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

00:07
Did this guy really just post a question asking how to concatenate strings?
im surprised he knows waht concatenating is but doesnt know how to do it
According to his bio he's been a "sysadmin" since '99. I say bollocks.
what's more surprising is he's been here for 6 years and he doesn't know how to search
Maybe they're drunk.
Out of all the "plz do my homework" questions I've seen, this takes the cake.
00:12
Sometimes, you get drunk and get ellipsis and colon mixed up.
(This is me being as charitable as I've ever been.)
I believe the sysadmin though....yeah, I've had to fix code written by veteran "sysadmins"....definitely believe that
BOFH
Dan
Dan
Cbg
Simon is still writing those? I remember reading BOFH when I worked as Help Desk in the 90s
Dan
Dan
00:21
Say I thought I needed to write my own generator to iterate over a file line by line because I need to ignore some standard newline characters and don't want to load the whole file into RAM first and replace those
Where would I start?
it appealed to me for some reason
Dan
Dan
Can't think of a better way
I don't know if they're still being written - I just remember somebody showing me them way back when. A few hit a little too close to home.
make a generator that reads in one char at time until it hits a \n
Dan
Dan
That could work, but I also need to handle encoding
I use codecs to handle a lot of issues
Dan
Dan
Then I'd have to explicitly encode every line, but I suppose that could work. Trying to find an example
grrr....I have work to do too.
Must resist urge to binge read
nice. I have my evening planned now :)
or what you could do is make a generator that still uses readline but checks if the last value is in fact a \n and if not then keep on appending new lines until it is
this way you could still use codecs
00:56
oh boy. it's been a while (like a decade) since I've read BOFH...
01:49
@Dan how are you iterating over the lines ... it seems like "a\va".splitlines() does not treat it as a newline
>>> with open("out.test","wb") as f:
...    f.write("a\va\nb\rq")
...
>>> for line in open("out.test","rb"):
...    print line
...
a♂a

q
Dan
Dan
02:20
@JoranBeasley I am using codecs to encode it utf-8 and then iterating line by line. The data is represented as u"\x0b"
It is actually binary data in my dataset. Your example is encoding it as cp1252 perhaps, which is not an option for me as I have Unicode characters I need in utf-8
Dan
Dan
02:34
I appreciate your help
Just trying to figure out best solution
 
1 hour later…
03:54
its really just bytes ... until you decode it
try print line.decode("utf8")
Im not entirely sure it will work for your data ... but reasonably sure ... this would only break newlines on \r and \n
(its worth noting that when you print it , it attempts to decode it with whatever your terminal uses since i use windows it is indeed cp1252)
05:00
passed 10k questions
@davidism does that mean we throw a party of some sort?
@davidism I'll drink to that.
(Little... "flask" humour there... for you... <_< )
...
Well, I'll certainly drink. I think when I started answering it was around 6k.
05:16
@davidism's answers: Create more questions than they resolve. ;)
05:30
Good morning
@vaultah morning....
@VigneshKalai yeah... saw that :)
Now I think it has a duplicate but not sure ?
Cbg Vignesh, vaultah.
05:55
@Augusta cbg :)
06:34
REOPLS stackoverflow.com/questions/33909079/… I don't think it is unclear now :)
cbg :)
cbg
what's the pythonic way to make/concat a string?
Umm str1 + str2?
with + doesn't seem pythonic
% gets deprecated
.format() ?
+ isn't Pythonic? But you can concat everything with +, pretty much.
06:46
@CS what's wrong with +? :p
@JonClements doesn't look nice, that's all
>>> str1, str2 = 'some', 'thing'
>>> f'{str1}{str2}'
'something'
and also need everythiong converted to str
wow, that's looks nice
And % is deprecated?
I did not know this.
06:47
Damnit.
Well that spoils my week. =_=;
Only for something like 7/8 years :)
Oh, I meant "Yes, it does look nice" :P
def concat(*args):
    return "".join(args)
print concat("this","is","nice")
Y not this :P
That would return "thisisnice"
You probably want " ".join(..)
