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14:00
@Wally the only remedy for that is to keep using them. Repetition is key.
I only just realised the hats are gone D:
Even then... I wonder if Ada Lovelace ever had days where the triangle of asterisks kept coming out of the difference engine left-justified instead of right-justified.
user3522371
@MartijnPieters I coded during 3 years as an e-commerce (PHP mainly) developer, and because there is a severe Pythonic sect on StackOverflow, I'm afraid to ask or answer Python questions :)
Stuff you don't use you'll forget about. I do that all the time.
(well, no, because they never actually built the difference engine. But you get what I mean)
14:01
@Begueradj there is a sect, we hold to the ancient laws of keeping our tag high quality...
@Kevin We should totally go and analyse her code and see if we can find an off-by-one error she missed.
:-)
@Ffisegydd I didn't find the related issue (on GH), could you point me to it?
@vaultah there's no issue as it's its own project github.com/sopython/kesh
It hasn't been fully put together what needs to be done yet, but if you're interested then we can work out what needs to be done.
user3522371
Does someone know when moderators elections will be done on 2015 ?
14:05
Thinking of running?
I did a whole bunch of stuff with pygtk 5 or 6 years ago, and then hardly touched it until a couple of months ago. So now I've forgotten a lot of the little details, which is a bit annoying, but it's not that hard to find stuff in the docs, so it doesn't worry me too much.
cbg @Zero
cbg @Jon :-)
@Begueradj Searching for "election" on Meta, I see that the 2012 election ended in June of that year. So I assume the 2015 election will also end in June.
@Ffisegydd sorry, I was out for coffee. was the answer ok? stackoverflow.com/questions/27780705/ask-user-and-print-a-list/…
14:07
@Kevin think it was February last year...
No! I don't like change :-(
I was under the impression there was no set time, just "when we decided we need more mods".
@Reut in the end yeah it turned out okay, remember the OP us using Python 3 though so that print statement is technically incorrect.
Well, that's just chaos! Which is a kind of unending change, which as we have previously established, I don't like :-(
user3522371
@Kevin I checked too before asking, I noticed the month changes almost every year
14:09
@Ffisegydd got time for a pandas question?
@Jon for you? Of course.
Ahhh... wags tail happily :)
That cat picture accurately represents my Monday morning worldview.
@Kevin Ah, but since it's well known that the more things change, the more they stay the same, you probably have to solve some kind of equation to work out the optimum amount of change. Or something.
@Begueradj Elections are not done by any calendar.
Elections are held when there is a need to find more or new moderators.
14:10
@Martijn well, fairly sure they're by the gregorian calendar? :)
@JonClements yeah, once a need for an election is determined, a calendar will, at some point, be consulted.
Unfortunately, the universe is always changing and will continue to do so appreciably, until the last star winks out for good. Maybe then I'll have some peace.
@Martijn it'd be far more fun if they used "stardates" instead though...
user3522371
Serious question guys: what is a non community question ?
@JonClements The next election will start on stardate 428143.2.
@Begueradj You mean non-community wiki perhaps?
14:13
Shouldn't be all that hard to develop a new, SO calendar based on mod elections. There's bound to be a curve that fits.
Idea for 3.5: stardatetime module.
@MartijnPieters They should be done by colander :)
> Zap: Captain's log. Stardate: uhh....
> Kif: [belabored sigh] April seventh.
-- Futurama
@MartijnPieters Wow - I'd better get the statis machine ready then
user3522371
14:14
@MartijnPieters I do not know. Sometimes I see a given member having a badge because he answered for a given number of non community questions. I do not understand what they mean by a non comunity question
@Ffisegydd I'm okay with that though I'm not good at planning and I doubt I'll be very helpful at this stage...
Non-community-wiki questions are questions that aren't marked "community wiki" in the section that usually indicates the author.
user3522371
@PM2Ring thank you very much
@Ffisegydd I have a dataframe which has a datetime column... I'd like to count the occurrences of the dayofweek (I've got as far as df[2].dt.weekday.value_counts().sort_index()) - However, there may some days not present.... and I think I'm going down the wrong path anyway
14:17
@Begueradj That's community wiki; only answers that are not community wiki answers count towards a badge.
@Jon let me throw together an example then
If you don't know what CW is, then you don't need to worry about that either. :-P
This question and answer are both CW: stackoverflow.com/questions/23294658/…
@MartijnPieters That's a corollary of the old programmers' adage: Never test for an error condition that you don't know how to handle.
user3522371
@MartijnPieters Thank you :)
@Jon is it daily data then?
14:19
I handle errors by going "oh no, an error" and crashing.
It works pretty well, because 100% of my end users know how to read a stack trace. (Because I am my only user)
@Ffisegydd yup
Just don't make it so I feel stupid ;)
I would suggest Counter but I expect it doesn't play nice with data frames.
I may not know the first thing about this problem domain, but I'll be damned if I let that stop me from contributing!
I appreciate it @Kevin :)
I suppose something like
import pandas as pd

