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15:01
Same, unless I have an unusual amount of patience that day
That's like that episode of Futurama with the mermaids
"Why couldn't she have been the other kind of mermaid, with a fish on top and lady parts on the bottom?"
@RobertGrant That was a weird film
15:22
I think my typed list idea is heading for production...
Woo. 25% unittest coverage!
Fizzy, can you get that to 80% by EOD? Thanks.
@Kevin :)
It was 0% at BOD.
Oh yeah, you're about done with your workday now, aren't you. Ok, 80% coverage by EOD tomorrow, k?
15:28
Can you give a progress report at MOD tomorrow? Needs to be at 52.5%
Don't forget to write a paragraph in the progress tracker about each unit test you make.
cabbage all
And from me in South Africa - goodnight.
morning davidism
Project is actually bigger than I realised, 13,000 LOC.
My unittests are only on a part of it though, the JS side.
user559633
15:34
just delete 12,000 LOC. There. Test coverage up.
user559633
think outside the box.
Put everything in external libraries, blame external libraries for not adding tests
I accidentally counted the external libraries when I did my first LOC count, came in at 500,000 :/
This album is really good. Mix of instrumental and electronic, really chill.
15:49
Am I missing something, or does this question not make sense?
@MorganThrapp I have no idea what it's trying to say
And I am basically the master of nonsensical questions
@corvid Yeah, me neither.
Also, it's tagged with Python 3.x, but find() is only in Python 2.x.
In [77]: sys.version.find('3')
Out[77]: 0
The guy's bolding got messed up because **chocolate ** got rendered wrong.
He really should be using quote marks
15:54
Oh, huh. I looked through the Python 3 docs, but I couldn't find find().
And really that OP should be using startswith().
Did you search the python docs with find() for find()?
DSM
DSM
Questions with what are intended to be strings lacking quotation marks? That's a paddlin'.
Run away!
attempt number four in my journey to track down the source of all x = Entry().pack() Tkinter errors.
This time I have made no mention of the problem. I hope that asking the question with no context will keep OP from becoming defensive.
user559633
stackoverflow.com/questions/31995350/… can't reproduce and asker has disappeared (even though there's an answer on it)
@Kevin where's the dupe for "name becomes local if you assign in a function scope"
Not sure we have a target for that, common as the problem may be.
Time to find one!
looks at Kevin expectantly, because his search skills are better than mine
@davidism reckon Kevin has kebab finding skills? Seems @Ffisegydd's are somewhat lacking (or rather, not very expedient) :p
16:13
Kevin has enough to worry about finding that orbital tea cannon.
Pretty sure the LOTC has come unstuck in time. It's in exactly the right place... Just not right now.
@Kevin how about first or second?
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: some people make this mistake on youtube.
Time to send a frivolous DMCA takedown notice!
DSM
DSM
Under the circumstances it seems the best choice. He's obviously stealing that mistake from people on SO, and I didn't see any attribution.
16:19
@davidism First one seems fine.
argh, added tag strikes again!
DSM
DSM
Martijn, just now: "Pandas produces such objects too." :-|
@DSM I didn't know pandas produced anything other than cuteness and poop.
Sometimes they produce other pandas, but this is uncommon.
Well, and other pandas I guess too.
DSM
DSM
16:32
I award more points to Kevin, because he added the "uncommon" bit.
Fine, I'll just go sulk in a corner.
user559633
Pandas are endangered and you shouldn't feel bad for them. They're too lazy to even follow their biological imperatives.
DSM
DSM
@Morgan: missing a )
@DSM Oops, thanks.
DSM
DSM
+1 if you add a link to something explaining what * does. :-)
Huh. I have to admit the second interpretation here didn't even occur to me.
user559633
16:39
If that man is trying to knock over those poles with his mind, his stance is all wrong.
user559633
user559633
if you want to go more towards the meaning of "keep"
Unless your chakras are collinear, you're going to get a lot of destructive interference.
user559633
@Kevin who knows what cricket is or how it's supposed to be played
DSM
DSM
This went in a direction I wasn't anticipating.
@tristan I'm only on season 3.