With the space.
;)
@CSᵠ actually, this feature is from Python 3.6
06:49
Concatenation does not give space right ? or was that a pun
is the f'..' notation from Python3?
@vaultah yeah, that makes me feel beans
Umm... so f'{s1}{s2}' is something like '{s1}{s2}'.format(**locals()) I guess
Concatenation don't put anything in that you aren't explicit about, I think.
'bla {} bar {} baz'.format(42, 'foo')
06:51
Bit PHP esque for my liking
@JonClements Is it really kosher to use locals() that way?
@Augusta well - don't see why not - but if you're ending up doing that - it's probably not what you want to be doing :)
Ha ha, true enough.
I mean, my attitude is that tools exist to be used and that if it works and works efficiently, it's fair game. If it's astonishing, comment it.
BUT!
I don't have coworkers, so my life is my own to dispose of as I see fit.
I totally understand that when you work with other people, you have to be courteous to them.
@Augusta Really? That's a shame - doesn't sound like much fun :p
It's a nightmare.
Software development, like so many other professions, would be much more satisfying if it weren't for customers.
06:56
@Augusta same condition here :)
@JonClements looks like they don't use locals() python.org/dev/peps/pep-0498
"f-strings" sounds cool though :)
I really like f-strings, but I'm playing with 2.7.10.
C'est la vie. u_u
07:46
Hi, anybody that help me really fast with a kivy problem? I have experience in python just trying to wrap my head around some kivy issues.
@GenGen just ask. If someone can help then they will do.
Thanks, I wasnt sure of the procedure. I will dump short segment of code now to hopefully get an answer.
@GenGen you can find the room rules here sopython.com/chatroom. If your code is longer than a dozen lines then please instead post a dpaste.com link.
I can't promise that anyone will be able to help, it's still relatively early for the majority of our users.
Thanks.
I have a kivy issue with the labels not updating. I have looked at the documentation and working with it still doesnt make sense. I am trying to change the text when I swap screen with screen manager. I have pasted the code here dpaste.com/32PQW5H. I have removed a lot of unnecessary code to highlight the problem area. Hoping somebody can help.
I should perhaps mention that the code that refers to id_ref and heading are lists. Ignore those. In order to simplify it further I want the text "label changed" to change the label in the ScreenTwo class on the label L1.
08:24
hello, i want to learn how to make a keylogger in python, to capture keyboards events on linux mac and windows os. I would like to know how it works, and where can i find documentations on this
@supertrainee have you watched this video? youtube.com/watch?v=8BiOPBsXh0g
08:41
Cabbage everyone.
Anyone know if there is any documentation for forked pypy packages? (ie: I forked a module on github that is accessible on pip, and I want to be able to get my forked version through pip) if this is "legal" of course.
You should be able to do a direct install from your forked gh
@InbarRose you should be able to give a url to pip.
There's no way to have pip install foo if you've forked foo though because pip install <name> relies on the PyPI repository (which will still be pointing at the author's original)
But pip install git+https://github.com/InbarRose/foo.git should work*
[* sopython does not guarantee that this will work. Furthermore if it does not work and blows up your computer, sopython is not responsible]
@Ffisegydd (... but if it does work - sopython expects copious payment immediately)
08:57
"By accepting my advice you irrevocably surrender all human rights for yourself and your progeny for all eternity."
>_< AAAA AAAAA IF I DON'T READ THE EULA AND JUST CLICK "ACCEPT" IT'S NON-BINDING AAAAAAA
I didn't read anything after "should work". So we are all good. :)
09:22
@GenGen I think you should perhaps ask that on the main site to get more coverage.
09:33
Cabbage!
Amazon Cyber Monday deals are so weird.
They have a shelf for 5 pairs of glasses. What normal person needs a shelf for glasses?
@VigneshKalai I feel bad asking questions that seem like it needs somebody to point out an obvious 1 line flaw. Like "you forgot the parenthesis silly." If I dont get a reply within the hour though I will seek further help in the questions section.
