« first day (1655 days earlier)      last day (3521 days later) » 

14:00
Phone interview went well. Just waiting to hear back from lots of people now.
@Ffisegydd Good stuff - fingers crossed
If we're talking old school AD&D, you can only level up as a druid if you find a druid already at that level and defeat them in ritual combat.
Be a wizard instead. Less competition.
I note the Java room is resembling Lounge<C++> just now. It really is pleasant in here.
It's the static typing. Makes people cross.
5
I wonder if the author of that math question will appreciate my Python implementation of his problem, given that he asked in the C# tag.
14:02
I think the language is irrelevant as long as you explain the math well enough.
It's an algorithm question really - language unimportant
Everything is more or less language-agnostic except a weird approach to implementing the Point class because I got lazy.
Hopefully they can figure it out from context.
cbg
@JRichardSnape @JRichardSnape ouch
Yeah - I was less than happy.
umm.. I have two computers. They are connected with an ethernet cable. Both are running Arch Linux (both are updated to run the latest of all softwares). I set the TCP/IP address for each: ip address add 10.0.0.0 dev eno1 and ip address add 10.0.0.1 dev enp2s0. Now when I try to ping one from the other, I get nothing. Sometimes I get: Destination Host Unreachable or Do you want to ping broadcast? Then -b -- any ideas?
14:11
<(?:"[^"]*"['"]*|'[^']*'['"]*|[^'">])+>
Couldn't get the accept :-( I guess an implementation in a foreign language isn't worth as much as an inherently shorter algorithm with no implementation.
@PeterVaro You say "Now when I try to ping..." Does that mean that you used to be able to ping, but can't now? Also, how are they connected? Directly, or via a hub or switch?
@WayneConrad directly via an ethernet cable; and yes, yesterday they were working.. but not today.. and I tried hundreds of different setups for the last 6 hours.. and now I'm giving up :P
Sorry for the spam - just intrigued at the easter eggs page I just discovered.
@Kevin - unlucky - maybe they're linguistically dogmatic in C# land
@PeterVaro What does the routing table look like?
14:16
@Wayne this is the first one:
default via 192.168.10.254 dev wlp5s0  metric 302
10.0.0.0/8 dev eno1  proto kernel  scope link  src 10.0.0.0
192.168.10.0/24 dev wlp5s0  proto kernel  scope link  src 192.168.10.88  metric 302
@PeterVaro Not sure, but don't you need a crossed over cable (i.e. null modem rather than standard ethernet) unless you're going through a hub / switch. Maybe modern network cards don't need that - it's a long time since I did direct wire stuff
@JRichardSnape not nowadays => almost all new ethernet cards can switch teh cables for you virtually
@PeterVaro showing my age :(
@PeterVaro I'm not familiar with that. Can you please show the output of the venerable route command?
and as I've told you: it was working yesterday..
14:17
@PeterVaro and my inability to read
@WayneConrad here it is:
Destination     Gateway         Genmask         Flags Metric Ref    Use Iface
default         gateway         0.0.0.0         UG    302    0        0 wlp5s0
10.0.0.0        *               255.0.0.0       U     0      0        0 eno1
192.168.10.0    *               255.255.255.0   U     302    0        0 wlp5s0
@JRichardSnape np at all -- thanks for trying :)
@PeterVaro Hmm. How about route -n
Kernel IP routing table
Destination     Gateway         Genmask         Flags Metric Ref    Use Iface
0.0.0.0         192.168.10.254  0.0.0.0         UG    302    0        0 wlp5s0
10.0.0.0        0.0.0.0         255.0.0.0       U     0      0        0 eno1
192.168.10.0    0.0.0.0         255.255.255.0   U     302    0        0 wlp5s0
user559633
oh @PeterVaro set the hosts to 10.0.0.1, 10.0.0.2
I think (I'm not a network guy) that packages destined for the 10.0.0.0/8 network are being routed to 192.168.10.254. The're leaving on the wrong NIC.
14:22
@tristan what difference does that make?
user559633
.0 in the last octet is not valid for netmasks with > 24 bits
I think you want to get "route -n" to show you something like this for the ten-dot network: 10.0.0.0 10.0.0.1 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0 eno1
lemme try
@tristan I don't see any error with a final 0 quad. What do you see?
