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17:01
cbg
Yeah, seems a bit contradictory.
Objectivism doesn't play nice with "do unto others" except in certain game theory scenarios
DSM
DSM
I had a friend at college who had Objectivist sympathies. I teased her a fair bit when she wound up working for the Feds. Her pushback was that she was agitating for change from within, and I'm sure she did her best. :-)
@Kevin "Do unto others before they do unto you."
Personally, I usually prefer "Do unto others while they do unto you."
Cabbage guys. You so much hate LPTHW ?
I liked The Fountainhead but its philosophy does not seem to withstand reality
"Do unto others with 50% of the intensity as they did unto you in the previous round, in order to prevent ever-increasing vengeance cycles"
17:09
@XavierCombelle ?
@XavierCombelle We hate some of the questions that obviously come from people studying from it. But we have no idea how many people read it and are happy and don't ask questions.
DSM
DSM
@XavierCombelle: it's not like there's a single room opinion, and I don't think I'd use "hate" myself, but a lot of us think it's not a very good tutorial. This comes both from direct evidence (reading it) and indirect (looking at the questions people using it ask.)
@XavierCombelle we do not hate it :D we just do not think it is an appropriate resource to study Python from.
the fact was that before it was the very first link in the list of resources for "beginner non-programmers"
@XavierCombelle I wrote most of the stuff on that list after a short glimpse.
What is a good resource for beginner in your opinion ?
17:13
guys, blue apron is best internet service
@DSM @MorganThrapp @Kevin @JoeKington @Ffisegydd Thanks for the help guys. I submitted a patch. github.com/nodejs/new.nodejs.org/pull/183
well, anything else. For example openbookproject.net/thinkcs/python/english3e this looked better
@XavierCombelle we have a wiki page for that too sopython.com/wiki/What_tutorial_should_I_read%3F
Feel free to suggest corrections.
@thefourtheye I hate it when a sentence starts with "So,"
17:15
Oh, but it is not wrong, right?
"Node.js doesn't want to be in the business of picking winners or losers. So, to avoid the appearance of favoritism, we only discuss our APIs."
"Node.js doesn't want to be in the business of picking winners or losers." does not really add anything
See, so doesn't bother me. Partially because I use it frequently. :P
I try to avoid "So," in my posts, fwiw
DSM
DSM
I use it casually. In more formal work I'd avoid it, but only because it's casual, not because I think using discourse markers is ungrammatical in itself.
"All of this documentation is meant to only highlight the builtin core modules provided by Node.js, and not to highlight any particular module or collection of modules found in the community." is enough for me, all other is just repetation
17:17
How can that be written better actually?
@AnttiHaapala @vaultah may I point that you kind of contradict each other: openbookproject.net/thinkcs/python/english3e/thinkcs is not mentioned on sopython.com/wiki/What_tutorial_should_I_read%3F
@XavierCombelle I could add it there :P
I just recently found it
I've been thinking about reforking it
DSM
DSM
@XavierCombelle: the fact that a list isn't exhaustive doesn't mean there's any contradiction.
The wiki page doesn't say we shouldn't recommend openbookproject.net/thinkcs/python/english3e
a bug!!!
17:19
I said kind of contradict, not contradict
I log in to the wiki, it redirects to "...read?" instead of "...read%3F"
DSM
DSM
@AnttiHaapala: I've opened a ticket for that bug already. :-)
@AnttiHaapala That definitely is better. I updated the PR :-)
"All of this documentation is meant to only describe the builtin core modules provided by Node.js, and not to highlight any particular module or collection of modules found in the community." is enough for me, all other is just repetation
@thefourtheye repeats "highlight"
17:21
@XavierCombelle the wiki page is not striving to be a comprehensive list of every tutorial we should and should not recommend.
argh I'd rather rewrite it all :D
DSM
DSM
If we're being finicky, I'd drop "all of" and move "only" to "is meant only to".
-All of this documentation is meant to only highlight the builtin core modules provided by Node.js, and not to highlight any particular module or collection of modules found in the community.
+This documentation is meant only to describe the builtin core modules provided by Node.js, and not to highlight any particular module or collection of modules found in the community.
and remove and :P
lol
so much words to say so little
btw I haven't started reading my English grammar book yet :/ lol
17:24
Ah, right. :-)
a Finn giving suggestions to a native Tamil speaker on how to fix English language documentation written by Americans.
actually, I learnt German before English, but I probably cannot speak it at all.
Oh, can you read German?
