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04:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

04:19
Hello, cbg
Anyone active?
cpx
cpx
05:12
Hello
 
1 hour later…
06:24
cbg fellows
Cbg peeps
cbg ffisepeep
06:54
cbg all
07:18
cbg all
Who is Demian Brecht? Our sopython code is copyrighted to him?
Is that the OAuth stuff?
On my phone so can't check
sopy.davidism.com/salad : orderable, linkable salad with a word of the day star, and front page callout. Rhubarb, bed.
so when someone ask "what does sprouts mean?" you can link them: sprouts
Seriously dude that is fantastic. Go to sleep.
Rbrb
Avocado. (coincidentally, that's the word of today)
07:29
not sure everybody should be able to edit the list; it could be subject to vandalism
but yes, the visuals are awesome :)
@Ffisegydd Its on the sanction.py and yes it has the OAuth stuff
Cbg :)
It's just a demo, I'm working on better auth
will switch from sanction to flask-oauthlib.readthedocs.org/en/latest
Oh okay
07:55
stackoverflow.com/questions/24752426/… never in my life did I write anything like this
someone using sum with generator to calculate the number of lines but then does not realize that one can write as they are read.
 
2 hours later…
10:06
@AnttiHaapala I went for stackoverflow.com/a/24755366/1252759
 
1 hour later…
11:17
Hi pythonies..
easy one. Butcan't figure it out.
>>> m
'[1,2,3],[3,4,5],[6,7,8]'
I want
>>> m
'[[1,2,3],[3,4,5],[6,7,8]]'
erm, m = '[' + m + ']'? (i.e. we need some more context)
>>> m = '[1,2,3],[3,4,5],[6,7,8]'
>>> from ast import literal_eval
>>> str(list(literal_eval(m)))
'[[1, 2, 3], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8]]'
not convinced on that though... :)
I think @Volatility's probably more correct, but without context, we can't tell :)
11:33
@Volatility you are the man...
i'm asking that just for this stackoverflow.com/a/24757172/3297613
well, in that case, please don't use my method; it's very hacky
he asked a hacky question.
and he wants a regex solution.
@AvinashRaj I suspect @thefourtheye's answer is the correct solution
11:38
indeed
data = """"(1,2,3)","(3,4,5)","(6,7,8)"""""
it misses the last double quotes.
it won't print
"(1,2,3)","(3,4,5)","(6,7,8)"
the OP states he wants a list
then coverting that string to list will solve the problem.
am i correct?
yes, but it's not pythonic
11:55
anyway, bedtime; rhubarb guys
@Volatility rbrb!
cbg all
cbg!
@Ffisegydd STEWIE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
cbg @Ahmad
@Jon BRIIIIIIIIIIIIAN!
11:59
what's up?
the opposite of down? :p
/got free airport wifi \o/
Have you seen sopy.davidism.com/salad?
It's ever so purdy
@Ffisegydd I have.... I'm in love :)
haha
nice
12:03
be right back...
Did something cool in python the last week
tell us more
Scraped project Gutenberg and put into a more user friendlier format :D
Still working on the top bar, but I like it so far. What do you guys say?
That's pretty cool
Looks good hommie.
12:11
The c should be C in "Choose" though
Thanks :D
Oh you're right Ffisegydd
going to fix it
ty
In fact that whole sentence sounds a little strange. I feel it should be something more like "Choose from a variety of free epub books and Kindle books."
Egyptian style.
Yeah I think I'm going to rewrite it
But it's a really good idea, I've been on PG before and their website was awful if I remember rightly.
12:13
yeah
plus it's completely offline now
I'm working on that with Wikimedia CH
we're going to put that on usb's and ebooks and ship them to Mali.
@JonClements Your master plan can still be achieved in our lifetime.
Just not on Stack Overflow.
