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12:00
not the most useful of error messages though
@JonClements Redirecting something? The connection failed, no stdin / stdout / stderr created, so the next thing thing trying to connect to FD 0, 1 or 2 fails.
@PeterVaro that could still benefit from eInk, just backlit :)
@Martijn was using git bash on a W8.1 system... would have expected a simple "remote system not available" or something
@JonClements yeah
Trying to use Heroku through a firewall gives all sorts of wacky errors, that included :)
arghghg... trying to remember syntax for scp
ahh poo... now I need to find the key for the remote system
which requires me remembering where I put the keys to the safe...
my professionalism knows no bounds obviously
I have a horrible feeling that the keys to the house safe are in the safe in the shed...
12:21
Seriously, solving security is going to be a major coup for whoever does it in a way that doesn't require unlocking a safe in a shed
well... I'm going for the view point that it's so secure, I can't even access it
DSM
DSM
Early morning cabbage, all.
@DSM good afternoon good sir
@JonClements a remote overvolting of the server will turn it to ash, which has the advantage of not needing to go outside
@JonClements but seriously, I'm not mocking your setup, as it currently is still too difficult to do security properly
@Robert no worries - I'm mocking my setup :)
hopefully might have a server key that has a key to the server I'm trying to access
I do look after about 600 of 'em now... so I can't be blamed if I can't remember everything!
12:28
Just use the same key for every single one, easy!
arghgh.... appears I've disabled password logins
this is going well
Hah yeah I have the same issue on the server I would develop on instead of Heroku if I could get to it easily :)
why do people still do formulas by hand?
Because there are still lots of areas of mathematics that humans are great at and computers are terrible at.
For example, calculating 1/3 and not getting 0.333333333333333314829616256247390992939472198486328125
WOO HOOO! Got in... yay me
12:36
Or more squishy problems like "looking at an equation, figuring out what you need to do to get it into the form you want, and then doing it". Can't write an algorithm for that.
oh sheesh... porting a system, and I've forgotten it was written mostly in erlang
@Kevin I like the thing where 0.99999 (recurring) equals 1
my brain had better start working at some point, otherwise it's going to be a long night
I just don't get this class .-. memorize these formulas and redo them
Me too. Anyone that doesn't like that thing, should move somewhere where real numbers have exactly one decimal representation. (that is, not in our universe)
12:40
From university there is not a single class that I can look back at and think "Gee-golly-willikers I'm glad I memorised all those equations!"
@Kevin you just have to find the Indivisible Unit
@Ffisegydd F=MA doesn't pound in your brain as you do an emergency stop? :)
I'm glad I memorized The pythagorean formula and y = radius*sin(angle); x = radius*cos(angle)
Everything else I can just look up.
Except the things whose name I have forgotten.
Actually I think more in terms of F = dp/dt ;)
I would think formulas would basically be inconsequential, just what they're actually about is what matters
The point is you're showing you can do it. You probably only need to do it if you're going into academia or R&D
12:42
@Kevin we were talking earlier today... have you invented holodeck technology yet?
But it shows you can learn stuff that clever people consider to be difficult
@JonClements Not that I am aware of. But I may have done so and forgotten about it.
I don't have the courage to say "computer, end simulation" out loud.
Yes... I agree - it may end reality as we know it... wise choice
You guys don't need to bother trying to say it, since only I have super user access.
Question: I'm re-doing my CV and I think my participation here (helping, ROing, working a bit on sopython-site, and working on Nidaba eventually) will be important and will show me off as a good candidate, etc. Does anyone have any ideas/advice on how I should word/discuss this in a CV? I'm not too sure how to go about it.
12:45
mind you, it'd be fine if it was a simulation of a simulation of a simulation of a...
I am accepting both serious and joking answers, for the sake of conciseness though please make all joking answers italic.
I wonder if "community leader" is too overpuffed
Python social media evangelist
Sorry
@Ffisegydd I'd be more than happy to write you a recommendation on linkedin or something
Python social media evangelist
12:46
@Kevin exactly. How does one word it properly?
