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16:00
@ZeroPiraeus I know the excuse used to be "in-browser media players are black boxes from the point of view of the browser. If Adobe Flash Player doesn't feel like supporting a will_sound_start_playing API, there's nothing we can do about it"
@poke Yes I wanted to see if you are because I had your idea since a few days in mind about : "I can easily get lost, a button would be great to allow to return to the "Home" ". I implemented it : bigpicture.bi/demo ... You can zoom anywhere... Then click on the topleft "BigPicture" (logo). Then there is a zoom on the biggest picture available. What do you think about it ? If you click twice on this button, you return to the previous zoomed position
and what really, really p*sses me off is when it's a page and it's got several things, that go all at once... and it ends up being a cacophony of inane rubbish
I think this is changing as HTML5 develops, though. the <video> tag has a bit more power
@Kevin Well, yeah, I suppose there is that. Just hurry up and die already, flash ...
@Basj If I scroll out a lot (so the content is rather small) and then press that button, it’s not doing what I would expect it to do (zoom and move to fit the full content on screen)
16:01
I completely agree with @poke... if there's some video that's related to what I'm on your website for, then by all means, let me click play and watch it... don't auto-play it
@poke true! bug found! I have to work on this :)
@JonClements That’s even true for YouTube.
I have 23 tabs open right now that are on YouTube. I don’t want them to autoplay their movie just because I accidentally activate the tab (which makes the browser load it)..
@Basj I thought that was me who said that, no?
I've got a buggy-yet-indispensable Firefox extension that causes the browser to crash when certain video players start playing. Auto-playing videos are such a delight for me, since the page crashes on load, and then the page loads automatically when I start Firefox again, prompting another crash...
@poke I know the reason : I use numbers like 2136 px for this algorithm, and because it's integer and not float, when you zoom out a lot, the width 0.232 px would be rounded to 0px :) I'll work on this
16:03
Is my memory going already?
@Kevin Which extension is it?
@Iplodman oh, both probably! in my TODO list , I added the name of the people who request, and wrote poke? ;)
@Basj Probably both then ;)
@Iplodman In fact it's the most requested feature, so I think at least 10 people requested it :)
Thanks by the way!
No problem :P
16:04
@Iplodman You can have the spot in Basj’ TODO list if you want, I don’t care :D
@poke you don't care ??? really ??? ;)
@poke I never officially pinned down the cause, but I suspect the culprit is "Mouse Gestures Redox", which is only officially supported for, like Python 12.0 and below.
about whether my name is on the TODO item? Yes.
I gotta have my mouse gestures.
*Firefox
I hate mouse gestures
16:05
@poke I know ;) I was joking
- hate is the wrong word. I don’t care about mouse gestures.
The one killer feature it has that I can't find anywhere else is, "perform any mouse gesture ending in right+up+left: open in new tabs all links that the cursor passed over during the gesture"
oh b*cks... forgot to invoice
... Which has proven to be surprisingly versatile and useful over the years.
Ooh, gestures ... does anyone else remember that add-on which turned the context menu into an eight-segment ring? That was an interesting concept ...
16:07
@Kevin That sounds like a feature I would hate a lot.
Ok :-)
What if you can’t move over all the links you want to open with that gesture?
What if you have to move over other links you don’t want to open for the gesture?
I just very carefully avoid the undesired links :-)
Then there's the feature's evil twin, "right+down+left: open all links that are in the current highlighted selection"
@poke I feel so honored! Lips tremble.
Which is useful if you need to open so many links that you can't see them all on one page without scrolling
16:09
The following packages have been kept back:
  mongodb-org mongodb-org-mongos mongodb-org-server mongodb-org-shell
  mongodb-org-tools
The following packages will be upgraded:
  apt apt-transport-https apt-utils bash bsdutils libapt-inst1.5
  libapt-pkg4.12 libblkid1 libmount1 libssl-dev libssl-doc libssl1.0.0
  libuuid1 linux-libc-dev man-db mount openssl python-requests rsyslog
  util-linux uuid-runtime
21 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 5 not upgraded.
Need to get 8,583 kB of archives.
I have started a new small website that can be useful :
@davidism @Ffisegydd any idea why we have python-requests system wide?
(in case someone needs it : gget.it)
@ZeroPiraeus yeah, I had that, then I realized I barely use the context menu
@JonClements some system package must depend on it
I don't install python packages to the system
It is possible I may have accidentally, but I don't know.
