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00:23
I think that is a good thing to dig into @Adam Smth
and if you really wanna add value throw some angularjs in there (or rect is also good i hear)
00:38
hello room
with open(infile, 'rb') as infile_:
infile_read = infile_.read(148)
header_hex = binascii.hexlify(infile_read)
header_prep = struct.unpack( '>', (header_hex))

print(header_prep)

Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\Death_Dealer\Desktop\test.py", line 30, in <module>
header_prep = struct.unpack( '>', (header_hex))
struct.error: unpack requires a bytes object of length 0

Anyone have any idea why im getting this error: / I have tried a couple different things with binascii but keep getting this error.
 
1 hour later…
02:06
Anyone else getting weird login issues?
Seems to have stopped now. Was geting auto-logged-out, then being able to immediately log in, but then getting auto-logged-out again whenever I tried to do anything. Odd.
@Death_Dealer you should use unpack with something like struct.unpack(">i',header_hex)
Cabbage :-)
02:24
cbg :-)
02:40
cabbage @thefourtheye & @ZeroPiraeus
Cabbage @XavierCombelle
03:26
Cbg
 
1 hour later…
04:51
I appear to be the only person who actually read the question properly here:
2
A: Extract elements of a sublist to list strings too

Zero PiraeusHere's a solution using itertools.groupby(): >>> from itertools import groupby >>> x=['+27', '05', '1995 F'] >>> [''.join(g).strip() for s in x for k, g in groupby(s, str.isdigit)] ['+', '27', '05', '1995', 'F'] This works by splitting each string in x into groups of characters based on whethe...

Still the strip doesn't feel right to me
Hmm, seems like a pragmatic solution to me ...
Can you think of example data broadly similar to that of OP where it'd cause problems?
OP hasn't mentioned his intentions clearly.
True (and the first revision is a nightmare), but I think it's pretty obvious what OP wants.
>>> x = ['+27', '05', '1995 F']
>>> [item for items in x for item in re.findall(r'\w+|\W+', items) if item.strip()]
['+', '27', '05', '1995', 'F']
How about this?
05:07
Yeah, that's reasonable too. Gonna post it?
(I am quite aware that the nested listcomp with groupby is probably beyond OP, but want them to actually ask for a deeper explanation before providing it)
05:19
I am not posting it, you can include it if you want :-)
Even RegEx might be difficult to understand for OP I guess
I'll leave it, then. Don't want to make my answer any more complicated than it already is.
Cabbage @MartijnPieters :-)
@Martijn it may interest you to know that the mod.ninja domain is currently available (at an exorbitant price) ... :-)
$190/year at gandi.net ... or you could get blue.ninja for a very reasonable $95,000/year ;-)
Does anybody have work with Parallel port printing
05:34
yay :d
got an accept from the necromanced exec compatible in Python 2 post
@underscore like, 15 years ago
@ZeroPiraeus @MartijnPieters moderator.ninja is 2 $ per year :d
maybe we should buy it as brib a gift for martijn :P
Which one? ;-P
@AnttiHaapala Well-deserved :-) +1
@ZeroPiraeus just realized :D
the six exec is broken :P
def exec_(_code_, _globs_=None, _locs_=None):
    """Execute code in a namespace."""
    if _globs_ is None:
        frame = sys._getframe(1)
        _globs_ = frame.f_globals
        if _locs_ is None:
            _locs_ = frame.f_locals
        del frame
    elif _locs_ is None:
        _locs_ = _globs_
    exec("""exec _code_ in _globs_, _locs_""")
ah hmm no, it is not that broken... :D
it just does some very stupid things.
@Antti is there actually any reason for six's exec_() to exist at all?
Some weird edge case or something?
I suppose it's always possible someone will want to write this compatibly:
>>> x = exec("pass")
  File "<stdin>", line 1
    x = exec("pass")
           ^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
:-)
05:52
@ZeroPiraeus that might be reason
or someone wanting to map exec
in any case it does not make any sense at all as six is 2->3 forward compatibility library :d
anyone who wants to use "six" to backwards-port python 3 library to python 2 is screwed already :d
exec in Python 3 can never return anything apart from None
so using the return value is completely useless, now the question is does anyone want to use it as a function reference...
@AnttiHaapala Ha! That's evil ...
@ZeroPiraeus as you can see, the exec_ exists to "also work around the fact that Python 2 uses different syntax"
variable_factory = map(exec, ["a%03d = None" % n for n in range(1000)])
though you'd have to consume it :P
Just call next() on it each time you need a new variable ;-)
05:58
hehe
yesterday I looked into scala
and I decided I hate it
Now, where are those variable-variable questions in the canon ...
Didn't get any further than "JVM, eh? No thanks".
no, I like JVM, I like clojure, I like java 8
and scala, it is just a big mess
like the new perl
To each their own ...
I was a perl coder once
Finland was trying to dispatch 50 rescuers with dogs to Nepal, but the plane didn't get anywhere since Nepal said it wouldn't be allowed to land... :?
Hmm.
Okay, I really need to go to bed. rbrb and good luck with the bounty investment experiment ...
06:08
@ZeroPiraeus not paying off :P
earned at least 200 reputation on 42 days
hmmm??
I thought it was 42 yesterday
do the user deletes change reputation from past?
If you're looking at stackoverflow.com/reputation I think that updates as soon as you pass 200, not at midnight UTC (but I might be wrong).
Now I really gotta sleep ...
hehe
got a downvote on my exec/eval/compile :D
06:41
Hey up
Hii all
06:54
hi
Are @property methods initialized when we create its class instance?
@TanveerAlam scusi?
what do you mean by "property methods", "initialized" and "creating" and "its" and "class instance"?
Class x:
@property
def data(self):
return 200*200
o = x()