I learnt Hindi, but cannot speak that well. I cannot read also.
I just started an english course today
It happened to me that I improved a lot since school
17:29
I'm just an American lol
I can read German, Swedish, Norwegian and Danish without any problems, and thus I can guess lots of Dutch and Icelandic text
My English has started improving when I stepped into this room :D
@AnttiHaapala That's nice. You can read popular literatures of all those languages :-)
well, more like shampoo bottles :D
17:34
okay
@thefourtheye I did read the "Digital Fortress" by Dan Brown in Swedish...
Finally!!! I meet someone who read Digital Fortress :-) Did you like it?
@XavierCombelle - Oy! Yeah, I hope I never see that in anything I have to maintain...
of course not, that is why I read it in Swedish :D
:(
Though I was able to guess the climax, I enjoyed it.
17:36
@JoeKington I hope it will be explained as a necessary optimization trick if it is written in a code I have to maintain
I had read Angels and Daemons and Da Vinci Code... the former was marketed to me "as the worst book ever written", and I concur.
Dan
Dan
Cbg
> why are you using this weird pathlib library instead of pythons perfectly good path utils?
Dan
Dan
@AnttiHaapala @thefourtheye I also read (and enjoyed) Digital Fortress
17:38
@thefourtheye having read Angels and Demons or Daimons or whatever it was called, and Da Vinci Code, there was nothing to guess any more :d
all of them have the exact same plot
@AnttiHaapala Well, I am neutral on those two books. I wouldn't say I enjoyed them but time-pass. But Digital Fortress touches upon the Computer Security a bit. So I enjoyed it
the problem is that I knew enough about computer security to know that the guy does not know at all what he's writing about :(
that's why Da Vinci was much more enjoyable (though not exactly a thrilling read)
Angles and Daemons: Triangles in the Background
Moreover, I watched the movies before I read the books. So, that is there.
But the books were more detailed and had many things which were not there in the movies.
Dan
Dan
Anyone have a good tutorial you can point me to for designing a good Python factory class? I have a parent that needs to return the appropriate child class depending on some logoc
Dan
Dan
I assume factory is what I want, maybe not
Problem is children need parameters of parent also
@Dan why a class
@XavierCombelle Well, yeah. It's not recommending OSs.
@Dan You can use a dictionary for that, no?
lol @MorganThrapp
Dan
Dan
17:41
@AnttiHaapala because they share a lot of common stuff so I want to subclass that
TMI
information overload
Dan
Dan
@thefourtheye not following
you are doing a child-parent relationship, factory and subclassing all in one place
that sounds like a very bad design already.
if i want my font size to change when my window is resized how do i call that for each widget in kivy?
Dan
Dan
K. So the idea is there is a parent parser class
17:43
@Dan please can you tell more about the actual problem
using the on_resize method
Dan
Dan
And depending on what type of file, it must be parsed differently
But they all need an elasticsearch db instance, file to parse, place to store parsed data, logging, etc
I suppose I could just have two methods in the parser class
so how do you deduce the file type?
Dan
Dan
There is a static method in the parser parent class that I wanted to return the appropriate child class
@Kevin Bears, really? :) I'm truly sorry, but definitely not interested.. even if my favourite animals are bears.. :P On the other hand: from mid 80s till mid 90s was probably the darkest age in human history -- at least from art POV (fashion, music, etc.) -- but still, thanks for the tips :)
Dan
Dan
17:45
Couldn't figure out how to get it to work as static method nor class method as in factory tutorials
Because in the tutorials, there are no required parameters for instantiation
Not so in my case
I still do not think the inheritance is any good here... :P
anyway which tutorial is that?
Dan
Dan
A gist tutorial I found on github
I'm definitely open to a better way
I still do not see a link to the tutorial :D
I cannot comment whether or not the approach there is good or mine would be any better :D
Dan
Dan
That's because it is on my desktop and my work blocks chat so I have to use my phone for this haha
17:49
@Dan - One thing you might consider is abstracting away some of the IO. For example, have each parser take an input file-like object and an output file-like object. You can also have the logic of "is this an X file" be a method of each parser as well.
Then it's a good deal easier to have a factory function to open things. E.g.
subclassing is overrated
Dan
Dan
gist.github.com/padzera/1099559
hmm must be wrong number
@JoeKington control-K
Dan
Dan
17:51
Sorry pazdera
Thanks, I always get it wrong on multiline in chat...
