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12:00
I've had that ready for months
user559633
lol
user559633
i'm too tired to understand the code i wrote a few months ago
Better 12 days late than never!
@tristan you're probably too old to understand it now
@XavierCombelle HAPPY BIRTHDAY
user559633
"Better 12 days late than never!" optimistic heart surgeon
12:02
Two weeks to payday.
Too much month at the end of the money
@RobertGrant Thanks for the link and to the rest for your input.
user559633
someone lend me 500,000 euro funny moneys, i want this house immobilienscout24.de/expose/80603485
@RomanLuštrik sure :)
@tristan are you a Greek politician?
user559633
@RobertGrant i'm actually two small greek poltician-children in a trenchcoat
What's crazy is that for that much money you could buy such an unbelievable house over here
Like, astonishing
user559633
12:04
yes, and you could buy a villa in a worn torn country for that money
user559633
or 3 blocks in detroit
Or a small flat in central London
user559633
with the deed to all 14 liquor stores in those 3 blocks
Or nothing in Oxford
Apparently Oxford has now overtaken London as having the worst salary:house price ratio in England
user559633
or an apartment with cockroaches in new york
12:05
And I want to live there
maybe a cupboard in NYC
Maybe I should live there...one day
user559633
oooh, oxford, i love their shirts
every apartment in NYC has cockroaches
user559633
@tzaman untrue :)
user559633
12:06
a matter of time, but untrue
user559633
i had 2 without cockroaches and 4 without mice
I think I'm lying; there's probably no flat in central London for that little money
heheh, you're lucky then :D
also, happy birthday!
@tzaman Ok. I guess that's simpler than using logarithms. :) It'd be interesting to see how it compares speed-wise to Antti's loop. Converting an int to a string is pretty fast, though, since it happens at C speed.
user559633
:D
12:09
@tristan because asking how old someone is can be considered rude, I won't do that. But just out of interest, how many full orbits of the Sun has the Earth done since you were born?
user559633
@RobertGrant between 14 and 19, exclusive to all numbers between 14 and 19, inclusive
I'm hoping it's a multiple of that number, or else I'm going to hate my life now
user559633
@vaultah ;)
May 1 then? @tristan
You've literally just copied your question here @HarshitaJhavar?
user559633
12:13
@vaultah nope, long game
@PM2Ring Yeah, I thought about doing it the log10 way but that has potential precision issues, and it's more of a mouthful. len(str()) is straightforward and easy to understand.
I have a list in prolog final(Sentence). Sentence = [John, is, dancing, behind, the, house]. I want to pass this list in python text to speech program in a function of kind engine.say(Here I need to pass these values) I am using pyswip and I am working on ubuntu. Please help how can I do this.
Pardon for the previous text, as I am working from my phone.
Happy Birthday @tristan :-)
12:15
Can somebody help me in its solution?
user559633
heh, now i feel bad because it's picking up momentum
user559633
there's no april 31st and i was playing the long game on a joke hoping someone would notice around the 1st of may
Oh yeah :(
Tearfully crumples up the happy birthday banner
@HarshitaJhavar you asked your question about an hour ago, you should probably wait and give people chance to answer before bringing it up here.
user559633
awww, that's why i decided to detonate the joke @RobertGrant -- everyone started being so nice
12:16
Wait, no. This is unacceptable.
Apr 31st is hereby defined as May 12th.
therefore it is Tristan's birthday.
@tzaman True, but the precision issues shouldn't be a problem unless the integers are crazily big, eg with a bit length > 10**15
@PM2Ring yeah, true enough.
I cba to timeit right now though
gotta drink some coffee and toddle off to work
@tristan Haha, what the hell does this mean?
@HarshitaJhavar Are you looking for engine.say(*Sentence)?
@tzaman Me neither. :)
12:18
@tristan well, I noticed that a few weeks ago :P
user559633
@SomeGuy definitely david, right away
@tristan Has anyone ever been so far as to want to do look more like?
user559633
@SomeGuy i'm sure that some has taken such measure to do much so more also
@tristan But if they have then why didn't they do more look like the way they should have been?
