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2:05 PM
meanwhile
in Java, 1 min ago, by Unihedro
Python is a great chat room. Shame the language sucks
 
user559633
Gasp! Don't care!
 
@davidism OTOH. the code does now do something different to the original post. I tend to the view that such edits should be rejected.
 
See, I knew the people here are brighter. :p
cbg all :)
 
user559633
cbg uni
 
2:06 PM
@Unihedro hehe.. they are..
cbg @Vogel612
 
I'm pretty sure I've seen that "joke" from you before @Unihedro. Get some new material!
 
dammit and that when I just grabbed my propcorn...
 
@davidism ... hey.
Unit testing in Python is fun because I can spam pass everywhere.
 
haha... cbg @Uni ;)
 
user559633
That's the spirit
 
2:07 PM
:D
 
user559633
i like adding raise NotImplementedError on every unit test when a job demands 100% coverage
 
user559633
there i technically did it
 
@JRichardSnape It's weird, because on the one hand I'd welcome a correct edit to any of my answers, but on the other hand I'd be annoyed if other people were approving it without understanding it.
 
quickly codes up an AstractDeferredPassFactory and joins in
 
@Unihedro you can also pass spam
 
2:08 PM
@davidism I think you define exactly how I'd feel about it too.
 
:O
What is spam in Python? srry im a green bean
 
A placeholder like 'foo' or 'bar'. So you can literally pass spam as a variable. ;)
I was being clever with words.
 
:D
 
user559633
foo and bar shouldn't be used :)
 
foo and bar considered harmful?
 
user559633
2:15 PM
they're more typing than x or y and don't add any additional detail
 
user559633
foo and bar considered stupid
 
@JRichardSnape Agreed. I'd reject: "Edit conflicts with author's original intent" . Even if it's an edit that definitely improves the code. If you have a suggested improvement to an answer, mention it in a comment. If the author is a skilled coder & made a minor typo, or even a minor logic error, they'll be able to edit the fix in themself. If they're a newbie, & don't fully understand the suggestion, you can offer to fix it for them.
 
Tristan is above fubar code.
 
user559633
fubar is valid. as is snafu. foo, bar is not.
 
How did that get into programming jargon anyhow? I've heard foobar since the 90's.
 
2:16 PM
Cabbage boys :-)
 
@PM2Ring if it's someone I know and I know they're not around at the moment, and it's a very simple typo and I know what they meant... I sometimes do a quick fix (if it's minor)
 
@tristan I'm not sure if it "doesn't add any addition detail". The metasyntactic naming infers that the variable is makeshift.
 
Had a long day, but did shopping :'(
 
@thefourtheye you feeling better puppy?
 
2:17 PM
Look at this, I'm moving up boys.
 
user559633
@Unihedro yes, but only because years of asshole programmers just parroted a stupid naming convention.
 
True. :p
 
@tristan Now I'm just more confused...
 
@JonClements Spent a lot of money, but got new shirts and a good shoe :-) I hope I ll feel better when I wear them :D
 
I suppose I will have conquered when I can peruse Youtube with impunity.
 
2:18 PM
@thefourtheye just one shoe? :)
Even I need three... I'd have thought you'd have needed four :)
 
OTOH, in U&E they have a different attitude - every post is fair game for improvement without notice. I found it a bit disconcerting at first. But when you get guys like Stéphane Chazelas editing your code to handle obscure corner cases you hadn't even thought of, and then up-voting it, you can't really get too upset. :)
 
fusion footwear is the new future
 
user559633
@QuestionC it's from some dumb comic book. someone typed 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' enough times through the gloves on his fursuit that other people felt stupid for not understanding where it came from, so they started using it too as to not feel ignorant.
 
@AaronHall Last time you helped me out, you were at 6k rep..
 
Yeah, but I didn't have a window'd office then. :)
 
user559633
2:20 PM
@QuestionC see also cabbage language (shots fired) (but difference being that cabbage lang is actually useful because it's amusing)
 
<3
 
@JonClements lol, actually a pair. But my shoe size is UK-13 and my friend's size was UK-8. So, he would need just one of my shoes :D
 
@AaronHall Nice! You have a projecteuler profile.
 
@thefourtheye so your friend hops everywhere in a single shoe, right?
 
lol, I thought no one would ever scroll that far
I should probably remove it, I don't really have time for it.
 
