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00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

00:07
@AbhishekBhatia Because you put it in a regular dict first.
>>> OrderedDict({0:1, 2:3, 4:5, 6:7, 8:9})
OrderedDict([(0, 1), (8, 9), (2, 3), (4, 5), (6, 7)])
>>> OrderedDict(((0, 1), (2, 3), (4, 5), (6, 7), (8, 9)))
OrderedDict([(0, 1), (2, 3), (4, 5), (6, 7), (8, 9)])
Thanks! It seems to already exist stackoverflow.com/questions/15711755/… .
also
New question, does anybody know how to apply the linear referencing method in python?
00:27
lol cracks me up one of my co-workers had a problem and he didnt want to bother me ... so he looked it up on SO ... and guess who had posted on the comment that solved his issue :P
Anonymous
Guys. Is there an online (preferably offline) Python cheatsheet? Like devdocs.io/python but faster or better.
what kind of cheat sheet? I have several ones (including some favorited SO answers)
and there is always docs.python.org
Anonymous
I mean, a list of all functions, objects and modules. So, I can just type first few letters and get an instant result/suggestion with simple definitions and examples.
I use the oracle for that. Or an IDE (JetBrains in python's case)
Anonymous
Ah, IDE. Forgot, I am just using Sublime text.
 
1 hour later…
02:09
Hey.
Hey, Aaron! How goes?
02:37
I'm ok. How are you?
Not bad at all.
Got in a long nap yesterday; got something to work at work that has been a niggling thing for a couple of weeks.
02:48
That's good.
Things working is good.
Yeah, especially when it's things with high visibility.
Anyway, rhubarb -- gots to go collect my car from yon charger, and then get some shut-eye.
Anyone have a good development contractor's invoice template?
I did some side work I need to bill for.
04:11
Joran... tut tut tut. — Aaron Hall 12 secs ago
04:41
oh aaron so harsh :P
05:39
stackoverflow.com/q/32836291/770830 5 equivalent answers to a dup.
oh, now 3
still 3 too many
06:30
@Air yeah a colleague sensibly overrode it to return none when the element doesn't exist.
06:46
Hey up all
07:08
Cbg
ok, wasn't exactly a dup after all
07:38
Cbg :)
user4587874
07:53
fellows, when one wants to add something to bashrc file, e.g. $export PATH=/usr/bin:$PATH , do I simply write that in a new line or there's a place for it? and if the program for which im defining such path, is called test, then does my command become: export test=/usr/bin:$test ?
08:09
:p
Mornin, saladeers
user4587874
@davidism hi mate, just wanted to let you know that I fixed the python issue, by finding out two locations when trying "which -a python", I removed the one in /usr/local/bin, now I have only the one in /usr/bin/python and all works fine again. Cheers
08:25
To automatically test a fairly CRUDdy application, should I be creating a SQLite instance in my test setup, running all the tests and then removing it? Is that a good way to do it?
08:36
@RobertGrant who cares? last day tomorrow!
;) Only joking (because I have no idea whether that seemingly reasonable idea is actually a good one)
:D
It's not for here - I was just thinking about it for something else
Need to try and plan a good way to do it because I don't have loads of free time and I want to use what I have as well as possible
And I'm not great at CI stuff in general; slowly trying to get better
08:55
Yeah - I've got no experience on CI either - seems like something I ought to know how to do...
09:06
Don't even know how to structure it - should I (somehow) create a SQLite instance, use Selenium to do some web interaction against it, make sure I get the UI responses I'm expecting and then also test the database contents? Who knows!
How much portable is python code ? I have written a script for my client using beautiful soup and MySQLdb. I use Linux. My client uses Windows. So, will that script run on Windows ? Or do I have to change something in my script ? I have never done programming on Windows.
Depends what the script does, but assuming it doesn't do anything obviously Linux-specific (e.g. running a subprocess that calls a Linux command) the main thing to check is whether your script's dependencies will install on Windows
As some modules are (very sadly) hard to install in Windows if they compile stuff during their installation
@RobertGrant My script just does some web scraping and communicates with local MySQL database only. So, I think I can deliver it without any worries.