Dan
Dan
I am typing it
When i resize a window kivy docs state the on_resize method is called. To take advantage and overwrite this class do my classes have to inherit the Window class or as long as I import it i can overwrite this method?
Dan
Dan
Yes
17:52
well in this case you'd just rather have 2 arguments, like infile and outfile
def getCup(cupColor, input, output):
you could have them by filetype in a dictionary, like
parsers = {'red': RedParser, ...and so on...}
then you can do:
def get_parser(color, input, output):
    try:
         parser_class = parsers[color]
         return parser_class(input, output)
    except KeyError:
         raise KeyError("No parser for color {}".format(color))
it does not actually need to be a static method of anything
actually you don't need to use classes for these either, the parsers could be just functions - python wouldn't care.
Dan
Dan
Hmm I will try that
when I look into that code, it feels like someone is programming Java with Python syntax
Dan
Dan
Except it's more complicated than that
A series of if then statements to determine type
@Dan then... another choice is to have a parser class, and let that class choose if it handles the file?
Dan
Dan
Hmm
17:57
so: parsers = [ FooParser, BarParser ]
Dan
Dan
I'll have to keep playing with it
@Dan - I find it's often useful to have each Parser class have a (often static) is_valid method that chooses whether the file matches the format
Which is basically just what Antti was suggestion, I'm just slow to type, apparently :)
Dan
Dan
@JoeKington makes sense
def get_parser(input, output):
     for parser in parsers:
          if parser.is_valid(input):
              return parser(input, output)
     else:
         raise Exception("No parser for this input")
this is programming, not rocket science.
Dan
Dan
@AnttiHaapala that makes sense
17:59
Is there a simple way to convert this to a datetime object without having to manually parse? 2015-09-21T12:27:29.060789900Z
@Programmer not in python core
if you can have any kinds of iso8601
bahumbug
I keep getting random forks on my one github project from new accounts. I'm so confused.
@Programmer - Have a look at dateutil.parser
18:00
I second dateutil.parser
It will guess, and often guess wrong, but it's generally quite good
I'd rather have it in Python stdlib but ... they'd say "a stdlib cannot have everything, we cannot add such obscure standards, we'd rather support parsing Sun AIFF wave files".
Who uses Windows anyway?
18:02
@AnttiHaapala Huh. You were not kidding. That is really weird.
@Programmer so when did you need to do an AIFF with python
"Some operations may only work under IRIX; these will raise ImportError when attempting to import the cl module, which is only available on IRIX. "
sorry AIFF ofc is not by Sun :D
AU is, and it too is supported by Python standard library.
parsing iso8601 timestamps is not, because that's an obscure standard.
@AnttiHaapala Well, yeah. Python is gold (or a star).
Sometimes I think Python is made of Obscurium
@Programmer anyway as you can see: bitbucket.org/micktwomey/pyiso8601/src/…
that is the "simple way" (using a regex)
I just picture GvR being blindfolded and throwing darts at a giant board with every feature ever proposed. AIFF? Sure, why the cabbage not
Thank you @AnttiHaapala. I'm gonna try finding dateutil on pip if I can, otherwise I'll try to use the regex
18:07
@Programmer you can parse a YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS but you cannot do the timezone or fractional parts or anything
@Programmer you can copy the iso8601 code from the link I gave you, just one file
"Let's support aiff and also... runs random generator again... qzqq, lynf, and dyfw"
@Kevin you think the support for Dynamic Feather-Weight is obscure, how?
;-)
I frequently use Lyrical Noise-Filtering. It should really be in stdlib.
"cd/CD

CD drive control for SGI systems.
SGI no longer sells machines with IRIX on them.
Code has not been uniquely edited in 14 years."
this was removed in Python 3
18:13
I think what happen with iso8601 is that is a complex standard
@XavierCombelle it is rather easy to just support the simple date formats
DSM
DSM
If it's that complex, it should probably be supported, because random user who tries to implement it himself will do a poor job of it.
@AnttiHaapala Yes but in this case you can't name it iso8601
@XavierCombelle of course not. It should be there in datetime and date and time
as static class methods.
@DSM but a random user doesn't want all the complexity, just a subpart of it
@AnttiHaapala how would you name it ?
18:16
fromisoformat
datetime.datetime.fromisoformat('2015-09-21T12:27:29.060789900Z', round=True)
though that would round it
datetime does not support nanosecond precision
Got dateutil working. Thanks guys
DSM
DSM
@XavierCombelle: standards should be implemented correctly where possible. If a user doesn't need to care about all the details, so much the better.
