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02:39
Very newb question, if I want to read the docs / help page for the startswith method, how to do it? help(startswith) doesn't do anything
03:15
help(str.startswith) should do the trick.
you're asking not about a standalone function but about a method; qualify it with the class.
thanks so much! btw what's the difference between pydoc and help?
help can be invoked in the REPL ("console"). I suppose "pydoc" is somewhere around docs.python.org/library
I suppose the official doc is just a little better formatted content of help() (which is, I believe, is taken from str.__doc__). Most often the docs on the site are much more detailed than the built-in help.
pydoc generates HTML documentation from the __doc__ attributes. help() shows it immediately.
Yeah, it looks like help and pydoc get the same help. The former is to get help within python, pydoc is to get help from the OS terminal
oh, I never realized that pydoc can just show it on the command prompt! 8-) I always used the html generation option only.
 
2 hours later…
05:48
Sorry, if this has already been posted. But, read all the posts.
hi
i want one help
Hi @square. Welcome to the Python chat room :) Please read the room rules to be familiar with this environment :)
i am having two textfile . i want to remove list of word from text1 to text2 file
text1 file have all the list of words . which one i want to remove
@thefourtheye thanks
pastebin.com/nfAxL1Bi this is my word list in file1text file
06:56
Cbg
07:24
Umm.. main page of Microsoft's site has a link "See how Surface Pro 3 stacks up against MacBook Air". Isn't this illegal?
Surface is the clear winner in their comparison...
 
1 hour later…
09:00
Cbg
 
2 hours later…
10:34
I found this piece of code in internet.
@app.route('/grade/<int:id>', methods=['POST'])
def grade_assignment(id):
    if id < len(assignments) and id >= 0:
        assignment = request.json['assignment']
        words = []
        corrections = []
        teacher_corrected_list = []
        for w in assignment:
            if not w['correct']:
                words.append(w['text'])
                is_teach_corrected = w['teacherCorrection'] != False
                teacher_corrected_list.append(is_teach_corrected)
                if is_teach_corrected:
And I want to change it to
cbg
@app.route('/grade/<int:id>', methods=['POST'])
def grade_assignment(id):
    if id < len(assignments) and id >= 0:

        assignment = request.json['assignment']

        words, teacher_corrected_list = zip(*(
            (w['text'], w['teacherCorrection'])
            for w in assignment if not w['correct']))

        corrections = [w['teacherCorrection'] or w['correction']
                       for w in assignment if not w['correct']]

        print(words, corrections, teacher_corrected_list)
Does it look like a reasonable change?
@Jerry Cabbage, the RegEx master :)
Is it okay to remove Hi! from the question title?
608
Q: Should 'Hi', 'thanks,' taglines, and salutations be removed from posts?

GEOCHETI edit a lot of posts every day. I often run across posts with 'Hi' and 'Thanks' on the top and the bottom of the post respectively. I also run across things like: --User Should these items be removed during the editing of the post by an editor?

Thanks :)
I'm surprised they don't remove these from titles then
10:58
cbg
@thefourtheye I especially liked meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2950/…
11:58
cbg
Cabbage puppy :) How are you?
Have you recovered?
yes my evil twin - still a slight headache, but yeah, don't know what that was all about - throat and everything else is all fine
re-cbg
cbg all :-)
mind you - chopping vegetables when you're feeling woozy is not the greatest of ideas
not sure about "half a pint of Jon's blood" is a really good ingredient
12:11
@JonClements Ah, you should have gone for the beer last night. You wouldn't have felt a thing, this morning.
@thefourtheye possibly, but just the idea of a beer was ugh
Cbg guys
OT I know, but it's deleteworthy and has been used to create a new tag that IMO doesn't deserve to exist, which has already attracted a suggested wiki.
umm... while I don't agree the tag needs to exist, I approved the edit in terms of good faith stuff
Same here (just because there was no appropriate reject reason really) - as I understand it the tag will quietly die anyway if the question does, regardless of having a wiki.
12:28
tags get purged by the system in 24 hours if they have no related questions anymore
anyway, dv'd and voted to delete the question
wow - another random upvote... interesting... wasn't even that good an answer, but I'll take it anyway :p
I had two upvotes in two days on the same 18-month-old, nothing-special answer just recently. Made me wonder if it had been linked somewhere, but if so I didn't find it with casual googling.
12:47
maybe we can live in hope that students not asking tic-tac-toe questions can actually search effectively :)
bbiab
13:06
@ZeroPiraeus The wording in the superpixels wiki entry is a little awkward. And I noticed that the answer to that superpixels question is missing a word: I assume it should say Since the number of super-pixels is less than the number of pixels,. Should I edit it?
@PM2Ring It's neither a great answer nor an outstanding wiki excerpt, and I'd expect the question to get deleted soon enough, so personally I don't see much point in editing either. If you do, though, the answer also has a = that should be a -.
Done. It took less time than yakking about it here. :)
I'm severely tempted to edit an answer I just saw that repeatedly uses u instead of you, but it's a meh answer to a very close-worthy question: stackoverflow.com/questions/27887063/…
You'd deprive of inconsequentia to yak about? For shame!
gong, by the way.
(or is that just for room closes?)
13:23
Are there any ctypes experts hanging around that can contribute something to this? I know a little, but I'm kinda out of my depth.
I await the day when I see a question like this:
I keeep gettign sytnax erorrs in my pyhton pograms and I ca'nt figuer out hwy?
Is there a better / more compact way to do this:
    set(''.join([c+c.upper() for c in string.ascii_lowercase if c not in set('aeiou')]))
14:11
s = set(string.ascii_lowercase) - set('aeiou')
s.union(map(str.upper, s)) # result
Nice, vaultah.
14:33
Oh boy... OP accepted my answer, but then the chat went on for more than an hour. I suggested few other alternate solutions. And the actual problem boils down to aligning else part to for instead of an if condition within the for.
15:11
stackoverflow.com/questions/27888546/… "why doesn't set keep order of elements?"
16:21
How to handle HiddenField with Flask? too broad, op is clearly confused about more than just the question that was asked
17:00
i install pymongo only , mongodb we have start befor doing this? — django-renjith 2 mins ago
The logic is not strong with that one. "I have to run mongodb to use mongodb?"
OP has installed pymongo, but doesn't seem to have installed MongoDB. Oops.
I cv'd can't reproduce.
 
