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00:02
What would you call a lazy rabbit?
Dan
Dan
@ReutSharabani normal
;)
I need it for a variable name :)
Dan
Dan
rhubarb all
@ReutSharabani 10-4 haha
I'm actually making a rest base class for restful resources using request... Anyone knows one that's already done?
00:22
cabbage
An object's method can be called like this:
obj.method(*args)
...or like this:
method = obj.method
method.im_func(obj, *args)
Is there any reason why doing things the latter way would be a bad idea?
i.e., calling an objects method by the underlying function object?
What "underlying function object"?
@AirThomas method.im_func
Which is what?
It looks to me like you have an object with a callable object as an attribute.
00:31
@AirThomas Could you please rephrase?
Ok, i'm just trying to avoid circular references.
Bound Method objects hold a strong reference to instance.
A functioning class definition would help me understand.
@AirThomas An example?
Ok.
class C(object):
    def foo(self, args):
        print args

c = C()
foo = c.foo
foo.im_func(c, 'hello world')
#exactly like calling c.foo('hello world')
My question is, are they really "exactly" the same, as i claim?
Hmm. I suppose that depends on how exact you want to be. I'm not really sure.
I mean, id(foo) != id(foo.im_func), so in that sense there's something not "exactly" the same.
But as far as implementation, you'd get a better answer from someone with more depth of knowledge.
I don't know too much about those instance method attributes.
Fair enough. I'll leave the question up there for the Europeans when they wake up.
...and proceed as if everything's kosher.
cbg here
00:41
If there's a hidden gotcha, or if someone answers, we'll all learn something.
Thanks.
Yes, those Dutch fellows to whom things are obvious :)
having a question about a 'pythonic' way of doing something
ask away
no need to ask if you may ask
merely ask :)
Oooh...not sure i can help. I usually take the "Whateva! I do what i want!" approach...
is it better to print 'yes this is %s' % var or print 'yes this is {}'.format(var)
00:43
Everyone can help answer "Pythonic" questions. All you need is an opinion that differs from the other participants in the conversation.
use str.format
The latter.
python 3
@Bestasttung Especially in Py3.
Oh, foot in mouth. Yeah that's clear-cut; use advanced string formatting.
00:43
although the former (I've heard) is faster for mundane operations
ok was just checking the lattest django tuto on django.org and they use %s
it's never better.
but i was sure .format was better
You'll find the old style in a lot of modules. Doesn't mean they're bad modules.
You'll see tons of people still use string interpolation because that was the de facto standard before string formatting became available
languages change. This changed.
00:44
@AirThomas yes i'm sure but just want to know
It's not deprecated either.
melon guys
wassermelone
I've heard that "%s, World!" % "Hello" is some tiny bit faster than "{}, World!".format("Hello"), but it's never enough of a difference to make a design decision over.
And the latter is vastly easier to read and extend
@AdamSmith I wonder if that's specific to e.g. cPython
00:46
It may well be
@AdamSmith I don't know, that sounds like putting stickers on your bike.
I've never done any kind of profiling on it, so for all I know it's an old wive's tale
@NoobSaibot By which you mean, awesome?
(though I don't know how much debate there is over coding style among many old wives)
user2555451
% is faster because there is no name lookup and function call.
00:47
@AirThomas You remember when you were a kid and you used to put stickers on your bike to "make it go faster"?
You mean like when you put baseball cards in the spokes, grandpa?
Yes... when I... used to do these things... >__>
Am i that old? Maybe i was just poorer than i thought growing up. lol
@AirThomas +1
Interesting related trivia before I leave for the day
There are swimsuits that make professional swimmers go faster than if they were naked & shaved
That shouldn't be surprising. There are lots of materials that provide less friction than human skin
00:50
Sometimes (often? always?) banned in competitions as a result
So it is possible for stickers to make your bike go faster!
Also, Betty White is literally older than sliced bread.
In that "infinite, frictionless plane" way
Do they similarly ban being naked and shaved? Because I feel like that's the natural solution.
You'll thank me when you're on Jeopardy.
I feel like there's a joke in there somewhere where the Mathematician strips naked and grabs a razor and shouts "A solution exists!"
00:52
all jumbly bits should be securely fastened prior to competition
and with that, rhubarb!
pasta
:P
user2555451
@NoobSaibot - The two examples you posted are equivalent. Doing c.foo(...) uses the method object to call the underlying function object. im_func however accesses the function object directly. You could also do c.foo.__func__ instead of using im_func.
user2555451
Actually, using __func__ is preferred if you must access the function object directly.
Why prefer __func__? Just a stylistic choice?
(rbrb)
user2555451
Yea. It has the dunders. :)
user2555451
01:01
Plus, Python 3 removed the im_* attributes.
01:22
@AirThomas that's why they're forbbiden now
01:47
can I merge two dicts in a simple single line?
and keep one of the keys in case of collision..
user2555451
dict1.update(dict2) maybe? Or do you need something more complex?
no no, that's just what I need.
I never used it for more than one key so I didn't think of it :D
 
