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01:51
Any Django gurus online? Do you mind having a quick look on this small code-snippet and tell me if I've understood how I should use transactions.atomic() correctly?
I basically want to check a datetime field of a model, and if the field is older than 2 seconds ago, I want to update a field sending a request to an external API. If the model is locked, I want to avoid calling the external API by catching an exception inside the with transactions.atomic() context
@corvid just mention it in the description - "this addresses #42" and the #42 will automagically link to the issue.
02:08
cbg
I've got me a question regarding Python that I don't think really warrants a full question.
02:27
@RPi_Awesomeness please read the room rules - you don't need to ask if you can ask a question, or if there is an expert in a certain domain in the room. Just ask what you want to ask, and if someone can help, they will.
@MattDMo Ah. Thanks for pointing that out - sorry.
Basically, I had some code that uses urllib2 that was working just fine. I rebooted...and now it's not. It's returning this: urllib2.URLError: <urlopen error no host given>.
I've looked around on the site and all of the other answers with that error mentioned having to use urllib.urlencode to encode my URL - but I'm pretty sure that's not the solution, because my code was working just fine prior to the reboot without using urllib.urlencode.
Plus, when I tried using urllib.urlencode, I got the same error.
cbg
@RPi_Awesomeness I'd write up a full question so you can include the code in question and the full traceback
@AdamSmith I've done that.
0
Q: urllib2.URLError: <urlopen error no host given> on code that was working fine

RPi_AwesomenessI have some code that uses urllib2 to connect to a server and grab an XML file. It was working fine, connecting to the server and returning the correct file, and all was dandy. However, I rebooted, and now, it's returning this: Traceback (most recent call last): File "isbnapi.py", line 45, in <

