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13:01
@Kevin What is the connection of KS with python ? Do you compile it to python byte code?
This website is predicting that SNP will have more seats in Westminster than the Lib Dems O_o
@khajvah KS is an interpreted language, so there's no "compiling" per se. The Abstract Syntax Tree is made up of Python objects.
I got my dog at work :3
Why don't you have a cat at work? Why!?
Cats seek out the person of highest importance and sit on their keyboard. If the CEO can't check his email as a result, this has a deleterious effect on company revenue.
13:06
I'm not allowed a cat at work :( I have to make up for it by looking at pictures on the internet.
I have never asked if pets are allowed in the office... Maybe I should.
That's a nice cat
This was an office cat: twitter.com/torvalddb
He passed away recently, aged 19 3/4.
His website: torvald.jottit.com
Yes, that's me being referenced, together with another Martijn.
19.75, not too shabby for a cat.
@Ffisegydd Yummy :-)
13:14
Concept - Kevin
Design - Kevin
Development - Kevin
Quality Assurance - Kevin
Documentation - Kevin
Branding - Kevin
Public Relations - Kevin
Help Desk - Kevin
Catering - Kevin
Technical advisors and emotional support - the fine members of SOPython
-_-
Being a cute puppy - Jon
That goes under "emotional support" :-)
Spiritual Guidance - Fizzy.
It's thanks to that guidance that I didn't make just_nuke_the_middle_east_already() a built-in function.
13:22
@JonClements Hmmm
> Wray Nerely (Alan Tudyk-Me!) was a co-star on Spectrum, a sci-fi series which was canceled -Too Soon- yet became a cult classic. Wray’s good friend, Jack Moore (Nathan Fillion) starred in the series and has gone on to become a major movie star. While Jack enjoys the life of an A-lister, Wray tours the sci-fi circuit as a guest of conventions, comic book stores, and lots of pop culture events.
@Ffisegydd because dog is so much easier to manage cause they listen to commands
1
A: BeautifulSoup, Google Scholar, Authors names, affiliations and citations too

Avinash RajYour code works for me. #!/usr/bin/env python # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- import urllib2 from bs4 import BeautifulSoup url = "http://scholar.google.pl/citations?view_op=search_authors&hl=pl&mauthors=label:security" content = urllib2.urlopen(url).read() soup = BeautifulSoup(content) mydivs = soup.fin...

works for me but not for op. why?
That synopsis sounds like real life up until "A-lister". Nice try Nathan.
13:26
To be fair Castle is quite popular.
I should re-watch Castle...
@Ffisegydd what did you talk about our fav user?
Oh yeah. His previous name was Bergueradj
@Ffisegydd very obvious it is the same guy: chat.stackoverflow.com/search?q=rakastan&user=&room=6
@AvinashRaj Different version of BS, maybe?
but we clearly mentioned bs4
13:29
Yeah we've known it was the same guy all along, just didn't have any absolute evidence, only circumstantial.
nice I soon have 500 helpful flags
different minor but still 4 version???
can you not downvote comments?
4.1 vs 4.2? I dunno
13:30
@Ffisegydd I mean the sense of "humour"
i think it's not because of the diff sub-versions of bs4
I think there's a good 10% chance. Couldn't hurt to ask.
Really dont know what causes the issue. Installed Mint 17 on VM, and it seems to work too but I would like to solve this out anyway, here at Mint 13. — mazix 1 min ago
so, the prob is mainly because of the os he installed..
cbg
@corvid No, you can't. Votes on comments are basically a way of saying "I agree with this comment", so it's essentially a mechanism to prevent a stream of duplicate comments. If you disagree strongly with a comment, write a countering comment. But if it's an obnoxious comment, flag it.
Yeah the essential point is: downvotes are stupid without a reason, so you might as well not have them and just let people comment if they don't like something
Unless you have a comment associated with a downvote of a previous comment, and the more upvotes that downvote comment gets the more the original is downvoted... dreams
13:43
Also, votes on an answer affect the answer's position on the page, but comments are ordered chronologically, and it wouldn't make sense to move them based on votes.
And then what if the downvote comment is downvoted; should that then upvote the original comment? drools
Is there a way to get the absolute path of the file that a Windows shortcut points to? I'm asking because of this question.
os.path.abspath doesn't do it.
@AnttiHaapala been busy, but got as far as the cool scaffold landing page
@AnttiHaapala as in, "probably typed about four commands in total" busy
is opening a new window on a web application and returning data on close supported on mobile?
