« first day (1774 days earlier)      last day (3403 days later) » 

00:04
Ah, I guess I know what you mean
It sucks when I have to debug and find out all I did was write in camelcase while python functions are in upper case
That's why having a linter is worthwhile: you know when you made spelling mistakes, or crucial syntax errors (plus other stuff, like style recommendations).

But the reasons to be weary of autocomplete are a few fold, especially because Sublime offers full snippets. Now, if I type in "qt" + tab for C++, I can start a new Qt project file. The same is try for me and PySide, with "pyside" + tab. But, if I don't already know what I need to start a new project, it does all the work for me and I learn nothing. Autocomplete when you're starting, in my opinion, is just a milder form of copying exer
@AlexanderHuszagh ah I see what you mean
I'll take your suggestion and download sublime text instead ^_^
do you know which plugins I should download? and if sublime 3 or 2?
@AlexanderHuszagh you're talking about templates, not autocomplete.
Autocomplete is figuring out what to import when you ask for a function, or telling you what arguments can be passed to a function call, or telling you what attributes are available on an object.
@davidism, yeah I know, although I generally feel autocomplete in the very beginning is a bit of an extension.

Especially if you're following recipes or a tutorial.
I think the message you're sending is wrong though. Autocomplete is harmless, and incredibly useful. I don't want to be a walking docs.python.org, and autocomplete doesn't keep me from having to actually know what functions I want to use, just prevents the rest of the busy work.
Recommending people avoid things with autocomplete (as opposed to avoiding pre-written templates), is just detrimental.
00:14
Is it? For a beginner in a language? People learn by repetition, once they've learned, autocomplete is a great tool.

But I've seen people just type "e" and wait for suggestions to come up. I do mean very beginning of a language until they understand the basic syntax.
If I want to read a csv file, no amount of autocomplete will help me if I hadn't read the docs and found that I had to: open a file, create a reader, then loop over it's rows.
No it won't, but this is what I'm talking about with autocomplete: overly suggestive IDEs at first make you stupid, then they build you up:
(link to image) "http://i.imgur.com/vzOsNBl.png"
I don't see how offering to let you type fewer characters for known keywords "makes you stupid". If you don't know what the keywords do, you're screwed whether you have autocomplete or not.
I guess the argument here is
whether single statements completing for you will make you dependent on it for larger processes
Davidism is more senior and also a much better programmer than me, I will preface this argument with.
00:22
Oh. So then I guess autocomplete is not as bad?
But generally, I feel we as creatures learn through repetition. We don't actually know how to fix a tire until we do it multiple times, we cannot right a good sorting algorithm until we've done it multiple times. My issue with autocomplete is it "does" all the repetition for you when you should grind through it, at least shortly.

But I will stand by that davidism knows a lot more than me.
Then don't press tab, and type out the whole thing. But don't recommend that people avoid good editors just because it pops up things about things.
(I'm not telling him to avoid a good editor. I'm telling him to set the default parameter for autocomplete to false for a few days. Which is do-able in any good editor).
Mmm I think the argument about good sorting algorithms isn't necessarily true
But everything else makes sense
Also, disable autoindent, since the only way you'll remember to indent 4 spaces is through repetition. ;-P
00:31
LOL
Also, disable highlighting, since the only way you'll recognize syntax is by parsing a monochrome block of text without aid.
I think there are different styles of learning. Some people like the cut back, I started doing this with just a text editor and repeated it like a mantra until it became second nature. Others want to start fast and use all the tools. You can get to the same place via both paths
:p True, my argument disintegrates in extreme examples, but a lot of introductory examples have you do a for-loop a few times, then a few while loops, etc, just to get you used to the syntax and built-ins.
Well, it may be the case for someone who just started programming, but I've been doing some C++ and java and some frontend languages, so I know what kind of functions, control structures, etc that SHOULD, in reality exist
so I guess it's just a simple case of translation of wording to mean the same thing in two different languages
Yeah, then davidism's suggestion is probably the way to go. I stand corrected.
00:33
I tend to go for the latter (fancy IDE) in java, but use a plain text editor for python, not sure why. probably cause I'm doing simple stuff in python.
@AlexanderHuszagh nono, you have a valid point there
I just feel lazy at this moment, don't want to keep repeating things haha
But yeah, check the wiki and the link for the recommended IDEs which are an excellent guide. Also, the love the Anaconda plugin for Sublime.
alright thank you so much :)
 
