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18:00
:(
@RobertGrant you can simplify that by just looking at the part before the division
Integer exponents have no upper limit, IIRC, but floats can only go so high
but python has unlimited precision integers, but not unlimited precision floating point numbers
Yeah I guess it works it out algebraically?
Because 600**501 also overflows
Air
Air
@JoranBeasley I'm not parsing it csv, that was the first thing I tried but like you said, it only "almost" works. So my next try was fixed width, as every line seemed the same length, and now that only "almost" works as well.
18:03
Wait, no it doesn't
@Kevin Long Integers have no upper limit and python automatically converts int to long
right, ints are unlimited precision. so that could take a long time (it doesn't, exponent not big enough) and use a lot of memory (not really that here either) but it will still work
I know (long) integers have no upper limit, but I don't know whether exponentiation specifically has an upper limit. For all I know, 999 ** (999 ** 999) raises an Exception("Not a chance") error.
Air
Air
@WayneConrad Depends on the field, unfortunately. The reporting agency's database doesn't use all of the same data types that we use.
Sure beats gobbling up a couple gigs of working memory while it futilely attacks the problem
18:09
@Air Perl and Ruby's latest regex engine can handle nested quotes, parentheses, etc. How about Python's?
not the builtin
i think there is a regexp package out there that does
(literally named regexp)
@Kevin ah, my bad. I figured you'd know that.
It says I "partially" solved it, giving no clue as to what's wrong
Air
Air
At this point I've been directed to just get the important data out in whatever dirty way possible so we can summarize it for another program
Might try just tossing out the lines that are the wrong length for now
Oh wait, it actually fails on the original input data.
Renews hope
18:14
@Air I got curious and started to write the state machine for it. There are a lot of nasty edge cases like trailing commas, empty fields, etc... that make it more complex than it otherwise would be.
Air
Air
@WayneConrad Yep. If I had known on Monday morning I would need to go that route, it might have been feasible. =/
I'm going to ask the person who gave me these files exactly how they were generated next time I talk to him.
to be honest csv.reader gives you close enough for that task probably
you lose some quotes is all
(as far as I could tell from the sample provided)
@Air
Air
Air
@JoranBeasley It splits problem fields into more than one field
But yeah, I can ignore those by testing len
which field?
o i c
I thought that was 2 fields
18:23
:P
lot was one
and company was another ... but now i see its one field
And just as I started to actually be productive... all the fire alarms go off
Air
Air
If neither humans nor computers can reliably parse a file format it is probably a bad file format
Wow, that's disgusting.
Air
Air
My current hypothesis is that the database this stuff comes from uses fixed-width storage internally, but the people who extracted the data and gave it to me did something hacky that broke some of the lines.
I'm pretty sure it's just CSV that isn't being output in an intelligent way. Can't you just log all the ones that parse incorrectly?
Like, what percent of lines fail to parse in some logical way?
1 in 100?
Air
Air
18:27
6 lines in ~500,000 are broken with my current struct-based approach
cel
cel
oh yea, let's make a statistical parser
1% error rate is fine
@Air like a boss
import shlex
line = next(open("weird.csv")).replace(","," ")
for v in shlex.split(line):
    print v
@MartijnPieters Grats on the election.
Air
Air
@JoranBeasley Whoah.
Air
Air
18:30
Bet I can break it. :)
Let me give it a line I found with unmatched quotes
oh im sure you can ... but can your csv?
oh
that probably will mess it all up
ValueError: No closing quotation
Air
Air
I'd also want to keep the comma in the field itself. But still, I'm impressed.
how the hell did they make this stupid file ... ? an intern by hand?
@Air I get files like that when people try and send me human readable files that they physically parsed for use as a data set (or just used excel export incorrectly)
I guess Martijn is going to have A LOT ocngratz messages waiting for him
Air
Air
18:34
Yeah, some combination of interns and Excel was likely involved.
Would it be reasonable to just have the program say "Error on line 68: Blah blah blah"?
@Vyktor I read them all, I really appreciate them!
@NickHumrich thanks :-)
cel
cel
hey, your name is in blue font in the chat - impressive :P
@MartijnPieters congratulations from me too :)
I didn't want to "highlight you" since you weren't here...
do they have an xls version of the file?
Air
Air
18:35
@QuestionC Long term, yes, I can bounce the data back to the submitter and tell them "give us something that's not broken here, here and here."
@MartijnPieters is my understanding correct, that you had like 7500+ votes?
you could always use xlrd or something
@Vyktor I haven't counted the STV votes yet.