1 hour later…
Dan
Dan
03:10
cbg
03:30
What's the term for ** expansion? I know there's some weird word for it.
user2555451
I've always called it "splatting". Or "keyword splatting" to emphasize that it is for keyword arguments.
user2555451
Ah look, SO has a post on it: stackoverflow.com/q/2322355/2555451
that's it
What a great word. "Splatting" :)
Dan
Dan
04:12
@davidism @iCodez I learned something new today
 
2 hours later…
06:18
Exact error: raise ValueError("Ciphertext with incorrect length.") but again whats the difference, why isnt it interpolating t correctly? — Banned_User 4 mins ago
Perhpas I am not asking the right questions.
06:35
Cbg
@vaultah Cabbage :)
 
1 hour later…
07:54
@corvid “Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.” - Terry Pratchett, Jingo
08:38
Anybody here watches Person of Interest?
09:09
Cbg
09:24
iter(cbg)
09:40
asyncio.get_event_loop().call_soon(cbg, 'all')
 
1 hour later…
10:46
cbg!

@thefourtheye I watched its 7-8 episodes from the first season because of Jonathan Nolan, but found it monotonous.
@AshwiniChaudhary Give it another try. Even I felt the same after watching Season 1. From Season 2 onwards they have come up with a new dimension.
The third and fourth seasons have become totally about AI
10:58
@thefourtheye I see. Let me put it on download then. :D
11:24
cbg
11:54
Hello guys I just found a cool api. And I want to implement it for my site. But I'm worried if I make an api call in Flask it might take too long and give an error to the visitor. Is there a way around this?
Google search results are not helping.
They are showing how to create an api not implement one for your site
 
2 hours later…
13:38
grmbl
not that there are no duplicates for that one. Best leave it be then.
cbg @Martijn
Cbg
I've voted to undelete as I just (out of principal) find it rude someone deletes a Q when you've bothered formulating an answer
cbg @Wally
How do you guys handle timeout when talking to APIs.
I.e if the api takes too long to respond
13:54
oh, make a cup of tea, share some biscuits, be nice to it
bit of discussion about if their family is doing well, do they want to go to the pub later...
I have a site that is going to take data from an api and return it to the user along with some other data from a database. I don't want the user to see an error.
Increase the timeout in your WSGI configuration?
is this related to something I glanced at earlier regarding your API taking too long stuff?
I don't want my site to take too long to load. Should I use Jquery?
if you're making an API request in the same request that your client is requesting, you'll get blocking
It all depends what your user expects (and/or is willing to accept)
13:59
So how do devs normally handle such a thing. Just make a blocking request and cross their fingers hoping that all will work well?
Or maybe give the request a timeout and handle it using Jquery if it takes too long?
normally for a long running API request, you'd put the request in some MQ and provide some feedback to the user
What do you mean by MQ?
message queue
how you provide feedback to the user is completely different on each circumstance though
14:02
jQuery doesn't magically solve this; you still need to handle the longer request somewhere, as well as handle edgecases (like timeouts, the server refusing connection, HTTP and network errors, etc.).
Oh! Well time to lookup celery tuts!
@Wally at the end of the day, your web server should return requests ASAP
processing requests should go into some sort of async queue, and if you set up some sort of MQ that can communicate progress, then you can do some websocket stuff using jQuery/plain JS to display a progress bar of some sorts
Actually the api I'm trying to reuquest is very simple and I just need to send some numbers
@app.route(/api)
def returnapi():
    r = requests.get("http://dndchecker.railsroot.com/api?mobile_number=9876543210")
    return r.text
So it doesn't request a progress bar but I get the idea.
How have people voted that suitable for SU?
14:19
GOOOOOOOOOONG
Cbg @Ffisegydd
cbg @Wally
Welcome to Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS (GNU/Linux 3.16.5-x86_64-linode46 x86_64)

* Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com/

383 packages can be updated.
wow... how many updates a week does the server want?
okay... done the updates anyway
I never notice how many updates there are because I set it up my Ubuntu machines to download and install security updates automatically. That's kind of ridiculous.
me too have lot of pending updates but i never updates .. Anyway ..
14:31
Also, why the heck did I pick 14.04 instead of 14.10 ?
@JonClements You did the right think puppy. 14.04 is the LTS version
Can't test the code i wrote today .. ! so far i successfully integrated twitter but this facebook needs permission .. Dono why .. !
The following items must be completed before you can submit your app for review:
Your app must have Privacy Policy URL set. Please visit App Details to add one.
Please provide Notes for all items before submitting.
why i need privacy policy url .. i don't have domain also .. now in dev ..
@rajasimon then err, follow the instructions and do so ?
Exception Value:
(#200) The user hasn't authorized the application to perform this action
Hey @rajasimon, please be aware that there are no spaces before most punctuation, and ellipses are three dots, not two. Typically, the pronoun "I" should be capitalized. Thanks!
14:38
@davidism oh thanks ..!
Wow, you couldn't even get it right in the reply. :-/
Watching a guy speedrun a Platinum game one handed, while holding a soda in the other hand on AGDQ right now. This is crazy.
@davidism I got it ...!
no, you've still messed up
gotta run for a bit, rbrb
14:48
Once again Liam Neeson's family is in danger. :D
14:59
According to this answer, module object has __file__ property. But when I try '__file__' in dir(itertools), it returns False. Any idea why?
It definitely has a file‌​. It's a C module, maybe that has something to do with it?
But I get AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute '__file__'
Tried it in both 2.7 and 3.4
yeah, I get that too, just pointing out that it's a c module
@thefourtheye On some systems some packages are present in form of DLLs or so files. Usually they don't have the __file__ attribute.
It depends on how it was compiled
if it is compiled to be part of the Python binary (statically compiled) then it won't have a __file__ attribute.
sys and __builtin__ are such modules.
15:07
Many of the other c modules have a __file__ property though, so not sure why itertools is special
>>> import __builtin__
>>> __builtin__.__file__
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute '__file__'
>>> import itertools
>>> itertools.__file__
'/Users/mj/Development/venvs/stackoverflow-2.7/lib/python2.7/lib-dynload/itertools.so'
The repr() output for such a module uses (built-in) for the filename:
>>> sys
<module 'sys' (built-in)>
So in my case itertools is compiled as a dynamically loaded module, but you have the choice to just link it in.
@MartijnPieters Oh... That is a big clue... In my machine, all sys, __builtin__ and itertools are built-ins only
Looks like Ubuntu's Python binaries are statically linked
I see the same on my Debian box.
Still, the /usr/lib/python*/lib-dynload directories contain plenty of .so module files.
So not everything is linked in statically.
Ah, it is the minimal vs. full installation separation.