Will this initialization will do the 200*200 already or when I will call it
o.data
good morning :)
07:15
@TanveerAlam when you call it
Cbg :)
whenever you access o.data, the data() method is called
every single time
if you want a lazily evaluated property, it is possible to do that too, but it does not exist in the Python standard library (don't know why)
if you need a property that is initialized lazily but only once, you can use for example this reify decorator from Pyramid (source)
Take it easy @AnttiHaapala, it's only 9am :-)
07:25
cbg
@ZeroPiraeus :-P
Aw, coding.ninja isn't available anymore.
@MartijnPieters moderator.ninja is cheap
07:26
invisible.framework.coding.ninja would have been hawt
I actually did look at plenty of these ninjas too some time ago
@AnttiHaapala thanks
@MartijnPieters python.ninja is 90k
:P
May have convinced my girlfriend to learn programming. This is either a very good thing or a very bad thing.
07:32
@MartijnPieters moderator.ninja had 2$ promotion, 2 yrs 36 $
@Ffisegydd I'd bet on the latter
@Ffisegydd you'd be soon re-unemployed :D
I already am unemployed. :P
Good morning everybody, do you think it is bad to choose PyQt over TkInter in terms of commercial issues ? I mean PyQt is owned by a company, so may be in the future they will change their mind and make it available for sale only by removing its GPL license ?
there is also the PySide
though I do not know how alive it is
You support PySide because you are Finnish :) it is Nokia stuff :)
PUPPY NINJA REPORTING FOR DUTY! What evil needs sorting today @Martijn? Bark!
3
07:36
@Nakkini nokia's got nothing to do with it anymore
but the IP of Qt is currently held by a finnish co
@JonClements :-D
@JonClements Pupppppppy :D
cbg fellas... gonna grab a cup of tea, bbias :p
@MartijnPieters so will you register the moderator.ninja or do I need to steal it :d
Go right ahead!
07:45
Do you think it is possible to make the widgets displayed by Tkinter as those that Macintosh displays ? In PyQt you can do it, but Tkinter can not do it by default, may be there is a way to achieve that anyway ?
@MartijnPieters python.uk is free, hinthint
7 €/yr
ah but i guess python.co.uk exists :d
07:59
.py is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Paraguay. == Second-level domains == com.py coop.py edu.py mil.py gov.py org.py net.py una.py == External links == IANA .py whois information http://www.nic.py/ - Network Information Center Paraguay where you register .py domains....
08:11
bah... and so.py is not available :(
@JonClements What about cbg.py ?
And how dare you eliminate the cute Puppy that once was?
cbg @Inbar :p
...but... but - I'm still cute? :*(
i have an iphone 6 plus, is there a way to write code on it ? would help me with boring family dinners and when i am on a plane or train
As big as it may seem, an iphone screen is very small thing to write code on
@JonClements You are hiding your cuteness behind a mask of deceit!
08:24
@Inbar it's all part of the the "master plan"! muhahahhaha muhahahha... errr... woof!
mount a real keyboard, install a proper text editor and you'll be fine @StephanKetterer
luckily at home, due to poker i have really big screens :)
@Stephan you should learn to play bridge :)
sorry to ask in that way, but . is there money in bridge ?
well... not any money in poker unless you're fairly good? :p
08:28
oh
then following your logic, i am fairly good :P
use to play a lot of poker in my younger years... much less so now... bridge is more fun... probably a sign of getting old though
i play poker only for the money.. if it was up to having fun.. i would go outside or play counterstrike or something:P
"outside" - I keep hearing that word.... thought it was a myth though :p
i thought bridge is a game for old women in all seriousness
but i heard it is very challenging
I reckon you'd be fairly good at it if you chose to put your mind to it :)
08:33
would prob read the rules and then take like 1 week just to do math on it
@JonClements You know it as "meatspace"
cbg
right... breakfast eaten... s'pose I should actually call some clients and give them updates sighs
rbrb for a bit
seriously.. the hardest part of the course i am taking is understanding the instructions, support forum the same..guy writes me 30 lines which only says, create a dict with one key/value pair
Hard understanding instructions? Try [Ugg Tect](https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/60131/ugg-tect)

