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01:02
@PeterVaro Sorry, I left for home last night :(
@thefourtheye left for home!? How dare you puppy! :p
Its raining dogs and cats Puppy...
better than raining frogs I guess?
But... it rains :( Mesa don't like rains... :'(
Wait... my evil twin doesn't like a shower now and then? :p
01:10
Nope, he was born and brought up in a place where the hot sun and water scarcity is quite common... So he is not comfortable with rain
wouldn't recommend England then :p
It rains a lot?
Not exactly the driest of countries most of the year :)
Hmmm, looks like accommodating to rain will help me live in this world I guess :( Except my home town, every other place has rains often
Well - it's fine... puppies are generally insoluble... so all's fine
01:18
Phew, thats a relief :-)
plus - it's fun getting soaked... then running towards those human things and shaking the water off vigiourously near them - they love that...
I remember them chasing me for doing that once
01:41
that's because they love you... it's a fun game :p
01:57
The UK became the 5th largest economy in 2014, overtaking France. The UK is predicted to become the largest economy in Europe by 2030 - yay :p
 
3 hours later…
05:01
cbg
I have a list1 [1, 2, 341, 8] and another list2 [{"message" : "hi"}, {"new": 'this"}] and list1[0] 's message is in list2[0] and so on...serially then on. Is there a way to construct a data structure to store their association?
Or instead just work on the lists without the overhead of constructing a data structure with association?
05:53
@tilaprimera I think you need to be a bit clearer what you're after ... one of your lists contains four integers, the other two dicts, and only one of those dicts has a "message" key.
Based on those examples I can't tell what you're looking for.
They are just examples.. bad one.
Both have equal number of elements and assume list2 has messages ..
Yes, but of what? I can't see any relationship.
List2 is in same order as list1...
it is created that way..
by some third party app..
Do i make a data structure for their association or just leave it and use it as it is?
Ok, but ... you say "list1[0] 's message is in list2[0] and so on" - but what does "and so on" mean if list2[1] is {"new": 'this"}?
like i said bad example...
05:57
Can you put together a good one? ;-)
list1 = [1, 2], list2 = [{'msg': "hi"}, {"msg": "hehe"}]
And what do you want? [{1: "hi"}, {2: "hehe"}] ... {1: "hi", 2: "hehe"} ... ?
... something completely different?
Will that create unnecessary overhead?
I resorted to not doing anything with the list and just using it by indexing values as necessary.
You still haven't told me what you want.
@ZeroPiraeus man i am all sprouts.. leave it. Sprouts.
06:05
Don't worry about it ...
just confused is all :-)
 
4 hours later…
10:05
cbg
@Kroods: can I ask you to look at the chatroom rules?
yeah
> 1. Do not link your recently posted questions in the room. The main site is the dedicated space for posting questions, and having them answered.
thank you
 
1 hour later…
11:10
Hi i need help. I cant find PIL for Python 3.4!
11:23
def factorial(n):
  if n == 0:
    return 1
  else:
      x = factorial(n-1) #Question
      print x
      return x*n                                                                                                              what is x equal to?How does it know the factorial of (n-1) by using factorial(n-1) since the function it self doesn't have any kind of operation attached to it
Hi
any help would be appreciated
suppose n = 5 , the first time x will be x = factorial(5-1), whats the value of x here
@Emyen pythonware.com/products/pil The current free version is PIL 1.1.7. This release supports Python 1.5.2 and newer, including 2.5 and 2.6. A version for 3.X will be released later.
11:40
@Emyen PIL is deprecated, try the replacement Pillow
There's a slight formatting problem with that code, the last two lines should be
print x
return x*n