But what is cricket? The truth is, we just don't know.
user559633
i like how it's stayed true to the origin of "okay, so we're british and it's f-ing hot here. how do we waste a lot of time"
DSM
DSM
Once tried to get an Australian friend of mine to explain the scoring to me. Admittedly I was going out of my way to do a routine, but still, by the end even he had to admit it was absurd.
This question is actually kind of interesting. Turns out it really does seem to try a frozenset version (see here in cpython src.)
16:59
If I have a list of strings, is there a way to zip part of one string with another part of the same string?
For example:
string_list = ['ajlbasljbdaldwnd', 'dfkljkfjqkljqwejqjwle']
return zip(string[1:3] for string in string_list, string[5:7] for string in string_list)
what exactly do you want as output from that?
I'm now realizing zip is the wrong thing, but I want [{'ajl': 'asl'}, {'dfk': 'jkf'}]
How about return {s[:1:3]: s[5:7] for s in string_list}
Anyone know the default behavior of XOR in Python 2 versus 3? I am trying to convert some Python 2 code to 3 and I can't get it to pass the unit tests: github.com/Skylion007/Reed-Solomon/blob/master/ff.py This code throws an error stating that type is an invalid operator, but when I cast it to an int, it goes out of the 0 to 255 range
AFAIK, xor hasn't changed
17:10
Publications made me realize how bad my data structuring was... So many trees of finds
@Kevin Yeah, that would be exactly what I need. Thanks. Just losing my mind.
@Skylion Got an MCVE?
@Kevin In the link, just run the RSTest.py in the same repo
I'll give it a shot
@Kevin, I suspect that they were doing some weird backend conversion to make so you could XOR, and now they make it throw an error in Python 3.
17:13
evening re-cbg all
When I run it in Python 3, I get ImportError: No module named 'StringIO', which makes sense
Not sure how you're getting any other error than that one, unless you've got a nonstandard standard lib.
... And when I change it to from io import StringIO I get NameError: name 'xrange' is not defined. This really doesn't seem like code that's designed to be cross-version compatible
I'm guessing you've already solved these little incompatibilities, but just forgot to push them to Github. In which case I will go back to waiting for an MCVE
All sports besides baseball and handegg just look like a black void to me because I refuse to acknowledge them in any way.
@Kevin sorry let me push the changes
@FIxed all the import erros
Ok, I'll try again in a bit
17:25
@Kevin and pushed
Ok. Now I'm getting TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for ^: 'GF256int' and 'float', which I assume is what you're getting. But I'm getting it whether I use Python 2.7 or 3.X.
Yep
@Kevin that's the issue
I tried changing the division to // in Polynomials but that gives a recursion depth error
Oh, I thought it was working on your Python 2.7 install but not your 3.X one
17:40
I don't think you want from __future__ import division in polynomial.py. You don't want 2.7 to use 3.X style division, you want 3.X to use 2.7 style division.
Yeah, I know I changed that
@Kevin So I am trying to reimplement that method in a way that doesn't cause a recursive depth error
17:53
On second thought, division style shouldn't matter in any case as long as you're not using actual integers.
GF256Ints should divide the same whether you use / or //.
Quick question: Best way to get rid of a bunch of 0s at the end of a list?
import itertools
def drop_zeroes(seq):
    x = iter(reversed(seq))
    list(itertools.takewhile(lambda item: item==0, x))
    return list(reversed(list(x)))
Or if you don't mind mutating the original list, while seq[-1] == 0: seq.pop()
DSM
DSM
For the showoffy version, I was going to propose list(chain.from_iterable(g for i,(k,g) in enumerate(groupby(a[::-1])) if i or k != 0))[::-1], and for the more practical one while not seq[-1]: del seq[-1], so I guess we're thinking along similar lines.
Can't remember if deleting the last element in a list is O(1) in cpython or not, though.
Ok, I'm stumped on this reed-solomon thing. My best guess is that some of these dunder methods are being called in 2.7 but not in 3.X.
DSM
DSM
who the what now?
18:01
The thing I've been trying to debug with Skylion for the past hour
I know __nonzero__ got renamed to __bool__ in 3.X, so it's not as though they hold the object model sacred
for all I know, __rdiv__ gets called in very slightly different circumstances. (this is probably not the actual problem)
DSM
DSM
What's an example of a case which fails?