2:21 PM
@JonClements By the looks of the shoe and him, he can hop inside the shoe itself. ;)
 
@JonClements Yeah, I guess it's different when it's someone you know, especially if you're familiar with their coding style - it's like fixing a team-member's code. It's still nice to document that sort of thing in the edit comment, though.
 
Ooh I did some Project Euler long ago
 
like "omigawd you Corn was totally Beans so I added some Bananas and now it's fine"??
 
@RobertGrant What color are you in TC? (we are not talking about "colors" colors people)
 
I'm still not a master of the universe, when I go to Youtube: "This website is categorized as: Prohibited Media Streaming;Mixed Content/Potentially Adult;Audio/Video Clips"
 
wha-bam
 
DOWN
 
@thefourtheye what's TC?
 
@RobertGrant TopCoder
 
Yesterday I was doing a crossword puzzle, where a clue was "a green vegetable found in salads" and the letters were "escar???". Took me a few seconds to convince myself that escargot is definitely not a plant.
 
2:25 PM
Oh, I don't know :)
 
51 seconds... needs improvement - aim for 45 seconds next time!
 
I haven't done a single one, because they all looked dull/used tech I didn't know about
 
@Kevin Hahaha. What was the real answer, though?
 
Hmmm, participate in one or two SRMs (Single Round Matches). Its fun.
 
Maybe they need some top coders writing their site
 
2:26 PM
Just hypothetically speaking, I've thought of a way to scam reversal badges
 
@SomeGuy "Escarole"
 
@RobertGrant Try this. It is the actual getting started page.
 
Ah
 
A word which I literally had never heard before I looked it up.
 
2:27 PM
Thanks, except I logged in :)
 
Cool.
 
I mean, clicking the correct gmail account got me that error message :)
While logging in
But it's fine. So coding stuff is green, so I guess I'm...green?
 
:O Awesome. But how much is your score? 1200?
 
Zero. Literally only tried it the other day, and couldn't find something I could do.
 
Hmmm... That is the default rating. When you participate in competitions, the colour will change.
 
2:31 PM
The TopCoder site is annoying, because every page says "Log in", and then it realises I'm logged in and switches it.
Why are you asking? Because I mentioned Project Euler?
 
Yup :)
 
Ah, no. I did PE as a way to force myself to learn more Clojure without starting a proper project.
Not that I got very far
I did complete the ClojureScript Koans, which were quite fun.
 
Oh... Its a nice idea. I should try to solve it with Haskell :-)
 
For many months, I've had a daily 11:45 AM meeting, just before my lunch break. So I have a Pavlovian response where I want to eat when the meeting ends. But now they moved it to 10:00 AM. This presents a problem.
 
@thefourtheye I was fine solving 1-10 declaratively, but #11 blew my mind
And so there I stopped.
@Kevin bring some pavlova to work for the end of the meeting, and then you can bore people with a joke every day
 
2:35 PM
@Kevin yeah... no one likes drooling...
 
True. We're running out of spare keyboards.
 
@Kevin Are you airz?
 
I don't recognize that word, so I guess "no"
 
Haha
He's a semi-famous Redditor
He writes about his workplace
They've been losing a lot of keyboards mysteriously
 
foobar didn't come from a comic - its old (1930ish) military jargon
 
2:41 PM
Ah, ok :-)
 
and yes still used, in a newer form, as fubar (F* up beyond all recognition)
 
where F* stands for "Fouled", of course. :)
 
Or "yammed"? :)
 
user559633
"a semi-famous Redditor"
 
You know, like Unidan or poem_for_your_sprog.
 
2:53 PM
@Shog9: thanks for the heads-up. That edit was correct and I'd have approved it had I not been busy when it was suggested.
 
@tristan read: a not famous person at his desk
 
there must be something in the air - just moved up my meeting too (which I usually have lunch before).
rbrb all
 
An answer of mine was downvoted because OP didn’t like the news I had for them, that their “problem” can’t be solved.
 
user559633
@davidism yeah. i think my new life ambition is to be "moderately important employee"
 
Come work for me and you'd be "exceptionally important employee" as you'd be my only one.
 
3:00 PM
But you need to bring your own computer
Etc
 
user559633
@Ffisegydd haha i'd totally work for/with you
 
You'd be in charge of exceptions.
 
user559633
raising or handling?
 