@Jon possibly. I might pass out my CV to people here for comments when it's done anyway.
It's probably fine if the interviewing company has any kind of tendency for buzzspeak.
I could go to the university careers people, and they're very good for generic CVs, but my friend went to them and listened to them then in an interview the interviewer said "BTW your CV is awful, it should be this, this, and this" which is the opposite of what the "generic" advice was.
I'm in the middle of massively changing my CV
In fact this has been an open tab for a week in firefox: businessinsider.com/why-this-is-an-excellent-resume-2013-11
Your CV should be right justified 24 point comic sans with a rainbow color scheme. Helps you stand out.
@Kevin Ah. The Angelfire CV.
Can you print it so it starts playing music when someone looks at it?
12:48
hhhmp... installing an email server... this is going to be fun
@Robert thanks for the link.
Put an attractive headshot picture on the cover. It doesn't necessarily need to be a picture of you.
@Kevin counterstrike, or real life?
@Kevin you didn't put that in italics so I'm going to assume you're deadly serious. Thanks for sabotaging the beginning of my new career.
"I thought you'd look a lot more like Michelle Obama" "Oh yes, that was before my... Accident... eyes glaze while looking into the middle distance"
12:50
I wonder if I can embed a marquee in a pdf.
@RobertGrant Real life, but do include your CS kill/death ratio.
buh calculators are bizarre... I just want to program in constants
Pen and paper. Easy.
not allowed to write things down for a test, and don't get table of constants. Frustrating
What's the question? Is it physics again?
DSM
DSM
12:54
Dimensionful constants don't matter anyway.
Nah, chemistry. The question is: "the first ionization energy for a gas-phase atom of a particular element is 6.24 * 10<sup>-14</sup> J. What is the maximum wavelength of electromagnetic radiation that can ionize this atom?"
If you can't remember the value for c, you can simply determine it empirically using the test materials.
For example, accelerate your pencil to relativistic speeds, and measure its change in mass.
E=hc/lambda
I got lambda = (c / .94 * 10^-15). Not sure if the answer is wrong or the website just doesn't like it
Where h is Planck's constant and c is the speed of light.
12:58
oh I used phi = hv, given that kinetic energy is 0, then used the result in lambda = c / v
ahh huh... and now I need the DB password
What's phi in this case?
@JonClements It's ********, of course.
oh hunter2?
phi is the work function, so it is 6.24 * 10^-19 in this case
12:59
@JonClements Yes, ********.
Ah yeah I remember now.
@JonClements On Windows? Hahahahahahahahahahaha. Good one!
@corvid as KE=0 that is basically the same as what I said, E = hc/lambda.
what is lambda? Is it a constant?
lambda is the wavelength.
13:02
oh okay then it needs some algebra to work
That seems insanely small though, sure you copied the energy into chat correctly?
6.24*10**-14?
@MartijnPieters I was busy getting some Civ practice in... don't wanna lose too badly to Stewie when Civ:BE is out
Oh no actually it's not too silly. wolframalpha
yeah got planck's constant wrong, the correct answer was 318.55
I thought the always correct answer is 42?
13:12
Only for the questions that actually matter.
email server config is a PITA
@JonClements yes
Umm... how long does it take to copy 150gb across the net
taps fingers
sopython appears to have a more than decent xfer speed... this server doesn't it would appear
cbg @davidism
13:32
cbg
@JonClements (not the best of its kind -- but still nice, isn't it?)
impressive beard :)
not sure I could ever get my one that long
@JonClements (mine is bigger now ;))
---> You must have this much beard to be a Unix developer
13:36
But yeah... that's not too bad a track... not quite to my taste, but can appreciate it
@Kevin one day maybe.. one day maybe..
Anyway... gotta finish setting up this email server... then going to have a later afternoon snooze before ordering a chinese
It occurs to me that this is a sexist policy. Maybe we should make prosthetic beards available for the follicularly disadvantaged.
@Kevin look - we can't afford a hitman to keep you off the starred list... how do you think we're going to subsidise testosterone injections - the room has budgets you know!
