=6))
True
>>> dt = datetime(2013, 1, 1)
>>> dt > (dt.now() - relativedelta(months=6))
False
17:28
relative delta! That's what I want, thank you Jon
... or listen to @JonClements
    Hi guys, i have a quick question:How can i do the following more generic. For example, there should be a variable to get tuple of n element. data = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
for i,k in zip(data[0::2], data[1::2]):
    print str(i), '+', str(k), '=', str(i+k)

for i, k, j in zip(data[0::3], data[1::3], data[2::3]):
    print str(i), '+', str(k), '+', str(j), '=', str(i+k+j)
So instead of writing different for loops for each case, it should be a function with a variable
Splitting a list into even chunks would be a good starting point
Although the most common implementation allows partial chunks, so chunk(data, 3) would give you [(1,2,3), (4,5,6), (7,8,9), (10,)]
Not that it would be too hard to remove that last bit after the fact. if len(data[-1]) != chunkSize: data.pop()
17:37
from itertools import izip_longest

def f(sequence, n):
    grouped = izip_longest(*[iter(sequence)] * n, fillvalue=0)
    for group in grouped:
        print '{} {}'.format(' + '.join(map(str, group)), sum(group))

f(range(1, 11))

1 + 2 + 3 6
4 + 5 + 6 15
7 + 8 + 9 24
10 + 0 + 0 10
DSM
DSM
Those would group contiguously. Isn't the OP looking to skip?
Oh, wait.
Never mind.
Hmmm, style question :
I want to keep the stack trace intact, should i not catch the exception, or raise a RPCServerError with the 3 param syntax ?
Not catching makes me use the raw exc as a param to the error_response handler, which I want decorable, but catching makes me import sys, for the sake of catching
@JonClements, thanks!
Both solutions work, I just can't figure which one would be the most elegant
I would lean towards "not catching", personally
DSM
DSM
@JonClements: I kept reading that as "j-oncle" and kept wondering whose uncle you were.
Same :-)
Some people pronounce it jon col
others jon clee
sounds like an ailment
17:52
another thing I need to learn to into... regular expression
Our youngest, Sharon, has got the joncles, poor dear :-(
@Kevin I think that's probably how most people view me I'm afraid :(
Doctor says an oatmeal bath will clear it right up
heya @Sergio
@JonClements I'd leave a supportive comment, but I'm completely uninformed and have nothing I can add.
At least on SO, I can dumbly upvote things that look good that I don't understand :-)
17:55
You belittle your contributions with using "dumbly" - I don't believe that for a minute!
:-)
@Kevin i have a pref for not catching too, thanks for answering :)

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