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00:29
Heh. Beat the cybot to an answer! This day will go down in history!
@PatrickMaupin, I deleted my answer :).
Too similar to yours, and you were first :P.
Awww, yours was slightly more complete and better. I'll add the underscores, and fix it up like yours...
Well, I could always undelete.. :D
Geez, I even deleted that comment too
Now it will almost be identical...
00:32
why the need to ban me from the chat?
I also tried to edit it to mean what I meant but I failed to format it...
You weren't banned, you were temporarily kicked for disregarding what we told you earlier. With the hope that it would cause you to reflect on what we told you earlier.
01:07
If I need any help, is this the place to ask?
Is there any pdf package which won't change the order or alignment of text present in a pdf file while reading. I already used pypdf but it won't show a newline character present in-between two text after extracting the contents.
@BassetHound, sure, go ahead :).
Alright, thanks
01:36
The correct way to retrieve a target list in a map is map[key][targetlist], right?
02:21
I've got a Flask app that has to do several long running (hours) IO processes one after another. My current approach is to spin these off into threads and use callbacks to chain them together. Is this something I would be better off doing with Celery?
02:32
Cabbage all :D
02:42
Cabbage :-)
@RickNorson welcome, please see our rules. Please don't post recent (< 1-2 days) questions in chat, as people who can help are already watching the tags on the main site.
@Radu yes, I'd suggest using a queue such as celery or flask-rq
@BassetHound it's not clear what your asking. That looks like the right way to access something in a dict of dicts, but are you having some problem?
03:06
Hello.
Why does this return the correct fibonacci sequence (1,1,2,3,5,8, etc...)
def fib(n):
    a = 0
    b = 1
    for i in range(n):
        a, b = b, a + b

    return a
But, this doesn't? Instead it returns 1,1,2,4,8,16, etc...
def fib(n):
    a = 0
    b = 1
    for i in range(n):
        a = b
        b = a + b
    return a
The only thing that is different is the body in the for loop, (a, b = b, a + b) vs (a = b b = a + b). But as I understood it, they are supposed to be the same, just different style of writing it.
@Byte, the first one uses the old values to set the new values; the second one sets a to the new value, then uses it when you're expecting the old value
Given a = 1; b = 2, a, b = b, a+b is the same as a, b = 2, 1+2
@Cyphase Is that a rule with commas in function bodies?
whereas a = b; b = a + b is the same as a = 2; b = 2 + 2
@Byte, no. Let me rephrase it; in the first one, you're computing all the values before changing any variables. In the second one, you're changing a before changing b. And since the change to b is based on a, the value of b is now wrong.
Oh, I think I see now.
Sort of.
You could "fix" the second one by doing old_a = a; old_b = b; a = old_b; b = old_a + old_b
But a, b = b, a + b is much cleaner
03:20
The recursive version is easier for me to understand, is there a way to convert it into an iteration?
Or will any self-reference of the function immediately add to the stack?
neither of those are recursive
I'm aware.
then you already have the iterative version, so what are you asking for?
I suppose I was asking about tail recursion being considered iteration by the interpreter.
Sorry for the confusion.
CPython doesn't do tail-call optimization (TCO)
03:22
I see
Info about tail-recursion: stackoverflow.com/questions/13591970/…
Wow, I didn't realize it did that on a naked link.
Alright, np. I'll work a bit more on my iterative techniques.
I guess I thought people were doing something special -- learn something every day.
lol
@Byte One thing that is sometimes useful is to build your own stack in a list.
03:25
@PatrickMaupin just don't post Amazon links, they take up half the page :)
@PatrickMaupin How do I do that? (Haven't worked with that in any python tutorials as of yet but sounds very C-like) :D
Hmm, I'm not getting the "card" UI for some reason. I did earlier on a question, but even that seems to be gone.
Oh, that question was moved; still seeing it there.
Well, for one thing, if the goal is to eliminate the negative effects of tail recursion, you wouldn't really want to do that...
True; but regardless, how would you build your own stack in a list?
But for a lot of tasks, you can flatten things with a stack. Typically, you'll do something like while mylist: stacktop = list.pop(); ...; mylist.append(new_item).
