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00:00
separate classes based on system used - but any custom errors I have are typically based on external hardware and hence easy to define custom classes (or at least easy to separate logically)
you probably have a main API point you'll dump stuff into
also, cbg Aaron
00:56
Ah, the stuff I know that just isn't so.
Lets say you have a list containing chunks of data, you need to process each one and you get it by calling a generator.
the first chunk contains padding you need to truncate.
I would have sworn up and down that the song by Don McLean popularly known as "American Pie" had the formal title "The Day the Music Died" but it would appear I am completely mistaken. I must have gotten that impression from bootlegged chord sheets.
would you create two separate loops or do you have some sort of a magic trick down your hat for that?
a generator is an iterator, so just call next(iterator) until you've bypassed the junk, then use a for loop to iterate over the rest of it.
this is the snippet, probably would explain the situation better
it's kind of ugly
I can check if it's the first index and if so truncate the padding but that's a lot of conditional checks afterwards.
01:03
it's probably fine. I'd collect the strings in a list and then join them with ''.join(list_of_strings)
instead of +=? why?
strings are immutable. You create a new string with each iteration
so decoded_data.append(tree_iterator.symbol)
makes sense
thank you
I wish there was a book containing all good practices of the world
best practices. Yeah I hear ya
I wanted to write that book. I don't have a lot of time, though.
no no I'm fine with good practices
01:07
@AaronHall Looks good. One tangential thing you might or might not care to mention (simply based on a simplistic reading of the beginning of the question) is that, of course, iterating over list(my_set) is the correct thing to do if the set might be altered by the iteration.
I don't wanna be the best programmer, just a good one is enough.
thanks.
Following "best practices" won't make you the "best programmer" but it will set you apart from the competition for whom "hey, it works (for me)!" is the primary value for checking in code.
He has a point, though -- a lot of people touting "best practices" are pretentious gits. You avoid that when aiming for "good practices."
A lot of times there's no right or wrong, I just want to know I'm not doing anything really stupid or frowned upon. I'm usually ok though.
Also purty code makes me all fuzzy inside
Some people are a little nuts and think their opinions are best practices and anything not quite like their opinion is "harmful" but I think we can differentiate.
01:19
should I change this comment into an answer (with the for loop) or would I just be doing that person's homework for him?
never forget that "best practices" (rather than good programming practices) tends to lead to that ultimate evil - premature optimization
how do you avoid that?
sometimes I fall into that nook
follow the old code of development one of my mentors gave me: 1. Build future needs into design not actual coding (at least at first). 2. Always follow GPP (good programming practices). 3. Work First, Optimize later
imo 3 is the most important one
I've had to build on that over the years based on my own experience but it was a good starting point for the young developer that I was 14 years ago
really more of a script kiddie than a developer back then
There are some optimizations that take so little time and thought that they become canonical. For example, using if x is None instead of if x == None. Don't shy away from those -- any optimizations you can make in your sleep that don't detract from the readability of the code or even (in this case) enhance it because they make your code more consistent with itself and with others' code -- do those up front.
01:30
actually I've found the most important one is Number 2 over the years
Patrick, I would consider those type of optimizations part of GPP
So would I, which is why you have to be careful how a blanket prohibition against premature optimization is taken. Also, FWIW, number 2 and the first half of number 3 are in a bit of tension in some cases :-)
Is using Python's built-in TimSort instead of writing a bubble sort a premature optimization?
not sure any of these apply: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPP
yes they are, hence general rule of thumb not policy ;)
hehe....I use GPP for good programming practice in certain classes cause I can then reference Hitchhiker's Guide
helps people remember
@AaronHall A good programmer is merely a "general purpose preprocessor" who takes ill-defined and conflicting requirements and converts them into something more suitable for execution.
collecting strings in a list to join them might be considered "premature optimization" but most Python programmers would think you're crazy if you objected on those grounds.
01:38
<- was not trying to start the "what is pre-optimization" wars
Here's a best practice I'd like to promulgate: Learn Python's data structures and methods, builtin functions and the top standard library modules, and attempt to use the most appropriate of those as applicable.
wish I could get people to do that with every programming language I use
@JamesG. add a print (x) to the for loop and you'll see why
I was printing x instead of total. I thought it was a python quirk, but it was really me failing at typing.
for i, y in enumerate(my_string):
    if my_string[y] != other_string[y]:
        return False

