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user3444876
04:52
CABBAGE
07:27
3671
Cbg all
jag är i Sverige!
07:42
Cbg!
 
2 hours later…
09:36
@AnttiHaapala Funny. Google search for cbg 3671 gives this chat room as the 1st result :)
I wonder how many people are searching for that? ;)
It is too early. I've had insufficient coffee to be dealing with Postgres/Django and scheme migrations.
I can't believe my eyes. Someone just posted the most inappropriate question.
@sshashank124 sorry about the downvote there. The whole try:... except:... is personal bugbear of mine. I've revered it to an upvote now anyway :)
@sshashank124 Inappropriately tagged with Python you mean? It would be all right with C#?
@Ffisegydd, No you're right. Just because the OP has a bad code habit doesn't mean I should let it pass. Thank you for your feedback
@ypercube, Hahahaha, yeah sure.
:)
09:47
room topic changed to Python: The *productive programming cabbage. Please do other members the courtesy of reading sopython.com/chatroom [python] [python-2.7] [python-2.x] [python-3.3] [python-3.4] [python-3.x]*
Hello
:< Cabbage
user559633
stackoverflow.com/questions/23756422/… what's the over/under action on this being a homework question
10:10
I'm having a little trouble getting a posted solution to work for me: stackoverflow.com/questions/307305/play-a-sound-with-python/…
user559633
...go on
It should be about running a .wav file in Windows, but seem to only ever get a dismissal beep when I pass the function the file path to the sound.
I tried passing it: 'sys.argv[1]'
Just to test
I just get an indexerror
IndexError: list index out of range
When you used sys.argv[1] what did you give as the argument on the command line?
I gave no argument on the command line.
user559633
What do you think sys.argv[1] does?
10:13
I guess it was looking for one.
I don't know what it does.
I saw "winsound.SND_FILENAME", assumed I would be passing it the sound filename.
sys.argv is a list of arguments passed on the command line, sys.argv[0] is the name of the file (IIRC) and is automatically passed.
So I need to enter the name of the file on the command line?
Yes so something like python this_is_my_code.py this_is_my_sound_file.wav
Then [0] will be "this_is_my_code.py" and [1] will be "this_is_my_sound_file.wav"
Note that it doesn't pass the file itself, just a string, so you'll need to open it, etc.
Is there a better way to do this without the command line..
Well, do you need to pass in the string as a user or can you not just save it into the code itself?
10:22
It will be the same .wav every time, so it can be saved.
Then just hard code it into the code itself.
wav_file = "this_is_my_sound_file.wav"
I did that.
Then I passed it to the function.
And I just get a generic 'ping' sound from Windows.
Well without you providing any code I don't think anyone is going to be able to help you.
And unfortunately even if you did provide code I personally probably wouldn't be able to help you as I have no idea about the sound libraries used in Python.
Sorry, not being very helpful. This is what I have: http://pastebin.com/BTEwGjdH
I just didn't think it would be too helpful considering only I have the .wav
Hmm I'll try and have a look in a bit, just a bit busy with work at the mo.
10:34
Thanks! I'll try fiddling with it in the meantime.
@Ffisegydd Fixed
Nice, what was it?
%s.wav' % sound
Appends .wav to the end of a .wav file
Oh god yeah.
Derp.
At least I suspect so
I should have noticed that one.
Yeah it does.
So '%s' % sound will return "this_is_my_sound_file.wav"
10:40
But I had already passed it the file with the extension
But '%s.wav' % sound will return "this_is_my_sound_file.wav.wav"
super wav
@Owatch and the point of using os.path is to not rely on the OS, so not use slashes (backward, forward ones, etc.)
Oh
I thought OS.path was to rely on the OS
Since otherwise you'd need to provide an absolute reference
Stop using % formatting.
Use "{}".format()
10:52
cbg
cbg :)
@InbarRose 'Stop' is a strong sentiment.
I certainly would encourage people to use str.format() and format() though.
@MartijnPieters Well, .format is much better (imho) but also % is going to be deprecated.
@InbarRose It is taking a long time to die.
So we need to help it along.
10:54
I was blasted by various Python devs that I can't call it deprecated. :-)
In all honesty, it seems very un-Pythonic to use % str formatting.
Hah I was just reading an answer that said it's depreciated stackoverflow.com/a/13452357/3005188 (and it turns out to be one of Martijn's...)
:P
perfect.
kwarg assignment with str.format() is so nice.
So much nicer than the regular method.
@Ffisegydd I think there is another one of my answers with some stronger comments on it from a proponent of the % format.
But str.format() has more features, is more flexible and makes recursive interpolation of formatting parameters easier.
11:30
Cabbage every body
I have a text file with the following text
AN—Andaman & Nicobar Islands
AP—Andhra Pradesh
AR—Arunachal Pradesh
AS—Assam
BR—Bihar
CG—Chhattisgarh
CH—Chandigarh
DD—Daman and Diu
DL—Delhi
DN—Dadra & Nagar Haveli
GA—Goa
GJ—Gujarat
HP—Himachal Pradesh
HR—Haryana
JH—Jharkhand
JK—Jammu & Kashmir
KA—Karnataka
KL—Kerala
LD—Lakshadweep
MH—Maharashtra
MP—Madhya Pradesh
ML—Meghalaya
MN—Manipur
MZ—Mizoram
NL—Nagaland
OD—Odisha
PY—Puducherry
RJ—Rajasthan
SK—Sikkim
TG—Telangana
TN—Tamil Nadu
TR—Tripura
UK—Uttarakhand
UP—UttarPradesh
WB—West Bengal
user559633
Thanks for letting us know
But when I use the following code
@tristan Stop, be courteous.
stateCodes = stateFile.read().decode("UTF-8")