@HarshitaJhavar I saw your question on the main SO site, but I can't offer any suggestions, as I've never done any text-to-speech work in Python, and I'm unfamiliar with pyswip. However, your question is a bit difficult to understand. If you can improve the grammar of your question you might get a better response to it.
user559633
12:22
@SomeGuy have been was is even more such to do was even already far
@tristan I think far enough isn't what being should do to be what thinking is
user559633
@SomeGuy but then should agree far already being one so more do to like
@tristan Yeah, I guess so
user559633
@SomeGuy Glad we could work that out
12:28
people write libraries in such different ways ._. I'm not sure if it's good or bad
Hello Python boys and girls I am here
I was just in the PHP chatroom; My eyes are bleeding.
I'm reminded of the old riddle:
Q: Why is a duck?
A: Because one leg is both the same.
@cpb2 Friends don't let friends use PHP.
6
blinks
Wha'?
What is the maximum length accepted for a Python module allowed to have ? (programmed by you or me)
user559633
size of your memory + swap
12:36
There is no maximum.
user559633
@Ffisegydd yes there it -- maximum size that will fit in any sort of memory as it is defined by the OS
is not there a PEP for it ? I searched I did not find myself
Is ElasticSearch any good? I just want to use it to transform documents... will it take long to configure?
@Nakkini no. There's no practical limit (Tristan raises the point about available memory)
Allowed in spec vs runnable error
user559633
12:37
@Nakkini unlikely to be a pep because the code gets exec'd to bytecode, so you'd have to write some file that's like 40 billion lines long
user559633
longer, really.
But it's not like you can say "Oh no my module is 101MB, as opposed to 100MB, I must now delete it and leave my family in shame."
ok thank you very much people
user559633
haha, who even has a family anymore?
You're my family tristan Bobby :3
12:38
Certainly not people who pretend it's their birthday chokes back tears
OTOH, if you're writing Python sources that are 100MB you should probably consider re-organizing your code...
user559633
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'family'
@Ffisegydd woohoo
That validates all the abuse I receive
user559633
i'm going to create a social network exclusively for models that drink too much and make impulsive decisions.
tristanandmodelsthatdrinktoomuchandmakeimpulsivedecisions.com?
Wow, it's actually taken
Actually what about beautifulfacestupidbrainbook.com
12:42
cbg
user559633
Updated Date: 14-dec-2011
Creation Date: 28-jun-2007
Expiration Date: 28-jun-2017
user559633
wow, you weren't kidding
Yeah :)
whois.net says it's available
@tristan foiled
12:44
Suck it!
user559633
oh no our elaborate ruse it up
/me buys it
user559633
buy me checkrepublic.com while you're at it
How on earth were we figured out; that was such a likely url to have been taken
user559633
i realllllly want that one
12:44
@tristan you must now leave your family in shame. You are hereby banished to Germany!
user559633
@Ffisegydd oh, okay, just give me a minute to collect my accoutrements
12:58
Ever see someone ask a question like "how to call an instance of a class"? and cringe? They probably even try Googling it. But have you seen anyone do it after, say, June of last year?
@AaronHall You can call an instance of a class if it has a __call__ method. But I guess that's not what you're talking about. :)
@PM2Ring print(sorted(a, key=lambda i: i and i/(10**ceil(log10(i+1))-1), reverse=True))
Flask question; can you mutate data which falls under a regex path?
user559633
@corvid what do you mean?
@app.route('/game/<game_slug>/player/<battletag>')
def player_profile(game_slug, battletag):
  return jsonify(Players.findOne({ 'battletag': battletag }))
But since the route is under /game/<game_slug>/, I want to intercept that json and attach Games.findOne({ slug: game_slug }) to it before it's returned
13:08
Was someone talking about a supermarket job yesterday ;) Was this it? :D :D :D
@JRS I was. And no it isn't it :P
@corvid but jsonify did encode it already
Well say I was just returning plain json, and wanted a key for game in there
I think a werkzeug adapter would work maybe? Saw that on SOPython at some point
@Fizzy :D Didn't think so - just amused when it popped up next to SO on the careers thing. Although, thinking about it, I should be worried that it's trying to match me to PHP jobs wanders off in worried thought
@corvid look at URL preprocessing
you can have a function to pull the game slug out and attach the related json onto flask.g
and then put that into the response later
13:12
hmm, that makes sense. I'm using a slightly different framework but the same concept should apply I think
ahh. It just smelled like flask :) but yeah, the concept is pretty universal
as long as you have some concept of a request context, and being able to do preprocessing in it
@AnttiHaapala That works.
user559633
would you guys use a website/phone app that's just yelp for bars?
@tristan If it didn't have the paid reviews and general sketchiness of Yelp, yeah.
user559633
but like, only showed you reviews from friends and friends of friends?
