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17:00
I think I've seen / closed at least three other questions about the same problem set from people who similarly had no clue how syntax worked
Like, maybe he has a .png file of a picture of a webpage's source, and he literally needs his program to "read" it
I just like his answer to the person asking what his question actually is.
@BlackVegetable is a problem that I'm trying to fix it a few hours. — Panos Angelopoulos 4 mins ago
"What is your problem?" "A problem!"
3
Yeah, I saw that too.
pretty funny.
eats bacon wrapped chilidog with onion, sauerkraut, and jalapenos
I'm guessing the response in his head was "no, I don't need to parse HTML. That form is one I wrote myself using the flask framework, and now I need a flask method to retrieve the value the user entered"
17:09
3 of those 5 are vegetables, so that's probably healthy.
Unfortunately I know nothing of flask, so this psychic debug ends here.
It hurts when I inhale past 50% lung capacity. I wonder if it's possible to put your ribcage out of joint while you sleep.
You'd think "how to get the value from a form input" would be, like, chapter 2 of any flask tutorial
It's like chapter 3 in the Mega Tutorial (tm)
17:24
> To access form data (data transmitted in a POST or PUT request) you can use the form attribute. Here is a full example
Ok, so it's more like chapter (/header) 6.
do any of you live near a Krispy Kreme?
@Programmer I reckon I'm definitely within 5 years of one
Well, tomorrow is apparently National Coffee Day so free donuts and coffee at Krispy Kreme
What is char code 26 in ascii table supposed to be? What is its significance?
17:31
I wish I lived near one...never gotten to try one of theirs before
let me google that for you :)
@corvid 26 hex or 26 decimal?
Decimal
26 octal.
@corvid so the SUB control code.
A substitute character (␚) is a control character that is used in the place of a character that is recognized to be invalid or in error or that cannot be represented on a given device. It is also used as an escape sequence for some programming languages. In the ASCII and Unicode character sets, this character is encoded by the number 26 (1A hex). Standard keyboards transmit this code when the Ctrl and Z keys are pressed simultaneously (Ctrl+Z, by convention often described as ^Z). == UsesEdit == Under CP/M 1 and 2 (and derivatives like MP/M) it was necessary to explicitly mark the end of a file...
Also known as CTRL-Z; you'll have a lot of fun debugging if that one appears in a text file and you try to read the file in text mode on Windows..
that sounds troublesome
Woah, @vaultah when did you get an avitar?
Ooooh now it makes sense why that is showing up, thank you, Martijin
@MorganThrapp Yesterday, but I already miss the white square :p
I miss my purple Kevin :^)
looking at vaultah's avatar Oh, it's the guy from Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas... click... No, no it is not.
17:38
@Kevin but it is actually an avatar :)
I have an avatar... Or at least that's what I tell myself so I can sleep at night ;_;
18:00
rbrb all!
rbrb @vaultah
18:53
chat is dead today. someone come up with another riddle. Go!
I met a man going to St Ives...
I met a man with seven wives,
Each wife had seven sacks,
Each sack had seven cats,
Each cat had seven kits:
Kits, cats, sacks, and wives,
How many were there going to St. Ives?
1
Did i win??
That is one possible solution :-)
Assuming from the first sentence that I am going to St Ives and the man is coming from St Ives
it's also possible that the man is going to St. Ives
the fact that he has wives and cats and sacks and so on doesn't mean all of them are going too
Yes, and then there are a number of variations of the answer depending upon whether you count animals as "going" even though they aren't people, and whether you count sacks even though they aren't alive, etc etc
Lesson: establish project requirements before doing heavy mental lifting
As I was going to St Ives / I met a man with seven wives / each wife had seven husbands / see appendix A-1 for directed relationship graph
19:03
I want to contribute a riddle as well, without much time spent searching...this one seems interesting
I make memories that last a lifetime,
Without me you’ll be miserable,
If you miss me you can gourge and it’s okay.
Some say I am naturally split in two.

What am I?
The answer is "man". Or a river. Or time. Or the periodic table of elements. Or the greek gods. That covers about 80% of all riddles.