Both. Handling our own but raising our enemies.
 
user559633
I can handle that.
 
3:04 PM
That's the kind of punnery we like to see at Fizzy Corp, welcome aboard son!
 
user559633
I'm...older..than..you
 
Don't be stupid tristan. You're not literally my son, that'd be weird. And physically impossible.
 
Oooo... so close to 4k
 
user559633
I can't not be stupid.
 
user559633
Is there an emotion that's both "excited" and "nervous"?
 
3:07 PM
anxious?
 
user559633
Sort of, but that's just nervous and not "looking forward to"
 
Why would you be "looking forward to" ?
pensieve?
 
anticipated: anticipation + constipated
 
user559633
Also, lol at tech recruiters that fit the mold perfectly: "women's studies" major in college, was in a sorority, pretty white girl
 
user559633
@davidism perfect, i'll take it
 
user559633
3:09 PM
@JonClements using it for a slide at a talk i'm giving at a conference
 
user559633
"I'm 'anticipated'* to be here!"
 
it doesn't quite work because it's an actual normal word too
 
user559633
Hence the star and the footnote
 
user559633
@JonClements anyway, "looking forward to" because i'm terrible at public speaking but need to get better at it
 
user559633
so it's a huge opportunity but also my nightmare
 
3:14 PM
I generally find when you get into it and loosen up - it's fine
 
user559633
Yeah, I think I have a 30 minute slot, then an hour slot
 
user559633
I'm fine for the first 30 seconds, then I get lightheaded and my voice gets shakey, then I'm fine after 5 minutes
 
Ahhh... so the first 5 mins of the 30 is probably gonna feel a bit awkward... but you'll be fine
 
user559633
I'm going to pitch a talk for pycon next year, so this is huge practice that i need.
 
I kind of hope that Andy gets a mod spot, his interests seem relevant to us; he's the one who made the machine learning for flags.
 
Air
3:23 PM
Martijn, Jon, Andy - practically a coup
TBH the Python community does so well at moderating itself without a diamond that I wouldn't say we really need one
E.g., remember 21 meta tags in 2 days?
 
Wow, I didn't even notice that his top tag is , I haven't seen him around before.
 
its realy martin + (JC or this Eager guy)
martjin even
\martijn even
lol
 
Got lazy and just used Node.js :\
 
meager's not far off 5k now...
 
I'm interested to see the outcome of Threading in Python - What am I missing?. If OP is to be believed, the observed behavior is pretty strange to me.
The behavior being, there isn't a race condition in the code, even though I expect there to be.
 
3:33 PM
can you repeat and verify the observed behaviour?
 
What's the race condition?
 
Nope, I haven't tried yet.
 
if not im inclined to PEBKAC
 
And Martijn should overtake Bohemian's score from last year in about an hour
 
Oh, I see.
 
3:34 PM
The race condition is, if counter is zero and thread A says, "ok, fetch the value of counter, and add one to it..." and thread B quickly interjects "fetch the value of counter, add one to it, and store the result", and thread A finishes, "... and store the result", then counter will have a final value of 1 even though it was incremented by two threads.
 
Maybe Python just doesn't give up the GIL in the middle of count = count + 1.
 
Oops, I mean count, not counter.
Heh, I made the same mistake as a user that I chided
 
Air
@davidism I interacted with him during the CB beta where he's a pro tem. He's a good mod.
 
My theory: count = count + 1 is atomic (in python), or close enough to it that we don't see the error with any frequency.
 
you can create race conditions with dining philosophers ... by aquiring locks wrong
 
3:36 PM
@JoranBeasley Ok, now I can verify.
Yep, it prints 80, which (I assume) indicates that no race conditions ocurred
 
isnt verifying really the halting problem
so if you dont stop at 80 eventually at some point you might encounter a race condition
if you stop at 80 the race condition occures at 81
etc
 
My theory is, thread A executes so quickly that it finishes before thread B starts. And so on down the line.
 
Aha, made it mess up.
 
someone else says they got a race condition
 
3:39 PM
@JoranBeasley Yeah, I can't prove that there's no race condition just by running it a bunch of times.
 
Nvm, I get the race condition. – C.B. 1 min ago
 
I can demonstrate that a race condition is unlikely, but that's all.
 