I just noticed I'm 1.6k away from overtaking Jon on Meta SE. :-P
@Martijn "lifetime"? speak for yourself... I fully intend on being immortal :)
12:36
@JonClements And what were you planning to do when the eventual heat death of the universe has arrived?
oh, I'm only planning immortality for another 40/50 years
I admit the plan has a few flaws, but heck... give me some time, I'm sure I'll work it out :p
@PaoloCasciello long time no see! cbg!
@jon yeah... very intense weeks... x_x
@MartijnPieters see anything wrong with stackoverflow.com/questions/24752426/… ?
12:42
@JonClements looks good!
I'm confused. How is someone from Ethiopia able to get legal aid from the UK government, to sue the UK government for sending aid to Ethiopia... how does that work?
anyone of you at europython next week?
I wish :(
Not me, no time and funds.
Not that I'm a Daily Mail ready, but umm... dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2592534/…
user559633
13:01
"Ohloh now called Black Duck Open Hub" what a terrible name change. i read the rest of the email carefully to make sure it wasn't bot spam
anyone used drawing tool for latex?
Drawing tool for latex?
I use latex a lot.
i am trying to draw a state transition diagram
and came across a blog talking about TikZ package.
Does anyone know of any good websites that are similar to topcoder but of smaller scale? I know of one but can't remember it's name...
user559633
@fizzygood challengepost.com ?
13:16
No I'm more looking for algorithm tests
Code Chef is one example but there was a bigger one that I can't remember >_<
okay wtf is there no way to develop on iPhone without owning a mac?
that's lame... I'm poor, don't got money for this kind of stuff
13:41
and after a mac you need to pay 99$ / year just to be entitled to let your code be reviewed by apple (not-so)geniuses...
user559633
i'm glad it costs 99 a year. it keeps the market higher brow than android
@tristan ?? i don't get why..
user559633
@PaoloCasciello because the barrier to entry prevents everyone and their dog from flooding the market with "fart sound" and "bouncing boob" apps
@tristan fart apps were the first apps in itunes...
user559633
maybe it's their curation, but the app market 'charts' are not as ghetto on my iphone as on my android tablet
13:51
well.. on my development ipad (that one NEEDS to distribute ios apps) i see lot of bloatware too...
and i prefer boobs apps on a free market than one company that decides what is good and what is not good..... but well, everyone has different needs.. :P
14:05
@Ffisegydd have you seen the RPi B+ released yesterday?
@Peter yeah that's actually what made me think about RPis yesterday.
I think it's time for you to buy one -- it became super awesome
:)
I dunno what I'd use it for though.
I'd buying one just so I had one.
isn't that enough? :D:D:D
14:48
Wow, I have more silver than bronze badges on Meta now.
Howdy folks. Any other PySide users have Python crash when they try to run the built-in example editabletreemodel? (should be located in \Lib\site-packages\PySide\examples\itemviews\editabletreemodel) Getting Process finished with exit code -1073741819 (0xC0000005) [i.e., you be messin' with the wrong memory! or some such]
I don't know why I bother commenting, but people who can't see beyond their single use case shouldn't be making pull reqs. github.com/mattupstate/flask-mail/pull/74
@davidism in the open source world everyone is here to also teach them how to think outside of the box.. :) maybe sometimes in the future he might recall your comment and build a good piece of code... :P
15:05
I worded that wrong, it's not that he shouldn't make the request, it's that he keeps arguing after I've pointed out why it's invalid.
hey y'all. I'm working on a program that updates various .csv files. Since all of them have the column-to-be-updated named differently and in different orders (it might be the second column, etc) I've created a resource file that has labels for each csv followed by a list of relevant column indexes. Thing is, I'm worried it's stylistically bad. The file is small, but loaded into a global dict that the GUI portion of the program also uses for the labels. Am I in god object territory?
What is a god object?
well i've read it and i think that, from a newbie point of view of flask, it may be hard to know why you're protecting the contexts.. :) he must have some framework development background. and ok i agree that if one doesn't have some framework background shouldn't be bothering with pull requests.... :D :D
In object-oriented programming, a god object is an object that knows too much or does too much. The god object is an example of an anti-pattern. The basic idea behind object-oriented programming is that a big problem is separated into several smaller problems (a divide and conquer strategy) and solutions are created for each of them. Once the small problems have been solved, the big problem as a whole has been solved. Therefore there is only one object about which an object needs to know everything: itself. Likewise, there is only one set of problems an object needs to solve: its own. ...