13:38
I can't decide, wether I have "The Philosopher" beard or the "The Homeless" one :P
@Peter just philosophise about being homeless... job done
umm... if I'd have known there was this much data I would have compressed it before transferring it
@Kevin still, show me a UNIX sysadmin of either gender without a beard :)
oh well... a little late now
@Robert sounds like you date some lovely "ladies" :)
@RobertGrant I suspect that they exist, but they're hiding
@Kevin I suspect they're mostly in neon lit basements with matrix screensavers
13:42
I think I just found the scariest man with a beard:
@JonClements I've never dated a UNIX sysadmin (of either gender) :)
@RobertGrant are they even "dating"?
@Peter I imagine they dream about touching with their finger
I just inwardly growned
At least I didn't say, "they hope they can gopher it"
13:46
at least you didn't :P
thank cabbage for that hey? :)
so err, who wants to 1) help me tie this noose and 2) open the trapdoor?
take a ticket, join the queue :)
Ah, that is so Python
@Peter love it :P)
not quite sure what that smiley is, but it looks cool and potentially ambiguous, so I'm leaving it :)
:)
that's called "the broken nose smile"
What are they even asking!? :)
"None of the above examples" seems to be a suitable answer
anyway... need to concentrate - rbrb in a bit
user559633
14:10
I was a unix sysadmin without a beard
why can't I find samples of the CSS styles of pygments in the documentation? I feel like that would be important
user559633
I was also 19 and I had yet to bloom into the beautiful flower that I am today
I was a unix machine with a beard.
@tristan That doesn't sound possible.
A beardless UNIX sysadmin?!
user559633
Right?
user559633
14:12
and freebsd as well
I want to make a generator that yields 0,1,2,0,1,2,0,1,2... Forever. I can do (i for _ in itertools.count() for i in range(3)), but is there a nice way to do it in one line with only builtins?
DSM
DSM
By "builtins" do you mean to exclude itertools?
Yeah, no importing.
(this is just idle curiosity, by the way. Of course I have no problem importing during actual projects)
DSM
DSM
it = (i % 3 for i, _ in enumerate(iter(int, 1))), maybe?
KhanAcademy has such a nice user interface, it's simple but still contains tons of stuff
14:18
Hi! Has someone seen @poke recently ?
iter as a way to yield infinite items... Good thinking.
DSM
DSM
He came, he taught us how to format code, he left.
7
@Basj Yeah, he was around earlier this week
lol @DSM
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: I think Jon taught me that trick, so I can't take credit. :-)
Or maybe mgilson. I certainly learned about it on SO.
14:19
not to forget the 10 stars .. about as much as @Kevin's daily stars.
Ok! He had suggested me a nice feature for bigpicture.bi/demo and I implemented it : if you click on this page, and click on the top left logo "BigPicture", it will show the (biggest) picture available, and if we reclick, back to where you were working on.... What do you think ?
@Swordy His accomplishment is more impressive, to me. Accumulating stars on a single message is exponentially more difficult. Stars 5 through 10 are way harder to get than stars 1 through 5.
@DSM LMAO
yeah , should take you around 2 days to get that many stars and for me ?? maybe a decade.. :P
its 11 now..
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: I think it = (x for _ in iter(int, 1) for x in range(3)) is my final answer.
14:25
what does the _ mean?
DSM
DSM
It's just an ordinary variable name. It's frequently used to mean "dummy variable whose value isn't used."
@corvid variable name => indicates you dan't care about the value
Poor _, nobody cares about him.
DSM
DSM
14:27
gettext users like him!
OverflowError: Python int too large to convert to C long... That's a new one to me.
We should start an orphanage for all the abandoned _ out there. "The Kevin Kevinson Star Orphanage for _s That Have Been Abandoned"
@DSM Go developers too
as they are truly using it as a language syntactic sugar to get rid of a variable
@DSM Yeah, that's what I went with. Unfortunately, the question I was trying to answer has a range exceeding 2**31, so range doesn't work too well for 2.7 users.