Oops
Aha, made it mess up
 
see ^^
^_^
ir2smart
 
Does "I get the race condition" mean, "I understood why you think a race condition should have occurred", or "I actually got the race condition to occur on my machine"?
 
3:40 PM
This is the kind of stuff in the H&I queue: stackoverflow.com/review/helper/7683602. I still have zero reviews there because I keep flagging or skipping everything. :(
 
I don't have time to post an answer, but this will demonstrate a race condition.
        def run(self):
        global count
        for i in range(100000):
            #self.sem.acquire()
            count = count + 1
            #self.sem.release()

and

    counters = [Counter(i) for i in range(500)]
Probably worth linking to that video where the guy talks about performance and the GIL because it explains why python threading might seem less concurrent that one is used to.
 
@QuestionC Ok, so that lends credence to my "each thread finishes before its younger sibling starts" theory.
 
@Kevin Your theory is consistent with the evidence.
 
By extending the lifetime of each thread, they now have a chance to interfere with one another.
 
But I think it'd be neat to mess around with other values.
Yea, looks like you're right though
Even at 2 threads, it dies with 100000 loop
 
3:43 PM
I woulod post that as an answer @QuestionC ... and maybe flag @Kevin's answer as should be a comment :P
 
Yep, I have seen as much on my own machine.
 
I don't have time
adieu
 
kevin you should edit your answer to be a real answer in that case :P
 
I guess I'll write my own post.
 
lol
nm
I thought that other guys answer was you for some reason
 
3:44 PM
Hi
 
(cause you commented on it)
 
Anyone an idea how I can convert negative and zero values to zero and positive values to 1
without using int(bool(val))?
is there something possible with bit wise operations?
 
no i dont think so anyway ... nto easily
 
fn = lambda x: int(bool(x))

fn(-3) # equals 0
fn(-1) # equals 0
fn(0) # equals 0
fn(1) # equals 1
fn(4) # equals 1
Hmm any ideas what this problem could be called or where to look for an answer?
 
I get True for `bool(-1)
which leads to 1
why wouldnt you just solve with this simple solution?
 
3:47 PM
Ah right
so I must do
 
int(bool(x>0))
 
yep
okay thank you
 
Why the bool there?
 
that is almost certainly the "correct" answer on how to do this ... sure I guess you could probably do some math stuff
 
int(x > 0) should be fine
 
3:48 PM
@JonClements yeah thats right
cause i havent had enough coffee this morning
 
Ah yes this works too :D
Thank you
 
@bodokaiser 1 if x > 0 else 0
 
Weirder solution [0, 1][x > 0] - Don't use it production code. Go with davidism's solution.
 
I was going to suggest ((x/abs(x))+1)/2, but oops, that only works for nonzero numbers.
@JoranBeasley Oh, I thought you meant "you should edit your comment [and turn it into a real answer]" :-)
 
trying to get a mega efficient fizz-buzz example, and this doesn't cut it:
Maybe I can avoid the modulos, somehow?
    for i in count(1)
        yield 'Fizz'*(not i%3) + 'Buzz'*(not i%5) or str(i)
 
3:57 PM
In the name of the father and of the son and of the Holy Spirit. Who all are referred here?
 
God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. Unique, but three-in-one.
 
Oh. Thanks man :-)
 
The Christian doctrine of the Trinity (from Latin trinitas "triad", from trinus "threefold") defines God as three consubstantial persons, expressions, or hypostases: the Father, the Son (Jesus Christ), and the Holy Spirit; "one God in three persons". The three persons are distinct, yet are one "substance, essence or nature". In this context, a "nature" is what one is, while a "person" is who one is. According to this central mystery of most Christian faiths, there is only one God in three persons: while distinct from one another in their relations of origin (as the Fourth Lateran Council declared...
 
I thought the father meant Jesus's father and I got confused when I heard Holy Spirit. I thought that they are referring to Jesus twice.
 
I thought the son was jesus ...
 
4:00 PM
I thought it was a character in The Matrix
 
@JoranBeasley Exactly, even I thought so.
@JonClements lol.
 
It's a decent name for "the One"'s leading lady.
 
I thought the universe came to life last thursday (blink at @Kevin)
 
DSM
Cabbage cabbage cabbage.
 
4:05 PM
cbg
 
'Cabbage' * 3 back at ya
 
> In the name of the corn, the garlic, and the holy cabbage.
 