*In Ugg-Tect, first released as Aargh!Tect, players work in teams to construct fabulous – well, let's say "functional" – structures out of materials lying around them. All the players are cavemen, however, so you have only rough blocks with which to build and you can communicate only through primitive gestures and sounds. Ugungu!

When you're the architect on your team, you see a building plan that shows how the blocks should be placed in the finished design. To get the builders on your team
Haha, just saw the question on ru.SO: "I got 2 expensive books about programming, but I lost my enthusiasm. What movies would you recommend to help me regain it?"
that is deep :)
too bad hostnames cannot contain underscroes
i'd for one register init.py and future.py
Why is the formatting screwy?
08:55
bc I am lazy
@AnttiHaapala Is that an answer to me? I was asking it about my previous post. Which - as you can see - has screwy formatting
:P
maybe you had a zero width character before )
can anybody guess what that means in context of mongodb ,- query the database by using the field 'label'
Exactly what it says. Query the database using the label field.
@StephanKetterer Which part don't you understand?
09:02
in all the videos they always querry with 2 inputs, like for example db.find{"dawdad" :
"dawdad"
}
like 2 entries
random.sample(['Query', 'Database', 'Using', 'Field', 'Label']) ?
@StephanKetterer that isn't 2 inputs, that's a field_name and a field_value.
@StephanKetterer save your sanity and stop learning about mongodb now :D
i dont understand how those are not 2 inputs :(
09:03
@AnttiHaapala Whats wrong with mongodb ?
if i give a field name and a field_value into it
everything.
Yes but they are one single input.
Either on their own is useless.
You have to have a pair, a key-value/field_name-field_value pair.
@StephanKetterer First of all, it is a single variable, in this case, a dictionary with a single key-value.
09:04
starting from the name, the name is a lie, it says as if it was a "database management system"
@Ffisegydd i get that, but when they just give me label, isnt there something missing then ?
@AnttiHaapala You mean it doesn't stand for "Data Badonkadonk"?
"The market has reached a tipping point where most developers and IT organizations realize that modern applications cannot continue to be built on relational database technologies"
I don't know dude, I haven't read your assignment.
09:05
@InbarRose no, I mean that people could msitake it for "database"
it literally just says what i pasted :P
lol got an answer to the "eval/exec/compile" question
(and also a downvote to my answer) :D
09:44
@Ffisegydd can i show you 3 lines of code of my new querry and you tell me whats wrong if you can ?
def update_db(data, db):
    for key in data:
        x=db.find({'label':key})
        for a in x:
            print a
data is my dict, and i thought that way i can print out all the datasets where label is equal to one of my keys
09:59
@StephanKetterer Please don't ping individual users, as per sopython.com/chatroom
i am sorry
11:00
re-cbg
Hey up
Hey up, Fizzy
So - are you a fellow northerner? I had assumed a welsh connection given the name - but I realise cultural assumptions always dangerous...
J Richard if that is your real picture, that is a glorious beard
Why thank you. Indeed it is real. I have nothing to hide. Except my chin, obviously.
You remind me of a Welsh Rugby player, Adam Jones.
Guy's an absolute legend, a national hero.
11:05
Ah, I see he has equally fine taste in tonsorial matters :)
I am honoured by the comparison
6ft and 19st/120kg. Wouldn't want him tackling you.
stupid mongodb will not spill her secrets to me
I see you've been introduced to the horrors* of NoSQL @StephanKetterer. *No flaming please - I'm just old fashioned, I know. I'm sure there are times they are better than RDB / LDAP Dictionary etc, etc, etc...
@Ffisegydd Oof - indeed not
its just part of the course i am doing, and i think i am pretty close, i created my dict i have to insert, and i know know how to adress the collection, but i still dont know how to write it , since i should only insert it in those places where the keys of my dict exist in my collection
def update_db(data, db):
    for key in data:
        x=db.arachnid.find({'label':key})
@StephanKetterer Hah - I'm no expert or fan. Here's a thought, though. Think of find({"key_name": "value"}) as "give me all the records where key_name == value
11:10
this gives me all the data that needs insertion, when i look up the type on x, it gives me mongodb cursor
OK - you're past where I thought then. That looks alright to me. So - you need to use the cursor to go through the matching records (i.e. those that have the right key names) and add the info from your dict (data)
@StephanKetterer have you considered searching for "mongodb insert documents" on Google?
i did and watched videos... i am confident i will have it by the end of the day.. its the final thing in that module
You might get something like api.mongodb.org/python/current/…
11:14
@AnttiHaapala cbg
look there already and did not find anything that seemed useful to me :(
Well I don't believe that you've read it properly, I'm sorry. Because it shows you explicitly how to insert documents.
i read it properly just did not understand it :)
so yeah maybe i suck at reading
or maybe it is mongo
Or maybe you're trying to update an existing document rather than insert one?
11:16