And xrange doesn't accept long Python ints :-(
Well that's hellish
14:34
cbg(@IntrepidBrit)
Had to "pop" into the office. 4 hours later...
Cabbage @PeterVaro
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: minor, but max -> upper or something?
@Peter 25 page review for ya arstechnica.com/apple/2014/10/os-x-10-10 ;)
Yeah, guess I better change it
DSM
DSM
The OP may want 0,1,2,1,2,1,2, I can't figure out.
14:37
Augh, I hope not
All I want is a beautiful, concise, understandable, version-agnostic code with no external dependencies. Is that so much to ask? :-(
@Ffisegydd thanks! although I have my own very strong and ultra negative opinion, I'm going to read this now ;)
@poke cbg
@Basj You summoned me?
Cabbage.
@Basj See what you've done now!
I guess I could make my previous code iterate from 1 to upper_limit, and then chain it with [0]... blurgh
DSM
DSM
14:40
I honestly can't tell.
I'm going to put on my rose colored glasses and assume he meant "...at which point it's supposed to cycle back over to [the beginning of the sequence]"
Um.... don't think this post is going to garner any positive attention
not even sure I should have re-tagged it :)
I gave the old "dicts are unordered" comment, but I'm wondering if that should have been an answer...
user559633
dicts are ordered, just not how beginner programmers expect :)
Maybe if I can dig up a quote from the docs. Off I go
14:44
@Peter I'll probably wait a few weeks at least to ensure my apps are supported.
DSM
DSM
I think answers-as-comments tend to be most useful when closing as dups, where you give the minimal comment necessary to connect the OP's problem to the target.
I cv'd as unable to reproduce.
Same.
OP is an arrogant jerk. A comment is all they deserve.
Found a nice quote, answerified
user559633
14:47
"I am not 100% sure but it seems that there is a bug in Pythons function collections.Counter()"
user559633
why are new/bad programmers always so certain that they found a bug in a trivial usage of a module?
user559633
I suppose.
@Ffisegydd if I were you and wanted to upgrade, i would wait for 10.10.2 or 3
@Peter yeah will play it by ear.
14:48
Theory: when you're new, you're more likely to go over your code many times without finding a problem, leading you to think "it must be a bug in the implementation"
gah. Rhubarb for now
rbrb(@IntrepidBrit)
bai brit.
As opposed to when you are more experienced, and can locate your errors without too much searching
user559633
I mean, from the documentation: "Counter dict subclass for counting hashable objects"
user559633
14:49
it says it right there that it's a hash. if i was a new programmer and didn't know what a hash was, i would go "okay, that word doesn't matter, it must be a bug"
Yeah, as soon as you see "unordered collection" in the second sentence, that should tip you off
@Kevin isn't this philosophical? for example, I always search the problem in myself first rather than in the "outer" world
user559633
one doesn't even have to read beyond the first "tl;dr" block at the top
@poke not sure "not stable" is the best way to describe it - it is stable... ;)
@JonClements Is it really?
14:52
@poke yes, see Kevin's quote. It is non-random.
I would expect consecutive calls to values with no intervening changes to return the same thing every time.
If you modify in between, all bets are off
Tis just not easily worked out (by eye, if you will) what the order should be.
@Ffisegydd I know that it’s not random, but is it stable across all possible ways to construct the dict (with the same keys/values) across different machines?
Sounds like a job for SCIENCE!
it's stable once constructed and with no modificiations
14:53
I would maybe expect the same results if constructed the same way each time, on the same interpreter, on the same machine.
DSM
DSM
I think it's only locally stable. With hash randomization I don't even think it's guaranteed if you run twice on the same setup.
That’s what I meant @DSM.
@DSM indeed... but I was taking stable as iteration might be different over the same instance of the dict - that's how I read it anyway
DSM
DSM
Now without randomization I think it will be the same in practice on the same setup, but that's just impdet.
So I guess we're all talking about different senses of "stability" and everyone's right. Hooray!
