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15:00
Reading further, oh hey, a Weak Key Dictionary already exists. Hooray!
>>> class MonitoredObject:
        def __init__ (self):
            print('I’m created :D')
        def __del__ (self):
            print('I’m destroyed :(')

>>> def frob (d):
        x = MonitoredObject()
        d[x] = 'foo'

>>> d = ReferentialMap()
>>> frob(d)
I’m created :D
I’m destroyed :(
Oh, but it doesn't support lists as keys. Boo!
@corvid If you have access to the object you registered at, you should unregister yourself properly. That’s better than relying on weak references.
Oh okay, I basically do that with promises
>>> from weakref import WeakKeyDictionary
>>> d = WeakKeyDictionary()
>>> frob(d)
I’m created :D
I’m destroyed :(
>>> len(d)
0
But yeah, doesn’t work with lists… :/
15:05
> If you have no experience with Python, switch to using Python 2.
I'm adding the first sentence of this comment to my scrapbook of quotes that are inflammatory when taken out of context
Interesting__weakref__ slot…
#Crackpot feature idea: allow the behavior of literals to be defined by the user.
SetLiteralListType(weaklist)
assert isinstance([1,2,3], weaklist)
I could probably do that in KevinScript... I give it a five on the "difficulty to implement" scale.
five out of?
ten. 1-4 is "can be done before the end of the day", 8-10 is "I'm not even going to try unless someone pays me"
That doesn’t sound too bad.
But it sounds as if you’ve just chosen 5 to avoid having to do it now :P
15:13
:-D
While implementing it I'd probably end up thinking "I should really refactor these crusty bits here" and end up with three more difficulty-7 tasks
15:28
This song just appeared on my SoundCloud. I’m laughing so hard right now xD
Looking at Copy and Pasting Images in Python and trying to think of a tactful way to say "you do know how to use return, don't you?"
Although I'm guessing the answer is "no", based on the fact that their program asks both "What is the name of your image file?" and "What is the image file name again?". Seems like OP doesn't know how to pass data between functions.
It's hard to gauge when you can say "you should probably read the tutorial" without making them mad
("when has the possibility of angering OP ever been an obstacle for us?" says the peanut gallery)
So... why do some codebases leave an extra , before the ending ) in tuple expressions/unpacking?
If it's a multi-line tuple, it's convenient to have a trailing comma, so when you add a new element you only need to insert the new line, without changing any previous lines
I believe this is the primary reason that trailing commas are legal syntax in the first place.
But that only works once, because then the next time you'll have to add a comma.
oh, well
15:43
Well, when you insert the new line, you have to add a comma to that one too ;-)
Unless you add a comma after the new element, in which case it doesn't save you anything.
Lame explanation: it makes diff readings look nicer.
Maybe. I don't use it myself.
When you change

t = (
"qux",
"foo"
)

to

t = (
"qux",
"foo",
"bar"
)

the diff looks like

-"foo"
+"foo",
+"bar"

But if you change

t = (
"qux",
"foo",
)

to

t = (
"qux",
"foo",
"bar",
)