13:17
only if it tells me which bars have awesome mead so I can be weird
user559633
thanks guys
user559633
barcopolo rides again
That is a beautiful name.
user559633
thanks
I'm always in favor of a good pun-based name.
user559633
13:18
haha same
user559633
barcopolo is my second favorite domain name that i own (behind narcissism.me)
Ooo, that's a good one too.
user559633
less good one: owl.is
user559633
(like owl eyes)
13:20
@tristan I love them. They're playing at Mountain Jam this year, and I kinda want to go
Hrmph, the Session object in this does not have an option for deleting a key. Are you not supposed to delete keys from the session?
user559633
oh, also, i think this is the first time i've seen you in here @MorganThrapp -- welcome!
user559633
@corvid why would you?
Last night I was being hit on by a partner in a health startup looking for a CTO. Their tech of choice? php. Funny, his card said CTO on it. It kinda makes sense if you think about it.
@tristan I've been in here for a bit, but mostly I just lurk and read. :P But thanks!
13:21
@tristan I dunno, seems weird to have it just sitting around
user559633
@corvid you can use .pop on session
user559633
or use the global/g object
user559633
brb
@tristan yeah, in flask that's true, but this framework only seems to have set, setDefault, and equals
13:27
"If the dirt hadn't been there, the picture would have been better"
That's fine, I'd probably swap them though.
"The picture would have been better if the dirt hadn't been there." sounds more natural, but either way is understandable.
Thanks :)
@JRichardSnape Could you take a look at this: stackoverflow.com/questions/30188237/…
@Jesse are you continuing a previous conversation, if not please don't ping specific people like that.
13:43
do controllers generally perform their own action, then their child controller's action?
I suppose this counts as a typo. The OP attempts to call a function using square brackets instead of parentheses: stackoverflow.com/questions/30192652/…
@Jesse As stated above - it's generally a bad idea to ping people unannounced like that (have a read of sopython.com/chatroom to familiarise yourself). As it happens, I saw your question, but haven't got the environment to help on that one, I'm afraid, so didn't respond. Your problem looks like it can't find something - probably the .dll/ .pyd you need. Try moving them (maybe to your python install directory, or wherever you're running py2exe) and see if it solves the prob.
user559633
14:03
that's the 3rd time someone has begged for help on that question
user559633
especially annoying when the official documentation will answer it
user559633
nope what?
Nope sir
user559633
lol
14:09
the official documentation doenst awnser it, sir
user559633
yes, it does, really :)
user559633
or if you just have a thing against the official documentation, this one also tells you why: pythonhosted.org/setuptools/setuptools.html
@RowanKleinGunnewiek it's so unbelievably unlikely that you have all the documentation memorised and could tell that it wasn't in there that it looks pretty foolish to say something like that. Obviously @tristan would only say it's in the official docs if it were there; why would you say it isn't? Just to sound good?
user559633
@RobertGrant my favorite thing is that he asked twice this morning, suggesting he doesn't know how to solve it
user559633
14:11
i don't know how to fix it, but i do know better than to read the manual!
I think they're obviously struggling and probably friends. Google-Fu might suggest this ... sourceforge.net/p/py2exe/mailman/message/6937663 . @RowanKleinGunnewiek people here are especially resistant to direct requests for help on relatively new main site questions - we all tend to watch them. I know you might well have spent ages and are banging your head on the desk before you even ask.
user559633
@JRichardSnape yeah, they're coworkers or something. still, asking in room right after opening a question -- against room rules, asking again * 2 -- annoying, refusing to read and learn -- annoying * 2
It puts people in an awkward position. If we now help - we might be encouraging some behaviour that many in the community do not like and for good reason. If we don't, it could be quite rude and we're all here to help / learn anyway. So. Have a look at the links / pointers. if the docs, moving the files or the py2exe forum don't solve it, Go back to the question - edit all that in and get a really succinct precise question that someone might be able to help with
@JRichardSnape well put
user559633
14:18
anyway, i suspect more garlic will be needed to finish this recipe
Cbg
Voted
This would have to be the deepest nested set of for loops I've ever seen, in any language: stackoverflow.com/questions/30192597/adfgvx-key-brutforcing
hehe, @jesse was about to awnser to your posts but then he couldn't cuz he didn't had enough points cuz of the downvotes xD
Hah. Linking to a question is a double-edged sword.