09:51
@GenGen sounds reasonable :)
I don't see a question there...
1 more cv
Might be related to some security course, like on Coursera?
10:33
Astrologers proclaim the week of keyloggers.
11:00
Is there a way to pack with mixed endianness? stackoverflow.com/q/33914467/770830
That moment when you have a test that keeps failing and you don’t know why… until you finally realize that you are calling the wrong method in your test…
@poke that'll teach you to test your tests :)
yo dawg we heard that you like tests...
just small help required.... I have an array like this
[['C', [0.99813803, -0.00263872, -0.00464602]], ['H', [2.0944175, -0.00242373, 0.00417336]], ['H', [0.63238996, 1.03082951, 0.00417296]], ['H', [0.62561232, -0.52974905, 0.88151021]], ['H', [0.64010219, -0.50924801, -0.90858051]]]
i want to write it in text file
when i use numpy.savetxt its saving like an array
is it possible to save only the values
C 0.99813803 -0.00263872 -0.00464602
H .....
and so on
11:15
> Their is probably a better way for swapping
took me a while to understand what it means...
11:27
@poke got a moment to pick your brains on git?
Sure
Not sure if I'm thinking about this right... I have a file in the latest pull... I want to overwrite it with the same named file from the previous commit
git checkout HEAD~1 -- path/to/file after pulling
Well, that was easy. I expected something more “picky”
11:34
So was I... I was looking for something like that but thought - "nah... can't be that simple!"
@TigerhawkT3 can you explain your answer mate :) can't understand it
Yay, another keylogger question stackoverflow.com/questions/33915730/…
Meh it's a dupe
11:54
I would have thought "# encoding:" was a FAQ but the sopython wiki doesn't have it ...?
stackoverflow.com/questions/33914593/python-utf-8-regex/… should perhaps be marked as a duplicate
@poke what does it show?
@VigneshKalai What answer?
I don't know what else to explain there.
@tripleee When the moderators on the site were moderators. (i.e. when elected, when stepped down, and when turned to the dark side (hired by SO))
@TigerhawkT3 this bit value-int(value) < 0.3 what it does it is confusing
12:07
@VigneshKalai Select all values, which when subtracted with the rounded-down version has a difference of less 0.3. So all decimal numbers X.Y are used where the Y part is less than 3
(albeit the choice of 0.3 seems a bit arbitrary)
@poke I see, thanks for explaining
I didn't want to compare to exactly 0.5.
You could have used == 0 :P
but why 0.3?
Oh I don't know why but I am doing something wrong value-int(5.2) gives 120.0 in my machine
12:10
I mistrust 0.0 just as much as I mistrust 0.3.
@VigneshKalai Is your value 125? :P
how about abs(value - 0.50+int(value)) < 0.0000001?
but depending on OP’s requirement, maybe they were looking for filtering for actual ints anyway
Given a choice between reading their mind and never comparing equality in float-point numbers, I chose the latter.
@poke cached variable did it thanks. Sorry all.
12:13
:)
Looks like all(num==float(num) for num in range(1000000)) is True. I'll update the answer.
@TigerhawkT3 so you would also be removing value above .3 but he only wants to remove .5
@VigneshKalai maybe
We don’t know for sure what OP wants :P
His sample only had .0 and .5. I'm changing it to v==int(v) anyway.
cabbage
12:16
cabbage
Sleep time. Rhubarb.
@TigerhawkT3 Good call. I like the straight-forward list comp, but I guess I can cope with filter(lambda i:i == int(i), a)
OP said he wanted to remove data which had . followed by a 5 so the data to remove can be also so 435.5505 but we can't be sure since the OP saw an answer doing his job and ran away
OP is a Hit and Run case
@VigneshKalai any particular reason you use code markup for random words?
Yeah I just highlight random words :P no particular reason behind it .