Empirical retort: try it and see.
13:51
@Kevin <s>who cares</s> From en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_shortcut#Microsoft_Windows "Microsoft Windows .lnk files operate as Windows Explorer extensions, rather than file system extensions. As a shell extension, .lnk files cannot be used in place of the file except in Windows Explorer,"
Also, "File system links can also be created on Windows systems (Vista and up). They serve a similar function, although they are a feature of the file system. Windows shortcuts are files and work independently of the file system, through Explorer."
I was able to find Reading the target of a .lnk file in Python? but I don't understand the answer well enough to build on top of it. And frankly I don't know if the OP would know how to make use of it.
@RobertGrant :P
@AnttiHaapala they seem to prefer easy_install and eggs to pip requirements?
@Kevin That looks pretty comprehensive; this may also be helpful: forensicswiki.org/wiki/LNK . But I don't know a lot about Windows... and prefer to keep it that way. :)
Actually decoding the lnk file is probably beyond the scope of the question ;-)
13:57
@RobertGrant pip requirements.txt do not pull right versions of every dependent package
That's weird, because you can specify a version in pip requirements?
Although there is some appeal to doing it that way, just so you don't have to install the third party win32 module.
yes, the point is that you want to upgrade...
the "requirements.txt" is an excuse for writing software that breaks things by not being compatible between 1.5.3.2.a0 to 1.5.3.2.a1
Oh, okay. Isn't it better to upgrade, make sure it all works and then freeze again?
there was another reason: pip does not handle conflicting dependencies (still)
13:59
Oh, okay
do note, I use pip to install my packages
yet I never use requirement freezing
You have to use it for something like Heroku
instead we download all the packages, because if there is something we trust less than the author is the pypi itself :D
But yeah, whatever works well I guess
you can of course use requirements.txt
it is how the cookbook writer did it when writing the cookbook, still works
14:02
reads about pip not handling dependency conflicts
3
Q: Why does Pip ignore conflicting dependencies?

Wilfred HughesIf I create a dummy package -- here's /tmp/example_package/setup.py (note the requirements): from distutils.core import setup setup(name='my_project', description="Just a test project", version="1.0", py_modules=['sample'], install_requires=['requests > 0.12']) Here's ...

Yeah :)
So the logic seems to be that your project's dependencies trump its dependencies' dependencies
yes
normally you shouldn't need to worry about it
also if the cookbook specified a requirements.txt then one would have to update it all the time :D
Yeah that's true
But I mean it also generates egg stuff inside the project folder
however pretty much anything from the cookbook recipes are run all the time together by ppl using pyramid day to day
?
your project is an installable package
it is the only sane thing to do in python world :D
this is how the django app composability should have been done
14:06
Okay, just not familiar with it :)
you do not need to worry about it bc
99.9 % of the stuff
you will get an installable package by doint setup.py build :P
Well, that's not quite true. Someone did tell me that that's how the sopython site worked, but that was while I was trying to push django to heroku, and was highly committed to requirements.txt :)
Okay, cool. I'll ignore it for now and look in wonder when it happens
you do: setup.py develop, that is the way to install the newest dependencies that the project declares
then if and when you're happy
you just do pip freeze
you can make your program into a wheel, egg, with a simple command.
upload it to pypi, you can do "pip install myapplication"
then you just need to have a deployment.ini you can run the server with pserve deployment.ini
Okay, that's pretty cool
you know, flask is "a microframework" whereas the pyramid guys want to write a framework that is good for writing an application server (but still easy)
@RobertGrant btw, speaking of pypa and pip and so... github.com/pypa/warehouse
14:13
That looks cool. Do other languages have such issues with package management?
Yes.
Fair enough :)
But...do they solve them when they provide a package manager? :)
Package management is a non-trivial problem for any system, including OSes :P
Loving pymc. Very interesting.
DSM
DSM
More-normal-hour cabbage for all.
14:18
@poke true, maybe I just haven't seen it up close
Most package managers aren’t good.
And even the ones that do fine are somewhat weird.
too broad, primarily opinion based, external resource, take your pick.
hrmph. Sending emails in a web application is kind of a pain :\
@corvid sendgrid
Or, you know, point it at an smtp server your company already has configured
Cabbage y'all
How is the best way to organize my code for a project?