Looks like somebody found it already, too! :)
@AdamSmith Yeah, but their solution isn't actually a solution :P
02:57
cabbage
What is the etiquette for similar open source projects?
@NoobSaibot carrot
:)
Like say you were working on Project A, but had a difference of opinion about some key fundamentals in the code...
Depending on the license, you could just fork it and start your own project
...then decide to make your own Project B: Just like Project A, but with some differences.
nothing wrong with that - happens all the time
03:00
@AdamSmith Sorry, my question is not about the legalities of it all, but more about etiquette.
I harbor no ill will towards these guys.
I just have some ideas i'd like to put to the test, you know.
I could imagine there being some hard feelings if you start grabbing upstream patches for your own project
other than that, your use case is pretty much the reason github exists, isn't it? :)
@AdamSmith I guess you're right.
I'd say if you want to make some key changes, fork your project and don't look back. Consider contributing valuable patches that would affect both codebases to the original project
I was gonna make sure to slap "Inspired by Project A" everywhere. :P
@AdamSmith +1
Thanks.
I guess it depends on what exactly the changes are you want to make. Do you fundamentally disagree on the direction of Project A, is it a coding style issue, or what?
03:04
@MattDMo A little bit of that, to varying degrees of disagreement. But i have an idea involving coroutines that i think would work well with the project...but ultimately involve uprooting the entire base code and starting from scratch.
Even if it turned out to be the greatest thing since sliced bread, no one would just blindly go along with that, you know?
In that case, forking is probably the best way to go. Explain to the others what you're doing and why, and perhaps, at some point, if your ideas work out you can merge them back into Project A if they see the light.
Keep them in the loop?
(As if i'm a big player in the project to begin with. lol)
They should be cool.
sure, or invite them to watch the project, and they'll get notifications of all issues and PRs.
This has all been helpful. I can now sleep in peace.
03:21
@MattDMo I wanted to avoid the MinGW vs MinG64 beef.
@MattDMo Has anyone ever thought of a "StackOverflow Lite", for noob questions?
Yahoo! Answers?
@MattDMo Lol I mean with people with a modicum of understanding answering the questions.
It would be a way to..."teach" the new guys what this SO thing is all about before letting them ask questions.
That way SO-proper doesn't get polluted with yadda-yadda-yadda.
As the saibot of noobs, even i had a bit of a culture shock when migrating here from Yahoo Answers. It took a bit of time to fully understand what the question-nazi thing was all about.
As far as i can tell, the model doesn't really exist outside of Stack Exchange.
Gotta educate the new guys a little harder?
Just my 2¢.
@NoobSaibot trust me, there are conversations about this on Meta all the time. Some new users ask great questions and are off and running immediately, others flail about and ultimately get question-banned and/or leave. There are just no good ways of forcing people to read through the entire help center, understand what it's saying, and then apply it to their questions/answers.
Because our model is so different, people aren't used to it, and even when they're pointed to the help center, they don't get it, then complain bitterly that they were treated poorly.
@NoobSaibot Was just about to write the same as @MattDMo (albeit less eloquently). I don't think segregating newcomers would be positive; you'd end up with two different cultures, and the old hands wouldn't have much incentive to hang out in SO Lite and guide newcomers along.
03:40
great comment here, though, on the very question that started this conversation. Hopefully we'll have one less "give me teh codez" new user now :)
Oof, whatever it was, taking the entire network offline seems harsh ;-)
well, it's late (ish) and I want to read some before bed. Rhubarb, all!
rbrb @MattDMo :-)
04:18
cbg
04:42
@thefourtheye - Need your guidance. How do i initiate/suggest a tag merge?
04:54
My mother paid a web dev to create a website for her business. This web dev did a bang-up job and made her something incredibly customizeable and scalable in Joomla, with all the plugins and etc she could ever need.
She raved about it to me a week later "Oh Adam look at our new website isn't it awesome! Look how easy it is to change something!"
I saw it's Joomla. "Oh yeah, Joomla. I've fooled around with that a bit."
A word to the wise: NEVER SAY THAT.
rhubarb all. Work in not nearly long enough :(
tc @AdamSmith
05:19
Guys, Advice needed. I have completed basic python from learn python the hard way. I have not come across stuff such as pulling data from websites, sending requests, using API's etc. Where should I start? Are there any best resource places to start with?
@VamsiPavanMahesh please don't ping people you haven't conversed in a previous conversation, and please read the rules at sopython.com/chatroom
1 message moved to recycle bin
But I did converse with them!
look at the requests library
ok? is that enough?
scraping is a complex subject
to use an API, well, you have to read up on the API you intend to use
05:23
Is there any resource regarding
google is fairly good if you put in "python web scraping" I believe
there's soooooooooooooo many ways to do things, and since I have no idea what you want to do specifically, you can research that yourself :)
Do you prefer any of them is all what I'm asking
05:27
I mean, I want to have a head start
I prefer a requests/lxml setup, Possibly scrapy for some "major" stuff... apart from that... it all depends
ok thanks :)
can I ping you if I get a doubt?
I just read jabbing is prohibited :D
@Vamsi always a load of people here... just mention it - don't always need to ping someone :)
you mean *lots of?
bah... semantics :)
05:34
you infer meh? ;)
on a side note - might be useful to learn xpath if you haven't already