16:11
well... okay.. going to do the update anyway
couple of security updates apparently, so just installed and rebooted - so sopy will bbias
welcome @OliverBestwalter
Think the email server is set up properly...
or at least I really hope it is
can you write me a tutorial?
I wouldn't say I'm overly qualified to do so... I'm just following a tutorial and man pages :)
meh
last time I set up an email server it became a spam relay... so avoid touching them
Think that was more of an issue with the IT Admin not configuring the firewall properly... but... safe to say it was a combined failure all around
Huh. self.foo doesn't show up in locals(), so how do I tell if a variable is in the local namespace?
16:24
self.foo isn’t a variable.
self is. But .foo is a property access.
What's the difference?
foo is like a property, then?
Yeah, it’s a property of the object self references
So how do I see if a property is in self then?
You can’t. It depends on that object and how it does a property look-up.
Ah.
Okay then :D
I'll go the messy way then.
16:28
@Iplodman foo is just an attribute of self ... just like if you had a local variable x that was a complex number, x would be in what locals() returns, but x.imag wouldn't.
hasattr(self, "foo")? try: self.foo; except : print "not found"? "foo" in self.__dict__? I havent bothered to test these.
um.... who keeps raiding my drinks cabinet... I bought a six pack two weeks ago...
picksies
oh... just remembered I gave those to my brother when he was around last week
DSM
DSM
#family
16:31
Oh! Thanks @kevin, hasattr works great!
looks like I'm putting the kettle on instead then... oh well...
disclaimer: it probably doesn't work for a bunch of corner cases, such as properties with getter/setters.
That's way over my head, so I'll be fine for now :D
You should be hearing the echoing smack of my facepalm soon. — Rusty Manibus 55 mins ago
If you made the class yourself, and it doesn't do anything tricky like override getattr, I think it's fairly safe
16:33
@Kevin best comment ever :)
:-)
Enlightenment is the sound of one hand slapping.
@Kevin Woo! Cheers :D
@Kevin don't forget the difference between __getattr__ and __getattribute__ and __get__ :)
cbg @JustinJDavies
ahh huh... apparently, allowing user log in to the newly configured email server would be a good idea
> am not a python programmer am a java programmer i want to convert it to java to understand it
"convert it to java to understand it" :(
apparently - not being able to use it to send/receive emails is a no-no... However, on the plus side, it's very secure
16:39
@vaultah absurd. Python is so readable, even people that can't read Python can read Python.
@Kevin My mum can't :c
My computer science teacher wrote this:
#import pickle
import pickle
Hmm... not sure that was worth the comment.
No. No it was not.
hi all
16:45
He does stuff like this all the way through.
# Function to open file
def fOpen():
Gud' evening @CoKoder.
Hiss, the accursed camelCase
It burns ussss
Umm... 29 points off 51k... might have to try answering a Q tonight
@Kevin You can be assured that all his function names are CamelCased.
Oh, what a world, what a world
someone ask an interesting question
16:48
~cbg
@JonClements I think your next big target ought to be 54,321.
@Zero or 55555 ?
would you choose RnD or a pure python programmer if you were given the choice?
@tilaprimera do they have to be mutually exclusive?
16:50
I have a question, maybe not directly related to python, but you guys may advice me. So, I want to send the sensor readings from my program to the back end server. Is it a good practice to send data say every minute send 50 records at a time. Or pack all the data into possibly a json array and send as a whole. Which one seems to make more sense?
I'd make a JSON file.
Makes more sense to me.
there are tons of stuf about python and programming, that i have not worked on.....and RnD deals with more of domain research and coming up with solutiosn than actually programming
@CoKoder Depends on whether you would be interested in live updates every minute, or just care about the end result.
I'd probably just stream it
there are tons of stuf about python and programming, that i have not worked on.....and RnD deals with more of domain research and coming up with solutiosn than actually programming
16:52
@poke, i just care about the end result.
DSM
DSM
I'm not fond of waiting until the end before sending data; what if something goes wrong? I might not even have anything to use as a diagnostic.
Then—if storage of the sensor is not an issue—just send it all at once.
@Kevin Here's the original. Yes, yes, I know that took me way too long to find.
@poke, my concern is that if something goes wrong when the program about sending data, we loose all the data. On the other hand, if i send them at a time, possibility of loosing data will be lesser, right?
Oh, I thought fOpen was named because it's short for "file open". But actually, all his functions start with f. That's so much worse.
16:55
does anyone know of a good python library for inputting mathematical formulas and having it render correctly?
