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12:01
:)
morning everyone
is there a dark mode for stackoverflow? White backgrounds irritate eyes
You’re welcome.
thank you good sir
ah that looks SO much better
12:18
@IntrepidBrit possible issue with the url thing - does a subdomain route require a (more expensive) * SSL cert?
I don't know about more expensive SSL cert
But you'd need one for BOBBYPROJECT.org and *.BOBBYPROJECT.org
But I normally self sign, so I can't comment on the cost
Yeah, I'm sure it'd be fine
Just a useful thing to bear in mind when making saasy decisions
Yeah, for digicert it's $475/yr
Sounds like you need some legal advice. Can I interest you in the services of Fizzy and Brit Legal International?
godaddy $250/yr
SSL certificates are far too expensive…
12:25
Yeah it's so ridiculous
That’s my main issue with Mozilla’s idea to deprecate HTTP in Firefox.
Yeah if Mozilla became a free signing authority, then go for it
free is not really the problem
poke this userstyles thing is fantastic!
we need free (or open), secure and trusted.
12:26
Well, yeah :)
Also able to suck eggs
Apparently Comodo will do a "cheap" one (what the heck is the difference?) for $60/yr, which is rather more in my ballpark
user559633
Hold on, I have a link for $10 ssl certs
Can git hooks auto-generate documentation pre-commit?
@tristan wildcard?
user559633
@RobertGrant one sec, finding link
user559633
it's somewhere around here
12:30
Thanks
user559633
yeah, of course :)
I'm looking at cheapsslsecurity.com, which has a cool design, but can't match $10
user559633
$10 comodo. they were $2 for non-wild card and something like $25 for wildcard
That also has a cool design
And yeah, $100/yr :)
12:31
I'm with namecheap for my domain names, very happy with them.
I can't actually believe anyone has the gall to make money from a system that can be fully automated
But anyway :)
user559633
yeah, SSL is snakeoil
Thanks, noted the sites. When I'm ready, and then spend just as long working out what to call it, I'll use one of 'em :)
user559633
you could find a pool of friends and "share" an SSL cert by using server alternate names
I think I'm going to frickin set up an SSL cert company, as that seems the easiest way to make money
user559633
12:35
hah, you need to pay off the OS vendors and deal with the ubuntu community to get your root cert on there, but yeah
is it considered "namespacing" to create a class in SASS and confine the rules inside of that? Eg:
user559633
good scheme
Bring it up at the sopython meeting, we can form a company/startup. I call shotgun on CDO.
div.welcome-page
  h1.title Wilkommen!

.welcome-page {
  h1.title {
    color: yellow;
  }
}
@Ffisegydd Obsessive-compulsive disorder?
12:36
Chief Data/Destruction Officer.
@Ffisegydd You can have every role that you like, as long as I get cheap trusted SSL certificates.
Of course we'll have a discount for sopython members.
The nice thing about cloudflare is you get free SSL
user559633
i call shotgun on COO (COO Official Officer )
12:41
We have E, F, and T left.
I'll call E
user559633
Uh, we're a startup, we have so many left
user559633
innovation, dreamer
Culture
Alcohol
12:42
As long as I get to keep my official job title: "Veteran Technomage"
:)
In another company that I help sometimes I'm Lead Carpal Tunnel Sufferer
Veteran my arse, you're the same age as me!
Got to give the kids something to laugh at
@Ffisegydd go back 100 years and you'd be regarded as a wizened old sage
But these days you wouldn't be considered a sage at all
12:44
Or a wizard. Then you'd be burned
Who smells of sage, so at least it'll smell nice.
user559633
Chief Alcohol Officer
I can't remember which of "in olden times, 30 was considered old" and "no, perception of oldness was no different than it is now. Life expectancy was mostly brought down by childhood mortality rates. If you lived past 12, you'd probably live to your 60s" and "that too is an oversimplification because reasons" is true.
@EmreVerim cabbage :) Please read the room rules!
@Kevin yeah that assumes a surprising lack of disease
12:47
Once a common myth is debunked and then the debunking is also debunked, I get all mixed up
Turns out, reality is complicated.
My favourite common myth - "Glass is really a liquid."
