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13:00
I definitely wouldn't use + for any more than six elements, at which point a + b + c + d + e + f + g becomes longer to type than "".join([a,b,c,d,e,f,g])
@Ffisegydd Yeah, that might be the case here, in fact, since his format string starts with two spaces. So he could remove those and do fresh_text = " ".join(seq)
Provided he doesn't mind the first element will no longer be preceded by two spaces
If you use format you can *unpack a single tuple as well rather than using property_, value
All the different choices!
fresh_text = u"{} {\n  ".format(self.select_string) +\
                     u"  \n".join(\
                         [u"{}:{};".format(property_and_value)\
                          for property_and_value in self.property_values])
Or we could do something completely different, and convert property_values into a dict, and use pprint it to get a nice representation without globbing together strings yourself
is it good ?
13:05
Morning*
(*greeting not available in all areas)
One should use the universal language of Salad then, shouldn't one @Kevin! :)
Yeah, but for every new word I learn, I'll forget an old one.
self.property_values is a list of lists(2 elements) with len between 3 and 20
The next word up for forgetting is "spoon", and I want to hang onto that for a while
Gabel ?
13:07
I wonder if property_values should just be a dict then... :-)
no because order matters
and dicts don 't have orders
ok, no dict then
How about... OrderedDict? :-D
I'm meddling in other peoples' program designs a lot, today
meddle meddle meddle
ordered dicts ? never heard of that .
PyCharm has an interesting feature. It helps updating all the Python packages installed on your machine
Hello
13:13
cabbage
@Aamirkhan Cabbage :) Looks like you changed your DP
OrderedDict is hidden away in the collections module
So it's not too surprising you haven't seen it before
@thefourtheye Yup
Android 4.4.2 :)
and using normal spelling as well :)
13:13
I will update it next when New version of android will release on market :)
Yup, removed Heart :D
So your DP is synced with Android releases. Hmmm
What is this version called?
hehe not synced , This Version is Call KitKat
You know Kitkat is famous chocolate product
@thefourtheye
I ate a lot of Kitkat when I was young
I also like it , Yummy
@Aamirkhan Yup I know
Awesome :)
13:20
Generally Android OS version name is based on Some Famous Sweat or some thing like that :)
You can read different OS version's name Here when you get time, it's interesting
how do I put a } or lone { with format
fresh_text = u"{} {\n  ".format(self.select_string) +\
ValueError: unmatched '{' in format
perhaps you could just use addition here
fresh_text = (my expression creating the first half of the string goes here) + "{\n "
another error
line 293, in <listcomp>
    for property_and_value in self.property_values])
IndexError: tuple index out of range
from
def refresh_input(self):
        fresh_text = u"{} {{\n  ".format(self.select_string) +\
                     u"  \n".join(\
                         [u"{}:{};".format(property_and_value)\
                          for property_and_value in self.property_values])
13:28
You don't need to \ escape after the join(
And you need to do format(*property_and_value) I think
You also don't need to \ escape `format(*property_and_value)`
you re right
@Ffisegydd Congrats on making it to 3K! :P
I noticed just now.
@Games cheers :D I've slowed down a bit now, just answering any random questions that take my fancy.
How do I know when I should put \ to continue line or not ?
@Games our "ittle bitty Stewie" has come a long way :)
13:35
@JonClements I'm so proud :)
@Ffisegydd Thats the best way. Spend more time watching pyvideos :D
@WalleCyril I basically never use them
Wow... I'm a genius... I knew I'd bought some more toothpaste today... took it out the box and put it somewhere...
Couldn't find it... figured it'd turn up at some point
I just sat back down... and guess what...
I actually don't know when they're necessary. The rule I use is, "if it crashes, with a SyntaxError, you probably need one"
Back pocket?
All over your chair?
All over the f*ing chair :(
13:38
oh!!
o_O
it happens some times
Hmm. Does toothpaste stain?
We'll find out once I change my trousers
@JonClements good thing doggies don't wear pants :P
@Walle I think generally you don't need a \ if you're inside some kind of parentheses.
Internet says, try water
13:39
yes
    a = [1, 2, 3,
         4, 5, 6]

    print(a,
          end='')

