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00:03
@Zero do you know who this guy is?
Yes. Yes I do.
Interesting that the profile's three days old ... typically they get deleted the same time as the "questions".
is he the same guy as Python Newbie?
Name rings a bell ... it's that troll, anyway.
Been back on the scene the past few days.
ah, ok
00:24
Hey there
@Volatility what did he ask now?
well, there was this yesterday
> unfortunately due to racism in US, Sümer Kolçak never made it far in life.
LOL
who's that guy
how did you even find that profile
it has no activity
Zero cv-pls'ed the question i just linked
that is a better title than he usually comes up with
00:37
"ooowchie walla walla oowchie bang bang" :D
 
5 hours later…
05:09
cabbage
05:23
cbg
 
2 hours later…
07:22
Cbg all
cbg all
cabbage
cbg all
Cbg! :)
cbg!
07:51
What extra does django have when compared to flask other than models or integrated database management?
 
1 hour later…
09:29
Good Afternoon
goodafternoon!
09:50
cbg all
@Jon BRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIAN!
@Ffisegydd STEWIE!!!!!!!!
What's going on with sopython? Does the old server go down tomorrow/today?
@Ffisegydd today if I can - but don't really have time to look at it again just this moment
09:58
I understand puppy. I can still access "temp.sopython.com" via ssh using the IP address in the Linode CP right? (Just checked and yes I can)
Hello folks
10:21
My university file server is beyond yamming useless.
It's running RHEL -10 or something.
Supports Python 2.3
Has no git.
Actually no it's SunOS
cbg all
help me understand functions with *args
<rings bell on front desk>
the service around here has really gone downhill...
10:37
Pipe down.
In [3]: def func(a, b, c):
   ...:     return a + b + c
   ...:

In [4]: def func2(*args):
   ...:     return sum(args)
   ...:

In [5]: a = [1, 2, 3]

In [6]: print(func(*a))
6

In [7]: print(func2(1, 2, 3, 4))
10
TIL a new word: 'yamming'
@ElendilTheTall well I was just typing an "okay, what are you having trouble with?" response, but if you're going to be like that ...
@ZeroPiraeus haha, I apologise unreservedly
cbg @Martijn
10:38
I have no patience
cbg @Martijn
cbg @Martijn
I'm doing the following task on Check iO
cbg Martin, all :-)
> You are given an array of numbers (floats). You should find the difference between the maximum and minimum element. Your function should be able to handle an undefined amount of arguments. For an empty argument list, the function should return 0.
10:38
@Zero sudden image of you as Basil Fawlty :)
Don't mention the war.
Oh hell yes :-)
I have never come across *args before
281
Q: What does ** (double star) and * (star) do for Python parameters?

ToddIn the following method calls, what does the * and ** do for param2? def foo(param1, *param2): def bar(param1, **param2):

Google's top result is a good SO question on it.
Ah, there we go :-)
10:40
I tried this, but errors ensued:
@Zero is the majority of Chile drunk right about now?
Drowning their sorrows.
333
Q: *args and **kwargs?

MacPythonSo I have difficulty with the concept of *args and **kwargs. So far I have learned that: *args = list of arguments -as positional arguments **kwargs = dictionary - whose keys become separate keyword arguments and the values become values of these arguments. ?? To be honest I don't understan...