Just to be clear in what I'm suggesting, the "10.0.0.1" in what I put there should be the IP of the NIC, not the IP of the other computer. So on one computer, it'll be "10.0.0.1" (that computer's IP of the NIC), and on the other, "10.0.0.2"
@tristan sir, you are a fudging genius.. genius indeed..
you just ended my 6 hours long suffering
user559633
14:26
I used to work as a network engineer.
user559633
Not an uncommon mistake :)
@tristan so if I want to use .0 at the end, I have to add /32?
user559633
For a class A 10.x network, the .0 and .255 at either end of the block are typically reserved (some hardware/implementations disregard this but hey).
user559633
You can use <24 bit netmask and have a .0
user559633
14:29
That's because the broadcast and gateway addresses (typically and unless otherwise specified) will no longer lie on the subnet slices in that octet at 0 and 255
superb! thanks again, mate!
user559633
Cheers, no worries
user559633
I'd avoid .0 though -- you'll probably run into stuff that doesn't adhere to the RFC and otherwise gets confused
I had no idea. And that's why you hire a network engineer.
user559633
eh just ask online. unless you're dealing with routing protocols, it's all pretty straightforward and you can get really far with just rote learning
14:31
I too have learnt something there. Nice one @tristan
user559633
@WayneConrad for what it's worth, you were mostly right about the routing table...
user559633
if the two are connected directly or via a switch, the link layer will say "oh i know that dude" and then the two will just be able to learn each other via ARP
user559633
also, lots of implementations look at the mask and see if they can just fire a packet to DST
user559633
anyway, here's a picture of a cool looking dog
@tristan I knew that route -n needed to be done. After that, I'm just faking it.
user559633
14:36
user559633
14:47
I need a name for my system administration automaton/operations dashboard
user559633
I was thinking System Automation Droid / Management Application Network (SAD MAN)
user559633
Horrible Automation Layer
user559633
Intelligent Droid Operating Internet Things
14:50
Dashboard Of Operations Management
user559633
Ooooh, I like that
TPS Report
user559633
What does TPS stand for?
user559633
Because the daily mailing could be the TPS report
Oh, I didn't know that "TPS Report" was a real thing. I was referring to its use in Office Spaces.
user559633
14:53
Yes, Testing Procedure Specification
TPS Report Cover Sheet. Then the allusion will be obvious.
user559633
But if I'm going to co-opt it, i need to pretend TPS stands for something else
user559633
Tristan's Programmatic System
Not Python - but a weird thing has just happened. I share a folder on my Windows box at work (NTFS). Colleague tries to copy a lot of data from it (100GB +). Somehow the copy fails at about 40GB, leaving files in one subfolder on my disk corrupted. Probs can recover it, but anyone thoughts on why? Google suggests "corruption happens..." but no specific bug report / solution.
I like J Richard's "HAL" suggestion.
user559633
14:55
HAL is used too often
yeah, I thought it was a bit tired as I typed it. I'm still up for DOOM. You could make a hidden feature where it fired a low-res first person shooter circa 1995...
Past Kevin implemented KS list comprehensions in the laziest possible way and now I have to clean up his mess >:-(
user559633
@JRichardSnape i wonder if microsoft copies each chunk to a new file, updating the timestamp, then when the transfer fails, it has to stitch it back together
user559633
@JRichardSnape yeah, i like that because the theming is done and i can represent the state of the network with doom guy faces
user559633
14:57
@JRichardSnape Is the subfolder on your disk part of what's being shared?
@tristan yeah - I was musing around that - but it corrupts the original, not the copy. It seems odd to alter the original at all
@WayneConrad yes
user559633
@JRichardSnape yes, because the original has a last accessed date too
Hence my enhanced procrastination this afternoon - I'm watching chkdsk recover...