You just let it stir for a while Kevin :^)
Yep, it's definitely the greek gods. The first line refers to Mnemosyne, the mother of all muses and personification of memory. The second line refers to Hera, who would routinely punish anyone who slighted or ignored her. The third line refers to Dionysus, god of grapes and wild partying; but the guy is pretty laid back so it's OK to be wild even without worshipping him. And the last line is Persephone, who spends half of the year in Hades and half of the year in the living world.
Can't possibly be anything else. Job's done.
19:14
Wow, you put a lot more work into that than necessary
for a wrong answer
I don't even care what the right answer is now - Kevin wins!
Even though 50% of them aren't greek gods ;-)
Kevin always wins :[
/me puts fingers in ears - lalala can't hear you Kevin - lalala
is there a spoiler tag for chat?
19:17
The trick is, the Greeks personified pretty much all the things, so it's not hard to pound their round pegs into some square holes
@Programmer, not natively but you can hack it in by using links with alt text. Like this: [hover for spoilers](http://www.example.com "insert spoiler text here")
rot13 encoding is also a common approach
I'm unfamiliar with the word gourge.
Do you mean gouge? Or gorge?
Guys Facebook is down. It must be the Apocalypse.
I think it's a misspell for gorge, I just copy pasted
As this is the End of the World, I'd just like to say that you're all terrible people.
I accept this.
19:20
is there a native viewer for json files in windows?
json are just text files, so whatever.
Sublime Text will format/colour them properly.
yeah but parsing a google chrome preferences list is a bit difficult with no print formatting
Like, native as in fresh-from-disc install? I doubt it
well, visually
Wasn't sure before I started downloading viruses
Just download Sublime Text, or Atom.
19:22
There's nice browser plugins for JSON too.
Very useful in the case of working with a web feed. So... when working with JSON.
Try doing jQuery to it.
4
@Kevin do you not like that answer?
Whether line 3 is true is up for some debate
I think it's supposed to be some sort of play on words with breakfast but was very poorly put lol
I was thinking Ettin Girlfriend.
19:30
@Ffisegydd is there a command to make SublimeText parse this json into a more readable format?
@Programmer yes.
Oh you're one of those people. :^)
Well you're one of those people who ask questions that could be easily Googled, so :/
Would you like me to spend my time googling it for you?
I thought since you recommended it that you would know and not have to google
If Sublime Text commands are Turing complete, then the answer to "is there a command to..." is "yes" without even needing to read the rest of the question ;-)
(well, not for far-out things like "... unleash wave after wave of spiders upon my enemies?")
@QuestionC Ettins as in the ferocious two headed giants of DnD lore? Yeah, that qualifies for a number of clues.
19:45
I have a question regarding python styling:
Is there a difference between between a and b of styling functions in python:
a.)def function() :
      pass
b.)def function():
      pass
try ctrl+k on your code
PEP8 is the answer.
No spaces before :s
You should read through the rest of it too. It's the official style guide, and almost all python code you encounter will (or should!) follow it for the most part
I've definitely worked at a few places that need to read the style guides
20:00
I have very quickly gone through the docs python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008 there are indentation, space rules for expressions but none for functions with space between function name and :
Search for "colon"
"Whitespace in Expressions and Statements" - " Pet Peeves" - "Avoid extraneous whitespace in the following situations:" - "Immediately before a comma, semicolon, or colon:"
ctrl-f is your other friend.
Now let's argue about whether def f(x): counts as a statement or not
20:05
no
Agreed. By itself it is not a statement. But def f(x): combined with the function body is a compound statement
So it ought to qualify for the pet peeve anyway
I'm too busy pet peeving over your "But" compound statement.
The only grammar rules I obey are the ones for programming languages B-)
KevinScript > KevinGrammar
Also, the colon example is if so I think the lexically equivalish def works.
20:12
KevinScript is a descriptive language. If me and the one existing interpreter implementation disagree on what the syntax is, I win.
I declare that "colorless green ideas sleep furiously" is valid KevinScript syntax, but only for the next three seconds.
Aaaaand it's gone.
The true mark of success for a programming language is when people argue about it for 25 comments
@dasblinkenlight Your link goes to compiler output, not the standard. So yes, it's "compiler says". — melpomene 1 hour ago
I really appreciate the Python approach to "Undefined behavior" which is "Source dive the compiler"
when I searched colon it took me to right area....works :D
btw I hope I'm not pet peeving anyone :D
20:42
rbrb all
Anonymous
20:53
Hello.