(You can push uparrow to edit your message)
Just double check that mysqldb installs fine in Windows; I use PyMySql myself, because it's pure-Python.
09:23
@RobertGrant Thanks :)
In fact according to that, you will get that stupid vcvars error on Window with MySqlDB, so I'd just use PyMySql
It's basically a drop-in replacement that you can also use
Not quite as fast, but much easier cross-platform
09:47
@RobertGrant Ya. I looked into it. I think my script will work on Windows for now. Thanks :) for PyMySql ... I did not know about that
wim
wim
10:03
@jonrsharpe start looking at enum.EnumMeta in python 3.4 +
10:29
Hi, I'm new to Python, and running in to a problem: "AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'encode'"
I'm trying to solve this with "if variable is not None: " condition, but it doesn't seem to be working.
soup = BeautifulSoup(html, "lxml")
tables = soup.find_all("table")
for table in tables:
  for tr in table.find_all('tr'):
    tds = tr.find_all('td')
    for column in tds[:5]:
        if column is not None:
            row = [column.string.encode('utf-8')]
        else:
            row = ['']
10:54
Ooh - Error code 521 - stackoverflow.com is down... Or so says CloudFlare
Works here
yeah - working here again.
Strange things happen in the cloud
521 is an unusual return code. Had to look it up - apparently it's "Protocol Extension Not Implemented"
Wow, okay. Maybe Cloudflare were trying to call SO with some weird old trick
Status Code Details, Courtesy of Wikipedia

This status code is not specified in any RFCs, but is used by CloudFlare's reverse proxies to indicate that the origin webserver refused the connection.
temporary overload, maybe
UK universities largely start this week ;)
I think I respect CS degrees much less now that SO exists
 
1 hour later…
12:04
I finally figured out how to into threading
@arjan Looks like you also need if column.string is not None
It's the string value that is causing the error rather than the column value
cbg :)
morning programmer
I want to name change to something more distinguishable
Thanks @Kevin, that was the problem
12:17
@Programmer and what would that be?
I wanted to do Pugrammer because punny and all, but I thought some might take it the wrong way
12:30
...I'm not very creative :[
Do what all the "cool" companies are doing these days: prgrmly :P
@Programmer we can call you "Jar Jar Binks Junior" ? :)
Are you trying to imply something?? I took my pug picture because pugs are my spirit animal :o
yousa remember himsa
12:46
@Programmer lucky for you: petpugdog.com/pug-names
haha: Sir Barks-a-Lot is kinda cool
I named mine Zeus (he's the one in my pic)
sir pugsalot
Sir Pugthon? :)
hmm js is annoying
I want to array join to "foo, bar and baz"
but I do not want to write any code :P
I'll sleep on it. When it hits me, I'll know it xD
@idjaw doesn't work :P
@idjaw both of them are broken and deserved downvotes :P
@corvid that one looks good though, has lots of other methods i'd be needing
@AnttiHaapala hmm.....I just tried it on my browser console (Chrome) and it worked
@idjaw the first one does not work for a list of [1]
and the second one does not ever produce and...
javascript's string library is pretty bad compared to python, as well as the RegExp library (compared to python's re)
13:18
@AnttiHaapala You're right. Apologies. It's broken for list of size 1.
that's why I think the underscore.string is what I'd use
@AnttiHaapala and I should read more carefully...it clearly says it at the bottom of the post: "This works for all arrays with more than one element.". :)
did it?
ok removed downvote
and edited the answer :P
This only works for arrays with at least two elements.