12:28
@VigneshKalai It would be nice if the OP clarified the question, but hopefully they'll be back: they have a good track record for giving accepts.
Tabs are not refreshing automatically :O
hm?
@PM2Ring nice investigation :)
12:45
@poke SO questions are supposed to be getting the data pushed from the server, right? I think I am getting the data but UI rollsback to the initial state when I opened SO
Yeah, I think SO uses websockets for live updates
Hmmm, I think they are doing some testing I guess.
It works for me though :P
(I don’t think SO has the necessity to test things on production)
@VigneshKalai :) But even if they don't re-visit the question, that's not really a big deal. Sure, we want to help the OP, but if their under-specified question triggers a range of answers that may be helpful to future readers, that's good too.
Never forget that the answers on SO are ultimately more important than the questions. And even if some of those answers to a given question are not very good and gather negative comments &/or downvotes, they can still be helpful: future readers can use them as examples of what not to do.
13:03
morning
@Dan That sounds messy. Why do you have random binary data in your so-called text file? It'd be bad enough if the text was 7-bit ASCII, but having chunks of binary data in a UTF-8 encoded file sounds like a recipe for disaster, IMHO. Can you locate this binary stuff by its position in the file, or by surrounding marker sequences?
>>> ast.literal_eval("36#foo")
36
TIL: literal_eval accepts and strips out comments
>>> ast.literal_eval("#foo\n36")
36
TIL: literal_eval supports multi-line input.
:-O
Incidentally, somehow I doubt I'm going to get an accept for this answer wherein I say "nope there's no builtin that does that"
Not sure what OP's comment "nobody will use it anymore" means. What is "it"? his program? My answer? Python? echo?
@JoranBeasley Um. You mean "encodes it with whatever your terminal uses". Assuming that line contains valid UTF-8 bytes, then print line.decode("utf8") first decodes those bytes to a Unicode string object, but then the print statement has to convert that back to a byte string, and it does that using the encoding (it believes) your terminal uses.
13:09
@Kevin I don’t understand that comment on so many levels.
"Because I couldn't write my program in one line, no one will use it." "Because your answer only satisfies 66.6% of my requirements, I will not use it". "Because Python has a meager standard library, no one will use it". "Because echo has syntax incompatible with Python, I will stop using it"
@PM2Ring What the…
Base 36 has a venerable history.
@Kevin The requirements weren’t even clear. I would have never expected that 36#foo would be base 36…
Wow, that eval answer…
You can figure out the desired output from his existing code... Not that I bothered to do that when I wrote my answer :-P
13:14
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base36#Uses_in_practice FWIW, back in FidoNet days I wrote some stuff in C that handled base 36 conversions for something involved with the Remote Imaging Protocol, but I can't remember the details. :)
I'm not sure when I would ever use base 36. If you want dense storage, use base 256. If you want human-readable glyphs, use json.
Maybe when you need to embed data in another format that has restrictions on what characters may be used? Like CSV.
ValueError: int() base must be >= 2 and <= 36
Boo
@Kevin Sure, base 36 isn't very dense, but it's denser than base 10, and more robust than base 64, being case-insensitive and it doesn't use any punctuation chars so it's totally safe to use in filenames and URLs. Base 256 isn't always an option: there are still channels that can only handle 7 bit data, the prime example being email, which is why binary data attached to emails gets MIME encoded to base 64.
FWIW, I quite like base 85, since 85**5 (= 4437053125) is only a little higher than 2**32 (= 4294967296), so you can encode 4 bytes as 5 printable chars.
Isn’t base 256 called binary? >_<
Thanksgiving Eve cbg :p
13:28
For the purposes of this conversation, I'd consider binary to be one bit per character.
wat
If you can do int(s, 2), then s is binary encoded.
>_>
This is in line with the other bases, which all follow the pattern "if you can do int(s, NUM), then s is base-NUM encoded"
Okay, then I make a difference between binary, and binary encoded.
13:32
A lot of people here won't have Thanksgiving, eh?