print stateCodes

stateList = stateCodes.split("\n")

print stateList
user559633
:) I was joking. If he's using salad language, I'm sure he "gets it"
11:31
with open(text_file) as f:
Use io.open() and have it decode as you read.
import io

with io.open(filename, enconding='utf8') as infile:
    for line in infile:
        code, lang = line.strip().split('\u2014')
        languages[code] = lang
The second print is doing wierd things like
[u'AN\u2014Andaman & Nicobar Islands', u'AP\u2014Andhra Pradesh', u'AR\u2014Arunachal Pradesh', u'AS\u2014Assam', u'BR\u2014Bihar', u'CG\u2014Chhattisgarh', u'CH\u2014Chandigarh', u'DD\u2014Daman and Diu', u'DL\u2014Delhi', u'DN\u2014Dadra & Nagar Haveli', u'GA\u2014Goa', u'GJ\u2014Gujarat', u'HP\u2014Himachal Pradesh', u'HR\u2014Haryana', u'JH\u2014Jharkhand', u'JK\u2014Jammu & Kashmir', u'KA\u2014Karnataka', u'KL\u2014Kerala', u'LD\u2014Lakshadweep', u'MH\u2014Maharashtra', u'MP\u2014Madhya Pradesh', u'ML\u2014Meghalaya', u'MN\u2014Manipur', u'MZ\u2014Mizoram', u'NL\u2014Nagaland', u'OD\u
with open(text_file) as f:
	state_list = f.readlines()
11:32
What is wrong
@Ufoguy Why is this weird? It's a list of what you wanted.
What are the u and \us
Those are Unicode strings.
That's letting you know it's a unicode string.
You decoded from UTF-8 to unicode values.
The u prefix lets you know it is a Unicode value, not a byte string.
The \u2014 is an EM DASH character, a longer - dash.
11:33
But in a text editor it is completely different
Your text editor is not Python code.
You could use print stateList[0] for example
and Python will encode the Unicode string to your terminal encoding and display the characters.
So u'AN\u2014Andaman & Nicobar Islands' becomes AN—Andaman & Nicobar Islands in your terminal
Just like in your text editor.
But note the character there. It is longer than -, the ASCII dash.
Thanks for letting me know @MartijnPieters
I have replaced the unicode string to @ using the text editor
You'll still have Unicode strings if you decode. The sample contents you gave here use ASCII throughout otherwise.
You may want to use an actual "text" text editor, and not a word processor, to avoid having it replace regular - dashes with EM DASH. It'll probably also mess up your quote characters, and other 'niceties' that are great when writing a letter but not so great when manipulating pure text.
11:58
-1
Q: Python - calculation error?