SO died in the middle of an edit. RIP
I broke async again :| So annoying to fix
13:29
@MorganThrapp pretty sure I gave that instance guy the answer he needs but whether he decides to even try is the real question
Why would he want to raise an exception when he can check the values and exit if necessary?
re-cbg
13:45
@vaultah changed picture
What is the meaning for the picture
It's a piece of "Virtuoso Dancing Couple" by Volker Böhringer
I'm not gonna lie it's creepy as hell
:) I don't see a couple there
13:55
cbg
Bleh. So, anyone here work with futures in python before? I am getting some annoying errors
Hmm, I can't figure out how to solve the Zebra Puzzle without using the "redundant" clue "the man that drinks water lives next to the man that smokes chesterfields".
The footnote says you can solve the puzzle without it but I don't see how
That is one of the frequently asked questions in CAT Examinations
We gotta solve that in 5 mins
I need to write it down and look at it, but i don't have any paper :[
There is a "grid technique" apparently to solve that.
Though I dunno how to do that
14:03
This is how far I can get
anyone here using cookiecutter ?
Nope, I eat cookies at once. I don't cut them :P
I'm writing a "grid puzzle" helper program that fills in some red squares for you. I suspect I'm missing a deduction rule
@Kevin Is that the "grid technique"?
Yeah
14:05
I gotta learn that.
We used to do those when I was in grade school in a program I was in.
I miss doing those puzzles.
Here is my program if anyone wants to play. 2.7 only, and you can toggle prefill_hints to False if you want an empty board
I had an awesome phone when I was a kid. Sometimes it would beep really loud. I would exclaim, "That phone is off the hook!"
did candy come out when you pressed buttons?
14:11
That crossword puzzle looks impossible.
shit I hate bad job contract negos
I have the feeling that I will be pressed to accept a shitty job contract :P
and if I do not accept then all my contracting gigs to this co will also be cancelled
@Programmer When did you changed your avatar? o_O
Similarly, I had an awesome dog when I was a kid. We would set him free in a little fenced in area so he could run around and poop and stuff. I would exclaim, "That dog is off the chain!"
All dogs are awesome
^ Even puppies are awesome :D
14:14
@BhargavRao over the weekend
flips through his notes
14:27
Ah ha, I determined the inference necessary to solve the puzzle
The Japanese man can only drink coffee or milk.
The man in the second house can only drink tea or orange juice.
Therefore, the Japanese man does not live in the second house.
I could generalize this logical step into the solver, but it would be hideous and O(N^4)
Sometimes that's your only solution
I already have a nasty O(N^2) bit to detect when four items in a category are red so the last one must be green
I could get that down to like O(n log n)-ish, but it would be unpleasant
Something strange is going on in Navigating specific dirs in filter with os.walk
14:47
Ok, I made it O(n log n) anyway. Saves a second per program execution B-)
Now I only need to run the program 900 times to break even on development time
#worth
Hmm, So what is a good subtitle for writing the advantages of the product?
Or shall I stick to Advantages of the product?
Buy our stuff, it's double plus good
Could've written that but then the paper would be an instant rejection.
@BhargavRao Seems good enough
Btw, will I see you at PyCon?
cc: @thefourtheye
14:56
@SomeGuy No, clashes with my exams. ;_; (I crie everytime)
@BhargavRao Oh, crap. :/
2nd is a holiday. So I hafta see
Yeah, it's the perfect weekend
Argh, I hate questions that are like "how do I do [reasonable task] using only [single feature of language]?"
Lol, I know the one you're talking about
14:58
You can't print the unique items in a list using only for loops, because print is a thing that is not a for loop.
@BhargavRao Also, do you have any suggestions for places I should visit in Bangalore? I've never been there before
@SomeGuy 3rd I've got exam and 5th I have exam
Got one day to spare
There are so many!
@BhargavRao Oh. Probably isn't possible, then
14:59
It's a way to get kids to understand how to use programming basics I guess, instead of just using implemented methods
The OP always has some nebulous idea of what is or isn't allowed, but the only way to find out is to post an answer and have them say "sorry, you're using a forbidden approach"
@SomeGuy Refer this post. But whateva you do don't forget tasting Masala dosa
"That's too easy, this should be harder." :^)
Haha, alright! Thank you!