Oh, wait, it's a whole code, not just the ff.py.
Yeah, you need ff.py and RSTest.py and rs.py and polynomial.py. Also, delete from __future__ import division from line 4 of polynomial.py as we've decided it's not necessary.
Then you should be able to run RSTest.py and see that it passes all tests in 2.7, but fails all of them in 3.X.
@Skylion, I suggest that you leave all the classes' code in the state they were in when all the tests were passing in 2.7 and failing in 3.X. Then narrow down the cause of the problem by writing simpler and simpler unit tests that pass in 2.7 and fail in 3.X.
Ideally you'll eventually get to the point where you call a single function and it crashes right away, one frame down.
I think it's just a recursion depth problem now
@Kevin Working on reimplementing it using some stuff from Rosetta Code
That's the exception that occurs if you change quotient_coefficient = dividend_coefficient / divisor_coefficient to quotient_coefficient = dividend_coefficient // divisor_coefficient, certainly. But I strongly don't believe that that's the root problem.
That's only the symptom. Some code is failing somewhere along the line, and a recursion error is occuring sometime after that.
It's like saying "I think the problem is that my car is wrapped around this tree". That's true, but the root cause is that someone cut your brake line. The tree isn't defective at all.
I guess totally reimplementing __divmod__ from the ground up is one possible approach. The docstrings do admit that it's not the best approach.
"I know it can even throw recursion depth errors on some versions of Python."
Although there's a fair chance that even with a perfect non-recursive __divmod__ implementation, you'll still get failing tests.
Hello Everyone, I'm stuck with some problem, could any one can help stackoverflow.com/questions/31960327/… I want to give a 64 bit data as input, it should sets in the corresponding field in stackoverflow.com/q/31960327/4014959
I am referring to first answer, could anyone can help
18:17
I don't understand. If there's an accepted answer, doesn't that mean your problem is already solved?
Also, PM already said he was going to help you with your extra problem, you just need to wait.
stackoverflow.com/questions/32231222/… please have a look at this thread
@Sandy: Ok, that's a reasonable request. :) I've written some code, but I want to test it properly. I'll post it tomorrow. — PM 2Ring 2 hours ago
DSM
DSM
Aside: those % 255s look weird to me. I thought we were in GF(256)?
@ Morgan, I want to try to solve , could anyone give me some hints to solve this
18:19
Ooh, this looks tough... It will take me at least 24 hours to come up with a solution ;-)
@DSM Hmm, agreed. Seems suspicious.
Ok, thanks .I will wait for PM 2Ring
Seems like an off-by-one error that would cause problems about 1/256th of the time
DSM
DSM
I might try testing multiplication to see if that gives the expected answers when we expect "wraparound" from the perspective of ints.
I'm in favor of more fine-grained unit tests, in general
@Kevin, I just gave up and found a better implementation of the algorithm.
18:26
ok :-)
I just bought a new computer in parts... and spent more than I wanted to ... but dang it will be nice
How many instances of Crysis with maximum graphical settings can it run in parallel?
Link to the parts list?
18:31
how do I export my order from amazon?
Oh, I dunno. I always spec out my machines on pcpartpicker.com first
user559633
@JoranBeasley take a photo with a digital camera, print it out, and then scan it
heh I should have probably ... ill add the important parts to that
But you have to do a double JPEG compression first.
I'm trusting your judgement on the cv-pls tags haha
@AnubianNoob FWIW you are under no obligation to vote to close. If you don’t know whether something should be closed, then don’t vote (from sopython.com/wiki/cv-pls) :)
DSM
DSM
@AnubianNoob: you never need to defer to someone else on close votes. I regularly ignore CVs when I don't know enough about the tag to know whether it matters.
@vaultah: ah, you beat me. :-)
user559633
Thanks for the info
I love the idea of a
Voting to move the above discussion to MetaPython, and this comment to MetaMetaPython.
> Please try to refrain from posting snarky comments on questions.
Any questions of the form "do we really have a MetaMetaPython room?" belong in the MetaMetaMetaPython room.