def checkio(*args):
    array = list(enumerate(args))
    if array:
        first = array[0]
        last = array[len(array)-1]
        return last-first
    else:
        return 0
Um ... it's 6:40 on a Monday morning, so ... probably not?
user559633
that statement was more amusing unqualified @Ffisegydd
user559633
10:41
@ZeroPiraeus let the man answer the question (heh it was addressed to you, that makes the next joke even weirder)
> TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for -: 'tuple' and 'tuple'
user559633
it's 640 for me too and that ain't stopping me
Oh, I see. Actually it was very quiet after the match.
You can't subtract tuples.
@ElendilTheTall You are using enumerate() so array is a sequence of tuples.
you cannot subtract the first and last elements there.
10:41
ah ha
Remove the enumerate() call altogether, you don't need it.
But your *args is working fine
Can i simply use list(*args)?
Your *args is working fine, it'll be a tuple, which is good enough here, so no list() needed.
if args: return args[-1] - args[0]
You don't need to do len(args) - 1, indexing support negative indexes which mean exactly that, counting from the end.
You're making the assumption that the maximum is the last element and the minimum is the first element - I'd be wary of that
10:43
@JonClements that's true
I suppose I should sort() it first
If args is sorted, that is fine.
use args = sorted(args) then. Or use a loop over args to find the min and max in a O(n) loop instead of a O(nlogn) sort.
i'll throw in a curve ball here and suggest using min and max :D
heya @Vol :)
@Volatility: right, and make it O(2n) instead of O(n); double the constant cost.
cbg guys :)
10:47
def checkio(*args):
    res, min, max = 0, float('inf'), float('-inf')
    for i in args:
        if i < min:
            min = i
            res = max - min
        if i > max:
            max = i
            res = max - min
    return res
def checkio(*args):
    args = sorted(args)
    if args:
        return args[-1] - args[0]
    else:
        return 0
this worked ^
Bail out early so as to save yourself a call to sorted().
def checkio(*args):
    if not args:
        return 0
    args = sorted(args)
    return args[-1] - args[0]
ooo, smooth
my brain is not wired to think like that
Could even do if len(args) <= 1
@Jon or even if not args[1:]
10:54
@Volatility but why create a slice?
is there some magic Python function that multiplies the contents of a list together?
ie [1,2,3,4,5] = 120
reduce(operator.mul, iterable)
You'll need to import operator
and you'll have to from functools import reduce in py3
10:57
TEAM WORK!
high five guys!
user559633
you should shell out to ruby for this
hmmm
i'm not sure if Check iO allows imports
That write your own loop - it's not difficult :)
ummm - who voted to close that one as a dupe of stackoverflow.com/questions/60848/… ?
@JonClements that was my original plan - but then I remembered this is Python and there's usually some automagic built in
@JonClements Shouldn't I have?
11:19
@Jon sorry I missed your message was asleep. Might be up for a game tonight depending on when you're free.
@Martijn well, it's useful... but I reckon the other dupe is the better one
@Ffisegydd ooo, a game?
@Ffisegydd no worries
Feel free to close that one a dupe of the newer post with the OrderedDict answer.
11:20
@Martijn I'm happy to leave it... don't want that post coming up as a closehammer war :)
No guts, no glory!
what is the difference between a list and a set?
@ElendilTheTall what does the documentation tell you the difference is?
the explanation in the documentation conveys nothing to my mind
Which part(s)?
11:25
wait
ok, is the only difference that a set has no duplicate entries?
That's one difference, yes
I swear, some documentation writers write like Victorian orators
There's a couple of other differences...
"How many commas and jargon-words requiring another tab to be opened in order to gain an explanation of said jargon word can we, as documentation writers, shoehorn in to each sentence, such that, in doing so, said sentence becomes impenetrable?"
A set object is an unordered collection of distinct hashable objects..
The only 'strange' word there is hashable.
Which is linked to the glossary.
11:29
@ElendilTheTall I'm being deliberately obtuse because being able to read documentation and then asking for specific information you find unclear is a skill you're going to have to learn :)
yes, which says something like "a hashable object is something that can be hashed", I'm sure
Why don't you read it and find out then?
The glossary says:
> Hashability makes an object usable as a dictionary key and a set member, because these data structures use the hash value internally.
Which is all you need to know for now anyway.
It is the unordered and distinct keywords that distinguish how a set is different from a list.
Before Python had sets, we used dict with all values set to None.
Sets are basically dictionaries with the values removed.
Because keys in a dictionary are also unique, and unordered.
(except they're non-indexable because it makes no sense for them to be)
hmm
so how does one reference the contents of a set?
11:35
What do you mean? :)
You usually test for membership
if something in setobject:
or do intersections or other set operations, or loop over the contents.
well, this is the task I am working on
> In this task, you are given a set of words in lower case. Check whether there is a pair of words, such that one word is the end of another (a suffix of another). For example: {"hi", "hello", "lo"} -- "lo" is the end of "hello", so the result is True.
The naive way is to use a double loop:
ME = naive
for word1 in yourset:
    for word2 in yourset:
        if word1.endswith(word2):
            return True
return False
11:37
Did you just stutter your return statement @Martijn :)
I hate having to indent every. single. line. when typing code into chat.
It fazes me.
I don't understand how that works
Smart indentation userscript would sure be nice
I probably need more caffeine
yes, caffeine
@Martijn "hi".endswith("hi") == True
11:40
^ that's what I just thought, too :)
also, checkIO doesn't like it
you'd have to do if word1 != word2 and word1.endswith(word2) to fix that
or, to prevent having to do the check multiple times, you could use set.difference
for word1 in yourset:
    for word2 in yourset - {word1}:
        if word1.endswith(word2):
            return True
return False
Do you think it's a problem if I use Bjoern -> github.com/jonashaag/bjoern without Nginx?
@Volatility Good, make Elendil pay attention and not just copying code from the internet then! :-P
huh?
oh
11:46
sorry, your gravatars are of similar colour. I had you two confused for a sec.
Like DoS/DDoS attack mitigation, load balancing..? As far as load balancing goes Bjoern is able to offload to multiple cores.. and Dos/DDoS attack mitigation can be done with DoS-Deflate and other methods not requiring Nginx.. but for the rest is it a problem using it without Nginx?
Yeah guys - use your "real profile" pictures just like everyone else does doesn't
ME DO
@Ian sorry... that made me chuckle - had an image of you hitting your desk going... "ME TELL DOG - ME DO! thumps chest" :p
11:49
:D
Doggies can't chuckle
I'm a special dog
Oh, oh
I get this awesome benchmark with just Bjoern and no Nginx:
Benchmarking 127.0.0.1 (be patient)
Completed 1000 requests
Completed 2000 requests
Completed 3000 requests
Completed 4000 requests
Completed 5000 requests
Completed 6000 requests
Completed 7000 requests
Completed 8000 requests
Completed 9000 requests
Completed 10000 requests
Finished 10000 requests