"... [at certain pressures and temperatures]"
If glass was always solid, glass blowing would be a much more difficult profession :-D
Doesn't matter on P and T :P if it's still "glassy" then people still think it's "liquid"
Yes but when you do glass blowing it stops being a solid and is a liquid that you're blowing, it stops being a glass.
Ok :-)
Ah, proof by dictionary definition
12:50
But I mean the everyday glass that you have in your windows (in my myth).
anyone familiar with website migration from linux to windows?
My favourite myth: a myth is a female moth
Let me argue a little more with the guy who analyzed glass for X years worth of phd research...
It's a myth that your window glass is actually liquid that flows really, really slowly
"But old timey windows are thicker at the bottom", says a hypothetical dissenter.
12:53
@Kevin you might be right, according to a website : However if you could survive childhood and your teenage years you had a good chance of living to your 50s or your early 60s and even in the Middle Ages in Western Europe there were some people who lived to 70 or 80.
"That's because of the way they used to make them, they weren't uniform and to make it more stable they would put the put the thickest part at the bottom.", says me.
If I was a glass manufacturer, I'd put the thickest part at the top, so windows were more likely to break and they'd have to buy another one
.htaccess to Web.Config. really need to know. HELP ???
@BigByte this is the Python room.
You've asked an off-topic programming question already, and no one helped you, please don't ask again so soon.
I guess old timey corporations hadn't invented planned obsolescence yet.
12:54
@Kevin and in the medieval equivalent of selling SSL certs, I'd charge people a "glass rotation fee"
its regarding python.
Thanks for the flag :3 (incidentally I'm surprised I'm allowed to see and deal with my own flags (though I didn't actually respond to it so many I couldn't deal with it)).
@BigByte what is web.config related to python?
web.py?
yeah. my bad i'm out. you guys can suggest a room for me ask this question.
12:57
lol
I'm still not sure what the question is.
What question, you haven't given any details at all. All you did was come in here and say "Here is my non-obvious problem!" then you said "Seriously guys help my problem that I haven't defined at all!"
What else do you expect? Us to read your mind? Us to spend 30 minutes teasing clues out of you?
Suggestion for stack overflow chat: ``` should act like how it does on slack and enter a code editing mode.
user1804599
user1804599
13:00
INFO: Can't locate Tcl/Tk libs and/or headers
trying to build python 3.5, anyone have idea what do I need on ubuntu for these?
Faith.
Hope.
Etc.
ehhehe
np. starship troopers
oh hey, rightfold is in here
user1804599
The one and only miss rightfold.
user1804599
13:07
I wrote lots of Python code today.
*/starts playing Chesney Hawke's "I Am The One and Onlly" for @rightfold :)
Python is good for you. Now fortified with riboflavin.
user1804599
Optimised code using lazy evaluation!
user1804599
This proved useful: gist.github.com/rightfold/4503306f6cf097669a8e. Don't know whether it's in the standard library.
Not that I am aware of.
13:11
RUBY. I HATE RUBY. KILL IT WITH FIRE
5
breaks down and cries I just want to install this program why is it soo hard to anything?
stars please :D
No, gemstones are elementally resistant to fire. You need a heavy edged weapon to kill Ruby.
5
See if you can beat poke's 19 stars:
Jan 8 '14 at 12:51, by poke
I hate Java.
Java is pretty lame. I used to tutor it. The error codes and tracebacks alone are annoying enough
@corvid Yeah. We allow him off the compound once in a while
user1804599
13:15
@corvid We have a room for that: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/23658/java-sucks
for a second I thought I accidentally stumbled into the C++ room because sehe and rightfold are here
@corvid error codes? java? hrmmm?
Good you try and avoid going negative
In python --help I do not see the options -t and -p, but I see some examples like python3 trends.py -t make_sentiment and python3 trends.py -p computer science is my favorite!. How do I interpret this command with -t and -p?
By looking in trends.py
13:18
@Kevin Pssh. I've melted Ruby before now. #physics #aluminiumoxide #bigfurnace
make_sentiment is a function and -t option runs all the test within given docstring of make_sentiment
Well there you go.
@Ffisegydd How hot are we talking here? Can I get similar results with consumer grade fire?
Probably not no.
How can we weaponise our fire?