@tristan ah, I see what you're driving at
user559633
The only problem with DOOM is that the service is primarily an API
@tristan Tristan's Online Thing Administrates Like It's The Awesome Robot I Apparently Need
14:58
@ZeroPiraeus Nice
user559633
Total Itarian?
user559633
I'm actually pushing to let me open-source the dev entirely. What i have so far is actually pretty useful -- you give it aws keys and it gives you a drag and drop interface for creating new instances/changing load balancer configurations/adding github services or package installs
Pub/sub is acting weird :\
user559633
Heh, that's awesome @ZeroPiraeus. Not sure why my mind did greedy matching.
user559633
15:04
s/greedy/lazy/ (don't want to ping you again)
another drone pic :)
user559633
is that your drone?
user559633
[nevermind, snooped on your github]
DSM
DSM
Late-morning cabbage for all.
user559633
Morning :)
15:11
I live in San Diego, that's Scripps beach.
this is weird... could arrays/list be considered "Objects" in some languages?
user559633
@corvid sure! languages like python
DSM
DSM
Likle pyt Aargh, tristan beat me to "like Python".
@corvid yep
And yeah, it's my drone, I took the pic yesterday evening.
15:13
@tristan ah okay. Just weird this interpreter/shell shows arrays as objects, guess it logically makes sense
Even KS has List inherit from Object
>>> List.type.parent;
<type 'Object'>
Single inheritance, huh?
yeah.
I never use multiple inheritance anyway, so I'm not putting it in my language
user559633
I just looked at the weather for San Diego. Looking at real estate now.
user559633
Is San Diego part of California that won't have water soon?
15:16
In the continuing recovery of my disk corruption (I'm sure you're all on tenterhooks) it seems like some files had somehow become orphaned. Among those are the files that I knew were corrupted and some suspicious looking dos-style named temp files in the same directory. I'm blaming windows copy at the moment. Stay tuned for further updates.
@tristan I believe so.
@Kevin Good choice. Multiple inheritance is the devil.
I sure am writing a lot of raise Exception("Not implemented yet") today
@tristan yes, soon we will all look like this:
user559633
:( @davidism
user559633
I'll just come out and visit
15:20
Once upon a time, wars were fought over salt. Water might be the next thing people kill each other over.
user559633
Doing last looks at places that are warm
user559633
lol S&M
Yep, prices are ridiculous here.
There's enough water for everyone, it's just economically difficult to get it to the right place.
California merely needs to build a tremendous pipeline and steal rainwater from Washington.
15:22
Hah, I thought you were commenting on the price, then I looked at the picture.
@Kevin Interesting. Reminiscent of Amartya Sen on famine...
Even Washington has droughts. It depends upon snowpack for water storage, same as California.
i.e. it's basically a problem of distribution not shortage
cbg @PM2Ring
15:23
I think cheap energy is the cure. Fusion, for example. Then you just build desalination plants.
user559633
@davidism Yeah, I think that price is pretty mundane for a cookie cutter condo complex
Sciencemen, please invent cheaper desalination plants, thanks in advance
was always amused by seeing signs for these guys on construction sites back in Sheffield ...
but is it really a "water" problem in california, isnt it the case that most of the water is used for growing food? i understand that that is economically import, but a bit different than having no water at all
Eating is good. Selling food to foreign countries for money to buy things you need is good. So you can't stop doing those.
15:25
It's not even that most of it is used for growing food, it's that apparently farmers are not very efficient about it. I don't know all the details though.
The old criticism is "it takes a gallon of water to grow one chestnut to maturity"
There's a fair bit of water on the planet, but the volume's pretty small compared to that of the planet itself. And the volume of fresh water is considerably smaller. I'm rather fond of this image from the USGS:
Ah, that old chestnut.
user559633
Part of it is irrigation systems are expensive and don't get updated/maintained
15:26
All Earth's water, liquid fresh water, and water in lakes and rivers

Spheres showing:
(1) All water (sphere over western U.S., 860 miles in diameter)
(2) Fresh liquid water in the ground, lakes, swamps, and rivers (sphere over Kentucky, 169.5 miles in diameter), and
(3) Fresh-water lakes and rivers (sphere over Georgia, 34.9 miles in diameter).
Credit: Howard Perlman, USGS; globe illustration by Jack Cook, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (©); Adam Nieman.
user559633
People grow things outside of their cultivation zones
user559633
Pesticides require tons of water to distribute and wash off
@PM2Ring Oh, sure, put the deluge right over my home.
i am sure the us will figure it out and make changes when things get too bad :)
@WayneConrad The good news is, you wouldn't suffer for long.