4 hours later…
04:16
Morning guys
Come to ask a question about using python write a gdb pretty printer
I do not know how to do it right, but seems that the ['val'] part is formatted so that for each accessed char it gives the number and the char literal.
Maybe you'd get what you want with splicing instead (just a guess), so try _str = str(self.val['val'][0:3])
04:33
Let me try
Good morning. I had this (I think relatively simple) question but that hasn't gotten any replies yet. Does anyone have a moment to try to help me out?
1
Q: Avoiding multiple entries of same data into SQLite database tables (Python)

LinnKI'm writing information from Python (a Pandas DataFrame) to different tables in a database. I'm currently testing whether there is a match between a 'cell' in my DataFrame and the name of one of the tables in the database, and if so sending the information in the relevant row from the DataFrame t...

TypeError: Could not convert Python object: slice(0, 3, None).
@AnttiHaapala
so not that
hmmm
then I guess you need to look into manuals :D
or maybeee...
you can print(dir(self.val['val'][0])),
and see if there are other usable methods / attributes which would just give the char value / byte
maybe int would work?
so you can do chr(int(self.val...))
05:05
Last one works! Thank you very much @AnttiHaapala, I love you
I guess there is a better way to do it but...
it'd require me to look into it :D and I am a bit busy
notice that they do not have operator +
Value.string ([encoding[, errors[, length]]])
you can use this
self.val['val'].string('iso8859-1', 'ignore', 3)?
Ok, Let me see
I tried 'strict'
But don't work
RuntimeError: Trying to read string with inappropriate type `struct zend_string *'.
I think this function just try to dereference this pointer to it type.
so won't work
05:20
yeah but do you have val['val']
@JasonYoung that error is because you're trying with self.val
when you need to point to self.val['val']
Oh my god, I am so stupid, It works now!!!!!!
@AnttiHaapala
You are so nice man. admire you!
06:09
cbg
np
though I feel like I've sinned
I've helped debugging PHP, not switch from PHP to Python
:P
You are forgiven. It is the least I can do before I go to bed. Rhubarb for all!
Just read Zen of Python 10 times.
hi , what is the lagguage that make python.org ?
06:21
python?
English?
I mean what is the server side language of python.org
?
python
source's there
go dig :P
06:23
without webframwork like Django ? pure python ?
ok thx
a for apple, b for ball, c for cabbage
Hey up all
@Ffisegydd cbg
06:53
@AnttiHaapala cbggggg
07:05
trouble troubleshooting troublemaker django multiple foreignkey inlineformsets
@tilaprimera I am glad I have nothing to do with django ORM/forms
having second thoughts myself
Cbg :)
@tilaprimera worth pushing through I reckon; it gives you quite a lot of stuff free
hmm yea
07:13
Django tagline is the "you'll get free whatever you never imagined you'd want"
Also can be worth (slightly) bending your screen design if it'll make coding the screen a lot easier :)
@AnttiHaapala indeed :)
as in give in to weakness of django ?
Well, it depends if what you're doing is hard to do in everything, or just hard to do in Django I guess :)
Have you tried your hand in Django?
do not fight django
if you're fighting it, switch away
07:21
Trying to create a single form, with fields related by foreign key, however, having difficulty saving, the foreign key fields. : )
anw. django tagline is ~"for perfectionists with deadlines"
Will think about it
@tilaprimera just do not try to do with the django form if it isn't working.
Thank you @AnttiHaapala
advice noted
07:27
in a related note, I've never found any form generation package to be working for me
I write html + js + as thin as possible view controllers
I used the django bootstrap3 forms module for basic crud - it was unbelievably quick
But the requirement was simple
hmm i will look into django bootstrap3 forms, else html+js
@tilaprimera hm that should be fine in django
Don't worry about that bootstrap thing for now; it's the same as normal forms, just with bootstrap CSS classes. You still need to get your thing working :)
hope so
The django tutorial should cover saving foreign keys
And is really good actually; I think it's one of the best official tutorials I've read
07:31
I am using inlineformsetfactory to build multiple forms in a single form, connected by foreign keys..
I will try some more hours, before I ask : )
08:00
That does sound a bit complicated :)
by the number of hours I mentioned or the above description of the problem?
The problem
08:15
cbg, all, bugrit
Millennium hand and shrimp
Anyone know why "pip install scipy" doesn't install numpy as a prerequisite?
Nope - it's annoying though isn't it :)
Annoying as yam, yes
SO appears to give no reliable answer, and the #scipy IRC channel is as dead as a doornail. Beginning to piss me off
08:53
10 upvotes for "You don't have to use while loop at all, because cursors are iterable"
Unbelievable...
09:12
Just googled something, found an SO q and a which answered it, and a stupid comment under the answer that I'd left last year. Deleted the comment :)
What are you trying to hard Bobby G? :p
:)
I literally asked a question that was answered in the comment above mine.
Right - back to barking at bad data
09:45
@vaultah I still find it weird that my answer about ternary operator got >70.
Hi, I am new to python itertools.product()