does mongo has a second meaning in english ?
because in german it is a slur for people with down syndrom
It is similar to a similar slur in English.
@StephanKetterer It can be that in English too. But certainly looked down upon greatly / almost taboo.
yeah here too
It's also a skateboarding term though (mad Tony Hawks Pro Skater skills)
Good knowledge, Fizzy
11:22
def update_db(data, db):
    for key in data:
        x=db.arachnid.find({'label':key})
        x.classifaction.insert({key:data[key]}
first i put the cursor to the datasets where i am at the right spot ( called x) then insert the new data from my dict
makes so much sense in my head :(
I don't know what you're trying to do, but it doesn't sound right.
:(
yeah i am sure its wrong,because it does not work :)
You want to insert a whole document into your collection, yes?
I agree with @Ffisegydd. Step back. Look at the assignment. Are you a) trying to change values in an existing document. b) trying to insert a whole document into your collection?
I think it's a) - I think @Ffisegydd is assuming it's b) and unless you know and grasp the conceptual difference - you're not going to be able to do it or get much help
i have the datasets arachnid, now i have to select those where label is the key of my dict, thats the ones i wanna input new data . The data i wanna put in those places are key: and data[key], they should be saved not in arachnid directly, but in a subdictionary called classification
11:28
So. Is data by any chance, a dict with the common name of spiders (or a Unique ID of some kind) as its keys and a dict with classification information as it's values?
data is a dict i wrote myself, it has only one key/value pair
cbg
but i cannot just put it in my db. since i have to find out which datasets they belong to
thats why i make the thing with x
to find those datasets where i have to put it in
Can you see for yourself whether you're trying to do a) or b)? It's an important conceptual difference.
11:31
cbg @poke
So what you're actually trying to do is update an existing document?
if update means to change a already existing , key value pair , then no
No - it doesn't mean that. You are trying to add something to an existing document ?
Which is the same as updating an existing document.
You're modifying an existing document.
11:33
yes
oh then sorry big missunderstanding on my part
Whether that means changing an existing k:v pair in it, or adding a new k:v pair to it.
i thought updating means "changing the value of something"
It's important to understand the conceptual difference between the collection, the document and the data in the document. I'm not an expert on MongoDB, but the conceptual difference is really important
hence my insistence on my a) vs b)
ok got it, updating it is :)
if you substitute "content" for "value" in your sentence - you will see you are, in fact, changing the content of the Document. So it is an update. You are not inserting a new Document
cool
11:35
{ 'label': 'Argiope',
  'uri': 'http://dbpedia.org/resource/Argiope_(spider)',
  'description': 'The genus Argiope includes rather large and spectacular spiders that often ...',
  'name': 'Argiope',
  'synonym': ["One", "Two"],
  'classification': {
                    'binomialAuthority' : 'Researcher Name'
                    'family': 'Orb-weaver spider',
                    'class': 'Arachnid',
                    'phylum': 'Arthropod',
                    'order': 'Spider',
                    'kingdom': 'Animal',
thats the structure inside db.arachnid
Onto the next. For each key in your data dict, you are finding a (one or many)? Document with a matching value in label. That is x
Is that after you've modified it?
i have to update the entry 'binomialAuthority' : 'Researcher Name'
the data for it is saved in my dict
So the classification dict already exists?
If you are sure the cursor x will only ever point to one document - i.e. label is unique - then you can proceed...
11:37
so i tried something like x.classification.update(key:data[key])
You're just replacing the string 'Researcher Name' with something like 'Joe Bloggs'
no, its not there at the moment, all the others liek family, class, etc are
i def need to update it in classification, and i thought x.classification is the way to go
What does db.coll.find return? Isn't it a dict?
A lot of this is terminology, then. You might google "pymongo update subdocument". Your terminology is really important.
Can you do print(type(x), repr(x)) to describe the object.
11:43
x will be a Cursor. However - the line above is worthwhile to check what you've got.
gives me this
(<class 'pymongo.cursor.Cursor'>, '<pymongo.cursor.Cursor object at 0x7f983212ac90>')
gonna watch all the videos and read all the threads i can find :)
we had fscking dataloss bc of someone who does not quite know how to write code :d
Read the docs here - docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/method/db.collection.update/… . They relate to what you're trying to do. You might also look at stackoverflow.com/questions/5646798/… .
11:49
thank you , will do it after lunch. and then solve this :)
i am sure it is not more than like 2 more lines of code
@Stephan your code doesn't work at all. You can't use a Cursor object in that way.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AttributeError                            Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-35-282991d87abf> in <module>()
----> 1 x.classification

