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12:00
brb
@PM2Ring It would be upvotes - downvotes, without the * 400 ;-)
Yeah. :)
As I said, I do make errors, but I tend to fix them quickly. Especially when prompted by others. :)
http://stackoverflow.com/help/badges/50/python?userid=4014959
*did not earn this badge* is that a bug lol
Because here stackoverflow.com/users/4014959/pm-2ring?tab=topactivity it says that you did get it
F4z
F4z
I'm a bit confused with something, when does Python start to count from 0 and 1 e.g. when getting characters from string:

string = "theName"
new_string = string[0:3] # gets only 'the' from 'theName' and to get the first, you have to start from 0 and not 13
what do you mean by and 1
woot? it gets th not the
12:05
@TimCastelijns Hmm. That's weird. And I guess that I really shouldn't have that badge, since accordingto the Tags section of my profile my score for Python is only 288.
@PM2Ring Yes but I'm pretty sure that is just the upvote count
python starts counting from 0, and the end is always "one past the last"
F4z
F4z
like position in text, you have to start the count from 0 and go onward, put when it comes to length it gives you the count from 1 so in this case 'theName' will be 7 characters and not 6
@F4z so how many characters does 'theName' have, 7 or 6?
@F4z I guess you can think of it as "indexing counts from 0, length counts from 1" if that helps you any
F4z
F4z
12:08
it has 7, but i want to know why not start the count from 0 and return 6 as the length
Although I don't really think "count" has any true meaning in the underlying implementation
@Kevin wouldn't help me ;)
@F4z 7 is 7 is 7
F4z
F4z
so anything to do with indexing will start from 0
the characters are numbered from 0 upwards so the 7th character has index 6
this is common in mathematics and in computer science and Python too
but if there are 7 of some things, then there are 7 of them, not 6 or 8 :D
?!
Sorcery! Burn the witch!
F4z
F4z
12:10
haha alright, so in a list e.g. new_list=[x,f,7,2,df,g]
to access '7' I will have to use 2
F4z
F4z
so var = new_list[2]
because it really does make equally much, if not more, to number them 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 as opposed to 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ;)
@F4z I guess you can see it like this for the format str[x:y] for x, y > 0
 t h e N a m e
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
@F4z The length is 7 because there are 7 characters in 'theName'. And the empty string '' has length zero.
I can sort of see where this confusion is coming from. "zero-indexing is surprising because in real-life, people index from one. 'This is my first child' rather than 'this is my zeroth child', etc. I expect programming languages to be consistent in their confusingness, so length calculation ought to be equally surprising and report one fewer result than what you would find in real life"
But this is not the case - confusingness is not evenly distributed ;-)
len is intuitive and zero-indexing isn't (to some people)
F4z
F4z
it's like i never hated this, just a bit confused at some points
lol @Kevin :D
There's a lovely short paper by Djikstra that explains why zero indexing is preferable. Ah, here it is. cs.utexas.edu/users/EWD/transcriptions/EWD08xx/EWD831.html
Some early languages use(d) 1-based indexing, but it was soon discovered that it's horrible. :)
F4z
F4z
12:13
thanks guys, but if anything, to remember whether it's 0 or 1, is it a matter of remembering what functions use the index based counting vs indexing from one
@F4z it is because in computing you can always think it this way: "we have a beginning, and distance from beginning, the first one is 0 from the beginning, because it is the first, the second is 1 more than the first (thus 1), etc..."
everything in python indexes from 0
@F4z Can you give an example of a function that indexes from one?
everything in C, everything in Javascript, everything in Java, everything in C++, everything in C#, everything in pretty much everything except Visual Basic :D
F4z
F4z
@Kevin len()
(len doesn't count because length calculation isn't "indexing" per se)
F4z
F4z
12:15
ok nvm
so your point is that len([]) should be -1?
F4z
F4z
so if everything indexes from 0 in python, it's always good to start the count in a string or whatever, mentally in my mind, from 0 and count onwards
I recognize that I'm not being entirely fair here by asking and then saying "oh, that's disqualified because reasons"
becuase there are -1 elements in the list?
F4z
F4z
forget about my len() situation
12:16
@F4z yes exactly, and if you get confused by "first, second etc" then think of them as number 0, number 1 and so on :)
F4z
F4z
good. it's just that I do a lot of string manipulation and i figured it would be useful to know why
one more thing, Moduli, MOD what is it good for? (if this is a vast topic forget it)
you mean like 3 % 2 gives 1? If so, then one of the basic use you can have is to separate even and odd numbers
F4z
F4z
yes, i mean like 3 % 2
so odd and even
interesting...
28
Q: Recognizing when to use the modulus operator