He's keeping a tally of people who havent congratulated him, for revenge schemes later with his new found superpowers
:P
btw congratz :P ... but i figured it was a given from the instant you tossed your hat in the ring :P
18:37
Oh dear. Congrats @MartijnPieters
Air
Air
When I figure out what the hell is going on here I will share the gory details. But for now I'm going to find an appropriate playlist and go grep what I need from the heart of the demon.
@JoranBeasley in my case: the problem is that they add sooo much custom formatting, instead of using the tools Excel includes, to the files that Excel cannot correctly parse them and barfs up garbage.
Ah, Stack Overflow: new user posts explanation without code, three minutes after the same explanation was posted with code, gets two upvotes: stackoverflow.com/a/29805954/400617
Also, congrats @MartijnPieters; didn't want to add to the inbox load :)
wait they make a file in excel that then breaks excel?
18:38
in most programming languages, how does one handle calling a method which may not exist and keeping having it return null if the function is not defined? Eg:
Air
Air
@downvoter: just because this answer doesn't have any code doesn't mean it's not a good answer. — Tim Castelijns 8 mins ago
try: result = fn() ; except: result=None
Air
Air
Translation: "Downvoter: YOUR WRONG VOTE HOW I VOTINGED"
try{result=fn();}catch(e){result=undefined;}
etc
@JoranBeasley seen it a couple of times, yep
user559633
18:40
am i hungover or are there a lot of time vampires out in the daylight today?
Human stupidity + a computer = inf
@davidism True. Though I like to judge answers based on their own content, regardless of what has been said in other answers. Also -this probably won't happen, but- what if the other answer(s) somehow get deleted? — Tim Castelijns 1 min ago
@TimCastelijns I can totally envision a user that finds this unhelpful even without the context of other answers. So I can see why someone would still downvote it. — davidism 30 secs ago
I'm having fun dancing around saying I downvoted.
Air
Air
@davidism I'm resisting the urge to downvote the answer purely because someone questioned your downvote.
ehhh ... thats not a good reason :P
someone is going to create an SO account called downvoter....I just know it
18:42
I feel like it got the second upvote purely because someone questioned the downvote, so...
Air
Air
@JGreenwell Display names are non-unique. We can all be that user!
I think there are already robots randomly downvoting question on this site ...
(maybe they randomly upvote too ... for some reason I never question my upvotes that dont have a comment ... even though if i look back some of my answers were less than correct)
Without downvotes, that answer currently scores higher than the same answer with code. What is the Internet coming to?!
@corvid At the edge of my seat for that example.
when = db.users.findOne().services.password.reset.when;
date = {
  start: when,
  end: Accounts._tokenExpiration(when)
}
where Accounts._tokenExpiration is a method which might not exist
18:46
@TimCastelijns I didn't want to start anything there :)
@ air how is this
`"a", "b" -> ["a","b",...]`
distinguishable from
`"a","b" -> ["a\",\"b",...]`
with that stupid csv ... i am going to justgo ahead and say there is NO way to parse that even by hand
Just kinda silly that the answer was higher scoring than the same answer with code.
Anyway, I removed my comments, so now you look like you're talking to yourself. :-P
Reading the comments above, I feel unwelcome here
18:48
Bump:
2 hours ago, by Zero Piraeus
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/29780373/google-code-jam-2015-hair-cut
(so it can be deleted, emptying the tag)
@davidism If you don't mind me asking, what do you think the answer-er should do here? stackoverflow.com/a/29805905/4686625
@TimCastelijns didn't mean to give that impression, sorry
we're a pretty friendly place
@DonkeyKong close as dupe? The answer is fine, users aren't expected to know about every dupe ever, and they did give credit.
cbg @AdamSmith
18:51
@davidism Ahh that's what I figured too, just wanted to make sure, thanks :)
@ZeroPiraeus closed
I need to get to 20k so I don't have to wait a couple days after closing to delete.
@ZeroPiraeus I think you've safely pulled ahead of me in rep again. That was close though! ;)
Air
Air
@JoranBeasley I know what the fields should look like, so I doubt a case would ever come up that I couldn't parse a row by hand. A field outside of the context of the whole row, maybe.
screw this, I'm copying the files and fixing the copies by hand
where by "hand" I mean "perl"
19:00
I have the afternoon free. Assume that I don't know any languages except Python -- what should I spend the next four hours learning?
@davidism Understood. I think I'll visit the chat more often. Always interesting to hear what other people think
@davidism Still not that much in it, really ...
@AdamSmith I like Perl (and it will feel similar)
I was thinking about getting the Microsoft toolchain installed on this computer and digging back into C#, but I just don't have the inclination =/
@AdamSmith C#!
Wow perfect timing.
