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12:57 AM
How does the Flask request object work? Specifically how can I call request from within a method where request isn't a parameter?
I guess that means request is a global variable, but different routes clearly can have different flask.requests
 
1:55 AM
@quantumtremor request is a proxy to the top object on the request stack for the current thread. The app constructs a Request object and pushes it to the stack when it gets an incoming request, then pops it after the response is dispatched. One thread handles one request at a time, so the stack will typically have only the one element.
 
 
3 hours later…
user559633
4:45 AM
the fact that it took me all day to finish reading a page on PIDs is exactly why my new apartment will have a home office
 
user559633
4:55 AM
i failed an audit on this: http://stackoverflow.com/a/27577260/559633

which doesn't actually address the questions
 
user559633
5:06 AM
i'm going to order a large print of this for the office
 
user559633
and maybe this so that people will ask "what's that?" and I can point to aforementioned print
 
abc
6:19 AM
Cbg
 
user559633
cbg
 
user559633
6:32 AM
stackoverflow.com/questions/9827820/… i see this answer totally getting me 3 internet points max
 
@tristan Do you research before answering or the answer is just off the top of your head? Or hat?
 
user559633
i read about process groups earlier today, had a suspicion about top and its assumption about the screen (the way it updates the screen is just too ~fancy~ for it to not be doing something special) and knew about some relevant man pages
 
user559633
i did research freebsd a bit and look at its source code online to confirm my thoughts
 
user559633
if he/she comes back and is like "NOPE, still wrong," I'm totally going to install 8.1 on a virtual machine though
 
user559633
6:52 AM
it's a shame that user hasn't stuck around stack (or maybe did under a different username). that's a really great first question
 
user559633
7:16 AM
alright, i'm off to bed. take care
 
Hi guys
 
7:35 AM
cbg
 
7:56 AM
Hey guys, i have a machine learning task (text classification). I have a bunch of .txt files in a folder with a label at the end of the eaw text, something like this: blablablablabalbalab,'CATEGORY'. I'm using scikit learn for this, any idea of how can i label the folder full of txt files?
Somethin like: y = [doc[-1] for doc in training_data], where training data is the folder full of .txt files?
 
Are you trying to assign categories, or get a summary of categories already defined?
 
assign them
 
abc
@tristan Russian division of Apple has raised the prices again
 
y = [doc[-1] for doc in training_data]

test_data = ['this is a bad movie']test_matrix = feature_hasher_vect.transform(test_data)


svm = SVC()
svm.fit(X, y)
result = svm.predict(test_matrix)
i want to build that 'y' but at a folder level.
 
okay, just walk over the folder then?
 
8:02 AM
i tried but im assigning the labels bad
 
sounds like something that'd take a while to solve via chat given the vaguerity of the info... I'm afraid I don't have that time
 
Ok thank you
 
cbg @Ian
 
Cbg @Jon - potato?
 
@Ian last couple of days working - so bananas... potato?
 
8:12 AM
:D - Well I've had the weekend off (other than installing CyanogenMod for the GF, which I always find to be very stressful) so bananas too! \o/
 
 
2 hours later…
10:10 AM
cbg
 
user4202350
ninja
 
10:26 AM
Cbg
 
10:37 AM
cbg again
 
cbg again
 
cbg
 
central heating appears to have either "don't do anything" - or "bake me to death" modes
 
@JonClements You'll need to install a bot to do PWM
 
hah... not - I need to call the people that I spent more than pretty penny with fixing the issue
I want the rooms I visit to be "warm" - not trying to take my skin off... and don't want the entire house at nearly 32c
 
10:44 AM
lol
 
just turned the sytem off at the mains in the mean time
 
11:04 AM
Ah, look at this, I'm sure it an aduit, but its a link-only answer!!!
And then it isn't...
 
welp, audit or not, I always do what I think should be done
 
Its quite funny that everyone hit Looks OK, just in case it was an audit...
 
@matsjoyce difficult one; should really be a comment.
 
abc
11:50 AM
Cbg again
Is "They raised the prices by 66 percent" a correct sentence?
 
@abc yes.
 
abc
Thanks
 
12:07 PM
@abc typically you'd use % in writing though.
 
abc
12:26 PM
Also, can I replace the "66 percent" part with "two thirds"? Will the sentence still be correct?
 