Server Software:
Server Hostname:        127.0.0.1
Server Port:            8000

Document Path:          /
Document Length:        148 bytes

Concurrency Level:      100
Time taken for tests:   0.185 seconds
53k requests per second. whereas the same behind Nginx gives 15kr/sec
@MartijnPieters that thing I said about people being rude on SO to newbies, I semi-retract. I spent yesterday just trying to sort out some questions and found almost every new question was a dupe / mistake / homework...
Spend long enough on SO, and everyone becomes a close vote / downvote automaton! :-)
user559633
11:52
@abdellahmansur it's possible that you don't have them tuned correctly. and based on your "benchmark" you're hitting a static page that basically says "hello world"
@Ian ahhh.... on the verge of bitterness I see... wait until you fall into the pit completely :)
Yep!
@JonClements I'm teetering on the edge
Like this question "Use just one class instead of two" *facepalm*
user559633
it's possible to just get off the ride and just not care
(That's CSS btw, no Python)
user559633
11:54
i hate XKCD, but this is apropos imgs.xkcd.com/comics/duty_calls.png
cbg for all
@tristan not really..
look..
import bjoern,redis

r = redis.StrictRedis(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0)

val = r.get('test:7')

def hello_world(environ, start_response):
    status = '200 OK'
    res = val
    response_headers = [
        ('Content-type','text/plain'),
        ('Content-Length',str(len(res)))]
    start_response(status, response_headers)
    return [res]