    b = {'a':1,
            'b':2}
@Kevin clean the chair with a toothbrush for good measure yeah? Make sure it get rids of that nasty leather smell that only fresh mint gel can do :)
oh... I forgot "with cooling crystals" - whatever that means
Guests will love it, I'm sure
Its a shame that python can't help you get toothpaste outta your trousers, and they say it has batteries included.
@Kevin maybe I've invented the new whoopie cushion by accident!
@Games I still find that misleading... I still have to buy batteries for the remote control...
13:42
So begins the dawn of a new age
You look tired @Kevin, why don't you take a seat.... pushes over a chair
Man, JS room is too busy. At a time, I see three messages being posted.
I asked few questions, within seconds question went up and one has to scroll to see that
And they changed the Room's name to Bananas :-)
Ugh, they stole the name I was going to propose in the RO meeting - b*tards :)
...HEATHENS!
Summon the armies. We ride at dawn.
13:45
But they shall never have ROOM 6 - muhahahahahhhaha
This guy's profile says,
Evil genius.

Always in search of minions to sacrifice their lives in world domination attempts.

Trying to take over the interwebs by infiltrating the evil russian spy agency Google.
@thefourtheye I like him already :)
He is also attempting world domination
We must haste.
kansas city shuffle my friend, kansas city shuffle :)
13:49
How to create a python datastructure to be initialized only once over the run of the entire code?
They call that the Singleton pattern
globals/singleton?
why not borg?
I think they don't call it "borg", because the pattern predates Star Trek
@Alex Just want to check - you are attempting to search for this on SO/elsewhere before asking? It'd be much nicer if you presented a few links and said you weren't certain where applicable...
yes - but the singleton pattern is not the same as the borg pettern
13:50
@Kevin Alex is right - there's a subtle difference :)
Well, yes, I am not sure what of these pattern/structure to use for my problem(s).
They are talking about world domination right now. Should I pitch in and begin the fight?
@thefourtheye patience young pup
@Alex you haven't described your problem though...
i have some data in a file
i want to read that data
You've asked a question that you know of two patterns that are appropriate... Kevin gave you a response that you then said you knew about and suggested another... So, not quite sure how we're going to work if you can't give valid info. from the start :)
13:52
and i want to process that data before it actually can be used
@JonClements Waiting for your orders, Sir. Always ready.
this is very time consuming
and is needed in different parts/mopules of the code.
@Alex how about you write it in notepad/text editor first to contemplate your thoughts
I just described it
it's not a useful description...
13:54
what do you not understand?
Singleton sounds good to me, for what's been described
If you disagree, kindly elaborate why it's not appropriate
The use of a singleton was also my thought, I just wanted to be sure that there is no other pythonic approach or even a fancy standard lib I have overseen that also could solve my problem
What supporting structure around the system is there? Are you blocking on the data being ready? Why can't the data be pre-processed?
Ok, a slightly different problem: Several different modules need to store and share data. Should this be also a Sinbgleton?
concurrently?
what is this data ?
Should it persist across python sessions?
14:02
Okay, gonna try something which is fatal for my computer.
not across python sessions
I do not know yet what data exactly. strings, integers, pickles, whatever
I could use a database, but it might be an overkill
singletons are usually dependency managers
in essence they're glorified objects, of which only one instance can exist
what is a dependency manager?
say, you need to use service x
now say service x is connected to a real physical thing, hence if more than 1 of service x exists, you'd have a problem.
yes
14:07
in essence what a singleton does is precent a second instance of service x being formed, hence giving you fewer headaches.
now what is a dependency manager?
well service x is a dependency for your application say
so the singleton that is in change of service x, is your dependency manager
ok understood
thanks
So would the use of a Singleton a good (pythonic) approach in order to 'share' data between modules? Say, module1 writes data which module2 later uses. Or is this a question of the architecture/design of the entire code?
in general, singletons are always a bad idea
they're easy enough to create, any module in python is a singleton
if you're testing its better to use meta-classes with dependency injections
but admittedly thats much harder than simply making a module
@JonClements Could you check? I might be wrong about this.
Depends on the use-case
I'd prefer to share data outside of modules
that's not what code is for
Sharing a singleton to access the data across the codebase isn't unreasonable though
but mostly - I'd call that a database
@GamesBrainiac Dude PyCharm is amazing
But still I hate it :(
14:14
@thefourtheye Why?
