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15:00
The OP seems to be using 2.7. On 3.4 join is again faster.
I don't have 2.7 ;_;
I cannot give you better advice than already given by Bhargav Rao — colidyre yesterday
Saw this comment now :D
done something to my phone which has increased font size
Duh. @JonCle Who gave a puppy a phone?
On my phone, the volume buttons will do that
(change font size, not give phones to puppies)
seems like a potential option
@Kevin wow... yes that's it
15:05
I got a job offer today \o/
Good luck!
Ty. :)
Well, if you've got the offer, that's pretty much it? :)
I've got job offers too
you should pity me
15:07
I manged to collect a few votes on this SO Meta comment:
@ace: Definitely. Inappropriate Stack Snippets are evil and should be killed with fire. — PM 2Ring Sep 25 at 8:23
I like MetaSO, people upvote comments.
I got 98 votes on a comment once
Yep. I think my highest rated so far is:
@AnttiHaapala I find the source of the problem -- it was nothing that we've discussed earlier.. although I have no idea why it is happening
I hope that page can deal with people whose Last name is Zero... — PM 2Ring Sep 21 at 10:47
@PeterVaro so where is it?
15:09
I removed everything, I only have an init and dealloc function now for kbpy_rpi2_PyContext
now, if I remove the comment from these lines:
But TripeHound deserves more votes on his reply to my comment:
@PM2Ring It will result in the package being sent to their NAN. — TripeHound Sep 21 at 10:54
if ((PyObject_Length(args) + PyObject_Length(kwargs)) > 1)
    {
            PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError,
                            "__init__() takes 1 positional argument but more "
                            "were given");
            return kbpy_FAIL;
    }
then it gives SIGSEGV
so the problem is in somewhere at: PyObject_Length
@PM2Ring Reading the list of comments there :D
15:11
It's a classic
@PeterVaro simple.
kws is null if no kwargs
since a dict would be pretty expensive to build all the time
@PM Did ya by any chance start to follow cricket?
DSM
DSM
Morning subway problems cabbage for all.
cbg DSM, WAIT! No cabbages at Subway? o_O
15:17
@DSM evening still no subway here cabbage to you too
@BhargavRao I'm afraid not. :)
Tis the month of October, fest for all cricket fans :P
for German beer
Oktoberfest?
poke would be enjoyin then :D
that's why you do not see him online
15:20
Haha True
actually oktoberfest ends in the beginning of oktober...
Also, 3000 apps? That's some intense testing.
3000 for testing, then the actual would be?
I put money on virus scanner or something
Any mongo pros here? Got a pretty complicated problem here.
15:25
@corvid I guess no... :D
though I must comment that mongo is a very complicated problem indeed.
fuck yeah @AnttiHaapala I've made it ;)
not having staged commits makes it annoying. Easier in postgres
thanks for the kwargs can be NULL tip, that really helped
@PeterVaro see Python/getargs.c, it specifically tests that all other args are non-null, but that if kwargs is nonnull, then it has to be a dictionary
"If no named arguments are needed, kw may be NULL."
15:29
I've totally missed that one :P
@PeterVaro also remember to move the tp_init to tp_new
and remember to use PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT or what it was if you're not coding C99+ named member initialization
I'm using C11 so no worries
I will refactor the tp_init -> tp_new but I have a pretty close deadline
in less than 18 hours from now
but there will be another hackathon event within a week
DSM
DSM
I think I've only manually written a CPython extension once or twice ever.
well @DSM since my original library is written in C and I want to interface it with JavaScript, Python, Go, Java and C++ I had to use the Python C API here
DSM
DSM
As opposed to SWIG?
15:40
I don't like SWIG -- I can write way better wrappers manually ;)
and peter's case is pretty specific.
@PeterVaro though they'd have some bugs :P
DSM
DSM
SWIG has caused me a fair number of headaches, I'll admit, but it's also the only non-insane way I can keep my main work data library (in c++11) having both Python and Java wrappers. But I can easily see how in a given case it might make more sense to do it directly.
with open(sys.argv[1], 'r') as input_file:
    with open(sys.argv[2], 'w') as output_file:
        with open(sys.argv[3], 'w') as error_file:
Any good way to flatten that?