This is called [recursion](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursion#In_computer_science)
@PM2Ring I have read alot on it, i kind of get the big picture , my only question still how does the function the value of factorial(n-1), or does it just take in account the number of times the function is called, then multiply it by n.
12:01
It'd be nice if Python could do that, but it can't. When you call factorial(5), the factorial function has to call factorial(4), which has to call factorial(3), which has to call factorial(2), which has to call factorial(1), which has to call factorial(0), which can return a result of 1 (since if n == 0 is True).
So 1 gets passed back "up" to the previous invocation and so factorial(1) can return 1*1, which gets passed back up to the previous invocation and so factorial(2) can return 2*1, etc. until finally factorial(5) can return 5 * 24. Does that make sense?
cbg
@PM2Ring PIL isn't deprecated.
It was just neglected, so someone finally forked it (with Pillow being that fork).
after having given up on the original author responding to the mounting pile of bug reports.
But yeah, use Pillow, it is the new PIL.
@MartijnPieters: Yeah, Ok. PIL may not be technically deprecated, but anyone waiting for a Python 3.4 version of it is going to be waiting a very long time. :)
I'm still very new to using these Chat rooms. Why didn't my Wiki link work properly?
is this the right regex to catch all numbers that open a string? pattern = re.compile('(\d)*')
( a single number that is... )
@PM2Ring Can't tell as I cannot see the Markdown source.
@ReutSharabani That'll catch any string of digits in the string. Try re.compile('^(\d)*') The ^ is an anchor for the start of the string.
@MartijnPieters The Markdown is [recursion](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursion#In_computer_science)
@ReutSharabani: Also, although it's not necessary in this case, it's good practice to use raw strings for regexes, eg, re.compile(r'^(\d)*'), otherwise backslashes may do unexpected things.
12:20
Cabbage!
@PM2Ring thanks! I avoid regex ona daily basis but I'll try and remember that
re-cbg
@PM2Ring The whole line counts. Was it indented for example. That isolated piece of markdown works just fine: recursion
I don't think it was indented, but it was following that code which I pasted from my text editor, so it was following a pasted newline... I guess. :) Anyway, it's no big deal, just slightly annoying.
12:36
cbg
@Ffisegydd re-cbg :D
@PM2Ring totally,its like its stacking the functions until the factorial of 1 which we know, and then go back up replace it.I am i right?
@PM2Ring Yes, any text with newlines is left un-parsed as it is assumed to be a non-Markdown source.
@user2983686 Pretty much. As you might guess, calculating factorial with a simple loop is much more efficient. So only use recursion in Python when there's no alternative. OTOH, in some languages (like Haskell) recursion is efficient, and it's not easy to do loops without using recursion.
So if I use *newlines*
in my post then all **MarkDown** is left un-parsed.
12:51
@MartijnPieters Ah! That makes sense. Thanks, Martijn.
@PM2Ring Thanks for the advice,since i am learning python, i am kind of trying to do it the right way , not leaving the details behind.next time i see it at least i will know how to understand it
I kinda feel sorry for the OP of stackoverflow.com/questions/27705523/… getting all those downvotes. They tried to do the right thing - there's a code attempt, error messages, and although there's no expected output that's not really relevant for their question. But I guess they got hammered due to appalling understanding of and inconsistent use of basic Python syntax.
@user2983686 No worries. BTW, try searching for recursion on Google... :)
@PM2Ring I think it is a 'lack of research' thing; searching for 'range' in the Python documentation would have given them a plethora of examples to work with.
`
if quantity:
if quantity == 'gm':
items = items.exclude(cost_gm=0.00)
elif quantity == 'oz':
items = items.exclude(cost_oz=0.00)
elif quantity =='fourth_oz':
items = items.exclude(cost_fourth_oz=0.00)
elif quantity == 'half_oz':
items = items.exclude(cost_half_oz=0.00)
elif quantity == 'eighth_oz':
items = items.exclude(cost_eight_oz=0.00)
`

how do I make this code short.
@MartijnPieters True enough. It seems odd that they made such elementary errors when they claim that they visited this site many times to find answers. But I guess searching on SO can be easier than searching the docs. I don't know whether that's a good thing or a bad thing. :)
13:04
I thought `` will format the code
Not for multi-line posts.
You need to hit the "fixed font" button, or indent by four lines manually, or highlight everything and press ctrl-k
oh let give a try print "kevin"
13:30
cabbage cabbage!
Greetings
i am loving snow here
so much snowing
It's been quite warm where I am. Doesn't even go below freezing, most days.
i hoped for snow for newyear
perfect
It's after midnight here and still over 27°C (80°F).
13:35
@Kevin now -1 at your end
27°C wow
did anyone read django docs in paper? i printed all pages yesterday and now i am studying all of them.. like literally studying it with notes like i did maths at university hah a
@doniyor i never did but I think it's a terrific idea
You can pass keyword args using a `dict`. Eg
items.exclude(**{'cost_'+quantity: 0.0})
reading docs with no particular purpose in mind is something that everybody could do more often. there always comes a moment later when you think to yourself it was a good idea to read all this stuff
@Jivan yes, i just got some free time and thought, this would be better time spending.. classical study in papers is always charming, now i know.. even for django docs haha
yes, you are right
Depends on the docs. If they're written really badly you can end up feeling that you know less than when you started. :)
13:43
yeah thats also true..
@PM2Ring that's awesome, you made my day !!
@Kroods Don't thank me, thank Guido. :)
Any substantial docs need to be read at least 3 times. First, just to get a feel for the material and how it's organized. Second, to actually begin to learn stuff. Third, to fix up all the misunderstandings that happened the first two times. :)
This looks scary: unix.stackexchange.com/questions/176587/… . And bad for the promotion of Linux, since Ubuntu's such a popular distro. But I guess that's not really on-topic for this Chat room...
Here's hoping that's not intentional behavior.
Thoughts on how to declare generic python objects in cython?
0
Q: Overriding variables containing regular expression objects with a Cython .pxd

