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00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

00:03
Hey everyone o/
00:50
Happy birthday, Aaron! And cabbage for all.
01:20
@AaronHall Happy Birthdays!
01:39
Thanks!
03:00
@PatrickMaupin I used my dupe-hammer to undo it. Cheers.
So it comes with an auto-undupe hammer as well? Awesome. Might have to get me one of those.
03:13
Auto? No, it requires careful thought and consideration. Making hard decisions is a management skill. I'm almost ready, I can feel it.
expects to be made managing director any day now
@AaronHall I wouldn't work for a company stupid enough to promote me to management.
 
2 hours later…
05:41
Cbg
06:11
Cabbage
 
1 hour later…
07:28
Someone has stolen my notebook and left a message saying "Company confidential notebook destroyed - Security". It's not actually from security. I suspect my friend/colleague Ian. I've stolen his tea pot as revenge. I can see this snowballing.
£5 says HR has to get involved before Christmas.
08:39
Cabbage!
Anyone cares to weigh in on the statement “Try not to use loops in Python”?
 
1 hour later…
09:40
Wheeeeee, serial vote. Thank you anonymous voter, but those 10 votes in 1 minute will be reverted.
10:22
cbg
10:42
@PeterVaro :P
@PeterVaro I guess you'd do a descriptor for those instead :P
in the __dict__
if you'd notice, these are not dict attrs, so it does not make sense to remove them either really...
or I dunno :P
11:05
@AnttiHaapala that was my conclusion as well :(
11:35
hello all
11:51
cbg :)
Cabbage nuppy
How goes it pups?
Quite busy... Between badminton and computer I hardly find time to eat and sleep :(
You?
The usual :)
Awww... have some scooby snacks puppy... can't help you with the sleep, but have food!
Yay :-)
12:11
Cabbage all
cbg
have to restore my path environment variable today somehow :D
Windows 7
I have an idea though
Can't roll back to a checkpoint?
Or restore point, or whatever they call them
No, my drives are encrypted :[
12:19
Oh Windows...brings back some memories..My last day with Windows was when I needed to use pgp. Never went back since that wonderful experience.
It was my own fault...i think?
@Programmer superuser.com/questions/265532/… might help, although I dunno how encrypted drives interact with that...
@idjaw Ha - I've used pgp on windows. I know what you mean...
Anyway - gotta do some work, I guess. Temporary rhubarb
@JRichardSnape Did you have to go digging for older VC versions by any chance?
Hey up all
Oh Windows - how I love thee, let me count the ways...
Umm... okay - didn't take long at all :p
12:42
Whatever, I have basic windows paths. I can add what ones I need, I suppose.
Today OP made me look dumb by leaving out crucial background information in his post.
DSM
DSM
Day off cabbage for all!
DSM I'm jealous
@poke Done!
I love list comprehensions, but they aren't magic. A for loop in a list comp is still a plain old Python for loop, it doesn't run at C speed. The list-building process itself is certainly faster than an explicit for loop using append because a list comp uses a dedicated LIST_APPEND bytecode, so it avoids the overhead of a method call (and method lookup, unless the append method has been cached). — PM 2Ring 2 mins ago
13:01
Mark off the "using sleep to make it seem like the program is 'thinking'" space on your bingo cards, everyone
> Username and Password is User input by the way
I can't comprehend why OP would take the time to write that instead of just leaving the actual two lines of code in his sample. The latter would be less text for him to type
on the above link, btw. Needs MCVE.
The more I look at the question the more it resembles the Platonic Ideal of a post that aggravates me. Poor grammar, no MCVE, "it wont work" with no additional details, no actual question asked...
Look away from the light Kevin!
The OP being called theRumblers100 doesn't help
Why do I have Tuesday-strength grumpiness on a Friday
Because Mercury is in retrograde and Jupiter has aligned with Uranus.
Hahahah Uran....(feels the room)...us.
13:09
> Oh, it's not called Uranus any more. Astronomers got tired of that joke, so they renamed it. It's called "Urectum" now.