@DSM but the problem is a user expecting '2015-09-21T12:27:29.060789900Z' ot be parsed will be surprised that '2015-09-21' is parsed
DSM
DSM
You'd need to know a lot more than I do about use cases in practice to know what the best interface is, but that's a separate question from whether or not the spec should be implemented in stdlib.
@XavierCombelle no, it would just round the nanoseconds to microsecond precision with rounding
if you'd use datetime.date.fromisoformat, it would throw if it contains the time portion as well.
18:29
OP asked another question as an answer
@AnttiHaapala that I mean as a user I expect
datetime.datetime.fromisoformat('2015-09-21T12:27:29.060789900Z', round=True) work and datetime.datetime.fromisoformat('2015-09-21', round=True) throw exception
downvoted.
@XavierCombelle well, 2015-09-21 is still also a datetime
>>> datetime.datetime(2015, 9, 21)
datetime.datetime(2015, 9, 21, 0, 0)
DSM
DSM
@BhargavRao: we don't need to flag, we can vote to delete ourselves.
No 20k :(
DSM
DSM
Ah, I forgot when that kicked in. :-/
18:35
Guess you and @Antti have already delv-voted it. So 1 more is left.
@BhargavRao I didnt :P
2 now
Damn, I need to get to 20k asap so that I can be more "helpful" :D
@AnttiHaapala I know it is a datetime, the problem is that it is not at the format expected and an error is better than a guess
Aaand, it's gone
@XavierCombelle what makes you say it is not expected format, datetime constructor also accepts one to omit the hours, minutes...
18:39
@AnttiHaapala the difference is that when you omit hours and minute in datetime, it is in your code you control. When parsing an incomplete string it is in input that you not control
> EDIT DUE TO COMMENTS BELOW: Well, it was worth a try. You just do your job, fellows.
Phew, people don't understand. :/
@BhargavRao you need more rep
sys.stderr.write('An error') raise SystemExit(1) can be replaced by: raise SystemExit('An error')
Yeah. But after I reached 15k, i have become lazy to answer
I'm at 28 and I have the same problem... :^)
18:47
I'm answering fewer questions because fewer people are worthy of my glorious insights
has anyone ever encountered a time where you stare at the screen and the code writes itself?
I usually have the stare blankly at screen and get nothing accomplished time
After being sick for three weeks and not programming for a really long while I can't seem to concentrate and write code for a long portion of time.
DSM
DSM
19:06
Ehh, time to boot into 'doze.
That reminds me to install doze.
pip install doze
Oops, didn't mean python doze there ;)
D'ohs!
Reputation is just a rough measure of how much the community trusts you.
Yeah. Kinda
19:15
Reddit's Python page's first category of links is books, and the first link is to LPTHW.
skype is still not working
Did you try the NSA backdoor?
I didn't try that either :p
why do people still use skype? I don't understand
People often say they've tried everything when really they've only tried one thing the exact same way a couple of times in a row. :)
19:25
@Programmer I really do not know any viable alternative either
Literally if people know your skype username, they can DDoS you. I don't understand how it can be so universal yet so flawed
popular is orthogonal to good
because everything else is more flawed unfortunately
@Programmer just look at PHP and repeat your statement.
Need to install IE on ubuntu :(
not bool(fun)
19:31
I may not be a Security Expert, but I took some courses relating to the subject area and just the whole idea of security bothers me when I look at things like Skype or people's willingness to give up info.
yet ppl use facebook as well :D
or google
or android, or iphone, or windows 10, or anything.
I know and I bring this up and they all say, "Why do I care?"
@AnttiHaapala Google particularly. I thought it was the greatest search engine, till I discovered web3.0
Security by obscurity! It works for me!
Predator satiation, yo. If everyone gives up their privacy, then the odds of a malicious agent targeting you are minimized.
By being secure, you're making everyone else slightly less secure, so thanks a lot >:-(
;-)
rip image
Kevin I only trust links from kevinpedia not wikipedia
Damn, they have changed the appname of IE to netscape :O
It is like a zebra telling that it is a tiger (just coz it has stripes)
19:56
Have an XML parsing problem I was hoping someone could help with: <task id="9750f026-6509-449d-b8e5-ea24a70cad36" registrationTime="2015-09-21T19:54:36Z"...how do access that id field?
