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00:00
Or you could just remove the eval and print the string that would be eval'ed.
unbeknownst to cyphase, @Air has now pwned his network
 
2 hours later…
02:07
ad says "looking for skilled apex software engineer". Is apex some kind of framework I haven't heard of, or do they mean like an apex predator?
Apex is an Oracle framework for web development.
02:22
Rhbrb
03:21
Hello
anyone here know openstacks
Just ask your question
Or post an actual question :).
03:40
@RenaeLider the point to enums is that the system can help you insure that you don't reuse constant values within a single set of enumeration constants. In a statically typed language, they can also be used to insure that you only use the correct type of constant within a given context.
04:48
Missing parenthesis in call to 'print' when i install a module.
how to solve this error message.
Could you be more clear
show the traceback
i am installing web.py module.
flask is the easiest to work with imho ... although you often find yourself recreating vast ammounts of functionality that django just has
its a python2 module ...
04:52
@VigneshKalai plz see the screenshot you will understand what i want to say
you can try and put parentheses around all the prints ... but more stuff will probably be broken ...
you should just try pip install web.py ... that might work
i want to create a web service which returns json format data to clients, i read a tutorial, where they say install web.py.
is there some other way to create web service ?
Joran is correct there
@JoranBeasley i tried pip install web.py but it shows some other errors in red color.
sure type `pip install flask`
then open up a `test.py` and write the following
04:54
Post those error we can't say anything useful without seeing those error
import flask,json
app = flask.Flask(__name__)
@app.route("/api/something")
def my_api_call():
     return json.dumps({"some":"data"})

app.run(debug=True)
he put it above .... the problem is that he is trying to install a python2 package in python3
I dont know if flask supports python3 yet ... but I think it probably does
@VigneshKalai see screenshot
@JoranBeasley let me try your suggestion.
04:58
@JoranBeasley nicely done :)
yes, i installed utils.
I dont even know if web.py is even still being developed ... between flask/django/pyramid the playing field is pretty full
web.py is simply not compatible with python3 ... without lots of work on someones part at least
so if you really really want to use web.py for some reason you will need to install python 2.7
@JoranBeasley i don't really need web.py, i just need to create a webservice with GET/POST requests support.
any of the other 3 packages I listed (I think) all support python3 ...
@JoranBeasley garlic?
05:01
I develop still in python2 so im not sure
ok :P
Actually I feel xmlrpclib is better for small web server applications
bah flask is easy as piss especially if you want json output ... but whatever ive provided all of my 2c on this topic I think
I have used that for some of my projects but I don't know if it compatible with python 3 have to check that
on my amazon aws when I type yum, it says
bash: /usr/bin/yum: /usr/bin/python2.62.7: bad interpreter: No such file or directory
Im really just killing time until mad max finishes downloading in steam ... (I took tomorrow off just so I could play video games :P ... heh the wife is visiting her parents with the baby and the teenager has first day of school == WINNING)
05:04
and you don't see anything wrong with python2.62.7?
I could not understand reason behind python2.62.7
why did you type it then?
@JoranBeasley newest one?
@davidism because I want to install mongodb
the game :P
yeah i think its the only one :P
but I lieked the movie quite abit
Haven't used flask as of yet so can't say which is better :P but I felt that would be easy since it was easy for me
05:05
I didnt understand why it got so much hate
@davidism my default python is 2.7.9, so why it show 2.62.7, i really confused
well I showed you a whole flask program above
It got hate? I saw it in IMAX, it was so good.
@cyclic sounds like your amazon account is messed up if yum is pointing at a nonsense python binary
yeah ... here in the states ... a buncha people said it was all about promoting femminist view points ... but meh I thought it was awesome
Well it was a lot easy :P
05:06
type env in your AWS shell and look for that string
and set your environment to point at the right interpreter
@JoranBeasley wow, people will misinterpret, or just get offended at anything
or sudo apt-get remove python followed by sudo apt-get install python2.7
@davidism I agree I thought it was phenomenal :P
one of the best of the year imho (maybe the best... unless GoG counts as this year that was awesome)
ok Im gonna go find something to do for the next hour other than just staring at the download bar .... its been a looooooooong time since ive had a video game day ... I hope its as good as my nostalgia thinks it will be
this weekend I finished all my weeks worth of work (I wrote a kivy application) ... so maybe one day will turn into 2
but realistically I have like 10000 items on my backlog of other shit to do for work ...