The diff looks like

+"bar",
In other news, this library has finally solved my long running problem of my JSON not being formatted like a cat. github.com/AnthonyCaliendo/purrfect_json
@Kevin Alright, that does look much nicer.
15:47
anecdote: on my home machine, the "end" key is broken, so going to the end of the previous line to add a comma is in fact more work than it already being there and adding a comma to the end of my new line.
I acknowledge that this is not typical.
@MorganThrapp Reminds me of this infamous perl script, which is in the shape of a camel.
[Errno 4] Interrupted system call happened in pika consumers when I run "sudo kill -USR2 <process_id>". Why? USR2 should only be handled by my signal handler functions.
@Kevin wonderful
@Kevin I've always wanted to learn perl, I just worry that I'm not enough of an artist/masochist.
It's a lot like golfed Python :-)
Hmmm, maybe I should give it a shot then.
16:01
@Kevin it is hardly even nearly as intuitive to Python, though :P that auto flattening of nested lists... eww
I have been meaning to pick up a new language. I was thinking something functional. I'd do Haskell, but I don't know enough high level comp-sci stuff.
I tried assembly a couple weeks back but the difficulty of getting it to do anything at all smothered my ambition
Yeah, that's how I feel about ASM. I'd like to get to the point where I can at least read it, because I run into inline ASM in our legacy code base semi-frequently, but writing it just seems tedious.
Wow, I was pretty much the opposite direction.
You could probably get to a particular skill level where it no longer seems tedious, but if you can only learn by doing fun projects, that's a chicken and egg problem
16:06
I learned more or less in order of Basic -> ASM -> C -> C++ -> Python.
For me it was like, TI-83+ BASIC -> hey I heard my programs could be faster if I wrote them in asm, woah this is really complicated nevermind -> C++ ...
I went BASIC -> C++ -> Delphi -> Python. I have since forgotten all of my BASIC and C++ knowledge.
Also you needed the $20 computer-to-calculator cable, so there was a barrier to entry.
Knowing ASM did really help with understanding C. It's really nice to go in there knowing there's a call stack underneath.
I got that from This book. It was really an amazing read.
It starts with telegrams and goes all the way up to ASM.
16:10
HP graphing calculators had a really neat programming language. It was all stack-based compared to the TI language. I always really liked it and wished more things used stack based programming.
I would have been happy to have functions.
I've never been able to wrap my head around stack based programming. I've tried learning CJam, but it just made my brain hurt.
Like... 5 3 + was addition.I forget if it had functions, but I remember rotating the stack an awful lot.
@MorganThrapp Makes a lot of sense though. Using a stack for exerything stops you from having to declare variables.
@QuestionC Oh it totally does, I just couldn't get the hang of keeping the stack in my brain.
Like, 5 3 + makes sense to me. It's once you start introducing loops and functions that I lose it.
Maybe there's a CJam editor out there? I wouldn't have been able to do it if the bottom 5 of the stack weren't visible either.
16:20
Not that I found, but I also only spent about 5 minutes looking.
Is there a non-golf stack language that you would recommend I take a look at? I would like to learn stack programming.
16:38
Apparently the language is "Reverse Polish Lisp", although I guess any functional language is stack based really maybe.
I was planning on checking out Racket, and that's a lisp derivative, so that sounds like it should work.
Does this question (and answer) make sense to anyone? stackoverflow.com/q/33863442/400617
They're asking if Flask sessions are stateless, when the entire point of a session is to store state.
DSM
DSM
Monday morning cabbage.
I'm going to be pretty mad if the OP of Maze Solver Stopping in the Process replies to my comment with "oh, when I said that was the expected output I just mashed random keys, lol"
"I just meant, my actual output is a lot shorter than I expected it to be"
The flames from the side of my face will be mighty.
@davidism I'm reading that as "if Flask sessions are client side, does that mean you can't access session data on the server side?"
16:57
I love my backup solution. Dump a massive query that'll re-create the database for me into a text file. Only 360MB \o/
Which would be a weird state of affairs. If only client-side scripts could see session data. You'd have to write some funky JS to talk to the server.
Unless that's actually how it works, in which case it's not weird at all >_>
@Ffisegydd I have done that before. database hack high five!
@kevin, the picture he added in the edit makes so much more sense now holy cow.
Well, I added an answer that's at least better than the one liner they accepted.