Yeah I love that line - almost quoted it :)
Anyone got a recommendation for a server dashboard to keep check of server health, etc? Need to keep track of multiple servers (actually VMs)
DSM
DSM
There was a post earlier where a guy got a bytes object, didn't know to decode it, so called str on it and then hacked it to remove the (now) r'\n' characters. Started to write a reply but then said "hey, it's Friday!" and didn't.
Silly OP. Everyone knows that you convert bytes to string by printing the object and doing OCR on a screen grab.
@PM2Ring Good comments, thanks! :)
13:16
@Ffisegydd Nagios of some sort?
@Kevin works every time
@Rob ta. I've found a few and will decide on which is best, if Nagios works then your finders fee will be sent in the post.
Woohoo!
morning you cats
DSM
DSM
Not sure about that one, poke. The OP is explicitly asking why he needs to use the quotes. msw decided to answer with a comment for some reason.
(FWIW the answer I had in mind before seeing msw's comment was something like " You're not calling it with a filename which isn't in quotes. You're never even getting to the call. board1.txt isn't a filename, it's the way you request the txt attribute of an object named board1. There is no such object, hence the error.")
Man it's nice not having to wait for approval on my edits. Time to go deface ALL the questions.
If I get that, then there'll be a whole lot of leverage (on)?s that get a pasting
@corvid i acknowledge your presence :^)
That's why you're my favorite, Programmer. That makes sense without the comma too
13:33
I'm reading that question as "why does Python require me to include quote marks, when it could theoretically figure out what I mean from context?"
@corvid Without the comma you need a 'u' in "morning"
Perhaps OP would be satisfied if we pointed out that there would be ambiguity if there was a board1 object with a txt attribute, so the interpreter wouldn't always be able to figure out whether you meant the argument as a string or not.
But he might say, "but I don't have a board1 object, so why can't it figure it out in this specific circumstance?"
@Kevin And the answer's annoying because it calls parentheses brackets.
DSM
DSM
In the face of ambiguity, etc.
Then we'll say "the interpreter just doesn't work that way" and they'll say "but why not?" and then we'll abandon post having wasted lots of time for nothing
13:35
Pssh. "Parentheses" are brackets.
They're round brackets. Brackets without further qualification are square brackets.
I pronounce them "braquettes" to confound better but less confident programmers
And I didn't say that that answer is wrong or bad, just annoying.
[ and ] should be called rectangle brackets because their convex hulls are far from square.
Nah. Brackets are (brackets). Square brackets are [square brackets]. Braces are {braces} but we'll also accept {curly brackets}.
13:37
Don't forget <angle brackets> :)
I didn't, I was just too lazy :P
And the forbidden R'lyeh Brackets, which modern browsers cannot reproduce due to their 7 dimensional nature.
Ironically, IE5 displays them fine
The cheaters way of writing them is Ia!(like this)Ia!
@RobertGrant He speaks the name of the beast!
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: what do you call the objects we use to show floor and ceiling (square brackets with one of the horizontal lines missing)?
13:39
You guys gonna see The Martian today?
Where's he landing?
Probably tomorrow or sunday.
@DSM would probably call them just floor/ceiling symbols.
I already read the book, and retconned my recollection of it to include Matt Damon. Don't need to see the film.
Or floor/ceiling function.
13:41
@Kevin Then you say: "You don't like it, write your own language. When you've written the code for your compiler or interpreter that successfully distinguishes between identifiers and literal strings in all cases without using some form of quoting, please show it to us".
@Kevin but then how will you pretentiously tell your friends "the book was MUCH better"?
I ran the "string literal guessing" idea through my "can I staple this to KevinScript?" heuristic and got back "hahaha, no. You need human level intelligence for that"
Since I don't have human level intelligence, I can't implement it! #self-zing
Just don't allow strings at all. Problem avoided-and-hence-solved.
Good idea. Leave Strings for another version. The Erlang way.
@Ffisegydd Conversely, don't allow variables: do everything on a stack. :)
I think this guy's actual problem is "how do I get a byte buffer from an image file, suitable for sending over a network connection?" But then he needs tobytes, not frombytes.