bjoern.run(hello_world, '127.0.0.1', 8000)
@Peter done.
it fetches a set from Redis ;) and my system is heavily tuned
@Ffisegydd takk!
11:55
@IanClark What do you make of stackoverflow.com/questions/24489487/… for example? I just don't know where to begin with that one..
@MartijnPieters wow.
wait..I think I got the issue
user559633
@abdellahmansur still a hello world :) unless that's the content that you'll actually be serving, then you're just saying "web scale"
@MartijnPieters And the proposed edit to match! incredible.
@tristan Don't let the door hit you on the way out you XKCD-HATING MONSTER!
user559633
11:57
@Ffisegydd lol like i go outside
3
@MartijnPieters oh, you might have missed it. It was appending "Thank you" to the end of the question
@tristan It is a compressed pseudo-homepage that should then be uncompressed client-side.. so yeah, akin to a "hello world" and most likely the thing to be served on production :p
@IanClark No, clashing edits.
@MartijnPieters?
ah, no.
It replaced Greets with Thank you.
Wow.
I've given some friendly feedback to the editor, the rest of the edit was helpful enough.
user559633
12:01
@abdellahmansur if you're seriously pushing things through a method called "hello_world" and you're arguing that this is a real-world example, i don't even know what to say. no css/imgs/static assets, no showing of how it deals with client connections from a myriad of networks, no SSL
@IanClark In any case, the reviewer did the right thing and removed the greeting as an Improve action.
user559633
What i'm taking away here is that I should drop a "Greetz 2" into any and all future questions for extra attention
@Martijn a reviewer did something more than just robo-approve? The end of days is nigh!
@tristan this one is the homepage which is one of the few pages not requiring logic, so being compressable server side and uncompressed client side, augmenting the theoretical throughput and reducing the real latency. css is first-time loaded from Redis and images from disk.
12:12
@Martijn were I mod, I'd be teaming up with minitech re: reviewers :)
my philosophy is to keep-it-simple.. not to have 20 databases and 1000 servers to address a goal.. also SSL is used where needed
Wow that menu function is going to go boom at some point
user559633
@abdellahmansur you've already convinced yourself, so there's no point in me responding. good luck with this setup.
@tristan thanks anyway :) I convinced myself than Nginx is not really needed as you saw
@JonClements Or use the bug S.L. Barth just ran into: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/262000/…
12:18
Martijn: that one's also confusingly tagged :/
@IanClark: another one I just vote to close without spending time figuring out what it is about: stackoverflow.com/questions/24489980/…
@Wooble Retag?
I guess it's encouraging that most people getting that error seem to be attempting to use Python 3, badly.
9
Q: Python, name not defined

jimdef main() name = input ("Please enter your name") print ("your name is", name) In this program,(written in python IDLE) when I run it, and enter my name I get this error message. Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Users\********\Documents\PYTHON\hello world.py", line 66...

9 upvotes
and no Python 3 tag.
I just don't like Ignacio's answers; too brief, slightly condescending.
user559633
i love SO. i'm going to start making lazy questions to up my rep
12:20
@frostnational sure, once we have a good target.
Actually, you know what? The question today is using print() syntax. Maybe it is an exact duplicate. :)
user559633
Python, ImportError: No module named cbg, help.
@tristan If pip install cbg doesn't help, this chatroom is failing horribly.
@Wooble cbg
pypi.python.org/pypi/cbg is 404. I'd correct that oversight myself, but I don't actually speak saladtalk.
12:24
who's going around starring everything?
1
Q: Basic Hello World in Python isn't working

Sergio TapiaI'm completely lost as to why this isn't working. Should work precisely, right? UserName = input("Please enter your name: ") print ("Hello Mr. " + UserName) raw_input("<Press Enter to quit.>") I get this exception: Traceback (most recent call last): File "Test1.py", line 1, in U...