It is not as light as Sublime Text
@thefourtheye To be sure. But the thing is, I just start it up and never shut it down. That why, its always fast :P
Also, it looks like Java based
Is there a kind of database in the standard lib available? I do not want to use mysql for a bunch of numbers floating around my application...?
The interface and the fonts suck
14:15
@thefourtheye It is java based.
@Alex sqlite3 (relational) or shelve (key-store)
@thefourtheye If you want something like Vim, then just use IdeaVim
hmmm....
wow -- chrome is biggest memory=cpu hog if it comes to youtube (especially HD vids).. so I started to looking for a standalone YT player, and guess what, VLC is capable of doing such thing.. well done, well done :)
After spending some time with a tool like Sublime, it would take months to get settled with PyCharm :-(
14:16
@thefourtheye Well, what are you missing?
wb @TheWaller
Maybe I can help you out :P
@GamesBrainiac in PC?
@thefourtheye Yea, that you have in ST
Mainly I hate the Javaish interface... :'( Is there any better theme?
14:17
erm sure
@thefourtheye You can go to settings > appearance > and then change it to dracula
I am using Dracula only now :D
@PeterVaro I tried to play this video But it failed with an error message :-'(
@Jon I just found something in my office that may amuse you, I've taken a photo.
@thefourtheye well, I'm not a VLC developer, but I tried several vids (one is playing right now) and it worked for me
Awesome, the other video is working fine...
yes a screenshot from this screen...!!!
14:21
Have you figured out how to switch to HD?
and an interesting book on the lower end
Also @thefourtheye getting used to and using PyCharm is definitely worth it, especially for bigger projects etc.
@Ffisegydd They're working on making it much faster.
@Ffisegydd Oh, I have never worked on any Projects. Maybe thats why I hate the heavy toolbox
@thefourtheye arrite, then are you using ubuntu?
the font rendering is horrible on that for some reason
14:23
When you get to multiple files across a project with different stuff you'll appreciate it in a whole new light.
@GamesBrainiac Yes, 10 points to Gryffindor :-)
^ to me, that looks fine
@GamesBrainiac Which font is that?
@thefourtheye consolas
I loved Ubuntu Mono in Sublime. And it looks horribly ugly in PyCharm
14:27
@thefourtheye Well yea, I had the same problem
I switched to Source Code Pro
was pretty happy
Not as good as in yours but its better, but I am sure I won't be able to live with this font forever
Do they have something similar for Node.js?
Cringe moment: when you look over your flag status and see that your iPhone mangled a 'other' flag almost beyond recognition. Lucky for me Bill the Lizard can mind-read.
> This is a request for an dyer am resource (asking for a search engine API), but I cannot VtC because there is a bounty on the question. Can a moderator please remove the bounty and (optionally) close the question?
Not sure how 'an external resource' was mangled to 'an dyer am resource'..
At least the rest of it would makes sense... one would suspect you've hit the Sake early otherwise :p
"Tis a requisite for an dyer am resource (tasking four a stretch engineer apt), butt I carrot veto before their is a butty no the quirk. Can a modem plastic remake the bunty and openly close the quirk?"
Fairly sure I've seen enough questions like that though :)
14:44
@thefourtheye What do you mean?
Oh, yes, they have webstorm
zmo
zmo
cbg again
@GamesBrainiac I got it, IntelliJ's ideal :-)
But that supports Node.js only in the paid version :-(
DSM
DSM
Cabbage, all.
zmo
zmo
I think there an improvement that could be made to SO to weed out early usual questions... When answering most basic/error questions, we're always giving the same comments to have the OP make his question good enough to be answered. Maybe SO could have every user below a reputation level get through a question tree that asks all those questions?
I guess I should do a meta Q for that, though I just had the idea, writing SSCCE as a comment for the 42th time today
so I thought I'd share this
@DSM cabbage!
@zmo think it's already been suggested on Meta
I think the concensus was that if they're not going to bother reading the "how to post" and ignore the already present warnings - they're going to be the same kind of person that'll just click through dialogs/similar anyway
14:51
Yep, it's futile
@MartijnPieters But why that will not be efficient here?
Oh yeah, I got it.
nothing beats LC
@thefourtheye Leonard Cohen ?
@JonClements Is he better than List Comprehension? ;-)
Writes better lyrics and sings better... :)
zmo
zmo
@JonClements then one of the questions snhall be "do you want to invoque Cthulu and have it burn your soul eternally?" ;-)
DSM
DSM
14:53
@JonClements: I think "sings better" is debatable.. "I was born with the gift of a golden voice.."
@JonClements Nits comes close.
Cohen asked the band to tour with him, but they were just taking off in The Netherlands.
DSM
DSM
My father's a big fan, so I listened to a lot of Cohen growing up.
@zmo we all know that "Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn"
The lead singer still wonders what would have happened had they taken Cohen up on the offer.