19:02
haha
I started learning C# about a month ago. Spend a few days on it and got distracted by more pressing things in my life.
user559633
Learn Boo
Learn angular.js .... easy to learn the whole thing in 4 hours
well sort of
What are your interests Adam? Apart from specific languages
19:04
angular.js is pretty dang handy to know ... and runs along side almost all my python web stuff :P
user559633
Real answer: ArnoldC
I don't know anything about angular.js, but from the name I assume it's related to Javascript. My javascript/jQuery days are wellllll behind me: does that affect the four hour marker? :D
It doesn't
a little maybe ....
but not too bad
ah, excel: manual colors for metadata (instead of conditional formatting or headers), cross tables where pivot tables are needed, non-matching formatting (21-jan vs jan, 21, with no actual date field)....oh, how I hate you Excel
19:05
You don't really have to know any jquery to be able to play around with angular
angular complements any web technology nicely ... but its a little bit front endish ... but its nice to understand even from backend
@TimCastelijns More of a sysadmin than a programmer now, so most of what I think would actually be helpful to me is scripting and the ability to build reusable modules to make further scripting easier.
But I'm not necessarily looking for what's most useful, just what's most fun
oh if you do no web stuff i doubt angular will be of much use
Bash? :P
I would look into parellelisation stuff ... like hadoop or whatever
19:06
@TimCastelijns my work environment is 100% Windows. Bash won't help T_T
and maybe work on my spelling :P
honestly Powershell might not be bad though
but it seems a little cheap to call that a "language" haha
dont waste time
with powershell its garbage
19:07
Powershell is not as bad as people make it out to be but it does suck
If you don't need to know it, just move to .Net frameworks in C#
its terrible ... tbh I prefer cmd.exe
Was thinking about picking up Ruby and/or Haskell
C# services maybe? There was a time I found that interesting
but they seem superfluous if I can write Python
better and you'll have to use them with powershell eventually to get anything done
19:08
hadoop can be used with python ... and being able to parrellize large jobs nicely is valuable to any programmer :P
(although you might spend the whole 4 hours tryinh to get it set up on windows)
@AdamSmith didn't you say you wanted to learn more database related skills?
@JGreenwell yeah
that also ties in nicely with hadoop (iirc it requires a nosql)
(rbrb briefly: gf just woke up and is feeling under the weather today. Gotta go check on her)
I'd lean more towards learning MySQL and PostgreSQL over starting with a big data tools
19:12
Learn Spark rather than Hadoop.
It's easier to program with.
yeah spark === hadoop when I say hadoop
same difference
some big data thing
I would not recommend learing raw sql of any type
I would recommend learning sqlalchemy or some other orm
with an orm
SQLAlchemy would be the one I was going to recommend too :)
sqllite == mysql == postgresql (with an orm)
Write your own ORM. Then write your own RDBM.
lol
thats probably more than 4 hours
user559633
19:17
RDBM, pronounced RedBum
like when you sunbathe at the nudie beach?
user559633
spend the 4 hours oscillating between different tutorials that teach you nothing.
user559633
No. Not at all like that.
(jk im a programmer the sun is my enemy)
sometimes I feel like putting "sorry that is not possible" in the comments of questions like "How can I turn an inputed string into a list in python?"
@JoranBeasley Someone will, incorrectly, correct you
19:21
and I would say "no sorry strings are immutable"
:P
I always want to answer "No." to questions worded like "Is it possible to [do easy thing]?"
@JoranBeasley Laughing at this question's action from you
Oi @MartijnPieters, good job making mod. How many palms did you have to grease?
Nope, sorry. Reversing a string was proven intractable by Alan Turing as part of his code breaking experiments. No one has ever done it.
Just the one. The trick is to know which one.
19:27
Do you know which one?
Air
Air
@AdamSmith What, no Cygwin?
Dumb question... if you had routes, the routes had names and paths, if you prefixed the name with the collection it is using, that would be considered a namespace, right?
user559633
What if StackOverflow is just a collective illusion of an informercial world? The "How does I Python scrapy linkedin" users are the people in black-and-white videos dropping and breaking stuff and we're the Billy Mays/Offer Shlomis of the world.
@corvid can't tell because I don't know the terminology you're using :)
@tristan that's breaking my brain
@DonkeyKong :P and my answer too :P ... people like that poster will give python a php like reputation
19:38
good evening people
was helped here a lot this morning , so i thought i try my luck again
i wanna skip over the first 3 lines in a csv file when reading it in
DSM
DSM
Midafternoon cabbage for all.
with open(filename, "r") as f:
reader = csv.DictReader(f)
for col in FIELDS:
fieldtypes[col]=set()
for row in reader:
reader.next()
reader.next()
reader.next()
for col in FIELDS:

fieldtypes[col].add(get_the_type(row[col]))
return fieldtypes
i tried it with simply reader.next()
MA1
MA1
I want a run single Django command multiple times, each time with a different arg. The condition is i want to run the commands synchronously. Any one have any idea about how to achive this?
