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01:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

01:10
@DSM that was brilliant.
DSM
DSM
01:27
@AaronHall: sorry, what now?
Hilarious. Where do they get these?
DSM
DSM
Where does who get what? Oh, the AI/Excel thing?
Wonder if I've still got some of my favourites bookmarked
Did someone give him a warning, or was it just summarily deleted with an expectation that he knows what's up?
He's having a laugh for some reason
01:33
Do you have to have a direct link to find these? If you can find them with some kind of search, can you do so on other SE sites?
I just happen to have some bookmarked I found particularly amusing
mmm
ok
I met an SE employee at a christmas party once, he gave me the idea to ask, "Who's a good boy" on pets.SE. I did it Q&A style with the answer along the lines of "You are!" :D I don't remember if I waited until April 1st to do it or not. Probably not... :(
02:12
@JonClements do I need 10k to see that?
Yup... can make a screenshot if you want
well I guess I better get on that 10k rep target ASAP then! ;)
Yup... put the pedal to the metal and all that :p
yup! (screenshots would reduce the incentives :) )
DSM
DSM
I remember one of our occasional visitors was really excited about the opportunity to view deleted questions. Not sure if he was disappointed when he realized the majority of them aren't very interesting.
02:19
It's still useful though... saved me from making an answer before... eg: a kind of "ah huh... someone's already made that wrong... I won't post it then..." :p
 
3 hours later…
05:01
word up @Ffisegydd :p
05:14
Been up since 3. Couldn't get back to sleep.
Might just get up soon and get an early breakfast.
Over-active mind?
05:40
Cbg all
How are you this fine day numpy :)
You confusing nuppy and numpy there? :p
Going good - how's you?
yeah nuppy sorry :P
Yeah going well :) starting to learn python from basic from o'reilly learning python book
06:15
Omnomnom.
So what's for brekkie then?
This is 12PM-> Good Afternoon
06:31
Cbg
I finished the ML course :) Woohoo
@RobertGrant Pineapple
Was this course the one you posted a month or 2 ago
That pyspark thing
Related; I finished that one. This was a distributed ML one, which still used pyspark, but more focused on ML techniques
(Much more)
In fact it was more numpy than spark
congrats
06:37
Thanks
Way to go Bobby G! So we can expect Nidaba to be up and running and production worthy by the weekend then? :p
Was this also like the MOOC course
user2299177
any salesforce developer here?
user2299177
any one please
@JonClements :)
Yeah I still have a very tenuous grasp of the theory, but I'm a lot better than I was
06:47
@i_Looser please don't go around asking that in every room you can find... it'll be considered spamming
user2299177
But I didn't fine any special room for salesforce
user2299177
@JonClements
That's no reason to ask in other rooms
Yeah, logic fail.
@VigneshKalai yeah
If possible can you give me the link of both of that :) @RobertGrant
06:50
Sure, 1 sec
They say they're closed now, but I don't know if you can still access the content
Thanks mate :)
Even if the first one is closed and you can't access the content, the second one should still (just) be open and if you sign up quickly, you can always download all the content and do it in your own time
But hopefully you can just access it as per usual
Yeah have to download it then
I'm now doing a pre-university calculus course, to try and remember stuff long forgotten :)
Yeah for machine learning it say mathematical foundations are needed have to brush up that and get into that
06:59
Yeah I struggled with the linear algebra side of things; that distracted me from the actual content :)
I have some links that might help for that as well?
Thanks a lot for the links Khanaacadmey seems to be more informative and easy :)
there are some guys who say "if you do software you don't need math" :D
in my books they're not doing software
@AnttiHaapala yeah at least for the cooler stuff
That's why I'm trying to brush up; what's nice about the mathsy stuff is it's easier to parallelise, which is nice
And presumably the future
07:04
it is like "I make computers"
"I am a computer engineer"
"I buy a case and the components, put them all together and install windows"
:)
Well it can also be "I make webapps"
yes
"no math needed I just need to know html"
:)
True, although you could make a Django application and a database structure mostly on cs instincts, without knowing (or remembering) much maths
07:19
that would be the "I make computers" from above
Oh I thought that was like assembling components
08:19
it is, but I wouldn't call it "making" really...
it is assembling :D
and at a very high level then...
but that is how I see things
08:39
cabbage
Is it just me, or is this guy too hard to communicate with?