Yeah I think that's fine.
 
abc
Thank you
 
Oh dear, they are making my Ninja grumpy now: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/280924/…
 
The "star hat" was a bloody stupid idea.
 
12:43 PM
@MartijnPieters I think the parrot's a bit too low to call it "perfectly integrated"?
 
@matsjoyce it's a stylised ninja doll with short stubby arms, and you care about the exact positioning of the parrot?
 
@MartijnPieters Yup, I'm fussy. I can't talk though, seeing as no hat fits my avatar... Except the solstice hat.
 
one might argue the 'almost' that precedes "perfectly integrated" to make that statement a bit looser
 
1:01 PM
Avocado...
 
Ah, my first delete vote.
 
user559633
I answered it, but that's a waste of time
 
abc
@tristan did you get my message about Apple?
 
user559633
@abc just now saw it in notifications.
 
abc
They raised the iPhone prices by 33%
 
user559633
I'm surprised they didn't raise it by more -- the currency is about half of what it was worth against the USD at the end of last year
 
user559633
1:26 PM
And it's significantly less stable
 
Apple has a currency?
 
abc
@tristan well, they raised them twice, so..
 
(even if not, it's surprisingly plausible)
 
user559633
@Kevin heh. on that note, i should have slept last night
 
user559633
@abc ah. what what the first round?
 
abc
1:31 PM
25-26% (for iPhone 6)
 
user559633
are electronics stores raising prices too or is it just official apple that's doing it?
 
wat. I've got a recursion error...but...I'm not using recursion...
Why do you do this to my python? Why do you test my love?
 
You can get "maximum recursion depth exceeded" without recursion if you're sufficiently determined.
 
Something to do with copy/deepcopy
 
You just have to call a thousand functions, is all.
 
abc
1:37 PM
@tristan some of them do - people are buying a lot of TVs, laptops, phones etc.
 
Maybe you're copying a data structure that contains a reference to itself? But deepcopy usually handles that properly. Must be a particularly twisty dependency.
 
Okay even more weird. It only occurs if I'm using tmux
If I run it in normal bash, it's fine.
Argh no it has happened outside of tmux. But it occurred much later on.
 
user559633
@abc weird. i would think they'd be buying euros/us dollars so they could remain liquid
 
user559633
@Ffisegydd reliably later on?
 
So basically I'm iterating over 370,000 Python questions in our DB
But it's occurring at different points in the iteration.
I'll try it again and see if it's the same again
Unfortunately my bash cuts out a lot of the traceback. I might set up some logging
 
1:48 PM
this question gets philosophical about "can an empty string really be said to be in another string?"
 
user559633
I'm going to answer. Hold my beer
 
Failed around 44,000 into the iteration. I might put the whole thing in a big try except
And see if there's something special about the database output
 
The docs are somewhat unclear about the true meaning of "in".
 
user559633
this is actually a neat question
 
> The operators in and not in test for membership.
Ok, great, but what is membership?
They go on to discuss its precise meaning for container types, but str is not a container type.
 
user559633
1:51 PM
i kind of know the answer to this
 
Oops, here it is in the next paragraph.
 
user559633
figured it out
 
> For the string and bytes types, x in y is true if and only if x is a substring of y. An equivalent test is y.find(x) != -1. Empty strings are always considered to be a substring of any other string, so "" in "abc" will return True.
 
user559633
yeah
 
Ok, so it works that way because that's the way it works. How ontological.
Tautological. Whatever. I can't words today.
I have a feeling the OP will reply with "yes, but why is it like that?"
You're going to have to track down GvR and interrogate him for a quote.
 
user559633
1:56 PM
yeah, i'm working on the actual answer
 
user559633
part of it is because '' === None
 
@tristan You could also mention that 'abc' in 'abc' == True, 'ab' in 'abc' == True and 'a' in 'abc' == True, so having '' in 'abc' == True just continues the pattern.
 
Ok I've narrowed it down to iterating over the database, not creating anything with the data.
 
user559633
@matsjoyce i'm putting in the C source
 
user559633
'' in 'abc' is there, but for a different reason
 
user559633
which now makes me late for work :P
 
user559633
which is getting some love, so now i don't feel so bad about the response to what i spend time on last night
 
Okay code is fixed. It was a deepcopy call in a class method. Don't understand how it came about though, as I wasn't recursively calling it or anything
 
deepcopy uses pickle, and pickle has plenty of ways to go recursive
 
Ah touche. I didn't know that.
 