@JoranBeasley thanks. I checked env but didnt see yum there. as it is aws GNU/LINUX apt-get does not work
sudo apt-get remove python followed by sudo apt-get install python2.7 will remove both python right?
I think so .,.. my linux chops are less than perfect...
env | grep python
should help you with the environmental variables that are perhaps a problem ...
it gives nothing : (
05:15
its surely getting python2.62.7 from somewhere ...
but i give up for now ...
@cyclic we're not really aws support. We can't psychically debug your system. It sounds like it's messed up, I would advise asking Amazon for direct help.
thanks guys. I though there's some python related issue so I was discussing here. Got enough help
Lots of similar questions lately; I guess because classes are starting.
There were several questions related to the Collatz sequence; two in the last few hours about why string repr's "add" and "remove" backslashes.
every year right when school starts theres alot of people that try to SO their homework ... I try and give answers that teachers should ask about if they are teaching an intro programming class
for example see the -3 voted question that someone jsut asked :P ... if thats for school I hope the teacher asks him what the code is doing
05:32
@JoranBeasley just now saw this could you say what that code is doing. I can't understand what you are doing there
of course :P
Did you necessarily complicate the answer :P
first we use a generater for part one so we only have to iterate once ... all part one does is find all the "Key af..67" strings and extract the part after key
then you run it though binascii.unhexlify to turn it into a bytestring "\xaf..\x67"
then you just unpack it into unsigned bytes using struct unpack and the "B" unsigned byte code * the length of the string
Golf it; they'll think the short code is cool :P.
its not really that complicated (I had the wrong code for struct unpack at first... and forgot that re.findall matches are not re.match objects)
im sure someone could beat it for raw number of bytes...
especially when they use one of those weird bytecode languages where XEF means print the first 3 primes or something
the problem is I want to answer those questions ... except if it is a homework assignment i dont really want them turning in my code for an easy A ...
05:40
@JoranBeasley beautiful mate just know understood it but still the OP needs to do a few things on his own .That is job well done :)
this one im not really sure if its a homework or not ... but if they engage and want to learn then I try and help ... if not im sure it will come back to bite them later
@JoranBeasley how to setup this route?
@app.route("/api/something")
i don't understand thid.
http://localhost:8000/api/something
...
how? using wamp server?
will take you there ... it took you this long to copy and paste those 5 lines?
no
app.run(debug=True) will start its own http server ... it tells you the address
05:44
ok, got it.
dont use wamp server at all ... turn it off ... or you will need to write a wsgi file for your app ... you can just serve it with app.run() really ... (its better than apache/2) ... or better yet use gunicorn ... but you will need to look that up yourself
and when i put it on online web server, then how to manage the url?
is it same on web server also?
you will need to serve it via apache mod_python or just use app.run(host="0.0.0.0",port=80) and jsut gotot www.my_site.com/api/something
what host are you using?
they may not like long running processes ... in which case you need to go learn how to maek a wsgi file for your flask app (its easy ... use google)
i am not using any host at the moment, will use later, when app is complete.
ok, but how wsgi will manage long running processes ?
but if they let you I would just use app.run that will be the easiest for you by far ... a much better solution is using gunicorn + ngninx .. but that is so far beyond the scope of this chatroom...
it doesnt ... wsgi sucks basically
but you can serve it there are lots of tutorials ... use google "flask + wsgi"
05:49
i will use windows host.
this web service will serve a ASP.Net application.
I recommend digital ocean as you can just use app.run there ... what? dont use windows host ... thats like the worst possible choice you could make ... but you can still do app.run (probably depending on host rules) ... and now im done
oh god .... ASP.net ... just jump off a bridge now and get it over with
i don't know, why, but the org whre i am working are saying like this.
hmmm
well have fun good luck ... try not to suicide
you are done? what means, are you going now?
app.run should still work fine ... yeah I thought my game was done downloading ... but 15 minutes still .... Im basically saying I have probably given you all the help I can for now :/
05:53
ok, let me continue following the tutorial. i will be back in case of any questions.
flask is real easy
ok
yeah, i am feeling it easy now.