"supersonic omnidirectional jet that destroys everything in its path" isn't a phrase you see every day
15:29
Haha, yeah.
It's all about the flows, not the absolute amounts.
Ninja-water
Interesting california drought article, I thought theatlantic.com/features/archive/2014/02/…
15:45
I used those values as an example, the real list has almost 200,000 values — C Mac 13 mins ago
Not sure why they picked Kugelman's answer as accepted then, when I showed that that solution is 20% slower.
DSM
DSM
Not sure I'd call a 20% difference a "huge difference"..
@DSM would you like a 20% pay cut? :p
cbg all
DSM
DSM
@Jon: given that there are jobs I could have which would pay me more than I have now, in some ways I've already taken a 20% (or more) pay cut.
Doesn't keep me up at night. :-)
"up at night"? Wait... wat... one isn't supposed to be up at night!? This could be where I've been going wrong the last of many years...
DSM
DSM
To be fair, I don't usually get business-related calls in the hour of the wolf, and you do, so my sleep is usually uninterrupted.
15:50
Hi everyone, for speed comparison I'm writing two versions for all functions, keeping in fun.py and fun_vectorized.py. Another file import from either of these files and use the funs to run simulations. Is there a good way to switch from using one version to another?
DSM
DSM
import fun; import fun_vectorized; use_fun = fun_vectorized; print(use_fun.some_fun(2))?
user559633
Oh god new @JonClements avatar I WAS NOT PREPARED FOR THIS EVENTUALITY
@Heisenberg just import from 1 file that does the switch
or just do:
import fun_vectorized as fun
@tristan Ninja's are popular - starting work for 2016 elections already! woof!
@JonClements Puppies are equally popular :'(
15:54
@thefourtheye so yeah... a ninja puppy - how can it fail!? :p
@AnttiHaapala can I indicate the switch with a function argument somehow? For example, simulation_fun(use_vectorized=True/False)?
user559633
@JonClements Probably if you leave it inside the house for too long
@JonClements Yay :-) :-) :-)
"Two there should be; no more, no less. One to embody power, the other to crave it"
user559633
"Vote for the candidate that won't wee all over your rugs"
15:55
@Heisenberg why so complicated :P
you can do:
@tristan but if you don't vote for them - they'll wee in your shoes! muhahhaha
simulation_fun(fun=fun/fun_vectorized)
user559633
russian tech
user559633
pictured: defeated dog
15:56
russia just lost contact with progress :P now that is a pun
user559633
huh?
Progress was the name of a Russian spacecraft
@AnttiHaapala well it's because in my simulation_fun I have to call many functions, each of which have two versions
The Progress (Russian: Прогресс) is a Russian expendable cargo spacecraft. Its purpose is to deliver supplies needed to sustain human presence in orbit. While it doesn't carry a crew it can be boarded by astronauts when docked with a space station, hence it being classified as manned by its manufacturer. Progress is derived from the manned Soyuz spacecraft and launches on the same vehicle, a Soyuz rocket. Progress has supported space stations as early as Salyut 6 and as recently as the International Space Station. Each year there are between three and four Progress flights to the ISS. A Progress...
@Heisenberg you said they were in a module, my suggestion is to switch the module
15:58
OK, I guess "is", not "was"
@AnttiHaapala and we can switch model like this? simulation_fun(fun=fun/fun_vectorized)
why not, then within your simulation_fun you can do
fun.func1(x), fun.func2(x)
holy crap
!!
Thanks @AnttiHaapala !
this is no Java :D
is there a reason this is expected to work? Any search terms I can google to read more on?
16:00
(Actually in Java you'd give an instance of a different class :P)
@Heisenberg python tutorial?
I mean why wouldn't it work that way?
well because fun is an function argument, and I have only seen them used as variable within the function
so I didn't expect that using it as the module name would work
Gotta love the run up to the general election... no one's really said what they're going to do, but they'll do it better than the other guys.... sighs
Me: "That sounds like a great idea... where's the money coming from for that", Them: "What we're not going to do is make cuts like the other party*", Me: "Errrr...."
I am worried about the General election in general.