09:11
@PM2Ring yeah, that user needs json, as simple as that
Hopefully, he'll get the hint when he tries Anand S Kumar's code.
Mornin' cabbage
mornin'
Any other Brits silently fuming over the RBS sale?
09:28
Oh, no. But I didn't know about it.
Tell me your rage
"Osborne is hoping RBS shares will rise in value, however, and future sales could be at a smaller loss or even a profit." Ah.
Our most important strategy is hope! No.
Good old Georgie boy hasn't quite got the hang of "buy low, sell high"
It's stuff like this that makes me wonder how people stay motivated to pay tax at all
2 billion pounds, gone into subsidising a bank.
Oh - that's only a fraction of what it was bailed out by
Yeah but that's the loss they're contemplating, I think
They're not selling the whole stake now
They'll get ~2billion but make a ~1billion loss on it
09:41
Ah okay sorry
So, 1 billion gone into subsidising a bank
This is why I wish Egg had succeeded
First chance for tech to redefine the industry
Shall we all start a bank?
Yeah, but if they sold the whole lot right now at these prices, that's a 7bn loss
Which equates to around £230 per taxpayer
@RobertGrant I've seriously thought about it. Don't gamble people's money, charge them a monthly fee and their money is guaranteed
I wonder if selling the shares could cause the share price to rise
@IntrepidBrit yeah
Loan out money to local businesses, encourage the use of localised digital currencies...
But y'know, pipe-dreams ;)
I will say one good thing about SA: their banks basically do that, and apparently their regulations don't let them get into a big mess
Just charge a monthly fee, or per-transaction
@RobertGrant We all know why that won't work. People will hold off buying the shares, suppressing the prices...
09:47
Yeah true, that is the issue
Although isn't that a good time to buy?
At least in the short term
And our fictional bank could link to Visa, who issue the cards, and every transaction/cash withdrawal is done on Visa credit, fees paid for in the background by FictionalBank, so we wouldn't have to worry about cards
I'm no stock market guru. But yes, it would be a good time to buy them. But if they know the government NEEDS to sell, they can dickish about it. Especially if the media go on a massive trumpeted fanfare each time to give everyone plenty of warning
Yeah agreed
@RobertGrant Yep. And in the far future, make sure it's international but contained. Because cross-country regulation is absolute murder for banks
I guess the problem with starting a bank is the number of people you need to employ solely to keep you compliant with regulations
I guess you wouldn't call it a "bank" to begin with.
09:52
Legally mandated employment: I'm not a fan of those jobs
Although I know they make everything work
I do feel as though a lot of them could be replaced with software in the next 20 years
And then they all become auditors of that software
Until we write, say, 9 systems that all are checking the same stuff, and humans only audit when at least one of the systems disagrees with the results of the others
And then BOOM! The world bows to software developers
We'll program all the elections...
This I guess is where Asimov's MULTIVACS came from
In fact there's even one story where MULTIVACS only has to interview one person, the Voter, who is different every year, to determine how everyone will vote
terrifying
Sorry, MULTIVAC
Not actually read through any of Asimov's stuff. Currently cracking through Iain M Banks' stuff
10:01
@IntrepidBrit not for the Aston-laden developers who maintain it :)
10:15
True dat.
So, yeah. If anyone is ever in the position to do something like that, I'm in :) (please let me in)
@JonClements He's following a long line of UK chancellors in that tradition ;)
indeed :)
cabbage all. For anyone who remembers my rapid exit yesterday, I haven't been squashed by falling scaffolding
Excellent :)
10:26
Yes. apparently there were some cartoonesque / filmic scenes where two builders were clinging to the side of a building some 30ft up for a few minutes, but they were rescued and everyone was OK.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/31793117/matplotlib-embeds-type-3‌​-fonts-with-linear-axis-scale OP looking for, well, I'm not sure, someone on SO to fix an external library I think. No comms from OP in 10 hours+
hello my cabbages
I forgot to learn python for about 2 months but now I'm back
11:02
@JRichardSnape Good to hear nobody was injured.
