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

17:02
hmmm
I wanted to answer the question, but... I can't :D
I'd be too snarky
Release the Snarken...
Hello. I've heard that this room does elections for RO's. Is that true? What procedure do you follow?
-6
Q: How are the SO Python chat room owners chosen?

Fermi paradoxI know there is a process when it comes to Stack Overflow moderator elections, with votes, questions, and so on, ensuring a person that knows the rules well and has the qualifications for the job is elected. There are some requirements, like badges, and the elections last several days. For exampl...

great, thanks
Hey now. Anyone have an opinion on this proposed edit by anonymous? stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10335801 It is a much better answer, but the original answer was pretty much wrong. so, should the anon edit be approved or should the original answer stand, get down voted, and a new, different answer go up?
17:12
@gunr2171 Out of interest, where did you hear that we have elections?
@vaultah Criteria 1 should've been - Get more stars than Kevin
JonClements, I think
Ah don't listen to him, he's a nutter.
when he hops in our room, it's sort of the same thing :)
That meta post makes me shiver ugh
17:13
Doesn't know what he's talking about, thinks he's a dog...
@ShawnMehan i would reject that in a heartbeat, that changes the intent
@RNar - agreed, hence my concern. But I don't want to lose the anonymous love that tried to do the right thing.
Or maybe Chinedum Ukejianya suggested the edit anonymously
might be one of those random tests that SO throws at you, I wouldn't worry about that too much :P
well, tis regnjected and I added a comment. Cheers
17:24
Hi @Jeremy
@JeremyBanks how's freedom? :p
@gunr2171 You getting me into trouble!?
......no....
rbrb ... Going for dinner
@JonClements It does feel a little relaxing to be able to post without the weight of the diamond. :P
Clearly just speaking for myself, not on behalf of a team.
17:39
There is that I guess
Yeah, given how much we judge Jon for everything he does, I could see why you'd want to avoid that.
damn,
that question would be improved by removing all answers except 1
@Mortgan sounds ominous - is my being judged going favourably? :p
Oh I'm sure it'll be fine.
DSM
DSM
Happened again, for the first time in a long time: googled for something I needed to know how to do and found an answer of mine explaining it.
17:43
@DSM but did you try to upvote it first? :D
@DSM if it helped you, you must upvote
i feel like upvoting your own answer before realizing its your own answer is the most ironic form of narcissism i have ever seen...
narcissism?
DSM
DSM
But actually I'm going to use a competing answer. :-)
I think it just shows one's really good
and objective in one's voting criteria ;)
17:45
Ah, of course. The reason I have an int overflow in my database is because there's a phone number in the amount field. Because that makes sense. WHeeeeeeeeeeeeee.
11
code stops working: have no idea why. code starts working: have no idea why.
^me pretty much daily
Apparently this entire flat file spec is just a loose suggestion. I love working with government data.
i finally got the bronze last night woot
@RNar congrats - now to aim for silver!
Congrats!
17:55
Wooo, boss just came around and told everyone they can leave 3 hours early today.
laid off? :D
I only get 30 minutes early because I didn't take an hour for lunch :p
"you can leave early, and do not need to come to work at all tomorrow"
Hahahaha, nah. I have too much nepotism going for me here. ;) My dad was the first employee and my direct supervisor.
This just means I get to go finish my Thanksgiving shopping before everyone gets out of work, which hopefully means I can get out of there in under an hour.
once the day will come that I'd be made redundant.
17:59
Dang, three hours. At BigCorp managers are contractually(/legally?) obligated to limit early dismissal to no more than 59 minutes.
Unless the president himself descends from the clouds with a proclamation stating otherwise
Thankfully our company is a MicroCorp. There's only 13 of us.
I work from home :D
I go to the office to attend meetings only
no early dismissal for me
You can never go home, because you're there already.
the biggest reason why that improves my productivityis that
the net at the office is horrible
Yeah, ours goes down at least once a week.