DSM
DSM
Are you using a modern Python?
If there are only three you can write them horizontally, i.e. with open(a1) as fp1, open(a2,"w") as fp2:. If there are an arbitrary number you can use an ExitStack.
I am.
15:46
See this. The dupe may give you more information though.
There's only 3 so horizontal should work.
DSM
DSM
Riley, did you change your avatar?
I'd never seen ExitStack before, that's really cool.
ofc, since the world is full of Python 2 crap
so you can't use ExitStack :D
16:15
Rhubarb
rbrb PM
16:36
for i in phone_number_reader:
    raw_number = i[3]
Any way to write that as...
for raw_number in ???:
Nope, that is not right. Nevermind.
for rn in (i[3] for i in phone_number_reader):
Good. I was starting to feel ashamed for not trying that because it was 'obvious' to me it wouldn't work.
for _, _, _, raw_number, _, _, _, in phone_number_reader:
assuming phone_number_reader contains nothing but iterables with exactly seven elements each
Couldn't I do like
16:39
No.
Just kidding, I have no idea what you're about to say.
for _, _, _, raw_number, _ in phone_number_reader:
Cuz the last _ is just gonna be the last 3 things?
Sure, if phone_number_reader contains nothing but iterables with exactly five elements each.
If you want to get fancy, you could do for raw_number in map(lambda x: x[3], phone_number_reader):.
I thought you could do for _, _, _, raw_number, *_ in phone_number_reader: but I'm getting a syntax error so I guess not
Aha, I meant for _,_,_,raw_number,*_ in phone_number reader
16:43
Pretty sure there's some way to use the splat operator in for loops, but only in 2.7 because they removed it in 3.X
No, I'm misremembering. It was this they removed:
Sep 24 at 19:31, by Kevin
Ooh, I got bitten on an answer because lambda (a,b): expr isn't valid syntax in 3.x
>>> l=[[1,2,3,4,5,6,7],[8,9,0,1,2,3,4]]
>>> for _,_,_,i,*_ in l:
...     print(i)
...
4
1
>>>
Works for me.
Yeah, that works in 3.x
Though it looks a little weird to me.
>>> x = [[1,2,3,4,5]] * 10
>>> for _, y, *_ in x:
  File "<stdin>", line 1
    for _, y, *_ in x:
              ^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Must be version specific.
In any case, it's really not idiomatic. Just use an extra line and do raw_number = thing[3]
I'd go with @vaultah's solution, personally.
16:46
I'm going with @vaultah's answer. 6000 points to house vaultah.
Hmm, I need a "personal statement" for my SO Careers profile.
Not sure if I can hit the bullseye that lies between "boring" and "deranged"
"I am the Microsoft Bob of employees"
Read other people's. The prompt suggests you tell a life story but I'm more impressed with the ones that just use it as a simple intro.
Also, aaa, I can't remember what technologies we used when I worked at OtherBigCorp
I'll just put down "notepad" to be safe
Put down notepad++. You never really used it but it's what the big companies are looking for these days.
16:56
Put CORBA; what're they going to do? Find the world's other CORBA person and ask you a question about it?
"I see you did CORBA." smug nod "Tell me, what does that stand for?" deer in headlights
I did a whole terms lectures on CORBA. Some weird fetish of the lecturer, I always thought.
I tended to prefer Cobra at that point
CORBA, that's just another Pyhton dialect, right?
CORBA stands for "CORBA Object Relational 'Base Access" obviously
"I can't remember what it stands for, but I do know this: it's a half-specified, bug-ridden implementation of half of Common Lisp haha amirite?" looks hopeful
Then the interviewer asks "what does that stand for?" and we recurse for the remaining 118 minutes of the interview.
He leaves the room with a fuzzy feeling that I am highly competent.
17:00
Well, it was designed by OMG.
Uh oh, I pressed some three key combination and now the text in my address bar is right-aligned
You wouldn't want to dive into settings for an operation as common as that
Looks like you need a new computer :(
There we go, it was ctrl-shift-x
> Let us know how you got started, writing BASIC programs to impress your friends at school
Uh, that IS how I got started, but now I can't put that because obviously everyone else will
"Another lazy applicant that just copy-pasted the suggested prompt. Into the trash it goes", says every employer in the world
"Used BASIC - too old"
17:05
cbg
Are you looking to change Corp?