Mike PenningtonI am trying to augment my python source with a cython .pxd, as Stefan Behnel illustrates in slides 32 to 35 of "Using the Cython Compiler to write fast Python code". I have this function in my .py source: import re class MyObject(object): # <-- insert irrelevant code here --> def find_...

13:58
I'm not familiar with Cython, myself.
Rhubarb
And I expect the rest of the room members would have already commented on the post, if they had any ideas. Looks like you're a victim of holiday-based inactivity.
Better luck next year ;-)
Perhaps someone will bite on a bonus
14:00
@JonClements Greetings
@MikePennington Indeed... Users seem to respond positively to fabulous prizes.
@PM2Ring oh great, Ubuntu now kills windows when it installs. I think that's pretty good news they finally made this important leap in their self-affirmation.
re-re-cbg
Pah. Going to the Sandbox to get starred seems like cheating. I prefer to get my hats honourably!
14:16
Seems to be a principle worth starring :p
Ah, good. That means I didn't have to pin my own message then un-pin it, exploiting the bug which would allow me to self-star.
did the SO team anticipate that they were going to favour certain kind of behaviours (like, rush for the stars) when they designed their Hats winter bash thing?
I don't think they thought it through, or actually more likely, they didn't realise how bloody annoying it would be.
I'm going with "they thought the room owners could reverse the damage once the event ends"
Which is true, but still a pain.
I think other rooms aren't as strict with stars as we are
14:27
like php room for instance?
I mean the whole language is a big mess, so I guess the room must be too
14:38
php is awful. bash has dollars in variables as well, but in php it bothers me a lot more for some reason.
does anyone know how to add spacing between Gtk Widgets in a grid?
14:50
hello
I need some help
I am doing an online course on edx and am having a problem with a problemset
ok
I get this error
TypeError: 'Position' object is not iterable
now when I print pos, I get
"is not iterable" errors usually occur when you try to iterate over something that you can't iterate over.
(0.60, 0.30)
what does type(Position) give?
or more percisely type(var_name)
14:53
then I try this on my local terminal
>>> pos = (0.60, 0.30)
>>> [int(f) for f in pos]
[0, 0]
>>> pos = (0.60, 0.30)
>>> [math.floor(f) for f in pos]
[0.0, 0.0]
so, they are indeed iterable
a position object is not a tuple
the thing is that you have a tuple here, not a Position object
you probably have something like: Position(0.6, 0.3)
can you try print(your_variable.__dir__) ?
the type of pos is <class 'submission.Position'>
@Jivan what? How do I do this
14:55
so you're using the class Poisition which doesn't know how to iterate over the position specifics
like, by typing what I did type
print is untrustworthy, because custom classes can represent themselves however they like. Ex.
class Thing:
    def __init__(self,x,y):
        self.x = x
        self.y = y
    def __repr__(self):
        return "({},{})".format(self.x, self.y)