df = pd.Series(pd.date_range(start='01/01/2015', end='03/01/2015', freq='1D'))

df['weekday'] = df.apply(lambda x: x.weekday())
count = df.groupby('weekday').count()

print(count)
# 0    8
# 1    8
# 2    8
# 3    9
# 4    9
# 5    9
# 6    9
# dtype: int64
Create a weekday column and then groupby/count it. Edited for a better version.
Ahhh okay... don't think I made myself clear.... it's not a contigious range...
so it might be mon, wed, fri, then mon, then some sundays and nothing else
14:29
This will still count the weekdays though. Even if it's not contiguous.
yeah... but I need 0 for missing weekdays
I need to guarantee a 7 element series, with 0 where a weekday didn't occur
Do you mean an 8 element series then?
1-7 would be Mon-Sun and then 0 is "missing"?
okay, given my example... above the result should be [2, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 10] - 2 mondays, 1 wednesday, 10 sundays.... no tuesdays/thursdays/fridays/saturdays
I can get 2, 1, and 10... but need to fill in the gaps
Ah I see!
Wow, so many Bottle questions today
14:33
@Ffisegydd so df[2].dt.weekday.value_counts().sort_index() gives me a correct series if the data contains at least 1 entry for a day... otherwise, the size varies
I'm sure there's something clever like creating a series, then updating it somehow, but I'm completely confuddled how to
import pandas as pd

df = pd.Series(pd.date_range(start='01/01/2015', end='03/01/2015', freq='15D'))

df['weekday'] = df.apply(lambda x: x.weekday())
count = df.groupby('weekday').count()

df2 = pd.Series(pd.np.zeros(7))
df2[count.index] = count
print(df2)
# 0 1
# 1 0
# 2 0
# 3 1
# 4 1
# 5 1
# 6 1
# dtype: float64
14:46
umm... let me have a play with that
Tested it using your method and it works.
Note: you don't need sort_index()
count = df.dt.weekday.value_counts()