@Kevin at least with Flask, the client can't actually modify the session cookie since it's cryptographically signed. You can add other cookies though, or change the session implementation.
This maze problem is unfortunately quite tricky, and I don't think there's any quick fix that could be done to OP's code. I wonder if tile completion puzzles are NP-hard...
specially since he wants to find a solution that hits all tiles, he'll have to do a check for each path that the solution matches the amount of blank tiles present
17:08
Oh, they are NP hard if it's a general graph problem, and I assume it's the same even if you restrict it to graphs that connect neighbors in a lattice grid
but its not necessarily a cycle
So.... MS Paint bucket fill is NP Hard? I'm a little skeptical.
Code blocks add indentation on newlines. Magic!
I assume both cycles and paths are NP hard
@QuestionC Nah, MS Paint bucket fill is allowed to backtrack.
That's more like finding a spanning tree for a graph.
Abby T. Miller on November 23, 2015
Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast episode #69, brought to you by The Lake Erie Soda Water Company. Your host is Joel Spolsky, joined by First Deputy of Community And So Forth Jay Hanlon and Lord High King of Nerds David Fullerton. Fortunately, the beer arrived shortly after the podcast began, so this one should be pretty good.
17:14
Ok, so it's a maze solver that hits every tile?
Once, that is?
Yeah. Like the tile puzzles from Legend of Zelda: Oracle of (Ages | Seasons).
If you haven't played those games, I suggest doing so now. I'll wait.
Or like the collapsing floor puzzles from Deadly Rooms of Death.
Sounds lively.
DSM
DSM
Sorry, so we just need to find a path which hits all the (non-wall) cells?
Has to start next to the K too.
Yeah, start on the K and touch all non-wall cells exactly once
(Actually it's not perfectly isomorphic to Deadly Rooms of Death, because that game has the additional stipulation that you finish the path by leaving the room. It doesn't count as a win if you collapse all the tiles and strand yourself on the final one)
17:19
NP hard doesn't necessarily mean hard from a programming perspective though.
DSM
DSM
I don't think that's NP-hard. Finding an Eulerian trail can be done in polynomial time, I'm pretty sure.
A brute force solution might be feasible for this size of maze, I admit
@QuestionC Not Programming Hard?
:D
Are Eulerian Paths isomorphic to Hamiltonian Paths? The latter doesn't necessarily need to traverse every edge, just every vertex. Or can you do something fancy with duals to turn one into another?
17:23
This problem reminds be of the Bridges problem where you want to cross every bridge once.
Yeah, that's a Eulerian Path.
(an Eulerian?)
I should probably condition myself to stop pronouncing it "You-ler"
Oiler?
Air-Dish?
Oiler. The girlfriend is taking a Paths and Graphs course right now, so I've heard her yelling about them a lot recently.
cel
cel
hmh, do we have any ipython/jupyter users in the so python community?
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: ah, you're right. I was thinking about the steps, and so flipped the vertices and edges, more's the pity. :-/
17:32
What ever happened to Jeff Atwood? Did he sell his SO stake for a million dollars or something?
Good. I want Jeff to be rich off this site. His blog taught me a lot when I was starting out.
Jeff is at his tropical island stronghold a la The Incredibles
Free EP from Foo Fighters! saintceciliaep.com
EP from Foo Fighters is innocent! #lamejoke
17:39
The streets here are covered in "Post no Bills" signs. I kind of want to make some large Bill Clinton stickers now.
Like, just his smug face hovering inches below the warning.
The person on the bottom left looks like Antti :P
lol, that's Bill Clinton
ping @AnttiHaapala
Yep, but the resemblance is striking. Only if you flip the photo vertically.
Hahah, yeah. I can see that.
17:44
Antti Clinton for President!
So... Bussh?
Ok, I was listening to that SO podcast and I clicked pause. There's no resume button.
I hesitate to say "worst UI ever", but...
Podcast 69?
The pause and resume works fine for me. :/
Oh, there it is. The button was hidden by a pop-over ad for soundcloud.
I upgrade my rating from "worst" to "irritating".
18:08
It's a case of would-be-good except for advertising. It's similarly irritating on mobile without the app.
I also wish Soundcloud had an RSS option.
I like soundcloud though. It's like Bandcamp for people who don't even imagine they'll make a living off music.
I think there are people on soundcloud who aim to make their living off music. And its certainly used by some audio manufacturers to demo sounds of their gear.
I actually have never checked out bandcamp. Is it good?
Also, on the subject of UX. I hate how you get the "Your flags have been declined recently" message if even one flag is declined.
18:16
@DavidMarx Ok, could you ask that question, with relevant code, rather than what you posted. — davidism 53 secs ago