2:45 PM
@tristan: done now, I promise.
Sorry about that, I am OCD like that.
 
I don't think I've ever had problems with pickle. Hmm. Not sure if prevalence of recursion problems is overstated, or if I'm just inexperienced...
Needs reproducing code
 
user559633
@MartijnPieters no need to apologize, thanks for the edits (was trying to rush out an answer when running 45 minutes late for work)
 
user559633
3:01 PM
@thefourtheye hah, thanks for snapping the asker back to his original question on the '' in 'string' post
 
user559633
i'm hoping that one or my sigttou post from last night ends up being the +7 i need to get my redundant helmet
 
3:18 PM
I feel like I could answer this if only I paid a little more attention in school.
Take the cross product of the two vectors to get the axis of the great circle... Then a miracle occurs... Then you have your interpolated points.
 
I do like great circles.
 
They're pretty great B-)
(I guess step 0 there should be "get the vectors from the radian measurements")
"find the straight line segment connecting the two points, choose N interpolated points on that segment, then normalize them onto the unit sphere" was my first instinct, but I think it becomes increasingly inaccurate as the points grow farther apart.
And it doesn't work at all for antipodes, since the normalized vectors would all fall on the points themselves, or even cause a divide-by-zero error if the middle interpolated point lies at the origin.
I bet there's a really nice pure geometry solution, but the only approaches I can come up with require dropping down into trigonometry and solving some difficult equations with cosines and square roots and such.
 
abc
 
abc
put on-hold ... 20 secs ago :(
 
user559633
high five fizzy
 
No code to reproduce the issue; the chardet juggling is a red herring (and cannot even be reproduced with the current release of chardet).
They may or may not come back to add the code, so in the meantime, it just needs to be closed.
 
abc
4:00 PM
> So my question is rather broad: is there a better way to do this?
 
user559633
I learned my lesson again this morning on answering bad questions.
 
user559633
"i am facing the same problem now.. Is is something related to ubuntu?? Or is it due to PyCharm IDE i am using??" give a man a recursive solution and he'll have a solution for the day. try to teach a man what a recursive function does and he'll annoy you for the rest of the morning
 
recursive functions don't work on ubuntu, everyone knows that
 
user559633
f this. i'm going to expertsexchange. at least there, they do the needful asap in an enterprise way
 
Heh. I had an insane amount of work on Nidaba the other day, like 20-30 commits that I squashed to one. Just squashed the commit to "Done the needful"
 
user559633
4:06 PM
alright, afk for a while. i got handed a task at 5pm on a friday with a due date of wednesday for a task that took my predecessor a couple months to give up on
 
I got a football hat for writing one line of code. There is no justice in the world.
 
user559633
dammit
 
user559633
11am is not too early to get drunk, right?
 
No, never. It's Christmas!
 
user559633
I'm at work :|
 
4:20 PM
even more reason to get drunk
 
user2555451
cbg.
 
user559633
That's the spirit
 
Closed-voted for an ubuntu/linux question. Moved question to AskUbuntu. 2 views. argh.
 
user559633
Maybe your question wasn't that great then :)
 
There's a reason the main site gets questions like "I know this really belongs on [other site], but can you guys help me?"
 
4:27 PM
I got upvoted after one second but the close-vote made me think AskUbuntu would be fitting
And I try and ask with complete info
@Kevin, do they get closed?
and even if they do - they're still visible on the main site
 
Typically, yeah.
 
user559633
what was your question? i might know off the top of my head
 
@tristan I was told not to paste links to questions here, but you can check out my profile (maybe you'd have to check it on askubuntu) to see
 
user559633
i asked, just link, i'm not digging
 
0
Q: Allow users to set higher (lower?) nice levels

Reut SharabaniI want to allow users to set a nicelevel lower than 0 (and any nice level really) in my system. I'm testing by logging in again as a user of the affected user group after I set the change and trying: nice -n -18 sleep 1 Which keeps producing the message: nice: cannot set niceness: Permission ...

 
user559633
4:32 PM
that's a good fit for server fault. i really don't like askubuntu. does "didn't work" mean permission denied? and did you log off and on with your test user? pam is read for a user at creation of the session process group
 
yup. added the error message I keep getting.
serverfault is more popular tha n askubuntu?
 
user559633
don't know about more popular, but it's higher quality imho
 
I'll let it sit there for a day... maybe delete and move it if that fails. It's for a feature I'm working on...
I logged off everything. A quick reboot is more challenging to fit in the uptime schedule
 
The most common word in Python questions is use.
 