14:27
cbg all
@RobertGrant more of the optimization part, cause this web app sends lots of emails
Cbg @inspector, how's things?
heya @poke! got a minute?
@Ffisegydd I'm getting very upset with 3d printing
@corvid record them and send a batch later?
14:29
@inspectorG4dget Sure
had a friend in my lab (in Ottawa) try to print that splint for me, but the thing is so large, that one side cools while the other is being printed. So it warps and the print fails
that's what I am going with now, have them sending every 15 minutes
DSM
DSM
Okay, did we ever come to a decision on whether we (1) comment/typo-close or (2) answer missing-parenthesis questions?
I don't know the group consensus, but I personally do the first one.
@inspectorG4dget I guess that means it's too big to make the print direction be "along" the longest axis?
However you say that in English
14:33
@MartijnPieters just fyi, the cv-pls extension doesn't work quite right if you use https links
As a 3d printing layman, I wonder if it's possible to print temporary struts that connect distant portions of the splint, reducing the likelihood of warping? Then you could snip them off with scissors after everything cools.
@poke: if I had an mp3 of a book being read out by a human (assume no audio noise), and I had the full text of that book (say in .txt format), then how would I accomplish this: I want to read the file, word by word, while simultaneously reading the mp3. Thus, whenever the next word is spoken, I would like to highlight that word in the display (while displaying the entire sentence/paragraph from the txt file)
It would rather radically change the topography of the splint from "sheet" to "one or more holes", though. Not sure if that matters.
@RobertGrant That seems accurate. Though, I doubt struts are the right way to go. We might need to print it off in two parts and superglue them together
@Kevin the design makes it look like a honeycomb
Basically, it's already holey ("holey 3d printed splint, Batman!")
@Ffisegydd Getting on for double according to most projections ...
14:44
@inspectorG4dget quick and dirty way would be to get the number of words, divide the audio length by that number and move the word highlight on after that amount of time :)
Guys is there a better way to import files from different directories than the answer provided here?
111
Q: Importing files from different folder in Python

IvanI've the following folder structure. application/app/folder/file.py and I want to import some functions from file.py in another Python file which resides in application/app2/some_folder/some_file.py I've tried from application.app.folder.file import func_name and some other various attempts...

@inspectorG4dget then it might also look as though it's lagging sometimes, which implies you're doing some awesome stuff
@RobertGrant Won't work. The book is read "naturally" by a human. Average word length timing won't work. Average syllable length timing might - but then, how do we cut the audio by syllable?
@inspectorG4dget and when it gets ahead of the audio - wow!
@Martin yes, you install both in your virtualenv rather than messing with the path yourself
this of course requires that both directories are actually packages that are installable
14:45
They're modules that I wrote
I'm trying to separate my code into smaller chunks
Does that make sense to do?
are they part of the same package, or completely separate but one depends on the other?
any thoughts, @poke ?
in the first case, you just have to set up your package correctly, in the second case you need to install the package into the env
They're just classes, should I not be separating them?
messing with the path is a last resort that really isn't correct
14:47
I didn't think so
@Martin it sounds like you just don't understand how to lay out a package yet
Definitely not
Any resources to point me to?
any library with more than one file
alright, gotta run. Will catch up on message when I get back. Rbrb all!
Lol I was thinking of just going into Github and finding a Python project earlier... I guess I'll do that now
....Melon!
Anecdote: KevinScript uses the sys.path.append trick to import lib/parser.
Not necessarily because it's a good idea. My primary motivation was "get this working now", which excluded the possibility of learning about packages or virtual envs or whatever.
It kinda bothers me that the "mess with sys.path" advice is so prevalent, since there is a correct way to do it, and messing with the path leads to even more misunderstandings down the line.
Just make python scan every subdir when it starts, guido
"So why not change KS to use a package system, now that you're no longer in a hurry?" I still don't know how packaging works, but I assume that it incurs a slight cost on the end user. Like, they have to pip install an egg file or something. This is considerably more difficult than "download source, works out of the box"
I'm hoping one of you will now say "don't be a dummy, Kevin. 'Download source and instantly run with no intermediary steps' behavior is still possible using packaging, and here's how..." but I'm not holding my breath
14:57
@Kevin the first thing KevinScript does when running a program is scan for any unmet dependencies and downloads them while displaying this: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I don't think there is, you'd have to at least pip install -e . to get it installed in editable mode.
