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13:00
morning friends
G'Morning.
Martijin, why doesn't ``` syntax work for code blocks? :|
13:17
@MartijnPieters shucks you always bring us the nicest things :D
Why the negative voting
4
Q: Support CommonMark fenced code blocks

Matthieu NapoliIt would be great to add support for fenced code blocks as defined in the CommonMark spec: it would be consistent with GitHub code blocks it would be much more practical to type, instead of having to indent every line which is a pain… it would allow to define explicitly (and easily) a language ...

the person is new at SO people should just point out the mistake and let it slide
@paul23 I didn't vote but whether you do vote or not should be regardless of the account age ideally.
One thing's for sure: I'm investing all I've got in SocialNetGate
13:19
I don't think so, I think that a "repeated offender" should be 'punished more harshly' for each mistake than someone who just did it at first because he doesn't know the (un)written rules yet
You're making a big mistake there. You're equating downvotes with punishment, they're not.
They are: they severelly limit you in the amount of bounties you can appoint
1 hour ago, by Kevin
The punishment of wanting to program is a life sentence of learning.
Your vote is used for you to say how you value each individual post.
I'm a glutton for a life sentence of learning
13:21
@Ffisegydd Then downvotes shouldn't affect bounty allowance
Votes aren't used as punishments, they're used to say "I think this post is/isn't valuable."
Why? Bounty and other privileges is something that has to be earned by bringing value to the community.
Bounty needs some "currency" to avoid hyperinflation; if not votes, what else?
Should I use shell.js or python to create a variety of build scripts to make my node web application compile to desktop?
I've brought enough value to the community to view and delete posts. Martijn has brought enough value that he's now a shareholder in SO (I kid).
People who bring no value to the community, or worse bring negative value, shouldn't be allowed to have the privileges. But that doesn't mean that a downvote for a question is a punishment.
@RobertGrant time - combined with votes & a large enough starting value?
13:22
You should vote based on the question, not anything else.
@Ffisegydd So I can't receive answers because I can't express myself very well in english?
That's a very kapitalistic way of seeing life isn't it?
Not really social
I've downvoted people with 1 rep before now, and I've downvoted people in this room with 50k+ rep.
That's nothing to do with capitalism
And this isn't about life
"community life"
We have to have some language to communicate in, and the language of SO is English. If people can't write a question well enough that they can be understood then it should be closed.
And yes it has nothing to do with capitalism.
13:24
It's not about community life, just stack overflow
@Ffisegydd Why can't you native english speakers then just improve it (without downvoting)..
That really sickens me
@paul23 Because a lot of the time it's not even possible to understand what they were trying to say.
Also, why don't you do that, then?
Exactly. And if I try to improve it I may get the wrong idea, thus changing their meaning.
Being dyslexic and non english I've received more downvotes than upvotes for unclearness
And there is a whole reviewing process dedicated to that, but it can't always be done
13:26
@paul23 Here's the other thing. Everyone here is doing this because they want to. If they don't enjoy trying to struggle through other people's broken english, they're not going to. No one is getting paid.
Yeah, that was going to be my other point
@MorganThrapp but downvote?
If you don't feel doing anything -don't do anything. If it is unclear the response should be that or improve.. But not downvot
Theoretically, the only English words you need to know in order to ask an SO question are "my code is... my expected output is... my actual output is...". Everything else is just window dressing.
Yes! Because it's low quality! Because it's hard to understand.
@paul23 The whole point of SO is to create a repository of easy to understand questions and answers.
13:27
@Ffisegydd So your'e against disabled people
Ah, we're back to this sort of logic - if you aren't totally pro me, potentially to your own detriment, then YOU MUST HATE ME
@Ffisegydd disabled (dyslexic) peple desevre less points because their questions aren't so good?
If you aren't for us, you're a terrorist!
@paul23 that's like saying people who write compilers are against disabled people, for exactly the same reason.
Yes. That's exactly what I was saying. Oh no. You have outed me as a closet bigot. Whatever shall I do. (That was sarcasm by the way, don't twist my words.)