... Or he could just send the entire file. That also works.
Ah, he edited it into more or less a completely different question. OK then.
Dem XYs, they invalidate the answers :-(
14:02
I'm surprised at the amount of hate for Take input from stdin and insert it to list in python. Isn't this a simple confusion between append and extend?
@Kevin Well, the code wasn't there when I downvoted.
Ok, I'm looking at the original revision. Now things make sense.
It still needs an MCVE, though.
I'd be happy with a better description of what is "getting wrong"
I am not sure if I am doing Futures right... if a future is running and will resolve eventually, but you want to read data during it for async operations, should there be some callback method to parse the data?
14:04
@Kevin Pretty much.
Meanwhile PIL guy's true question is beginning to take shape... I think it's answerable now, but I don't really feel like writing server and client applications for one answer.
Even though the behavior is a straightforward "server sends bytes, client reads bytes and makes an Image"
hey guys
Welcome
I have a a crazy thing to ask
14:07
Ask directly, don't ask to ask
Just ask (if it's to do with Python and not a newly asked question on the main site)
The answer is "acetaminophen, kumquat, beige". Next question please.
Don't even justify it with a response.
I meant people trolling here. I'm sorry
is there any1?????
14:10
Yes there is. Next question please.
help me out dev.s
VVV Insert question below: VVV
That's not a question
showing this error
python manage.py sql polls
Error: No module named messages
14:12
Looks like you're missing the "messages" module.
Good for you, but please ask an actual question and show what code you have.
I have a truly marvelous question which this margin is too narrow to contain.
but i added this 'django.contrib.messages',
past two hours ..i suffer
Added it to where? Minimum Complete Verifiable Example please
@IntelliJAmiya please provide a full MCVE as at the moment no one can help you.
14:14
Are you doing the tutorial? @IntelliJAmiya
yes
MCVE stands for ?
Minimum Complete Verifiable Example
Minimum Complete Verifiable Example
Kevin has already said what it stands for, but you could have googled it anyway.
DSM
DSM
Googling that error message reveals a lot of information. The specifics will depend on lots of details we haven't seen (OS, versions, code, etc.)
14:15
hey
i am sorry for my earlier comments
okay . i will check once again
@Kevin Argh. He didn't have raw image bytes, he had the whole file sitting in a byte string.
That is... Less than ideal.
something something stringIO
Or BytesIO, as in the accepted answer.
@JRichardSnape: You appear to have some typos at the end of stackoverflow.com/a/32908982/4014959 : you repeated aaseq1
@PM2Ring aww - damnit - you're right. I should take more care...
Thank you - you are ever vigilant - fixed
14:25
@dodge901 Ok. Consider yourself on probation. Please read the room's rules carefully.
I'm a bit worried that the OP's amino acid codes don't appear to match their codon values in the original post...
o/ Hi @tristan
Hey up love.
Bleh, I made the same comment 23 seconds after you.
People with such good rep and post bad content :-/
"What are all the iterable data types in the builtin module?" would be almost answerable...
14:33
@JRichardSnape Oh well. Let them worry about that. :) It's good that your answer says "the best one to use depends on how big your seq is in real life". Running over the string 3 times is fine if it's small, but I'd definitely be using the single for loop code on big data. And it's nice that you're doing it with one loop, not a nested pair, and you don't need any if tests to handle partial triplets at the end of the loop.
I hate it when you need to test on every iteration just to handle something that can only happen at the end of the loop. There's usually a way to avoid the test, but it's not always obvious, or it relies in ending the loop one iteration early so you can handle the final loop as a special case, which is ugly.
@MorganThrapp, prepare for OP's inevitable follow-up question: "now I'm just getting None when I call b.numberOfCalories()"
@PM2Ring yeah - I almost put the if test in to mirror exactly what they asked and then thought "no - what's the real problem they've got here". I too can't stand that test every time for a single end condition.
@JR S Your comment made me understand the OPs confusion :-)
If you're testing a CRUDy webapp, is it worth creating a new db in the test setup, running all the alembic scripts to populate it and starting a webserver off that, then deleting it on test teardown?