how cringeworthy is this?
oh, I thought you were having an issue on why x was still set the same as it was in the for loop rather than a new scope
01:45
I used to teach python and many people did this
@GLaDOS Do you really mean if y != other_string[i]: ? Because if not, I'm confused.
@PatrickMaupin Just saying some people try to compare strings in python as if they were writing code in C
depends on what level the student is at and if it is a "new to programming in general" or "only new to python" programmer
@JGreenwell Both had that issue
yeah, cause one was used to C and the other probably asked him for help :)
@PatrickMaupin I've seen if my_string[i] != other_string[i]: often
01:52
And this is why you shouldn't be allowed to use a high-level language until you've written production assembler for at least 5 years. An implicit understanding of the interpreter overhead produces an overwhelming desire to push loops and calls down below the Python level.
actually I like when I see that anymore. Cause then I can show them you can just use cmp() or set() & set() or ... and suddenly "programming is fun again" :)
02:08
Yes, Python did make programming fun again :-)
and there was much rejoicing
Thanks to @AaronHall for that comic
I don't think I can take credit for it.
well, pointing me to it at least
Man the things I don't remember...
02:19
dude, that was like two nights ago
02:31
This?
2 days ago, by JGreenwell
user image
import antigravity
yep, after you referenced Bobby Tables
02:53
well you must have found it after Bobby Tables, then?
You'll notice, he doesn't make comics about Ruby.
03:41
sleepy time, good night everybody!
Well, Good morning :-)
04:00
Good morning and goodnight...
 
1 hour later…
05:19
cbg frands
cbg
@JGreenwell and then you come to Python 3 and suddenly there is no cmp() any longer
05:34
The rift between Python 2.7 and 3 hurts me physically.
that's why you should jump across right now and never look back.
06:19
@AnttiHaapala if it were entirely up to me, I'd be happy to.
@JGrindal so make it entirely up to you :P
one way or another
However, I serve at the pleasure of the client, and his army of code integration minions.
That's the problem with clients - they always want something.
06:35
hello I'm senior python developer in CERN
@MarcinqM howdy
06:51
Hey up all
That feeling when a program does what it's supposed to do after first blush.
ahhhhhhhhhhhh
07:12
Cbg
@JGrindal that always makes me nervous
I like to build up a program based on small constant tests I fail first, and then pass. Don't trust myself any other way :)
Same here
Some times I used to write tests for even trivial things
I'm not diligent at writing the tests, I just write a bit and run it and see if it does what I want :)
Which is dumb of course, but it makes me feel alive
07:44
Tests are for the weak.
@Ffisegydd I am weak
:D
Where you are weak, the tests are strong
I always feel like kind of a doofus, I'll write 10 lines of code, test, retool, 10 more lines, test, retool.
how do I deprecate a module name?
I am going to rename a module to another
@JGrindal yeah that's me as well :)
07:52
then I want to deprecate the old name, keeping it as an alias, how to do DeprecationWarnings
But that 10 lines used to be 5 lines, and will one day be 50 lines
@RobertGrant I worked with this grizzled old C programmer a few years ago who used to write an entire class, member methods and all before he'd even test compile it. 300-400 lines at a time. He was my mentor
you know what, he was my GOD
@AnttiHaapala there's no import hook you could call warnings.warn from?
Or just have in the "old" module a warnings.warn call and then from newmodule import * (or whatever)
I really want to write a peer-to-peer chat program, but I'm too lazy to learn all the networking side of it.
Yeah it'd be cool to write a low-level networking thing that uses all the stuff that you need to remember for that interview question, "what happens when you type google.com in your browser and hit enter"
08:02
@RobertGrant I'll tell you what happens:
fucking MAGIC
I remember taking a networking class in college, all the packet packaging and repackaging that the routers do
:)
Yeah I enjoyed stuff like whatshisname's algorithm
It's unreal. We live in a world with legit magic.
Djikstra
Nagle?
oh yeah
I actually use Djikstra for data processing, though.
08:31
hem anyone else having problems with skype?
08:42
Cabbage!
Cbg :)
Has anyone ever used verbose reg-exs in Django URLs?
Tried to compile one - no luck, tried to use "(?x)" - no luck
define no luck?
Note that the (?x) flag changes how the expression is parsed. It should be used first in the expression string, or after one or more whitespace characters. If there are non-whitespace characters before the flag, the results are undefined.
who knows what django does with your regex :d
When using (?x) -> "ValueError: Non-reversible reg-exp portion: '(?x'"
And generally can't use a compiled reg-ex
:P
you need to have it the first in the compiled regex
It was
08:51
django is django
The regex was fine, I actually tried a match manually
Now just doing:
I guess django makes a big regex out of these all or something equally evil
or it
(
    r'^(?P<app_label>\w+)/'
    r'(?P<model_name>\w+)/'
    r'(?P<instance_pk>\d+)/'
    r'(?P<contact_id>\w+)/')
08:52
ah no
see...
it must prepend the / in there :d
^ works, but would have been nice to make use of verbose flags :(
@IanClark it must prepend / in the regex
(and then strip the ^ as well... can't see how it would work otherwise)
@AnttiHaapala it => django? That's why you're saying its not possible/
08:55
I am not using django though, just that the (?x) needs to be the first in regex
Does anyone of you know a very simple mail server that I can just run and it serves SMTP and some (ideally web-based) inbox?
so django prepends some shit to these strings before compiling them into a regex
"simple mail server" sounds promising :P
@poke roundcube has a decent UI but I don't think it includes a mail server directly, it's just a frontend
Well, I don’t really need a good frontend or anything. It’s just so that I can fire up a mail server, and do some tests with this app that needs to send emails
hem
so why do you need a webbased if for it??
why not just install postfix with local delivery
09:00
Windows, and I want as little overhead as possible. I don’t really want to install anything.
I’d probably be fine with an SMTP server that I can run from the command line, that shows incoming mails in the command line.
/me takes a look at smtplib…
(actually that “incoming” means, showing emails send via the SMTP server; no need to actually send/receive them)
hmail?
I've used that before; was okay
Oh, overhead may be an issue as I think it's Java based :)
just write an smtplib project that responds 200 to everything :D
from smtpd import DebuggingServer
import asyncore
server = DebuggingServer(('127.0.0.1', 1025), None)
asyncore.loop()
^ works for me.
Lol fair :)
ah smtplib is client
kewl :D
09:09
Flip that's awesome
saved to notes :P