2 hours later…
18:51
hello
19:20
hello
is there a ting like a defaultdict
except it passes the key to the factory function and adds the result of that to itself
I don't think such thing exists in standard library, but you can easily write it yourself @user22723
oh it's easier than i thought hah
im trying to process a stream of twitter data but i can't process it fast enough and that makes twitter angry and close the connection
is there a simple pythonic way thing to be like "sample this stream every x seconds" without blocking it
so without using sleep or something
19:34
@user22723: have you considered putting the tweets in a multiprocessing.Queue, while one or many other process read them from the queue to process?
i was thinking about using multiprocessing, but i was hoping there'd be a simpler way to do it
I don't need to process all the tweets (1% of tweets made very recently), processing 10-1% of them would probably be more than enough
maybe even 0.1%
how about a simple loop counter that ignores 9 out of every 10 tweets, and simply processes the one?
i thought about that too but the way tweepy doles out the tweets is that
def on_data(self, data): do a thing, return True
if you dont return true in time it closes the connection
and i couldn't figuer out how to do the loop counter
i just figured out how to do the loop counter
whoops lol
hm ok that doesn't seem to have helped
twitter still closes the connection with IncompleteRead
yeah, the problem seems to be that you hold the connection for too long.
on_data needs to do something super quickly, and return True. This is why I suggested mp.Queue
the thing is if i remove branching and make it just process every tweet it takes longer for it to fall behind and for the connection to close
i know nothing about multiprocessing though, how hard would it be to implement? it looks really pretty hard
20:10
Hi all, I'm wondering what the standard practice is for releasing multilingual documentation for python modules
I have English documentation on ReadTheDocs, but I want to add more languages. Should I make a new module? Or set up my own docs hosting?
@JDong With readthedocs, you can make different projects for different languages, then link them together in the "translations" settings page.
20:26
@davidism So since I'm hosting the source on github, I would create a new repo for each language?
It felt a bit awkward because github doesn't allow you to fork your own projects
no, I'm talking about readthedocs projects, since that's what you referenced. You can keep the source wherever you want
I'm sure there's something in the sphinx docs about writing translations
yea I read that
I see, so I set up a separate repo solely for the documentation
no, you can have your docs in the same repo as your project
There's nothing stopping you from making lots of repos, but it's not necessary
so for something with this structure: github.com/JDong820/python-jamo, I would just add a folder /docs-kr
and point readthedocs to that folder?
I've never done translations before, but that sounds right
20:32
I think the way ReadTheDocs works doesn't let me set it up to have multiple projects in the same github repo, but I'll look more into it
Thanks though, David
looks like you can point to docs-kr/conf.py file rather than letting rtd find the one in docs/ automatically
it's under advanced settings
so you create multiple projects from the same repo, but point them at different confs
and the main project links to the translations
20:52
Yes - I can even set it up on a different branch with various other setting. Manual selection -> conf.py, then add that as a translation. It works quite well once set up, actually. Thanks again!
21:06
Cabbage
cbg @jakebird451
Guys, I have just found iPython. I got pandas for it, is there any other libraries that are really neat to use with iPython?
that's a super broad question. What do you expect to use iPython for?
And what on earth is Cell Toolbar: Slideshow used for?
iPython's just a better shell, use whatever libraries you need to use...
21:18
I suspect (from pandas) that you want to do some data analytics. I would recommend therefore matplotlib (for plotting) and perhaps scikit
are you talking about iPython Notebook?
yea, sorry. iPython notebook.
There are some libraries that are made for it to improve productivity. Thats why I ask.
cells are the "chunks" of code that can be modified and executed, I would guess slideshow shows them as a slideshow for presentations. Why not just try it out?
pandas is not made for ipython...
Sorry, I didn't mean literally made specifically for it. But have some tailored functionality.
I tried evaluating certain cells as various slide types, but I am still oblivious to what it does.
@inspectorG4dget Yea, data analysis is basically what I have been using ipython for lately, I will check out scikit. Thanks
@jakebird451 you'll likely want matplotlib, scikit, numpy
21:51
Man, scikit it neat. I wish I had that a couple of weeks ago...
22:02
@davidism here?
slightly
I have only a tiny little question for you
how can you post JSON with pure JS (no jquery) to get and process that JSON in a Flask app?
I fonud this one here:
46
A: POST data in JSON format with JAVASCRIPT

Jan KučaNot sure if you want jQuery. var form; form.onsubmit = function (e) { // stop the regular form submission e.preventDefault(); // collect the form data while iterating over the inputs var data = {}; for (var i = 0, ii = form.length; i < ii; ++i) { var input = form[i]; if (inpu...

is XMLHttpRequest is the right way to do that?
pretty sure yeah
all righty, thanks, I just wanted to be sure ;)

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