13:29
@RobertGrant No cause I don't mind being ignored I mind being told "the quality of what you do is bad" - While I go to great lengths trying to explain things.
@paul23 Yeah, it sucks, but for the most part (from what I've seen) if it's just a few minor errors, it will get fixed.
@paul23 Here's the thing. Effort != quality.
Of course you're assuming that your posts were downvoted because they were difficult to understand due to your individual circumstances. Are you sure (and I mean no offence here, I've not looked at them so don't know) they weren't downvoted for other reasons?
@MorganThrapp What youv'e seen... I've stopped asking at SO as I gained only negative answers
now for each question I'm afraid to answer I remove an answer I gave.
@paul23 That doesn't make any sense, but okay.
@Ffisegydd Yes - often when discussin it on the meta they "helped" me rewrite it.. But then it was closed shortly thereafter for being unclear.
13:30
You don't seem to have any trouble expressing yourself here, so I'd be surprised if it were a language issue.
@RobertGrant I have often trouble understanding the meaning of manuals
What is this conversation going to accomplish? If you want dyslexic users to be impossible to downvote, make a feature request on Meta. There's nothing we can do about it.
@Kevin I wish to make it so that people stop seeing downvoting as a first resort to unclearness. ESPECIALLY when not telling it.
Then bring it up on Meta, instead of the Python chatroom, maybe?
@paul23 he means why are you talking to us about it? We can't change how everyone votes, so why are you saying this to us ?
13:32
I feel anything that is downvoted should have at least one reason/reply (maybe automated?) to indicated something for the questioner.
This conversation is not going anywhere sensible.
Although given that "Unclear what you're asking" is an official close reason, I doubt they'll say it can't be a downvote reason.
@Ffisegydd Now go look for that OpenCV user that you needed garlic for. :-P Consider that compensation.
Still wish to share my discontent on those who downvoted above questoin without writing a comment it is offtopic.
@paul23 No. This conversation is going nowhere. Let's end it.
13:34
@RobertGrant It should be indicated somewhere before downvotes happen, how else can someone improve without indications...
@paul23: voting is always anonymous. Comments are an additional courtesy, never required.
One of the reasons being that it makes the OP focus on the commenter rather than try and improve the post.
@MartijnPieters That rule I disagree wholearthly with
Well take it up on meta, not here, please.
I understand the frustrations, but that rule is not going to change.
And a discussion off-topic for this room, anyway.
That link was on topic about python right? -.-
13:36
Okay. Final warning. Drop it.
We're no longer discussing a specific question, it's turned into a general meta argument, so let's move on.
Sarcasm is hard to spot, right?
munches virtual popcorn
Don't you antagonise things Bobby or you'll be out on your virtual backside with your virtual popcorn too :P
13:38
ARGH but now all I want to do is say that you can't antagonise things
ALL I WANT
I just want the boto API to be good. That's all I want. :(
Not all things are antagonizable, but all antagonizable things are things.
I managed to introduce an Angular dev to Clojure. Proud of myself.
I need to look into AWS more.
(For definitions of "thing" that include sentient beings)
13:40
@Kevin exacerbate
(I always( wanted( to get((into)) LISP))))) based() lan)guage))s)))), but I just can't.
@Ffisegydd yeah it's one of those things that I'm pretty sure you can earn very good money translating normal systems into AWS systems
(For now, at least)
@MorganThrapp f(arg1, arg2) -> (f arg1 arg2) :)
@RobertGrant Prefix notation is more what gets me.
I really hope the problem I've been working on for the last two days isn't because I wasn't running with administrator privileges.
13:42
(* (+ 1 2 (3)) = ?
@MorganThrapp 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 -> (+ 1 2 3 4) :)
It upsets me when I spend more than eight hours trying to fix a problem that could have been diagnosed and solved in fifteen seconds by someone more qualified
@MorganThrapp * needs 2 args, I guess
It's once I have to start nesting equations that makes me sad.
@Kevin welcome tomy world
13:42
Oh good(?), that wasn't the (only) problem.
@MorganThrapp you don't have to, at least with Clojure. Can do --> and do them sequentially
@Kevin this is a common symptom among programmers
Hey up mucka
@RobertGrant Yeah, I'm sure I have the syntax on that wrong.