@Ffisegydd Love the way the OPs own (wrong) link explicitly has a section for tuples in addition to the three listed. They obviously don't count, or the word is unreadable, or something.
14:37
As in, is that often seen as a good way to do it?
Or am I just attracted to it because it sounds more fun to set that up than to just write tests
@JRichardSnape Aka the February 29 problem: having to regularly test for something that only happens rarely.
hey there, are any of you aware of a python fiddle like utility that allows for importing libraries that would usually need pip to install them?
@Rob for my project I've set up a VM with a DB that I'll populate and tear down on test start/end.
@BhargavRao Good :) I'm amazed he hasn't reverted to your answer and deleted his own TBH. I had a brief look at his C++ tutorial book too. I'm not a C++ expert, but there are... issues ...
So I've got a VM with my dev DB that can be changed/modifed and a VM with a test DB.
14:39
@PM2Ring What's the old saying... 90% of the code is for 10% of the use cases
@Kevin wasn't that Shakespeare?
No, Bacon.
@Ffisegydd hmm interesting
@JRichardSnape Do you have a link to his book?
So our dev DB will reflect HEAD but the test DB will reflect the latest tests.
14:41
Mm, bacon.
@PM2Ring Hadn't heard that name for it, but yes. you can be lazy sometimes due to processor pipelining / branch prediction. Not sure if that works for Python, though thinks about whether that relies on compiled vs interpreted languages
And I've set up Jenkins to run jobs to build the DB as necessary.
Ooh nice
Wow, that sounds good
@BhargavRao 22 answers / 712 questions.
Socratic indeed :D
14:42
Fizzy is hitting all the buzzwords these days. Fizzbuzzwords, you might say.
@BhargavRao Google scholar and search author:<his_name>
It's First Friday at BigCorp which means we get free wine/beer this evening. I'm gearing up for it.
What does First Friday mean?
@JRichardSnape Trying to optimize Python by guessing what's happening at the CPU level is a path to madness.
14:43
First friday of the month.
Now I am properly jealous. I have not had alcohol for weeks. Never mind free alcohol
We're let out of our drone-cubicles and allowed to see sunlight, as opposed to the fake sunlight that glares from above to make us feel like humans.
@PM2Ring if you do it right then madness is a cache miss, which also slows things down
@JRichardSnape I had to pack my alcohol two weeks ago because I'm moving....withdrawl...
14:44
@PM2Ring This was my assumption. Often, you can drop "by guessing what's happening at the CPU level"
@JRichardSnape Thanks, got it :D
user559633
Hi there @JRichardSnape!
user559633
FizzyBuzzGydd
I'm looking to trademark Fizzwords. They're buzzwords but you say them in a Welsh accent while drunk.
14:46
@Kevin Yeah, I decided to just fix those things in hopes that it would stop followup questions. I was wrong.
Hey, for a = drink(4) and a.numberOfCalories this part works, but when type b = AlcoholicDrink(4) I get this error "__init__() missing 1 required positional argument: 'sugar'" — bradmonster 1 min ago
Despicable Me 2 is on
Still looks like Ballmer.
Is there a good reason to use itertools.imap(None, a,b) instead of zip(a,b)?
Confusing your enemies, hearing the lamentation of their developers.
If Will Smith made a rap for The Pursuit of Happiness like he did for Men in Black, it could be released as an album called The Pursuit of Rappiness
I have a feeling that the OP of can't add itertools.so to the path in os will reply to me with "my actual code doesn't really use imap, that was just an example of a 2.7-only method"
14:50
@Ffisegydd Is a drunken Physicist a BuzzyFizzy, I ask myself.
"Because you did not tell me how to import 2.7 modules in 3.X and solve my true problem, I award you no points"
:%s/drunken physicist/physicist/g
DSM
DSM
Now, now. It's almost eleven on a day off and I haven't even touched my Scotch. Or the wine. Or the leftover beer. Or the Bailey's. (This may not be helping my case.)
I need to buy a bottle of gin for tonight.