4:36 PM
did you use stemming?
 
Yes
Otherwise it's Python :P (without stemming)
 
user559633
@ReutSharabani you don't need to reboot. just log off and on with the user.
 
Where did you run this and how? Is there an api to get the questions in some format or did you crawl the site?
I logged off with a user frmo the group and it didn't work
 
Does that count titles too? I bet we have a zillion posts that end with "...using Python"
 
I'd be interested to know the most common words by character count
 
4:39 PM
I expect "in Python" would be more common, but I'm guessing you're filtering out embarrassingly common words like "in" or "the"
 
@Kevin no, body text (non code) only.
 
Hypothetically, if I asked one question containing ten million instances of the word "Kevin", would that put it at the top of the list?
 
user2555451
Look at this comment I got: "Try to avoid forward slashes. They're OK in this particular context, but not always, and it's a dangerous habit to get into."
 
user2555451
Huh? When would they ever be a problem in Python?!
 
I'm curious as well. I have asked him to clarify.
 
user2555451
4:46 PM
All of Python's tools which work with paths allow for /. I have yet to find one that doesn't.
 
Hmm. Do they have a special meaning in regexes maybe?
 
user2555451
Not in Python.
 
user559633
Eh. Forward slashes are not great because they're applicable on windows and on URIs. If you're talking paths, it's safer to use os.pathsep so it will work on other machines.. durr: not pathsep but dirsep or whatever it is, i don't know off the top of my head
 
@tristan Or os.join. That sounds like a reasonable reason.
 
user559633
os.sep.
 
4:48 PM
We need a cabbage bot like the js folks have to look up this stuff...
 
user559633
meh, i don't mind using the meat calculator
 
I'm not sure I'm following here. "applicable on windows" implies "not great"?
 
user559633
f bots, they ruin communities.
 
user559633
well, besides windows being a peasant operating system... ( actually i meant applicable only on, my english isn't great today)
 
user2555451
All well written Python code will be able to handle both ` \ ` and /. All of the std tools do this as well. Using ` / ` is the same as ` \ ` in Python.
 
4:50 PM
@matsjoyce Did you mean os.path.join?
 
I always get confused by slash chat, because I can never remember which one is forward slash and which one is back slash.
 
user559633
yes, but if all python code was well written and DWIM, we wouldn't have that many questions.
 
user2555451
Meh. My slashes aren't rendering well.
 
user559633
@Kevin think left to right for reading
 
windows is a peasant operation system?
 
user559633
4:50 PM
Yes, a beep boop platform for the unwashed masses.
 
@AirThomas Yeah, I get confused what is in os.path and what's in os.
Things like os.sep look like they should be in path, but arn't...
 
user2555451
I'm waiting for pathlib to be more accepted so we can drop os.path.
 
user2555451
I never understood why Python has a "nested" module for working with paths.
 
I'm not too fond of that either.
 
user2555451
pathlib or the nested os.path module?
 
4:54 PM
os.path.
 
user559633
isn't it a nested module because it's actually an alias?
 
user2555451
Yea, os.path usually corresponds to the ntpath module (at least on Windows).
 
user2555451
But nobody uses ntpath directly.
 
user559633
Yeah, so it's probably a good thing it doesn't get mangled/merged into the os namespace.
 
@iCodez At least with pathlib you won't have to call os.path.relpath or os.path.abspath when using fnmatch, just because it can't handle ./
 
4:56 PM
@Kevin Hypothetically, yes.
 
user2555451
True. The pathlib.Path class is pretty powerful when it comes to comparisons.
 
> if len(row[2]) or len(row[3]) > 3:
> 3 applies to second one.
 
Yes.
 
OK, nice actually works and I missed it. Still doesn't work with soft/hard limits though.
 
How i check for both?
 
5:00 PM
Use any. any(i > 3 for i in (len(row[2]), len(row[2])))
 
@AvinashRaj if max(len(row[2]), len(row[3])) > 3: is one way?
 
user559633
@ReutSharabani again, what does "doesn't work" mean? permission error? nice getting ignored?
 
That could probably be tidied up a bit but meh.
 