@BhargavRao That image is so terribly low-res :/
But that is a collage of all the other pics in the album
15:01
"I can only use for loops" is an ambiguous statement. What about function defintions, user-defined function calls, built-in function calls, assignment statements, int literals, boolean literals, list literals, binary operators, if blocks, return statements, break statements, and print statements? Because you're using all of those too, right now. Please ask your teacher to be more specific about what you may or may not use. — Kevin 6 mins ago
I'm going to flip out a little if OP replies with "Kevin, all of those are allowed" with zero other information
@BhargavRao Oh! Well, I'm not smart :P
@SomeGuy Click on previous to go from 1 to 25
Thanks
If you wanna see the tech side of b'luru (that which I hate), you gotta go to World Trade Center
Why do you hate it?
15:05
The tech companies changed the face of B'luru from Garden city to IT city.
Oh, that sucks
@BhargavRao Is there anything worth seeing there, though?
I assume it's just buildings?
I was typing that ^
Haha
We have plenty of those here in Mumbai too :P
And if you get a chance visit Vijay Mallya's house
(Not as good as Mumbai's Antilla though)
Any body want a Creative commons share alike book I bought for 40$?
on Python
15:10
the SO group is so diverse. who knew?
@Programmer We need to rope in researchers from Antarctica to make our presence felt there also! :D
lol if only
Or atleast the penguins
Where can I get Fake Python instead?
15:13
India still needs more programmers to choose Python as their primary programming language. .net is the big deal here
All GOVT sites are made in .net
.aspx
@davidism LOL!
realpython.com . It's now 60$
15:31
Neat, code golf is doing FizzBuzz for the first time. codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/58615/1-2-fizz-4-buzz
@QuestionC dang, that python solution is really nifty
> Note: This problem can be solved in 1 byte with gs2 using the builtin f.
gs2 ~= kevinscript ?
realpython looks pretty basic for most of the room users :P
15:48
Is there a way to do a temporary in memory relational database? Something like redis, but without needing to install anything outside of Python.
Ideally I want to feed it classes and be able to use them as table.
Redis isn't relational
You can use shelve
Ah, well then it really won't work. I've never used redis, just read bits and pieces about it.
I'll check that out, thanks!
You can use sqlite if you need a SQL database, it's built-in and in-memory
Yeah, that sounds like exactly what I need. I'm parsing a flat file that has ~10 different types of record in it, and I need to join between different record types.
Eg, type 2 is a header record, and type 3 is the detail. I need to grab stuff from both the type 2 and type 3 when they share an id.
@MorganThrapp might even want to contemplate merging dicts in that case
15:52
@JonClements They're not dicts, though. They're class objects.
So you use the the join as the dict key, and the object itself as values...
That might make sense.
If they're already objects, why convert them into column-wise data... just access attributes/whatever as needs be
I am so lonely I'm happy when I'm pinged
We love you @Wally :p
15:55
Even in IRCs
Thanks
Now - where's the scooby snack you promised me for saying that?
LOL! I stopped watching Scooby doo a long time ago
How about mass pinging @Wally that we burst @Wally's ear with that ting sound
I'm fine with it. I like the "ting" sound
Just because you stopped doesn't mean you can't keep watching them now :^)
15:59
I'm more into Anime now
@Wally Speaking bout loneliness, I'm waiting for the dislike button on FB so that I will get notifications :D :D
Is facebook really doing that?
Apparently, YES
Scooby Doo is super anime. Japanese media has a proud tradition of guys in rubber suits pretending to be monsters. Sorry, "kaiju".
Phew, my final draft of the paper is ready, but I dunno how to add citations :'(
16:05
Udemy did a DCMA takedown on the download script
But some other guy fixed it
DSM
DSM
16:20
Too many heavy work days in a row cabbage for all.
cbg DSM
Cbg
How to change the colorbar values' default color in python?. Unclear. Vanilla Python does not have "colorbar".