pos = Thing(23,42)
print pos
for item in pos:
    print item
did you write the class?
Here, Thing exhibits the same behavior your pos object does - printing it, it looks like a tuple, but it's still not iterable.
  File "submission.py", line 33
    print <class 'submission.Position'>
          ^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
I did write the class, but not the one that generates the test though
14:56
so you have a module, named submission.py and a clas within the module. Position?
print(your_variable.__dir__)
I am doing this online, I paste my code online and it tells me what I did wrong, etc.
were you told in your excercise to use a tuple for position?
or any iterable object (list, tuple...)
I was not told anything about it
actually let me check
14:57
no
Is this problem publicly visible? Please provide a link.
you can solve this by subclassing tuple and using position as a custom type of tuple
it only says Position object which doesn't mean much
you were told to write a position object, but not specifically told to make it iterable, yet the tests assume it's iterable?
If they literally tell you nothing about the object other than its name, how could you possibly solve the problem? What a terrible website.
14:58
<class 'submission.Position'>
@ComradeVader I advise you solve this with the people in charge of the exercise and understand what's expected of you
how do you spell excercise? :)
ecxerssise
well they give me example like this
The robot starts at the position (2.1, 2.2) with an angle of 205 degrees (measured clockwise from "north"). The tile that it is on is now clean.
I think you're expected to use tuples as position, but I can't be sure
I guess I have to type-cast
or whatever it is called in python
15:01
Sup Vader, what's up? Can you provide the full question?
you can subclass tuple I think...
class Position(tuple): ...
but I'm no expert :)
@Ffisegydd well it's quite long, but sure
@ComradeVader stick it on pastebin and share it then
Otherwise everyone is just guessing differently, and it'll just get confusing.
prompt:
http://dpaste.com/0TBDYWG
there is more than that btw
my code:
Oh look, the Position class definition is exactly as I predicted. It prints as a tuple but is not actually iterable.
the thing is they are iterating over it in the test code,
weird
Which test code is that?
Whoever wrote that Position class should be shot for using camelCase anyway.
it was MIT
15:06
I hate camelCase....
Ok, so your problem is resolved now, right? You now know that you can't iterate over a position object, so you should remove whatever code is doing that.
let m explain the problem more clearly without you guys have to reverse engineer what I am trying to do
@Kevin well I can't, it's server side
Ok, in that case the problem scanner is broken. What do you want us to do about it?
nothing right now, let me just show you the problem
the position of the robot is (2.1, 2.2)
lets say he cleans this postion/tile
the way I store this info should be as (2, 2)
the problem is (2.1, 2.2) --> (2, 2)
int or floor would ideally work
but I guess not
15:12
morning everyone... don't think I've been on in a little while
cbg @crowz
Cawww
yes, I've been quite busy sitting on power lines and cawing at people
crafting crude composite tools. Mostly in C++
so I can't even index pos
    pos = int(pos[0]), int(pos[1])
TypeError: 'Position' object does not support indexing
how am I going to do this then?
15:17
ShitError: 'Position' object is full of shit and Python just walked in it
4
there are getX and getY methods right there.
(another reason to shoot the guy that wrote this, btw. Why have get methods when you can access the attributes directly?)
you mean that pos is in instance of the class Position
why would they do that
a tuple would be fine
Maybe they need a mutable data type.
well list would also be fine
Maybe they wanted the getNewPosition behavior to be nicely encapsulated in a class
15:19
getX and getY methods? Isn't that not very python style?
I guess I can use the getX and getY methods though
Having a position as a tuple makes sense as opposed to a list.
Based on the idea of when to use tuples vs lists.
either way I am onto something
Glad to hear it :-)
But yeah, the whole class stinks. It sounds like this course is for learning generic-OOP or whatever and is just using Python as a generic-language.
15:21
Agreed
don't you guys think sublclassing tuple is classic in this case?
you get a lot for free...
can you add a __hash__ method to the class? Not sure if good idea
adding dunder methods to a class requires a lot of dark magic.
Just doing MyClass.__hash__ = whateverFunction doesn't work.
dunder methods?
@ReutSharabani double-underscore
15:22
@Ffisegydd it more about learning to programm than learning to python
like __hash__, __str__, __repr__ etc
init, new ...
hmm that's not what I wrote ^
@Kevin I used their get methods to solve the problem
double underscores get converted to bold unless you surround them in backticks
15:23
now only 2/9 modules don't work
__test__
@ComradeVader Good, good
so, again, why is subclassing tuple a bad idea? because of double-underscore methods?
No, I think the dunder conversation was independent of the tuple inheritance conversation.
Sublcassing builtins can be tricksome.
15:27
I don't subclass from built-in types very often, so I'm not personally familiar with any pitfalls there.
Especially when things are immutable.
I thought the dunder was directed at the idea to subclass tuple... anyway, since tuples actaully have features you'd be interested to find in a position object, I'd give that a try
Honestly, I wouldn't bother, I'd just use a tuple.
KISS and all that.
what does this mean [0, 3) opposed to (0, 3)
Whether it is inclusive or exclusive.
15:31
[ is inclusive
So [0, 3) is 0, 1, 2 while (0, 3) is 1, 2 if you're just handling integers.
(0, 2) means everything in the range not including 0 and 2. [0, 2] means everything including 0 and 2
For example random.random will return a random number from the range [0.0, 1.0). Such that it can return 0.0, but won't return 1.0.
If anyone wants to help out with the sandbox starring, they are of course most welcome.
15:36
sounds like a job for @Ffisegydd
RABBIT feature request: a !star_me_plz command.
Please implement by 12/30/2015.
Sigh, my revised KevinScript design isn't falling into place as elegantly as I wished :-(
We could charge for it! It'll be like mobile games! Sure you could wait to say something witty enough for a star...but pay only 100 Cabbage Coins...and you could get a star now...
I'm back in the quagmire of "the problem is so abstract, I can't even articulate it in words"
what if the rabbit becomes TOO intelligent and takes all of our cabbages?
Those wishing to buy Cabbage Coins can send a SAE envelope with cash to Ffisegydd, Stryd Street, Tref Town, Sir County, Wales, UK.
15:41
@tristan I did not ask about IIS, I just showed my question as an example of a question that received -1 without any comments
@Kevin before 01/01/15 13:00 UTC would do.
I am more worried about the Mistletoe hat.
I am 99% certain that the star can be handed out after the 10 minute window.
but still, for us in the UK getting in a chat message in that window while also paying attention to our loved ones (without them feeling slighted) is going to be.. challenging.
@Martijn I hate NYE and so usually spend it at home, so if I'm still up I will come in and blatantly star anything you say help within the 10 minute window.
I didn't want to pressure the dev team with a tight deadline, I just want it ready for next year ;-)
@Ffisegydd Much appreciated!
Indeed, the UK is dismal at celebrating NYE.
Having grown up in the Netherlands and seen a similar spectacle in Norway every year, the UK is distinctly failing at marking the occasion.
NYE parties are exactly the opposite of my preferred scene. Standing room only, everyone is drinking, and nobody is playing board games. Blugh.
15:51
I dislike going out on NYE, it's usually the night that people who don't drink/party decide to go out and go wild, and as such there tends to be a lot of trouble.
Oh, I missed that sentence. Yeah, voted.
:-)
That's slightly weird.
15:58
You're Internet famous!
Google's panopticon has focused its fiery unblinking gaze upon you.
Not me, though. I guess gravatars don't have much SEO juice.
@Ffisegydd a normal web search for sopython also turns up your linkedin profile on the 2nd page I think...
Nice. Yeah I do mention it.
pythonfasterway.uni.me all of the micro-optimisations!
Yep
I'm going to employ my usual shield here. "If you need to shave off a billionth of a second, for God's sake don't use Python to begin with"
I need some help again. On my local machine I get the correct and expected result. When I run it online though I get an error.
#4 is interesting...
16:06
Incidentally, I'm bothered by the tag line "Tricks for your code run faster", although it theoretically could be interpreted in a grammatically correct way.
the error
isPositionInRoom((5.90, 3.90)) incorrectly indicates that (5.90, 3.90) is not in an 6x4 room
my code
    def isPositionInRoom(self, pos):
        """
        Return True if pos is inside the room.