14:26
yesterday, by Zero Piraeus
... which is unclear, and abandoned by OP. Normally I'd delete my answer to mask my shame at answering it, but as it's the only answer, I feel a bit icky about that. Can I get some close votes on the Q (followed by delete votes as and when)?
Thank you kind sir.
cbg
I am in desperate need of a Django Guru
There must be someone on codementor.io?
DSM
DSM
Morning cabbage for all.
14:28
Cabbage @DSM
wondering for long time what Cabbage means?
@RowanKleinGunnewiek I'd say read the room rules but you'd probably say it's not in there
@RowanKleinGunnewiek sopython.com/salad
Hey up
DSM
DSM
14:30
@RobertGrant: it does have the "Incidentally, if you've just been greeted with the word "cbg" or "cabbage" then you may want to have a look here..." line. I want to say Jon added that, but I'm not 100% sure.
I red that but why?
@RobertGrant Maybe
Read all of it.
why say cabbage instead of Hello? :P
@RowanKleinGunnewiek Read all of it.
DSM
DSM
14:31
@RowanKleinGunnewiek: don't worry, not everyone here speaks Salad. But everyone has to learn to put up with those of us who do. :-)
@DSM Carrot!
Rumours speak of those who are actively against the Salad movement within the sopython room. Who these brave, handsome souls are... no one knows...
I was a heretic, but saw the light.
Speaking of py2exe... Would you trust an encryptor written by these guys? stackoverflow.com/questions/30193792/… :)
14:37
Oof. Just sent them the details for my bank account ;)
DSM
DSM
Odds are currently rotation-shift at 2:1 and XOR at 3:1.
It's not the same lads who had the nested for loops, is it? Maybe that's their encryption algorithm.
javascript stack traces are intense... how does python manage to make them so much more simple?
DSM
DSM
"I am trying to do something with Python, but no luck so far." Well, at least we're not being drowned in irrelevant details..
Aww, you're not supposed to comment on why you upvoted something?
14:46
@DSM he's probably trying to wrestle one
DSM
DSM
@QuestionC: I comment, if I'm drawing attention to a positive aspect which might have been overlooked. Or if it's just really, really awesome.
@JRichardSnape I don't think so, the nested for-loops guy's trying to crack a WWI-era encryption en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADFGVX_cipher
I'll comment about my upvote if the question is exceptional in a specific way rather than being generically good.
Ex. Last week when a question had an MCVE, and about twenty assert statements that could be used to verify whether a prospective solution actually works
@RowanKleinGunnewiek I consider it completely apropos to mock these silly children who want to appropriate an entire class of words to mean something else entirely. Sociologically, the ingroup wants to recognize other members of the ingroup more easily so they can treat them more favorably. So this bizarre slang is now their shibboleth.
Test cases are amazing and I want the OP to keep doing it; the comment lets them know that.
14:50
As ever, @PM2Ring, you are a font of interesting knowledge.
@QuestionC There's nothing wrong with explaining in a comment why you voted the way you did. But it's considered poor form to merely say that you upvoted or downvoted without explaining why. And a simple "+1" or "-1" comment is right out - it's automatically prevented.
@PM2Ring +1
DSM
DSM
Heh.
@PM2Ring I got caught for saying "+1 for ..."
Which is weird because I could swear that I've seen those comments before.
@QuestionC You can't start with +1
But 'Upvoted because...' should fly
14:53
std::advance(votes, 1) for ...
To get around that, I end with +1
@JRichardSnape Ta. But I just looked it up on Wikipedia. :) OTOH, I might've read about it years ago in Simon Singh's The Code Book.
Votes += 1
Er, this is the python room. next(upvotes) for...
@QuestionC The [+-]1 comment filter is relatively new, and it doesn't affect old comments.
@QuestionC votes += 1 is valid Python; votes++ isn't.
DSM
DSM
14:57
Could be part of something valid, though, like votes = votes++10, I guess. Bit of a stretch.
@DSM Reminds be of a great C question about the nefarious `-->` operator.

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1642028/what-is-the-name-of-the-operator
@DSM Does ++ do something difference than +?
@Pureferret I mostly prefer to be more subtle, and leave 'em guessing. :) Although sometimes I bribe people with the offer of an upvote if they'll fix their answer after I point out a flaw.
...first time I've seen shibboleth employed in a programming chatroom with it's sociological meaning... An interesting point, although I wonder if the favourably bit necessarily follows. It often can, but if we object that it always does, we must object to any form of in-joke, I think.