18:02
the internet is vpn'd to another site located in nowhere, and only from there does it come out to the internet
the net goes down once per minute
My Internet is fine but the coworkers five feet from me often complain of disconnects.
I guess they don't have a psychic empathetic link with their hardware like I do.
and the once per minute is not even a joke.
I was downloading something from the net,
and the connection speed dropped to 0 when my colleague had a voice call via skype
if I need something fast I use my self-paid unlimited 4G...
And your colleague sits there like a statue, frozen mid-conversation, mouth open to the headset, as his conversation's packets drop.
and the worst part is that the network is managed by a company from another city town village
and of course they will never witness any of these problems.
and this company has 70 employees.
18:07
cbg
Unless you have a latency measured in days, it could always be worse
going to venture into the dark side again
@Kevin That's like how I shared porn while I was a teenager.
Though back then it were floppys
@JoranBeasley Wow, that looks so like a movie.
18:09
It's a time honored tradition :-)
Or cds
CDs? Woah there mr moneybags.
@JoranBeasley Wow. That is incredible.
@poke I've read reviews it looks and feels exactly like you are in the film. Though the gameplay is quite linear & there isn't a lot to do.
anyone have a pointer to a userscipt or other than counts votes for a user, preferably by tag? e.g., how many votes does @username have for @tag?
I'm wondering how to see counts for the python tag
18:12
@ShawnMehan use the SEDE?
off to google.....
Or look at the user's tag profile?
The tag score should be a good indicator of the sum of the votes.
isnt the tag score DIRECTLY the sum of the votes?
I bet there's already a query for it
@RNar it's the net sum - yes
18:13
@RNar (that’s what I meant)
Thanks, @Jon. But I think that @poke and @RNar are more in tune with where I was going. I want to query how many votes X has for tag T.
now reading api.stackexchange.com. thx
Not sure if troll: Longer execution time
23 factorial factorial factorial factorial takes a long time to calculate? [you_don't_say.png]
I wonder what wolfram says to that expression...
Although there may legitimately be ways to determine whether 23!!!! is greater than 5!!!!!. a > b implies a! > b! for positive integer values, so maybe you can cancel common factorial operations?
(23 < 120) therefore (23 < 5!) therefore (23!!!! < 5!!!!!)?
that should make sense
18:30
@Kevin yeah, you just cancel the !!!!!'s
ofc if that's the only optimization you do to the program, it will still hang when you do x=1 y=23!!!!. Nothing to cancel so you still have a meganumber.
Maybe you can take advantage of the fact that (a < b) implies (a < b!) for all positive integer values of b
1 < 23 therefore 1 < 23!!!!
im sure theres a lot of optimizations for this program
But what if you have x = 23 y = 5!!!!... 23 isn't less than 5 so you can't just naively apply the axiom from my previous message.
DSM
DSM
Use Stirling's approximation and interval arithmetic.
Hmm, but (23 < 120) therefore (23 < 120!!!) therefore (23 < 5!!!!).
18:34
you can do recursive calls to compare after each factorial operation and only go deeper if the smaller number has more factorial operations than the bigger number
Man, I've been spending too much time around trolls.
I read "23!!!!!" as "I REALLY WANT TO EVALUATE 23 FACTORIAL GUYS."
DSM
DSM
Avoid bridges, my parents always said.
So the algorithm should be "reduce to zero factorials on one side, then evaluate factorials on the other side one at a time until you run out or until the base exceeds the no-factorial side"
They say that, but tunnel trolls are actually worse.
That's how they get you.
wehter
Why can't I ever write that word
18:35
But, tunnel snakes rule (recommends youtube search) :)
I thought those were just regular snakes with agoraphobia.
What happens with a set in python if you change the hash returned by __hash__(). IE:
def __hash__(self):
return self.i++
Undefined behavior, probably.
++ isn't an operator in Python but I know what you mean
It would just make everything a unique object, I would assume.