Cthulu

Jul 7 '13 at 13:33, 10 minutes total – 23 messages, 6 users, 0 stars

Bookmarked Jul 7 '13 at 14:08 by Inbar Rose

14:55
@thefourtheye erm yea. They've got to make money somehow :P
most of their stuff is free though
Ah we don't have a good dup for this
DSM
DSM
There are almost too many to choose from..
20
Q: Python: fastest way to create a list of n lists

munchybunchSo I was wondering how to best create a list of blank lists: [[],[],[]...] Because of how Python works with lists in memory, this doesn't work: [[]]*n This does create [[],[],...] but each element is the same list: d = [[]]*n d[0].append(1) #[[1],[1],...] Something like a list comprehens...

zmo
zmo
well, if not it will become the reference for future dupes ;-)
14:59
Thanks @Ffisegydd :-)
I got your back puppy :P
zmo
zmo
@Thefourtheye, though we do have many dupes of the [[]]*42 mistake, but it looks like not in the context of the OP's question
@zmo Ya, correct.
zmo
zmo
mostly because that's the first who made the assumption that []*2 could give [[],[]] :-)
> cheers mods, touche` , but the problem is that the dupe's title is not precise enough to have search for it efficiently - i'll edit theirs
1. Amazing that he tried to write touché but couldn't do the é so did e'
2. I hope he doesn't go randomly editing old questions :(
15:04
Does anyone see an efficient way to sort a list like this?
[{'id': 1, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 2, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 3, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 4, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 5, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 6, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 7, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 8, 'parent': 4}]

[{'id': 1, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 2, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 3, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 6, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 7, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 4, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 8, 'parent': 4}
 {'id': 5, 'parent': None}]
anyone familiar with alembic + psql?
i.e. I want any item with a parent to occur right after its parent
@AnttiHaapala + sqlalchemy, i hope :P
@GamesBrainiac ofc
@GamesBrainiac but I mean this is very specific to alembic, need to issue some grants on created tables...
Then no. I just have a basic understanding
15:06
@ThiefMaster easiest would be to:
the o(n^2) solution is obvious, but i'd rather avoid that.. ;)
@AnttiHaapala have you ever used _Alignof and _Alignas ?
@ThiefMaster use defaultdict(list) to map parent to the children,
yeah, and then creating a new list - that was my first thought, too
then iterate the d[None] first, recursing into children
you can run it as a gneerator
better to just store it as a tree always in mem
DSM
DSM
15:09
If you don't have to worry about grandparents, maybe:
>>> d.sort(key=lambda x: x['id'] if x['parent'] is None else x['parent'])
>>> pprint(d)
[{'id': 1, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 2, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 3, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 6, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 7, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 4, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 8, 'parent': 4},
 {'id': 5, 'parent': None}]
@DSM I was thinking the same, but yea I think he needs grandparents
hmm the data could have grandparents but it's rather unlikely
zmo
zmo
well, if your data has parents and grand parents
stop messing around with list of dicts
DSM
DSM
If it's even a possibility, just build and walk the tree.
@ThiefMaster Why not just represent the whole thing as a trie?
15:12
Because I'll need to pass it to a WTForms select field. Just want to do some nice formatting for nested items
nodes = [
 {'id': 1, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 2, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 3, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 4, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 5, 'parent': None},
 {'id': 6, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 7, 'parent': 3},
 {'id': 8, 'parent': 4}]

from collections import defaultdict
tree = defaultdict(list)
for i in nodes:
    tree[i['parent']].append(i['id'])

def flatten(parent_id):
    for id in tree[parent_id]:
        yield {'id': id, 'parent': parent_id}
        yield from flatten(id)