@JRichardSnape Maybe he thinks the matplotlib devs assiduously read all the matplotlib questions on SO...
@PM2Ring yeah, possibly. I know T Caswell is around sometimes, but still... I've added a little comment to try and assist, but it really should be closed
I wonder why he doesn't want a work-around. I'm pretty sure that using GhostScript it's not too hard to play with the fonts to some extent (eg embed unusual fonts into the doc itself) while converting to EPS. But GhostScript is so huge it's hard to remember the details of its capabilities.
> GhostScript is so huge it's hard to remember the details of its capabilities.
Ain't that the truth
I suppose it's just he wants to press the button and out springs the graph for his publication. Fair enough. I suspect there is a little bug where I link to in the code - the use of fonttype shouldn't be reliant on useafm (I think - not a PS expert at all)
But it's a matplotlib github issue, not SO, that's for sure
cbg @Ffisegydd. World of work treating you well?
11:51
In the UK, if you buy a car on finance, can you overpay as much as you like?
Often no - they make their money by making you pay interest... I'm sure there are some schemes where you can
Hmm okay
Here's another nice financial law in SA: for loans up to around 15k GBP, you can overpay as much as you like
Or - you could get a loan with those terms and then repay, I guess. I've never done it. But I do know that when I worked for a large car company, they made all their money from enforcing Finance terms. Some cars were even sold as a loss leader just for the finance at that time (c. 2001)
Yeah I'm not surprised
I wonder if it's better to get a bank loan
@RobertGrant That's a useful law. I don't thing (caveat: not a Financial Adviser ;)) there's anything similar here
11:54
Also wondering if I should ask if I could get a company car, and then just get anything that's under 100g/km CO2
Often these days, you get some kind of salary sacrifice scheme to spend on a car, rather than a company car per se
Lots of places encourage such schemes, though. Particularly for low emissions.
Yeah that's fine - they quoted me a car allowance so I might be able to swap
I just wonder if I'd save on tax
yeah - that's the usual thing, I think. Car allowance on your own pre-existing car or swap to get something new. It's a while since I was anywhere where I was interested in that, though
(Assuming I got a low BIK car)
morning everyone
11:58
I love how in the US "scheme" has negative connotations, but in the UK, you're all a bunch of little schemers and tax dodgers. :D
Isn't that negative as well?
I'm always surprised that when Americans are happy they exclaim a word that means "fairly tidy". Neat!
Hm. Fairly cold. Cool! Are they all just mild forms of adjectives?
We're so much worse. Have you seen the european's guide to translating British phrases?
There is no tax charge if the car is powered only by electricity
OOOH
"Not Bad" -> EU = "Not good" -> UK = "good!"
FREE CAR
I guess wicked isn't mild, although it's also not in fashion any more
12:02
@RobertGrant In other news - HubGit. I've posted a ticket of relatively minor import.
Thanks! And double thanks for import.
Just read that for non-electric cars, it's worse to get the company car than the cash. Oh well.
@AaronHall proudly schemes and dodges
That's why no-one at my old company has a company car any more
@RobertGrant that rings a bell - I think that's why it sort of fizzled out as a thing
12:05
The tax system is fairly punitive on emissions - as you say starting from zero on all-electric
But from what I can see any car other than electric, you might as well get the cash.
You're just gonna have to get that Tesla S ;)
Even 1g/km CO2
range, speed and 4 seats. Never mind the second mortgage
It's because you take the value of the car, say 20k. Then the benefit in kind tax gets applied to it - say 20% (that depends on CO2). So now we're on 4k. That 4k gets taxed at your highest rate
12:07
yes - it's coming back to me now. Particularly bad if you hit the 40% income tax bracket
So BIK is just on top of income tax
Except when it's 0%, at which point you're paying income tax on 0.
Hm sorry no I'm talking rubbish, I think, as you're only paying tax on the BIK, not the total, it should actually be smaller.
I need @JonClements to help me
Anyone work with SVG before?
I can't remember. HMRC pages normally good. This useful? gov.uk/calculate-tax-on-company-cars
@JRichardSnape I remember when they were the worst.
12:16
I think they've come on a lot. There are still hard to find details, though
Actually the What Car thing doesn't really help
This must be a calculable decision
Graph, 2 lines, point at which they cross, etc.