DSM
DSM
14:54
I guess our imap guy could inject functions into Python 3 itertools which would behave the way 2 expects.
you mean take a bottle of gin for free?
Sorry?
Free alcohol night I thought :o
That's the pre-party. There's also an actual party I'm going to.
Grab a bottle from the pre-party.
14:57
Maybe that's what I should get for tonight. I haven't had gin in a while.
I don't drink, I've never understood why and seeing my brother's state is depressing.
I should really remember not to answer homework questions.
Yes I know, I forgot to include that I am not aloud to use any form of strings, just mathematical operations. — Joe Dingle 1 min ago
DSM
DSM
Maybe it's okay if he uses them quietly.
@DSM I was going to tell him to just copy-paste the imap implementation from the itertools documentation, but when I tried it myself in 3.X it started giving errors
@Kevin Commented. Although good knowledge that you can't pass None in to map (I didn't know that and wouldn't have tested)
15:00
@MorganThrapp TIL you can call super() with zero arguments in Python 3. That's nifty.
@PM2Ring Yup, it's a much nicer syntax. I'm not totally sure how it handles multiple inheritance, because I've never used it, but it handles single inheritance perfectly.
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: there might be some implementation quirks but I'm pretty sure it should work in principle.. but the OP's explanations don't make much sense to me.
def imap(function, *iterables):
    # imap(pow, (2,3,10), (5,2,3)) --> 32 9 1000
    iterables = map(iter, iterables)
    while True:
        args = [next(it) for it in iterables]
        if function is None:
            yield tuple(args)
        else:
            yield function(*args)
print(list(imap(pow, (2,3,10), (5,2,3))))
#result in 2.7: [32, 9, 1000]
#result in 3.X: TypeError: pow expected at least 2 arguments, got 0
I am suspicious of map(iter, iterables) there
DSM
DSM
Yeah, you need list(map(.
Agreed, but I do not yet see why
DSM
DSM
15:05
Because you exhaust iterables in the args = line otherwise on the first pass.
Ah, got it. That took me a while.
DSM
DSM
Confession: I had to add print(args) inside before I realized what the problem was. :-)
I did that too but still didn't see it, so you're winning
DSM
DSM
\o/
> there is no itertools module in blender python3 based environment, how could I import the itertools module into its environment
15:10
Even on his off day, he is still on...fire
Damn you, blender!
DSM
DSM
I'm not sure I believe him. The error was AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'imap', not an ImportError.
@DSM I'd lay money on that too
He says he's using itertools.map now, which AFAIK does not exist in any version
'zackly. Which leads me to suspect the assertion that itertools does not exist in the blender environment is questionable
15:15
cbg
cbg @antti
DSM
DSM
OP is deeply confused. Glad to have dodg-- oh. Sorry, Kevin..
;_;
Oh well. Sometimes for questions like these I get an accept six months later after OP realizes that the problem never actually was a problem
DSM
DSM
Kevin, master of the long con.
Only after I've fled the country does the mark realize that I actually helped him... Sucker.
> Why split is not yet available by default in C++?
Because C++ is the language of scrubs B-)
15:27
Ugg, hafta install boto and I forgot the password :(
@BhargavRao Good luck. I hate boto. The docs are surprisingly useless.
Oh god! Got demotivated even before I start :D
I've only used boto.ses, maybe the rest of it is better.
Hopefully it is good
I think you are mistaking Stack Overflow for the C++ standardization committee. — chepner 39 secs ago
:D
@MorganThrapp Are there any alternatives to boto?
@BhargavRao Nope.
15:34
Lol, thought so :D
Which part of it are you using?
I hafta still see. I have been thrown into using it as I finished my job earlier in another part.
Being thrown into projects without a lifeline is the best way to learn.
Yup, that's how I learned boto and wire transfers.
True. I did learn R like that.
15:37
And how I'm rapidly learning the arcana of the NYS property tax code.
^ now that's a good way to take a mid-day nap
The most interesting thing I've learned is that one of the richest municipalities in NY uses comic sans for all their official property tax related mailings.
Are your eyes bleeding yet?