13:20
By giving it to the enemy.
so -t mean testing all the doctests given in docstring of given function?
@overexchange no, not necessarily.
It's a custom flag. It could mean that it sets your computer on fire. I've travelled to the past, help my Bobbbbbbbbby!
Only the author of trends.py knows for sure.
And, I guess, anyone that reads the script to see what it does.
4 mins ago, by Robert Grant
By looking in trends.py
I thought -t make_sentiment caused tears?
13:22
This is like the world's worst time travel movie
Except it doesn't involve a time-traveler's wife
What we tell you three times is true. Assuming quoting oneself counts, that's three votes for "the answer is inside trends.py"
How would you find out what it does, Robert?
ok these are custom options handled by trends.py
Hey up PMR.
13:24
cbg PM2
@JRichardSnape aaaaaargh
Strangles foetal self
The self is implicit, you just need "Strangles foetal"
Anyone have a 2.6 install? I can't replicate the error in Why sorted list detection does not work in this situation? using 2.7 or higher.
Recursion can be Recursion can be fa̶oetal fa̶oetal
@overexchange Options to the Python interpreter are given before the script name, so in things like python3 trends.py -t make_sentiment the -t is an argument to the trends.py script, not to the Python interpreter.
@Kevin Yeah, I'm running 2.6.6.
13:27
ok
Trying to decide whether "2.6 is weird" or "OP made a mistake unrelated to the code he's showing us" is more likely
>>> [*range(5), 42, *range(4, 0, -1)]
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 42, 4, 3, 2, 1]
oneliners, here we come
Ok, now we've narrowed it down to "2.6.4 is weird" or "OP made a mistake..."
Isn't the answer correct?
I'd be more inclined to believe the answerer if his code block looked more like the output of a REPL. As it is, I think he's just guessing.
13:33
@Kevin It behaves as expected in both 2.6.6 and 2.5.5
Maybe it's an iPython 0.10 problem.
Maybe all got redefined earlier?
This reminds me of a question from a while back whose answer was "doing from numpy import * overwrites built-in values X Y and Z"
Well... they mention they're in ipython so ummmm :)
I don't know what that is, so I ignored it :-)
I was looking at that question and answer - and thinking what the heck? How are they even getting those results!?
cabbage, can anyone tell me how to make a private chatroom?
13:38
I don't think you can in here
All chat rooms are public.
Try Slack
The best you can do is "anonymity by obscurity". That is, making a room whose title is so boring that no one will ever bother peeking inside.
no I mean like a private discussion
You can create a "Room for <user name> and <user name>" room, but it won't be private
13:39
@RowanKleinGunnewiek what else do you want to know that you haven't already been told?
@RobertGrant Why do you hate so much? I'm doing my best not to annoy everyone with my question since I have already asked in this chatroom, and since someone tried te help me I want to start a discussion withim. Instead of just post that useless reaction u could or just say nothing or awnser the question? because that is the reason this chat exists right?
He isn't "hating".
I'm confused. We already did answer your question.
@RowanKleinGunnewiek please don't unthinkingly use the word "hate". Instead of this silly rant, please say nothing or answer the question.
The whole point of Stack Overflow is that other people can learn from your questions. Moving to a private chat gets rid of that.
13:45
Or, you know, chat about something else.
@Kevin old ipythons have a bug w.r.t. closures / var handling
could be an issue here
@RobertGrant I haven't said a thing in 5 days in this chat. I ask one question how to start a discussion and u say. what else do you want to know that you haven't already been told?
This discussion is going nowhere.
@Kevin That looks like the best theory, so far.
13:47
Bit harsh - I only said hello
@RowanKleinGunnewiek no, I answered your question, as did others, and you continued talking about it. I wanted to know what else you wanted to know.
You'll be pleased to know, I shan't be boring you with tales of my inadequate disaster recovery plan any more - mission retrieve this week's changes to data is completed.
then what's the "explicit read access" for?
@PM2Ring Yeah but unfortunately the OP seems satisfied with the "add some []s to the expression" answer, so I don't think we'll ever know for sure
13:48
@JRichardSnape ahhh don't worry about DRPs - disaster's never happen right?