DSM
DSM
@Morgan: it's the combination of a unary positive + (the + in x = +3, like the - in x = -3) and the binary addition +.
15:00
@DSM Ahhh, okay.
I'm trying to think of a practical situation where <expression> ++ <expression> would have a different outcome than <expression> + <expression>. I can whip up a contrived example where SomeClass.__pos__ does something other than return self, but I'm struggling to think of a reason why someone would want that.
Because they hate people.
What DSM said. I guess it's kinda traditional for languages to support a unary positive operator, although it's fairly useless in Python (but it's handy in JavaScript, as we discussed the other day). I suppose it's nice to support leading + for numerical literals, but that's not quite the same as unary positive.
@JRichardSnape everything is the inner ring
Maybe some kind of weird vector system where + and - are used to create rotations. ++thing means "thing rotated 90 degrees twice"
In a world where std::cout << "Hello world" is taken seriously, why not make unary operators perform 2d geometry?
15:05
Just had a go at answering questions. I'd honestly forgotten what Martijn is like -_-
Is it misusing Session variables / g object to bind details of the current user's state?
I sure hope not.
that's kinda what they're for
I never use the session but it seems to make sense here
Okay. rbrb!
15:08
The day that web design experts tell me I can't use Session to store state, is the day I take up my hobo bindle and start a life on the rails
DSM
DSM
There's a Ruby joke in there somewhere. Where's Wayne when you need him?
Off taking the Good Word to his fellow ruby-peons.
Insert joke here about how Wayne is never around during a crisis, and have you noticed you never see him and Batman in the same room at the same time?
Hey up
15:14
Morning davidism
bleh, stupid framework keeps adding extra classes to my html
I added for s in mystudentsinfo: print s — Kevin Q 2 mins ago
@KevinQ I'm not sure why you're telling me that. Did my answer help you? — davidism 1 min ago
Award for most mysterious comment of the day.
There's a moderate chance there that he was writing a comment like "I added <insert multiple lines of code here>, and I got X, which is bad because Y, so could you clarify Z?"
And after he pressed enter to go to the next line, it submitted the message earlier than he anticipated, at which point he decided the whole thing was a waste of time and abandoned the question.
theory: there is a correlation between "not knowing that comments can't be multi-line", and "gives up at the slightest frustration". This would explain the trend of half-finished comments containing code
Kevin was right.
user2555451
Hmm, "community" isn't very accurate. The tag was destroyed by a posse from the Python chat room. Press the buzzer if you know why Python programmers don't like questions about program that emphasize speed. — Hans Passant 6 hours ago
user2555451
Neat, we're a posse. \o/
15:25
Now that he's given more detail, I feel bad that I characterized him as "easily gives up".
user559633
more like hans pissant. because he's a complainer. about SO website stuff.
I don't understand what that "speed" jab has to do with Project Euler.
Unless he's referring to the requirement that PE questions execute in under a minute.
@HansPassant: If you need speed to solve Project Euler problems, you are not solving them correctly. — Kevin 16 secs ago
Thank you Other Kevin.
user559633
@Kevin Press the buzzer if you know why Python programmers don't like poorly constructed complaints
Pretty much every PE question I've solved has two possible approaches: the obvious way, which takes a billion years, or the right way, which takes a billionth of a second. Python being 120 times slower than Fortran doesn't make a practical difference either way.
15:30
rhubarb
rbrb PM
can't remember the rules on cv-plsing
user559633
Today I sorely wish we had a canonical "you have to explicitly return something in the recursive branch of your recursive function" post
Just seen that Q, Kev.
DSM
DSM
Feb 17 at 16:17, by DSM
I like the canonical question suggestion. During this meeting, I saw yet another "missing return in a recursive function", which I know Kevin and I have discussed in the past. We could either write a new one or edit a good existing one into perfection.
15:34
I do want to compose one. I just have to come up with an example that's 1) not totally 100% trivial, and 2) comprehensible to newbies
ex. checking palindrome-ness using recursion violates #1, but parsing an XML tree violates #2.
How do you know if something will cause a race condition?
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: walking a directory tree, maybe?