13:43
Yes :)
You also don't close the brackets
oi oi Dr FizzyGood
I've read a report about that, years ago. Most programmers feel jealous, or anxious if someone exceed their skills. I do too. All the time.
Do users get any kind of punishment when their shitty answer is successfully removed?
If you meant (1+2)*3 it's (* (+ 1 2) 3)
possibly by flagging for being absuive
13:44
Does anyone need a prescription or a sick note? I can do those now, you know.
@Ffisegydd I could use a script.
DSM no longer has a stranglehold on the trade of illicit pharmaceuticals within the room. Viva le revolution.
@direprobs oh MAN I wish I'd written that report!
@wonderb0lt tries to restrain himself sorry failure: why flag for what coudl be ahonest mistake?
I can't count the number of times I've been accidentally abusive to people
13:45
I've never been accidentally abusive to someone in my life.
I'm kidding; it's 0. (I'm very self-aware.)
Well in the case the answer was sarcastic and meant to be jerky
@RobertGrant, you wish if you'd written that report ?
@RobertGrant You mean that was all on purpose?
@paul23 Are you just trying to be antagonistic at this point?
13:46
Or "exacerbatistic"
The question is "How do I remove all whitespace from X" and the answer posted the same code just with all whitespace removed (making it invalid etc.)
(I'm not talking about anything that happened in or around this room btw)
Well maybe English was the person's 8th language, they're not a programmer and this is the first thing they've ever posted on the internet. They don't deserve the downvote!
^^ easy to tell deliberate abuse
Then they should take a look at ell.stackexchange.com
On a serious note, anyone have experience with fixing a Missing Start Boundary error that's being returned from Amazon's SES? All the info I can find is about fixing a rails gem (Activemailer). I think I'm missing a header, but I don't know which one.
cabbage
13:49
Hey up PM2R
@wonderb0lt ROFL!
@wonderb0lt No, they get a reward - they get back the points they lost from the downvotes.
@PM2Ring That's nice. Do they get some cake too?
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: what's this? I step in to find you're muscling in on my territory!
@direprobs I don't - I think "Cool! Here's someone I can learn some neat new stuff from".
DSM
DSM
Morning cabbage for all. Another Java-based day for me, more's the pity.
13:52
I'm sure we can come to some kind of understanding @DSM, along the lines of the National Crime Syndicate.
@RobertGrant If they're not a programmer, then what the yam are they doing posting on SO? (Yes, I do realize that you were being sarcastic).
Budgets for increased prescription costs
@Ffisegydd or the NHS
Lightning fast wit, that's what I've always liked about you Bob.
I wish I had a Java-based day...
@MorganThrapp Way to miss the sarcasm (ok I'll be kicking myself out again, have a good day everyone!)
13:55
@Ffisegydd oh, sorry is that a thing people call the NHS?
Had no idea
@Ffisegydd That reminded me of this answer, and my comment to it:
Should that be "People do code weird", or are you implying that the original coder was high on stimulants? :) — PM 2Ring May 19 at 10:01
@MorganThrapp That's why I prefer postfix languages to prefix ones. You don't need all those pesky parentheses.
@PM2Ring What languages are postfix?
So (1+2)*3 becomes 1 2 + 3 * ?
@RobertGrant Yep
Hm, smart
That was how the original digital calculators worked, I seem to remember
14:01
Huh.
Because it's simpler to process
Stack and a variable for the total
Sorry - had one of the odder responsibilities I've ever been contracted to do (move coconuts)
DSM
DSM
Respectfully -- that is awesome.
@MorganThrapp The one I use is PostScript, but there are others, eg Forth. And RPN was very popular on early HP scientific calculators.
DSM
DSM
@PM2Ring: oh my word. Is that what the "Post" in "PostScript" is referring to?!
14:03
@DSM Exactly!
@RobertGrant It sure is; you can write a simple RPN calculator in Python in a few lines.
Quite cool
DSM
DSM
The other day I was astonished to discover no one had used the word "effervescent" here before tristan. Now I find out that "PostScript" isn't just a collection of syllables but means something.