06:29
how does python 'set' an attribute? i am trying to set attr to instance methods and its not working?
looks like we cant add attrs to instance methods stackoverflow.com/a/7891681/2698552
#todayilearned in Python, functions implement the descriptor protocol, that's how they become methods.
06:48
tasks = [
{
'id': 1,
'title': u'Buy groceries',
'description': u'Milk, Cheese, Pizza, Fruit, Tylenol',
'done': False
},
{
'id': 2,
'title': u'Learn Python',
'description': u'Need to find a good Python tutorial on the web',
'done': False
}
]
this code is showing error: invalid syntax at column 5
i don't know why.
Please format your code properly using Ctrk+K
Images are useless. Please provide an MCVE rather than half of your code.
i pressed Ctrl+K, nothing happened.
what is MCVE ?
An important piece of advice: Before you ask a single question in this room, or in general, I'd suggest you google it first. You could easily answer what an MCVE is through using your own initiative and searching for it.
The fact that you can't take the time to do that, in my opinion, shows that you don't care enough about the other people here and just want free help. That won't stand.
To answer your question: lmgtfy.com/?q=mcve
07:08
list2=['water resistant','water','red strap','digital and analog','analog','men', 'stainless steel']
string="men"
if all(string!=word for word in list2):
     ...:     print "yes"
yes
string!=list2[5]
False
Why is it printing "yes"
As per the documentation Return True if all elements of the iterable are true (or if the iterable is empty)
@MuhammadSohail your code works for me.
>>> list2=['water resistant','water','red strap','digital and analog','analog','men', 'stain
less steel']
>>> string="men"
>>> all(string!=word for word in list2)
False
@VigneshKalai ^^
I am using python 2.7 it is returning a generator item
And still prints "yes"
Am I understanding all function wrong
all(string!=word for word in list2)
<generator object <genexpr> at 0x06BD5CD8>
list(all(string!=word for word in list2))
[True, True, True, True, True, False, True]
all will return True only if all the elements in the iterable is Truthy.
You want any
07:23
@Ffisegydd yes but why is all not working since all of the element is not truthy as per my view or am I wrong :P
I have no idea what you've actually done, but the fact that it works for other users suggests that PEBCAK
I've just tested it myself, and it isn't printing 'yes'
I tested it in repl python 3 and it is not printing "yes"
Instead of running it in the console, try running it in a script (on your own PC).
And it working perfectly in cmd prompt but it showing this weird effect in canopy even after refreshing the session
07:34
Have you done something like from numpy import *?
Yeah import numpy as np
Try print(all)
That's not what I said, is it?
It shows <function all at 0x030CEAF0>
Okay so you've re-defined all by mistake.
As it should show something like <built-in function all>
I suspect it's Canopy being utterly ****
Yeah it shows that when I type it in cmd <built-in function all> but why is it showing even after refreshing the session have close and reopen canopy :( to see if it changes
@Ffisegydd thanks for your help :)
07:38
1 min ago, by Ffisegydd
I suspect it's Canopy being utterly ****
My first CV yeah \o/ :P
Are you kidding me? It's not even for your own work? You've got us debugging your code so you can answer a question!?
@Ffisegydd not at all
I am using this piece of code in my script just got stuck when doing this
And if I want to answer it why would I CV it
@Ffisegydd he's got you there
Sorry I had to take a conference call.
Actually my case is I will crawl a site get some data with id see if it is available in given list if not insert it into db
@VigneshKalai it looks highly suspicious that you would come to us with debugging problems that used the exact same code (even down to the same list elements) as a question that you were looking at.
the given list will be like ["1_2","4","3"]
I did not want to copy the code from separate server and move it back to my server then posts it as a question
Since it was already available I used it :)
I can use if [string for word in list if "1" in word] because it will match "1" and "1_2"
Sorry for the inconvenience brb going to have lunch :)
08:21
Cabbage!
user4433485
Cabbage
user4433485
ooh runs away..coffeebreak
08:42
again?