@Kevin Yeah, I know xD
I appreciate that he wants to use names to determine the type of the value it represents, but there are way better ways to do that than mutant Hungarian notation.
Like, how about "names that are verbs are always functions"
@Kevin I decided to re-write that code, instead of re-factoring it. pastebin.com/R0CAutgb
is open a function or an int? Hmm, let me get my dictionary...
@Kevin I usually go with classes anyway.
16:57
@kevin one company I worked for, and save my soul, had to use VB... they had this really weird naming convention that was a complete bastardisation of Hungarian notation
I might stick his code on CodeReview and see what other people come up with.
spent more time writing out function names than I did any body of code
@Iplodman You don't seem to use that self_hasattr method anywhere.
@poke, is there a limitation how big a json object/array can be?
@Kevin Yup, it's a WIP.
The code is actually broken at that state.
16:59
@CoKoder Only memory.
and writing "string_SomeStupidNameThatTakesTwoNumbers = blah` always seems a really weird way of returning values
But if you did, I'd suggest replacing any instances of obj.self_hastattr(name) with simply hasattr(obj, name). Then you don't need to make your own method at all.
@poke, i see.
For the transfer, it depends on the protocol.
@Kevin Good idea.
17:00
But most are not really restricted.
@poke, say http
E.g. you can send terabytes over TCP—if you keep the connection open.
Now that I'm not eating lunch with my typing hand, I guess I should suggest not using hasattr at all. If possible, try to create all properties of an object in its __init__. If you make self.foo point to None instead of just not assigning it at all, then you can test if it has a useful value with if self.foo: rather than if hasattr(self, foo)
^ +1
Umm... Here's the actual code (I removed the code for Skew, as it does what I described above perfectly, and I'm not allowed to post working code online, which is also why I'm not going to mention the course name )
17:03
I was wondering whether it's worth it to just force the programmer (being me) to provide a target and data when the instantiate the class.
Or you could require them as parameters to save_file(target, data) and read_file(target)
Then they don't need to be properties of self at all.
What would be better then, or neither is better?
(You might then say, "but without target and data, self has no properties. So why should I bother putting these methods in a class at all?" To which I say, "maybe you shouldn't")
@Kevin God dammit, stop being clever around me. It makes me feel insecure about my ability to code! :c
cabbage
17:08
But then I re-assure my self by looking at the code I linked earlier.
((although you could argue that, because namespaces are a honking great idea, it's fine to put logically similar code bundled in a class, even if they don't share any self.whatever values. This is also true.))
cbg(@OMGtechy)
So much cabbage.
@Kevin That's what I like to do.
17:10
That book's 8 years old, you're going to miss out on a bunch of nice features.
@Kevin I'll just force the coder to give a target and some data when the class is instantiated.
Mmm, and that book (core python) is apparently aimed at people who already know how to program
@davidism True, but for the absolute beginner it's all good.
so I can cut a lot of the crap out at least and get to the interesting stuff
I suppose there's no harm in that
17:10
I've also never heard of "Wesley Chun" in the Python community... but then, I suppose on the flip side, no one's heard of me either... so...
ahaha
it had good reviews, and at worst, I don't like it and don't both with it
will give it to the library or something
I don't know any names of Python community leaders except GVR and Tim Peters.
Have either of them written a book? You should but those hypothetical books.
@Kevin don't annoy the BDFL with having a capital V there!
Well this one has some good reviews from people who look clever aha
oops
17:13
doesn't mean they are of course
I don't understand names that aren't American B-(
I'm sure the book's fine, it's just not up to date.
Oh joy. Kik (The messaging app) requires you to download another app to send video in the main app. What fresh hell is this?
on a side note... I've never read a Python book in my life... so can't judge anything in that regard
Same.
17:15
I tend to jump in and out when I feel like reading
The only dead tree documents I have on programming are Design Patterns and The Mythical Man Month
I had never finished a programming book, but have always found them helpful and insightful when I'm looking for something interesting
@Kevin think I've got a C++ programming language book or two, and Object orientated software construction
Anybody work with the splinter framework?
I think C++ is a wonderful language with a load of shit hanging of its wonderfulness that it picked up last time it went shopping.
17:17
I also have Code Complete, which is the thickest book I have ever owned, counting dictionaries. Not sure if I'll ever get past chapter one.
Wow - that's gone up in price... think I only paid £40 for it... now it's nearly £70!?
mind you, was 15 years ago I guess
I read one of the O'Reilly PHP books cover to cover once ... can't remember whether it was Learning or Programming, but written by Lerdorf anyway.