Everything is spiralling out of control!
It took me many lines to write an infix calculator with brackets, unary negative etc in Python
@DSM The world makes sense. What is this nonsense?
Here ya go: SImple RPN calculator in Python. Sorry about the eval, but I wrote that code when I was first learning Python, and I've never bothered updating it.
14:15
Need something new to read D:
I just read The Quiet Game, that was pretty good. Well written thriller/page-turner.
@Ffisegydd I just finished Doctor Sleep.
@PM2Ring But you need to know exactly the arity of each operator.
I'm working through The Pragmatic Programmer now.
Player of Games has been sitting on my bed stand for a week or two. I should open it at some point.
14:17
I may go for some Peter Hamilton
@Kevin that's decent
Probably the most conventionally structured/paced of the Culture novels
Which I liked
I haven't read any Iain Banks yet
Ah, the non-science fiction author? :)
I'm a little gun-shy on dead-tree scifi ever since I got Anathem a year or two ago and put it down for good after ten pages
Why, when the first 10 pages were so good?
14:21
@Kevin Try The Martian by Andy Weir
@Kevin you need to ease into his work. Anathem is not a good start.
Anathem was fantastic, but then again I am a big fan of his work.
It's not for the faint-of-heart though.
I liked Snow Crash...
Yeah, go with Snow Crash or the Diamond Age.
@SomeGuy Yep, read it as it was being written chapter-by-chapter.
14:23
Haha nice. I loved it
@poke Fair point. But in practice that's usually not a problem. In PostScript, there aren't too many operators that aren't monadic or dyadic, and when using those ops it's generally a good idea to consult the manual to make sure you've got all the args & have them in the right order. For ops that can take a variable number of args you make the number of args the last arg.
Finished it in like a day
The thicker works are great too! But they require a bit more... commitment.
Cryptonomicon. Amazing. The Diamond Age: Or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer. Heartbreaking but fantastic.
@Ffisegydd hey there, fellow Stephenson fan!
14:24
@Martijn :P Cryptonomicon is my favourite book of all time.
@PM2Ring I’m more thinking about custom operators, aka. functions.
@Kevin Me too. I have it here, I guess I should re-read it.
what's the word for the end part of a url? After the domain name. /thing/id
@poke That shouldn't be a problem if the function is sensibly-written and has comments explaining the args & return values. OTOH, I admit that a lot of PostScript isn't exactly easy to read. :)
;)
@corvid path.
14:30
Wiki says scheme://[user:password@]domain:port/path?query_string#fragment_id
RFC says (draws):
     foo://example.com:8042/over/there?name=ferret#nose
     \_/   \______________/\_________/ \_________/ \__/
      |           |            |            |        |
   scheme     authority       path        query   fragment
      |   _____________________|__
     / \ /                        \
     urn:example:animal:ferret:nose
Just hard to google that... I want a regex that confirms something matches a path for my module. Eg,
MyModule.on('/path/somewhere', function () { }) it should validate the first argument.
@corvid “Parts of a URL”
^(?:[^\/]*(?:\/(?:\/[^\/]*\/?)?)?([^?]+)(?:\??.+)?)$ is all I came up with
Why not startswith and a list of possible paths?
14:33
^
Just match on your actual paths
like every router does.
Surely Meteor has something like this already?
Cbg @BhargavRao
In Halifax, Canada for 2 more months :)
14:37
@poke Germany weather was good!
@RobertGrant meteor doesn't even have a router actually
Was it?
Heavy winds! Delayed the take off by 1 hour :P But I like winds ...
@corvid oh, okay
How does it know what to do with URLs?
14:38
I was there for 6 hrs instead of 5
it doesn't, really, people make addons to handle it
I think meteor is more of an esoteric and specialized framework in that way
I guess it maps straight to its data
In fact I guess one way to describe Meteor is it's trying to recreate the simplicity of mainframe dev, where data, logic and screen all are handled in one system
@BhargavRao Oh right, I remember that it was just a few hours. Guess our weather is good if you only see a few hours…
The German language is tougher than English I guess
Why do you say that?