wb @iCodez
But xml is not used now a days?
you can use it to query any XML document - HTML is a subset of that
anyway, need to crack on with some stuff... nice to meet you
05:41
see you :)
Ehhh, +20 over night. That was unexpected (for me).
user559633
morning cabbage
cold morning cabbage to you
user559633
:) i'm going to go check if i can stop camping out, trying not to wake people up
06:22
room topic changed to Python: The *productive programming cabbage. Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom [python] [python-2*] [python-3*]*
user559633
morning @davidism :P
Why not just python*?
darn, thought that would work, but the room links to the info pages, which don't exist for wildcards
@vaultah too much, we just want to point out the main tags
@davidism think I'd rather 2.7, 3.3 and 3.4 in there rather than ambiguous tags
room topic changed to Python: The *productive programming cabbage. Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom [python] [python-2.x] [python-3.x]*
06:25
2.x and 3.x make more sense to me ... much more likely to be the level of specificity someone cares about than a point release.
Like the tag wiki says, only use specific sub-versions if you know that the difference is for a specific sub-version. I think the 2.x and 3.x should be promoted more, as that is where most of the differences are.
user559633
i only answer 3.2 and 3.4 questons. don't come at me with that 3.3 game
@tristan 3.3 was when 3.x really started actually working :)
user559633
also, do the tags matter? i assume people just search for python.
user559633
@JonClements yeah, but if you're on 3.3, move to 3.4 :P
06:27
Also, the .x tags imply that you should be using the latest release, rather than a specific one
user559633
and if you're on 3.2, the answer is "upgrade to 3.4 and ask again"
I thought 3.3 was still a mess, and 3.4 was where it got good.
You can set favorite tags with wildcards and it highlights correctly, so I thought the chat would work too. Silly me.
3.3 was definitely where it got good if you ever tried to adopt 3.0/3.1
Does anyone else think it would actually be kinda cool in a messed-up way if anyone managed to come up with a question that merited the creation of ?
right - definitely need sleep now... I'll leave you guys to worry about the room tags :p
06:30
rbrb
user559633
sleep well @JonClements
@davidsm maybe run them by @Ffisegydd and @Kevin later today?
user559633
i love this method name docs.python.org/3/library/… "assertAlmostEqual"
rbrb for now
user559633
"yeah, check that the test passes, but don't be a nerd about it"
06:34
My favourite function name of the moment is bisect_left, but only because it's very close in spelling to an entry in a list of euphemisms I was recently sent.
user559633
i said no to pancakes. why did i say no to pancakes?!
I can think of no good reason.
user559633
Right? And everyone else in the house was up until 4, so they'll sleep all day and i don't speak enough russian to politely re-initiate the pancake negotiation and preparation protocol
06:41
cbg @Robert :-)
user559633
reference to this @ZeroPiraeus youtube.com/watch?v=h-mX9T2qyIQ ?
user559633
cbg robert
Yep :-)
user559633
oh god, why haven't i been doing lots of unittests when writing this large flask app? this is awesome
07:01
@BatScream I have never done it before. @JonClements @Ffisegydd @Kevin any idea?
You mean how do you make a synonym? First you suggest it on meta, then if it's received favorably (or at least not unfavorably) after about a week, go to the tag wiki and click "suggest tag synonym" in the sidebar.
You need >=2500 rep and >=5 points in the tag to suggest a synonym (if you don't have that you'll need to get someone else to do it for you, mention it in your meta post).
07:17
Speaking of which, if anyone wants to vote for any of my suggested synonyms (and has the relevant tag rep): stackoverflow.com/tags/control-flow/synonyms stackoverflow.com/tags/data-uri/synonyms stackoverflow.com/tags/element/synonyms ...
I don't have the required tag rep in any of those D:
It's not the toughest bronze badge for nothing ...
@davidism Thanks for your response. Yes i suppose. There are a few tags for mongodb, which have been tagged less than 10 times. Would suggest it on meta to merge those tags with the tag mongodb.
@thefourtheye- thank you. Will post it on meta.
If it's so small, it might be better to just retag (burninate), but still post first.
Yeah sure. Will do that.
08:00
Just went looking through my tags - result: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/282899/…
cbg @Ffisegydd :-)
@VamsiPavanMahesh I can't remember having a conversation with you. Certainly not within the last month. So no, there is no good reason to ping me :)
user559633
08:12
replugging from last night:
"confirmation of how i think something works: python modules are compiled if needed on process startup, modules are small, and are stored in/served out of memory for that process's duration, yes?"
And I'm going to continue to ignore you as I don't know the answer.
I thought they're compiled during the import
user559633
@Ffisegydd haha thanks
user559633
they're compiled during the import, but I'm not sure if a reference to the compile obj is stored in memory or referenced from disk
It's in the memory afaik
user559633
08:16
i know that the job of the import "Finder" is to source it (e.g. from module.__file__), but I'm not sure if the importer stores the compiled obj in memory by attaching a ref to the global scope or not
user559633
yeah, my feeling is that it's in the memory and that it would be bound to the topmost __module__, making each thread share the ref
user559633
unrelated, i find it odd that the official python docs point you to 2.x by default (docs.python.org/library/unittest.html)
Yeah, Python imports each module only once and stores imported modules in sys.modules
Cbg :)
cbg @Ian
user559633
08:22
yeah, and sys.meta_path has the importers @vaultah what i'm not sure of is if the entries in sys.modules are pointing to memory or disk
user559633
e.g.:

>>> import requests
>>> sys.modules['requests']
<module 'requests' from '/Users/tfisher/code/flathero/flathero-site/env/lib/python3.4/site-packages/requests/__init__.py'>
user559633
>>> dis.dis("requests.adapters.socket.gethostbyaddr('localhost')")
1 0 LOAD_NAME 0 (requests)
3 LOAD_ATTR 1 (adapters)
6 LOAD_ATTR 2 (socket)
9 LOAD_ATTR 3 (gethostbyaddr)
12 LOAD_CONST 0 ('localhost')
15 CALL_FUNCTION 1 (1 positional, 0 keyword pair)
18 RETURN_VALUE

implies memory if i'm not mistaken
In [28]: sys.modules['pandas'].value_range
Out[28]: <function pandas.tools.describe.value_range>
Imported pandas, removed the __init__ file, removed __pycache__ and it still works
though maybe it doesn't, but I don't know pandas :D
user559633
Cool, I'm reasonably satisfied that I wasted 2 days developing a dynamic heap implementation
user559633
but also kind of relieved that the default implementation does what i want
08:33
:)
Pretty cool thing to do though
This is why I'd be the receptionist
user559633
Eh. My thinking was that it relied on something like Linux's ramfs -- being that it shared memory with the disk cache and that cache evictions could happen if another process (e.g. java) requested memory and then held that memory forever like a greedy as^H^H jerk (e.g. java)
In [50]: requests
Out[50]: <module 'requests' from '/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/requests/__init__.py'>

In [51]: requests.utils
Out[51]: <module 'requests.utils' from '/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/requests/utils.py'>

In [52]: !sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/requests/utils.py

In [53]: !sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/requests/__pycache__/utils.cpython-34.pyc

In [54]: requests.utils.__version__
Out[54]: '2.3.0'
Destroying my environment for the sake of science
user559633
so my implementation would create a tmpfs/mounted ram partition instead, either by reading the contents of requirements.txt and comparing it to the search paths or by being the first the line of module finders and passing though the request so that request would work, while fetching the dependency and exec-ing or copying (depending if already compiled) it into the tmpfs, notifying the module Finder of a changed state, then responding with the in-memory copy for subsequent requests
user559633
vaultah +1
user559633
i think the only redeeming feature of what i wrote is that it allows for hotpatching module upgrades
user559633
09:00
does anyone have a regex handy for removing dots and filters (+whatever_filter) from email addresses?
09:11
@tristan IIRC it's not technically possible to parse email addresses (per the RFCs) with regex, because they can contain nested comments.
Do you think it's okay to do this
try:
    raise Exception
except Exception:
    set variables here

use variables here (outside the block)
Wow, does that work?
Looks so
@vaultah Thats supposed to work.
I mean is it okay (pythonic, acceptable, etc..) to use the variables from the except block, outside the except block
09:15
So I guess you could set a flag or something if you needed that info down the line
I guess that's not very exceptionic (exceptional?) but could come in handy
re-cbg
Today's Penny Arcade, while aimed at family troubleshooting, describes SO quite well...
Stupid proxy filter
Martijn closed the question with the wrong dupe-target IMO
Voted. Needs one more.
09:32
Maybe this is the best dupe-target
Voted to close
user559633
@ZeroPiraeus i'm ot parsing the whole email addresses, just removing dots and filters for certain domains, knowing their rules
user559633
09:48
@vaultah i'd use something closer to the following so you're checking that a value is set later instead of going through another try/except (and another and another)