CodebugI know the modulus (%) operator calculates the remainder of a division. How can I identify a situation where I would need to use the modulus operator? I know I can use the modulus operator to see whether a number is even or odd and prime or composite, but that's about it. I don't often think in ...

@F4z: In case you're wondering, this seemingly-simple topic has occupied some of the greatest minds in computer science, so don't feel bad if you find it a bit confusing. You may find this Wikipedia page helpful: Off-by-one error, especially Fencepost error
F4z
F4z
12:20
I be reading that soon!
Yup, another would be if you want to get prime numbers
@F4z there is also the saying: "There are only 2 hard things in computer science: naming things, cache invalidation and off-by-one errors"
How about we put it like this. In Python, all ordinal numbers start from zero, all non-ordinal numbers don't. Ordinal numbers are pronounced like "first, second, third, fourth". Non-ordinal numbers are pronounced like "one, two, three, four". So you can tell which functions use ordinal numbers by expressing its functionality in English.
"'Hello' has five letters": you said "five" and not "fifth", so len is non-ordinal. "e is the second letter of 'Hello'". You said "second" and not "two", so str.indexOf is ordinal.
Coincidentally, I answered a question on SE.Mathematics a short while ago that involved converting back & forth between 0-based & 1-based indexing: math.stackexchange.com/q/1254137/207316
F4z
F4z
@AnttiHaapala you say 2 hard things and sate 3 reasons, best ;) part of the joke i see?
12:22
Exactly! :)
@AnttiHaapala: Sadly, I haven't got any points or feedback on my answer which used that cute Any class we were discussing the other day: stackoverflow.com/a/29867270/4014959
Heh, I've used a wildcard class in an answer myself, in the past :-) Great minds think alike
5
A: Finding partial-match to item in list-of-lists

KevinYou could create a dummy class which compares equal to everything. Then you can use it as a kind of wildcard in your in condition. class Dummy: def __eq__(self, other): return True l = [["08:00", "09:00", 60, False, 1.0], ["09:00", "10:00", 60, False, 0.3], ["12:00", "13:0...

I see you went a bit fancier than me with __instancecheck__ and friends... Nice.
12:39
@Kevin As you can see, my 1st version was pretty basic. That fancy stuff is due to Antti. I just came in here to ask if I should make the Any class a singleton, and Antti posted that little gem.
DSM
DSM
Much-earlier-than-normal cabbage for all.
I am feeling drained today. Perhaps because I spent the last week dog-sitting, and now that it's over I no longer have an overarching goal.
Well... does KS have labmdas yet?
The spot in my heart where I kept "don't let the dog die", is now empty.
early cabbage for @DSM
12:46
I still want the dog to not die, but now it is largely beyond my responsibility or control
DSM
DSM
You can always spot the foreigner by how he spells "lambda". It's like our shibboleth. ;-)
Guilty. I guess. How should it be said?
Kevin, does KS have λ yet?
Eh, sort of. KS functions are expressions (rather than statements, like in Python), so you can stick them anywhere a lambda might want to go.
Doc
Doc
0
Q: Django handle new ManyToManyField items with get_or_create()

DocI have a model with a ManyToManyField and in my view I want to be able to add new options to the generated selectbox How can I handle those new items with get_or_create function? I want to check for form validity before saving it, but it will never be valid because I have to create all the new ...