Problem is - you have two lines for each type of car
That's why none of the articles want to commit
True - I just wonder if you could plot cars on it. Maybe scrape CO2 data from somewhere
And have company car tax along the x-axis and taxable income required to pay it outright on the y-axis
But then there's insurance etc for private sales. Bleh, never mind.
12:50
Do I just have terrible taste in music or is this song really good?
cbg
@corvid svg with Python or svg in general?
@PatrickMaupin just svg in general, it's acting a little weird
I've only really encountered it in the context of Python (rst2pdf) or inkscape. rst2pdf can use packages like svg2rlg to render it, but there were so many edge cases that in general it works better to output a PDF from inkscape.
As far as electric vehicles go, if you don't have to go very far in one go (or there are DC fast chargers along your route), you don't need a Tesla (depending on the configuration of various parts of your anatomy, of course). I've had an i-Miev (I think I'm one of about 3 people in the states with one) for a bit over a year, and I'm really happy -- of course the subsidies don't hurt...
But we have two cars, and the other one is petrol-powered, so there's that.
@PatrickMaupin Wow, the i-Miev has a really weird front. It's kinda cool.
It looks like an escape pod.
13:06
Yeah. It's actually kinda like a Tardis. The square hatchback means you can get a lot more into it than my wife's Versa. It hauls around my tuba nicely. There are a lot of videos and pictures (myimiev.com is a good starting point) but some of the videos that really sold me on it were Kryten driving around in one.
Electric cars are cool because they're so much more efficient than gas cars
Yeah torque up front.
The torque of the town
That's what I'm torquing about
Torque about power!
Also, huh, subprocess.check_call() will accept a list of tuples as its args without complaining.
You'd be like Jack and the giant beanstorque
This one is actually RWD. It has a fixed 7:1 ratio, which is a good compromise. It doesn't accelerate anything like a Tesla, but in the speed range where you need to slip into the gap, it never disappoints.
13:08
@RobertGrant groans
Sorry I started this. Somebody torque about something else, quick.
@corvid Can you be a little more specific? :) I'm no SVG expert, but I do know a bit about it.
Torque about a lot of puns...
Anyway, there's a lot of video of Kryten in an i-miev in motion
Bad link -- fixed
rbrb -- gotta get to work
13:34
cbg
13:56
Had my IT induction at BigCorp, they've stated absolutely and utterly that they don't support Linux (and only just support Mac) and that Windows is the way to go :P thought you'd all enjoy that.
Welcome to AlmostAnyCorp :)
Not CabbageCorp!
Honestly, I'll take Windows 10 with the gnutools that come with git over Linux or OSX.
ducks
I'm happy as long as I have grep
13:58
Get out.
There is no escape from the Python room. It's like the hall of doors from Scooby Doo where you run through one and just come out of another one.
Possibly wearing an amusing costume, or riding a tandem bicycle.
As soon as Exchange and Outlook can reliably replaced, non-Windows has a chance
@RobertGrant Even then, there's webmail and Thunderbird plugins
I stand by my statement :)
@wonderb0lt I've yet to be able to get Exchange and Thunderbird to play nice together other than with DavMail.
To be fair, I'm on Exchange 2003.
14:02
@MorganThrapp I've only heard. I had my Linux in a VM because I wasn't allowed to make a full-on installation
Not sure what I should do with my answer to python - unable to add image to the GUI(tkinter) on windows. It doesn't fully solve the OP's problem, but I do think it's a step in the right direction.
I'm not feeling inclined to delve any further into his issue, but I don't want to delete either...
14:20
I was using ImageTk.PhotoImage() a week or two ago, but not with embedded images. I originally had a problem with it: IIRC, I couldn't import ImageTk, which I eventually resolved by installing tk8.5-dev and tcl8.5-dev then re-installing Pillow.
It looks like that OP is encoding the image as base64, so extra whitespace shouldn't cause a problem.
user559633
@Ffisegydd Go with OS X. A VirtualBox linux machine can be really easily used as a separate "space"
@tristan I don't have a choice. It's Windows or nothing (which I don't mind at all)
Windows + VirtualBox is also cool
Just have 8GB RAM
For extra zoom
@MorganThrapp DavMail is pretty good, though. I use it all the time, no problems with mail. Calendar integration can get a bit funny about timezones.
