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15:00
@thefourtheye I got a job in Chennai na..
DSM
DSM
@AdamSmith: don't get me started about email.
as a joke I asked our dept. head if I could migrate my username and he looked at me with that faraway gaze that says: "How difficult would that be really..." before I assured him that I was joking.
@AvinashRaj Hey great da, which office?
Congrats :)
@Ffisegydd yes, that's the default I think
Thanks, it's just a startup company. Not an MNC.
Where are you working?
15:02
@RobertGrant FWIW, this answer has a nice algorithm for verifying that a bunch of nested brackets of various flavours are nested correctly.
@AdamSmith Either your company never recycles email addresses, in which case you should quit before they run out and productivity grinds to a halt; or they do recycle email addresses, but only between employees with non-overlapping work histories, in which case you should quit and re-apply.
@Kevin RE: this message, we auto-generated account names from our AS400 and the guy who did the import was a bit sloppy about it, which means we have a number of "weird" characters in usernames. "HO'DOYLE" is one of them.
@AvinashRaj Well done!
Luckily they don't receive mail.
DSM
DSM
What did you wind up with? a[middle-initial][email protected]?
15:03
@PM2Ring Thanks..
I have a coworker whose last name contains an apostrophe. His work email was broken for weeks. (haha, I see Adam just linked to the last time I told this story)
@AvinashRaj I tend to agree not duplicate - I think there may be some frustration present there at two questions on the same (very small) sample of text
technically the same for me, but it's adsmith which I think in this case is actually ADamSMITH, not Adam Duncan SMITH.
DSM
DSM
I was about to say that it'd be awkward if the middle initial was a D, because then it could be ADell Smith..
Right but since she was the first asmith, she got the canonical name :P
otherwise I'd have been adasmith I think lol
15:05
rhubarb
DSM
DSM
Heh. Rhubarb, and pineapples, for @AvinashRaj.
The funny thing is that this is a family-owned business, so we have lots of execs with the same last name
@JRichardSnape yep.. :-)
@AvinashRaj Left a comment FWIW
some of it is helped by the fact that there are actually three companies under the same umbrella, each with its own domain
15:07
@DSM searching the meaning for pineapple in sopython.com :-)
Pineapple Congratulations
oh, thanks..
but we have a [email protected], [email protected], and [email protected] all belonging to different people
And funnily enough, the canonical [email protected] is actually NOT a member of the family that owns the company -- she just happens to share a last name and started working for us as a teenager, before [email protected] was born LOL
@AnttiHaapala github.com/mitsuhiko/flask-sqlalchemy/pull/281/files is this pr actually an optimization? My intuition says yes, since it's eliminating the nested select.
DSM
DSM
I have an issue because my name, say Alexander, has a canonical short form for daily use (Alex). But because I use it all the time, it occasionally makes its way onto formal documents, and no amount of complaining has managed to fix them because inevitably someone pulls an ancient template I haven't corrected.
15:11
@PM2Ring thanks! I'll consult it later.
I guess I'm lucky that "Kev" is sufficiently informal that it has never ended up on an official document.
Now I'm thinking that if I parse the brackets out before doing a regex, that comes with its own set of problems
Although at least the nested brackets work 100%
I have to correct people who call me Dave. For some reason I just don't like it.
"Actually, it's Davidism."
@davidism I have the same reaction when people call me Dave.
15:13
Understandable.
Yay! Got my visa...
Rhubarb all, gotta go
cbg all
@AdamSmith :)
rhubarb Bhargav
and congrats @BhargavRao
15:13
People call me Grant quite a lot in emails
hi everyone. i've a question about python number types hierarchy. from algebra course we know that numbers have such hierarchy: natural (N) < integer (Z) < rational (Q) < real (R) < (complex) (C). in python we can convert floats (rationals) to integers and vice versa. also able to convert integers to complex numbers. but why not complex numbers to integers, even they have 0j.
`
>>> x = 5+6j
>>> y = x -6j
>>> y
(5+0j)
>>> y ==5
True
>>> complex(5)
(5+0j)
>>> int(y)`
I just assume they have a mental illness
DSM
DSM
I'm coming to this nesting thing late, but what's wrong with just keeping a stack, and raising when you don't have the right balance?
@DSM the main issue with that is that I don't know what it all means
@RobertGrant :D
15:14
@marmeladze indent by four spaces for code formatting
@JGreenwell Thank ya!! :)
But in all seriousness I did vaguely consider a stack, but went state machine, and then went recursive descent, which I quite like. I'm not sure whether a stack would be less complex than state machine.
