« first day (1670 days earlier)      last day (3507 days later) » 

17:02
Behold! A mysterious sneak preview into tomorrow's 3D printing talk.
They also resemble little blue turds. You win some, you lose some
What are they meant to be? Other than turds.
Two toroids printed together without a deliberate flaw
(for assembly)
It's basically why 3D printing is a game changer. Previously, you'd have to whittle down a material (say wood), to get the same effect
This example COULD be injection moulded as a single item as well, but it's to illustrate a point
@IntrepidBrit Nice!
Is the white stuff around the torus intentional?
Or are those artifacts of printing?
It's support material. Means that the building material doesn't collapse in on itself during print. If I had designed the model better, I could have used less support material
Ah, that makes sense
17:10
But I wanted one toroid to be printed at the "perfect" position (horizontal to the floor) and the other printed at an odd angle so that people can see the importance of printing with the correct orientation
Oi Fizzy - we got an idea on a date yet?
that looks like the same print tray our printer has
however the strands give away the makerbot :P
:P Nope, got a Stratasys
Date for what? The meeting? Probably late next week. Thursday say.
Depends on everyone else.
Nah, for a candlelight dinner ;)
Sounds good mate. Should work for mee too. As long as it's not too soon or too close to the end of the month!
If we're regarding the candlelight dinner then whenever your cheque clears.
17:21
statasys looks like they make some nice printers
stratasys*
maybe ours has all the strands before we put in the bath
(tbh i havent actually printed anything myself on it)
They tend to. Stratasys make some good printers, they also make some absolute steaming piles of gosa
My printer tends to get a lot of bad flak on the internet, but they're people who look at the specs and scoff. I get around 99% success rate with my prints. The 1% is due to me being a dipstick
we use the Dimension elite
@Martijn do you know if they will record your AMA because at this rate I may miss it?
errr dumb dropbox
thats whats printing in it now
little tiny brackets ... like 1 inch x 0.5 inch
Sorry, was looking at the brochure
Hahaha! Do you have the same supply line problems that I have?
Or do you do yourself a favour and just not order any of the colours?
17:36
we dont really do much with the colors
we are mostly concerned with prototyping housings to make sure everything fits and works right before we order an injectionmold
its really really really expensive to mess up an injection mold
its relatively cheap to mess up a 3d prototype :P
Tell me about it
we can use it for personal projects at cost (~3.00 usd / in^3)
@DSM So you want to iterate the whole sequence and find the lowest rather than get the first value?
That's not quite equivalent, unless I am missing something..
(we actually have 2 of them ... one is only for work .. the other can be used for personal projects ... provided work projects get priority)
Not bad - just don't print anything to do with food and you'll be dandy
17:39
lol
I presume people have already 3D printed mugs?
I liek to stare at it as it prints ... I doubt my 3d modeling skills too much to print anything
I dunno how it would handle hot beverages
that plastic seems kinda soft ...
The glass transition temperature of the ABS is relatively high, so it should do okay
(its ABS but still)
hmmm thats a good idea
But you know, it's petroleum based and thus TOXIC
17:42
I think i could model a 3d mug ok
exactly
lol
im not sure I would trust it enough to drink out of it
I'm curious. I might print a mini-mug to see how the print holds up
Might do a little social media puff piece on it
DSM
DSM
@MartijnPieters: ah, sorry. That was a callback to your dislike for using min(seq) to get the only element of a one-element sequence.
But you'd be surprised at the things you can do once you get stuck into it
hehe :P
ok speaking of mugs im gonna go hunt down some coffee
@PeterVaro I eventually tested and it appears that the subprocess don't "respond" because in subprocess you have to flush also
here is my answer
0
A: How to create non-blocking continuous reading from `stdin`?

Xavier CombelleFor everything working fine you have to flush output in main process (p.stdout) and subprocess (sys.stdout) . communicate does both flush: it flush the p.stdin when closing it it wait the sys.stdout output to be flushed (just before exiting) example of working main.py import subprocess,tim...