It's not my fault that Texas Instruments hasn't changed its firmware for twenty years.
@RobertGrant Well - my boss' boss' boss wants me to take on some responsibilities that have very little to do with programming, so...
welcome @KostaZ
@Kevin wow, your boss' boss' boss knows who you are?
I have never experienced that
He only knows him as the lawn care guy, that's the problem.
17:09
It might be more like an Office Space situation where I have three people that tell me what to do, and this guy is the scariest one so I put him at the top of the hierarchy.
Ah okay
Are you Milton, or are you one of the other characters whose names I forget?
Well ofc I identify strongest with Peter, but that's why he's the everyman main character.
Peter, that's it
Probably
I'll say this - this Edge browser is nice and fast, and no stupid chrome at the top; just tabs and browser controls
Comparing Martijn's profile to mine may have been a mistake, self-esteem wise
Can he play Magic though? Probably. In fact he'd probably batter you. Sorry for bringing it up.
17:14
If you're losing at Magic, you didn't add enough Shivan Dragons to your deck. I don't care what colour you're playing.
@Kevin lol...
@RobertGrant Sure, but they still don't support extensions.
Still? It came out like a month ago :)
TIL about Russian Peasant Multiplication... stackoverflow.com/questions/32893160/…
Yeah, but it's just IE with a new rendering engine. And neither does IE.
17:16
IE doesn't support extensions?
Nope.
Well, that's not COMPLETELY true, it does support toolbars.
Like the Ask Jeeves toolbar?
And 12 couponing toolbars.
It supports things it calls add-ons and plugins
And MacAffee, and Norton, and Kaspersky, and Yahoo.
17:17
What's the difference?
Russian Peasants... multiply in binary?
Oh, I thought it didn't. I guess I stand corrected. I haven't used IE in forever and my initial google search didn't turn up anything about it supporting add-ons.
It's Edge that doesn't have plugin support yet
I should make a portfolio.
Does Github let you arrange your projects in any kind of directory structure? I'd like to put up all my dumb gifs in one "image rendering" category, but have all the code in different repositories.
17:26
Ah yes submodules, for when you need to fix someone else's code but don't feel like putting in a pull request. I am probably doing it wrong
That's a little outside my comfort zone
("Does not know git inside and out", writes every employer with angry red pen)
He doesn't use submodules? Not a team player. Synergy business logic.
Rolled his eyes when I said "synergy". One demerit.
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: beware of non-programming responsibility. I've been roped into some direct conversations with clients lately and it makes me very unhappy.
Yeah. The last guy who had to do the thing, kind of had sort of a nervous breakdown and quit...
DSM
DSM
17:40
"That does not bode well."
No. Now how should I phrase "I'm incredible because sometimes I go source diving to answer a question, like Can a string ever get shorter when converted to upper/lowercase?" without sounding quite so self-congratulatory?
You're Kevin
We're all Kevin.
DSM
DSM
We're most Kevin when we beat DSM to witty comments.
Yea, verily
17:52
FizzyGirl has a job interview with BigCorp
DSM
DSM
Kevin's BigCorp or Fizzy's BigCorp?
Hey guys! Just a quick question if anyone has Django, PostgreSQL, VirtualEnv experience. I have read yesterday that's it's good to create virtual env for python project and install django there and should Postgres DB be in the same virtual env or?
Anyone experience with ZeroMQ?
I want to write functional programming style code since I guess that would work well
Can't say that I do
get_html(url) would get html, this html I would like to send to a cacher and I want to extract urls and send those forth. How can I do this without having "side effects"
i.e. 1 "return"
or separately [urls, html] to another function, which would then spread them as messages, but at one point you break the "side effects" thing by sending in 2 different directions?
18:02
"List 5 technologies you enjoy working with". eyes warily
hello, my friend have facing problem in python command line interpreter...if any one have help him this is link stackoverflow.com/questions/32890630/…
@jonrsharpe what was the problem with this question? Looks like a new user and a new programmer. If this wasn't an obvious homework assignment I don't find anything else wrong with the question other than needing to post what the text file looks like. I don't think we should have sent him packing.