God object: <points at self>
15:10
What about atheists?
It's an acceptably secular term if you use the lower case, non-proper-noun form "god"
@Al.Sal I don't know without seeing it, but sounds fine to me. If it ain't broke don't fix it.
"science object"
BTW anyone else feel that Pycharm is bulky while Sublime text is light and cool
@Al.Sal LOL!
and yeah, that's true. But I'm looking for dat good style practices
15:12
My last name is Lord. Close enough.
@Ufoguy they do different jobs though. And if you learn Pycharm properly then it's not clunky at all though.
Pycharm can be sluggish in response time to keystrokes sometimes...
Get your company to buy you a better computer then.
well @Al.Sal in a pure OO philosophy you should subclass a base class specializing the "column-detection algorithm"... but sometimes the purist OO approach is not the best solution.... (personal opinion)
Yes it has advanced options and guess what I'm about to type well but is very slow and takes a lot of time to load
15:14
I'm ok with the slower startup time, I have the project open all day. Never had performance issues.
cbg all
I work on very small scripts so I think I'll go with sublime text
but when working on large projects Pycharm is cool too!
@Ufoguy try also komodo edit
Compare a car to a bike. Both will get you where you're going, but one is better for long trips and has air conditioning.
Does sublimetext have good tab completion etc for larger packages like PySide?
Hey company, please see davidism's comment above....
I just started using Pycharm two days ago and am hooked. No more Spyder for me.
15:17
@PaoloCasciello exactly. This code is really procedural more than anything since it's just a script.
That's a lot of people.
Okay, now I want the OP to tell me what exactly triggered the error:
1
A: UnicodeDecodeError with the sys.stdout inside traceback.print_exc()

Martijn PietersThe traceback module wants to include source code lines with the traceback. Normally, a traceback consists only of pointers to source code, not the source code itself, as Python has been executing the compiled bytecode. In the bytecode are hints as to exactly what source code line the bytecode ca...

Always intrigued to see how people get themselves into a bind like that.
@JonClements ^
@MartijnPieters notepad
@AnttiHaapala UTF-8 BOM you mean?
I discarded that option as the error was in position 5213.
@MartijnPieters nope, I mean what is the retarded editor that saves whatever the encoding happens to be
15:24
Need to bookmark that one to reverse Mojibakes on Windows codepages..
@AnttiHaapala I suspect the E7 is a obscure codepage inverted quote or some such.
@MartijnPieters OP says something about tests, so this could also be with windows messing up with times vs some VCS
@JonClements ah, itertools.islice sucks, should accept kwargs, with all defaulting to None.
@PaoloCasciello Thanks for suggesting me Komodo edit. Trying it out. It is cool. Works well on Linux too It's fast too unlike Pycharm
Thanks for confirming my (prejudiced) expectation that PyCharm is slow. :-P
Pah! It's only slow on bad computers :P
It is really slow. You're not really prejudiced
15:33
It's really not.
I have an Intel i5 processor with no graphics card
See my comment above for optimal solution.
I've got an i3 with 4GB of RAM. I've got it open as well as several other hefty scientific programs and I don't struggle.
Noooo we lost our 4th row of people!
Get a wider monitor, we only barely had 3 rows!
I'm on a crappy square monitor that I stole, it's better than just having one laptop screen :P
15:36
Also doesn't pychram force you to create a folder for every project
...where else are you going to store your files? The nether?
if you don't have your projects organized, you're doing it wrong
6 rows!
@MartijnPieters pycharm's not slow
though.
@Ufoguy seriously, if you call something that does not have a folder, a "project"
that is, 1 file, then :D
@davidism Narrower! You can get it to 8!