The minimal package gives you a static binary, nothing else: packages.ubuntu.com/vivid/amd64/python2.7-minimal/filelist
Then to get the full Python installation, you add on the libpython2.7-stdlib package, and it adds any C libraries not deemed minimal enough as dynamically loaded modules: packages.ubuntu.com/vivid/amd64/libpython2.7-stdlib/filelist
@thefourtheye: ^
15:28
Oh... That's interesting. Thanks @MartijnPieters :) But this says, itertools is an extension and it is already loaded as a built-in.
@thefourtheye extension means it is a module coded in C.
Also, I already have the full installation
➜  python3.4  sudo apt-get install libpython3.4-stdlib
[sudo] password for thefourtheye:
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
libpython3.4-stdlib is already the newest version.
libpython3.4-stdlib set to manually installed.
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 6 not upgraded.
➜  python3.4  sudo apt-get install libpython2.7-stdlib
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
libpython2.7-stdlib is already the newest version.
It says nothing about how it is included.
I linked you to the file lists for the relevant Python 2.7 packages.
itertools is compiled into the python2.7 binary so that it is suitable for boot-time scripts.
All the modules (Python code) are listed in packages.ubuntu.com/vivid/amd64/libpython2.7-minimal/filelist (libpython2.7-minimal).
Oh, I get it now. I just have to uninstall the minimal installation and compile Python from the source code to get the extensions as dynamically linked modules. Correct?
@thefourtheye No need to uninstall anything.
Just install your own compiled version in /usr/local
leave the minimal installation well enough alone because other packages probably depend on it.
And why are you so keen to have itertools located in a separate dynamic module anyway?
It doesn't matter if it is part of the python binary or is dynamically loaded instead, does it?
15:36
@MartijnPieters Good that you told me that. I screwed up my installation once by forcefully uninstalling minimal python and learnt that Ubuntu uses a lot of Python internally.
@MartijnPieters I am just trying to understand how the core modules can be loaded as dynamic libraries.
Just like any other extension module.
16:07
Arghhh... Half an hour of work went in vain. Even after compiling from source, itertools is still a built-in :'(
@thefourtheye Are you sure you are running the right Python executable? :-P
Yup
➜  cpython git:(master) python3.5
Python 3.5.0a0 (default, Jan 10 2015, 21:27:06)
[GCC 4.8.2] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import itertools
>>> itertools.__file__
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: module 'itertools' has no attribute '__file__'
>>> import sys
>>> sys.__file__
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: module 'sys' has no attribute '__file__'
I personally use github.com/collective/buildout.python to build my Python executables.
Ah, you built 3.5, then yes, that'll be independent.
I just checked the install scripts and one of them has this
I don't know where or when the build process decides to make it a separate loadable .so shared library or a built-in.
16:12
# The modules listed here can't be built as shared libraries for
# various reasons; therefore they are listed here instead of in the
# normal order.