@NajeebChoudhary please do not link recently asked questions into chat.
@NajeebChoudhary he should import the functionality from the other Python program, and use it directly.
@Kevin please run code in your system than you under stand what is problem...thanks
18:05
jonrsharpe already solved the issue, as far as I'm concerned. If the OP needs additional help, he's got to explain what's wrong with the solutions in the dupe target
@arcanesorcerer virtualenv is to keep your python installation clean so you have a clean testing environment.
@arcanesorcerer That way you have a clean list of dependencies from doing pip freeze > requirements.txt and can replicate that on your deploy machine
it doesn't really have anything to do with your postgres database.
@Kevin i don't think this is duplicat
No, it's definitely exactly the same concept.
Now, there are some other issues in that code, but those are outside of the scope of the question.
18:12
@morgan can you help or not
@NajeebChoudhary I'm not going to rewrite the code, no.
@morhan thanks...
Kicked. You should let your friend sort out his own issues and stop bothering members of this room.
We're not code monkeys, we're not here for your beckon call.
You've linked a question that's new, which is against our rules, now I'd suggest you leave it.
Aaaand now I have Code Monkey stuck in my head.
Ooh, the project I told management would take 6 hours is looking for like 60 hours now...
18:21
That's why I always submit 10 ^ 800 hours for my estimate. Underpromise and overdeliver.
A(999!, 999!) hours
Incidentally, that breaks Wolfram-Alpha.
Σ(googolplex, googolplex) hours
limit as x approaches 0 of abs(1/x) hours
@MorganThrapp Not surprising. A(7,7) would be sufficient to grind any computer in existence to a halt
:-O
18:28
@AdamSmith Yeah I just got little bit confused. Thanks for replying! :>
I love the alt text for that. "It means shuffling quickly past nuns on the street with ketchup in your palms, pretending you're hiding stigmata."
DSM
DSM
I have to google "coding project best practices" so I can figure out what to put in this work plan we need to submit. :-/
"Coding Best Practice #117: After your code successfully compiles, stand up and drop the mic."
Just print up and professionally bind about 20 pages. The cover page reads: "Work Plan" with BigCorp's logo on top and the project name on bottom. The next page reads: "We plan to work."

All other pages are blank.
18:39
To save on paper, each indentation level shall be only one more space than the previous one.
"Coding Best Practice #257: If at first you don't succeed, delete all your code and start again."
Ah, you're reading from the Netscape Project Manager's Notes, it seems.
"Coding Best Practice # 407: Commiting to source control wastes precious server space. All code should be edited on the live deployment."
@MorganThrapp In the margin of the project manager's draft of the best practice handbook is written "Thank God our programmers don't make mistakes!" with triple underlines for emphasis.
18:55
@Kevin this may help your chances to not get promoted
Hey guys, do you happen to have a resource (website or book) where I can learn about python lambda, or lambda's in general?
What's the best place you've found online so far?
Just Google it. There's dozens of blogs, tutorials, and docs.
Generally, stuff on stackoverflow that other people have mentioned.
I was just wondering if you guys recommended one.
We don't have anyone in Oregon do we?
19:07
I went there a couple times to visit my aunt/uncle.
Lambdas generally aren't something complicated enough for us to think "Oh yes I will write this blog down to advise anyone in the future who asks."
@Morgan just there's been a shooting.
I don't know, but I just saw that story.
Oh jeez. :/
f = lambda a,b,c: expression is the same thing as def f(a,b,c): return expression. There, that's all you need to know
("But Kevin, what is lambda a,b,c: expression without the 'f =' equivalent to?" Uhh... The lesson is over for today. Return to your quarters.)
19:17
very bad feeling my path environment variable only has one value....
Anonymous
Is there a way to detect a sequence of number. Like 10, 20, 30 ... or 100, 200, 300 in a loop?
Anonymous
import time

i = 0
for x in range(1, 5000):
    # do something
	i += 1
	if _____ :
	   time.sleep(10)
if x == 10?
or if x % 10 == 0?
Anonymous
I am maths illiterate
Can confirm, computer is boned.