@inspectorG4dget Uhhh, why exactly are you asking me about that? xD
@poke I was told you had knowledge of the ancients, with this sort of thing
@RobertGrant I'm actually not opposed to putting a dependency scan inside the main executable script ks.py. If I can get things automatically working by subsequently doing os.system("pip install parser"), I wouldn't mind terribly. (Unless executing pip install on the user's behalf is bad practice. Again, I have no knowledge of this field)
You'd have to venv it as well :)
So KevinScript checks for an activate venv, if not it runs virtualenv venv, then activates it and installs the dependencies in there :)
The principle of most surprise
15:00
@inspectorG4dget Not really ^^"
I have no clue how to architect this design :\
nvm then. Thanks
468 helpful flags, tomorrow I hope to get 2 gold badges
Maybe I'll take a whack at relative importing once more... Could be that cousin imports work with the right placement of __init__.py that I just didn't try yet
15:05
one in helpful flags, and the other in
@Kevin I would say do what Java does, except either derive the package from the file structure and don't have a package declaration, or derive it solely from the package declaration and ignore the file structure
Then you just scan everything and don't need to kill yourself deploying to Heroku and suddenly it all doesn't work
the thing about deriving the package from the file structure is that things are really fast
(Requirement based on real events)
with javac, it can compile dependent classes too, because it knows where to find them
Hmm: 207 flags, 186 helpful, 14 declined, 0 open, where are the other 7???
15:17
In progress
nope, no open flags
@lang2 Then please add code that actually reproduces the error you're getting. — davidism 23 secs ago
ಠ_ಠ
> * older flags were not recorded helpful/declined
I post an answer, they tell me "oh, I actually had different code that I didn't copy".
Probably that
@davidism so you should go hunt for some naa's
what I have done recently is that when I see some "check this link out, it helps you" or sth, then I always search for more answers containing this.
DSM
DSM
15:24
Aaargh. Forgot I should be adding a new method to Base.isless instead of isless.. vaguely like rebinding an instance specialmethod, which won't work. #nonPythonmoments
Terry Pratchett has died.
6
:-(
;_; I'm sad now.
I would like more information. Got a link?
DSM
DSM
On behalf of all members of the Unseen University, I declare we shall release a flag of mourning to fly from the Tower of Art. I believe I have that authority.
5
user559633
this is the worst answer ever stackoverflow.com/questions/2418722/…
user559633
"hey so don't use programming on it"
user559633
in fact, none of the "answers" are answers
Solves the X problem of "how can I execute this code?" but not the Y problem of "how do I OCR this code so I can execute it?"
Reminds me of a problem I had the other day. I was playing terrible idle game Tangerine Farmer and I wanted to write an OCR application so I could automate the stock market game. Buy when stocks are low, sell when stocks are high. Simple enough, if I could just read the numbers.
15:42
@davidism Hrmz, maybe should submit a pull request then.
I downloaded tesseract and ran it on an image of the stock listing column... No output.
Quite disappointing. I thought that the picture would easily be recognized, since it had 0 noise. It was a direct screenshot after all.
Even tightly cropping the image so only a single line of digits appeared, with nothing else but a solid background, didn't help. Nor did converting to grayscale or any other contrast increasing trick I could think of.
I guess I could have had better luck if I explicitly trained the engine to recognize that particular font, but that's way more effort than I was willing to put in. So I just gave up :-(
While looking up the Discworld character Death, I discovered that Wikipedia has a Fictional Skeletons category.
We never did assign someone to Death.
why were you looking up death? ...
dont know know him already from teh books?
I wanted to find a good quote, but got sidetracked.
15:49
o i c
Axwell Λ Ingrosso premiered their new track
@davidism you wanted a good Pratchett quote on death?
> “No one is actually dead until the ripples they cause in the world die away...”
Hi All
hi @Andrew
I am looking for some language so I can script things which are difficult in Bash
There was lot of info on various website that Python is good to do it
But I am wondering if Python is not too hard to learn compared to other languages?
15:58
Python is easier than most of languages
I know Python has very good IDEs, unlike Ruby for example
Is it really not that difficult?
When someone is saved from certain death by a strange concatenation of circumstances, they say that's a miracle. But of course if someone is killed by a freak chain of events : the oil just spilled there, the safety fence just broke there : that must also be a miracle. Just because its not nice doesnt mean its not miraculous.
@Andrew it is one of the easiest programming languages around.
but you still have to think procedurally
And does it run fine on windows? Does it run like normal with similar performance?