03:28
@Byte, here's a talk by Raymond Hettinger where he talks about updating multiple state variables at once; I linked directly to the time: youtu.be/OSGv2VnC0go?t=34m2s
@Cyphase Thanks very much!
@PatrickMaupin Is there a link or tutorial that deals with this concept?
Here's the bfdl himself talking about it.
Hmm, that describes the problem but not the solution.
I have a fond place in my heart for that fib() function; I remember it from way back when I first went through the Python tutorial.
Here's something‌​. Haven't read it yet.
Actually it looks really good! He's turned recursiive-to-iterative into a mechanical process that is easy to understand.
Reading it now and it does in fact seem good. :D
04:33
@Byte, do you know Laura :P? stackoverflow.com/questions/32218049/…
iPythonnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn
Good morning. I have a question that I think is relatively simply but still has me stuck. It hasn't gotten more views in a little while either - would someone mind trying to help me with the following python-sqlite question: stackoverflow.com/questions/32176280/…
05:22
Maybe people didn't view it because it (correctly) has sqlite in the title...
That would be my reason for not looking at it until now -- the short version of the link here fooled me, so now you have one more view -- happy?
Oh ok. I was just trying to be specific
Haha well yes, but any input about the problem would also be great :)
I want to answer this, but I just don't feel like explaining it all: stackoverflow.com/questions/32219068/…
:P
Tried to do my best.
07:03
Ah, what a week it has been.
cbg all
Do tell.
07:20
morning all
word up B :)
Sup J-money
SSDD? :)
Okay I'm lost :)
07:56
Same Sh* Different Day - get with the times ;)
Aah :)
I'm wondering if it's possible to use Docker to create a lightweight Linux-based development environment
Or rather, I'm wondering if it's been done and I can just type a Docker command and it all works
Or maybe I mean Vagrant, not Docker.
Or: enable 3D acceleration in VirtualBox and suddenly everything works properly with my existing Mint VM
08:24
Ignoring as "too broad / seeking off-line resources"? :p
Pff. Self-answered :)
The silent rubber duck prevails again!
08:39
/me ponders making a question template
Or an outline at least.
09:18
@Cyphase sounds interesting... more info.?
cbg @PM2Ring
user4433485
09:41
but... it's Jon Clements! with the blue?!
Well spotted :)
We're trying to replace all SO mods with sopython people. It's the secret plan.
user4433485
I can see that :p
user4433485
Salad SO
Salad Overflow
I like it :)
"They evolved. They rebelled. There are many copies. And they have a plan." Now tristan's saying that we're on our second Jon Clements is making much more sense...
user4433485
09:52
10 minutes to go for coffee
@Katherina long time no see - how goes it?
Yup - that sounds like you - see you in about 2 hours (that's normally how long a coffee takes IIRC!)
user4433485
I'm okay! Got myself a work-break :) I could not accept that I left unfinished busisness so I wen't back to school got a internship for 20 weeks :) I see that you've been bussy as well with the blue!
I personally miss the italics... but oh well :p
user4433485
hehe :p
user4433485
it looks good on you, that blue name =D
09:58
29
Q: Names of room-owning moderators should be italicized

vaultahThis man is both a moderator (congratulations!) and one of the owners of 'Python' chat room, and this is how his name is displayed there Names of moderators are blue, names of ROs are italicized, thus the names of moderators owning a chat room should be displayed (in that particular chat room)...

upvotes please :p
My coffee's black, with a bit of hazelnut syrup - k thanks :p
10:17
/me waits for 2hrs for @Katherina to do coffee
Explain it!
it begs a reply like "or else what?"
10:33
Just a language thing, I'm sure
How can I convert a urlencoded string to include &amp; characters in the query section? :/
@IanClark any example?
you mean, that's an input string or output string?
Output, e.g. from doing "{0}?{1}".format("foo.com", urlencode({"bar": 1, "zulu": 2}))
@Ian what're you trying to do? What's the big picture here (if any)?