@Ffisegydd Your real killer is whether you have admin access or not. Without it - getting VirtualBox or anything installed is often a pain.
@JRichardSnape I have some sporadic issues sending attachments, but other than that it seems to work.
14:42
Sneaking around this is one of the Procedural Violations for which I am in perpetual mild trouble (c.f. yesterday's starred comment)
If I didn't have admin access to my computer, I think I would go insane.
I won't have admin access, but shouldn't need it (I wasn't intending to install VBox)
user559633
@Ffisegydd Flip the desk and walk out while speed metal plays in the background
exactly. Hence my flouting of the rules. You can't do anything interesting on Windows without admin access.
DSM
DSM
Unhandled promise rejection TypeError: datagroups[Symbol.iterator] is not a function mutter mutter
Cabbage, all.
14:45
Cbg.
I can't desk flip and walk out, I've only just updated my linkedin.
No admin access == long waits to get anything done, in my experience. YMMV. Maybe BigCorp a la Fizzy is better than BigCorp a la Snapey
DSM
DSM
You can build a perfectly decent environment on Windows, but I admit I've needed admin access to get things set up the way I like.
LinkedIn update does lock out the desk flip feature for 3 months, I believe
@DSM Same
user559633
last time that i had to use windows, i just put a small computer on the floor and sshed into it
user559633
14:47
there, i technically did what you told me. if you don't like it, you should have been hyper-specific before expecting me to follow a stupid policy
We do everything on MSSQLServer, so I pretty much have to run windows.
SVG text is reeeally annoying :|
@Kevin I've just added an answer - hopefully, it'll work on Windows. :) But I guess the Big Question is: will it work once it's converted into an executable?
15:01
Best of luck :-)
Pet peeve: the plural of status is statūs
DSM
DSM
What now?
If I see someone tell me matter-of-fact it's statii, I will leather them
@MorganThrapp yeah also SQL Server
Thankfully I like the tooling
@IntrepidBrit Actually status is the plural, the singular version is just statu.
15:13
As per original latin? Or from prior to Middle English?
Guys, wake up. It's statue. Now, what are we talking about?
Anyone got a dupe for "Equality (==) is not assignment (=)"?
I knew I could count on Bobby G.
Woop. I made an animation suite. Why? I still don't know.
15:18
@Ffisegydd I'm always sad that Datum isn't used more frequently.
@corvid It would be less annoying if it worked properly in all browsers, but I guess that's a bit too much to expect. :) FWIW, you might like this SVG tutorial. I have no idea how good his videos are, but I've found the main text helpful.
@PM2Ring Luckily I only have to worry about chromium, but this tutorial looks really helpful
@davidism And a bunch of syntax errors
@corvid Oh, good.
15:23
Whoops, I only half-answered another question: Error when saving 3D array
1 hour ago, by Kevin
I'm not feeling inclined to delve any further into his issue, but I don't want to delete either...
@wonderb0lt that's mostly from them using tabs
@Kevin surprised it writes anything at all as DATA doesn't seem to be defined anywhere
Silly OP forgot to give us a full MCVE. So silly.
I suspect an MCVE might be impossible here, if the presence of "driver" in his code implies that it depends on special hardware.
15:29
Is there some magic library that lets me log a history of SQLAlchemy models to a db?
@Kevin That's an, interesting error. "Why is this thing I set to None saying that it's None?"
JUST found that - thanks
Is it known to be decent, or more of a Google hit?
I think there are a number of internally consistent mental models of Python where thing = None is a no-op. All of those models are wrong, but they're consistent.
@Kevin I don't think it does; me guess is that it's just gdal syntax. But it might be a good idea for him to somehow verify that DATA does actually contain non-zero values.
15:32
driver is concerned with file type here, not hardware.
Suppose a user first encounters x = None in some context where it is necessary to initialize a value before performing an algorithm. So they mentally categorize x = None as "cause x to be initialized". Obviously it doesn't make sense to initialize a variable that already has a value, so it's reasonable to assume that it does nothing if an assignment has already occurred.