@paul23 I'm curious as to why you ask?/
18:40
@JonClements Well trying to make my classes "robust"
that's another word for "broken" now is it? :p
"Because in the future I may make the mistake of putting mutable but hashable objects in a set, and I would like to know what kind of symptoms might appear so I can better diagnose the cause" would be a good reason to ask.
Have you ever played Spacestation 13?
No, but I watched a couple Let's Plays and it seemed pretty funny.
Hmm I have a resource class, which has one parameter "UID" - this is used for hashing/equality
18:41
"Robust" was basically shorthand for "awkward and unwieldy but I'd like to see you do this job."
SS13 teaches us to never fart on a bible.
But now I know I need to make sure that UID is only ever set once
SS13 is an amazing idea that can be either a phenomenal experience with the right people or the most clusterfuckedy misadventure in people-not-getting-it this side of EVE Online.
I make answer in bad question
Is there any reason not to use new btw?
18:42
Yeah I got that impression.
@CSᵠ bwoahshit
@Augusta well, he said no modules...
@MattDMo Commander Keen was shareware, therefore he is impossible to "steal" ;-)
You know, I completely understand why people say not to answer bad questions, but on the other side, I also feel like if you want to give your time to a thing that will inevitably be recalled, isn't it on you?
I feel like it's a user's prerogative to abide by or freeze out bad behaviour.
18:44
there's a nice article about sand and pearls around here
I feel like it's more productive to say something like, "Here is how you can solve the problem and also here is something else you can do."
@Kevin so that's who it is. I knew he looked familiar, but I couldn't remember from where. (And yes, I was too lazy to do a reverse image search.)
But I also feel like editorializing on a question in the answer is poor form, even if you answer it properly.
Because comments.
@Augusta definitely agreed - sometimes I'll downvote just based on that.
INTERNETTING IS TOUGH WORK, YO.
Mm. Downvoting, too.
18:47
I'll do just a little editorializing at the top of a question. Like, "I don't condone the use of eval, but... You asked so here it is"
I hate to downvote for that reason, though, primarily for the reason that I feel obliged to undownvote (if not upvote) if the question is fixed.
And I don't want to curate my votes, too.
One of the nice things about getting up to this level of rep is that you can downvote whenever you feel like it :)
I have to cover my butt in case people think I'm a bad programmer for posting bad code
@Kevin Exactly! This is what I think is the best format for answering. If someone asks how to do a dumb thing and recognizes the dumbness of it, then to answer the question is appropriate.
I was talking about this yesterday, I think, in the context of "Obvious_Module_R", if you were here.
4 weekend rbrb to all! Happy Thanksgiving to the US folks.
Later days, Morgan. :y
Isn't thanksgiving in july?
@AnttiHaapala Nice. I wrote something quite similar, although I was lazy and used math.factorial instead of having two for loops. Possibly just a little slower than yours since I can't break as soon.
18:50
11th?
It's the fourth Thursday in November.
@AnttiHaapala why ^(\d+)(!*)$
why the * after the ! ?
Looks like "any nonzero number of digits followed by any number of exclamation points"
Without the star, it wouldn't match, for example, three exclamation points
@Kevin yeah there can be pathological cases there :D
18:53
Which is undesirable since the strings we want look like "23!!!!" and "5!!!!!"
shouldn't it be (!?)
ohh
x: 10!!
y: 3628801!
3628801! is greater than 10!!
math!
Yeah mine definitely barfs if math.factorial would return a value larger than a C long
not sure your code would handle that one as gracefully ;)
18:55
And even if it didn't it would take a looong time for big bases
@Kevin incorrect.
>>> math.factorial(100)
93326215443944152681699238856266700490715968264381621468592963895217599993229915608941463976156518286253697920827223758251185210916864000000000000000000000000
22
A: Factorial algorithm more efficient than naive multiplication

András SalamonThe best algorithm that is known is to express the factorial as a product of prime powers. One can quickly determine the primes as well as the right power for each prime using a sieve approach. Computing each power can be done efficiently using repeated squaring, and then the factors are multip...