df2 = pd.Series(pd.np.zeros(7))
df2[count.index] = count
rhubarb
Yeah... was only using .sort_index() as value_counts didn't order the data as expected
rbrb @PM2Ring
Yeah, but when you then use it for indexing something else the order doesn't matter :)
14:49
indeed :)
How would I use groupby with a dict? I'm using iteritems, but there's probably a neater way... I want to group the same values together.
I'm using : groupby(ccs.iteritems(), lambda x: x[1]) but I only care about the keys, I get the tuples. Can I do this in one pass?
how to most neatly get the first day of the next month with datetime?
it is so appalling that datetime is actually worse than the time/mktime it tries to supersede
@AnttiHaapala it's a bit of a wart :)
CustomerRelatedInteraction.created_at <= datetime(month.year, month.month + 1, 1) - timedelta(1)
ValueError: month must be in 1..12
not made by me, but hey come on!
this is what works with mktime and it is documented
@AnttiHaapala I just use dateutil.relativedelta
14:56
yeah... dateutil is just soooo much nicer
>>> dt = datetime.now()
>>> dt_next = datetime(dt.year, dt.month + 1, 1)
?
Or consider arrow You can shift using crsmithdev.com/arrow/#replace-shift
@ReutSharabani spank you
@ReutSharabani see above...
@Reut won't work for decembe
arrow and delorean just wrap dateutil
14:57
:D
so naive... so naive...
is there a datetime.carry? (kidding...)
nope
the worst problem with datetime is that since it sucks so bad
One way is (datetime.now().replace(day=1) + timedelta(days=31)).replace(day=1) :p
everyone would want a replacement, but wont be accepted since we have the original datetime and it wouldnt be compatible with it anyhow
@JonClements so far the best one
@ReutSharabani My completely untested stab at what you want is [list(group) for value, group in groupby(sorted(ccs.iteritems(), key=itemgetter(1)), itemgetter(1))]
@Jon would break on 31st January I think?
14:59
dt_next = datetime(dt.year, dt.month + 1, 1) if dt.month < 11 else ... ?
It'd take you into March.
No wait nvm. I missed the first replace.
@Kevin thanks. I'm procrastinating atm.
Now I will actually open up an interpreter to see if this works.
aaaaaaaand... Nope.
Hi , all . I am a newbie to python and have posted a question here : stackoverflow.com/questions/27781125/…
would be grateful if some one can help me out :)
15:04
@pranav please see sopython.com/chatroom for the chatroom rules.
In particular, please don't link your newly asked questions.
@ReutSharabani Ok, second time's the charm.
from itertools import groupby
from operator import itemgetter
d = {4: 99, 8: 100, 15: 99, 16: 98}
print [[x[0] for x in group] for value, group in groupby(sorted(d.iteritems(), key=itemgetter(1)), itemgetter(1))]
#output: [[16], [4, 15], [8]]
Yuck.
I forgot to sort!
Though I see you're trying to get it unclosed, so let's have a look at the new edit.
Yeah, you'll get all sorts of wacky results if you try to groupby on an unsorted iteritems.
BTW the documentation is cryptic about the need to sort. It says "Generally ..." before saying the list should be sorted. Any reason for that?
15:05
Thanks @Ffisegydd :)
groupby will only group together identical values if they are adjacent.
"Generally, the iterable needs to already be sorted on the same key function."
@pranav your question is still unclear and your Python code is broken (the indentiation is all wrong).
So groupby([1,2,1]) would not group the two ones together.
@Reut maybe it says "Generally" because if you already have a sorted iterable, you don't need ot.
15:06
@Kevin which can be desirable if you wanted to group consecutive integers for instance...
Sure.
@Ffisegydd - why is it still unclear - would be grateful for a feedback ...
Better to have it this way, and make it relatively easy to make a variant that sorts the input before grouping, than to make it the other way, and have a hard time making a variant that only groups adjacent values.
It's not clear what you want and what isn;t working.
(I'm not sure that previous sentence makes sense, so don't sweat it if you think it doesn't make sense. Your sense making organ is properly calibrated.)
15:09
@Ffisegydd - I wish to compare the elements of a value list . For example : pairwise comparing (200,50);(50,40);(40,60);(60,70) . I don't think I am able to code that up . Some help would take me a long way . I have even mentioned this problem at the end of the code , but in comments ...
@pranav post expected input and output, that should clarify a little.
@pranav don't tell me, edit your question and add it there :)
Hi @ReutSharabani , @Ffisegydd - I have edited the question - please tell me if it is fine :)
@pranav no need to spam in the comments.
@ReutSharabani , Sorry ;)
15:19
@pranav it's reopened, good luck on your second time.