17:59
@DSM ah, if there's just the one element..
How would I iterate through a binary file in X sized chunks? Is there something in the struct module?
18:11
@MorganThrapp I tend to go for something like:
with open('filename', 'rb') as fin:
    for block in iter(lamba: fin.read(BLOCK_SIZE), ''):
        # do something
@JonClements If I use enumerate, do I need iter as well? I'm reading in a DBF, and I need to know which record I'm reading.
Considered using a python DBF reader library then?
@JonClements Yeah, but none of them support the kind of low-level info I need. This is to check if the headers have (once again) gotten messed up.
@JonClements Or if an invalid record was written to the file.
so... read the header, get the row size, then iter over it
Yeah, that's what I'm doing.
18:19
@Morgan the purpose of the iter in @JonClements code is to stop on end of file (read return '') so yes you still need it with enumerate
@XavierCombelle Ah, okay. Thanks.
guys, how do I teach a beginner how to debug? :|
print()
Or console.log
or printf, if you're feeling frisky
18:34
Or PRINT *, if you're old school.
i second print
or third it or whatever
its not working how you expect ... print right before
Martijn answered my question, hurrah! \o/
x = iter(fin.read())
while True:
   try:
      struct.unpack_from("myunpack",x)
   except struct.error:
     print all_done_msg
I tell him to just put prints EVERYWHERE and see if anything is weird
although struct.unpack is slower than I would like for this type of thing in my experience
i usually am unpacking into some_named_tuple._make also
18:41
Is there any smart way to store date ranges (think a time booking system) so they can be diced up in different ways, e.g. day, week, month, etc? I've come up with two extremes: 1) store every day separately, and 2) store date ranges and calculate whether a particular day falls within the date ranges
Also required is the option to do things like cut the ranges in half, or override a day with a range
pandas sounds ideal :)
@JonClements me? :)
Okay guys. Got an hour's walk to the station, I'd better leave the office
A sleepless night awaits me!
If ... something happens to me, someone else ensure the fine mantle of inane political commentary never ceases?
@Intrepid oh, I'm on it ;-)
Good stuff. Fare thee well and rhubarb
rbrb :-)
@IntrepidBrit watch out for an ambitious @ZeroPiraeus in the shadows
"What, this? well, I moonlight as a piano tuner, you see? I have to carry piano wire around with me. That's right, I'm off to a baseball match ... I suppose I ought to try and get those nails out, yes ..."
19:05
Where were you when I had a problem with my Python project? xD
I solved it now, though.
@RobertGrant If you've got large amounts of tabular data then pandas does indeed sound ideal. If, however, you just have individual bits then no idea.
I meant more the best way to store it in a db, sorry. Now I re-read it's not clear.
Argh can't work it out. I'm going to just try.
Hurray! 0.16.1!
19:24
my_file = "/Users/Documents/My File Name.txt"

Assuming that my_file is a file to be opened, is there anything wrong in defining the path like this?
that question doesnt make much sense ... what do you think might be wrong with it?
Sorry for the lack of context, I am given a quiz and that is as much info provided
would it make any difference if it were:

my_file = r"/Users/Documents/My File Name.txt"
(note the raw string literal, r)
sure then its a string literal ... but forward slashes dont need to be escaped ...
19:27
I was thinking that perhaps on some systems, the path may be described using the backward slash, then this line of code would be better
Making it a raw string would make sense if those were backslashes, but they aren't.
by better, I mean more compatible of course.
python can use forward slashes as seperators regardless of os
even if that is not the file seperator for the os
(ie windows)
Can anything be said about the name of the file? Specifically the spaces involved?
"C:/Users/joran/My Documents" works fine in python (although it woul not work in cmd.exe ) for example
that depends on how you use my_file if you are just opening it spaces are probably fine ... if you are putting it into a format strign or creating a shell command it might not be
19:30
is it just smarter to always define paths as raw string literals?
@JonClements need some help with the Linode account?
And wow, look at that giant block of text "answer" it got.
@haopei there's nothing wrong with the path you've shown. And no, you don't need to use raw strings for paths, you can always use forward slashes.
Thank you so much everyone.
Bleh just realised I'm changing the database and I should be using SQLA
cbg
Ugh don't remind me of Linode
I keep putting off my server migration over to my Linode VM
@davidism ?
19:40
@Ffisegydd are you getting those Linode emails? I feel like for that price, what we're getting is overkill for what we're using. Maybe we could go to the next tier down and give Jon's wallet a break?
Spent a few hours on it the other weekend and it failed pitifully. I don't want to dig my claws back into it T_T
@Jon there's some new emails re: latest bill
oh... they'll have to sit and swivel... bad month - not sure I can find the $80
I can pitch in for a month if money's tight
is it possible to downgrade to the $40 tier easily? I'll pay for that.
DSM
DSM
19:45
For 80$ a month we should get hand-delivered cabbage.
We can downgrade easily enough yeah.
@davidism @Ffisegydd doesn't stop the amount owing now though :)
but yeah, we could downgrade to that plan until nidaba is up
@AdamSmith Thanks - but not necessary I hope :)
OK, I paid it. Let's downgrade.
Hah. I was just about to pay it too. Shall I downgrade one level or two?
How to resize is here
Before we resize let me ssh in and delete some stuff, cos we'll go over the memory limit
19:51
I've backed up the sopython db
@davidism @Ffisegydd good job of making me cry guys :(
Let's do the $20 plan, that's a lot more reasonable until we're using nidaba full time.
Okay we're down to using 34GB of memory, which will fit in the $20 plan.
I could drop even more if necessary, due to the current mongodb data being out of date.
DSM
DSM
Now that our logo has to change anyway, we could sell sponsorships! SOPython, brought to you in June by Dynamical Friction Analytics-- for all your numerical needs.
That would be some very focused advertising :)
Although I am singlehandedly trying to drive traffic to codementor - let's monetise that
19:58
how is mongo using so much memory?
I liked the idea of a cabbage for a logo. Might as well go full cabbage.
It's got all of the Python Q+A in there :P
It can be dropped anyway, don't worry about mongo.
As it needs to be reconstructed from a more recent data dump.
Should probably put it in PostgreSQL as well. ;-)
Yeah that's the eventual plan :P
cabbage to everyone!
Whew, busy day.
DSM
DSM
20:01
@RobertGrant: I'm pretty surprised by how targeted stuff can be these days. I think I mentioned once that I was invited to a lecture on the history of beer in Canada and Japan, which is (shall we say) in my wheelhouse.
We missed you Kevin ;_;
To be expected when last week your boss says "the deadline is the 13th" but you hear "the deadline is the 18th"
@Ffisegydd after the 19th is good for me
@Kevin awesome. I'm thinking Thursday 21st may be a good day.
And 1500 UTC is a "typical" time.
20:12
That's good, unless my bi-weekly 1400 UTC phone meeting goes long.
Usually wraps up in 30-45 minutes though.
But even then I can multitask ;-)
user559633
stackoverflow.com/questions/12770950/… this is a bad bad, not good self-answer accept
Yeah, should be using ProxyFix or whatever it's called
user559633
sure, that or request.access_route[-1]
user559633
popular answers on google with self-(incorrect)answers make me sad
I have no idea how I am doing with the AMA, by the way. :-P
Hard to get feedback on something you just fill in answers..
20:21
@Martijn good so far :P
user559633
I wish that SO had a "technically an answer, but please see this concern"
checks out planet python
how do i import py files in a folder next to my main py file into the program? Basically extensions
user559633
@DJGee which python version
3.4
ive tryed
20:27
I asked @Martijn a question!
for ex in os.listdir("extensions/"):\nimport ex
user559633
@DJGee import .module
how about dynamically
not knowing whats in the folder
user559633
sigh.... not my place to judge... docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html
thanks @tristan
user559633
20:29
no prob
you're saying I can import import ?
@DJGee consider watching this video
user559633
3 hours
@DJGee Do you have an __init__.py file in the folder?
20:30
nope
That's your problem.
It's really not well documented.