I hate that German has genders
But then you get used to it
14:45
They speak so fast :P (Atleast on flight)
No, that's what you think when you don't speak the other language :p
Some things are easier in German though
Pauses between words aren't real. They're all in your head
So in another language, it sounds like there are no pauses and they're going really fast
Assuming I'm remembering correctly
:D But French was quite slow
Though I don't know the language
Another reason is the average number of consonants / vowels in every word / sentence
The more consonants, the faster it seems like a foreign language is spoken. (Spanish is often thought of as being spoken faster because it has more consonants on average)
14:48
But the people at the airport in Frankfurt were quite friendly!
When incorrect contradicting comments get upvotes... workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/47226/… sigh
What had you gone there for?
Flight change :D
Where were you headed?
Montreal. and from there to Halifax
14:52
@Bhargav long trip to pop into a bank :)
The secret backstory of The Lord of the Rings: Gandalf is trying to get an achievement for taking the Ring to Mordor using only Hobbits.
lulz
@JonClements 30 hrs. My longest ever trip :D
A Short Journey (50) -- Take the ring to Mordor using only Hobbits.
@BhargavRao We're always friendly here in Frankfurt
Except if you carry drinks inside airport! :D :D
15:03
@BhargavRao That must have been terrible
They caught a old lady for taking shampoo :P
Well, looking over the transcript, last night was a perfect storm of low quality posts. Good thing I finally got to sleep halfway through.
cabbage all
@BhargavRao Then you're obviously a terrorist.
lol :D
@MorganThrapp that's like the Steam Achievement for carrying the garden gnome through all of HL2: episode 2
15:04
Seriously though, the restrictions on liquids in carry-on baggage are pretty much universal in the western world, or so I thought
@RobertGrant You know, I've always meant to finish HL2.
@wonderb0lt the restrictions are there everywhere I guess. It was the same when I had gone to Myanmar
@wonderb0lt last time I flew from Frankfurt I had to go through two security things, unpacking my stuff etc into trays each time
That was fun
@BhargavRao Never been out of Europe / the anglosphere in my life so I wouldn't know :)
@RobertGrant Once at the Gate, but where was the other time?
But I've heard that Munich airport is really good in Germany
15:09
Compulsory xkcd :)
^ Seriously. In KIA (Bengaluru airport) they made me empty my water bottle
Am I wrong for thinking s[::-1] reverses a python string, unicode or not, in all cases?
They asked me to fill it inside :D
user559633
@AaronHall it should as long as s is a sliceable array of chars
@AaronHall it does
15:12
@wonderb0lt can't remember, it was a long time ago :) probably when security was at its most theatrical
>>> u'madam'[::-1]
u'madam'
:D
THE U SHOULD BE ON THE OTHER END!
@RobertGrant 9/12
Oh yeah! @Rob was correct. Nope, @Aaron, it will not put the u the other way :'(
15:13
rbrb Robert!
And the vowels in this Hebrew are in the right order, yes?

>>> foo = u'דוֹתָן'
>>> print foo
דוֹתָן
>>> print foo[::-1]
ןָתֹוד
user559633
the squiggles check out, yes
Lol. I did Google translate on that. :D
The dot under the N looking character is missing in the second one
That's a Hebrew vowel.
It looks wrong, but it's right.
see workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/47226/… where a low level programmer (C#) gets this wrong...
DSM
DSM
15:21
I don't know whether Python gets the combined characters right on reversal. For example:
>>> s = "Солжени́цын"
>>> s
'Солжени́цын'
>>> s[::-1]
'ныц́инежлоС'
Maybe it's just my system's rendering, but that looks wrong to me.
I think I'll just stick with ANSI forever.
DSM
DSM
(Where's J.F. Sebastian when you need him?)
Rbrb.. going out to see the city :)
The accent is a char that follows the e (that what it sounds like, if I recall?), but is placed over it. Thus the reversal is correct.
ok, gotta make a ui, now
DSM
DSM
Could someone confirm that I'm not seeing things? On my system, the following two render differently:
>>> ''.join(regex.findall("\X", s)[::-1])
'ныци́нежлоС'
>>> s[::-1]
'ныц́инежлоС'
15:26
Looks the same here in chat
Yeah that hairstyle of H has shifted to the left to the dyslectic N
user559633
heh (the 'n' but sure)
It's an H sound?