DSM
Drowning in work at the moment -- a deadline was moved up because I'm needed on a different project I don't want to do in the first place, so it's lose-lose, and I'm also working on getting a native cross join in pandas -- and then I miss an opportunity to talk about St. Athanasius. Not my day!
Did I miss anything else exciting this morning?
 
Cabbage cabbage cabbage batman!
 
@thefourtheye But that has no spaces.
 
4:09 PM
Then " ".join(['Cabbage'] * 3)?
 
You will be careful, if you are wise;
How you touch Men's Religion, or Credit, or Eyes. - Poor Richard's Almanack
 
@thefourtheye " ".join(['cabbage'] * 3).capitalize()
 
Ah, I like it :D
 
DSM
Aargh, .capitalize. How I hate that function, and those like it.
 
We could also use itertools.repeat
 
4:11 PM
@DSM How can you hate the cutest puppy in the world? starts crying slowly
 
' '.join(itertools.repeat('cabbage', 3)).capitalize() + '.'
 
@DSM Why? (Honestly don't know)
 
"Ben beats his Pate, and fancys wit will come;
But he may knock, there's no body at home."
 
@poke And islice joins the party " ".join(islice(repeat('cabbage'), 3)).capitalize()
 
DSM
>>> [name.capitalize() for name in ["MacArthur", "O'Neill", "M'Benga"]]
['Macarthur', "O'neill", "M'benga"]
 
4:12 PM
Ah
Thanks
 
DSM
Some of us spend our lives having our names miscapitalized because of well-intentioned normalization, and there's not much to be done for it. :-/
 
@DSM Hmmm, its not very common in India, to see names with ' and middle Caps. :(
 
@thefourtheye You're from India too?
 
@SomeGuy Yup, Chennai.
You?
 
Nice. I'm in Mumbai.
 
4:14 PM
Don't tell me you are a friend of Aadit Shah :D
 
I've spoken to him in the JS room a few times, if that counts :p
He helped me figure out our shitty education system to a certain extent too
 
@SomeGuy Oh, I figured it out myself. Yay to me :-)
 
Haha. I was primarily concerned about the effects of choosing "IT" vs. "Computer Engineering" for my BE course
Chose IT in the end
 
This is no good either:
f = ('', '', 'Fizz')
b = ('', '', '', '', 'Buzz')
for i, j, k in izip(cycle(f), cycle(b), count(1)):
    yield i + j or str(k)
 
DSM
Are we fizzbuzzing?
 
4:17 PM
Yeah, looking for some ideal solution
 
let's peach pear
 
I am permanently retired from FizzBuzz, since I've completed my Grand Work.
Jan 7 '14 at 21:06, by Kevin
Today's experiment: Fizzbuzz in 56,909 bytes
 
What the...
 
People, please don't click on the link...
 
@Kevin I assume you generated that code using Python? :D
 
4:19 PM
@SomeGuy Poor you :D
 
It's...too beautiful
 
Partially generated.
Jan 7 '14 at 21:11, by Kevin
this is what I actually typed out, then I ran some simple find-replace scripts to get it into one line
 
Yay, palindrome again! 14441
 
I'm impressed
 
whats wrong with your second example with cycle?
 
4:20 PM
@Kevin Today's quiz. Find the dot in the program :D
 
that seems to work
 
It gets me one star in our internal Python Koans
I need three. :)
I'm going to give up and look at the source.
 
7893 is suddenly not all that far away.
 
@AaronHall What is it?
 
what is what?
 
DSM
4:23 PM
7893 what now?
 
What's an internal Python Koan?
 
@DSM the highest primary vote score from last years elections.
 
yeah on day too even :P
two
 
Someone wrote a little quizzer program, brain teasers essentially, best answers get three stars, not sure how it grants the stars, I probably need a faster workstation to get the credits I want.
I am ranked rather highly internally, though.
 
Air
@Kevin What's KevinScript, then? Grand Chopped Liver?
 
4:26 PM
@JoranBeasley it hasn't even been 24 hours yet..
 
6 out of 493
constraint is I have to use count, otherwise I'd use enumerate for that last one
ok, gonna shut it down and work on some documentation I'm behind on, catch you guys later.
 
@Air I guess that's my Grand Work too.
 
Air
Grand Work 2.0
 
Grand WIP
 
DSM
Can KS run the KS equivalent of the fizzbuzz grand work?
 