hmm...
noo, my code is a bit stupid... hmmhm
Oh, I guess it barfs if the input to factorial is larger than a C long.
hmmm a sec...
18:57
>>> math.factorial(sys.maxint+1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
OverflowError: Python int too large to convert to C long
factorial(sys.maxint) works in the sense that it doesn't crash
x: 10!!
y: 3628801
10!! is greater than 3628801
this one
It just hangs until I hit ctrl-C
that would totally blow up your algo
since it would first do 10!, then notice it is less than 3628801 (3628800 exactly)
then it would proceed to calculate 3628800!...
Yep that'd do it
which only has ~~50M digits...
maybe compare 15!! with 1307674368001
that'd have about 35T digits :P
19:05
1
Q: Get/Search reference of element in set

paul23Well for a custom object I have a custom __eq__ and __hash__ function, that is only dependent on an unique "name". Object of this class are then placed into a set. Now I would like to search/find an element in the set: class Resource: def __init__(self, name, rest) self.name = name ...

:(
Math factorial.
python fact.py
x: 15!!
y: 1307674368001
15!! is greater than 1307674368001
@paul23 haha I had the ugliest solution to that
dunno if I can find it
Well there's [item for item in my_set if item == Resource("test", object())][0] but that's O(N)
Hmm now thinking of subclass the "dict" so that I don't have to type the "name" twice :P
@paul23 my solution is to subclass the item
19:09
item is already a class, what you mean by subclassing it further?
with a custom __eq__ that would capture the original item if it matches, and store it in its attribute
You could create a subclass of Resource that overrides __eq__ so that whenever an equality check passes, it stores a reference to the other guy in its attribute. So you do x = StalkerResource("test", object()); x in mySet; print x.capturedObject
Oh man, I had the same idea as Antti :-D
I've written about this in SO I think.
19:13
Hmm, my proof of concept isn't working...
23!! is about million exabytes so 5!!!!! is a number that with that much information you can pretty much make an exact copy of the universe.
Oh, it's probably because StalkerResource.__eq__ doesn't get called unless its on the left hand side of the expression...
yeah
sorry:P not a subclass
Yeah it ought to work if you make capturedObject an attribute of Resource directly
@paul23 I think this problem doesn't come up much in practice because objects in sets ought to be immutable, and objects that compare equal ought to be interchangeable. As long as you maintain those constraints, you should never need to extract a reference from a set.
I'm not saying it's wrong per se, just unusual
@Kevin hmm I'm just creating a large "set" of objects that represent resources. And I wish to find a resource by it's name which is supposed to be unique
However also part of the resource class
19:22
I understand your reluctance to use a dictionary since it duplicates the name data
you described a dictionary
there is no "duplication" of name data
it is just a reference to the same object
the exact memory usage would be the same.
@AnttiHaapala Well yes but like kevin said, I'd do then d = {"name": resource("name", 10, etc etc) }
duplicates the name data^Wreference :-P
yeabh but lookups wold be faster
@AnttiHaapala not for memory usage, but for potential errors and more difficulty finding the error.
Instead of at one place I now have to check the names at different places
19:24
If name is immutable, I think you're pretty safe
@paul23 wrap it into a class
the name is immutable, right?
if not, then you must not use a set.
seriously, you're making a simple problem needlessly complicated
Just from the information given, I feel like using a dictionary is the lesser of two evils
@AnttiHaapala did that just now:
you want a mapping of name->resource
such a mapping is a dictionary
class KSPDict(dict):
    def __setitem__(self, res):
        super().__setitem__(res.name, res)
19:26
your set would counsider Resource('foo') and Resource('foo') the same resource anyway
@paul23 no.
Interesting. I didn't think you could make a __setitem__ method with only two arguments.
(one if you don't count self)
not __setitem__
not tested yet :P
hmm nah that was idd stupid
nvm just going the long but easy route
Quick Q: Does anyone know a python library that would make allowing users to edit tabular data in Flask easy?