What's de big oidea
@JonClements Create a stupid Google Calendar URL
And use within an HTML anchor, hence the &amp; conversions
ahhh
Busy for a second, Neil Diamond has just come on the random playlist... gimme 5 minutes!
10:45
we'll see what 9x300w speakers can do to shake the cottage
No need to manually dim the lights with those speakers going
I AM I SAID... TO NO ONE THERE... AND NO ONE HEARD, NO ONE AT ALL, NOT EVEN THE CHAIR...
cabbage
ltns @Jerry cbg!
ltns? I'm afraid I'm not familiar with that acronym :s
10:49
"long time no see"
ohhh yea :)
been lurking most of the time ^^;
"I tried using Crypto library"
/me is crying
user4433485
@JonClements I'm back :p
@Katherina back - being a bringer of my coffee I hope!?
user4433485
Sure! but I won't bring it to you ;)
10:55
Pics or it didn't happen
darn it... guess I'm back to tea and lemon then
user4433485
=D
I made you a coffee, Jon:
Hi guys
Can someone tell about the use of memmap in python and how it is different from numpy array?
I trying to use memmap to avoid crashing my RAM for a huge array, but it seems to of no help.
@AbhishekBhatia numpy needs the array loaded into memory
all that mmap does is make it slightly more efficient on disk access
11:01
@JonClements So the entire array is still stored in the RAM?
@JonClements Okay, but I don't understand clearly. What is the point of creating a separate file in the disk then?
retrieval
how large are we talking, and what are you doing?
1.4 million x 3504.
total memory size being?
11:04
12GB
^RAM
it is int16
and what calculations do you want to do?
I want to feature scale it, and apply incremental PCA somehow. But it crashes my RAM.
My code:
scaler=preprocessing.StandardScaler().fit(out)
out=scaler.transform(out)
#PCA Reduction
var_per=0.95
start=time.clock()
clf=IncrementalPCA()
X_train=clf.fit_transform(X_train)
variance_retained=np.cumsum(clf.explained_variance_ratio_)/np.sum(clf.explained_variance_ratio_)
index=np.argmax(variance_retained>=var_per)
X_train = X_train[:,:index+1]
print "Time taken for computing pca transform %d secs"%(time.clock() - start)
print "Components retained %d"%(index)
out.shape
(1421392L, 3504L)
I am thinking conversion from int to float is the cause.
while I feature scale.
well, don't forget you not only need to hold the original data, you need to hold the output from such things
Is there any "natural" segmentation you could do?
For instance, if you had 1m rows, then take 100k at a time, agg those, then reduce each following 100k back into the 100k
(depends on the calculation though)
Incremental does what your saying, but that is a later stage.This algorithm has constant memory complexity, on the order of batch_size, enabling use of np.memmap files without loading the entire file into memory.
What are saying makes sense, is the only way I think of! I assuming this would involve memmap
Computing mean and variance using subsets and aggravating is execellent. But how to implement it?
your earlier point of storing output and input I tried:
Where does the source data come from? (ie: before you load it)
11:18
It's wavelet decomposition int16 type memmap
and what is my_array.mmap ?
it's filename on the disk
err no, I mean what file format is it?
Not sure what you're asking. Isn't it '.mmap'? It's a numpy array.
so the system has enough RAM to have created it in the first place?
11:23
is there a way to do this {"1":+,"2":-,"3":*} in python
@VigneshKalai declare a dict like that - yes... you just did - did you have a reason behind it?
@JonClements yeah exactly! The conversion is hassle!
@AbhishekBhatia simplest solution - up your virtual RAM
@JonClements this question he was using a lot of if else just wanted to reduce it
But I get invalid syntax
I want to give mathematical operator there
Wow... yeah, you can do a lot with that
11:27
@VigneshKalai sounds like a job for operator
@bereal indeed
Yeah that would do
@JonClements Trying that right now. I was hoping memmap would be of some help. Still unsure of it's use in my context.
from operator import add, div, sub, mul

    def f():
        while True:
            try:
                fst = int(input('First: '))
                snd = int(input('Second: '))
                option = int(input('Please select something: '))
            except ValueError:
                continue
            ops = {1: add, 2: sub, 3: mul, 4: div}
            return ops[option](fst, snd)
you can build off that
(but that's just typing off my head - untested)
cabbage. Sorry I didn't reply earlier, Jon. I was having dinner.