I could add a language element that actually uses a "λ" or "lambda" signifier, but it would largely be syntactic sugar
DSM
DSM
12:48
@Kevin: so you could inline an arbitrarily complicated function?
why good morning everyone
You do myList.sort(key=lambda a: a[1]) in Python. You do myList.sort(function(a){return a[1];}); in KS
Apropos the 1 / 0 indexing. I started programming on BBC BASIC. As I recall (and I might be wrong), dimensioning an array like DIM A(10) actually made an 11 element array which did have a zeroth element, but typically people used indexes 1 to 10. However, my memory is highly flaky these days.
@DSM Yep, just like in papa Javascript
12:49
I've never understood how lambdas in that sort worked, only how to use them :\
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: does it scope like you'd expect?
@JRichardSnape IIRC similar things happened in C64 basic v2 :P
Awesome. Do they have a binding to the enclosing scope?
Last I checked, yeah
Woohoo!
12:51
Yeah - this tends to back up my recollection (although not my assertion that people usually used 1-n) riscos.com/support/developers/bbcbasic/part2/arrays.html
DSM
DSM
When KevinScript is adopted as ECMA8, we can all say we were here first.
I was going to say, add closures to KS to distract yourself from that hole in your heart... but if KS already has them, that won't help.
</excursion into BASIC>
It's a little hard to test because my list builtin doesn't actually have a sort method yet.
@JRichardSnape Not impossible - various BASIC dialects had all sorts of weird & wonderful approaches to the 0-based or 1-based indexing thing. IMO, the most sensible was to provide a special variable to indicate which indexing base you wanted to use. But of course the statement setting that variable needed to be at the top of your program or it becomes a nightmare.
12:52
I implemented closures one night, in an hours-long frenzy which I only have dim recollections of now. I may have been literally possessed.
I guess it's fine if some restless spirit uses me as a vessel to fulfill its programming-related business. As long as I don't get in trouble for it.
DSM
DSM
with indexing('one_based'):
can you have two programs interact with the same database without causing any sort of weird locking issues?
Yes, but you can't do it naively. You have to be aware of the possible locks or conflicts and take positive steps to either prevent them to mitigate them.
@corvid Yes. Locking issues : depends what they're doing and how you told them to do it
Okay cool. I have a weird problem where I want to use python to do one tasks, but most of my application is in Node.js
12:58
Are there any rows that both apps will be modifying?
@corvid What don't you understand? Python's lambda is just a shorthand way to write a simple function. Feel free to ignore this comment while you're discussing your database locking question.
>>> function map(func, seq){
...     ret = [];
...     for(item in seq){
...         ret.append(func(item));
...     }
...     return ret;
... };
>>>
>>> a = 1;
>>> b = [4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42];
>>> print(map(function(x){return x+a;}, b));
[5, 9, 16, 17, 24, 43]
I guess this more or less proves my closure claims
@PM2Ring A global override for the index base is a nightmare. If it should be done (I argue that it shouldn't... programmers don't count starting from 1 anyhow), it should be done on a per-array basis.
@PM2Ring just in the sort sort(mylist, key=lambda x: x[1]), is it saying "return the element at 1 index, THEN sort by that"?
Pretty much
13:00
guess I'm just not sure how it grabs the context of list in this sense, or how mylist gets pushed to the lambda
@Kevin sweet. Can an anonymous function make changes to the enclosing scope?
@WayneConrad Not via assignment, no. There's no nonlocal or global statements. You can still change state via mutation, ex. List appending
@corvid It's saying "don't sort the items of mylist by their actual value, use the transformed item (in this case, the value of the element at index 1 of the item) as the sort key instead".
>>> a = 1;
>>> (function(){a=2;})();
>>> a;
1
>>>
>>> seq = [1];
>>> (function(){seq.append(2);})();
>>> seq;
[1, 2]
re-cbg
13:06
I have considered making the scope stack visible to the user, so they can modify it if they really want to shoot themselves in the foot.
I don't know the exact details of the implementation, but it's equivalent to
1) Turn the list of items into a list of (key, item) tuples,
2) Sort the new list, only sorting on the key & ignoring the item
3) Rebuild a new list of items by stripping them from the tuples in the sorted list.
So they could do (function(){all_vars[-2]["a"] = 2;})(); if they were truly determined
@Kevin With that one exception, you've recreated Ruby's lambdas (which are true closures). So, of course, I approve.