@AnubianNoob I try, but it's REALLY hard some times.
haha at least you have that in writing
"I can't promise I'll try. But I'll try to try"
DSM
DSM
18:38
Yeah, if we absolutely need to snark, we should come in here and mutter.
That's better than 90% of chats
^^^^
^ reverse the order of those two
You know you can edit your messages to actually reverse them, right? (Well, time's probably up now.)
test message (edit)
I can't post a message "test message" now
DSM
DSM
Economist in the office was just asking if we had a spare Stata license. Maybe I can teach her statsmodels instead!
That build looks solid
Do you want feedback or are you just showing off haha
user559633
@JoranBeasley Does this play playstation games or something?
DSM
DSM
@JoranBeasley: I asked about R, but she finds it clunky, and since I feel the same way I was inclined to give her points for that.
user559633
"Hey, do you have a Microsoft Office subscription for me?"
HAVE U HEARD ABOUT OPEN OFFICE IT'S TECHNICALLY SUPERIOR
3
DSM
DSM
@MorganThrapp: annotations have been valid syntax for a while now, not only in 3.5.
18:46
@JoranBeasley I'd go for more hard drive space, especially since I'm guessing with that graphics card you'll be gaming?
Unless you do machine learning or smth
user559633
Speaking of what I want to talk about, does anyone know what month this year the PS4 is going to have 4k support added?
In that case, what if you want to have huge datasets stored locally?
@MorganThrapp please try to cv-pls'ing to python in the python room
there's a whole other room for cvs if you really need to get those others closed
user559633
@AnubianNoob Wait, is 500GB not enough disk space for a desktop now?
Depends on what you're doing
18:49
I think im actually gonna use the gfx card to try out open-cl
I'm using 320/500 on my main hard drive and 15/30 on my ssd
(Ill probably play some games too :P)
Whenever I run out of disk space I just buy a new computer with twice as much.
@JoranBeasley Don't use opencl to justify your purchase haha
I also have a 1T external drive so :P
user559633
18:49
@Kevin The Python allocation approach. Nice.
It's not quite asymptotic because the average file size of an interesting file is always going up.
user559633
My macbook air has 128GB. It's almost full. I can't imagine 500GB though
I have a lot of games installed
DSM
DSM
500GB seems a little small, TBH, but I like having a lot of my work datasets available.
maybe around 100-150 gb?
18:50
I have a 500G optical in my other computer... and I still have 200+ gb free after 5 years
I don't play games anymore though
(that computer is gonna become a headless linux server)
If you can't copy the complete contents of your old computer into your new computer and still have enough left over for a couple years, you didn't get enough disk space
I dont really either ... but I miss thm and always think i might
but time is too expensive :(
user559633
@Kevin The bankrupt with a 7-bedroom house in a New Jersey suburb approach. Nice.
18:51
lol im nuking the contents of my old one ... anything important is in source control anyway
user559633
@JoranBeasley Yeah, that's the spirit. And the good guys always win.
I moved my Android Studio installation and Gradle cache to my SSD... best decision ever
I was pretty selective with what I copied over from my old laptop to my current one, but I still found myself having to go back weeks later to pick up some little trinket I forgot
i went to amazon because I was just gonna upgrade my drive ... to SSD ...
user559633
18:52
@AnubianNoob Nice, almost there! Now move AS and gradle to /dev/null.
but then I was like well I may as well get a new chip
haha
I'd sleep on the purchase, you seem kinda indecisive
and so on and so forth until I was spending 1200.00 at amazon for a piecemeal pc ...
user559633
I have stock in Amazon. Buy that shit.
I already did
I bought it yesterday
18:53
That works too
its supposed to get here tomorrow :P
user559633
That's funny because I don't feel any more rich...
@JoranBeasley Not if my extraction team does its job.
:P
my friend has stock in WWE ... so he turns my TV on wresling every time he comes over... I tried explaining thats not really how it works
user559633
its the year 2021. you download designer drug for your 3d printer off the bit torrent network. you go to get the drugs out of the printer but instead of drugs it printed a cop. Youre under arrest
3
18:55
lol
zork 2021?
Kings Quest is going to make adventure games cool again, you just wait and see
Text adventures can't be far behind
@DSM Really? I just tried it on 3.4.3 and it fails out with invalid syntax.