I don't think those pings will even reach most of those users, since they never commented on the post in the first place
Thanks @Ffisegydd :)
@pranav, does your expected output correspond to your sample input, or did you just write random ones and zeroes? I got [1,0,0,0] for the "pikachu" item, but you got [0,1,0,1,1].
Seems to me, that 200 and 50 is the only pair that should generate a "1" marking
@Kevin - apologies , in a hurry I just wrote random 1's and 0s . I will edit it agian to make it correct
@Kevin - you are right - I have edited the question
@pranav check out my answer, see if it generates the results you're looking for.
15:27
I'll post my attempt, then
@ReutSharabani I'm getting [1, 0, 1, 0] from your solution... I think there might be a problem.
@Kevin I'm comparing it to yours as we speak :) just wrote the mapping to dictionary and now testing to see what's wrong
Hmm, I think the problem is with cond = lambda x: abs(x[0] - x[1]) + 1 > 20. I don't think the "+ 1" is needed
Yeah, fixed it as well :) the question mislead me!
"if(abs(x-x+1) > 20)"
Hi @Kevin - can there be a more simpler code than this ? Thanks a ton again :)
Assuming in the problem statement, that abs(x-x+1) > 20 means abs(seq[x] - seq[x+1]) > 20, rather than abs(seq[x] - seq[x]+1) > 20
15:32
@pranav my code is very simple if you get to know the functions. They are used a lot in python. The names tell you what is where.
@pranav lambda is a "normal programming construct". We're not here to teach you to code, we're here to fix problems. — Ffisegydd 20 secs ago
@pranav we're not here to teach you to code, this is the Python code that you should use to solve the problem.
You can replace the lambda with a function definition @pranav ...
@ReutSharabani - fine , thanks :)
@pranav If you're looking for a "less idiomatic" form of the dict comprehension in the second-to-last line, you could instead do
output = {}
for key in d:
    output[key] = identify_events(d[key])
thanks , @Kevin , you are wonderful :)
15:34
@pranav please don't ping someone in every one of your messages, we can follow the conversation without that
And there are a couple things you could do to shorten the code, ex. changing the if-else blocks to result.append(1 if abs(current - next) > 20 else 0), but then you're arguably making it shorter but not simpler.
Thanks and Sorry ;) . The StackOverflow Community is awesome
dateutil is so awesome..
As long as we're criticizing grammar/formatting, please use "question" instead of "doubt".
15:38
lol, I need to find a canonical link for that
It seems to be quite common among Indian users. I assume that's an accepted idiom over there.
@Kevin While it also annoys me as a British English speaker, it's worth bearing in mind that "doubt" is correct in Indian English (according to more than one native Indian English speakers I've asked).
Ok, so it's less "this is the correct way" and more "please conform to my American preferences"
It's technically correct in US/GB English as well, but it doesn't sound right.
Yeah, that's why I don't usually point it out :-)
15:42
@davidism The best kind of correct ;-)
There are meta posts talking about how SO is for questions in English, but they never discuss the dialects.
I want to say that you can't usually single out an individual "doubt" from your collective "doubts", and "doubt" can only refer to the total notion of doubt as a whole. But I don't know if that's an actual language rule, or just my intuition.
@Ffisegydd just noticed that chat substitutes titles for share links now
I think there was a meta post about that.
@davidism nah Kevin made a userscript for us.
Which adds MD to the Share button.
15:44
@Ffisegydd gods, and the title totally made me reach for the 'recommend off-topic resource' reason too.
link?
@davidism gist.github.com/Ffisegydd/6dd3de6caff49fbe240b there's my fork, adds more websites to the include list.
But the actual work belongs to Kevin Kevinson.
nice
hmm, I think we got the wrong close reason with that one
@Ffisegydd I'm tempted to share my homebrew Point module with that guy.
I think it's POB. He wanted to know which of the different ways of doing it are best.
15:47
yeah
Does it count as self-promotion if I link one of my gists to a "closed as recommendation request" post?
No I doubt it, you're not making any money/rep off your code.
You can share private gists, right? I don't want to link it and him reply with "uh, that page doesn't load for me"
Dunno, share it here and see.
I assume so, though.
15:50
Yep
You use kargs rather than kwargs. I'm not sure what this says about you as a person, but I doubt it's good.
@Ffisegydd Now you know why it was private ;_;
My secret shame.
86
Q: Can "doubt" sometimes mean "question"?