19:21
google division remainder
@Programmer are you sure your system PATH only has one entry? It's pretty common for a user PATH to only have one entry
I can't use any console commands
Type echo $PATH
I think I have backups, so I'll do a system restore. I won't lose anything
Or echo %PATH% on windows
19:28
Yeah, it's definitely dead O:
Is that a bug? Because it looks like a bug.
It kinda really does.
There are weirdnesses with local() because of the optimizations they do to make functions go faster (don't need to do a hash for local variables). So anybody using exec() inside a function and not explicitly specifying the context dicts is asking for trouble. Thus has it always been.
19:46
Isn't it just that in python 3 that scope doesn't leak into/out of the for bit of a list comp?
Oh, no, because I didn't read the question
@Morgan it's not called a tuple comprehension btw
It doesn't create a tuple, it's called a generator expression or genexp.
@Ffisegydd Yeah, I just fixed it.
Brain fart.
Herpderp.
DSM
DSM
That reminds me. I keep meaning to spend some time going over my old comments to remove the ones which are out of date (and print out my favourites to put on my fridge.)
Also, because I can never remember, do I need the innermost set of parens in this? OrderedDict(((row.th.text, row.td.text) for row in rows if row.td))
19:53
No.
OrderedDict((row.th.text, row.td.text) for row in rows if row.td)
You could even do OrderedDict(row.th.text, row.td.text for row in rows if row.td) maybe, but that's not as readable.
Yeah that always confuses me
DSM
DSM
I don't think that last version will work.
I've not tested it, it was a shot in the dark.
Always a bit sketchy on where you need the brackets specifically, as technically they don't make the tuple (the comma does) IIRC.
19:56
Heyo
Nah, you do need the parens around the two values.
Otherwise it throws SyntaxError.
Curse you Guido!
DSM
DSM
In half an hour I have a meeting with a difficult client who yesterday sprang on us the news that they'd really prefer to have the results of a not-yet-started eleven-week project (which was always a rather optimistic timeline) in four weeks, and preferably with a glimpse into the results in two. The fact the CEO didn't immediately laugh them off the stage is concerning me. :-/
I've yet to have a client meeting. There's one on Monday but I can't go ;-;
DSM
DSM
Instead of ;-; you should be \o/.
19:58
Clients are the worst
Yeah the brackets vs comma thing is confusing
@tzaman What about servers?
DSM
DSM
rimshot
You think clients and servers are bad? Try models (views and controllers!)
@Pureferret You should always tip them.
19:59
From one peer to another, that was a bad joke.
Pssh.
@tzaman And then pick them back up
week.contain(self)
I've got a 3 hour meeting tomorrow before pub lunch \o/
20:04
I've got a three hour meeting across friday prayer :/
Wooo, I can finally edit things.
Only another 50% of my rep till I can close vote.
I should begin making a push for gold.
91 upvotes to go.
@Ffisegydd 91 upvotes to go
DSM
DSM
I have enough answers for 3.x silver, but not enough votes. :-(
Earn some rep....what rhymes with rep?
90 upvotes to go
20:06
PEP.
91 upvotes to go
91 upvotes to go
Earn some rep, check out the new PEP
90 upvotes to go
DSM
DSM
That was an impressively rapid turnaround from idea to execution. (falls the shadow)
There's a new PEP?
@AdamSmith There's always a new pep
Me and Bobby had a glorious idea for a PEP ;-;
But it had already been done.
20:08
the latest one
@Ffisegydd Close as duplicate then!
Yeah that sucked
PEP-XLII will live on forever in our hearts.
Speaking of PEPs - that one about string formatting using curly braces and variables directly is in the latest version of C#
And Julia IIRC in a way.
@AnttiHaapala any idea on why there is no tp_descr_del or why tp_getset is not tp_getsetdel? I mean, how on earth would you "subscribe" to the PyObject_DelAttr?
20:11
# $ can be used for string interpolation:
"2 + 2 = $(2 + 2)" # => "2 + 2 = 4"
Stupid Javascript bug at work
my promise thingy is only going in to the error bit
Doh
@Ffisegydd huh?
20:29
It's in PHP, too.
@MorganThrapp What language feature isn't?
creates a process for creating a process using that process
@AaronHall A colleague once showed me...now let me get this right
SomethingFactoryReflectionFactory

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