Ha - they'll never answer the question. They give XY answers to clear questions
@JonClements That's really not true: there've been more policy announcements this time around than I can remember since I was old enough to follow GEs properly.
anyhooo, I might have to run away from this terribly unproductive day and start a terribly unproductive evening
16:06
@Zero a lot of them though appear to be made up on the spot which concerns me.... "oh... people want this now... we disagreed with that in the house 5 years ago... but okay, let's dump it out there then"
Well, from cough certain parties, yes ...
@Zero Natalie Bennet is also not doing some thing she was due to tonight, as she's "lost her voice"
labour.org.uk/manifesto/all ... scroll down to "Budget Responsibility Lock". It's true that the Tories started throwing uncosted commitments around like confetti for a while when the "Miliband is a loser" schtick fell flat, though.
@Zero well... my money's on another con/lib...
I just can't see a majority happening... someone's gonna have to get in bed with someone else...
I really am going to leave, before my partisan politics come out. There be dragons there. rbrb
16:12
Yep, it'll be a hung parliament, definitely. Can't see another con/lib coalition having the numbers, though.
@JRichardSnape rbrb! Enjoy your un-productivity
@JonClements Hadn't heard about that. I feel a little sorry for her; she's obviously not cut out for this kind of attention (and is the first Green leader to get it).
@Zero she seems to "fluster" very easily - which is a shame
Unless something changes my mind - I've chosen who I'm voting for as he strikes me as a nice guy that's lived in the area for 50 years and could express his concerns and plans on how he'd like to improve it...
A good rule of thumb is, of course, "never trust a Unionist", but the DUP are giving ever stronger hints that they won't prop Cameron up, and even with them he pretty much needs a miracle.
@JonClements Yep.
Mind you - I'm in a con safe seat... so it's a "wasted" vote... but I'm going to make it anyway
(I don't even like the party he stands for tbh... but he's the most certain I have of the lot I've meeted/greeted would make a good local MP - so - going on that basis)
16:19
Is that the UKIP guy?
I think the only way to force the major parties into a sensible voting system after the fiasco of the AV referendum last time is to refuse to vote tactically: that'll make things less predictable, and they hate that.
@Ffisegydd yeah... sadly... I'm voting for the UKIP guy
cbg
@JonClements you're choosing based on 1 thing on the agenda...
that's how they do it :D
Hitler & al
re-cbg
re-re-cbg
Mr. A. H. mentioned, let the flags fly high :D (and I am not talking about Antti Haapala)
16:22
@Antti well... I'm choosing on the candidate that strikes me as genuine about the area and not retaining a seat or spouting the least b*s
@JonClements Ouch. Is there really no-one else worth a cross? I mean, from my POV if you are in a Con seat it probably hurts them, and so helps my preferred party, but still ...
IIRC joncle said that UKIP is the one that would stop spending spree on foreign aid
Yeah I wouldn't vote for a UKIP candidate if they were a) a lovely person and b) promised to make everyone in the constituency a bloody millionaire out of their own pocket.
Because of their party politics.
@Zero well... I'd like to stick with libdem (my preferred), but after meeting the candidate - he couldn't tell his arse from his elbow :(
@Antti I believe they want to cut it from £12billion to £3billion or something
why wouldn't you all vote for a candidate that promised election reforms :D
then you'd not have to have this headache any more :D
16:26
Rudimental's new song premiered on BBC R1 yesterday
@Antti 'cos a lot of people can't even be that bothered about voting - we even had a vote for an AV system which I voted for... but that didn't have exactly a great turn out and the main parties that wanted it, their supports of course voted no.... so sigh
DSM
DSM
@Zero: some people, myself included, have reason to take the importance of conscience protections seriously; the fact that you consider the idea manifestly absurd strengthens, not weakens, my thoughts on the matter.
"What do we want?"
"An electoral method that meets the Condorcet criterion!"
"When do we want it?"