I thought it was more of a redundant vowel.
Rhubarb
I don't remember, there's a difference between Ukrainian and Russian there too, isn't there...
15:27
@PM2Ring rbrb!
user559633
that's not a valid russian char :)
DSM
DSM
Ignoring what things actually sound like and only considering what they look like, in Chrome the two above have the accent above the H in the first and the N in the second for me. In my console, it's above the N in the first, and the U-with-tail in the second. Something is clearly broken with how at least one of my renderers is behaving.
user559633
wouldn't that be when your computer tries to combine code points for letters instead of just the literal reversing?
user559633
e.g. on something without diacritics

>>> s
'юникода'
>>> s[::-1]
'адокиню'
DSM
DSM
15:31
The point of using \X with regex was to iterate over the graphemes, and so in the console that gives me the "right" answer, and s[::-1] the "wrong" one. But apparently I can't trust pasting to behave..
user559633
everyone just learn english, good god stop being lazy
user559633
if it isn't the good doctor
DSM
DSM
The above is what I see in the console, and what I expected everyone else would see when I pasted into chat, but guess not..
when are they going to update the what's new in Python 3.5 doc? I've been waiting forever!
15:39
@tristan Well... I suppose he is a Doctor at least :p
If I'm the good doctor, does that make DSM the bad doctor?
DSM
DSM
:-/
@Ffisegydd we have some element of symmetry with good/evil puppy - I reckon the Dr's should have the same :)
I'm willing to be the Evil Doctor to be honest.
DSM
DSM
Is that "bad" in the good way? Like the kids say? .. they still say that, right?
user559633
15:42
@Ffisegydd oh, no, the "better" doctor
@DSM no idea, let's ask our resident expert on modern pop culture. @Tristan, thoughts?
user559633
@Ffisegydd there are doctors in pop culture?
ok, gotta switch comps. Cheers fellows
@tristan isn't there a Dr Dre.? :)
and there's errr, a professor green
Inglourious Basterds is a great film.
user559633
15:44
@JonClements my understanding is that his title is primarily ornate
Kanye West has a doctorate. Think about that guys.
@Ffisegydd I feel ashamed of myself :(
unless it's in something like "How to stab and survive being stabbed" - then I'm feeling superior again
user559633
You got stabbed?
Based on Kevin's messages earlier I've decided to re-read Anathem. Thanks Kevin, your failure has inspired me.
Awww - what a nice way to cheer @Kevin up doc :)
15:50
@Ffisegydd I failed to read Ulysses a couple of times, if you're looking for a folowup.
I failed to read Dante's Comedy, which is a shame because it's something that really interests me.
I've managed to read "The Hungry Caterpillar"
@JonClements Have you noticed how hard it is to find a copy of that which isn't damaged?
I need Brandon Sanderson to start churning out more books.
hi
15:55
Also on my list of disappointing books from otherwise good authors: That Hideous Strength. "Let's round off my trilogy of planet-spanning exploration and adventure by having people sit in a room on earth and talk to one another", thinks CS Lewis
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: ehh, I quite liked it. But then Perelandra is one of my favourite books.
Welcome @Liam :-)
It's because I liked Perelandra so much that I was blindsided by the tone shift
That's how I felt about Speaker to the Dead and Xenophobia. I love the rest of the Ender's Game novels, but those two were just so hard to get through.
DSM
DSM
Xenophobia didn't do much for me, but I thought Speaker for the Dead was very good. It's definitely a very different book from EG, though.
Wait, that's not the name, is it?
15:59
Maybe I just need to reread them. I was ~13 when I first tried to read them.
DSM
DSM
Xenocide, that was it.
Also whichever part of the Wrinkle In Time series was about shrinking to microscopic size to fight evil germs in the little brother's body. I was willing to accept the twins going back in time to the biblical era, but this was just way too out there.

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