DSM
DSM
What XML parser are you using?
xml.xpath('./task[@id]')[0].text would work for, say, an href
lxml
for some dumb reason this is stumping me
@Programmer I actually used to do security research. After a while you just understand you can't escape from it and stop caring.
although when I see some weird behavior in my computer the first thing I do is open tcpview and wireshark
DSM
DSM
@AutomaticStatic: not sure I follow. Does /task/@id give you what you want?
@GLaDOS have you ever been attacked personally?
20:02
only small stuff I accidently downloaded. I manually removed them. I'm pretty sure people are listening to my phone but thats because I'm paranoid. but I don't really care
you probably get attacked much more than you think
you should setup a fake 'drop' with a briefcase full of fake money and record the people that look into it :D
Maybe I'll finally get to see that Nigerian prince
do you think he has a horse with him?
No, two. So you can ride into the sunset together
I better find my money then
20:16
cbg
They still haven't 'cleaned up' the icon for the chat in a browser tab and it's bothering me now that someone pointed it out
You're gonna carry that weight.
Well I now have to check it daily, otherwise how will I ever know they fixed it?
DSM
DSM
On the bright side, think of how awesome your life must be if this can manage to bother you! It's like the Princess and the Pea.
@Kevin: oh, yeah. Your line about $30 at etsy the other day was well-received by those who read it. :-)
Oh good, I was worried it was too pointed. I don't actually think you have more tantrums than an ordinary person.
DSM
DSM
20:27
tzaman's chaser about "folksy guitar music and a sepia filter" was the icing on the cake. You both got excellent reviews.
This pleases me.
Whats the coding convention for inner functions and inner generators?
What do you mean? The convention is "program what you need, and don't make it a confusing mass of spaghetti".
sorry
naming convention
def func():
    def _func():
or maybe

def func():
    def inner_func():
The convention is "name them descriptively, preferably following pep8".
It doesn't matter.
DSM
DSM
20:35
I've been pushing for innerFUNCTION_1 and innerGeNeRaToR1 but haven't met with much success.
Does KevinScript support rAnSOmNotE identifiers?
DSM
DSM
Now that we have unicode identifiers all sorts of fun stuff is possible..
Is it bad that I use camel case?
@PatrickMaupin Oh man. I haven't seen toggletype in years. Thank you for bringing a smile to my lips this day.
20:54
Repurposing some old spaghetti code (of mine) into something worthwhile and run into a wall trying to modularize a tkinter app
I think my desk has just about given way from the repeated headbutts, though.
Every time I have to go reference the old codebase to say "Oh how did I do that again?" I'm shocked and appalled by how terribly it's written
It's like reading my high school poetry.
The term I use for such things is 'juvenalia'.
It's horrible.
Honest, but horrible.
I've learned to soften the blow for future!me by commenting vulgarities into my code.
"Oh, good. I didn't know what the christ I meant then, either. Whew."
Does this method scale well?
Only if I grow as a human being. v( o_o )v
In the worst case, the comments add a bit more colour to a wall of incomprehensible code.
Everything is better, with colours.
Is there any easy or convenient way to "grow" a range of indices in a NumPy array?
For instance, if I have an index (3,4) and I want to include all of the values axially adjacent, is there an easy way besides [3-1:3+1,4] and [3,4-1:4+1]?
The primary use I'm after is to grow a -range- of indices, though, so it'd be a lot easier if I didn't have to do this index-at-a-time.
21:17
for instance, I'm spawning a thread to go glob something across a network and it was blocking my UI thread while it waited
so instead of doing something nice like using tk.after to check to see if it's done yet, I did this:
        reporter = GetReport(date, store, rpt, msgqueue)
        reporter.start()  # starts running getReport

        while reporter.is_alive():
            # while we're waiting for getReport to finish, keep updating
            # the root window, and if any exceptions are thrown, grab them
            # and display them in a messagebox
            try: root.update()
            except TclError: sys.exit()
            try: m = msgqueue.get_nowait()
            except queue.Empty: pass
            else: # if there is a message here, handle it.
because calling Tk().update() is smart.
I wonder if tkinter can be improved
I wonder how tkinter can be improved
I wonder who has improved tkinter already...
The current wall I'm running into is running an async process that should spawn another async process. I wanted to put the second async call in the callback of multiprocessing.Pool.apply_async, but the docs say "callback should complete immediately"
That's how I did it before. Throwing stuff off the wall to find a better idea
basically my main window has several buttons that pull from a tkinter.StringVar to make a network glob call. That call can either return one path or many paths. If there's just one, it does os.startfile on it. If it's many, I need to open a new tkinter.Toplevel to let the user pick which path to open.

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