If the opinions of foreigners matters ;)
I'll take all the approval I can get :-)
13:08
@Kevin You might be surprised how seldom this leads to foot shooting.
Buh I am failing at basic recursion
Hopefully, only people that know what they're doing would ever use it.
I do think that radical self-modification of that kind could allow for some really novel algorithms.
Closures allow for some wonderful things. I came to Ruby from Python (long enough ago that I've forgotten most of the Python I knew), and found them not the least bit confusing, so don't worry about vexing Python programmers.
@Kevin Javascript just decided that that is a "nono"
for optimization and security features etc...
Python 3 also decides the scope of the variables when a function is compiled
Javascript should only be used as a counterexample.
I'd say more about Javascript, but it would generate a lot of flags.
13:16
not really
I'm not terribly concerned with optimization and security at the moment :-)
usually those kinds of "fringe features" that "add power" actually remove the power :D
I'm a visitor from a language where closures add a tremendous amount of power.
@Kevin @WayneConrad I am speaking of this of course
@AnttiHaapala Yeah, that's ugly. Agree, don't do that.
13:19
Python has locals() and globals(). all_vars() would be one small step beyond that :-)
lol python has locals() that actually slow down execution of python
in Python 2 exec allowed creation of new local variables which required that exec was a statement...
otherwise all python code would have paid x % performance penalty on all variable accesses
Interesting.
In python 3 they realized that "since we specifically discourage people from using exec then why do we always support this"
and they were like "ok, lets make exec a function again and not pay the performance penalty anymore"
@WayneConrad Guido doesn't like lambdas, so they're fairly limited. But you can still do closures with them, if you want.
Eg
>>> inc=lambda step:lambda x:step+x
>>> add3=inc(3);add5=inc(5)
>>> [(i,add3(i),add5(i)) for i in range(5)]
[(0, 3, 5), (1, 4, 6), (2, 5, 7), (3, 6, 8), (4, 7, 9)]
That's beyond my Python ken. Let me get this (#&*$ expense report figured out and then I'll start at it a while and figure it out.
13:30
hello everyone
Of those three lines, I understand the middle one. The last one looks like a... is that a list comprehension? But the first line, I don't know how to parse.
I would replicate that example in KS, but I don't have a range function apparently
in Flask, can you do an action every "part" of a route so to speak separately?
inc is a function that takes a single arg (step). It returns a single arg function which returns (step + x). And because of duck-typing & operator overloading, step isn't restricted to being numeric. You can also do stuff like:
>>> inc = function(step){return function(x){return step+x;};};
>>> add_three = inc(3); add_five = inc(5);
>>> [[i, add_three(i), add_five(i)] for i in [0,1,2,3,4]];
[[0, 3, 5], [1, 4, 6], [2, 5, 7], [3, 6, 8], [4, 7, 9]]
Close enough I guess
13:30
>>> f=inc('SO ')
>>> [f(c) for c in 'hello']
['SO h', 'SO e', 'SO l', 'SO l', 'SO o']
>>> f = inc("SO ");
>>> [f(c) for c in "hello"];
'items'
Uhhh.
Guess I know what I'm debugging today.
@PM2Ring OK, I understand it now. How is that a closure? The lambda isn't using its enclosing scope at all (except what's passed into it in its arguments)
(The expensive report, however, I still do not understand)
Just handled a case where a puppetmaster tried to dodge their account history by moving to a new account, using bounties to transfer the reputation, making the old account a sock instead..
Uhm, nope.
Thanks for doing battle for us.
It's not exactly an even fight.
Not when I bring this:
13:36
@MartijnPieters A cunning plan; unfortunately doomed to utter failure. :)
The most expensive thing I have to put on the report I don't have here. The receipt must be in my jacket, which is at home. Nothing makes me as cross as filling these things out.
@MartijnPieters What can be said publicly about how these accounts get discovered?
@WayneConrad Nothing, sorry.
@MartijnPieters wow, are you some kind of.. ninja?
I wanted to make a joke about the "long arm of the law" contrasted against the short stubby arms of Martijn's avatar, but I couldn't bring it together
Now the window of opportunity has closed, more or less.
@WayneConrad Yeah, the inner lambda is getting step from the outer lambda, which is providing the outer scope. I realise that's not very impressive, but as I said earlier, Python lambdas are pretty limited in what they can do, since you can't do assignment in them (without doing stupid shit involving exec).
FWIW, here's equivalent code that uses def instead of lambda, and a for loop instead of a list comprehension.
def inc(step):
    def incrementor(x):
        return step + x
    return incrementor