too harsh?
I have used the bandcamp app to listen to exactly one album. Whenever one song ends, I have to press the power button on the side of my phone to make it move to the next song
The bandcamp app is absolute crap. I have this problem where it will look like it's going to load a song, not load it, then not play anything until you force stop the app.
hah I'm so neanderthal I don't use my phone for anything like that. Whatsapp and nethack are about my limit :p
It's unusual because I didn't have to for the first three songs or so, and now I have to do it every time.
I can't use my computer to listen to music because whenever I press the "build" button in Visual Studio, all audio slows to 1/4th of its original speed, and if I have Pandora open, it skips to the next song regardless of where in the track it was.
18:20
I can't imagine playing Nethack on a phone, considering a good half of the keyboard corresponds to a valid move
Now I kind of want to see nethack for the Wii Balance Board.
its actually not too bad all things considered. Especially when one is stuck on a train for one hour with no access to data, and one's kindle is broken ...
have you tried the new adom steam release?
wim
wim
no python guys in the moderator election this time
Nah, Nethack is the only roguelike I've tried with any seriousness
Hey guys! I need some help with an algorithm, how do i modify a LIS algorithm so that instead of having the condition a < b in a nlist, it has a a[0] < b[0]; a[1]<b[1] in a nlist of 2-sized arrays
18:29
I spent umpty dozen months getting proficient at the game and I don't feel like learning a bunch of nontransferable things for another game ;-)
@MikhailTal, what is a LIS algorithm?
Longest increasing sequence
So, like you have a list [5,2,3,6,4]
Longest is 2,3,4
@wim vaultah was in the race, but he didn't make it into the primaries.
Question C, is that your album?
wim
wim
I don't understand why anyone would want to moderate crap here anyway
what a boring and thankless task
!!
Anyone can help, id really appreciate it
18:31
@Carl No, it was just linked like 20 minutes earlier in chat.
yeah time flies
!
I don't suppose you could create a Vector class with a and b attributes, and just run your existing LIS algorithm on that.
When/If I do have an album it will be proudly shown off to SOPython and maybe 3 other people though, I assure you.
@Kevin, how?
Im flat cold, havent developed competitively in 6 months
The only potential problem is that for integers, !(P < Q) && !(Q < P) implies P = Q, but that's not the case for Vectors
18:33
@Kevin what do you mean
hah
class Vector:
 def __init__(self, a, b):
  self.a = a; self.b = b
 def __lt__(self, other):
  #todo: return True if this a is less than the other a and if this b is less than the other b
@Kevin, thanks
I just need a proper lis algorithm now
DSM
DSM
I'm going to spend the rest of the day working on computing six (6) numbers in preparation for a meeting tomorrow.
@DSM 1, 3, 6, 7, 29, 2.5.
There you go.
18:41
4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42.
1,2,3,4,5,71234567899786453211234567
0,1,11,10,111,1110 ... Real programmers speak in binary
I prefer unary. 1, 11, 111, 1111, 11111, 111111...
Nonery?
, , , ,
DSM
DSM
Unfortunately those aren't the numbers I'm looking for. I'll know them when I see them. :-)
He wants the integer that, when you struct_pack it into a string, it reads the entire text of Moby Dick.
asc(MobyDick)
Oh, 077 111 098 121 032 068 105 099 107
Okay, im failing so hard guys
I cannot do this
Please somebody help me
I dont know where to put it
Your problem is non-trivial. Use the SO site and post some code.
18:54
They -4 my question
THey didn't like it apparently
@QuestionC
I was hoping for the chat to be more kind
That's not always a sure bet, considering most people that answer questions in here also answer questions out there
Oh well
A live approach to the problem might have clarified what i wanted
And considering that if your question doesn't follow the rules on the main site, it probably needs to be reformatted before you ask it here.
How can i best rephrase it?
The problem is it's just a hard problem. The algorithm to find the longest monotonically increasing subsequence isn't something people know off hand.
18:58
How can i rephrase the question to furfil all the sites requests
fullfil*
Anyone here familiar with AD authentication? I'm looking to use my domain joined PC credentials to authenticate against Office 365's SMTP. Any variation of "get local active directory credentials python" keeps bringing me to resources that describe how to authenticate against active directory..Not get the credentials to pass on to SMTP.
"How do i modify a [Longest Increasing Subsequence](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longest_increasing_subsequence) algorithm so that instead of having the condition a < b in a nlist, it has a a[0] < b[0]; a[1]<b[1] in a nlist of 2-sized arrays?