cassowhat should print (-2 ** 2) return? According to my calcuations it should be 4, but interpeter returns -4. Is this Python's thing or my math is that terrible?

check this out
Random guess: it's interpreting it as -(2**2)
That's the answer.
Nailed it
how did he expect 4?
() acts as a mod?
because (-2)**2 == (-2 * -2) == 4
print -2 ** 2 and print (-2 ** 2) have identical behavior in 2.7, if that's what you're asking
12:01
yeah .
python 3.x wouldn't digest the former
Parentheses alter the order of operations in Python the same way they do in regular grade school arithmetic. PEMDAS and all that.
BODMAS we know it here ;)
he wanted to square the -2 ,right?
Yeah
all answers are being edited evry minute :D
I'm considering lecturing the OP on why he shouldn't put a space between print and the left paren
12:06
i guess there is 1
@Kevin why not?
If he's in 3.x, print is a function, and you're not supposed to put a space between a function name and its parentheses. If he's in 2.7, he doesn't need the parentheses at all.
@Kevin But that's the trick.
print (content) works in 2 and 3
@Kevin ah ok, yeah. I'm so used to python 2.
Yes, it works in both versions, but it's bad style in both
12:12
Yes
Actually, I'll partially redact that. PEP8 says nothing about gratuitous parentheses, so it's fine in 2.7.
How do I find the length of a string in python
??????
I think we sould add a rule to the PEP
len(my_string)
Thanks
How do I get the first 2 characters of a sring
12:17
slicing
"Whenever you can use a snytax working the same in Python 2.7+ and 3.X you should use it instead of using the exclusif one
@Ufoguy string[0:2]
Thanks !
Is there a printable cheat sheet for string methods?
I'm going to laminate it if I find it
Additionally, dir(str) will give the name of every string method
Additionally, help(str) while in an interactive prompt will describe the behavior of every string method
I have created my personal text file with Python helps
Can you upload it
Please!!!!!!!!!!!!!
12:21
it is in french
My memory is weak
but ok
OK
So I need cheat sheets
The three I just gave aren't sufficient?
But I need a PDF so I can laminate it
Never mind I don't understand french
LOL!
You can dowload it as *.txt and then open it with your favourite text viewer
That's an unusual request, to me. Are you often in a situation where you need to write Python, but have no access to a Python interpreter?
Otherwise, help is always at your fingertips
french is easy except the spelling
help is slower than opening my file since it is 2 clicks away
help is too much often, you have to scroll to find the thing you search, so I made a more compact help
That's subjective. I always have an interpreter open and my hands on the keyboard, so typing is faster than clicking for me.
12:26
you write faster than clicking ?
@Kevin It's like they have written their own help file. It's easier to use something you have written.
Yes, I can type help(str) much faster than I can open explorer from the start menu, navigate to the directory containing a text file, open the file, and scroll to the relevant page.
I guess different people are different, and different things are useful to them
But you can also pin a file to the bottom bar (windows 7,8) and open it with 2 clicks
That's what I tell myself when I see a programming tutorial on Youtube, anyway. Why watch in 15 minutes what you could read in five? But then, if it's such an inefficient way of learning, why does it have a million views?
I don t understand you question
12:35
@Kevin if it's called "Debbie does Python" - the view count could make sense :)
@WalleCyril That's fine, it's a rhetorical question anyway.
Just another way of saying "do what works for you"
How could I have understand that this was a rhetorical question ?
@JonClements I think that movie actually exists.
@JonClements like SO users with female avatars. Way more views than average.