AttributeError: 'Cursor' object has no attribute 'classification'
What's the canonical for I need to prepend my string with that u character again?
Yeah - lunch for me too - I think you're right 2 lines of code. But trying to use . off the Cursor won't work as @Ffisegydd has just shown you
In fact - you can probably do it with one .update call and don't need to do the find first - read the 39 upvote answer in that question I linked to...
lunch rbrb
Okay I've got a nice solution to the problem @StephanKetterer
dont tell me yet please :)
12:01
import pymongo as pym

client = pym.MongoClient()

db = client['arachnids']
coll = db['arachnids']

def update_db(data, db):
    for label, name in data.items():
        db.arachnids.update({'label':label},
                            {'$set': {'classification.binomialAuthority':name}})

data = {'Argiope': 'Joe Bloggs!!!'}
update_db(data, db)
argh - delete, delete, delete - she's going down Cap'n... ;)
That is the solution, though, I reckon...
Using $set and details from stackoverflow.com/questions/13710770/… and the
nah its fine , since i dont understand it yet, i have to work through it anyway :)
db.arachnids.update({'label':label}, {'$set': {'classification.binomialAuthority':name}}) will update every document that matches {'label':label}. It'll update it by setting the subdocument classification.binomialAuthority as name.
They're docs from mongodb itself, not pymongo, but it's the same idea.
Note that "By default, the update() method updates a single document. Set the Multi Parameter to update all documents that match the query criteria."
12:16
guys, why is honey so delicious?
It is one of the best foods ever.
bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/s3cmd/+bug/1449530 <-- why you should never trust any software whose development is hosted on sourceforge
:D
Got a phone interview in 40 minutes.
TIL also that most bacteria cannot live in honey, which is why mead was so popular back in the day
@corvid It's due to low water pressure, because most of the available H2O molecules are bound in the sugars.
Same goes for salt.
12:26
@RomanLuštrik you into chemistry? Is that the same reason why it's so viscous?
I'm a biologist. Sugars make liquid viscous, yes. Another molecule that can be viscous or even solid is a fatty acid (oils, butter) but due to another mechanism.
that's pretty awesome, what kind of stuff do you do in biology?
when we set setStyleSheet() in PyQt, we must declare it only once ? Because I declared one in a function for the QMenuBar and the other in an other function related to QToolBar and this latter only is run
I'm now studying biostatistics and I'm mostly into ecology now. I left the basics of chemistry in my sophomore year -- years ago. :)
I'm currently helping develop a geodatabase, working on simulations of bears and preparing to estimate a number of bears in Slovenia/Croatia this Fall.
In my spare time, I work on my PhD and do other small projects (like contributing to adegenet package for R).
BEARS! I luh bears. I saw one a few weeks ago on a hike. Are they endangered in Croatia?
12:38
No, the population seems to be high enough. They're even being hunted in both countries. Where did you see the bear? What species?
Black bear, mountains around MA. Black bears are somewhat common but grizzlies are rare. Seen a few in Montana but not much outside there