Dennis WilliamsonI often see questions on Stack Exchange sites which I presume are written by non-native English speakers who use the word "doubt" in place of the word "question". Is this a case of misunderstanding the correct meaning or are people being taught that this is correct usage?

GOOOOOOOOOONG I suppose
15:59
> the noun doubt is uncountable
Great! I'm not crazy.
Not about this particular topic, at least.
> We understand it, but we also understand when a French person says "Let me explain you something".
That's an interesting example, because it neatly parallels the Southern idiom of "learn you", e.g. "that'll learn him"
I use learn him ironically. I had a Italian co-worker who said "Let me explain you" all the time.
I actually rather like it. I hereby petition to make "explain" a reflexive verb.
Or whatever the correct term is rather than "reflexive", I'm no wordsmith
@Ffisegydd did he happen to be a psychotherapist ?
She did not.
Let me explain you. Let me explain, (gesticulates generally in your direction) all... this.
16:06
oh - didn't realise he'd had a gender change before you met him...
Oh, the French and Italians are so much fun to do business with...
The only equivalent I've worked with is a colleague that "suddenly used to pick up after going to the bathroom for a minute..."
pick what up? There isn't much in a bathroom that you should be trying to move.
I wonder if metaclasses would be useful for this guy. He wants to subclass each primitive data type and add a description attribute.
"It looks like you're trying to make a CLI."
I discovered the metaclass hammer last week, and now I'm looking for a nail.
For some reason I find that clippy art to be more endearing than the official version.
Am I biased in favor of blue eyed mascots? I'm discovering new things about myself all the time.
16:15
TIL Bottle is capable of generating paths for its @route decorator based on signature of the decorated function. Not sure if Flask can do that
@vaultah do you mean '/users/<int id>'?
Where that'll basically route /users/any-integer-number?
Flask requires an explicit route definition, although there's nothing stopping you from making a "smarter" decorator.
Except how would it know what converter to use for each arg?
@Ffisegydd I can link my answer (not for upvotes)
@Ffisegydd How does it serialize data between runs?
16:23
Okay, here it's: http://stackoverflow.com/q/27779942/2301450
feel free to delete it if that's not appropriate
@ReutSharabani I can't take it any longer, wtf is your avatar? :)
It just looks so derpy.
It's a cartoonized(?) me in a dress obviously.
I'm guessing "Jill Valentine on a bad day"
I like Kevin's explanation better.
I look better when I grow a beard to match the dress
Guess I'll pimp out my Point class, again.
is it on github?
After a fashion. It's private, but I've been linking to it all day.
@Kevin is your credit card number also private? :p
Uh oh, did I leave personally identifiable details in my code again?
16:39
Well - I don't see a social security number...
It's in hexadecimal in the url: 3d03a226f6228ee69f4b.
Rather odd choice on github's part, to use that for private gist urls...
"How to pass arguements (having spaces &amp; hyphen) from one python script to another python script?" is probably an XY problem, but if anyone's gunning for easy points, the X answer might be "Popen should take a list of strings as a first argument"
Also, ew, my markup sharing button does weird things with ampersands.
Are there any commonly accepted docstring conventions besides PEP 257? If not, this question is mostly opinion based.
The PEP doesn't say much other than "The docstring for a function or method should summarize its behavior and document its arguments, return value(s), side effects, exceptions raised, and restrictions on when it can be called (all if applicable)."
Which could be interpreted either as "don't say what it returns if it doesn't return anything", or "if it always returns None, say it returns None"
16:59
That PEP isn't that great anyways, could really use some improvement like PEP 8 got.
I follow the "don't say what it returns unless it's not obvious" rule.
I'm leaning towards "it doesn't hurt to add 'returns:none' anywhere that ambiguity could exist"
(assuming "it adds 12 bytes of memory overhead to all of your functions" doesn't count as "hurt")
user2555451
If the OP was using Python 3.x, I'd recommend annotations. But for 2.x, I think it's fine to use the docstring for this.
does sphinx pick up annotations yet?
Google says, yes, if you install sphinx-autodoc-annotation
I'm guessing the behavior isn't integrated into Sphinx proper yet.
17:16
cbg
17:37
lol, I got the pundit badge by using the "not a support forum" close reason so much
:-)
It's hard to get five users to agree to anything, except "this question should be closed" ;-)
@Kevin I disagree with you? :p
My simulations indicate that you should have agreed with me. I disagree with your disagreement.
DSM
DSM
17:45
Back-across-the-country cabbage for all!
@Kevin I reserve the right to be random now and again (or not!)
@DSM cbg!
I can't explain this discrepancy, unless... Someone must be messing with the timeline. Tis the year, I guess.
DSM
DSM
Whenever someone writes "I would like to know the fastest way to X", I'm always tempted to reply "Unfortunately I only know the second-fastest way. Sorry I couldn't help!"
I would like to know the fastest way to get someone to tell me the second fastest way to do this.
3
python list comparison is deep-comparison right? (len(a) == len(b) and all(member == othermember))...
(this is pseudo code to pass my thoughts)
17:50
no, it is direct length
no recursive deep lentgh
but you can write a little function that does that
DSM
DSM
If I follow what you mean, yes, it's deep comparison.
@WalleCyril what do you mean by 'direct length"?
if you have len([5,4,[3,2,1],1]) == 3. I mean the length is accessed directly
cabbage!
how is everyone?
17:54
I'm not sure what you mean. You mean overriding __len__ when subclassing list won't ruin it?
@ReutSharabani do you know the xw problem ?
not sure
overriding len is probably not a good idea
DSM
DSM
Hmm. I wasn't thinking of the subclassing case; I was assuming we were comparing two nested lists.
better create len2 or something more explicit
17:57
I know, I'm asking what did you mean when you said "direct access"
I want to know
the len is stored in the list object
I know
you mean it does not calculate the length? but uses the stored value? If that's what you mean I know that
DSM
DSM
Looks like if you subclass list and replace __len__, list([1,2]) == NewList([1,2]) even though len(list([1,2])) == 2 and len(NewList([1,2])) == 9.
I only expect [1,2, 3] == [1, 2, 3] and [1,2 [3,4]] == [1,2,[3,4]]
and also, what is the xw problem?
Maybe he meant "XY Problem".
531
Q: What is the XY problem?