11:38
@PM2Ring no worries
@VigneshKalai: In stackoverflow.com/a/32224988/4014959 "opcion" should be "option".
user4433485
Any Italian in Python chat? :3
Ah. I just noticed you copied that from the OP's code. I guess they're Spanish, or something. Sorry.
@PM2Ring just wanted to modify his own code so did not change that :P
I think I need a keyboard shortcut that does uparrow, ctrl-a, s, u, d, o, space, enter
11:41
Forgot to point that out
@VigneshKalai Good idea. But I wish people wouldn't mix languages in their code it gets confusing. :)
@VigneshKalai anyway - might be a base you can look in to :)
Is there any way to feature scale huge data, without creating copies?
Use something like Apache Spark?
@RobertGrant FWIW, sudo is disabled on my distro (Mepis) for security reasons. We have to use su.
11:45
How does that help security?
@RobertGrant Can you elucidate more?
@bereal :joins bereal in crying:
@RobertGrant@JonClements Consider I am feature scaling a huge numpy array which is int 16. Now I now the result will be -1 and 1 for each value. What is the most efficient data type to use?
Semantically, no, because I haven't elucidated at all yet. pointless five!
@RobertGrant Well, there's nobody listed in the sudoers file, so only users who know the root password can do privileged stuff.
11:48
@RobertGrant okay. Can you elucidate then? :p
But all I meant is that Spark is built for crunching large datasets, and can also be scaled over multiple machines if it's literally impossible to fit everything in memory. Constraint is you have to use Sparky coding stuff, so lots of map/reduce things.
@PM2Ring that seems a really pointless way of doing stuff
@PM2Ring sure, I mean why is it better for everyone to know the root password than to delegate a subset of privileges via sudo (which can be revoked without changing the root password)?
@RobertGrant I am looking for one machine solution though. 1.4 million x 3504
@PM2Ring you're also then going to lose who did what in any useful way
11:50
@RobertGrant I'm not saying it's necessarily a sensible way to do things. :) mepis.org/docs/en/index.php?title=Sudo
Spark may still help, but I can't be sure. If you look at what your code needs to hold in memory at the same time, you'll see if it's possible or not :)
I'll try to find some official article on why Mepis does it that way. Give me a minute or two...
@PM2Ring indeed... and most of the time I can use my user, I don't want to su, I'd rather just execute a sudo command here and there...
@PM2Ring that's just the default setting though; the only security advice it gives is don't give unfettered sudo access
Which is a good idea on a multiuser system
also, I disable the root account login on systems anyway
and when you use sudoers, you know who has access to that, rather than centrally sharing a login
11:59
Bugrit. I can't find any decent explanation for Mepis's avoidance of sudo.
Is there any documentation on how to deal with huge array in memmap with limited RAM?
There seems to be a dearth examples in original docs.
@JonClements That makes sense.
@AbhishekBhatia Not sure... I've always worked on systems that can handle it - can't you just instead of tech. "workaround" just up the page/swapfile ?
that'd be a "get moving forward" step, then revise the technical better way (ie: non-kludge) in future?
@JonClements Still trying at that. Does memmap and virtual memory serve the same purpose to some extend?
12:14
too broad / resource request stackoverflow.com/q/32225901/4014959
Cabbage all :)
cbg @Rowan - wb
For some reason, any question with bold font is likely to be cv-pls.
Need to have a script for that.
12:31
@PM2Ring according to that page you linked, they don't avoid it; it comes installed. They just don't preconfigure sudoers to have access to everything, which means users have no sudo config to start with, as MEPIS can't predict what you might need.
But I'd imagine the idea is to set up your own sudo config per-user, rather than giving everyone the root password
@RobertGrant Yes, sudo is installed, just not enabled. And on the Mepis forums people generally advise you to just use su and not set up sudoers. I'm sure I read a rationale once upon a time, but it was years ago.