There's nothing wrong with Comic Sans. There's nothing right with it either. It's nothingless. It's the void that hungers. It's where sane men go to learn the wonders of the universe, and come back mindless wrecks.
11
I've been reading a lot of Lovecraft lately :3
Rbrb, deVil has started to play well, runs to the tv.
15:44
saves to google later
I need to read some Lovecraft at some point.
rhubarb
too relevant for today (sorry I don't know how to onebox) xkcd.com/1536
DSM
DSM
Just a few days ago I mentioned to someone that was my favourite Apollo 13 scene! interest_in["Martian"] += 100
@Programmer Just put it in a message by itself.
@DSM I haven't seen the movie yet, but the book was one of the better books I've read.
15:57
Everytime I try to read books, I fall asleep shortly after. That's why I haven't bothered in ages :p
I didn't read for quite a few years, and then I got a kindle.
Just think of a book as a chat room that you have to scroll manually
Now I read for ~2 hours or so before I go to sleep.
@MorganThrapp That's exactly what got me in to reading. Funny, it took a gadget to get me to read books....
I sometimes start nodding off while combing through documentation at work. I think it has something to do with lack of interactivity
rbrb :)
16:00
I read all the time when I was a kid, partially because I was only allowed ~1 hour a day on the computer.
But I pretty much stopped reading from 13-20 or so.
^^ same. It coincided when my dad brought home a classic II. Sorry dad...but hey.....I think I did pretty well for myself. Programming 'aint that bad....Although my dad has been trying for years to get me to be a chemist...follow in his steps and all :P
My dad is a software developer, so I was allowed to use the computer to learn programming as much as I wanted, which was nice. But when you're ~7, "programming" is a strong term for anything you're doing. :P
Then I got a laptop and could play video games (WoW) all day every day, so I did. :/
logo writer 4 life
Then in came Blizzard and destroyed all productivity....I started on Warcraft II
I never got into Warcraft. The only RTS games I could do was Age of Empires II and Rise of Nations.
I'm of the group desperately waiting for a new warcraft RTS
16:15
Legacy of the Void is coming out in November
Starcraft FTW
Seems like zerg is becoming weaker :\ zerg is best
I need to figure out my RTS solution for hooking up my gaming rig to my TV....It seems like I have to buy some fancy contraption so I can have lazy-couch-rts-play-time..
Screw RTS. MOBA4LIFE.
Heroes of the Storm is already out! (obvious blizzard fanboy, my friends work at blizz)
16:26
I love hots.
I play a round or 3 most evenings.
I've only played one or two matches. It doesn't agree with my computer for some reason.
RTSes are hard, let's play Mario
I'm afraid to get in to hots
Thought I've been playing Hearthstone since beta.
It's a little obscure, but I think SNU is really going to blow up around Christmas.
16:36
@AaronHall Seoul National University?
@Ffisegydd Which hero?
DSM
DSM
I think I guessed what SNU was as a joke, and it turns out to be a real thing!
This Puzzling.SE question raises an interesting philosophical quandary about whether you can believe something while believing that you don't believe it.
waits for someone bro enough to set him up
A weak example might be an atheist that says "damn it" when he steps on a lego. But that may just be cultural conditioning.
DSM
DSM
16:46
I think people can be wrong about what they really believe, if we use "really believe" to distinguish an action which only makes sense in one way of looking at the world and not another. People are wrong about lots of things. That's not the only way to look at it, but it seems reasonable enough.
Time to head out on the town and read about Austrian economics. #threedayweekend
Rhubarb for all!
I can come up with a handful of religious examples, but a secular one would be good. A global warming denialist that buys real estate in the currently frozen tundra?
@DSM what? you're a member of the Austrian school? :)
What about Chicago?
I watched the Star Trek pilot last night with my wife. I remember smiling as William Shatner tried to zig zag his way behind a rock as if he were trying to fake out a football defense.
You never know when a rock might actually be a rock alien. Gotta keep em on their toes.
(alien spotting tip: if the rock has toes...)
re-cbg
16:58
@davidism To be fair, that wasn't aliens. Just time travel.
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