@matsjoyce another way?
 
user2555451
You've only got two comparisons. Just write them out in full.
 
user2555451
5:02 PM
if len(row[2]) > 3 or len(row[3]) > 3:
 
@AvinashRaj Another way is Ffisegydd's way or iCodez's way
 
I prefer using any just because it's extendable.
 
@iCodez simple one.
 
But if you know it won't be extended, then iCodez's is just as good.
 
user2555451
*readable one. ;)
 
5:03 PM
@Ffisegydd any(len(i) > 3 for i in row[2:4])?
 
@tristan, permissions error.
 
Yeah :P
 
user559633
@ReutSharabani on only negative int values for nice?
 
user2555451
I wonder if something like if len(row[2]) <= len(row[3]) > 3: would work.
 
I'll try hard -18 and sot -18 and let you know, but in conjunction it doesn't work o either 12.04 or 14.04 after logging in and otu
@tristan - both do not work (either soft -18 or hard -18)
 
5:06 PM
@iCodez It works, but that's sought of evil. Like using or for selecting a not None value.
 
I do that :D (the or trick)
 
Its popular of codegolf.se... Doing b if a is None else a is more ... zenish?
 
import csv
with open('file') as infile:
	reader = csv.reader(infile, delimiter=";")
	for row in reader:
		if len(row[2]) <= 10000 or len(row[3]) <= 10000:
			print(row)
 
user2555451
it depends. If a could only ever be None or a truthy value, I'd use or.
 
how i modify the above with any?
 
5:10 PM
lowest = 'not this' if lst.sort() else lst[0]
codegolf :D
 
user2555451
@AvinashRaj - Are you sure you want to? The way you have it is both readable and efficient.
 
user2555451
any and a genexp will be slower.
 
@iCodez Nooooo... go functional mad!!!
 
no, i don't want any complex one..
 
user559633
5:12 PM
also
 
but someone says that your's is not an efficient one.
 
user2555451
who says that? Did they even test their claim?
 
Python is inherently inefficient ;-)
 
Thanks for your support.. :-)
 
user2555451
The way you have now is very efficient compared to any and a genexp. You would only use those tools with numerous things to test.
 
user559633
5:14 PM
Just profile it.
 
But seriously, the I/O required to read a file will probably outstrip the efficiency of any one line of code by an order of magnitude
 
2 mins ago, by tristan
Just profile it.
 
20 secs ago, by davidism
> Just profile it.
 
user559633
hah, i can't go through the moderation queue because i've already flagged 31 posts.
 
14 secs ago, by Ffisegydd
20 secs ago, by davidism
> Just profile it.
 
5:16 PM
20 secs ago, by Kevin
14 secs ago, by Ffisegydd
20 secs ago, by davidism
> Just profile it.
 
I've seen 30x nested quotes in the sandbox. It is a terrible thing.
 
18 secs ago, by Kevin
I've seen 30x nested quotes in the sandbox. It is a terrible thing.
 
The sandbox is a silly place. Terribly silly.
 
>>> timeit.timeit("len(row[2]) <= len(row[3]) > 3", "row=[1,2,[1,2],[1,2,3,4],5]")
0.2285489409987349
>>> timeit.timeit("any(len(i) > 3 for i in row[2:4])", "row=[1,2,[1,2],[1,2,3,4],5]")
0.9860989570152014
 
user2555451
told you.
 
5:19 PM
>>> timeit.timeit("max(len(row[2]), len(row[3])) > 3", "row=[1,2,[1,2],[1,2,3,4],5]")
0.46283905699965544
>>> timeit.timeit("any(i > 3 for i in (len(row[2]), len(row[2])))", "row=[1,2,[1,2],[1,2,3,4],5]")
0.8132056080212351
 
user559633
now run it and look at it in profile.run to see why :)
 
>>> timeit.timeit("len(row[2]) > 3 or len(row[3]) > 3", "row=[1,2,[1,2],[1,2,3,4],5]")
0.23495756098418497
Yup, so iCodez is the fastest.
 
user559633
congratulations, you put a turbo on a civic
 
Hey guys, just so you're aware, we're basically fixing/improving @AvinashRaj's answer without credit.
He tends to come in here and do this a lot.
 
user559633
haha wow, that's sad.
 
5:22 PM
It feels dishonest.
 
@davidism is this a wrong behaviour?
 
@davidism But it says he completed those edits, is that wrong?
 