import pprint
pprint.pprint(list(flatten(None)))
python 3
why hello everybody
this might be a dumb question, but can you have a query in an outside file, but bring it into a python script and modify what it's querying for easily?
@AnttiHaapala Hmm, that looks pretty good
@ThiefMaster you can get a list structre from the first, store it instead... then just use that flatten
@Crow example?
15:17
@AnttiHaapala: heh, that's pretty much what i'm doing right now - just need to do the yield-from part manually since i'm stuck with python 2
python 2 is like a cancer
there's worse cancer in this application than python2 ;)
I decided i will not get sick anymore
select
  tb.name
  tb.creation_date
from
  my_table tb
where
  tb.name = 'something to replace'
  AND tb.creation_date = 'some time'
@ThiefMaster which is?
15:18
@Crow ehm
I wanna replace those wheres but have it in a separate file
@AnttiHaapala I should repeat that to my teacher lol
@Crow well basically you don't want to do that...
@ThiefMaster Most of the time, to increase performance, I just cache.
Works for most cases.
@Crow you will use the dbapi, then you would have placehholders in there
not replacing anything
but yes, ofc it is possible to load anything from file:
@Crow if you are using a sane db driver

with open('query.txt') as f:
    query = f.read()

xyz.execute(query, dict(name='some name here', creation_date=datetime.datetime.now())
15:26
This is what I ended up using:
def _group_equipment(objects, _tree=None, _child_of=None):
    if _tree is None:
        _tree = defaultdict(list)
        for obj in objects:
            _tree[obj[1].parent_id].append(obj)

    for obj in _tree[_child_of]:
        yield obj
        for child in _group_equipment(objects, _tree, obj[1].id):
            yield child
@AnttiHaapala yes, but how does the file look when I want to do that?
I am using Oracle
I am slowly becoming a hedonist.
The first question's OP received his close votes quite graciously :-)
yup, he was very understanding about it.
Just wanted the answer, not the glory. :-)
The second one, not so much: "Now I really know what is going on. -10 to you all"
Such hostility! Unless it's a typo :-D
DSM
DSM
16:08
Almost useful for a public service announcement: be like vmrob, not like MaxPowers.
@Kevin He was downvoted 3 times, MaxPowers wasn't. Not sure why that post was downvoted like that, that was undeserved.
16:37
Wanna gain helpful flags on Programmers? Here is some spam to flag: programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/238831/…
nvm, gone.
I think that a lot of people downvote when there's a duplicate. Hmm, well, the downvote tooltip does hint at that "does not show any research effort" kind of points to duplicates.
It occurred to me that people may downvote without commenting because they fear retaliatory downvoting from the OP. I wonder if there would be any merit in allowing downvoters to post comments anonymously.
@Kevin how did you made 12k on stackoverflow ? I only have about 30
Answer a lot of questions, faster and better than anyone else also answering the questions
I have a python regular expression question, I am trying to match strings like Wikipedia:Wikipedistas_con_conocimientos_de_Colognian but not Wikipedia:Wikipedistas_con_conocimientos_de_Colombian_Sign_Language I started with following regx = re.compile(ur'(?P<locUserCat>\w+)[_])$', re.I | re.U) I dont think this is the way to go. Any thoughts? I was going to put this as a question but thought it would get reject since the question is too small so decided to ask on the chat first.
16:49
everytime I see a question which I could answer, there is already an answer !
@Null-Hypothesis dumb question: what is the actual difference between those two strings?
other than "one ends in Sign_Language and the other doesn't".
If that's all, you can just do, if my_string.endswith("Sign_language"): print "not matching"; else: print "matching"
the length is different too
@Kevin thats the only difference yes I could do that but the problem is I don't want to match strings like this "Wikipedia:Wikipedistas_con_conocimientos_de_Norfuk_/_Pitkern "
I am having difficulty detecting a pattern here. Of all the strings you don't want to match, what do they have in common?
2/3 of the time, you get upvotes for a good answer, and you often get more if there're wrong answers before yours. Though you can also see lower quality answers get more upvotes/accepted sometimes too, somehow
16:54
"they're more than 53 characters long"? "they have more than three underscores"? "Their value if played in Scrabble exceed 500 points"?
is there any way, in jinja or flask, to find out how they got to a url?
eg, they clicked this link or did this
@Kevin ok let me give you an example:
lets take following - s = User_En-5 I could match this as follows:
regX = re.compile(ur'(?P<locUserCat>\w+)[_]+(?P<lcode>\w+)[-]+(?P<level>[0-5\w])$', re.I | re.U)
but this is not the case on strings like this Wikipedia:Wikipedistas_con_nivel_básico_de_francés
what are your rules?
cbg
cbg roippi
16:57
@Jerry i think the way i see here are the common strings is all
`Wikipedia:Wikipedistas_con_nivel` or `Wikipedia:Wikipedistas_con_conocimientos_de`
that's not a rule, those are examples
the string must...?
the string must not...?

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