Can't have too much coffee. Or too many breaks :p
user4433485
09:09
Back
user4433485
benefits of not being paid :p
@Katherina unless they've come to realise they are paying you by effectively sponsoring a coffee plantation...
user4433485
haha ="D Don't worry 5 cups a day max :p
except they're 3 litre cups, yeah ?
user4433485
it's more that I smoke 3-4 cigarettes why it takes so long :p
user4433485
09:20
hahaha
@Katherina emphysema five!
user4433485
My lungs are just fine :3
09:42
Why can't I do this in python .
j=10
print j
{
j=11
print j
}
print j
Network connection at work is terrible atm. I can’t even send an email to our IT to complain about the bad connection! >_<
@psychoCoder Python has no blocks, and scopes (namespaces) are only created for functions.
@poke 'As any assignment, its scope will be limited to the block it occurred in.' I want to check the validity of the statement
cabbage
@psychoCoder Not sure where you took that statement from.
@psychoCoder Because. Just because. :)
09:47
But as I said, in Python scopes are only created for functions.
And {} have no use outside of sets/dicts either.
Generator expressions also get their own scope. And IIRC, so do Python 3 list comprehensions
>>> i=42;sum(i for i in range(5));i
10
42
09:59
@poke stackoverflow.com/questions/32326777/… .. In one of the answers it is written. (in bold)
Well, that has nothing to do with your example code.
user4433485
Can I ask something totally off-topic? I want some suggestions about my webdesign but the html/css developers are pricks =')
I don’t mind.
user4433485
as in: they didn't like your design?
10:04
oh, it did.
But I also have a terrible internet connection atm, so I’m not sure if that comment comes through…
user4433485
No I didn't even bother =D
Well, in their defence, SO isn't the place to come for design advice (on why HTML/CSS guys may not like it being asked)
user4433485
I don't have the official banner yet, but this is only a example
user4433485
Oh I know @Ffisegydd I dont blame them for that:) more that I don't like the trolling part
I'd make the menu stripe more narrow, and "Lees verder" buttons smaller or even better convert to links - that's a bit noisy as it's now.
also, that car in the middle looks too big.
10:06
For all that's holy pick a different font.
user4433485
Thanks, the buttons will have a link, I'm not done yet ;)
Disclaimer: not a designer, being a prick is just a hobby.
@Katherina Colors seem good, although the mix of dark blue and green for the footer looks a bit odd; the buttons feel out of place; the font in the header and footer should be the same as in the body; the text in the footer is a bit too small; the text could overall have a bit more line height;
@Katherina Your central image doesn't seem terribly high res, yet it's huge. Save it as jpg instead of png and you'll cut its size by about 700k
@psychoCoder Mureinik's wording in that answer is a little misleading. To repeat, Python doesn't have block-limited scope of variables.
user4433485
10:09
Thanks, @poke the buttons are too big indeed, about the font I don't know any font I could use I am still looking for one, as for the text in the footer I don't know if I will change it for something bigger. this is just a test and I don't know what the client will put there. @RobertGrant I couldn't agree more this is just a test banner, however I didn't know about the jpg thingy tnx:p
user4433485
But thanks :) Will check after lunch :3
Sure, I thought it might be temporary, but it's worth knowing about :) if the image is more like a photo, use jpg. If it's more big blocks of colour, and/or needs transparency, use png
If you're not sure, just try saving as both and seeing which is smaller :)
Also I doubt Facebook will let you put their logo on a green background, but I could be wrong.
Ooooh yeah I'd be shocked if that was allowed.
There is some leeway if it's a white f on an overall background colour (e.g. a dark grey footer), but if you're making a special green shape around it I think that's off limits.
I can't get to developer.facebook.com or whatever it is, as it's blocked, but it's easy enough to check
10:25
My suggestion would be Facebook does not look like a button .You could use hover color and change to it's original color[blue] when you hover over it
Don't:

Modify the ‘f’ logo in any way, such as by changing the design or color.
cbg
@Ffisegydd that's silly :p
10:40
Cabbage
10:51
Make it a g on green
so basically it says that "disabled f" is not acceptable
even in bw print, the color should be black/white (they say for the print media)
OTOH - bloomberg.com has the f against the wrong blue (just noticed whilst procrastinating). But I guess they're too big to complain about...
speaking of procrastination, I just read this: structuredprocrastination.com
will add to bookmarks and read later
Does anyone have any good examples of a webapp that uses maps/geovis really, really well?