+1 @pm2 - need to see at least a sample DATA
@MorganThrapp Yeah, Seeing that in the code snippet he posted doesn't fill me with confidence regarding the rest of his code. :)
Well if you guys want to needle him for more info, please proceed. As for me, installing a third party library is beyond my threshold of effort, so I'm bailing.
stackoverflow.com/q/31811184/400617 requires psychic debugging of remote server
DSM
DSM
15:34
I could understand thing = None at the start. Hard to understand where it is.
Also, yet another person apparently running their app as root.
@Kevin Maybe...
DSM
DSM
I don't often run my apps, but when I do, I run them as root.
Maybe it was at the start, and it migrated downwards as he inserted more lines.
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: that's not crazy.
15:36
@Kevin Nah, I've heard of gdal before, but that's about it.
stackoverflow.com/q/31809785/400617 "write an xml editor as form fields for me" too broad
Never attribute to malice insanity that which can be explained by stupidity mistaken assumptions about how programming works
^^^ seems legit
Hanlon^WKevin's razor
DSM
DSM
DSM, on someone's code which seemed to be written in a basically random order:
Jun 18 '14 at 15:10, by DSM
I can almost see it if I think of constraint programming, where the order doesn't matter so much. If you imagine someone telling the computer various things as they occur to him, and the interpreter's job is to construct a code in which each of those things happens in a consistent order, then maybe?
15:41
Yeah, this could be in a similar category of questions like 'why doesn't b equal "YY" when I do a = "X"; b = a+a; a = "Y"?'
It's weird seeing old transcripts of chat before Corvid got his name.
Jul 30 '14 at 21:28, by Crow
just had a pretty creepy experience with crows. No longer a crow
@davidism I'm so tempted to post "Clearly, the error's on line 37".
I wish we had a version of Local variables in Python nested functions specifically aimed at beginner-to-intermediate users that want to know why for i in range(10): widgets[i].bind("click", lambda: do_a_thing(items[i])) doesn't work as expected
Martijn's answer is very thorough but I simply don't think the target audience has enough of an attention span to pick out the solution to their actual problem
Hm I need to re-read that thing
Opened a tab for reading tomorrow :)
Rbrb
15:51
@davidism I guess he is now a different kind of corvid. Magpies are fun...
That's the problem I have with a lot of the long answers. The actual answer gets buried in words. The answers that use multiple headings are the worst offenders. A concise answer is almost always better than a blog post.
struggles for a cool and quotable maxim "make things as complicated as possible, but no complicateder" stop trying to make complicateder happen, it's not gonna happen!
@Kevin Yeah, it's technically an excellent answer, but it's probably a bit too technical for someone who's just learning GUI programming and can't understand why the loop they're using to build a bunch of widgets isn't working like they expect it to.
@AaronHall that's a terrible idea
and it's really not that clever, but you keep brining it up
Really it's not even the length. Most Qs that get hammered are specifically about lambdas in loops, but the target is about non-lambda functions inside loops. Obviously there's not much difference between the two from the POV of an experienced user, but most people asking this question don't know much about lambdas other than "these are the keywords you have to string together to make your button respond to clicks"
15:56
@davidism How about a TL;DR summary at the top, followed by the in-depth explanation? Preferably with some MCVE example code for people (like me) who learn better from tangible examples than from abstract descriptions.
Oh well. I don't think there's an easy solution. I guess I'll just keep doing the combo of "hammer" + "make a comment giving a custom solution to their specific use-case"
It irrationally bothers me when I look through the history of a user asking a bad question and see that all of the code in their question has been written by various other users in response to the user's terrible questions.
@MorganThrapp And thus the cycle of cargo cult programming continues.
@PM2Ring There's a PyGame question in the new queue that prompted this.
@PM2Ring sure, add the tldr and the example, then remove all the rest. The problem is that the long answers seem (to me) to be long because the author doesn't know how to be concise, not because the problem is particularly complicated. They also fall into the trap of going down a bunch of sub-topics a lot.
Martijn's answer is fine, I'm talking about the even longer answers.
15:59
I'm saddened by people that are like "how do I do [very non-general problem]? I have been searching very thoroughly and can't find a solution" because it's apparent to me that they think programming is 100% borrowing existing algorithms from existing sources.
01:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

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