for element in itertools.product(*somelists):

Why there is a `*` before somelines in the accepted answer? What does it do?
stackoverflow.com/questions/533905/…
509
Q: What does ** (double star) and * (star) do for Python parameters?

ToddIn the following method calls, what does the * and ** do for param2? def foo(param1, *param2): def bar(param1, **param2):

Indeed
11:12
Hi all
11:50
Is there any one using pyodbc to connect to MSSQL server from centos system
While connecting I get the following error
pyodbc.error :('08001',[08001] [unixODBC][FreeTDS][SQL Server] unable to connect to data source (0) (SQLDriverConnect) )
What did google tell you about that?
I followed this link when i googled
and this
does odbcinst -q -d list your driver?
12:16
ORA-01013: user requested cancel of current operation. The hell I did. Oracle, if I want you to execute a query that takes twenty minutes to execute, you better not give up after fifteen.
Ah, errors that start with ORA-. How I don't miss thee.
user559633
ORA-00001 INSERT MORE MONEY
I want to make a JoJo's Bizarre Adventure reference here, because "ora" is the sound the main character makes when he's delivering a savage thrashing to a deserving target, which is what I would like to do to Oracle right now, but I don't think many people would get it.
user559633
@Kevin Yeah, definitely. I get this reference stares off into distance
12:32
ORA-00013 Unlucky
user559633
love those questions
user559633
I don't understand the stock market at all. Or it's all based on bs.
"How is programming?"
12:33
Economics as a whole is a collective illusion.
I want to do X but I don't know how to do X, I tried to do X, but got an error, how do I do X?
user559633
Thankfully, I only partake in the purest of logical exercises. Hey, does anyone want to look over the CSS I wrote for my bitcoin website? It's written in nodejs.
When I interned at a futures trading company, I linked this to my coworkers and they said "yep pretty much, there's not really anything stopping this from happening in real life"
CSS written in nodejs?
user559633
@bereal Definitely.
user559633
12:36
@Kevin Well, if you don't want your objectively worthless strips of paper, I'll take them off you.
user559633
We should all be trading for goods and services with festive cakes.
paper money isn't worthless - you can burn them for warmth or make crude clothing out of them
They're already proven to be washing-machine safe.
user4433485
Cabbage!
user559633
What about elegant clothing? I assume cocktail dresses emblazoned with images of currency are still high society
cbg @Katherina
user559633
12:39
greetings @Katherina
user4433485
has been a while hehe
@Katherina cbg, wow yeah
user4433485
O hii Robert!
user4433485
I can see that everyone is still here
user4433485
12:42
nothing changed ^^
@tristan Woah. Webscale.
user559633
@Katherina we're actually on our second Jon Clements. Someone left the door open and the original one got out.
12
user4433485
Ah damn @tristan I always knew this day would come..
@tristan WHAAT?!?? runs off shrieking
user559633
@RobertGrant this one doesn't even look like our old one
user559633
12:52
JOOOOOOON!
user4433485
haha
I heard that one met a sticky end when someone was driving a borrowed Audi too fast...
... oh, cbg Katherina
Now I look at him, Jon does have freakily realistic eyes compared to the rest of him
I'm bored - any interesting questions out there that anyone's seen?
user4433485
12:56
Well
user559633
@JRichardSnape Is P = NP?
user4433485
Time for coffee
user4433485
Can take a while :p
Cabbage.
12:56
Any time is coffee time
@tristan Yes.
@tristan or, erm, no. I forget
I scribbled it down somewhere, hang on...
user559633
You could figure out exactly how much wood a woodchuck could chuck based on tooth density, muscle fatigue, and the density of woods near most woodchuck-habitable zones
I've been naughty.
I answered a gimme-the-codez homework question.
user559633
@MartijnPieters WRONG ROOM
0
A: Half Number pyramid in python