That's line 1 in the plan @JonClements
@RowanKleinGunnewiek You can't make a totally private chatroom. But a person with rep >= 100 can create a custom chat room. See stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/chat-rooms
What we tell you three times is true... :-)
I remember a company I worked for was undergoing a security audit to show we met the criteria for holding and using their data security. So, shown around to the safe, and the office security systems and certificates of ISO standards and DPA compliance and etc... etc...
20
Q: Confusion over private chat groups

Alex KI needed to message a user about something today. I went to chat.stackoverflow.com, found them in the users, then clicked "Start a New Conversation with this user." I wanted the conversation to be private, so I went to the "access options" link presented to me in the room options and was greeted ...

13:50
@AnttiHaapala That seems likely in light of the OP's "weird, it only happens in iPython" edit
And overhead the auditor asking my boss "So what would plan be in the event of nuclear war?" and my boss replied: "Well - I wouldn't be giving a shit about your data - that's for certain"
8
(amazingly - we got the data!)
@Kevin That sounds like an ancient incantation - is it Shakespeare? which thou sayeth thrice, it shall come to pass
@Kevin though I am not exactly sure how it would map to this very case...
I like it @Jon
@JRichardSnape I picked it up from The Hunting of the Snark but I don't know whether that's the original source :-)
13:52
@JonClements haha too right
Ok, I actually picked it up from Raymond Chen's Old New Thing blog, who presumably picked it up from Lewis Carrol.
More Lewis Carroll, I'm impressed
@JonClements It's like that bit in Frasier where they test the emergency broadcast signal, "Of course if this were a real emergency, your radio would be melting in your hands."
@PM2Ring I see, thank you.
you could ask if it is ipython or something else running ipython
13:55
@JonClements Everyone knows that if you want a system that can survive nuclear war, you should use ARPANET.
I have devised my own cockroach carrier system for that eventuality.
@JRichardSnape could u make a discussion between us like you did before? I want to ask you something about the question you commented on
Sure - but I must warn you I haven't much time and probably haven't much to add.
@JRichardSnape Most of the hard work has been done already. You just need to fudge some of the implementation details to account for the change in species :-)
13:59
Umm... Think I can hear some distant thunder... that's nice...
@Kevin what good is ARPANET going to do against SkyNet though!? :(
None. None good.
>>>print(good) output None
Go on - someone remind me the shortcut to put a newline in chat
Shift + Enter.
Shift enter
And, for completeness, Shift-Enter.
There's a fun trivia question. "Q: in what context do - and + have the same meaning? A: keyboard shortcuts"
14:03
Oh, now you said it three times I believe it
Also - Half-Life 3 confirmed!
For a given definition of "fun"
:-D
I am confused by this framework in terms of security... is it considered insecure if people can see the data model on the client?
Not necessarily
Why do you think it would be?
E.g. exposing database IDs?
Like I am using the Stripe api, and I think I need to store their stripe user id. This id wouldn't be published, but people would be able to see it's in the data model.
14:08
I wondered if Ctrl-Shift-M did the same thing as Shift-Enter. But I just discovered that in Firefox (29.0.1) I get an interesting custom window with a menu bar that lets you select the window dimensions.
Yeah I use ctrl-shift-m a lot
Interesting. Some kind of mobile compatibility tool, I guess?
Yeah its for testing responsive designs
cabbage
It's not compatibility apart from that though, doesn't send different headers or anything. Just responsiveness based on pixel height and width
Don't think it even tests zooms and stuff like that
14:12
In Chrome it goes to the profile selector.
@davidism but...I really want to know the answer to that :)
Interesting title: [python how to convert a for loop into a while loop[open]?](stackoverflow.com/q/30328109/953482)
@Kevin gotta upgrade that script to escape markdown
14:16
Adding [open] to the end of your post to signify that it isn't closed... That's a bold move, let's see if it pays off
...for time in question_life translates to while open(question)...
There we go.
There's probably a better way of doing it than title = title.replace("[", "\\[").replace("]", "\\]");, but... meh
I have no idea why I went overboard answering that.
:)
Surprised you answered at all
14:31
Arrgh! It's bad enough when people using C, JavaScript, etc, call if() a function, but what excuse do they have for that in Python where we don't have parentheses around the if condition? But this OP goes even further & calls == a function. :facepalm:
It works if you define "function" as "a thing that has functionality".