DSM
DSM
Sometimes people have trouble figuring out how things are structured when they start. Just like you want to know where that one tkinter bug comes from, I want to know why people ask questions saying "python pandas". It happens so often I know it comes from somewhere..
16:41
rbrb
Cya all tomo :)
@SomeGuy Not this year :'(
@thefourtheye Really? Why not?
Hadn't you applied to speak?
I applied but my friend is getting married this weekend. I thought I'll go if the talk gets accepted
Aww, damn
Next year, I guess
16:50
Your friend really should be more considerate of the needs of the Python community.
He's not his friend, pal
Am I doing this right?
Such much memory leaks :\
He's not his pal, buddy
He's not his buddy, friend.
Thus endeth the reference.
Cabbage all
17:18
How do I put a literal {} inside a format string?

I'm doing `'(.\{{}\})`.format(i)` and I want it to make `'(.{10})'`
IIRC, two curly brackets in a row is interpreted as a single literal curly bracket. Ex.
>>> "{{{}}}".format(10)
'{10}'
'(.{{{0}}})'
Ttthank youuu.
17:30
words are not in a file. They are a result of a db query. — Manish 6 mins ago
unclear/too broad ^
18:00
Hmm, not sure whether I should delete an answer which is probably wrong but not provably so until the OP provides more details
is there a safe way to do sftp on a client's side?
AKA who knows whos on the other end?
Like I'm using pysftp but you need a username/login for the client to get access to the server to upload a file. But, they can technically traverse your directories with this info during an sftp connection
so how do you do that safely?
I feel like a sufficiently determined adversary could fake any credentials of trustworthiness short of shared key encryption.
cel
cel
Why do we have ? o0
Dunno, it doesn't seem very useful. Perhaps you could compose a burnination request for Meta
@Kevin that sounds good - burning Meta!
No more "why was my flag declined" - woo hoo!
18:08
HTTP 410 - the requested page has been melted into slag
cel
cel
I would rather ask: Why has my moderator flag being ignored for more than a week. Are SO mods lazy? :D
@cel because we know it's you and we'd like to instil in you that patience is a virtue? :p
Yeah I was confused. I talked it over with my supervisor. Is there a way to drop a file into a directory then act upon that event?
I can think of many colorful adjectives to describe the mods I know, but "lazy" ain't one of them ;-)
Ninja-ish mods
18:11
@Programmer Hacky approach: have an always-on script that calls os.listdir every tenth of a second, and does... Something... When the result changes size.
Yeah that's what I was thinking but it seems resource-consuming
Take a look at the watchdog api
It lets you monitor file systems.
Ehhh, it's only two OS calls and a while loop. That seems sufficiently lightweight that it would be worth implementing so you can at least measure its CPU impact
Maybe do it in an --urp-- compiled language to remove interpreter overhead
cel
cel
Is anyone of you doing triage reviews?
I know but it's going to be probably a once-a-day used protocol at most (if at all). so monitoring if the directory changed seems like a lotta work. I can try this watchdog api Morgan recommended though. Thanks though
Ohhhh yeah, that's the stuff.
You trying to hypnotize kevin??
@Programmer I already did years ago -- actually I used the the imperius curse on him -- but from time to time I have to reinforce it..
It all makes sense now
18:24
That's funny, I also performed the imperio curse on you years ago. I don't think they ever discussed referential loops in the books.
18:39
@Kevin I cri...
polling_interval (float) – interval in seconds between polling the file system
0.0001 ought to do it
I might as well do my own implementation than use another library just to watch the directory
Wow.... 280.59 MB / 1024000 MB (RAM)? lmao
Client's got a bargain there for £5 a month on a VPS lmao
DSM
DSM
When you think about it, lots of companies probably have that much memory on a given floor..
Git submodules are kind of annoying...
cel
cel
18:55
@corvid, but also kind of awesome :)
Useful, just hard to manage
cel
cel
I think that's a perfect description of git in general
I dunno, most things in git seem pretty well designed, but removing a submodule is annoyingly difficult, why not just git submodule remove {mymodule}?
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