Do len(row[2])>3 or len(row[3])>3, with four fewer spaces it will get parsed faster! (do not actually do this)
 
user559633
@AvinashRaj haha what do you think?
 
i will delete that python part if this a wrong thing.
 
user559633
5:22 PM
jfc this annoyed me way too much #triggered i'm done
 
It's weird that your answers tend to come from us.
 
@AvinashRaj don't remove the Python part, just don't come in here asking us to write your answers for you. As davidism said, you've done it a fair bit before.
 
already reached upvote limit. I don't need that answer anymore..
 
@AvinashRaj you don't answer to get rep. You answer to answer questions.
 
anyway, just try to be more open about it
"I'm trying to improve my answer <here>, do you think <x> or <y> is better?"
 
5:25 PM
@AvinashRaj Please undelete your answer. You've effectively robbed any future reader of being able to see it.
 
You can mark as wiki if you don't want rep?
 
I don't think using us to answer questions is an ethical problem, but I worry that chat quality will degrade if lots of users use us as fact checkers.
 
i have done the most part of my ans. The part that made me to stuck was the condition part.
it applies to the second one itself.
So i asked here.
 
Which is fine, we don't mind questions like that. Just be open about why your asking the question in that situation.
 
@davidism ok ...
i'll follow.
 
5:29 PM
I recognize that you had an answer before asking here, and that you don't do this for the majority of your answers. But it still throws me off when I see this happen.
Anyway...
@Ffisegydd are you doing analysis now with Nidaba? I saw the common words earlier
 
@davidism I'm doing some exploratory work. Basically just goofing around with the data.
I've gotten Kesh to a point now where I can query for questions and such.
So I did a simple "count all words in all python questions"
 
Wow, you've been busy, you have kesh running as a socket service?
 
No it's a Python package which can be imported and returned a connection object which you can query by dict.
It's really simplistic, and probably badly designed, but it's just to get me going.
 
ah, so just the database layer right now, not general communication.
 
Yep
dpaste.com/0T2CF1X is what I used earlier
 
5:34 PM
18 mins ago, by matsjoyce
20 secs ago, by Kevin
14 secs ago, by Ffisegydd
20 secs ago, by davidism
> Just profile it.
 
lol, late to the party @Persijn
@Ffisegydd how fast was it?
 
Sorry took me a while to learn chat formating
 
@davidism oof. Maybe 5 minutes to iterate over 370,000 questions? I didn't actually time it.
That code is also very simple. When we do actual ML we'll use scikit-learn which uses numpy, etc.
 
I have no idea if that's good or bad either. I guess we'll normally just be running on a few questions a minute once the classifier is trained.
 
Yeah exactly. It won't be very intensive at all. And if it takes 12 hours to initially train the model then that'll be ok, just run it over night/weekend.
A lot of the classifiers require all the data in memory at a time, hopefully the 8GB RAM will be able to manage that, otherwise we'll have to use one that supports online learning (you can batch feed in the data from disk).
 
5:52 PM
And the 30 minute timer has started.
isn't too hopeful though.
18 mins ago, by Persijn
18 mins ago, by matsjoyce
20 secs ago, by Kevin
14 secs ago, by Ffisegydd
20 secs ago, by davidism
> Just profile it.
Just to keep it going. On a low simmer.
 
user559633
i'm honored. really.
 
@ZeroPiraeus: Wowsers.
Just saw that you put a bounty on the sorting question.
 
user559633
@MartijnPieters "coherent"
 
@tristan post it!
do qualify the answer, of course.
 
user559633
Done.
 
5:56 PM
 
@MartijnPieters Ah yuh :-)
 
The hats' escape attempts are growing bolder.
 
Ah, antonym, that's the other word I was looking for.
 
user559633
Will do.
 
stealing that.
 
user559633
5:57 PM
Added more words
 
TBH I should give myself a stern talking to about not having looked that up before posting.
 
@Martijn I'm not sure how well-received "what is the antonym for X" questions are on ELU
 
user559633
meh. it's a SE that's not SO.
 
@AirThomas there are some others that did well enough.
 
5:58 PM
@MartijnPieters Not attracting a great deal of attention / upvotes; I imagine given that it was one of a pair last time around, both of which already got bountied once, most the regular crowd have already seen it.
 
But, I don't spend too much time lurking there
 
@AirThomas I did look in the dictionary, there are no antonyms listed in the ones I looked at.
 

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