Debugging mailserver in 4 lines of Python

2 mins ago, 3 seconds total – 2 messages, 1 user, 0 stars

Bookmarked 12 secs ago by Robert Grant

:)
The output is pretty readable too:
---------- MESSAGE FOLLOWS ----------
MIME-Version: 1.0
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected], [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Date: 21 Sep 2015 11:19:54 +0200
Subject: Some subject
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
X-Peer: 127.0.0.1

Some body=0Awith multiple lines!

------------ END MESSAGE ------------
That's awesome
09:25
Simpler:
python -m smtpd -c DebuggingServer -n
Runs the thing on localhost:8025.
lol
so anoyone of you are using skype?
I love how Python modules come with command-line runnable minimal but super useful defaults.
@Antti Only Skype for Business atm, which uses a different network.
Yeah also SfB
grr you windows trolls :D
09:29
@vaultah troll obviously
yep
all skypes in Finland seem to be down :D
they actually have other questions, slightly better than this one
@vaultah better you say?
slightly
martijn deleted \o/
@AnttiHaapala Yeah, skype acting screwing
09:37
nicee
@vaultah see the other questions :D even the score question is a troll: "scores sorted so that the end result is [a-not-so-sorted-list]"
someone had the OOPS I guess
Someone rewrote some of Skype in Haskell
So it's not DOWN, it's just lazily executing.
That's just the status stuff, not the actual messaging?
Well, their statement says that. The facts seem to say that more is wrong than just that.
Has the Python tag always been like this?
Every tag has always been like this.
That is actually soothing to hear... thank you.
That does look like a python tag to me, yeah
10:12
@vaultah I can repro... (see my comment, I think this OP has a little more thinking to do)
@vaultah BTW - I'll have a look at your Q/A pair this evening and let you know if I have any comments (in response to your ping yesterday / day before)
@poke nice...
brief cbg
Cabbage
Hey up
I just wrote my first IPython Notebook!
Well, the first one that I wrote to explain a problem to the best of my understanding
@SomeGuy According to my colleague: "welcome to the future" (I am, according to him, living in the past with my basic interpreter)
@JRichardSnape Haha, 90% of the time, I use the interpreter too. IPython is quite useful in some situations, though
@SomeGuy Your notebook looks interesting. I think your prime_limit might be too low, but I'll work through it... My instinct is for 16 digit numbers, you need primes up to 17783 (4th root of 10**17), but I've only skimmed so far...
No, the limit is imposed by the question
The question says that the prime factors must always be less than 100
Ah, OK. I missed that, even though it's right there in the first line. Damn my skim reading!
10:29
cbg
cabbage
@SomeGuy I've got a few comments - there are a couple of errors. I can start a temporary chat room if you like...
Hello Guys! Quick Question: Do I have to have anything in a base class method if I'm overriding it in child classes? or just 'pass' statement?
@SomeGuy I'd calculate something like the largest N-factor number < 10 ** 16
@JRichardSnape Sure, I invited you to a room
10:33
@arcanesorcerer Yeah, that's legal. But why do you want a parent class that provides nothing to its children?
then for each of these primes, you can take any factor less than the current
so for 4, the largest is 97 * 97 * 97 * 97
@PM2Ring just for one method I thought of doing something with it but I guess yeah I'll just don't write it
but for that you can replace the 97 with any number less than 97
for 5 the largest is 97 * 97 * 97 * 97 * 97
but you can replace any of them with any of the primes less than 97...
10:35
@PM2Ring if A is a base class. B and C are child classes. Could I return C class's object from a method in B class? Could you give me just a quick example?
and the most factors will be for something like 2 ** 53
the larger before that is 2 ** 51 * 3
@SomeGuy
@SomeGuy invs?
@arcanesorcerer Sure you can do that. It's conceptually no different to returning a string or list or any other type from a method.
@PM2Ring Thanks a lot!