I just read "not stable" as sounding very close to - it could be a surprise each time
14:55
this question is like "how do I create dynamic variables" on steriods
I read "not stable" as meaning if you looked at its pint funny it might have to mess you up.
@DSM Actually, let’s find out:
from collections import Counter as C; list(C([250, 250, 251, 251, 251, 251, 252, 252, 252, 252, 253, 253, 253, 253, 254, 254, 254, 254, 254, 255, 256, 256]).values()) == [2, 2, 4, 4, 4, 5, 1]
Anyone gets a False?
No.
I answer for everyone when I say, "No."
And trying again in 3.x... No.
Anybody got an exotic Python implementation? Rev up that Jython interpreter!
When I run it in KevinScript I get a syntax error, which is kind of like a False value.
14:59
ImportError: No module named collections – Foo, IronPython.
“You are top notch” – Uhm.
Dang, I knew I should have suggested sorting.
Give that OP a code sample. OPs love code samples.
Sorry Kevin.
I like your answer better anyway :-)
@davidism Whew, he had second thoughts about that approach. "I think it would be better practice to just go ahead and code each individual class"
Dear Zero Piraeus, thank you for your non-existing contribution. — Commi 2 mins ago
@Zero you gonna take that lying down? Kick his cabbage!
Hmmpph... that's getting a non-constructive comment vote from me :)
15:05
lolwut
same
Zero posted the same thing I was thinking. "the mistake is not in your code, but in your understanding of the language"
Hahaha! "non-existing" is an edit ;-)
woo hoo... a helpful flag... yay me
People get mad when you tell them there's a problem in their brain... scribbles furiously in "Kevin's journal of human behavior"
argh. Nightly, can you please stop crashing?
15:07
@Kevin maybe you should try writing instead of just scribbling in your journal? I think there's a problem in your brain.
Hmm, using marks on paper to convey meaning... scribbles some more
@Kevin do you live in a shack and have a cat called "The Lord" per chance?
If so, would you mind explaining wtf you're doing in my house? :p
@JonClements I perceive that this is the case, but I have no way of knowing for sure.
Likewise, how can you be sure that the shack belongs to you and not me?
Remember, all external stimuli could easily be manipulated by a malevolent and powerful force bent on deceiving you.
That could be you though...
Ok, I think I'm out ... I didn't flag the "contribution" comment, but have flagged the followup as offensive.
15:13
Yes, now is a good time to abandon post.
DSM
DSM
After some experiments with types and architectures, maybe a dictionary of small integer keys isn't the best to bring out differences. :-) Not only don't ints seem to be randomized, but they're small enough to be hashed as themselves anyway.
(Today I am annoyed because I want to use "abandon post" in the same sense that sailors use "abandon ship", but it sounds more like "abandoning your post", which implies that the act is dishonorable)
@Ffisegydd amazing -- that's what I call journalism! this guy wrote 25 pages without actually talking about anything.. terrible waste of time..
@Zero also flagged it... I like the fact you're being blamed for deleting their comment
(I mean we all knew these details before, we all saw these screenshots.. grr..)
15:16
now you get blamed for deleting that one too :)
What did the comment say?
anyway, I have to got now, laters folks
rhubarb(~)
two helpful flags for the same post - I'm happy :)
Ok guys I need 63 rep for 6666.
@Ffisegydd something along the lines of "you're a rude yam for deleting my comment"
15:18
@Ffisegydd The first was "Thank you Zero Piraeus for your contribution", edited to insert "non-existent", and the second was "you don't have to be a *** deleting my comment on a friday".
Ah ok. I flagged the first myself.
Lovely.
> TypeError: __init__() missing 18 required positional arguments
DSM
DSM
@davidism: I think he mixed up his third 20 with his fifth 20.
85 pages and first draft of 3rd chapter finished. Need a pint.
DSM
DSM
15:25
One is good. Two and you'll start rewriting chapters so that the first letter of each paragraph makes a sentence.. #sweetmemories
Isn't there some competition about hiding messages in phd papers? I swear I've seen it somewhere.