@RobertGrant That mirrors my feeling a lot of the time (in life generally, as well as in python)
@marmeladze I guess that, unlike float->int, complex to int conversion is rare enough that the devs assume that trying to cast must be a mistake. If you really super want to discard the imaginary component, you could do (5+0j).real
@JRichardSnape :)
@DSM having said that, I generally get a lot of things wrong, so it's more than likely you're right :)
15:17
Re: name chat, I vaguely remember reading about a culture where each person doesn't have a single name, they have one name used by one person that they know. Ex. Person A calls person B "bob", but person C calls person C "steve".
It was either a nature documentary or a science fiction novel. I forget which.
@Kevin thanks for introducing this feature :) I really didn't know it.
DSM
DSM
@marmeladze: the basic idea is that since it's not clear whether you want abs(c) or c.real or something else, Python isn't going to guess.
I've gone by my middle name since middle school cause I got sick of people miss-pronouncing my first name
If we lived in that culture, you wouldn't have any right to ask people "please don't call me dave". Your name doesn't belong to you, it's a shared connection with another person.
Or rather, you'd have a right to ask, but the other person would have the right to refuse.
Oops, missed a typo in my previous message. I meant "but person C calls person B "steve""
Is it possible to jump forward in a for loop?
E.g. skip the next 6 iterations?
15:20
@RobertGrant continue ?
Obv could use a counter and continue... @PM2Ring :)
I just meant without that :)
i += 6
continue
There's no magical fast forward button, e.g. continue(6)
@QuestionC Don't think that works, actually
@QuestionC is that with an enumerate?
15:21
Oh yea
DSM
DSM
No, not really. But if you're doing a for loop over an iterator, you can use next or some other consumer to advance the iterator from within the loop.
P.s. continue(6) - good idea?
    for i in range(10):
        print i
        if i == 5:
            i += 3
            continue

    #expected output: 0 1 2 3 4 5 8 9
    #actual output: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Python lets you modify the loop variable inside the loop? Cool.
It lets you modify it, yes, but then it summarily ignores your changes in the next iteration.
15:23
for i in range(10):
@DSM yeah that would definitely do; can I do that with a normal for i, char in enumerate(my_string):?
In fact if I did that I probably wouldn't need the enumerate
You probably need a while loop to get what you want.
i = 0
while i < 10:
    print i
    if i == 5:
        i += 3
        continue
    i += 1
@DSM If I didn't, would I do my_string.next()?
@Kevin Yeah that's true, I could just not use a for loop
I'm curious what the big-picture goal is here.
dang it, didn't mean to hit enter there
15:25
I'm guessing he's still toying with ways to parse arithmetic expressions.
@QuestionC It's to live a fulfilling, useful life
Maybe skipping forward when he finds an opening paren.
You can do this:
g = iter(range(10))
for i in g:
    print i
    if i == 2:
        for _ in range(3):
            next(g)
@Kevin indeed
DSM
DSM
@PM2Ring: aargh, I was about to post
15:26
Output:
0
1
2
6
7
8
9
DSM
DSM
>>> my_string = "abcdefghijkl"
>>> it = enumerate(my_string)
>>> for i, char in it:
...     print(i, char, end=' ')
...     if i == 5:
...         for _ in range(3): next(it)
...
0 a 1 b 2 c 3 d 4 e 5 f 9 j 10 k 11 l >>>
@DSM Great Minds Think Alike. :)
Aaaah, I need a separate handle on it. Okay, that's perfect, thanks!
DSM
DSM
The itertools consumer pattern might be faster for really long skips.
Nah won't ever be more than about 20 characters
15:27
Call me old fashioned, but calling next on an iter instance in this way is a little more magical than I would want my production code to be
But I'll look later anyway
@Kevin why?
(Stupid Konsole copy & paste)
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: huh. I have a pretty low tolerance for magic, but this is well within my Zone of Science.
Just a feeling. Maybe I don't like that it sacrifices more in comprehensibility than it saves in disk space.
DSM
DSM
Do you consider iter itself incomprehensible?
In production code, I mean? (I know you know what it does.)
15:28
I actually quite like that you don't have to keep track and (as I was thinking) work out how many iterations forward to jump
Maybe. I notice that I never use it myself.
It's a @JonClements special
DSM
DSM
Good puppy.
If you don't like iter, you'll hate this: stackoverflow.com/a/434411/4014959
Maybe I prefer the while approach because all changes to state are plainly visible. It might not be apparent to neophytes that next has side-effects.
15:31
Yeah true
The counterargument being, "how many neophytes are going to be reading your production code?"
DSM
DSM
Would you prefer to wrap it up in an object which accepted a .skip call? (Might even be able to get it working using .send, though I'd have to think about that for a second.)
Also: how much codeeval code is used in production? :)
@DSM Yeah, that sounds more palatable. skip is more action-sounding than next to me, so it's more reasonable to expect side effects.
Although if I actually have to write the class that defines skip, I'll hit my laziness limit and just do the while loop anyway.