Need one column with 32 rows
15:39
Hey everyone, do any of you have any idea if this will run SL4A?
If not, I'd appreciate any cheap tablet suggestions for coding on.
@Iplodman I don't see why not. As long as you can install the sl4a app
What is the appeal of coding on a tablet? It just seems wrong.
My friend said that even a tablet like that would lag on the OS, which I really doubt.
@davidism So I can code at school, and out and about.
I'd also get a keyboard case thing.
I got a very cheap phone and it runs SL4A fine
15:41
@davidism it depends on what sort of things are you into. Someone likes leather, someone else likes pain...
I have a Note 3, but it's just a bit awkward to code on.
this is my portable device: asus.com/Eee_Family/Eee_PC_901
I do not touch asus computers anymore after zenbook
incidentally, it runs pycharm great
I am using a shitty lenovo
15:42
xD
that's the old 901 with 8.9" screen
the last true netbook imo
I'd probably get the third, or something similar.
my old 12.1 eeepc ha1215 or what that was was like a dream
dropped it at the heathrow on the floor of the airbridge or whatyacallit
and it went into 20 pieces
but still worked after putting everything together
--->
Wait, whats the opposite of capacitive?
15:45
wow, someone's still selling them
@Iplodman inductive?
(In a touchscreen context, my bad)
Maybe resistive
AH YES!
That's it :D
Thanks @davidism.
Hmm... I'm wondering how far 512MB of RAM will go.
Chrome is currently using 400MB on my PC :P
Well, yam.
16:12
This applies to Stack Overflow too
3
I have no idea what I am doing
drool
16:28
It's legit, too. My friends' friend buy stuff from there.
Is this one of those things where if you bid, you have to pay that price whether or not you actually win the auction?
That way, the company can sell their product at 10% the manufacturing cost, and still make a 100% profit, as long as 20 people bid.
Nope.
I believe not.
Researching it, it's not that exact scheme, but you do lose some money when making a bid, regardless of whether you win. Wikipedia says, "The net result is those who did not win paid for a number of bids and receive nothing"
That's fine by me - I'm not likely to lose any of those.
Just always prepare more than you need.
And the bids are about 1p each anyway.
by "any of those", you mean auctions? What if there's someone else with that exact same viewpoint, and you bid on the same thing? Surely one of you has to lose.
16:42
Fair point.
anything wrong with this line? from logging.handlers import RotatingFileHandler, StreamHandler
Since the company is profitable on par with a successful ordinary business, I see two possibilities:
1. all users end up spending above the retail price on the products they buy, when you account for the cost of bidding on things they didn't win; in which case, nobody should use this service.
2. "Savvy" users spend less than the retail price on products they buy, and "losers" spend much more to account for this. In which case, the losers should stop using the service. Assuming everyone is acting rationally, only the savvy remain, and the service fails to sustain profitability, and goes out
@Crow Not that I can see, although if it's causing you errors you could try two from x import y statements.
bah, why is StreamHandler in the logging module but RotatingFileHandler in the logging.handlers?
@Kevin Someone got a damn iPad Air for £55. I feel like this is enough for me.
@Crow Ahaha xD
@Crow I see a design flaw.
16:53
Well hey, if you can stay in the savvy category, more power to you.
@Kevin Ahaha xD I damn sure hope so.
If the #2 possibility really is the company's business model, then they're working hard to trick losers into thinking they're not losers. I suggest that you disregard all their marketing attempts and keep an eye on your budget.
I'm assuming that the 'trick losers' bit is throught the token style thing.
And I'm a teen - I don't have money to overspend with.
Nintendo and Microsoft do the same thing with their online services. You have to spend money to buy points, and spend points to buy games.
We should come up with a name for it, unless there is one already.
16:58
Googling for anything related to "digital currency" just gives a lot of Bitcoin results, so I don't know
Hmm.
rbrb guys! :) have a nice evening!
Cya @PaoloCasciello! :D
@PaoloCasciello You too!