so just add a blank __init__()
init.py sorry
@QuestionC you should watch the video too, that's not a problem anymore (techincaly, and don't rely on it, but still)
Then you can import the file.
user559633
20:31
I think it's plenty documented.
@davidism I did watch the video. I spent a lot of effort trying to understand how things work until you showed it to us.
user559633
I figured it out and I'm just a simple hillbilly from the woods of New England
After the video, I'm at least aware that it all exists and that I should never, ever touch it. There's still a right, normal way to do things.
@davidism: I am running out of time :-(
I have other commitments to attend to tonight, I'll see about adding in some more answers at another time.
user559633
“Would you rather fight 100 duck-sized horses or 1 horse-sized duck”
DSM
DSM
"What do you think about the introduction of the new type annotations? Did someone lose a bet?"
> “Would you rather fight 100 python-sized horses or 1 horse-sized python?”
user559633
I think weapons really come into play when it's human versus hypothetical
(Definitely python-sized horses)
DSM
DSM
I've seen horse-sized Python movies. They don't end well.
user559633
20:40
Python-sized horses if I'm naked, without weapons, in an empty room.
user559633
If I'm in an American grocery/liquor/gun store, the horse-sized python
I assume that's one store?
Night!
user559633
[ okay, annoying ]
DSM
DSM
I'd already turned my adblock back on. :-) I should get one of those extensions that stops animations instead.
user559633
collapsing images should be a feature
20:52
Hello I've just started learning python. Can someone explain in detail why 9//-4 gives -3 as the quotient and the remainder instead of 2 and 1?
floordiv (//) always rounds towards -inf
Also, // doesn't give the remainder, maybe you meant divmod()?
@tristan is that like seam carving?
I don't understand why it's done like that. Doesn't that seem counter intuitive?
No, it seems normal.
20:55
agreed
Hrmph... how can you make it seem like an enrollment token expired? Will setting it to null have the right effect?
In mathematics and computer science, the floor and ceiling functions map a real number to the largest previous or the smallest following integer, respectively. More precisely, floor(x) = is the largest integer not greater than x and ceiling(x) = is the smallest integer not less than x. == Notation == Carl Friedrich Gauss introduced the square bracket notation for the floor function in his third proof of quadratic reciprocity (1808). This remained the standard in mathematics until Kenneth E. Iverson introduced the names "floor" and "ceiling" and the corresponding notations and in his 1962 book...
What I understand is that the dividend is equal to the quotient * divisor + the remainder. if 9 // -4 gave you 2 and 1 it would satisfy this statement.
> floor(x) = is the largest integer not greater than x
@LuisAverhoff so will -3r-3 =/
20:58
Also, again, // doesn't return the remainder, so I'm not sure what you're referring to.
I just taking about the process of dividing whether it is modulo or floor division
@LuisAverhoff // is floor division. % is modulo. My guess is that 9//-4 == -3 and 9%-4 == -3
because that's how floor division makes sense
divmod(9, -4) == (-3, -3)
-3 * -4 + -3 == 9
davidism beat me to it
@davidism but going back to 9 // -4. 9 = -4 * - 2 + 1. So my question is why does floor mod go -inf?
21:02
because that's the mathematical definition of it.
Why should it do otherwise?
@LuisAverhoff Because it's floor division. That's what floor division does....
it's not "round-towards-zero" division :)
You're confusing int(-2.25) with floor(-2.25). They are not the same operation.
it's just that I've never used floor division(it's mostly been dividing a number as close to zero as possible) before and seeing 9 // -4 give me - 3 is really throwing me off.
Python is following the definition of floor division, I'm not sure what we can say on the subject besides that.
@LuisAverhoff Are you coming from C?
Or some other language that does division differently?
21:09
Well I have been going back and forth between c and python.
Oh yeah, I guess other languages do int() rather than floor() for division. They're wrong. :-P
rhubarb
user559633
@AdamSmith uhm, not sure. that looks neat though. i was thinking just "click to make image go away"
user559633
anyone use angular + jinja?
user559633
$interpolateProvider is what i was looking for. neat.
@tristan I do, what's up?
21:18
He explains it better than me.
C-style division is irritating for some algorithms (gcd? newton's method?) You end up needing to special-case things that you wouldn't need to given python's take on the operators.
I love C, but the mod operator blows, and it's only like that for historic reasons.
C is a pain to write in, even if it is a good language.
user559633
@corvid was looking for an ideal approach for working around the duplicate {{ }} notation
@PeterVaro I wrote a python program that basically does everything possible using pipes asynchronously. It's too horrid to post to your question. Hopefully you can glean something from it. codeshare.io/yfDaD
user559633
@corvid sorry, got a nosebleed
user559633
21:33
1) {{ '{{' }} 2) raw or verbatim, yes 3) change $interpolateProvider
@QuestionC well thanks for the link, it was a good read.
user559633
var app = angular.module('Application', []);