@davidism Oh, sorry.
Annotations in python??
18:59
@JoranBeasley Nice, that's a pretty sweet setup.
Hmm, works on my machine:
Python 3.4.0 (v3.4.0:04f714765c13, Mar 16 2014, 19:24:06) [MSC v.1600 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> def foo(x:int):
...     pass
...
>>>
yeah :) I think it will be nice ... orders of magnitude faster than current box
I just realized I tested it on 2.7.9. Works on 3.4.3. I'll go remove those comments now.
I want the power of a desktop, but I still want to be able to use it in any room in the house.
Setup a server with a bunch of thin clients in each room?
19:02
If I had the money, I'd just hire a minion to carry the box around behind me everywhere
Get a nice laptop?
But minions are so expensive these days. They demand health care and say things like "please don't call me 'minion', my name is Carl"
3
Also, man, it's like none of you have a media server or something. I have 200GB free out of 2.5TB between 2 HDD and a SSD.
I'm pretty unadventerous when it comes to hardware.
I got this laptop 2 and a half years ago, use it for everything. It was 1300 on sale for 700. I love it.
19:07
I had my current TV for several years before my friend showed me how to use it to view my laptop desktop with it.
I have a pretty good laptop ... it was 1500.00 5 years ago ... it still runs decently ... (not excelent but meh)
I probably would have figured that out 15 minutes after buying the thing if I had still been a bored teenager at the time
I upgraded the memory to 16gb, that's a lifesaver
user559633
i have a speak and spell with some model M keys hot glued to it. it's pretty sweet.
DSM
DSM
When I needed to buy my last notebook (to replace the one that died in the flood when they put out the fire on the roof while patching the holes which led to the previous flood), I did what I usually do. Find the cheapest one with a keyboard I like.
19:10
@tristan I tried
user559633
@AnubianNoob yeah, that's not the actual command :]
Sprouts... Asparagus?
Hey up all
Cabbage, potato?
I don't speak Salad.
19:17
Peas?
I understand that you may find Salad amusing, but intentionally speaking it to someone who doesn't subscribe/know what it means is quite rude.
Hey Shreyas, it's been a while. How have you been?
It has?
OH YOU
19:23
haha
long time no see
What you've been up to?
What have you been up to?
haha
Have you heard of Cosmos Browser?
First is there a way we can go into private chat or something?
I don't want to annoy the other people here.
fb message works
or I just invited you to one
why do I keep getting messages on linkedin for javascript, when python is my most endorsed skill?
user559633
19:36
@corvid because that's what they're hiring for and tech recruiters aren't technical?
user559633
or were you just complaining into the ether?
@corvid Because snake wrangling isn't needed as much as coffee movies?
I'm just kinda curious about why it happens, never gotten a message about python but get lots for js
@Cyphase Nope, I don't know laura. But that question you linked is useful. lol
DSM
DSM
Aw, man. Guy deleted his question before I was going to post an answer.
user559633
19:38
@corvid "because that's what they're hiring for and tech recruiters aren't technical?"
user559633
that's literally the answer. the recruiters get paid for placements. they don't care about the differences between c++14 and c++11
I regularly get recruiters calling me looking for me to fill a position that would require ~20 years experience. Conclusion: recruiters* are thick as pig sh*t [* some aren't, some are golden, but they're rare]
@DSM, the one about "intermingling elements"?
DSM
DSM
@Cyphase: yeah.
Anyone know how to iterate through a list by index number without the list index number going out of range?
I'll provide some example code that produces a "list index out of range" error
19:40
@Byte, why not iterate directly over the list?
def largestPrimeFactor(prime_lst):
    for i in range(len(prime_lst)):
        if prime_lst[i] < prime_lst[i + 1]:
            del prime_lst[i]
    return prime_lst
user559633
@Byte wrap it in a try/except or iter on the list itself
@Byte have you tried Python tutorials? Because that's a very simple thing to do.
Okay, so don't ever modify a list by deleting/adding to it as you iterate over it.
Ah, mutating a list while iterating over it.
user559633
Do it. DO IT
19:41
Don't ever add to/delete from a list while iterating over it
Why not?
user559633
You really should. It's in this season (eternal september)
If you're trying to find the largest element in a list, consider just using max.