Here is my code..."
@Corey Does that have something to do with Python?
@MorganThrapp Yes
And post an example of what you want in terms of input/output.
19:00
Thanks, ill try!
It's okay if your existing code for the algorithm is just a stub. What is important is that expressing it in code defines its parameters with enough specificity that anyone can understand it.
Anyone in this case meaning computers and programmers I suppose.
@MorganThrapp I'm using smtplib to connect up to O365. If I use smtplib.login(user, pass) I am able to send an email successfully. I don't want users to input a username and password to authenticate to O365 every time. These users are all domain joined PCs- so I'm trying to find a way to get those local credentials to pass to smtplib.
If no one is familiar with O365/Python/AD enough to help with this, it's no problem.
@MikhailTal Please post a link to it in here when you're done. I'd be interested in seeing the SO form of the problem. Maybe we can Triage it a bit so it doesn't get closed too.
I'm guessing it's this one unless someone else posted the same Q by coincidence
Whoever it is seems to have forgotten the very important part where you say "Here is my code..." and then you show your code
-2
Q: Modifying a LIS algorithm to work on a 2d list

GlutenSnakeHow do i modify a Longest Increasing Subsequence Algorithm so that instead of having the condition a < b in a nlist, it has a a[0] < b[0]; a [ 1 ] < b[ 1 ] in a nlist of 2-sized arrays Expexted input: 4 (Number of elements) 1 2 4 5 (a[ 0 ]s) 1 6 3 4 (a[ 1 ]s) Output: 3 (Biggest...