I had a bug in my 150 line method. I refactored it for readability, without attempting to change the behavior. Now the bug is no longer occurring.
Not sure if fixed... Or waiting for the most devastating time to strike.
17:09
Ahahah xD
How long until you overtake Alex Martelli do you estimate @Martijn?
DSM
DSM
Cabbage, all.
Greetings
bah. Getting a new error... anyone here familiar with heroku? Just trying the getting started parts
DSM
DSM
Strange day: power failure on my subway train, so after we managed to make it back to a station I decided to go to the gym rather than sit around waiting for them to fix it. I'm finally in the office but now my whole schedule is out of sorts and nothing seems normal..
17:24
That's because you're in a Truman Show style simulation, and we can only use high-quality props and scenarios when you behave predictably.
If some of the background extras seem out of breath, it's because they had to sprint from the gym stage to the office stage before you got there.
DSM
DSM
I remember when I first moved to England it took several months for me to lose the feeling that I was living in an English-themed amusement part. Kept expecting everyone to go on break and start talking aboot normal stuff like hawkey, eh!
I expect that's a common feeling among expats.
DSM
DSM
Did I miss any exciting community-dividing Python questions this morning?
We argued about whether Pycharm was any good.
I have no opinion, as I am a luddite and use only Notepad++
Mostly I was distracted by a side project of mine. I wrote a partial solver for Nurikabe puzzles. I'm trying to write as many rules as possible that don't require any "guess and check" or recursive behaviors.
i use pycharm...so far no trouble
DSM
DSM
17:33
I use the One True Edit(One True Edit(One True Edit...))
It's a little troublesome since there are some fuzzy techniques that humans can use easily if they apply common sense, but for which the actual algorithm is like O((N!)!)
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: why rule out recursion? Isn't that pretty standard?
Ex. in the first example image given in the Wikipedia article, the lower right "4" region can only be solved by evaluating all possible formations the 4 cells could possibly compose, and observing that they all have one particular cell in common, which you can then mark as "definitely white"
@DSM yes, but my master plan is to write a puzzle generator, and it would be very nice if it only generated puzzles that can be solved with human techniques.
DSM
DSM
Ahhh, gotcha.
So you make sure that the problem can be solved by people by solving them with the sorts of techniques people would use.
yeah
DSM
DSM
17:41
Is it practical to reverse the logic, choose the order of the rules you want to be applied, and rule-by-rule construct a problem satisfying it?
I mean, or do you construct a random problem and then try to see if only human rules can solve it?
Hi Pychat. Can anyone think of a reason not to find/replace all the dict.iter* calls in my 2.7 code with dict.view* calls?
Constructing a random problem will be the first thing I try.
The "reverse logic" construction method would work, I expect, but I think it would create puzzles quite different from the ones I'm used to
@AirThomas iteritems returns an iterator that can be scanned once, viewitems returns a view that happens to be iterable
@Ffisegydd By reputation, you mean?
DSM
DSM
@AirThomas: well, they don't behave the same, for one. next(d.iteritems()) will work, but next(d.viewitems()) won't.
17:46
you may not see any difference when using them in a for loop, but they are different things
@Martijn yeah by rep in the Python tag (similar to hout unutbu has just taken 3rd)
Wait nvm
I mean in overall reputation
But that doesn't matter so much I suppose
I am starting to tag stuff in my work chat
He gained 32858 rep so far this year, in 195 days. That's 168.5 points per day, on average.
DSM
DSM
@davidism: are there enough overflowers to get the joke?
I gained 70715 in the same period, so 362.6 per day.
17:49
@davidism I understand they're different, but stackoverflow.com/q/10189273/2359271 suggests view* covers iter* use cases and then some.
Difference in rep: 330825 - 263838 = 66987 still to go
@DSM There we go. Guess I'll let it be then.
I have a feeling that, since view is more powerful, it must be slower or consume more memory.
That'll take 66987 / (362.6 - 168.5) = 345 day then.
But it's only a feeling. benchmark and see what's best for you.
17:50
So I estimate in a year, unless my or his tempo changes.