11:10
@Ffisegydd I like this guys stuff maps.grammata.com
He (very) actively maintains a nice tool called mapshaper
not sure whether you'd call his stuff a webapp though. Some of it is interactive
Ta. I'm basically doing case studies on different webapps but definitely useful.
citymapper?
@Bob you beautiful beast, that's pretty cool.
I'm an old luddite, and a curmudgeon to boot, but I don't get that. What does it do beyond google maps?
11:16
I'm looking for stuff like that, yeah.
The app is extremely nice as well; really easy to use. Much better than google maps, at least in the cities it's rolled out to
I am quite impressed that they have the lamb and flag, Covent garden in one of their blog posts as the example destination.
11:33
Hi what is the difference between keyword and default argument types in python ?
and how do you differentiate if the argument is a default type or a keyword argument type?
default is the way how you declare; keyword is the way how you pass.
def func(arg=123) is default, func(arg=123) is keyword.
@psychoCoder check out star args and kwargs in google. Should give you a good start
okay so this is like actual and formal parameters..
@RobertGrant okay thanks!
No, it's positional parameters followed by named parameters
But take a look! :)
user4433485
@RobertGrant What was the JPG trick again ? :3
11:40
Scroll up lol
user4433485
o lol
user4433485
not much talk here :3
@RobertGrant def bar(**kwargs):
for a in kwargs:
print a, kwargs[a]

bar(first=1,second=2)
Why is it printing second 2
first 1
Because kwargs is a dictionary, which has no inherent ordering.
okay! So the output is fixed or different run can have different outputs
11:44
It's implementation dependant IIRC.
The main thing to remember is: don't rely on the ordering at all
So don't say "oh it was this order last time, so it'll always be this order"
Yeah, pretty much sums it up.
Just don't depend on the ordering at all
This counts for both sets and dicts.
Okay the content matters not the ordering. :)
11:48
Wow, SourceTree makes it very easy to make a new branch and switch to it. So nice.
morning everyone
12:02
Question: occasionally a 1 rep user will ask how to delete their post. I tell them "It's on the same line as the share, edit, close, flag, protect, and revisions button just below your tags". But I suspect 1 rep users don't have all those buttons. Which buttons do they actually have?
Just share/edit/delete/revisions?
cbg all
stackoverflow.com/q/32330410/3001761 (I accidentally hammered it with the wrong dupe, have reopened and commented with the correct one...)
cbg @jonrsharpe, everyone else, bugrit
Millenium hand and shrimp
@psychoCoder It can be misleading to try & apply terminology of other languages to Python, since variables in Python work differently to how they work in many other languages. In traditional languages a variable is a named location in RAM that the compiler / interpreter endows with a particular type. Python variables aren't like that: essentially, we have anonymous objects that can be bound to names.
See Facts and myths about Python names and values by SO veteran Ned Batchelder.
@Kevin much obliged
12:08
Still seems to me that this terminology is artificial and redundant.
In Python, there's only one kind of value: a reference.
and references are passed by value.
same as Java
except in java they have unboxed types
@bereal That's completely false.
@holdenweb care to elaborate?
"Only one kind of value"? A string is a value. A tuple is a value.
I suspect what you mean is that "names are always references"
you cannot pass a tuple or assign a tuple
you can only pass or assign a reference
... In Java?
12:10
in Python
In Python, there are names and values, and names (along with items in collections) are references
why making up some home-grown terminology?
But your terminology is so sloppy that you end up saying things like "there are no values in Python" - so where are the data held?
@bereal What makes you say it's "home-grown"?
@PM2Ring Thnaks for the link
12:12
Say, has Structure of a programm always had that extra M?
please send me a link where I say "there are no values in Python"?
I'd like to avoid using the term "variable" when talking about Python objects, but it's just too convenient, and I've been using the term for too many years to stop now. :)
@bereal Sorry, the exact quote is "there's only one kind of value in Python" - so, where are the data held?
There's a clear terminology where there are variables and their values. In Python, variable values are references to the object in the heap.
that's it.
I don't think "name" and "value" count as home-grown, because they're right there in the language reference.
"variable" is also used, but that is neither here nor there.