@davidism yeah I've heard similar things. My friend had custom markers in his graphs that was a well-known image from 4chan's /b/.
But they were so small that the printer couldn't distinguish it, you could only see if it you zoomed in with vector graphics.
Cabbage all!
cbg @Iplodman
15:38
@Ffisegydd found it: phdchallenge.org
ahhh... another rock paper scissors post
We should probably just write canonical, rock paper & scissors, tic-tac-toe and number guessing posts
hundreds of students turning in the exact same code may be an issue though
Let 'em all fail. More jobs for me.
Yes, soon I will have all the jobs.
@Kevin are you rubbing your hands together and chuckling while you say that?
Uncannily, yes.
I think I need to put masking tape over my webcam now.
15:41
@JonClements How's life for you?
@Iplodman same old - you?
@JonClements Just messing about with pickle.
Basically re-writing some one else's code.
sounds, err, fun
It is! :D
@Jon isn't that basically your job? ;)
I hasten to add that I did not mean it as a burn, but this is not to say that I did not laugh at the image...
And Kevin's job of course
@Ffisegydd Ahahah! ;)
@JonClements Best. CGI. Ever.
Luckily, most of my inventions can't be used for evil, because they can't be used for any constructive purpose.
I guess this is in the time when we didn't have orbital tea cannons that miss 20 consecutive times in a row, though.
15:48
talking about the LOTC.... any news @Kevin? :)
The LOTC's last status transmission was quite garbled, but I'm pretty sure I heard the phrase "space gremlins".
LOTC?
Lord Of The Code?
Lines Of True Code?
Low Orbit Tea Cannon.
The experimental space platform which I may or may not be the eccentric billionaire founder of.
It's admittedly a somewhat expensive solution to a kettle... but I'm assured that when it works, it'll be great
Even if they're not the mischievous or destructive sort of gremlins, they're still messing up the oxygen recycling mechanism with all their pesky breathing. I didn't budget for this!
15:51
I hate autoplaying video ads :(
I also hate those!
@Kevin it's okay... we'll just borrow another trillion dollars or something... we might need to close all the hospitals and schools, but everyone will appreciate the bigger picture of me trying to get a cup of tea in an extravagantly over the top way
@Kevin have you never played FTL? Just stick all of your crew in one section, seal the interconnecting doors, then evacuate the rest of the LOTC.
It'll eject them from the platform
@poke I don't mind too much the auto playing video... I just absolutely despise auto playing audio
@JonClements Yes, it's all for the greater good. I suggest telling the disadvantaged children and sick people to stop being selfish and think about someone else for a change.
15:55
@JonClements True.
@Kevin and if they don't like that - we just won't give them their teaspoon of water a day!
@poke especially if you have to find the bloody thing in some obscure spot on the page that's doing it
You’re lucky if you know what tab it is on.
well... you normally get a speaker thingy on the tab that's doing it... so that's a start
DSM
DSM
Several NorthAm sports websites are big fans of autoplay. One time I had to install an extension to prevent it, 'cause it was driving me whoa-crazy-crazy, although I think things have improved since them.
@JonClements Not (yet) on Firefox
15:58
anyone else remember geocities and web circles, and how it use to be trendy to have marquees and a MIDI file play? sighs
@JonClements Why browsers don't yet have a "This page wants to play audio. Allow? [Always / this time / not this time / never]" notification for that is a mystery to me. The annoyance of opening half a dozen tabs and then having to try and find the one with an embedded video three screenfuls down the page is way more than that of the odd popup.
3
@Zero completely agree
DSM
DSM
@Jon: the days of <blink>
Hello @poke !
Soo, I got this movie from Amazon (I’m renting them via Lovefilm), and I neither remember the title nor why I was possibly putting it on my list. It’s an anime (I love anime, but I never rented one before so wtf), and I’m a bit lost now.
15:59
@Zero and sometimes (I think it mostly happens on some news sites), I want to focus on reading the text, which doesn't mean I need to listen to some advert or some other news article

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