Air
4:30 PM
2 Grand 2 Work
 
DSM
Heh.
 
@DSM Not until I implement lambdas and also str.join
 
Air
In unrelated news, I merge sorted cloth diaper inserts yesterday. It was less efficient than I hoped.
I haven't got the hang of parallelization in RL yet.
 
Sometimes when I'm alphabetizing my Magic: The Gathering collection, I try different sorting methods to see which is fastest for a human.
Anything deeply recursive, such as merge sort or quicksort, is unwieldy because I only have so much desk space to hold my stack.
 
DSM
Reminds me of
2325
Q: Pair socks from a pile efficiently?

amitYesterday I was pairing the socks from the clean laundry and figured out the way I was doing it is not very efficient. I was doing a naive search — picking one sock and "iterating" the pile in order to find its pair. This requires iterating over n/2 * n/4 = n2/8 socks on average. As a computer s...

 
4:36 PM
Radix sort is decent because you usually only have to drill down to the third letter or so before each card goes into a different bucket.
Not counting the worst case, where two cards start with the same made up placename, like "llanowar elves" and "llanowar mentor". Then you have to drill down ten letters.
Other considerations are: if you put down your cards and have dinner, will you remember your place in the algorithm when you return? Insertion sort wins there, since you only have a "sorted" pile and an "unsorted" pile.
 
data = {3:"Fizz",5:"Buzz",6:"Fizz",10:"Buzz",12:"Fizz",15:"Fizz Buzz", ...}
for i in count(1): print data.get(i,i)
lol
he left though
@AaronHall
 
DSM
If you want to do that you should work with i % 15, so you don't need an infinite number of members in data..
 
Bonus points for sorts that don't require you to put cards down or pick them up. If you can get away with just performing swaps in a single pile, then it's easier to only pay half attention and watch a movie or whatever.
 
DSM
@Kevin: I'm still getting over how perfect "Sometimes when I'm alphabetizing my Magic: The Gathering collection, I try different sorting methods to see which is fastest for a human." is as a sentence which makes total sense but which I could never explain to half of my friends.
 
4:44 PM
Hey, you know what we didn't have enough of? Authentication schemes!
 
WHO SAID THAT?
 
What happened to Persona?
 
(prove it)
Yeah, I don't know :)
 
All of my IRL friends are at least moderately familiar with MTG, but none of them have programming knowledge. So I don't know how they would interpret "sorting methods".
Certainly, organization is an issue for them as well, but not in such formal terms as "I tried quicksort and it wasn't any good" etc
 
DSM
@davidism: speaking of authentication, I came across an answer of yours mentioning how you hadn't used flask-security yet. Has that changed?
 
4:45 PM
nope, I just wrote my own simple auth for sopython
 
DSM
'kay!
 
We'll ask you again tomorrow.
 
@davidism well done; the sopython auth is awesome. I click log in and I'm logged in. How do you do that?
 
DSM
[Context is that I was dabbling on the weekend with seeing how hard it would be to implement some services using a flask/bootstrap/coffeescript combo.]
 
Oh, whoops
Never happened.
 
4:49 PM
I think it was too slow with modulous @DSM
 
@DSM I'd say it's a good choice, I just usually know exactly what I need and how I want to do it.
 
I actually like flask-login alot
I went from being pretty ambivelent to alwaqys using it
 
Still not sure Bohemian should ever have been elected moderator. This question doesn't show much understanding about Meta culture, in my mind.
 
it also makes it easy to serve oauth2 authenticated content straight out of the box
 
@RobertGrant it's just stack exchange's oauth. I considered using an oauth library, but it turns out ever library and oauth server ever are incompatible. :-/ It was shorter to just write the views myself: github.com/sopython/sopython-site/blob/master/sopy/auth/…
 
4:52 PM
But I don't think I ever gave SO permission to share my details with sopython. Does oauth not work like that?
Or did I do that and have forgotten?
 
oauth is really easy to write with just requests ...
 
@RobertGrant It does, it only asks you once though. You can click "apps" on your profile to see what's authorized.
 
Oh okay. I must've forgotten.
Yep, there it is :)
 
@JoranBeasley yeah, it's just a redirect then a single post
 
@RobertGrant I saw it.
 
4:55 PM
Bah!
My head a splode
 

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