Ok. I'm still operating in the bubble of "for the purposes of this conversation", so all the terminology will vanish when this conversation ends anyway
Well, for the purpose of this conversation, I’d consider your opinion stupid.
:-D
@corvid that's what I was thinking lol
"Do they have the fourth of July in other countries?"
13:34
@Kevin Only fourth of May.
why didn't other countries join us when we had food with Massassoit? Then they could have Thanksgiving too
Because America was England's dumping ground for their no-fun puritans.
Kind of like a nega-Australia.
England, you can't solve all your problems by putting them in a boat!
13:57
@Kevin I am not wearing a tie.
XD
@BhargavRao pang this and @davidism
also, I did not have relations with that woman.
Oh I forgot about that lol
I never told anybody to lie, not a single time; never. These allegations are false. And I need to go back to work for these idiots bosses. Thank you.
Morning cabbage.
14:05
@MattDMo Speaking of BOFH... import telnetlib; print(telnetlib.Telnet('bofh.jeffballard.us', 666).read_all())
Got a query that has to use a cartesian product and had to increase the number of elements from 1000 to 70,000. Welp. Looks like it's time to go home and see if it's finished by tomorrow.
@Ffisegydd does it really have to?
Suddenly I can see life through @Jon's eyes, I miss colour ;___;
@Jon it does really have to yes.
Colour's over-rated
gray is a color.
14:11
Gray may be a color, but is grey a colour? That's the real question.
Tkinter.Canvas(root, background="grey").pack() executes correctly, which is my criteria for judging colo(u?)rness.
A part of me dies inside whenever I have to do plt.plot(x, y, linecolor=...)
Add a preprocessing step to your build that removes all instances of "u" from your source
14:15
@AnttiHaapala Lol, I thought you were serious till I googled your words! The first link made me laugh :D
I actually try to use BrE spelling consistently in my code, but fail miserably.
the hardest part is when one subclasses a class that would have get_color() and then adds get_secondary_colour()
I was going to say "sorry you don't like American programming languages B-)" but that doesn't really work since Python is Dutch if you go by geographic position of first implementation
You can "adopt" a programming language by having your countrymen answer the majority of questions on Stack Overflow, of course this doesn't help you as Martijn has destroyed 'Murica in too :P
I guess "Sorry Americans dominate the Internet to the point where every language developer felt the need to cater specifically to them." is closer to reality. But I don't feel good putting the smug sunglasses emote at the end of that.
14:27
I crashed my database ;_;
You shouldv'e used tristan's paintDB
I'm sorry to hear you have problems. It's a real problem to have problems.
I've got Error: Int Overflow problems and my DB is causing all of them.
You've come to the right place!
Not really as it has nothing to do with Python and so is off-topic for this room.
14:38
Python has long ints, so there's no limit to the number of problems it can cause you :-)
I un-crashed my DB anyway.
Turns out that O(n**3) is worse than O(n**2) and so should be avoided.
Oh, I just meant SO in general
But O(n**3) makes it look like you're doing more, thus your colleagues think wiser of you
I don't think I've ever had something extremely inefficient like O(n!)...I wonder how one does that.
You've never heard of a 1 rep user getting a bad reception?
@Programmer You do a really bad sorting algorithm. Generate all permutations of the set and then test each one to see if it's in order.
14:53
Whoops he deleted his comment. It said something like "I can't believe you would all be so negative about helping a newbie out"
> It's easy to fix a program, and hard to fix a person - Kevin Kevinson
My new inspirational quote
Yeah I'm considering adding that to my list of pre-prepared messages.
I'd say I see 2-3 "explain each line to me" questions a week... Not sure if it's worth it
which linux distro should I use?
Kali Linux silence in the background
Gentoo or Arch Linux. dead silence in the background
14:58
@corvid I've been using Ubuntu and Mint recently. I like both of them.