@AnttiHaapala Hmm, I actually don't remember the problem statement exactly, so I'm not sure if they meant distinct prime factors or not
I think they did, but as I said, I'm not sure
derp. My emails are encoded as base64 and the debugging client doesn’t support encoding that :(
10:38
@arcanesorcerer I guess doing that makes it clear that the child classes are all related, and you can do isinstance(ParentClass). OTOH, it's recommended in Python to avoid testing the type of objects unless you really need to. Making stuff type-specific is contrary to the principle of duck-typing.
10:52
@PM2Ring agreed, though Python itself is very bad at that :D
@AnttiHaapala It's a case of "Do as I say, not as I do". :) OTOH, I guess the core (& standard modules) Python developers are allowed to bend the rules a little if it makes the core code more efficient &/or readable, as long as it doesn't actually interfere with duck-typing.
of course there are many cases that interfere with ducktyping
take the %-interpolation for example
Yeah ok. I assume you're talking about how Bad Things can happen if the 2nd operand of % isn't a tuple.
yes
or how you cannot know if something is a sequence or a mapping without asking isinstance
I hope that page can deal with people whose Last name is Zero... — PM 2Ring 19 mins ago
@PM2Ring It will result in the package being sent to their NAN. — TripeHound 12 mins ago
Assignment dump with bizarrely unrelated title.. stackoverflow.com/q/32693720/4014959
11:19
Custom debug SMTP server… because reasons… gist.github.com/poke/6091a355db13c60153e9
11:30
Not bad, -12 in 4 minutes: stackoverflow.com/q/32693995/4014959
Hi everyone
@VigneshKalai: Please don't bother editing such horrible questions!
Just popped in to ask a small question.
I was self moderating some of my old questions, and I found one that has no votes, and one answer that I didn't select. from 2 years ago, no longer relevant.
Should I close it?
Should I delete it?
No longer relevant to you, or to anyone?
To me.
0
Q: Powershell to connect to an exchange server and remove messages from the Queue

Inbar RoseI have Python code that is supposed to use Powershell to connect to an exchange server and remove messages from the Queue. (I am new to Powershell) I have found this which also led to this. Which basically says I should do: Remove-Message -Server SERVERNAME -Filter {FromAddress -like '*MATCH*'}...

That was something from 2 years ago, I remember I did eventually solve the problem a different way.
11:33
Point of SO is to create a huge, useful Q&A repository. If it's useful for that mission then I say keep it.
but I no longer work at that same company, and don't need that solution anymore
i understand
but the question is just going to remain open
and I have no way of validating a correct answer anymore
Ah okay
So what do you think I should do?
I'd leave it, if it were me. There's some thought gone into the answer, and I can't tell whether or not it's useful to others.
So I'd err on the side of "maybe it's useful"
So, just leave it?
11:35
@InbarRose Leave it. And let AaronHall know about it. :)
Why AaronHall ?
That just sounds weird
It's a hobby. :) And 41 necromancer badges is quite an impressive collection.
11:54
@PM2Ring just wanted show how question should be formatted :)
How that question should be formatted is: Ctrl-A Delete. :)
@PeterVaro Ok, added. Recently I have watched Bears and Real Genius, which I give a B+ and B respectively. Bears is well done technically, but there's only so much plot you can construct around real wild animals. Real Genius felt a little unfocused (heh) but I guess that's a consequence of its "80s college movie" genre.
When the main character gets seduced by someone who hasn't been on-screen since the first scene 70 minutes previous, is when I decided they were trying to tie too much together
@VigneshKalai Yeah, it's nice to show newbies about proper formatting, etc. But we really don't want to fix questions like that, especially after they're closed, as that encourages some people to expend energy on them, eg giving the answer in comments, like what happened there.

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