# This only contains the minimal set of modules required to run the
# setup.py script in the root of the Python source tree.

posix posixmodule.c		# posix (UNIX) system calls
errno errnomodule.c		# posix (UNIX) errno values
pwd pwdmodule.c			# this is needed to find out the user's home dir
				# if $HOME is not set
_sre _sre.c			# Fredrik Lundh's new regular expressions
So, I guess it is not possible now :(
I still wonder how you and NPE got that as a shared library.
17:11
is anyone into hardware?
I'm willing to build a funky machine, and I hope someone can take a look at it :)
#hardware on freenode irc is quite helpful
@ThiefMaster nice hint, thanks
DSM
DSM
17:29
@DSM even worse on mobile :p
DSM
DSM
Oy, I was just complaining to myself you weren't here, so I had to remind myself how to do something in matplotlib/seaborn. :-/
Weekend cabbage for everybody.
Ah yeah you were after me last night too :p
If you'd have pinged me, I'd have replied
Ooooh PSF minutes. Nothing of interest though :(
17:50
If you need something in the future @DSM ping away, I'll pick it up on my phone.
DSM
DSM
I'd like to think I have a little too much pride to do that, but we'll see. :-)
:P
I think I'm going to permanently start using seaborn and prettyplotlib over matplotlib all the time I think. They're just so much prettier
DSM
DSM
I remember giving a talk at a university once, and someone came up to me after the talk: "so you're a Python programmer?" She'd recognized the mpl style..
18:08
cbg all
Cbg dude, all good?
yeah... sigh. Just got chewed out by dad for "taking too long to readjust to a proper day/night cycle"
I've been up all night with mom right, and now that she's sleeping through the night, dad says "start sleeping through the nights and be awake at regular hours like everyone else". I say "alright!". That was two nights ago. Now, it's night 3, and apparently two nights was too long to readjust. Bah! Muggles
:D we used to use the term "muggle" as a term for non physicists
When are you going back to university?
I have no idea. I was originally supposed to be here for 12-18 months. We'll see when I go back
We also used to call mathematicians "squibs" :P
18:16
earlier today, he said that I can go back now, but I'm not quite sure if that was just the social "mob mentality" talking
I ended up solving that text-on-image problem by using button text - the image was in a button, and the button text could be manipulated with CSS
Recognize a fork? What, by using image recognition?
What am I supposed to do if I see a spork?
@Martijn fork is a term in the game. OP does describe it at the bottom. It's still unclear though.
DSM
DSM
18:23
Okay, @Ffisegydd, how's this: have you done much with matplotlib 3d plotting?
I've played a little. Not a lot though.
DSM
DSM
One thing which keeps happening is that it keeps putting the zlabel outside of the (for me, grey) background on which it draws the plots. The zlabel is pretty close as it is, so I don't want to move it in.. instead I want to make the grey "backplate" bigger. Not sure of the right word.
(lol) got an MCVE? :P I'll try to put a quick one together now if you don't, I think I know what you mean though.
@Ffisegydd Right, I missed that because the question is a dense mess of a text..
DSM
DSM
@Fizzy: sure, give me a sec.
18:30
@DSM but for now you may want to try something like stackoverflow.com/a/12782474/3005188
So you can add more padding between the axis and figure, not sure if that's do-able using 3D ofc.
DSM
DSM
Something like
fig = plt.figure(figsize=(15.5,10))
ax = fig.add_subplot(111,projection='3d')
ax.view_init(elev=19.444, azim=-51.938)
b = ax.bar(range(10), height=range(10), zs=range(10), zdir='y')
ax.set_xlabel('A'); ax.set_ylabel('B'); ax.set_zlabel("C")
plt.savefig("test.png")
Should show the issue; the rotation rotates the C right out of the box. The rotation angles are basically necessitated by the dataset, and the real numbers are larger so I can't bring C in comfortably. I wonder if I can just go the other way and shrink the entire figure within the box?
Too broad.
The OP hasn't narrowed down what they want explaining.
@DSM Yeah that's what I'd try, using the link above. Make the axis smaller within the figure box. Incidentally, that plot looks fine for me (not sure if it looks fine for you as well and it's just an example of the potential issue with your full data).
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: really? You don't see that the C is outside the grey box at the far right?
DSM
DSM
18:43
Oy, that's not what I get.
ensure you guys are using the same version
Clearly it's because I'm a pro.
Python 3.4.0, matplotlib 1.4.2.
I don't think I've modified my .matplotlibrc file (which would change the default params)
DSM
DSM
1.3.1. Let me upgrade.
!@$!@$#
DSM
DSM
Well, something they did changed some default or other, because I reproduce your results in 1.4.2.
Now I have to see if any of my other plots look weird now..
Anyway, thanks for the consult.
18:51
No probs :P
DSM
DSM
Actually, now my plotting code won't even run! This is going to be fun.. sigh