19:40
gives me an error :(
Why not ask the question on SO?
(and include the error, always)
honestly.. i posted there a few times and peoples advice were confusing for me (i am a beginner) :(
DSM
DSM
Right now you're advancing the reader three times within every iteration of the loop. That doesn't seem right.
Hmm, didn't we have a conversation about skipping iterations of a loop just this morning?
Something to do with iter and next.
damn, so even if i had just one .next()
that would mean i just read every other line
do i understand that correctly ?
DSM
DSM
19:42
You want to skip three lines outside the loop.
Yes, you'd be skipping every other line if you had a next inside the loop.
ok.. wow.. that was stupid :(
DSM
DSM
I'm assuming you're using Python 2?
with open(filename) as f:
    reader = csv.DictReader(f)
    next(reader); next(reader); next(reader)
    # beetlejuice; beetlejuice; beetlejuice
    for row in reader:
i am a real beginner, just did the code academy tutorial ( actually was recommend from someone here in chat )
DSM
DSM
19:44
Then you should use open(filename, "rb") instead of open(filename, "r") (otherwise you can get into trouble with line endings.) This is covered in the csv docs, but Heaven forbid anyone should read those. :-)
@StephanKetterer so codecadamy uses python 2, but unless there's some external constraint forcing you to use that, I'd use Python 3
i am sorry, honestly i am doing an udacity course.. and unfortunately they do not provide material for python itself
Air
Air
Feels like I read the csv docs several times monthly -_-;;
DSM
DSM
@davidism: I caught that improvement, and I approve. :-)
19:46
duckduckgo is a search engine right ?
i know i am embarrassing myself here completely with my questions
DSM
DSM
Ehh, we were all beginners once. There's no shame in not immediately being an expert at something.
user559633
I was never a beginner.
maybe its also due to english not being my first language... but reading about programming in a non english language seems kinda stupid
You sprung fully formed and fully sarcastic from Martijn's mind.
Your english seems fine
19:49
I guarantee that your English is better than mine ;)
looked it up so : Melon :)
user559633
@Ffisegydd yep, i'm the golem that was born of your collective hatred of time vampires
DSM
DSM
Yeah, the only weakness I see is that your shift key only works some of the time, but that's a problem which afflicts a lot of native speakers too. :-)
WHaT dO yOO M3aN DsM?
Laziness is a factor there
19:51
wow, solved my assignment :)
Well done
user559633
@DSM lowercase is cruise control for cool
DSM
DSM
(sigh) You and your meme subversion.
do you recommend, just using python for now and doing the assignments or is it ok to try other language tutorials on code academy too ? i liked the python one very much and it was 13 hours.. so i learned quite a bit
DSM
DSM
19:55
@Stephan: is Python your first language?
Can never learn too much Stephan, it just depends on what you think would be useful for you to know
yes.. i do another thing that uses C,
You can try some and just not finish them if you don't like them
i did a masters degree in engineering.. but we never did programming.. which i think is insanity.. so i am really eager to learn... i find it super powerful
Air
Air
@StephanKetterer obligatory plug for Engineering SE :)
19:57
interesting, an engineer who didn't have to code
been mandatory in finland for 20 years at least for all fields
its disgusting
and i am from germany
a supposedly good country for engineering i guess
Air
Air
@JoranBeasley a few lines of tedious Perl butchery, and: Process finished with exit code 0
Depends on the engineering I suppose.
Air
Air
:D
DSM
DSM
IMHO one trap that beginners can fall into is learning things too shallowly. They can do hello-world in ten languages but can't do anything nontrivial in any. It's a great idea to learn multiple languages -- devs worth their salt speak many -- but I recommend beginners pick a language and become decent at it.
Air
Air
19:58
Germany has to be an excellent country for engineering; they haven't got much in the way of natural resources to exploit.
Wise words
civil engineering but given that all the work you do in that field by now is done with computer programs.. imho programming should be mandatory
I agree with DSM-san here. I decided to learn Python in depth rather than spread my knowledge/time too thin.
Air
Air
My civil BS involved extremely little programming
Morning Pythons
19:59
I've known a lot of Civil Engineers, never known one who could code/needed to code (within the Civil Engineering business)
Air
Air
I took one nearly-worthless Java course at a community college
Learn 1 language well, but then broaden your skillset. There are no golden hammers.
ditto the learn the language well before moving to another one

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