Who needs a book on OO, how hard could it possibly be? Dog Inherits from Animal, Rectangle inherits from Square. Or, hang on, should it be the other way around...
@Kevin you'd be surprised
After "HTML for Kids", that was my first intro to programming. In 2nd grade.
awesome
I wonder if these old books will be worth something someday
like the first C++ book by Bjarne S. for example
always confused by the "grade" system... we just call them years in the UK
plans to have a go at TAOCP whenever Knuth gets off his backside and finishes writing it
@JonClements I feel your pain
17:21
so how old are you at 2nd grade?
Umm, hold on, 6 or 7?
I was selling cassette tapes with home made games on by 6 :)
aha nice
I used something called The Games Factory and made stuff with 3.5 inch floppy disks
I used RPG Maker, which was just terrible.
nah, just wrote my own using a ZX81 and assembly... those were the days...
17:25
Back in the day when you could get games out of a magazine, and all you had to do was meticulously copy three pages of machine code?
@Kevin I have that on steam haha
I've written like 2 programs in machine code and I won't be doing it again
@Kevin And then most of the time they wouldn't work?
Or so I hear.
I expect it has no resemblance to the RPG Maker of the mid 90s.
instantly starts machine code at new job
@Kevin I actually had my code published in a magazine in the late 80s
17:26
@JonClements nice :D
Wow!
got £25 for it
hell yeah
that's like, pizza and cookies from dominoes
You're making me starstruck now ◕‿◕
^ +1.
17:27
didn't make it onto the cover tape though... slightly annoying... but
I don't suppose anyone works in a business near London that I could do work experience in? ;)
@Iplodman I have contacts, but certainly can't guarantee anything... what you after?
@JonClements Belated congratulations!
Somehow, getting code published in a magazine is more impressive to me than making XY dollars an hour writing code at a megacorp.
@JonClements Well, anything for work experience, really. We have a week in school that we can use to do work experience.
If you could give me the names of some companies then that'd be great, but I'd have to see if I could get there every day :o
17:30
@Iplodman I do internships from time to time
@OMGtechy How are they? Any fun?
@Iplodman I mean I host internships, I am not the intern so I don't know haha
@OMGtechy Ah, right :D
I did three internships as part of my college education.
They're about as fun as any other job, I suppose.
'Ello @Ffisegydd.
17:32
Maybe a little undignified because by default nobody trusts you to do anything difficult or important. You gotta work for that respect.
Writing interview questions at the moment, it's bloody hard to come up with fair questions that are original (so they don't just memorise the answers)
@Kevin indeed. Although I spend a good amount of time vetting the intern so I know I can trust them with a little at least
@OMGtechy How about why do you think that candidates choose to work here instead of competitor x?
@Iplodman ahaha
Na, I'm thinking about technical questions atm
Show that they have done their research, or not ;)
AH.
True
But I work that much out before I even ask them a technical question
I've found that if they want it bad enough, they'll do anything
17:34
@OMGtechy That sounds really sinister.
I've got one writing a report on games technologies for a month. If they were just trying to get into it for the money they'd leave at that point IMO. If they do it, it shows they can motivate themselves at least.
The problem with technical questions is that the good ones become well known
and then people just learn the answer off by heart
I couldn't give a fuck if they get the answer or not, I want to see them try to work it out
Well, I can't help there :l
What's so sinister btw?
@OMGtechy Is that really what's more important? Everything I thought about interviews isn't true.
@OMGtechy Let's keep a watch on the language please :)
17:37
@OMGtechy "Get them to do anything"
@Iplodman depends where you interview
@JonClements sorry :P
@OMGtechy How much do grades matter, then? Apparently they're not too important.
@Iplodman ahahaha
@Iplodman once again depends. Some places won't even interview you without a 1st. Others will give you a chance even without a degree (that's how I got in)
I don't see any reason not to give people a chance personally
@OMGtechy Hm.
On Hacker News, commenters occasionally suggest giving an actual problem that you're working on in your actual code base. It's like a miniature contracting gig for the interviewee. Drawbacks: strangers get to look at your code, you have to pay them
17:39
It shouldn't be all about the grades, IMO. Who gives a yam if you lack a special bit of paper? As long as you can code you should be golden.