I think by "not enabled" they just mean no user is set up by default
Unless there's a special MEPIS mechanism for installing things but leaving them disabled somehow
Is Three 32 bit integer packed into 80 bit binary number in python asking something other than "how can I fit 96 pounds of crap into an 80 pound bag"? I can't figure out why this has upvotes
I think s/he wants to get 80 of the 96 bits and put them somewhere
12:40
Maybe he's asking "how do I get the first 80 bits of a big integer" in which case it's just big_number & (2**81 - 1)
@RobertGrant That's right. It'd be easy enough to set up users during the installation process (eg when the home directory is set up), but Mepis doesn't do that.
@Kevin wow, how does that work?
2**81 - 1 is just 81 one bits.
Whoops. In that case, I mean 2**80-1
Off by one errors! shakes fist
Oh, duh. I get it :)
12:45
I'd probably do (1<<80)-1; I don't know if ** does an optimization for binary powers.
That's a cool optimisation
I also like the one where it works out if an integer is in a range using arithmetic
I've been using JS at work for a week or so now, and I'm seriously fed up of SO answers saying "lol use jquery noob".
Yes, it's definitely the non-noobs that use jQuery
dis suggests that 2 ** 80 - 1 is replaced by a constant, whereas 1 << 80 - 1 is actually calculated, so the former is actually faster in some cases (2.7.10 on Win 7)
12:48
Scratch that, they're both optimised out
should have been using (1 << 80) - 1
Although now I'm wondering why it doesn't just optimise out any calculation involving only literals...
lol use python3 noob
rethinks his life
Cabbbage.
@JonClements Hi, I had increased by virtual memory, but it seeems to have no effect on it rather.
@AbhishekBhatia if that didn't work - I'm afraid it's too specialised to help you with
DSM
DSM
13:04
(hit-and-run cabbage) @Kevin: "I want discard higher order 16 bits and keep only lower order 16 bits in 3rd 32 bit integer number." only took forty minutes..
I think I must have gotten the operator precedence wrong on print bin(a << 32 + b << 16 + c) because it made my computer freeze up so badly I couldn't even move the mouse.
Nothing like having to reboot because you forgot to use parens.
morning everyone
13:22
Situation: there are 4 competing string formatting standards. I know, let's introduce a new standard that covers everyone's use case. Situation: there are 5 competing string formatting standards.
I quite like that one though :)
Except for writing templating system documentation
@JonClements Any reference/ clear explanation of memmap in python please if possible?
I getting this:
np.mean(out[:,1],axis=0)
memmap(inf, dtype=float16)
Can't make sense out of it
I'd support this syntax if they could use a time machine to stick it in Python 1.0.
f-string is a cool name.
13:29
But since we're stuck in the present, we're going to end up with a lot of outdated tutorials that say not to use percent formatting because str.format is the new hotness
str.format will cease to be the new hotness.
@AbhishekBhatia you should probably do some research on the subject before coming back to ask for an explanation, as Jon said it's getting a bit specialised for him to help now.
Also Julia has had this string formatting syntax for a while IIRC.
So is an f-string roughly normal_string.format(**locals())?
True. But I still like it - it's far more readable to me than str.format
I do see the appeal in being able to write F-U-strings.
Let's take advantage of the fact that no-one's writing python 3 code yet to put it in now, before they all start
Haha yeah I thought that
The u has no effect other than offense
13:30
"2 + 2 = $(2 + 2)" # => "2 + 2 = 4" (Julia syntax)
I give it an 8 on the "how hard it would be to add to KevinScript" scale
Where 10 is what? "So impossible I wouldn't even attempt it, lest I lose my sanity"?
My gut says a 10 is "I would have to rewrite large portions of the core parser"
Anything at 9 or above, I would have to be paid with real money to implement
@Ffisegydd Okay I think I am not explaining correctly.
@Ffisegydd The idea is to feature scale a huge array. I am using memmap to avoid running into memory problem. Noting @JonClements previous working on the whole array at once is not good due to memory. (Creating a new copy.)