Martijn PietersHere's my take on it; the first line can be removed when using Python 3, but with it it'll work on both Python 2 and 3: from __future__ import print_function from itertools import count, islice counter = count(1) print(*(''.join(map(str, islice(counter, i + 1))) for i in range(lines)), sep='\n')

user559633
Oh.
12:58
@tristan RIGHT ROOM
Lets see them turn that in for their homework.
"Sorry it's in java, but you can easily adapt it in python I think!"
user559633
Yeah, that's what I was thinking. So "Snork," walk me through this *(''(map
user559633
Actually, I'm not sure what the asterisk is doing there.
I'm a simple man. I see asterisk, I upvote.
argument packing. Or maybe unpacking.
13:02
print takes infinite arguments
Splats the list in
user559633
Brb. I have a cat on my lap and my girlfriend needs to get woken up. Two birds, one stone.
Seems like print(*(stuff), sep=x) is the same as print(x.join(stuff))
It looks like (''.join(map(str, islice(counter, i + 1))) for i in range(lines)) is a generator.
user559633
Yeah -- print will dump out the list without the * IIRC
13:03
@Kevin yeah
Exactly.
Yeah but surely it'll dump it in listy format?
@Kevin yup, more or less, but print() converts stuff elements to strings too.
Ooh, nice bonus.
Hrmph. Collection hooks are bottlenecking and I can't find a good alternative :\
13:06
@MartijnPieters shame there's no izip_longest; that's my go-to tool for this sort of thing
user559633
Boo, someone removed the "Corvid contextless question tally" dupe target
@RobertGrant I love the redundant fillvalue=None there!
@MartijnPieters poke made it better still :)
len([a,b]) == sum([1 for (val, test) in itertools.zip_longest([a, b], [], fillvalue=type(None)) if issubclass(type(val), test)]) perhaps?
(*excluding files that use try/except/finally/raise/assert/del/exec/with/yield/globals)
13:11
:)
I remember trying to go a different route but the lambdas started making my head hurt
eval('YSBpcyBub3QgTm9uZSBhbmQgYiBpcyBub3QgTm9uZQ=='.decode('base64'), {'a':b, 'b':b})
Heh, yeah.
like that anything can be one-lined
user559633
Resisting the urge to post an assembly version saying "sorry that it's x86 assembly, but you can easily adapt it in python I think!"
@tristan too late, it's put on hold.
user559633
13:17
Going to chalk that up to a "thank god"
Is it possible to put an import statement inside a one-liner?
Sort of. Use the built-in function __import__(name).
@RobertGrant __import__('os').system('rm -rf /')
Ex.
>>> __import__("math").cos(0)
1.0
Oooh
Thanks
Now I can finish my modification to the Pyramid source code!
waits for @AnttiHaapala
Ah, never mind. I wanted to use the a,b values to seed a random number generator, but that takes two calls
user559633
13:22
You have to say his name three times in the mirror while drinking Finnish summer wine Koskenkorva
Finnish summer wine?
user559633
@bereal Is that not a thing?
you mean, Koskenkorva?
user559633
Actually, yes :)
13:25
You can still call multiple methods of the module if you use a lambda, ex. (lambda m: [m.randint(11,100), m.randint(0,10)])(__import__("random"))
Seldom to see someone so stubbornly holding on to their claims that fly clearly in the face of actual behaviour: stackoverflow.com/questions/32205019/…
user4433485
back
Cabbage
Oh yeah that's true. Doh.
@MartijnPieters That question is kinda hilarious. I'm surprised you haven't put it on hold yet.
13:31
@MartijnPieters It would be hilarious if it weren't kinda sad... :)
Hey, Morgan, it looks like we're on the same wavelength. I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing. :)
@MorganThrapp The thing is that it is going to be hard for them to prove that they actually see the behaviour, e.g. their Python binary has been severely altered without their knowledge.
@MartijnPieters I dunno, somehow I find it unlikely that their Python binary got modified. Especially since forgetting the comma would reproduce the error.
Anyone seen any good guides on the right way to do async programming? I read through python's asyncio docs, but still not sure how to handle specific things (like UI locks) with async