add3 = inc(3)
add5 = inc(5)

lst = []
for i in range(5):
    t = (i, add3(i), add5(i))
    lst.append(t)

print(lst)
13:42
That helps... the syntax was throwing me. I get it now.
>>> #Who says lambdas can't have state ;-)
>>> count = lambda x=[]: [x.append(0), len(x)][1]
>>> count()
1
>>> count()
2
>>> count()
3
Libre Office chokes on this stupid Excel spreadsheet. I'm going to have to clear it to delete all the stupid error messages, print it, and fill it out by hand. *(#&#(*& expense reports.
@Kevin Actually, I kind of like it. You can't do that in Ruby... it evaluates default args anew with every call.
@MartijnPieters: It appears that I've been prematurely awarded the Python Silver badge. It's on my profile page stackoverflow.com/users/4014959/pm-2ring?tab=badges , but OTOH stackoverflow.com/help/badges/50/python?userid=4014959 says I don't have it.
13:45
The "default mutable argument" trick is useful once in a blue moon... Better not use it unless you document it carefully, though
It's nice to have the badge, but I feel a bit weird (semi-)having a badge I haven't actually earned. :)
Cabbage all
@PM2Ring you reached the criteria today then.
It'll be awarded when the tag score script runs around 03:00 UTC.
Or, wait, what?
Checking.
You don't have the score here indeed: stackoverflow.com/users/4014959/pm-2ring?tab=tags
Exactly. 288 is rather short of 400... unless that 288 is wrong...
Was any answer of yours retagged recently?
Except you don't have anything to account for that difference.
DSM
DSM
13:56
Go away for a meeting, come back, and the room's become very ninja-centric!
Cabbage
27
Q: Tag badges are being awarded incorrectly

durron597On Stack Overflow, I have 428 java questions answered with a total score of 775 as of the writing of this post. However, I was just awarded the Java tag badge. It seems that this is happening to a lot more people than just me. Tracked tag badge incorrectly shown as earned Incorrect tag badge...