"When it would beat each of the other proposed methods in a two-way election!"
how about stv within the entire country or larger constituencies
16:29
@Antti the FPP system is just too ingrained right now - with not enough people that bother voting
oh no stop the EU, now the cars are going to call emergency calls automatically
@DSM In that case, I have strongly-held religious convictions that prevent me from associating with menstruating women, and I refuse to allow them into my shop.
what if I am drunk-driving and then crash my car, then it will call the emergency number and I'd be screwed ;)
@Antti serves you right for drink driving as far as I'm concerned
That sounds like the "if you've done nothing wrong, you've got nothing to fear" argument...
DSM
DSM
16:32
@Zero: did you intend that as a kind of reductio? Unfortunately for you I take freedom of association seriously.
see I am trolling you UKians to become pro-EU :d
As far as conscience protections I agree with it being allowed to object to things directly related to the religion in question, for example a Christian priest/minister should not be forced to marry a gay couple if it goes against their religious conscience, but I don't think people should be able to object on more general grounds (such as the bakery incident a while ago).
@DSM Wow, really? Er, yeah, I did. Probably best to drop the subject then ...
what about a christian doctor? do they have the obligation to serve a gay customer?
@Joran well... I'd like to think a Doctor's ethos and purpose would always trump their religious ethos
DSM
DSM
16:34
@Zero: don't feel bad. People who tend to think in terms of state power often find more libertarian attitudes scary when they encounter them. :-) We can let the matter rest.
ah you would think
I think there's something in the Hippopotamus' Oath for that
.... but alas there is a very recent incedent of it not happing
OK, new topic please.
The well known Hippopotamus' Oath which goes "NRGHHHNNHHHHHNNNNN!"
3
a woman pediatric doctor (for young children) refused to service the adopted baby of a gay couple
I walk away for two minutes and everything's gotten weird.
@davidism Err... I'll just make a cup of tea, then I can moan about how lovely the weather is...
That'll learn you not to leave the computer.
16:35
@Ffisegydd now there has been a heated discussion in Finland if doctors and nurses can refuse to perform abortions "against their religious consciousness" and my say is no.
I have two episodes of Daredevil left and no one has actually used the name "Daredevil" in the show.
if it does not suit you, get a new job.
isn't that fundamental problem to define what is a religion then ?
Hiphopopotamus's bottomless lyrics are so deep.
Im all for you having the right to refuse service for being an asshole or something like that ... but there are some things that should be protected (race/religion/color/etc)
16:36
It's like how "Superman" was never mentioned in the film Man of Steel.
DSM
DSM
Huh?
Hip Hop Hoppotomus ... and the Ryhmosaurus
if i have revelation that the earth was greated by a giant lightswitch, and then i threaten to firebomb everybody that pushes those innocent light switches... is that a religion then ? who decides that :)
@Kevin spoiler?
hehe jk ...
Okay... let's just have a BPFL in charge of the UK - I'll get it sorted :p
16:39
sure and I couldnt refuse you service based on that logic... however if you actually firebombed or were just an asshole in general sure I could refuse you on that
i noticed something odd today
>>> a[:]
[1, 2, 3, 4, [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]]]], [1, 2, 3, 4, [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [...], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [...], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [...]]]], 1, 2, 3, 4, [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...]]]], [1, 2, 3, 4, [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [...], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [...], [1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [...], 1, 2, 3, 4, [...], [
but not because you believe that
Hey everybody, maybe you should watch that video again. Wasn't that great? :)
@user22723 and why do you think that's odd?
16:40
well, they dont look the same
The ellipsis are standing in for more nested bits.
It's just, for some reason, a[:] "ellipsis-covers-up-nests" differently to a.
DSM
DSM
Which is a little odd, come to think of it.
why does the sliced one go further
compared to the normal one
I love that song ... its my favorite FotC :) ... lol I didnt even realize that video was wat it was ...
Python uses reference counting* to determine when to insert ellipses into a self-referential list. a and a[:] aren't referentially equal, so it's reasonable that they would have ellipses in different places
16:40
Aliens.
(*probably not the real name for the technique, but it's close enough)
@Kevin nah - it's definitely aliens
DSM
DSM
It's still a little surprising. I would have guessed that they'd be the same.
Basically, a is a[5] is True, but a[:] is a[:][5] is False
Uh, I think.
thats odd
16:42
(probably a temporary cabbage)
If you made a deepcopy of a, I bet it would have an identical representation as a.
maybe sliced does some weird stuff with repr
who was saying the disagreed withme about "Halt and Catch Fire" ... ok as im going into the season further its becomeing less about engineering and more about bullshit artistry ... still interesting but not nearly as good as the first couple episode
is the a nested?