    some_vars = {}

    try:
        raise Exception
    except Exception:
        some_vars = {'exception_case':True, 'candy': 'delicious'}
hi all
user559633
@Aadith hi!
this is the first time i'm using chat in SO .. could someone tell me how this is used?
TIL to never use elif if the problem can be solved with if and else statements alone. elif seems to confuse me for some reason.
Short question: Does Sphinx only generate documentation for functions/classes in __all__?
Better wording - does sphinx ignore the functions/classes which have docstrings, but are not in __all__?
09:59
@Aadith you just type - but be sure to read this room's rules at sopython.com/chatroom
10:10
cbg
cbg
in supervisor config, i have set autorestart=true for gunicorn & started it. if i stop/kill gunicorn, it is restarting. is there a way to stop gunicorn without restarting server?
In the future, depending on your requirements you could change it to autorestart=unexpected
But I dunno if you can do a hot config reload or something
@RobertGrant roger that. will set that to unexpected & restart it for now!
user559633
answered this question in python 3 instead of 2, but i'm hoping to make this a dupe target as i think it does a better job than the original
10:37
@tristan: I'm sure I've written a guide before about how to find the C implementation of a function.
I was in a little bit of a hurry, vaultah's dupe is a better choice than mine indeed.
But if you feel you have a better answer, why not post it on the other question then?
user3522371
hello, I am just curious about a user asking a question a moment ago. He subscribed to this website only today. But as soon as I commented on his question, his profile is deleted ! How come ? It takes few days to be able to delete our own profile. How come he did that in few minutes ? Just curious to know
@Begueradj a moderate can delete accounts - I suspect there's some reason we won't know as to why
user3522371
@JonClements ok, thank you for the answer.
it's normally a last resort thing though... so it's likely they think the user is avoiding a question ban/sock puppetting/other
cbg
10:42
cbg!
@Begueradj looking at the quality of the question though - it seems likely their original account was question banned and this account was deleted
user3522371
@JonClements ok, so this means he has 2 accounts, you mean ?
@Begueradj accounts with no activity can be deleted by the user at will.
having two accounts is fine as long as they don't "interact" with each other - eg: upvote each other... creating another account to avoid a question ban on another account is not
If there was a question already, and the account has now been deleted, it was probably nuked by a moderator because the account was thought to have violated rules.
If the user is recognised as a known troll for example, then moderators can insta-delete such an account before they can rope in victims.
user3522371
is it legitimate if I ask how this website identifies users as being the same user ? I mean, apart from browser fingerprinting
10:47
@Begueradj we don't know - the moderators have more information than a user does to decide on such things
user3522371
@JonClements you are yourself a moderator :)
@Begueradj whether it's legitimate or not, the chances are that no one here will be able to answer your question. This is after all the Python chat room. If you have such questions you could ask in The Tavern, but it's probably not publicly available.
nope I'm not
user3522371
@Ffisegydd ok
@Begueradj no one here is a diamond moderator.
Except @ThiefMaster. Hi Thief!
user3522371
10:50
@MartijnPieters strange, I thought there are thousands of moderators !
user3522371
I have been asked to program an application in which a user can pick a given picture of clothes and change their color: from example, a user likes a hat, and he wants to see how it looks like in red color, so he picks red color. The colorization must be loyal to how the colors are distributed, if you know what i mean, so that the hat must look natural and real after colorization: Is it possible to do this in Python ?
@Begueradj users are given moderator privileges, but that doesn't make them diamond moderators.
When we talk about moderators we mean the diamond-carrying elected individuals.
Anyone with 20k+ reputation can do more than people with less reputation, but what we cannot do is delete or ban users, we cannot delete comments, we cannot undelete what a moderator deleted, etc.
hello everyone
wb @ReutSharabani
10:56
we had power outage yesterday so was off work
I wrote a CV and sent it to some HR who contacted me through linked in. She asked "what is your level: junior/mid". I replied that this is a relative status and I don't have anyone to compare to, so I just attached my CV. How can you tell your "level"?
well, you can't really... you can tell if someone's not going to be able to do a job or do the job
junior/senior ummm.... not sure there's any universal quotient on how to do that