Anonymous
Is there a function or trick to write dates at a time interval in Python?
Anonymous
I want to create a date (twice a year) every 6 months. I could create a list a store them manually, but not sure if there is a function for that
Anonymous
saw that :)
Anonymous
What does yield do, without a list and dict?
I'm unclear what the problem is. Is the problem with handling dates, or with returning the values without a list?
20:58
That seems like more of a cron/task scheduler job than something you do specifically in python
Anonymous
@QuestionC
Anonymous
2008-06-01 => 2008-12-01
2009-06-01 => 2009-12-01
2010-06-01 => 2010-12-01
2011-06-01 => 2011-12-01
2012-06-01 => 2012-12-01
2013-06-01 => 2013-12-01
Anonymous
Basically, I need to store that into some logical form
Anonymous
as opposed to storing it in list manually
Those specific dates, or do you want "given a date, return another exactly six months later?"
Anonymous
21:00
@JGreenwell Yeah, I am using cron to run a python script, not sure if cron can pass args to python at this moment. (5 days of learning Python) though codeacadamy :/
Anonymous
@tzaman I could be at the interval of 4 - 8 months. But, the date must begin at 2008-06-01
This is just getting more confusing. You should try the SO site.
Agreed, it's hard to figure out what exactly you mean. Post a proper question, include code and details (where are you getting these dates? how are they intended to be used?)
Anonymous
There is a virtual book archive library. For a 'certain' subject, the earliest known book was submitted on 2008-06-01 I would like to get all books in this subject starting the first one. But, the library has a rate limit. The limit is minimum at the interval of 6 months. So, I would like to get books from 2008-06-01 => 2008-12-01 then 2009-06-01 => 2009-12-01
Anonymous
and so on, and so forth ..
Anonymous
21:06
Like I said, I could write the dates as is, but one problem is that, I would also have to alter the script every year to add a new year/month/date
Anonymous
Also, typing it as is, .. is lame :/
This is a codeacademy problem right?
Anonymous
Nope. I was just bring light into my noobness.
Anonymous
That site is dull, but I finished the course anyway.
Anonymous
This is just a problem I didn't learn a solution for in ca
Anonymous
21:12
I will try a mysql solution for this.
You might want to check out hackerrank.
Or Project Euler if you want math problems.
Anonymous
SELECT date_add('2008-06-01', INTERVAL 6 MONTH) // 2008-12-1
@samayo Given any date object x = date(2008, 6, 1) you can create a new one x2 = date(x.year, 12, x.day)
You could also do it by adding an appropriate timedelta
this might be helpful
Anonymous
Yeah, I think I have a much better picture now. It'll involve a func, list & loop but still much better than writing by hand.
This is actually a tricky problem.
What comes 6 months after March 31? Is it Sept 30, or Oct 1?
Anonymous
21:27
Yeah, I realize it's a bit tricky.
Anonymous
It really does not need to be from end of month to start of another. It could start at any convenient date and end at any other, as long as there is a 6 months gap.
Anonymous
The 6 months could be even 5 and half, the main objective is not to miss a book registered on some date.
Anonymous
The overall goal is to get all books from 2008-06-01 - 2013-12-01
4
Q: How to organize my module

emschorschThis is currently the way I'm organizing it. myProject/ README subproject1/ __init__.py classA.py classB.py driver.py basicTest.py Driver imports from classA and classB and provides some additional functionality. basicTest also imports from Drive...

Air
Air
@Pureferret Vimscript does this double-access-method for dicts, and even there, where it doesn't have the same implications, it makes me uncomfortable
 
1 hour later…
23:19
hey guys
has anyone here worked with tweepy library of twitter
Hello guys,
I want to create a new axis and new values along the new axis. Is anybody know how to do that in python?
23:37
axis?
Like the X and Y axis in the Cartesian coordinate system
I am trying to use a ordered dictionary but getting this weird issue.
Code:
num_events=collections.OrderedDict({'Casual':crowd_type.count("c"),'Conventional' : crowd_type.count("o")\
        ,'Expressive' : crowd_type.count("e"),'Acting':crowd_type.count("a")})
    print num_events
outputs: OrderedDict([('Conventional', 33), ('Expressive', 38), ('Casual', 2), ('Acting', 7)])
why?
Sry for bad formatting :p
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