@user22723 a is nested within a?
16:43
so they're not really the same only equal
just through a.append(a)
@user22723 Why?
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: looks like you guessed right!
exactly, they're not the same
DSM
DSM
>>> a = [1,2,3]
>>> a[-1] = a
>>> a
[1, 2, [...]]
>>> a[:]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]
>>> copy.deepcopy(a)
[1, 2, [...]]
16:44
idk. felt like it
a is a[:] is False is True is True is True....
DSM
DSM
Well, that's always generally true.
@user22723 Goofing around to learn is a good reason.
yes, but it means that the top-level is not same
one has a circular reference to the top level, and the other only to nested lists
but they're equal anyhow
16:45
I wonder what Ruby does in that case... lemme see.
i wonder if this would be used in some real produciton thing a ling for anything
@DSM what happens if you compare the deepcopy with the original? :D
does python throw up?
@DSM Ok, in that case I'm bumping up my confidence in my explanation to 95%
I redact my "Uh, I think" message.
>>> a == b
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
RuntimeError: maximum recursion depth exceeded in cmp
Neat.
16:46
it just seems like a[:] just goes down one extra level
explicitly
Cool, Ruby does exactly the same thin as Python when you inspect something that includes itself.
a = [1]
a << a
# => [1, [...]]
a[:] does what's called a shallow copy...
hm
but if you do a[:][:] it doesnt expand it any further
of course, it just does 2 shallow copies of the topmost list
@user22723 you can do this:
16:47
cbg
a[:] is a
and a[-1] is a[:][-1]
If you wanted to expand it further you'd have to do something like a_copy = [item[:] if isintance(item, collections.Sequence) else item for item in a]
or use copy.deepcopy
but then you cannot compare ^
:D
or just in general - don't have an object referring to itself? :p
DSM
DSM
In principle we could try harder to prove that they're equal.
16:49
@JonClements What happened to you??? Did you mutate???
@JonClements ding ding ding ding
@Bhargav I'm a NINJA PUPPY now!
>>> import collections
>>> a = [1,2,3]
>>> a[-1] = a
>>> print a
[1, 2, [...]]
>>> print a[:]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]
>>> print [item[:] if isinstance(item, collections.Sequence) else item for item in a]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]
@JonClements Looks so much like you did that using MS paint :D
16:51
I love the "Assembly" one.
Do I need to reply to this
I wonder why the first comment has more votes than the question .. ? If you can vote a funny comment, why not vote for the question as well. — JonasCz 33 mins ago
:)
I want to draw one for Ruby, but it'd look so much like the Python one as would make no difference.
@BhargavRao Nah. He's just a sour puss.
I thought so. He is a newbie
DSM
DSM
Aaargh. All I want to do is merge some geojson features together and it's way harder than it should be.
16:55
One more strike at the dead horse.
import collections
def partial_deep_copy(seq, depth):
    return seq if depth == 0 else [partial_deep_copy(item, depth-1) if isinstance(item, collections.Sequence) else item for item in seq]

a = [1,2,3]
a[-1] = a
for i in range(10):
    print partial_deep_copy(a, i)
[1, 2, [...]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]]]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]]]]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]]]]]]]
[1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [1, 2, [...]]]]]]]]]]]
@Kevin How do I parse that return statement? That's similar enough to how we'd do it in Ruby, but different enough that my brain doesn't quite get it.
@WayneConrad I'll compose a longhand version, one moment.
Thanks. I'm guessing it's a funny looking case expression.
def partial_deep_copy(seq, depth):
    if depth == 0:
        return seq
    else:
        ret = []
        for item in seq:
            if isinstance(item, collections.Sequence):
                ret.append(partial_deep_copy(item, depth-1))
            else:
                ret.append(item)
        return ret
I guess the a if b else c component is particularly tricky. It's a bit like the ternary operator b ? a : c in other languages.
@Kevin Yes, that's the part I've never seen before.

« first day (1655 days earlier)      last day (3521 days later) »