16:00
the best way to find out how difficult it is is to dive into it
of coarse it runs fine on windows
@Andrew Yes, yes
Yes. Use Anaconda if you're on Windows (it's a Python distribution).
I have dev machine Centos7 with KDE4 and Gnome2
but I will need to put some scripts on windows servers as well
meh ... I guess i just use the normal python ... it has windows installer ... but then you need to make your path right and install setuptools and a bunch of dependencies ... anaconda just bundles alot of that stuff in
I have there Java 8 and Groovy 2.4 as well with Eclipse were I have also PyDev - Python IDE for Eclipse
16:02
that has nothing to do with anything ... but good for you ... I recommend pycharm personally as an ide
I used to use eclipse + pydev
And is there some server were I can embed python script and query it over HTTP?
For example, like PHP on Apache or Java on Tomcat?
WSGI or CGI?
Apache + mod_wsgi
or ngix +uwsgi
or basic cgi
uWSGI, Gunicorn
yeah
dog is so crazy at work
16:07
or just Flask().run(debug=True) if you are just experimenting
ok thanks
> ᴛʜᴇʀᴇ ɪs ɴᴏ ᴊᴜsᴛɪᴄᴇ. ᴛʜᴇʀᴇ ɪs ᴊᴜsᴛ ᴍᴇ.
mreh. I wish there was some kind of subclassing in javascript like there is in python (and was as easy as python)
stackoverflow.com/questions/29005900/… the code posted (only relevant bit is at the bottom) isn't the actual code according to op (but has errors)
16:25
@corvid lol there is barely something that I would call classes to begin with
@JoranBeasley yeah. It seems like the closest thing is _.extend()
Words fail me.
JavaScript implements inheritance by allowing you to associate a prototypical object with any constructor function.
So, you can create exactly the Employee — Manager example, but you use slightly different terminology. First you define the Employee constructor function, specifying the name and dept properties. Next, you define the Manager constructor function, calling the Employee constructor and specifying the reports property.
Finally, you assign a new object derived from Employee.prototype as the prototype for the Manager constructor function. Then, when you create a new Manager, it inherits the name and dept properties from the Employee object.
what about when it is implemented within a dictionary in that closure style?
stackoverflow.com/questions/29014168/… "I just need help if there are any any libraries or functions available"
lol im just being a parrot ... im not so hot with js ... i can usually get something working but beyond that
AT LAST, SIR TERRY, WE MUST WALK TOGETHER.
JavaScript seems weird just because there are so many external libraries that attempt to make it... well... usable.
Terry took Death’s arm and followed him through the doors and on to the black desert under the endless night.
16:28
Grumble grumble using caps instead of small caps grumble grumble...
This touching memorial is slightly inaccurate!!!
Sorry :-( I'm grieving via nitpick.
I've gone home early. Not getting any work done in the office.
DSM
DSM
TBH I didn't understand what JS was doing until I started playing with CoffeeScript, and realized how much I should have been writing in order to get JS to do what I thought it was doing.
@Fizzy: that was me yesterday. Accomplished nothing all day.
There was a URL on the twitter feed that pointed to discworld.com but that now redirects to 127.0.0.1.
@MartijnPieters 127spooky1me
16:35
thats weird discworld redirecting to 127.0.0.1 ... wonder if thats some secret message ...
It means that Discworld is really part of all of us. <3 Or the server was overloaded.
Discworld is inside our hearts -- damn, beaten
I'll be starting with Guards, Guards! tonight FYI
ive never heard of an overloaded server redirecting to localhost
I just discovered that Steam's Big Picture doesn't heat my graphics card
16:44
maybe someone who isnt really an it person tried to throw a switch .... and didnt know what they were doing ... im guesing it is supposed to be a memorial of somesort
I need 10 python upvotes for mjölnir
but too tired to do it today
At least it's working fine on the developer's machine.
very dumb question; there's no security risk in making a gravatar public when email is not, right?
@corvid its based on a hash ... hashes are one way ... afaik your pretty safe
16:49
yeah ^
also, etiquette related, are conceptual questions acceptable for stackoverflow?