That link explains everything
It's old as dirt though, and I don't care for the accepted answer.
14:01
10 hours?
I don't think we're talking about the same thing.
The link I'm speaking of is from 2010
That's more than 10 hours ago I think
Hello everyone.. :D
@MartijnPieters Thanks. According to that post the bug was fixed 5 hours ago...
@PM2Ring Which is why it shows as not awarded everywhere. I think the remaining 'badge' will be gone tomorrow.
14:06
No worries. If it's still there tomorrow, I'll let you know.
Greetings to Mitch & Richard3.
What does "defunct" mean in the context of subprocess?
It’s synonymous to zombie process
i.e. terminated process but it still exists
I have been trying to write a python code to change a response code in the mitmproxy traffic... a guy suggested I use the json library rather than regex, which is a good idea but my response traffic starts with a line of javascript code then the json.. what do I do? :S
if (typeof sa_inst.apiCB == 'function') sa_inst.apiCB({
"AS": {
"Query": "toor",
"FullResults": 1,
"Results": [{
"Type": "AS",
"Suggests": [{
"Txt": "torrentz",
something like this..
I cant use json.loads() on this right? :\
@Kevin What poke said. But I'm curious why the OP is using subprocess to run a python script.
json.loads(responseText.replace("if (typeof sa_inst.apiCB == 'function') sa_inst.apiCB(", "")[:-1])?
14:19
right!! That would work.. :D
one step closer...\m/ Thanks poke!
It’s very hackish though ;P
DSM
DSM
Maybe ''.join(s.partition("{")[1:]) or something?
If possible, you should try to get a non JSONP response
DSM
DSM
Similarly hackish, though.
'slice off the first line and add "{" to the beginning of the result' was my first instinct, in regards to quick-n-dirty solutions
14:21
basically I am using mitmproxy to intercept traffic between my phone and an apps server... I need to change a few parameters on the fly every time the app makes a request and then change the response that comes as well..
import javascriptcompiler
globals = javascriptcompiler.eval('var sa_inst={};sa_inst.apiCB=function(data){window.x=data;}\n' + responseText)
data = globals.x
# TODO: Implement javascriptcompiler module
ROFL
JSONP is wonderful in JavaScript, not so wonderful in other languages.
JSONP is wonderful in browser environments only.
Fair call, poke.
If only browsers supported Python as an alternative to JavaScript...
what're some good minimum requirements to say before someone asks for help to a programming question? Person keeps asking me questions without even reading the error :\
14:25
wow - received my first "pay slip" in over 7 years... weird feeling
DSM
DSM
Because of some paperwork difficulties, a new hire was getting physical cheques every month for a while. Felt like I was missing out.
@corvid Garlic Alert!
@corvid Is this a debuging question? If so, this Meta post may be helpful: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/291234/…
@DSM well, they get 24hrs a week from me (ex client as it were) - I kinda threatened I had better stuff to do elsewhere etc... they panicked... so I'm on their payroll for the same money I charged (maybe a little less - but not massively so)
at work with intern
@corvid I like the Socratic method: "Have you read the error message? What does it say? etc."
DSM
DSM
14:31
Ehh, was wondering why suddenly everything was an eight-space tab.. unclosed brace!
If the json is like
"exchange": "B",
"price": {
"id": 1
"value": "true"
},
"exchange": "C",
"price": {
"id": 2
"value": "false"
},
How do I change the "value" parameter only for "id": 2 ?
My code is replacing all the "values" in the json :\
@WayneConrad you mean just asking the right questions so they are directed towards the right answer? Only problem is that takes a long time
So does doing the fishing for them.
DSM
DSM
@Richard3: have you made a real dictionary from the json via json.loads?
@Richard3 is it enclosed in a list?
exchanges = [{
  exchange: "B",
  price: { ... }
}, {
  # ... etc
}]
14:34
my code is like this...
data1 contains the json
with decoded(flow.request):
data1 = json.loads(flow.request.assemble())
fixup(data1, 'isAdmin', 'true')
i send it to a function to change "isAdmin" or other values to "true" etc
but that changes all the values.. :\
by chance, are you using MongoDB? Because that happens when you don't use the $set operator
Welp. I used the "auto-configure" option on my monitor, and it moved the image of the screen an inch to the right, so I can no longer see the rightmost inch of my desktop, and the leftmost inch of the monitor is just black. I can play with the "horizontal position" setting, but setting it all the way to -50 only reduces the problem to half an inch.
Factory reset does nothing. Casual googling reveals no one else with the same problem.
Did you try turning it off and on again?
No. I'll try it now.
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitmproxy/mitmproxy/master/examples/modify_response_body.py