D: what's the error?
I should make you aware of the small print you agreed to when taking my consultation, namely, if my consultation breaks anything else then it's all your fault.
DSM
DSM
Looks to be this, where things somehow got themselves into a weird state. Will clean and see if that fixes..
@BhargavRao Thanks for the link :) Can somebody please nuke this, with this dup?
user2555451
@thefourtheye - done.
19:05
Thanks @iCodez and @vaultah :)
cbg Jon
vanakkam thala @thefourtheye
@inspectorG4dget Thala, Pongal Cabbage :)
19:09
how come up so late?
anyhow - sore throat, stiff neck, headache and feel like the terminator has punched me in the stomach or something... so posts might be intermittent for a day or two me thinks
@inspectorG4dget There is a bug which I have to fix... :(
no idea @inspectorG4dget.... was fine earlier, then just ouch
@JonClements Take good rest and care, Puppy. Get well soon.
19:14
blah, these things never last long anyway
comes on quick - goes away quick
get well soon @JonClements! Bow wow, pal; bow wow!
woof bark woof!
supposed to be at a pub in just under 2 hours to celebrate a mate's 30th... definitely not happening sighs
user1804599
Hello, world!
cbg @rightføld
19:37
any ideas why this JS works differently on an iPad than on my mac?
function displayText(id, text) {
    if (text=="backspace") {
        contents = document.getElementById(id).innerHTML;
        document.getElementById(id).innerHTML = contents.substring(0, contents.length-1);
    } else if (text=="clear") {
        document.getElementById(id).innerHTML ="";
    } else {
        document.getElementById(id).innerHTML += text;
    }
}
it does what it's supposed to do on the desktop browser, but prints "backspace" or "clear" on the ipad (the files are stored locally in each case)
DSM
DSM
Line of code of the day: someone just posted a question which included
true = False
Yeah, was going to said that :D
He also called % a function, but yeah, if true == True: is clearly notable
how about a while true loop that is never entered, as a result of true = False?
Damn, I made an obvious grammar mistake again ;(
@DSM I can top that. True = False is actually valid in Python 2.7 :D
19:53
does asking "can I ask a question [about ...]" count as asking a question?
Yeah I suppose it does :P Why?
DSM
DSM
If the real question follows immediately, then I think it's just an awkward attempt at politeness; if that is the question, then I guess it's a better fit on meta.
Wow, an 11k user just posted a "please write this code" problem.
just curious - the next time someone walks into sopython with "can I ask a question about ...?", I'd like someone to respond with "you just did. The answer is yes. Now, the first answer is free; if you want to ask another, that's gonna cost you" :P
We should charge by the letter. And charge for spelling and grammatical errors.
DSM
DSM
Ah, that's 11k worth of questions.
19:56
@DSM: a 30k rep user did that yesterday in this very chatroom, no? :P
Pssh. A 79k user came in earlier looking for help when all he needed to do was update his packages properly.
DSM
DSM
I'll have you know the update didn't fix the problem, they only changed the background colour so you couldn't see it any more. :P
Thus fixing the source of the problem :P
But yeah, it's shocking how "high rep" users can sometimes not understand the general rules.
well, the 30k guy knew he was breaking the rules, but did so anyway
20:02
30k guy breaking rules? are you guys talking blank man?
DSM
DSM
Bah: what are a few rules amongst net.friends?
Blankman, blankville
39.8k 136 428 788
holy... blank man is at 40k now.
DSM
DSM
@Ahmad: no, a more local 30k user had a time-sensitive coding problem, which we were happy to help with. :-)
I don't get it. Why is this relevant?
@DSM :)
ah
@inspectorG4dget the my-refrencing-blankman?
DSM
DSM
20:05
"In Python we'd start by writing some code. Did you try that?" #mustresist
ahh. Yeah, Kevin, DSM, Ff, corvid, icodez helped out, IIRC (sorry if I left out a name there)
DSM
DSM
I mostly kibitzed.
mmeh! Remember how I said my image was in a button? I ended up using the button text to do my bidding. No need for super complex CSS hacks - just some minor hacking to send the text to the bottom of the button
@Ahmad nono. That happened to be me
wow... slight bit of sleep, and apart from a bit of stomach ache - feel okay now - bloody weird
time.sleep it off really works!
20:18
umm.... apparently Civ:BE now installs on a linux system... interesting
20:37
a silence has fallen upon the room
DSM
DSM
21:18
Okay, time to leave the office. Had to come in to help a friend with a time-crunched project, and not coming in to the office on the weekend was supposed to be my New Year's resolution, so I'm not doing too well so far. I'm going to miss opening kickoff, but sacrifices need to be made..
Anyway, rhubarb for all!
rhubarb @DSM. Get your friend to redeem you of your violation ;]
22:13
alright, I think I'm going to rhubarb for the night. Adios nerdmigos!

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