@Kevin that's a good idea
I didn't even go to college, so have no higher education... appears to have worked out okay though
@Iplodman exactly, or at least appear golden haha
@JonClements I studied music for two years but that's it
had an intern that was doing a CS degree... didn't think it was necessary, but the director of my department made his wishes more than clear... so took him on... was completely useless for about 3 months
DSM
DSM
We have an offer pending for a full-time research gig, and as a trial project we got him to make sense of some legal/economic data. We paid him for it, of course. He gets money; we get something we needed done; we get to evaluate him.
17:41
@DSM everyone wins
"produces useful work" and "went to college" seem to be orthogonal concepts.
(hopefully)
however, after the first 3 months, I wanted to let him go to be honest
but then he suddenly picked up and did stuff and understood stuff
worst I ever saw was a guy who just hard coded test case results because he didn't know how to properly implement them
was too late by the time people spotted it
Getting a CS degree exposed me to a bunch of stuff that I probably wouldn't have gone looking for on my own, but it didn't help me be a better programmer.
17:43
@davidism yeah, I've considered going back and studying it for that exact reason (exposure)
@davidism this guy dropped his degree, and started his own business after his internship was up
Unless you're going into research, the benefits of a CS degree seem more indirect
@davidism although some companies will not even consider you if you don't have one, which I think is stupid personally
DSM
DSM
On the OEIS we prefer people submit code to validate their sequences. One tried to submit a program which was basically print [1,2,4,8]. Not sure he quite got the point.
I gave him his start up capital and some advice, and he's doing well for himself...
17:45
HiringExperiences.SE
DSM
DSM
@Jon: your story went in a very different direction than I was expecting!
I'm not sure that uni is worth the 20k debt. At least @IntrepidBrit gets his uni education for free, the lucky sod.
Why free? @Iplodman
Scotland gives free university education.
DSM
DSM
His poor professors! Isn't it illegal not to pay them?
17:45
damn, they don't in England...
Not in scotland.
@DSM ahaha
England is like 24k :c
or 27k? :)
At least you only have to pay it back when you're earning a decent amount
17:46
@JonClements Ooh, startup investment. How entrepreneurial of you ◕‿◕
Glad I didn’t have these problems.
I have an idea for a startup: a page where you upload an image, and we digitally add googly eyes to them.
I'm aiming for a billion dollar buyout from Facebook.
@Kevin you've got some fetish going on with the unicode smiley at the moment haven't you?
17:48
@JonClements If you don't like the admiration emoticon, you'll have to stop doing things worthy of my admiration :-)
DSM
DSM
Surprisingly, addgooglyeyes.com is still free.
@DSM gasp?
England/Wales is £9k per year plus more in maintenance loans. Call it £13k per year of loan.
good, good. It's all falling into place.
@DSM So is googlyey.es.
17:49
@Kevin buy it now, and we'll host it free of charge on sopython.com!?
ahah
"Add google yeyes? What kind of site is this?"
DSM
DSM
Everyone can apply their machine learning knowledge to subimage detection!
either that or attempt to contact your doctors and get your medication changed...
You could actually just use goo.gl/yeyes – Google’s redirect service.
17:51
@OMGtechy we're normally sane... but welcome to insane Friday
@JonClements but what if I like it? :/
everything we say has some deeply meaningful purpose... just don't ask what it is
CEP 7: Insane Fridays are now a thing.
DSM
DSM
Speaking of things that happen on Friday, it's time for chicken tikka.
so jel
@DSM me wants...
My home-made pizza is in the oven.
@Ffisegydd ahahaha xD
DSM
DSM
Naan-flavoured rhubarb for all!
I've got beef stew that's been in the slow cooker
@DSM can I have a garlic naan please?
17:54
@Jon I love slow cookers.
dug it out from the cupboard a few days ago
well, I say "dug" - don't mean I literally had to grab a spade and go all minecrafty in my house
DSM
DSM
Last time I was at this place they kept trying to upsell me from my butter naan to a garlic. Three times. And then they rang me up for a garlic, even though they'd given me a butter. Charming rascals.
@JonClements If you need a spade to get your stuff out the cupboard then you're doing it wrong
awww dammit why did you go correcting yourself
@JonClements That made me giggle too much ;)
@OMGtechy because the magic 8 ball told me you'd retort to my comment
17:56
@JonClements :O
Well, actually it said "Yes"... but I read between the errr, lines?
you didn't read into the void did you?!
Ask again later
Oh no, it's taken him already
Most likely
17:59
@JonClements You mean the fact that all chat in here is actually steganographically encoded communication to our pan-dimensional overlords?
Na, he means he's still reading the ball

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