@Ffisegydd: ^
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: I'd guess the opposite, actually, that view would be faster. One hundred quatloos!
There are only a few spots where the performance might be significant, I'll just check those by hand.
I bet 12 milli-units of community respect. If I lose, you must all look down at me with slightly more scorn.
3
hrmph. I keep getting an import error
@Crow Absent further clarification I'm going to assume you mean you're sick and can't keep your food down.
In which case, my sympathies.
17:54
@DSM there's only one other developer, and no. He's on SO, but only slightly.
DSM
DSM
Do any of our Dutch speakers have a good translation for "stateful"?
We need a Dutch Institute For Translating Neologisms.
DSM
DSM
L'Académie française, but with more clogs.
@AirThomas ImportError: No module named innovation_center.app when I run the command heroku run python run.py initdemo. git here
setup = "d = {x: x**2 for x in xrange(100)}"
stmt1 = "for k, v in d.viewitems(): pass"
stmt2 = "for k, v in d.iteritems(): pass"
timeit is giving me <1% difference
18:02
That's precisely what I had in mind, but I forgot the name :-)
Why doesn't every language have a governing body? It's chaos
Ow! My markup!
Yeah, markup doesn't work on multiline messages.
You gotta hit the "fixed font" button to get a nice monospace and preserved indentation
DSM
DSM
@AirThomas: try list(d.iterkeys()) and list(d.viewkeys()).
@Kevin: I'm kind of a spontaneous order guy myself, but I can see how a Department of Words would sometimes come in handy. They could insist on everyone speaking Anglish, for example.
@DSM That puts view significantly ahead.
@Crow There's no app in that folder or init.
in innovation_center/app? There's an __init__.py. Whatcha mean?
18:10
Sorry. I'm mixing up my folders.
ah happens. I just wish I could somehow go to the heroku and see what's up. It works when I do foreman start
Have you double checked the module search path?
Maybe heroku is doing something funky to the working directory
what do you mean? Check the sys.path?
OH. I see the problem.
$ heroku run python
Running `python` attached to terminal... up, run.4835
Python 2.7.8 (default, Jul  9 2014, 20:47:08)
[GCC 4.4.3] on linux2
it's running python 2.7.8
@davidism I'm trying to run sopy locally but for some reason am getting ImportError: cannot import name inspect from SQLAlchemy. Do you by any chance know the reason? I've installed everything as per the Github
@Crow What's wrong with 2.7.8?
18:20
Nothing wrong with 2.7.8 persay, just that my app has been using python 3.4.1 the whole development process
Oh, gotcha.
nvm fixed it
18:38
what did you do?
I was running it on Python 3 but hadn't installed all the requirements fully
Thought it would run on Python 2 as it bad /usr/env/bin python
So when I installed Python 3 requirements it works
Though I now have a ZeroDivisionError when I start the site, I believe it's because generating the word of the day needs some data in the database otherwise the db.session.query(db.func.count(cls.id)).scalar() is always 0
Dunno how I'm gonna fix that though, could I manually add some data via the command line?
yeah, sopy shell will get you a shell in the app
Ah ok, I'm currently in the debugger on my browser
from sopy.salad.models import Salad
db.session.add(Salad(term='test', definition='test'))
db.session.commit()
Awesome. That fixed it and it's working now
18:42
sorry, it's not really intended for others yet, I should add the default word list or fix the division
Nah don't worry about it, I just wanted to make sure I could get it working, I understand it's still in progress.
18:56
forgery_py keeps failing on pip install when I add it to heroku... hrmph
Aw, I'm 5% below the average on the tone deafness test :-(
Taking this test gave me flashbacks to the old Sierra point-and-click adventure games of my youth. Maybe they use the same software.
Awww man I remember Sierra.
They did some awesome RTSs
I may not be able to reliably discern the difference between two musical scores, but I can tell that the sample halfway through would have been used when you're in the market talking to a snake charmer.
actually... gevent isn't installing.
04:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

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