They suddenly vandalised the post and flagged for a moderator to delete it.
Since the answers were catastrophically unhelpful, I obliged.
user4433485
where is our german friend @poke
user559633
13:36
Probably doing something else, no need to ping him.
Poke ist Deutsch? Ich nicht weiss das (maybe he'll come to correct my terrible german grammar)
@MartijnPieters Aw, I was just going to get some popcorn...
Hi, Katherina! It's great to see you gracing us with your presence again.
Isn't it Ich weiss dass nicht?
I dunno. Can't remember tenses.
I think it is. It's also probably technically weiß
Hm yeah maybe. Apparently daß was deprecated in 1996.
13:42
German has a CHANGELOG.md?
lol got a mail from psf list, saying "Amazon says Fluent Python is the #1 new release in the "Programming Languages" dept." and that the OP/Author does not know how long it will last; well isn't anymore :D
hm, contents look interesting.
user4433485
Hii @PM2Ring ! it has been a while indeed !
Is that fluent as in fluent interface? Or do they really mean idiomatic?
looks like "really idiomatic"
teaching some python 3 stuff early on like *splatting in assignment, yield from etc.
13:46
That's cool
I read the bit on len(), and I'm still not convinced :) But I'll stop moaning about it at least.
I havne't read it either
just that author was celebrating it in mail yet it ain't there any more :D
Sic transit gloria mundi
Hello guys, I got a question. I want to an application in python where I can store like 50 fields of data. Fields like: ordernr, date, price etc. When im done filling the fields I want to save that data to a database / file.When I want to edit the data I need to be able to open it in the same application. Does anyone have a suggestion they way to save the data. and to what I should save it(database or file)
Is it just for you?
what are you going to do later with the data?
13:51
Only storage
no it is for 10 persons
But they will all have the appplication
Depends on how you prefer to share the data.
I prefer to save the data to some kind of file. The data contains properties of a machine. So different people must be able to edit and read the properties
csv and json and pickle are some simple built-in serialization modules you can use, but they're not intended for heavy duty database work
Then sounds like json, yes.
50 fields each for ten people doesn't count as "heavy duty" though
13:54
Its not "heavy duty", pretty sure of that
Prepare to refactor when your application is a huge success and you get a million users
@RowanKleinGunnewiek Do you mean 50 fields in total? Or do you need lots of rows, with each row containing 50 fields?
like 50 fields of max 30 chars
@RowanKleinGunnewiek In that case, pickle is your friend.
13:55
@PM2Ring 50 fields in total
What about just SQLite?
I didn't suggest that because I'm dumb and don't know how to use actual databases
@RobertGrant for 50 fields does not make much sense + not human readable.
Good morning. My level 24 mage just found some Radagast boots with free action 900 ft deep. I'm now safe(-er) to go a little deeper in the dungeons of Angband in my quest to destroy Morgoth and free Middle Earth from his tyranny. Just wanted to update you all on that. :)
@RobertGrant I think I prefer a file over a database, I was think to name the file like the name of the machine. And to store the wanted properties in that.
13:57
@bereal I wasn't clear on whether other people need to be able to read the file in a text editor, or in other copies of the program
"different people must be able to edit and read the properties", but ofc "able to read the properties" != "able to read the file"
@AaronHall We're more of a Nethack room.
So u guys think pickle is the way to go?
@RowanKleinGunnewiek Do the different people only edit their own copy of the data, or is the data shared between all users?
@PM2Ring they edit and share between all users

« first day (1774 days earlier)      last day (3403 days later) »