Yep, that one
19:13
cbg all!
Yup. Also, I fail to understand creating a new account for it, unless you're question banned on the main account, which I would hope would mean you would spend more time devising the question than that.
Rule of thumb: if your question does not contain a question mark, you didn't spend enough time proofreading it
Okay, putting in all the edits
@Ffisegydd Oh wow. That looks really cool.
I still don't understand your question at all, Mikhail. According to the definition you give, you want to find elements of 2 lists, a and b where a[x] < b[x], but that's not at all what your input/output shows.
DSM
DSM
19:20
I think he transposed his display for some reason.
Pretty sure he wants the longest possible sequence of indices i,j,k... such that i<j<k and a[i] < a[j] < a[k] and b[i] < b[j] < b[k]
DSM
DSM
And also switched from a/b to a[0] and a[1]. Again, for some reason.
Yeah, that question is a mess. :/
Okay, back, what did i miss
oh god pycharm's keybindings are so terrible
19:22
@AwalGarg I dunno, I like them.
How do I convert a list like a = [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] into [(3, 4), (5, 6), (7, 8)]?
You gotta chunk that list
@QuestionC [(x, y) for x, y in zip(a[::2], a[1::2]]
DSM
DSM
@MorganThrapp: unnecessary listcomp there, it's just list(zip(a[::2], a[1::2])).
19:24
@DSM Oh, nice. Yeah, that is much better.
:mind blown:
how the hell does that even work
oh, zip is a builtin, cool
a[::2] is "every even-indexed element of a". a[1::2] is "every odd-indexed element of a". zip joins them pairwise, and list turns the resulting iterable into a list.
yeah, I really like that [x:y:step] syntax
I don't get to use it much often though :/
Yeah if I ever have to get every Nth item of a list, it usually means I picked a strange design and need to refactor
(mileage may vary based on one's particular field of work)
I was bragging about swapping two values in Python, till someone told me about Icon Programming language :D
19:31
swapping via unpacking an freshly created tuple, I presume?
Yep. x,y = y,x. In icon it's x<->y
Ooo, Icon uses Pascal assignments. I'll actually say that's one thing I kinda miss in Python.
:= for assignment, so you free up = for equality.
What's that website that's like a video for a terminal session? Where it plays back the terminal io.
It makes it a little easier to scan code.
19:34
OK, that's one of them, wasn't there another one? Can't remember the name
showterm?
I used to use showterm before, then I found asciinema which just looks a bit prettier :D
But the name is one typo away from disaster.
19:36
haha yeah..I had to read it over to make sure it wasn't what I thought it was
as-cinema. Doesn't sound too bad.
And I'm still thinking of a different site, but I'll use that if I can't remember it.
I don't get the disaster part :/
ascii enema...? I sincerely hope that's not a thing.
@Kevin Is KS in Beta?
(If so you can post an answer)
19:42
that first mathematica answer looks like emulating the chaotic motion of a double pendulum
I think I said I'd save the beta proclamation for when I get import implemented.
If you can't import/include, it's not a real language. gives JS a telling look
@Kevin ES6 got JS import/exports :D
on a fairer side, no engine implements them yet :/ the resolution isn't even specced yet :D
I'm sure that the language javascript could be is very nice. I look forward to it.
[waiting_skeleton.png]
19:47
es6 was one hell of a revision to the language. So if you "look forward" to JS, and haven't already, you should check out the additions :)
DSM
DSM
Given the popularity of transpilation (and the increased support for sourcemaps) the lack of engine implementation isn't as big of an issue as it would otherwise be.
@DSM the thing is, since the resolution isn't specced, what transpilers are doing is non-standard. So if tomorrow the spec does something different from what transpilers currently do (which is quite likely, as history suggests), stuff breaks :(
Sounds like the next generation of "looks great in chrome transpiler A.B.C, let's try it in Explorer transpiler X.Y.Z... Crap"
DSM
DSM
@AwalGarg: it's certainly suboptimal, but what a certain version of babel does today isn't going to change. It's a deeper issue than just library incompatibilities, I'll grant, but it's not a fundamentally different kind of headache.
@DSM yeah, agreed. Although since pretty much every other part of the es spec is extremely detailed and unambiguous, we aren't quite used to having compatibility issues between JS runtimes :P
as compared to... uhh... rendering contexts and browser APIs
20:03
Just noticed that my rep is 17178. Gotta downvote 7 people ;)
Or get to 171781716.
or 171781715 if you're only summing the past two, not the whole repeating sequence.
Hehe @Morgan I like palindromes :)
without worrying about how i filed it does anybody have nay ideas how i could do it? — harry marshall 2 mins ago
Lol...
I really wanted to reply "If you can't be bothered to take the time to ask a proper question, why should we be bothered to help you?".
DSM
DSM
Made the mistake of noticing that someone's attempt to implement Fisher-Yates was broken in several ways, and bringing this to the poster's attention.. should have known better.
Okay, pub/sub question. If you subscribe to a set of data on a client, do you have to "replicate" the query from the server on the client?
20:22
Define "replicate"
thats a replicant not a replicate :P
@JoranBeasley Shhh, you're ruining my pun.
Your pedantry will be lost in time, like tears in rain
cbg
20:34
So... pycharm unimportant-question: There is a "read-only" lock button on the status bar bottom right. I clicked it, then tried editing the file, and the read-only button restored and I was able to edit the file. Why is that button even there?
Yeah.
@AwalGarg it prompts me on windows (says this file is marked as read only are you sure you wish to edit it)
well it prompts me if i want to clear read only status at least
Yeah, I see the same behavior as Joran.
:/
I am on Fedora 23x64 (but that shouldn't really matter, IMO)
20:37
He who understands code with his eye has forgotten the face of his father. I understand code with my heart.
4
im using pycharm4.5
pro though
not sure if you are using community
I have got community edition 5 (ce because I am poor :P)
well even though it should be consistent accross OS ... perhaps its not
I finally convinced work to pay my subscription costs for me :P
I need to go eat later
Nods. Don't we all.
I'm using community 5.
20:42
Lol. I read the name of the guy who wrote Zen of Python as Martijn Pieters, instead of Tim Peters :D
I always read "Martijn" as "Martian" for some reason :/
I selected "presentation mode", this is so much better than normal mode for writing code :D
wim
wim
21:01
Martian Pieters .. haha
21:21
In a previous life he was the wise man of the Florida Everglades, Marsh-in Pieters.
Evenin' cabbagers.
Before that he ran a grocery store. Mart-in Pieters.
His ancestors would collect partially decayed vegetation, his great grandfather was Martijn Peat-ers.
I want him to program with colors so that he can be Martjin Piet-ers.
And his grand-uncle twice removed was a mercilessly blunt county fair pastry judge, known as Martijn Pie-tears.
21:26
Nothing can beat Margin Peters
@BhargavRao Deleted. :(
Actual lol
Hahaha, that's amazing.
That would be if he were a word processor. Margin Pieters.
I like the words he has used there...
> I mean come on if even if I work on S.O. a whole day , I cant do it.
:D
Or if he's drunk, More-Gin Pieters!
Aw, I answered a question on Math but OP self-deleted :-(
Was it an exam question? Was I bamboozled? I'll never know.
I guess that's why nobody else answered it even though it only required medium-level ability... Their honed help vampire skills detected the ruse
21:54
This might be the most interesting Code Golf I've seen in awhile Implement map with the lowest number of AST nodes

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