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because I really asked the wrong question. I didn't understand the underlying data was just a member of a list, so all I had to do was use email_variable[0]. — dwstein 8 mins ago
user559633
@corvid usually it's when the officer is white
6
@DSM Not bad, if I can construct an MCVE that doesn't require the reader to set up a test directory
15:39
Yeah - I think finding a file in a directory tree works
@corvid I think only experience can teach that, unfortunately
DSM
DSM
Ehh, good point about not wanting to have to make a test dir, though. :-/ Maybe if you start with an explicit list of paths and do something with that?
user559633
do i want the twitter username influentialfoodblogger ?
cbg
Hey, @tristan It's your b'day today?
@corvid write your code and then try to force a race condition (by using bigger data typically, or maybe more workers, or specific data patterns) ...
15:41
Happy birthday @tristan!
DSM
DSM
I thought his birthday was a while back?
Tristan is like the Queen.
user559633
It was on 31-April
if you can force a race condition you learned something and you can fix it ... if you cant force it then you really dont guarantee much(maybe your test just didnt cause a race condition it doesnt mean its impossible)
@tristan Not on 30th Feb?
15:43
On second thought, most recursive functions that involve tree structures usually accumulate the value in a loop, or otherwise make it obvious that you should be doing something with the recursive call other than simply calling it. If you have code like:
def do_thing(file_name):
    if is_file(file_name):
        something = ???
        return something
    else:
        for child in os.listdir(file_name):
            do_thing(child)
user559633
@BhargavRao Decidedly not.
... Then the answer isn't "you forgot your return" but "you need to accumulate the values of do_thing in the second case in a list, then return them at the end"
Which is rather more complicated.
user559633
"This position can be based out of our customer's headquarters in Birmingham, Alabama " yeah gonna take a pass on this offer
I have written a huge answer on a bounty question and after 3 minutes, Ninja has answered it .... :(
So again I lose the bounty
:'(
So now I'm adding constraint #3: the answer should be as simple as "you need to insert return here..." and that's it
DSM
DSM
15:45
Back to the lab!
Ooh, idea. greatest common denominator. It's often implemented recursively, but doesn't "branch" in the way tree-related functions do.
So the problem code is:
def gcd(a,b):
    if b == 0:
        return a
    else:
        gcd(b, a%b)
And the answer is "forgot your return".
I've meant to have an interview scheduled for Thursday but the interviewer still hasn't responded to confirm the time/place :/
Or perhaps it's better to cover both bases, and address accumulating and non-accumulating scenarios in separate sections.
DSM
DSM
Well, that gcd code there will simply return None. You'll have to address the case where you get AttributeErrors and TypeErrors because the None is further processed, which is often a symptom.
15:49
@Ffisegydd you pagans :D
@AnttiHaapala CBG!!
Now I'm thinking how thoroughly we can examine different variations of the problem, without making the reader bored.
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: dock 'em a few points for organization.
@Kevin gcd is properly tail-recursive, so it can be replaced with a loop
DSM
DSM
@AnttiHaapala: scroll up to find out what Kevin's up to. :-)
15:51
When you put it that way, I feel like constraint #1 and constraint #3 are mutually exclusive.
Is there a non-tail-recursive algorithm that could be written incorrectly such that "you forgot to return on line X" is sufficient to fix it?
Maybe Fibonacci would be closest to my impossible ideal...
    def fib(x):
        if x == 0:
            return 0
        elif x == 1:
            return 1
        else:
            fib(x-1) + fib(x-2)
Can't "trivially" be made iterative; often implemented by newbies; the answer is very simple.
Interesting feature: It either works, returns None, or crashes, depending on what value you supply to it.
DSM
DSM
Yeah, the 0, 1, None, TypeError pattern is kind of cute.
@ZeroPiraeus RIP My dear Python2-default :'( :'(
hmm
yeah, +1
15:57
TypeError bottles of beer on the wall, TypeError bottles of beer; take one down, pass it around, None bottles of beer on the wall.
8
I think I initially shied away from fib as a candidate because I feel like most users that make this mistake do so because they have an incorrect mental model regarding how recursion works, and their imagined model works best with a recursive function that calls itself exactly once.
is there any questions on how to write python 3 polyglot code?
Basically they think that the recursive call totally overwrites the original call, so that returning from within the recursive call causes the return value to go to the original caller.
DSM
DSM
Okay, time to get some Java written. Wish me luck..
Boy, did I misremember how super() with one argument works: stackoverflow.com/questions/30190185/…
15:59
A doubly-recursive function like fib doesn't fit so nicely into their imagined model, so they're more careful and thus don't actually make the mistake.

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