I was going to make up an alliterative adjective-animal combination as a spoof of Ubuntu's version system, but I discovered they're already up to W so I don't have a lot of letters to choose from
Or better still Minix ... :D
@corvid compile and install the linux kernel, and manually pull sources of different packages and install and track all of them yourself
@Kevin Xenial Xerus
brb creating own linux distro
15:00
I don't think you'll be "right back", in that case
okay back
@corvid Call your first version as Corvid Crow ... Just like the Ubuntu guys
Corvid Crow, version Magpie.Jackdaw
Corpulent Corvid. Cordial Corvid. Coronated Corvid.
The next version should start from D.
15:08
I feel like 90% of javascript is just setting things up in a way that you can actually do things
Errr How? I am getting 499,995
Same with me. How odd.
I'm seeing 500,001
<shia labeouf magic gif>
15:13
You must be a StackOverflow Gold© member to see the six special questions
@Kevin He is using the Paid version :O
Does anyone know a good multidupe for this?
:/
Okay, 500,005 questions tagged [python]. It's even better than 500000!
15:32
500000000 questions or 500000000 good questions?
In an ideal world, the sopython canon would match the list of good questions on SO.
And every other Python question was just a duplicate of some canon question.
At one point I meant to use the graph of dupes that @Ffisegydd generated to populate the canon, but it's still 6-8 weeks out. :-/
You get nothing from modifying inside. You save one, two line(s) of code? Does not seem to worth it, looking at the downside, that you can mess up the whole thing. — Gábor Erdős 33 secs ago
Sigh
15:47
Abandon post. If you spend five messages telling him there's no downside and he continues to say "looking at the downside...", you aren't going to convince him.
Yeah, I think I'll drop it
Heh, NotPad.
Argh
5 hours ago, by vaultah
Too many "keylogger" questions recently
Where do those come from?
15:55
@vaultah The answer just got worse… lol.
😞
DSM
DSM
Midweek cabbage for all.
cbg Morgan, cabbage DSM
cbg @DSM - what time do you call this, hey? :p
DSM
DSM
16:04
@JonClements: erm.. elevenish? Hey, did you sort out your arithmetic issues? You asked if you could ask (heh) and then vanished..
err yeah - thanks :p
Oooo, just found out about the <kbd> tag. Time to go make all of my questions use keyboard keys!
Invent new keys for more fun!
<kbd>Any key</kbd>
hey hey! How you all doing today!?
I’m bored.
16:07
Yeah, me too. :/
So that's what they've meant by Any Key for all these years...
bored...hmmm....I think I've posted this before, but if you want to combine the fun of programming and gaming, give screeps a try! Warning, it's coding in js.
I should be getting work done, but everything I need to do relies on me getting information from my father, but he's out today. So I'm trying to work on one of my sub-projects at work, but that also requires information from him.
So I'm sitting here trying to read terrible legacy code in hopes that I can puzzle some of it out.
is this still legacy PHP code?
Nope, legacy Delphi 7. We have lots of terrible legacy code.
I'm working on rewriting a bunch of our in house tools in Python.
16:18
Do virtual machines have to be mounted on a specific hard drive? Can they expand to two harddrives?
Just stick them in the cloud, then you don't need hard drives.
@PM2Ring awesome. A little text mangling, and I can have an excuse script ready to run at the push of a button :)
any Kivy guys/gals present today?
There is no OS but iOS, and Steve Jobs is its maker.
/*ducks*
16:38
@mri3 Just ask. If someone can help, they will do.
@Programmer but that is how you can sort in linear time, if you can command parallel universe and destroy it in O(n). In each universe you create a random permutation of the array in O(n) time, then check if it is in the order in O(n) time; and if it fails, destroy the universe in <= O(n)
I guess I meant algorithms where there were no better solutions than O(n!). That is interesting though
@PM2Ring meh yeah :P I always get encode/decode mixed up :P
16:53
Hopefully it's better now. Sorry. — Jared 3 mins ago
Nice and responsive OP ^.^
There's no such thing as a good OP, just a bad OP that hasn't shown their true colours yet.
whoa, that's a T. Rex
00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

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