Dan
Dan
@PM2Ring unfortunately I cannot control what gets put in the text files
19:29
Flask bit's prob not important, just don't want to create my own solution for allowing the display and editing of db data in html
Dan
Dan
@PM2Ring and it gets added in an unpredictable fashion
@NathanArthur "CRUD" may be a useful keyword for your research, as it often refers to boilerplate methods to view/edit data
@Kevin Thanks, I did some preliminary searching with that term, but maybe I just need to keep looking
19:43
Today's XKCD is one of the special ones.
Interactive hoverboard simulator.
20:06
I am calling a method and getting an error that it takes at most 1 argument and 2 is given
is there a way to see exactly whats being sent into that method?
DSM
DSM
Psychic debugging: did you forget self? Answer to direct question: yes. Replace the arguments with *args, **kwargs, i.e. def somemethod(*args, **kwargs): and then put print(args, kwargs) as the first line.
XKCD spoiler (a little): This XKCD environment is characteristically massive.
i didn't forget self. I was thinking that may be the issue. Its a kivy method i am using
Hi which libray do you use for make an irc bot under python 2.x, I tryed ircclient but it's a little bit bad made
DSM
DSM
@mri3: as the chatroom rules explain, we prefer using sites like dpaste for longer codes.
20:12
ok
sorry
user1804599
Does http.client.HTTPConnection automatically reconnect when the connection was closed before a request is made?
i am using 'self.remove_widget(self.hubt_sm)' which is an ObjectProperty for a screen manager in kivy
to call it
DSM
DSM
@mri3: that error message is hard to square with that method signature, but I don't know if kivy does any magic to change methods. Add in the debugging info and see what it's getting.
Add that directly into kivy's py file?
should i keep the 'self' so its def remove_widget(self, *args, **kwargs)?
DSM
DSM
You can if you like. Doesn't matter-- all it'll do is change whether self is its own thing or the first element of args.
20:22
yes keep self as the first argument ... that should always be the first argument in class instance methods ...
DSM
DSM
@JoranBeasley: it doesn't matter for the sake of debugging.
@dsm except he'll end up leaving it in and annoying someone later :P
DSM
DSM
@JoranBeasley: I think the fact that the code won't work because widget is no longer defined means it's unlikely this change will persist..
So your luxuriously-bearded head be it.
*On. Too late to edit. Joke ruined ;___;
hello, is there a simple way to automatically install the needed modules for a python script on windows ? like a packaging tool that can wrap python and the modules if not installed ?
20:29
@supertrainee yes.
Did you do some research on this though?
As it's not exactly a secret thing, it's pretty prevalent throughout the entire Python code system.
i saw py2exe
DSM
DSM
Time for a late lunch, I think Temporary rhubarb for all!
it looks like i would need py2exe
I recommend pyinstaller, but py2exe can be used.
It can only be run on similar OS to the one it was compiled on though. So, no Unix -> Windows or vice versa.
20:52
cbg
when i print args and kwargs i get ((<WeakProxy to <__main__.HubTestsScreenManager object at 0x7fa07a623db8>>,), {})
Good shout Jonathan.
even if those braces are empty is that considered an argument?
DSM
DSM
21:16
What the heck?! (re: all the deletions, I mean.)
We've been naughty, we're getting coal this year.
what happened?
Bad topic for discussion, but we should switch gears :p
DSM
DSM
@mri3: no, that's saying you have empty kwargs. If you left self in the signature, that means that it's being called like remove_widget(something), where something is that weakproxy. So I don't understand how your error message can come from that function.
 
2 hours later…
22:53
"well looking through your code, youre missing a few things..."
@RNar what about it? If you want it closed, please use the tag
naw i just found it funny haha
Nah, that's just normal bad. "How do I make a twerking kiosk?" is special bad. I lost the link though.
there was question a few days ago that was like "how do i make a query of places to store dead bodies- ah i mean places that are open, isolated ... "
that was weird
23:14
oppa
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