Rhubarb
15:37
I think the cleanest way to do it is to just have a state variable. I mean, you're basically emulating a machine that is entering a "skip things" state.
When you have a loop with a split-personality, it's nice to just give each personality a name.
Yep, some kind of state machine approach is reasonable
@QuestionC Yeah. I want to see something in the code that tells me why we are skipping. What's the intent?
Mechanism is boring. Intent is the interesting part.
DSM
DSM
If only there were a way to describe such intent somehow.
print("Now skipping next 3 iterations because reasons...");
sleep(1); #so it seems like the computer is working
Cool, working! Thanks @DSM, @PM2Ring
(Not all working, just the first bit)
DSM
DSM
15:43
Odd coincidence, but last night I had to try to explain the "because reasons" phrase and how the "because [noun]" pattern works and sounds to a Japanese speaker.
It is a fairly new addition to the language, yes? :-)
Daaaaaaaamn. TIL NoSQL does not mean "No SQL" but in fact means "Not only SQL"
DSM
DSM
Like a trilogy. (Obscure callback to the pronunciation discussion.)
Internet memes substantially increase the complexity of English, if you account for the "(very|such) [noun or exclamation]" sentence structure of Doge and the alternative spellings of most words in LolCat.
@Kevin yeah because they're generally terrible English
15:48
@Ffisegydd NoSQL actually stands for "No, use SQL"
3
Or, as the hippies would say, "You can't, like, know what a word means, man. It's, like, evolving.
Pipe down :P
You can find internally consistent rules if you look hard enough 0_0
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: apparently young Japanese speakers also twist the language in strange and mysterious ways, so we exchanged condolences.
By which I assume they mean that words are dying and passing on their characteristics to their children, some of which survive.
15:49
All languages converge to Marklar eventually.
Or just that said hippies have changed evolved CHANGED the meaning of "evolve" to just mean "change"
DSM
DSM
Oh, and I learned that emoji wasn't just the Japanese adoption of emoticon, it's e-moji, which makes complete sense. It's sheer coincidence that the emo of emoticon and (e-mo) are the same -- well, similar -- in sound.
Yesterday I learned that the "oke" in "karaoke" comes from the English "orchestra". It's all just one big jumble of plagiarism.
DSM
DSM
Okay, time to stop procrastinating and get these numbers assembled. Work-mandated rhubarb for all!
Timesaver: first thing to do is replace things like (-159.5) with -159.5
16:01
I just had an arguement with someone who thought karaoke was Japanese for "empty orchestra" (kara okesutora would technically be that)
weird
Air
Air
16:21
370 views on this MSO question and nobody thought to check MSE FAQ? sigh
Air
Air
the purplest of cabbage to you, sir
Alternatively, I had the most delicious Brussels sprouts last night, if you prefer your cabbage tiny.
Are we discriminating against green cabbage?
@Ffisegydd yeah, see not only SQL, so in addition to using SQL with MongoDB you can also use their superior query language (not).
morning everyone
16:28
@davidism actually not either, count() is always really slow
So it's not an optimization?
dunno if it would really optimize anything...
maybe on mysql :D
so it might actually save something, if mysql is stupid enough to not do its count() optimization on complex queries
The shields can't take much more of this, Captain!
@AnttiHaapala Yeah, I didn't want to go around benchmarking common databases, so I just asked them to do it.
16:35
Returned fire. The questions are disabled.
delvd all except the one that needs os.path.expanduser
Air
Air
16:47
@WayneConrad Brussels sprouts are green.
In other news... the file format I've been struggling with? The one that looked like CSV, only it turned out to be fixed width, and doesn't escape quotes? Surprise! Not consistently fixed width either!
is it just tsv?
Air
Air
Nope, not a tab to be found.
It's just shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit.
space separated values?
Air
Air
See, I counted the line lengths: Counter({616: 7417, 631: 4, 617: 1})
whats a line look like?
16:50
@Air I typed my complaint before you typed brussel sprouts. It appeared after because there was a race condition. ;)
parts = shlex.split(line) ?
maybe?
One more, from The Meta Tag That Won't Die.
Air
Air
"PRO",1 ,14349    ,"AB ","CD ","A",2     ,"1            " ,""X" Lot - Something foo, Company bar 123",20100102      ,4931          ,"      ",0.005      ,    ,0.005        ,0.009    ,          ,140     ,     ,0.0 ,   ,   ,      ,2 ,1 ,50,2013,"304             ","X1352468"," ","N",8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,8.33 ,"        ","      ",        ,         ,"                                                                                "," " ,"   ",20140731
There's an example @JoranBeasley
Had to take a moment to scramble the actual data
Air
Air
""X" Lot - Something foo, Company bar 123" is supposed to be one field
16:57
You're not allowed to go visit the programmer that created it and talk sense into them, I guess...