        pos: a Position object.
        returns: True if pos is in the room, False otherwise.
        """
        return 0 <= pos.getX() <= self.width-1 and 0 <= pos.getY() <= self.height-1
some code to test it and the result
my_room = RectangularRoom(6, 4)
my_pos = Position(5.90, 3.90)

print my_room.isPositionInRoom(my_pos)
/usr/bin/python2.7 "/home/user/Dropbox/Python/Python2.7/0.0.2 Week2/ProblemSet2/ps2.py"
False
e.g False, it is not in the room
You've got self.width - 1 which means that it's testing for 5x3.
But it should return True, because 5.9, 3.9 is in the room.
Same for height.
yes but we start at 0,0 not 1,1
16:09
ok, my previous comment still stands
so we start early, and end early
hmm okay
I will see
omg... I'd completely forgotten about:
XD
Stewie is dead! Which means Kittens > Puppies.
if I remove the -1 I get this
isPositionInRoom((3.00, 5.00)) incorrectly indicates that (3.00, 5.00) is in an 3x5 room
isPositionInRoom((3.00, 4.90)) incorrectly indicates that (3.00, 4.90) is in an 3x5 room
isPositionInRoom((2.90, 5.00)) incorrectly indicates that (2.90, 5.00) is in an 3x5 room
Yep, (3,5) is not in the 3x5 room, because the end point is exclusive.
2.9999999999 is in the room, 3 is not.
(hint: at some point in your code, you should be using "<" instead of "<=")
16:12
@Kevin thank's you solved my problem again
brb restarting computer
re-re-re-cbg
16:42
cbg
DSM
DSM
16:56
Morning cabbage, all.
Yo
DSM
DSM
Looks like itertools.product rep for any gunner who wants one..
Ah, falsetru already got there.
Today I'm annoyed by the naming discrepancy between the project "pywin32" and the module it installs, "win32api". I wanted to recommend it to someone, and it took me an additional ten minutes to verify that one belonged to the other.
1405 rep left. Then I can finally call myself a man.

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