13:38
@Ffisegydd@JonClements So the idea to write a bad for loop for all columns.
but sadly :
np.mean(out[:,1],axis=0)
results in memmap(inf, dtype=float16)
@AbhishekBhatia I think you misunderstood my intent. I'm not in a position to help you, so there's no need to ping me explaining. What I was trying to say and what I'll now say more bluntly is "Go away and read through documentation, tutorials, blogs, etc and then if you're still stuck, come back."
which makes no sense
I was actually trying to get you to stop pinging Jon when he's already said it's getting too specialised for him to help.
@Ffisegydd Ahha, got it. :)
Seems there's more problem than I know, but a starting reference will be helpful.
Start with the memmap docs
13:40
@RobertGrant 'related' on that screenshot is awesome too :)
Haha yes
@RobertGrant Thanks. I did that but can't figure out a fix for my issue.
That question could use an MCVE. I tried running the code and got NameError: name 'np' is not defined. Then I added import numpy as np and got NameError: name 'num_axis1' is not defined
num_axis1, num_axis2 are the dimensions. Please set set to 1.4 million and 3504 to be accurate
Why not put that in your Q?
13:49
Now I'm getting NameError: name 'temp_train_data' is not defined.
Yeah, fix your question so people who aren't reading this right now can run it
@RobertGrant@Kevin@Ffisegydd Thx for comments. I will update.
Argh virtualbox, why don't you connect to the internet?
It can smell your fear
Yeah, that's probably it
user559633
14:04
@RobertGrant Are you briding or NATing?
Bridging
Just because I want to access the guest from the host, and apparently that requires bridging
user559633
@RobertGrant It doesn't. It requires port forwarding on NAT.
Ah :) Well NAT also didn't work
user559633
Are you using a linux for the guest?
user559633
14:05
Want to take this to a private room?
I thought you'd never ask
Dan
Dan
Cabbage
@RobertGrant@Kevin@Ffisegydd @JonClements Please check the question. Hope it makes more sense now. again.stackoverflow.com/questions/32227847/…
@AbhishekBhatia Please stop pinging me.
14:16
Sorry, point taken. I was just mentioning I have accounted your suggestion.
@RobertGrant Hey, Can you check now please.
@AbhishekBhatia you've already linked a new question, which is incidentally against the room rules but let's let that slide, please don't ping people to ask them to look at it.
okay, sry. :)
@AbhishekBhatia take a look
@RobertGrant It's in a book, the reading rainbow chatroom rules.
SET PHASERS TO LOVE ME
7
14:30
YOU CAN'T DISAPPOINT A PICTURE.
Wow. Well done :)
That is probably my favorite episode of Community.
That or the pillow fort 2 parter.
Heh yeah that was good. Also zombies and both paintballs.
I keep watching in hopes they can do something good, but it hasn't really been worth watching since season 2. :/
@RobertGrant I was just informing you about the change in question. Since you had mentioned it would be better if I do so.
14:32
I still liked 3, but haven't seen 4
Well, I saw a bit of 4 on a plane, but don't remember it
I just like the dialogue
Almost don't care about the plot :)
Wait, I take that back, season 3 was good.
I also like the fact that the Glee episodes are better than Glee the series
I was looking at the episode list and I think I mixed season 2 and season 3 up. Yeah, season 4 was... not great.
@RobertGrant To be fair, so is most everything. ;)
Yeah true :)
DSM
DSM
Still too much work cabbage for all.
14:43
cbg @DSM
This is a nice demonstration of how an MCVE can enable people to answer a question that would ordinarily be outside of their comfort zone.
I have so many collection hooks, now my tracebacks reach back into eternity
I just got an email from Dick Talens. Now there's a name.
user559633
Why wouldn't he just go by Richard
If only his name was Talons, then it would be extra interesting
14:47
Because if you could go by Dick Talens, wouldn't you? It sounds like a Bond villain.
It sounds like the sequel to Teeth
Reminds me of the comic where Lois Lane and Superman have just gotten married and retire to the honeymoon suite... "It's got pincers! Why does it have pincers?" "Uh... To grasp onto you???" "[Reminder: superman is an alien.]"
DSM
DSM
I've noticed that if a question has three bugs or more in the code I tend to skip it.

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