I remember listening to a lecture about grizzlies in Montana. They host about 50 bears in size of an area where we have 400 in Slovenia. :)
I think we rank among top 3 countries in bear population density.
ah you lucky. Montana is supposed to be bear country in America. Even saw a mom bear with her cubs in the wild
Did you boop her nose?
12:49
We hope to make bear watching way more accessible in the near future, soon.
there should be more wolves. There are waaay too many deer round these parts, vile little critters
Do we have a dupe for this float vs int division in 2.x?
@corvid Lynxes do a good job, too. :)
That would probably be bobcats/cougars in your part of the world.
Only seen one lynx in the wild :\ they don't like New England, too hot
@AnttiHaapala "(Yes, this happened to us)." - hope it wasn't too critical
12:59
I have yet to see a live wolf and I helped take care of an anaesthetised lynx. They have such fluffy fur, you just want to take it home.
I like their little ear tufts, they're like big Maine Coons
@Roman those are the photos of the lynx you looked after?
No, but they were made by a fellow coworker.
13:05
Ah ok
The photo of lynx handling would be like this. delo.si/clanek/133986 But the one I was with was dry.
Brassica oleracea, all. Nice pics.
Fagopyrum esculentum right back at you.
I just spent 40 minutes writing a big mathy answer and I have a creeping suspicion that I missed a decimal place somewhere
Maybe I'll write up an implementation and test it out.
Decimal place? It looks OK to me.
13:18
I already made a mistake in writing that a/b = target.vel / interceptor.vel, when that's actually b/a
... Or is it -_-
It's all above me. All I remember of trig is sohcahtoa.
@JRichardSnape nothing of importance was lost :P
Dot product is only one semester ahead of that, so you're almost there :-)
@JRichardSnape but they were our backups
Found this in my 1yo answer: msfloat = '0.{0}{1}'.format(''.zfill(6 - len(str(dt.microsecond))), dt.microsecond) D:
But the OP was happy and accepted my answer...
13:24
@AnttiHaapala It hurts when you realise they're gone. And I appreciate the emphasis on bcakups - anyone writing a backup tool should have "be reliable - fail noisily" etched onto their screen. Our IT support lost my PhD database at one point. They didn't seem to realise that an intermittently failing snapshot was not a backup. Luckily I could reconstruct most of it. Glad you didn't lose anything important.
13:40
Augh, my equations don't give the same answer as the other guy :-(
Ah, I forgot to convert to radians.
I'm always doing that.
Ok, now it's even farther away from the other guy's answer.
I have a bit of a feeling that when he's dropped from vector notation into scalar to solve the quadratic he might have done something wrong. I might have a little check (gah - you've well and truly distracted me!! :D)
Ah, I found my error. Now we agree perfectly.
So we're either both right or both wrong :-D
Ah that's good - I shan't go through the maths (great minds and all that)
13:51
If they are both going the same speed, would you end up with an equilateral triangle?
Yeah.
If the ratios of their speeds are 1, then the ratio of the side lengths are also 1.
Guys I just want to be a shaman
No you don't, you want to be a druid.
I have a level 100 shaman and a level 100 druid
Druid and Hunter.

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