@Byte well, because then you get errors like the one you have :/
Sit down and think about your logic, and you should see why it'll fail.
Stop trying to make list mutations during a for loop happen, it's not going to happen.
19:42
How would you do it without max?
I wouldn't.
DSM
DSM
I'm not even sure what that code is trying to do.
@Byte, is that all you're trying to do? Get the maximum number in the list?
user559633
I would. I never use max(). Which means you should.
lol, yes
19:42
@Byte, why not use max()?
user559633
@Cyphase because it doesn't feel like real programming!!!
I haven't thought of that at first, but I'd like to know how to implement it without a built-in function.
DSM
DSM
Wait, that code is trying to find the max? then why is it returning a list? O.o
user559633
most functions are built ins :) stand with a rod of metal on the beach and make yourself into a CPU if you really want to be close to the metal
@Byte, as long as you know that you shouldn't do that normally :)
19:43
In that case, don't use len or range either.
You could keep a variable that has the current max, and iterate through the list while updating it as you find new maximums.
Lists are builtin, so they're probably out too.
And don't use for loops because they call iter internally
user559633
Stop using computers. Talk about abstractions!!
So is def and return
19:44
And < calls __lt__, so that's out
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: you're really making this hard. We can't use len or range or even for? What about while?
Okay, okay, go easy :P
user559633
@Cyphase go is a high level language.
We are going easy.
Just write down the number 3 on paper. It's the only way to make sure you don't use any Python builtins.
19:45
Sorry, I'm grumpy today.
user559633
Haha no one in here has ever witnessed me being direct and abrasive.
Ok, so I should use special methods instead of convenient for constructs.
Ok, but seriously. If you want to implement max, you should begin by thinking about how you would do it on paper.
DSM
DSM
Cyphase gave a good hint up above.
@Byte You mean you should use the convenient methods instead of broken for loops?
19:46
@MorganThrapp I was joking in that statement lol
Imagine you have a minion that is good at following simple instructions like "remember this number" or "add one to that", but not complex instructions like "find the max value in this list"
Though if there was no max(), I would create a max() if I needed it. So it would be the same, except slower because it's not written in C.
Oh I see.
DSM
DSM
What was that gorgeous 3d exploration game in development that davidism linked a while back?
user559633
@Cyphase Whoa whoa. C? That language is littered with "special methods" that can be written in assembly.
19:47
I really don't see this conversation going anywhere good.
user559633
Same. I think we'd headed for Illinois.
DSM
DSM
Will no one think of the children (who want to have another look at that trailer)?
Speaking of C, is there a compiler I could download without any IDE attached?
Obviously the correct solution is: reduce(lambda a, b: a if a > b else b, iterable) ?
@Byte okay you're taking the pi** now.
19:48
@Byte GCC?
DSM
DSM
clang!
Why don't you go and try Google instead of asking random questions in a chat room?
@Ffisegydd where do I find Google!?
DSM
DSM
(shrinks away to search through the chat logs..)
19:49
Probably because I've googled this already and wasn't satisfied with the "solutions"?
What's with the aggression?
Then you should try harder, and not ask in a Python room.
Lol, I was going to make the joke that "is there a C compiler I could download without any IDE attached" probably wouldn't have many good google results, but it actually does
user559633
Stack...overflow? Sounds dangerous.
@Kevin Ty
19:51
@Byte, so really, why are you trying to avoid using max()?
@Byte please don't ask random questions in here again, you're abusing the good will of the other users here. Please do your own extensive research before coming here with issues.
@Cyphase Simply for practice, if max() is the solution, I'll take it. Thanks
Okay, just checking. Reimplementing built-in stuff is fine for learning, but just keep in mind that in "real code", you should usually use the built-ins :).
user559633
@Byte It's not the only solution, but alternate solutions and what was wrong with your approach are handled very early on in tutorials.
Especially in Python where everything is pretty, shiny, well maintained, and typeless.
user559633
19:53
@Skylion Haha
And best of all it comes with Pip. Which is like a little angel that delivers code for you.
user559633
Not sure if you're kidding now :/
Poe's Law?
Seriously though, I love Pip

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