probably the oldest one
:blows dust off:
@frostnational I like that the OP knows about raw_input because he used it on line 3. :/
Also, the comment asking if they're using Python 3 that makes no sense :)
12:27
But seriously, wtf. I don't even see new people in here. Is it a cat walking on someone's keyboard?
Cat, can you read? Star me twice if you can, once if you can't.
Starred twice.
@frostnational Not by a long shot.
@frostnational: stackoverflow.com/questions/2612948/… is the oldest I could find.
erm,
not that one.
Yours is indeed older
question number in the 2-millions? I'm surprised it wasn't asked 4 times the week SO opened :)
but I found '09 posts I thought.
12:33
well i'm off to bed
rhubarb guys
night @Vol
12:46
Gotta love Mondays :)
@JonClements that's a disgusting lie
you Monday types make me sick! ;)
Ahhh good - the websocket logs still show who was doing the starring
I wonder if I can reimplement this entire awful Drupal timesheet system we're supposed to roll out tomorrow in Python 2.3 code by the end of the day, and whether this would be more or less work than tracking down the remaining bugs in the awful spaghetti codebase.
Let's hope that's over
@Wooble wow... I thought had a few awful projects :(
you trumped me there, good job
Never again will I fall for the trap of "let's save time by using this open source thing that looks like it does 95% of what we want".
It's fun when it turns out that original developers couldn't possibly have been using it on production because it doesn't actually work. :)
12:51
Is there a package manager on windows? I mean just as homebrew or macports for Macintosh, which is separated, not included as apt-get in Linux?
I mean ofc there has to be one, but will you recommend one?
Vote to close, vote down, flag it for attention.
Don't feed the troll.
@MartijnPieters done.
Voted to delete, one more.
Gone.
Go team Python room!
That was fast.
my offensive flag on his last account was declined :(
Older post, just went under the radar.
Ah, bluefeet is on it.
Account is history.
good ol' bluefeet :)
stackoverflow.com/users/3785429/… is still open, but the 5 posts that were on it are gone.
From troll post to deleted account in under 4 minutes.
12:55
I've cleaned the dupe up, upvoted some answers, flagged one. I believe it's ready for sopython.com
@Wooble The modus operandi is to abandon accounts when cleaned up.
@frostnational Thanks.
I closed the post as a dupe of that one.
Saw that :)
@Wooble There are more such accounts: google.co.uk/…
This one is even suspended until 2042. That worked (not).
huh, there are apparently 19 legitimate(-ish) questions tagged python + mod-rewrite. Surprised.
Well at least he's polite :)
Tango down
ψβγ
cbg
цбг :)
13:17
I am doing something right!
I don't understand why people bother downvoting. Just flag as offensive and move on. It's not like he's losing rep.
Is he foaming at the mouth yet?
@Wooble Flagging carries an auto-downvote.
thought that was only spam flags. :/
@Wooble gets hidden from the front page quicker, too
it works like that, doesn't it?
13:19
Now he's collaborating with Indians. the plot thickens.
This "posting a few questions" DDOS must really be concerning stachexchange employees. If he manages to post 3 in a minute clearly the whole site will come down.
Is he posting from the same IP every time?
Google Sumer Kolcak
7 mins old question is on the first page
@MartijnPieters I came here to ask you, what exactly did you do to that guy?
Oh good, now he's going to kill me too.
13:24
@BurhanKhalid Closing his posts?
@Wooble I hope you have your will written
But wait, he's giving you a chance
Really? For closing posts he went postal on you?
Tango down
Guys.. yo dawg I am Sumer Kolcak :(
@BurhanKhalid: he's a stupid troll who's been around for ages. He just needs serious psychological help
13:29
Kidding xD I thought this was enough to bring attention xD
What's happening here?
Anyone here teach Python?
Does to my 7 year old count?
That's probably the best :) "explain it like I'm five"
But did you teach them C when they were five? :)
To change subject.. Do you think this self-answered question is safe to follow?
4
Q: Setup uWSGI as webserver with pyramid (no NGINX)

Dev MahaMost of the available tutorials show how to set up uWSGI with an upstream HTTP server (like NGINX). But uWSGI alone can act beautifully as router/proxy/load-balancer - refer this For my project, I didn't want to setup NGINX at this moment so I started off exploring the option of serving webpages...

It doesn't apply to me, but I was just curious
@abdellahmansur why don't you want to use Nginx?
13:38
ok, so I'm doing a little taskeroo that involves replacing all the lower case 'i's in a text file with uppercase ones, where appropriate
I can do it for all the 'i's with this:
f = open('geah_lower.txt','r')
new = ''
for line in f:
    for char in line:
        if char == 'i':
            new += "I"
        else:
            new += char
but this replaces it in the middle of words as well.
what can I add to only affect isolated 'i's?
I guess I need to check the next character to see if it's a " "
but how would I do that?
oh
line.replace(' i ', ' I ')?
Of course that wouldn't work if i is the first or last character in the line.
I think you need to call upon the gods of regex here.
@LevLevitsky you are correct
and seeing as the text in question is Green Eggs and Ham, that's an issue :)
13:43
exp = r'(\s?i\s?)' perhaps
@BurhanKhalid that would match in the middle of words
r'(?<!\w)i(?!\w)' maybe
yeah, should be \s+:

>>> import re
>>> exp = r'(\s+i\s+)'
>>> re.findall(exp, "This is i that I want to replace")
[' i ']
hmm
I hate regex
wouldn't match if there was punctuation around, or at beginning of string
@ElendilTheTall you get the idea though, you'll probably just need to think of more cases to match
13:48
it's a beginner project, I wonder if the OP intended for regex to be used in the solution...
regex shuts my beginner's brain down completely
@Wobble I meant in academia, since there isn't any official Python "curriculum" so I was wondering what material do people use to teach.
@ElendilTheTall in that case, I think the idea might be to split the text into words and if a word is i, then replace it.
for word in sentence.split():
if word == 'i':
word = 'I'

etc.
''.join(word.upper() if word == 'i' else word for word in sentence.split()) <-- something like this maybe.

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