Air
Air
tl;dr: no
That's too bad. It would be an interesting talk.
Air
Air
I'm not sure my side of the conversation would be altogether intelligible
Air
Air
This is why I said yesterday hold onto your jumbly bits, I'm using eval
16:59
@ZeroPiraeus should we ask for blacklisting
@ZeroPiraeus I put please do not use this tag in the tag excerpt :D
Air
Air
So I've written a solution that doesn't require a FSM to parse nested quotes but it relies on parsing the files as fixed width via struct
Honestly, I don't mind checking in every now and again ... it's the only one of the Eulersphere that keeps popping back up, and not that often.
@Air It's a tossup. Fixed width, simpler. FSM, then changes in field width are handled transparently.
Air
Air
@WayneConrad My knowledge of finite state machines ends at recognizing this as a use case
user559633
hello friends (and @Ffisegydd)
17:08
;_;
user559633
get a job yet, hippy?
Had 2 interviews over past 2 days. Been preparing for interview tomorrow. Got another interview on Monday. Then got a phone interview on Tuesday.
user559633
Anything promising or sound like something you'd want to do?
I think all 5 I would be able to do and 3/5 are really up my street (data sciencey stuff).
Just preparing a presentation on Apache Spark for my interview on Monday.
user559633
Where is Spark really useful?
17:11
I'm pretty well practised in presentations. Not gonna wet my pants at the thought of it. By the way, how's your presentation preparation going tristris?
user559633
wetting my pants at the thought of it
My title is "Why a large global organisation should be thinking about Apache Spark"
user559633
I don't know what spark is used for
And it's for a data science consultant position where part of my job would be talking to clients about data solutions, so I suppose doing a presentation is a good test.
user559633
(my talk presentation is going alright, but i'm bored about the topic)
17:13
It's The Next Big Thing In Big Data. It's basically just a large-scale cluster computing engine.
People are very excited about it, and for a good reason I think. It's a lot faster than Hadoop (for certain things) and seems to be much easier to use.
user559633
it doesn't have an adorable mascot, so i wont use it
anyone know of any tools for vim to help with github markdown?
@corvid you on a Mac? I use Macdown for markdown stuff.
Yeah mac, the best way to program
user559633
I find Mou to be very useful for markdown.
17:16
@Air why are you parsing this csv? ... and it seems like csv.reader almost works ...
Has a nice split-screen editor so you can see the "compiled" stuff in real time.
user559633
oh, macdown is like mou
It's The Next Big Thing In Big Data. It's basically just a large-scale cluster computing engine.
marketing much?
I was recommended Mou, I don't remember why I didn't use it. I think it was being sold/stopped development or something.
every new thing in Big Data is "The Next Big Thing"
user559633
17:18
Yeah, I'm going to switch from Mou to MacDown. I didn't know the author had a "i'm taking my ball and going home" hissy fit, but it doesn't surprise me given that "hey, you can give me money" was always in the interface
@JGreenwell indeed. This is the latest and it's definitely generating a lot of buzz. I would pivot and say more buzzwords but I'm off to Nandos soon for chicken.
user559633
Take care m8
I've done the easy part of "describe Spark" for my talk, now need to do the more difficult "describe why it's useful for an imaginary large-scale company"
user559633
What does Spark do?
17:25
Data analytics basically.
So it does whatever you program it to do.
It's just an engine for clustered computing.
user559633
What are you using for an imaginary company?
@JonClements you'll make it next year :)
Congrats @MartijnPieters
A large multinational company (that's my brief). I think I'll assume it's a tech based company.
So lots of servers, lots of data flowing in and out. I'll think about it more tomorrow while I'm travelling for my 3rd interview.
brb chicken.
user559633
cbg
17:28
@Air Should your parser convert unquoted fields to numbers, or leave them as strings?
Does anyone know if a tool exists that can generate python docstring stubs in a python file?
@Ffisegydd yeah, Apache Spark actually looks kinda cool, just finished my term paper, for Business Intelligence and Analytics course, on Big Data tools and methods (including use with Data Warehouses) and researched Spark for that.
Hey all! Anyone here use Scrapy????
@Ffisegydd that plus studying for finals is kinda burning me out for "New Big Data stuff" atm though :)
@CharlesWatson ask a question and some users might appear
Deal.
When I typically return to a CSV, I just specify the arguments in my terminal "scrapy crawl foobar -o foo.csv -t csv"
I work a lot in the scrapy interpreter (terminal?) and was curious how to do it from there?
instead of bouncing back and forth
17:53
the first is "in shell", the second one would too be "shell" but does it mean "python shell with scrapy"
cbg
Hmph
>>> 600**501 / 600**500
600.0
>>> 600.0**501.0/600.0**500.0
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
OverflowError: (34, 'Result too large')

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