These questions are so annoying. I get asked these sort of questions a lot and I have no basis of comparison. I see far less qualified people write down they are "experts" and they literally have no idea what they're talking about.
welcome to the job market :)
user3522371
@ReutSharabani what is a junior/mid level ?
I asked her, she didn't answer, just sent me some job descriptions that I didn't find attractive.
maximize the python calculation!
I think it fits more on SU where he could ask how to allocate more RAM (or something) to a particular program (in this example, python)
user3522371
@Ffisegydd it is a Pythonic question
@Begueradj uhh, wha?
I calculate python on hadoop using a custom MR job that spreads the calculations in my python-calculating cloud. I mine ~10,000 pythons per day.
user559633
11:13
@MartijnPieters I'm almost positive that I read your "how to find a C implementation" of a function when I was first getting into Python.
user559633
Wasn't sure the ordering on posting to the other question for dupe reasons -- post answer and then flag that it's a dupe or just copy/paste to the other
user559633
@MartijnPieters upvoted. that's explained well there
hrm, not sure that was it either.
user559633
I know I'd say I'd edit that post with 2.x details, but i think i'm going to let that be a lie so i can get back to work
11:18
Which one is correct: "N lines patch" or "N line patch"?
Example sentence?
Expanded the comment now, found a few more.
The last one is applicable for finding the print statement implementation, since it is a separate bytecode.
I'm checking if I made a mistake in this message, @Ffisegydd
@vaultah hmm I'm not sure, I think either are fine to be honest :/ but if I had to choose I'd say '~80 line'
@tristan if you wanted to add 2.x details, refer to stackoverflow.com/q/12244074 to shortcut the search. :-P
user559633
11:23
@vaultah the patch is singular, so it would be "70 line patch"
how can I check if a tuple "contains" another tuple?
user559633
@MartijnPieters haha, fair. i think i'll just say "check out this answer for a good py2 write up"
@ReutSharabani if any(isintance(el, tuple) for el in your_tuple)
@JonClements this is unordered, are tuples considered to be unordered?
11:26
@Begueradj You can do that by shifting the hue. There's a little bit of info on how to do that with PIL in this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/24874765/…
No, tuples are ordered.
Thank you @Ffisegydd, @tristan
oh ffs, I can't spell for cabbage today
@Ffisegydd I mean conceptually, should I be working with lists
isinstance
11:27
Depends on whether you're working with homogenous or heterogenous data I suppose.
tuples are also immutable. I remember an SO answer that said lists can be a path while tuples are points on the path
@Ffisegydd a tuple doesn't care if it's homo/hetero - it just has a fixed size
@ReutSharabani yes, tuples are immutable, but may contain mutable objects
A common example is lat/long coordinates. You would store these in a tuple (latitude, longitude). You could then have a list of coordinates [(lat1, long1), (lat2, long2)].
hmm, anyway my problem is finding the longest common "runs" in two given lists. So I have a function to find all runs of size X, and I'm trying to find runs in X+1 and remove all those that are in the longer runs.
generally speaking, tuples are used when you have a fixed data set, each element with specific meaning. You often then use a named tuple.
while lists are collections, so usually you expect to find homogenous types, a variable number of them.
11:29
stackoverflow.com/a/626871/3005188 is quite a good answer on this IMO (and is kinda what I based my comments on)
@Begueradj: I recommend getting a feel for this kind of image processing by playing around with it manually, eg in GIMP, before you start writing code.
@Ffisegydd I think the second answer is short and to the point as an example, that's what I remembered anyway :)
So, no x.issublist(y) in python....?
What would that function even do?
if x supported it, but how would you generalise that?
user559633
it returns if the list is a container for sandwiches in elongated format or underwater vessels
user559633
11:32
OBVIOUSLY
[1,2,3].issublist([0,1,2,3,4]) -> True
[1,2,3].issublist([0,1,2,4,3]) -> False
@Ffisegydd I suppose the same thing as shortstring in longerstring..
@ReutSharabani that's the wrong way around.
user559633
requests.data.contains_cats()
I am listening @MartijnPieters
I'd expect the longer list to have such a method.
to test if a shorter list is contained within it.
11:34
ah, I see
anyway, is such thing available in python?
Strings support this; you can use in membership testing to find if a string is a substring of something else.
no, lists do not support sublist containment searching out of the box.
It is not something that comes up often enough, and is easy enough to code yourself.
I guess I'll write it myself then. Thanks!
user559633
Why do I feel like there's something for this in sets or collections?
usually people want to do more complex sublist testing, like where the sublist is not contiguous.
17
Q: Check for presence of a sublist in Python