I asked a few in the past and they weren't very well received
They were crap tho
Depends on the question. Might be better for programmers.se
Just write code until your concept becomes a prototype. Then ask, with minimal reproducing code at the ready.
might be too much code
17:04
@corvid why wouldn't you ask your question here first :d
cause it involves NoSQL :|
or tell what's it about
what does nosql have to do with anything? :D
Basically, I want to create a different user profiles with different data, and join it on a user at a specific event. Eg, a profile would not be a user until invited. I just have no idea how to go about doing that :|
@corvid you could do what sopython-site does, where the Users are a subclass of the SEUser
so there can be SEUsers that then get upgraded to Users that can log in
does the SEUser basically just refer to a user on stack exchange, but a User refer to a actually registered user of the site?
17:09
yeah, and all registered users of the site are users of stack exchange
Hm, that's a good idea, just need to figure out how to do it in js
@corvid if this is nosql
you wouldn't use joins :D
and see, the problem wasn't you were doing nosql but that you're doing js :D
what's wrong with js? .-.
@corvid Here, have a thing I saw on reddit. tantek.com/2015/069/t1/js-dr-javascript-required-dead
17:25
Mmm, nice link
Hmm, never thought about that before.
The simplest way to migrate off of Google Code is to use the Google Code to GitHub exporter tool hah! Now that is admitting overwhelming defeat
Another entry for the Showcase of Discontinued Google Products [insert link that I misplaced here]
@Kevin this may be relevant to JKevinScript
I'm vaguely displeased that other people are writing languages, and doing it better than me.
I should probably try to get unary minus working today... I bet I get a parser error
this dude asked and answered his own question in the same minute: stackoverflow.com/questions/29016104/…
cbg, btw
17:39
@Ffisegydd I'll give it a browse. My current JKevinScript dev plan is "try to port KevinScript line-by line as literally as possible", which shouldn't be too hard, since I was careful to not use any Python-specific features that are impossible to replicate.
Hello, sorry for my htaccess question, but who knows may be you can help me? stackoverflow.com/questions/29016479/…
DSM
DSM
@Bonifacio2: there's nothing wrong with asking and answering your own question in principle.
@Hypn0tizeR: no, in a word; see rule #1 of asking questions.
The main objection to self-answering a post seems to be "isn't the OP trying to game the system this way?" but users gaining points for writing excellent posts is exactly what SO wants.
ahhh
How bout I send you one of each, just in case? You can pick which one you like and give the other to a friend. Or use it as a pillowcase, or a cat bed. The choice is yours!
DSM
DSM
The Q/A pair under discussion doesn't seem to be a great example, admittedly.
17:43
@DSM Yeah. I know, but I don't see a lot of ~helping potential~ in this Q/A.
If you try to game the system by asking a non-excellent question, it's probably not going to work out very well.
(this is true whether you self-answer or not)
@Kevin and will only create pollution.
@JonClements Still trying to get a T-shirt from SO, then?
DSM
DSM
Why would a puppy need a cat bed?
Don't be so literal, daddy-O. It's just a bed for real cool cats, you dig me?
Oh nice, adding UnaryOpExpression to my grammar didn't cause the whole thing to collapse like a house of cards.
DSM
DSM
17:48
I'm not sure that I do. You youngsters with your drive-throughs and your crazy music and your UnaryOpExpressions. Impossible to figure out what you're saying half the time.
The way I implemented it, ++-+++--++23 will be legal syntax, which is weird... Wait a minute, that's legal in Python too.
DSM
DSM
Probably simpler to allow than to forbid.
I could configure the lexer to allow exactly one operator only at the beginning of integer literals, but then it would be difficult for it to figure out whether 2+2 means "literal operator literal" or just "literal literal"
buh... I forgot the operator for finding something in one table that has an attribute not in another table
18:02
Today I learned that Python has dedicated dunder methods for unary minus/plus. I figured -x was just syntactic sugar for x * -1 and unary plus was a no-op.
can't seem to get to sleep
DSM
DSM
@Kevin:
I'm dying of anticipation!
Can someone hit him on the head? See if he reboots?
It's kinda like when ahem people-getting-on-in-years just randomly lose their trail of thought...
who sleeps anymore?
18:15
Oops, I can't push because my local repository doesn't have my new readme.
Hmm, how to fetch it without accidentally overwriting my Unary Minus changes...
Sounds like you need to do git merge
Agreed. Having done so, I'm pleased to see it didn't destroy my un-pushed files.
Thanks for Doing What I Mean, git. thgit.
>>> -10;
-10
-*~SWAG~*-
B-)
18:56
Today I am irritated by users that do x = str(input(...))
Yeah, Ellipsis is a pretty weird prompt.

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