app.config(['$interpolateProvider', function($interpolateProvider) {
  $interpolateProvider.startSymbol('{a');
  $interpolateProvider.endSymbol('a}');
}]);
user559633
ended up going with this because i'd prefer to keep my jinja stuff clean
tbh, seems pretty rare to have conflicts in them, guess it depends on how heavily you're using angular
user559633
@corvid kind of all over the place
user559633
21:36
(this is the flask/angular/mongodb app i'm hacking on btw)
@tristan afaik there is a triangle package (thats for flask technically but i think it would work for straight jinja that provides an angular template_tag {{ 5+3 |angular}}
to solve that problem
allthough the interpolateProvider is probably even slicker
user559633
eh, that's okay. angular happily gets out of the way, so no need to incur the overhead of running a filter on every line
user559633
style question: when DEBUG is True

SOME_FEATURE_FLAG_ENABLED = not DEBUG

or

OPPOSITE_DEBUG = not DEBUG
SOME_FEATURE_FLAG_ENABLED = OPPOSITE_DEBUG
user559633
keep in mind that there will be potentially many inverse-of-True features
why would you ever want to type if OPPOSITE_DEBUG: instead of if not DEBUG: ?
and how is that at all more clear...?
user559633
22:06
^ i guess it's not? opposite_debug only gets evaluated once, not that a dozen or so not bool is that slow
user559633
the inverse-meaning settings set something off in my brain because it's like "setting-should-be-false-in-debug"
user559633
so it feels like saying "not debug mode"
heh I wouldnt do that ... but then again I am very very very far from the perfect developer ... I wouldnt worry about the performance implications as it will likely be non-existant(effectivly)
@Joran
> I made a silly mistake and realized that my solution does work...=)
:D
Dear @AtulBhatia Could you please add your silly mistake as an answer (of course in a better manner) instead of adding that to your question — Bhargav Rao 4 mins ago
heh
OP's are so helpful
lol someone is arguing with me in another thread that you can figure out what part of your sympy simulation is taking up the most time based on start=time.time();...code...;print time.time()-start
lol
Anyway, nite time rbrb
Gn all
:)
user559633
@JoranBeasley not really thinking performance, just semantic of seeing "not debug"
i think that not debug is more clear than opposite_debug ... just my 2c ofc
user559633
cheers, thanks :)
22:22
:P
as I said though its always a good idea to take anything that comes out of my mouth (or off my key's) with a great big grain of salt
user559633
it's all good -- it's helpful to hear/read how it looks to someone else
how do I search only my answer
s
?
user559633
not sure how to make that answers only
hmmm I swear i wqrote up a big "How To Use cProfile + runsnakerun in python" answer a year or two ago... but I cant find it :/ oh well
22:50
the 2nd nintendo world championships is comming soon!
hopefully that means we finally get "The Wizard2"
@tristan add is:answer (sorry for double ping)
meh still cant find that answer of mine ... maybe i dreamed it
user559633
23:25
@StephanMuller cheers, no worries

« first day (1670 days earlier)      last day (3507 days later) »