I am trying to edit the response traffic in mitmproxy..
14:36
@Richard3 what is the fixup function ?
No change
@corvid I suppose you could be more direct. "Please don't come to me until you've read the error, looked at the stack trace, and used a reasonable amount of googling to try to figure out what's wrong. These are skills you must learn."
Did you try plugging it out and in again?
def fixup(adict, k, v):
for key in adict.keys():
if key == k:
adict[key] = v
elif type(adict[key]) is dict:
fixup(adict[key], k, v)
@Kevin How is your monitor connected to the computer?
14:39
@poke Interestingly, that fixed my never-before-mentioned blurriness problem that prompted me to try a factory reset in the first place.
... But it didn't fix the alignment
@Richard3 can you share a data1 dict ?
data1 contains a json like i showed above..
@WayneConrad I have a laptop which is connected to a docking device, which is connected to the monitor in question via what I think is a DE-9 cable.
@Richard3 but the json you show don't contain isAdmin
ohh that was an example... i copied from my code... very sorry..
14:43
@Kevin lol…
@Kevin On my desktop computers, switching from a VGA cable to HDMI has always fixed problems like that.
If the json is like
"exchange": "B",
"price": {
"id": 1
"value": "true"
},
"exchange": "C",
"price": {
"id": 2
"value": "false"
},
How do I change the "value" parameter only for "id": 2 ?
Yep, I was being intentionally ambiguous, to avoid answers focusing on the whichever method is used to read in the data bytes. — ideasman42 4 mins ago
meh…
this is the question..
so a fixup(data1, 'value', 'true')
Changes all the "value" to true
@Richard3 it is not a valid json
14:46
@Richard3: You can ensure code posted here is indented properly by hitting Ctrl-k before hitting "send". Alternatively, with a multi-line post, a "fixed font" button will appear under the "send" button - just hit "fixed font" before hitting "send".
DSM
DSM
@Richard3: unfortunately the example you pasted can't be copy-pasted -- it's missing commas and an outer structure.
@poke @WayneConrad, my third attempt at a factory reset fixed it for some reason. I'm going to blame cosmic rays for interfering with the first two. Thanks for your help.
@Kevin :) But switch to HDMI when you get a chance, if the docking station has it. Picture quality is often better.
cabbage everyone
ohhh... Yes.. i missed commas.. :\
Okay ctrl+k got it.. thanks!
14:49
@WayneConrad yeah the problem was that one document table was emptied, so all the foreign keys broke. Took around 3 jumps to find
@WayneConrad I accept the cruddy picture quality because it's my secondary monitor. My primary one has something better than DE-9 but probably worse than HDMI.
The last time I fiddled with cables, things would spontaneously stop working, and my conclusion was "the total quality of the images of the monitors has a set upper limit - the fancier one becomes, the more basic the other has to be"
I guess the laptop only has so much bandwidth for sending video data???
@Kevin I was thinking of getting a laptop. You are reminding me of all the strange little annoyances they tend to have.
Sometimes my home laptop will spontaneously adjust its brightness, from its usual "as dark as I can make it" to "way darker than it's possible to configure manually"
And then it slowly ticks back up to normal over the course of two minutes.
Okay, I've developed some code that checks whether certain requests are forbidden. It's all happy and unit testy, but now I want to deploy some code so that 3rd parties can test their sites too.
I've lumbered this in unittests, but I feel dirty for having done so.
What's the proper way of doing it?
arhgghgh rbrb for a bit
14:59
If I play any game on Steam for more than forty minutes, my wireless internet speed drops 90% until I reboot. This persists even if I close steam and/or kill its process in task manager.
In short: the computer gremlins that power all modern technology, are angry at me and I don't know why.
@richard3 looks like this function work gist.github.com/xcombelle/1dcfbb50a62aa4d94194
@Kevin You and I are soul brothers, gremlin-wise. You are living my life.
only fix the id == "2", "value" value

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