Hard mode: with this definition, name a language element that isn't a function. Comments don't count, because they're functional in explaining things to the reader.
String literal?
Docstring?
Oh, comments don't count, so I guess they don't either
...whitespace?
Blah, this feels like a trick question
Quotes are merely an internal function that turns a collection of characters into a string.
Nah, whitespace defines control flow.
14:35
Functions!
I might accept trailing whitespace. Not used by the interpreter, not read by the user.
Empty comments
(I don't have a specific answer in mind, btw)
The whitespace between # and the comment wording
14:36
. o O (I am all over this )
:-)
The __author__ statement that Pycharm inserts at the top of every file it creates. :P
"\r"
it does not have any function :P
I thought you were going to say Python 2 for a minute there @antti
"no, really, comments are non-functional because nobody reads them anyway"
14:38
>>> dis.dis('1; 1')
  1           0 LOAD_CONST               0 (None)
              3 RETURN_VALUE
@Kevin Fair point. :) Still, even a newbie should know that the term "function" has a special meaning.
I just wish we could get newbies to stop saying "array".
@JRichardSnape it has a function, it generates sales for pharmacies
we're talking about analgesics :P
It's doubly annoying because you can't tell them "stop saying array, it's 'list'" because some smartypants will come in and say, "you don't know that for sure, maybe they're importing the array module"
14:39
@Kevin But how else will I learn how to use the array function.
"99.9+% of my "disputed" are where I was right and the rest of the world was wrong." So true. Take that, statistics! — davidism 40 secs ago
:slaps Morgan:
I do slip into saying array occasionally, but it's because I spend most of the day writing Delphi. :/
>>> a = {'a': 'defaulta', 'b': 'defaultb'}
>>> b = {'a': 'a', 'c': 'c'}
>>> c = {'c': 'alwaysoverriddenc'}
>>> {**a, **b, 'd': '42 is the answer', **c}
{'b': 'defaultb', 'a': 'a', 'd': '42 is the answer', 'c': 'alwaysoverriddenc'}
14:41
@MorganThrapp You're forgiven.
It's more permissible for polyglots.
polyglot means speaking at least 6 languages
I actually speak only 5 languages in that I can actually make lots of sentences in them.
@Antti balls - that means I can't speak any then :(
I guess the problem is that Python has 2 main array-ish things: lists & tuples, and it's often important to know which one the OP is really talking about. Or if they're talking about an actual numpy (or whatever) array.
@PM2Ring or an array.array....
14:44
hate the word array :D
but... haters gonna hate
@JonClements Them too
What's the advantage of an array over a list?
On the other hand, seeing an opening sentence like "I have an array that looks like {1:2, 3:4}..." is a good indicator to not bother answering.
@Kevin That's a sparse array...
@Kevin they could just be missing the word "associative" off the front... or using PHP terminology :)
14:46
@MorganThrapp Looking at the documentation, looks like it's more memory efficient.
What sucks more, PHP, or the people who use it? :)
Come guys, we're the welcoming, nice channel
Poor PHP Ruby Perl Delphi devs need love, not war
:)
@RobertGrant Yes, yes we do. I would kill for an array append. :P
@Kevin I haven't looked at the relevant source code, but at a guess, I'd say that an array.array is an actual C-style array of the underlying data type, rather than being an array of pointers.
Agreed.
14:51
I should add aliases for git: gti and igt
I need a "phyton" alias.
I have py
Me too, but I forget about it sometimes ;-)
heh
@poke I have lots of them
14:52
Sounds like me when I forget that other systems don’t have py :P
my best alias is:
alias ,pre='more'
more is ofc alias to less if less is available.
lol…
also I use dir always bc I didn't bother doing aliases in windows
Nice, accounting for off by one errors.
so I have dior, dire, dor, die, doe and dur.
14:55
hurr durr
every time I typoed it in the particular way twice, I added an alias :D
I typo a lot.
I usually don’t… except when my fingers are too fast.
@MorganThrapp that's relatively new compared to my aliases
many of them I did in last millennium :D
@MorganThrapp Holy shit
14:57
cbg
I haven't actually used it, I just thought it was funny.

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