GnomeWhat is the XY problem? When asking questions, how do I recognize when I'm falling into it? How do I avoid it? Return to FAQ index

also, hi, I've been afk for twenty minutes because I spilled juice all over my keyboard.
Currently typing from my backup keyboard, which has weird keyfeel and all the buttons click wrongly and just ugh
18:05
laptop?
yeah, with an external keyboard. The laptop itself was unaffected by the spill, because it sits on an elevated stand six inches above the disaster zone.
DSM
DSM
"keeping numeric format (not text)" but "easily readable format"? So an easily readable format which isn't text? My life -- if not my rep -- became so much better when I realized I could give up on ambiguous questions.
I need to realize that. I've been looking at Cryptography hex,binaries and ascii python for like twenty minutes.
Even though it was posted only ten minutes ago. Uh, I blame relativity.
I hope my SO profile can help get me a job without a job interview in a few months. I'll be leaving my current city and I'm bad at job interviews.
where are you going ?
18:10
I could write an answer for that question, but it would be inelegant and I bet I'd get upstaged by someone who can do it in two lines.
There was a stackexchange site about such questions, which is it?
I wonder if anyone ever wanted to offer me a job due to my SO profile. I should probably put up an email address or something.
@Kevin even I got a job offer here, from a decent company even :)
DSM
DSM
Do you have an account on careers? I get emails sometimes.
Nah, I don't have a careers account. I have a limited supply of give-a-darn points each day, and up until now I haven't seen fit to allocate any of them to that.
("signing up would probably give you a good return on investment of your GAD points", says the rational self interested part of me. "But I'm tired and my shows are on", says the couch potato part of me)
((potato couch? This keyboard must be tranpositioning my words.))
DSM
DSM
18:18
"How do I manage minion roles with salt-stack pillars?"
Jargon can lead to strange question titles.
I wish I got emails from careers :( need to find a job. Found some nearby analytics meetings I might start going to
No python group though
cbg from a train
Can this question be reopened?
It was closed as primarily opinion based because the OP asked which one of the 2 Python 2.7 binaries on his system was to be preferred.
I've reworded that one sentence; the OP just needs to be told what each option means.
@Ffisegydd umm... normally get a couple a month
Thanks everone!
arriving.
18:33
@Jon can you reply to them saying "Sorry I'm busy being a dog but Fizzy needs a job..."
Sure they'll get: "woof... woof woof... Fizzy!"
Chippy teeeeeeea.
Googling... None of these images seem to have tea in them at all.
Ah that's the "tea" vs "dinner" debate.
Better stick with the term that's more incomprehensible to Americans, then. It lends an exotic vibe that ought to increase tourism revenue.
18:49
Elevenses.
morning everyone
Yo
Cbg dawg.
How's life after college treating you?
Remember, strong men also cry.
pretty awesome, actually. Now time to find a job!
18:54
Hoping for any language/field in particular?
probably python, something mildly artsy would be preferred (like games, website, film, etc)... probably pretty competitive though
I bet working for a CGI film studio would be pretty cool.
Making Shrek do backflips and shiz

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