@WalleCyril That's a hard question.
Context clues, I guess
I don't suppose "translate it into your native language, and see if it looks rhetorical" would work
12:39
c = re.compile(((?:"/")?+stripcode+"@")|^stripcode+"@")
She's settled down, done a college course and now does Python tutorials on youtube... How did that not make it out on DVD? :p
I have a terrible feeling that such a movie exists, except there's an "a" before "Python"
Is anythig wrong with my re pattern
Yes, it's not surrounded by quotes
How do I insert a variable inside a re.compile?
re.compile()
stripcode is a variable
string**'
12:44
More generally, you can insert the value of a variable into a string using str.format. Ex. x = "World"; "Hello, {}!".format(x) gives "Hello, World!"
Can you give an example
Or you could do the ugly low-tech way and just concatenate strings. print "Hello, " + x + "!"
I just gave an example. x = "World"; "Hello, {}!".format(x)
the variable goes where the curly brackets are. Not too complicated.
inside a re.compile function?
Ok. re.compile("Hello, {}!".format(x))
@Jon BRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIAN!
12:48
lol
@Ffisegydd STEWIE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Do any of you guys have xp with WSGI?
yes
and no need to ask if you can ask about asking a question :D
I can't get it working :/ :/
12:49
too little information
not wsgi related.
Wow... two of the rules ignored straight off :)
Dudes, don't get crazy
a) don't deploy in public_html
12:50
why not??
why do you want to deploy in public_html
Because I want to see it running
besides the point.
you do not need ti in public_html to run it
if you do, you are doing wrong.
Ok, say its somewhere else
b) you want to use something like virtualenv
12:52
Is the Main.wsgi written correct?
and... if you really have two different packages in these paths
if you have this "folder structure"
Antti, did you see my post?
if these tools are really separate, then you should probably use virtualenv and install all the projects separately there
yes
that is what i am talking about
My professor fixed it once, but he did it live and I forgot how he did it
you do not generally want to mess with sys.path this way.
if you need to do something with sys.path, you are doing wrong generally.
you shouldn't need to mess with sys.path
12:53
...
Would you please offer your experience in order to solve my problem?
Is there any unique user identifier other than the email? I'm trying to come up with a short id generator and can't rely on increment. Right now I'm using the last 2 bytes of the timestamp, the user email, and a random int between 1-99.
dictionary = {'@hotmail.com':'hc','@yahoo.com':'yh','a':'1','b':'2','c':'3','d':'4','e':'5','f':'6','g':'7','h':'8','i':'9','j':'a','k':'b','l':'c','m':'d','n':'e','o':'f','p':'g','q':'h','r':'i','s':'l','t':'m','u':'n','v':'o','w':'p','x':'q','y':'r','z':'s','.':'t','@':'u'}

def replace(string_to_replace):
  pattern = '|'.join(re.escape(item) for item in dictionary)
  compiled = re.compile(pattern)
  def onerepl(match_object):
    return dictionary[match_object.group()]
  return compiled.sub(onerepl, string_to_replace)
It's highly un-optimized, but there you go..
@Saphire I did :D
now, you can do the ugly stuff
and basically you need to add the
but there is an answer already
by jaime
@İnekŞaban hash the email with a salt?
Cabbage
then possibly display as base 62 or something...
12:58
email+2 bytes of timestamp + 2 random digits is nice, but what happens when more than 25600 people try to sign up with the same email address? You'll surely get a collision
And to say "no more than 25k people may use the same email", is plain discriminatory towards big families ;-)
@JonClements Will try that, but I suspect that the output will be larger :/
@Kevin Email should be unique
Ok

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