12:15
Python specifically avoids the use of the term "variable" precisely because that leads to people saying things like "there's only one kind of value". Clearly you are so attached to the concept of a variable that you assume only variables can hold values, and hence "there's only one kind of value". In Python, we say "names are references to values," because it's far less misleading about the true state of affairs
"A clear terminology" for languages with static variables, perhaps, but I don't see why you want to force Python into that mould
What I mean, is whenever anyone is asking "is it by ref or by val" and insists that in Python it's neither, is purposely mixing up the terminology. Because, in terms where "by ref or by val" makes sense, there are variables, call frames etc.
@bereal how long have you been using Python?
since 2008
Why not also insist that lists are arrays of refs?
Hi guys mb some on have a deal with this.
How to represent that sql SELECT field1, COUNT(field1) FROM table GROUP BY field1 in Django ORM
Didn't see Django chat so post here
12:17
they are, in fact
Ah. You missed the meeting where we decided all this. Christmas 2007.
I usually go with "it's pass-by-ref, but assignment doesn't propagate to higher frames because that's just not what name binding does", which, if not true, is at least approximately the same shape as the truth.
I just don't understand why you try to insist that your terminology is superior to that in common usage in the Python world
Python uses "passing by object reference" (but I suppose you'd say that's a value)
Yeah that is a value. Java makes the same distinction: it passes references by value
There are objects, which may be bound to a name. You may just create an object & use it without binding it to a name. Binding an object to a name is effectively associating the object to a key in some dictionary, although in some situations it may not be implemented that way for efficiency reasons. But generally you won't go far wrong in pretending that some_name = some_object puts some_object into a dict with some_name as its key.
12:21
But you don't pass a name, you pass the value. As in: you put a value on the stack and call the function.
and what lies on the stack is the reference.
well, pass by share is kinda good way to refer to it, but on the implementation level, that's still by value
Fair enough. But I'd rather think about things at a higher level than to be concerned with such implementation details. If I want to worry about that low-level stuff, I'll go back to C. Or assembler. :)
Well, after all, the point about lists is valid too.
@bereal Sure, it's valid, but how often do you need to be aware that a CPython list is implemented as an extensible array of pointers?
@PM2Ring whenever I need something that's better be done with array.
Not often, although it's useful to know that a = []; a.append(a) doesn't somehow take up infinity memory.
12:33
@bereal I'll pay that. :)
Just be careful who you say "you cannot pass a tuple or assign a tuple" to. I can imagine a newbie hearing that and thinking "ok, got it. x = (1,2) is illegal syntax and so is f((3,4))"
Well, you can't assign to a tuple - they're immutable. :) :runs away:
I was about to say that in good old C it was more clear, then recalled array decaying.
Is C the language where 2[foo] has identical behavior to foo[2]? ;-)
ok, ok
it wasn't.
Python is the most Pythonic language. Other languages are much less Pythonic.
12:38
laurel
I agree with that statement because it is agreeable.
:-)
FWIW, the way variables work in PostScript is quite similar to the Python model, but in PS the fact that you're working with keys and dictionaries is much more explicit.
KevinScript uses name-value dictionaries, but it's only apparent if you look at the engine source
This question is deceptively difficult, if you want to make a generalized approach.
Might actually be easier to just brute force all size=3 possibilities.
12:46
Someone ought to tell Kasra how to do timeit tests... stackoverflow.com/a/32329448/4014959
Smells like teen homework
Terminology chat. What's the name of the numbering sequence that goes "first, second, third..."?
@Kevin ordinal numbering.
In linguistics, ordinal numbers are words representing position or rank in a sequential order. The order may be of size, importance, chronology, and so on. In English, they are adjectives such as 'third' and 'tertiary'. They differ from cardinal numbers, which represent quantity. Ordinal numbers may be written in English with numerals and letter suffixes: 1st, 2nd or 2d, 3rd or 3d, 4th, 11th, 21st, 101st, 477th, etc. In some countries, written dates omit the suffix, although it is nevertheless pronounced. For example: 5 November 1605 (pronounced "the fifth of November ... "); November 5, 1605,...
Ok, thanks :-)
I don't suppose Python has a built-in module to turn 3 into its ordinal form 3rd...
@wouter please don't link recently asked questions in chat.

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