JonathanI want to write a function that determines if a sublist exists in a larger list. list1 = [1,0,1,1,1,0,0] list2 = [1,0,1,0,1,0,1] #Should return true sublistExists(list1, [1,1,1]) #Should return false sublistExists(list2, [1,1,1]) Is there a Python function that can do this?

The top-voted answer makes both arguments strings. :-P
Yeah, @MartijnPieters I thought the second answer wasn't efficient but I now re-read it and it's exactly what I intended to write
It's clever, but I'm not sure it fits my use-case
11:37
@Martijn sure I've seen a better Q/A regarding that
so I'll go for the second answer
@JonClements feel free to beat my 0.5 second google search.
sure if I could remember it - I think I even answered it :)
think I just used a sliding window approach anyway, so doesn't matter
or maybe I put it in a deque and kept shuffling and comparing first n elements before shuffling it... can't remember
(I have some crazy (read stupid) ideas sometimes)
sliding window is the way to go I guess :) you can probably make it better by not creating sublists and actually comparing in the original list, but that'll add more lines compared to the version available in martijn's link
can't remember the name of the algorithm you can use for strings
11:46
for substring? isn't that sliding-window as well?
I'm not sure I'm familiar with another approach
been up almost a day - I'm a bad puppy... should have got sleep
oh well, life and all that
err....
someone bail me out here @MartijnPieters the algorithm used for containment?
I was trying to get some codereview work done here..
someone is after all paying me for work today....
:-P
@JonClements not sure what you mean; there are several.
the general one - you only need to look so far ahead, so that you can determine in it, a sequence isn't going to match, so you go from there
profile views 8,008
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wow... palindromic numbers for both
@JonClements need moar flags.
@Benjamin probably, but I only flag stuff the community can't deal with by itself
11:56
The easiest way to get a lot of flags is to flag redundant or otherwise bad comments.
oh, I have a load of comment flags
I just don't go actively seeking stuff to flag
74131 and 1935. No patterns detected.
anyway - good to see you again @Benjamin - you been staying silent there? :p
I lurk, enjoyed the sublist discussion :P I just have the chat open on a secondary monitor and I code - mostly read in builds and when pinged
okay, who's going to post the obligatory xkcd "it's compiling!" image :)
12:00
in tkinter, editor.bind('<Control_L><p>', lambda e: print('booooo test')) works, but if i hold ctrl down and press p again i get nothing, ideas?
@Kevin: isn't that your field? ^^
@Arden do you actually press ctrl-p the second time, or just p ?
i leave the ctrl key pressed down and hit p again
betting it's key events then
depress ctrl, then do ctrl-p again
that works fine, i want to know how to capture it without having to release ctrl, i could bind to <Key> but then i have read the event manually
12:05
I don't know tkinter that well, but I imagine you'll need a separate event loop for while ctrl is pressed
mind you, I'm not sure I'd like a system that allowed me without being in some mode to keep pressing the same key to do something while another key was held done (except shift/aft)
its for a text editor, like if you hold ctrl + v it will paste, and if u keep holding it will paste multiple times, you dont have to release the keys and press them again
sounds reasonable for that purpose - put an event loop that occurs on ctrl and release it on ctrl's release
cheers
12:31
@JonClements the behavior with ctrl v was implemented correctly with the text widget, calling the bind method with arguments showed me the current bindings and i just changed the bind syntax from '<Control_L><p>' to '<Control-Key-p>'
ahh... be handy to know if I ever do any GUI programming
hi, I am using "with open(logFile, "r") as f:" to process each line of file
how do I end of this processing in the middle?
Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to find all Wreck It Ralf characters amongst those games.
actually, I am do some regex matching for this file. How do I jump out of the "with open(logFile, "r") as f:" when I find my pattern?
12:54
@Alex I assume you have some kind of read loop inside the with context. So just break out of that loop.
user559633
@MartijnPieters aww, back when i had hair under the helmet
@Alex you could also wrap a try around the with, and raise a custom exception and catch it to break out

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