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Air
Air
20:03
I'm not sure there is only one meaningful scalar value to compute, there
true that
Air
Air
scipy.spatial.distance.mahalanobis seems close (but not in numpy)
do you know maybe the function by which I can compute probability of some vector under the multivariate pdf with some defined epsilon (small value)?
Air
Air
I do not. But there are people with far more knowledge of numpy around than myself.
I am returned.
20:17
@Ffisegydd: who would dare return you?
FizzyGirl. She found out about my secret lover.
DSM
DSM
d3? JS? There are so many lately..
I knew I couldn't keep Tristan a secret for much longer.
to those whom it applies, what's everyone been playing lately? i bought a copy of elite dangerous and have been having tons of fun with it. i also got project cars although i'm not huge on cars, i just love realism
I've been playing Trimps. Just got fifty bones last night and bought the population increasing imp. Not sure how useful it will be considering I can only clear about 38 levels with my current perk layout, but I expect it will pay off in the long run.
If I get buyer's remorse, that's all right. I'll have enough bones for something different sometime mid-February.
20:27
Lol, big fan of progression games, or simply just bored with nothing to do until mid-February?
Air
Air
I picked up Realm of the Mad God as a fluff game/time waster, but I find I have little time to waste
Watching numbers go up seems to appeal to the autismal parts of my brain.
@Kevin I just started playing that a couple days ago.
That and SwarmSim.
@spacecrab Hearthstone and Chess.
Rbrb, BR.
20:29
my wife plays a reasonable amount of hearthstone @MorganThrapp
i've played it a bit, but don't really get sucked into it
Air
Air
When I ran out of new player credit on MTGO I tried Hearthstone. I can see why people like it, I guess, it's just... it's like the checkers to Magic's chess.
@Air I had a fairly serious addiction to ROTMG back in college.
Air
Air
Did we abandon rec.sopython.social, by the way?
20:30
@Air It's the free cheaper stupidly expensive version of MTG.
Air
Air
@Kevin Huh. I had you pegged as older than this statement suggests.
I'm 27 and three quarters now, so I guess this was... Five years ago?
Air
Air
@MorganThrapp No, M:tG is the stupidly expensive version of M:tG. Hearthstone lets you invest time as a substitute for money, at least, if that's what you've got to spend.
@Air See, I've managed to spend mumble mumble dollars on Hearthstone in the 2 years I've been playing.
Still less than I would've spent on M:tG, but still quite a chunk of change fro a "free" game.
Towards the end of my Mad God frenzy, I wrote some automation scripts that would consume all of the MP potions in my inventory and automatically cast Invisibility every 19 seconds. This let me ninja-steal some nice loot that dropped in the lvl 20 valleys full of boss monsters.
Normally when you kill a boss and a potion drops, there are nine other bosses on screen that will obliterate you if you try to rush in. But when you have 1.8 full minutes of incorporeality, it's a lot easier to roll on in while they focus their fire on your more solid competitors.
Air
Air
@Kevin Did soulbound drops not exist back then?
I don't believe it's possible to steal pots, currently
I'm guessing those are drops that can only be obtained by the person that made the finishing blow? No, there was no such thing during my play time.
@Air Okay, yeah, I've definitely spent less than one deck worth.
Probably about $250.
Air
Air
@Kevin You have to deal damage in excess of a certain threshold to have a chance of it dropping items in a bag visible only to you. Any number of players passing the threshold may receive drops.
20:37
Unfortunately my script only had a 95% success rate. For some reason it would hiccup and fail to cast invisibility when the previous cast had almost run out, which inevitably led to my death.
dang, is RoTMG still running?
hi all
I'd get 4-5 pots easy, then oops! back to level 1 with no items.
Air
Air
Also, everyone has pets now.
I was very into that for a while, then it got too repetitive
About this answer:
117
A: Why does Python allow function calls with wrong number of arguments?

Martijn PietersPython cannot know up-front what object you'll end up calling, because being dynamic, you can swap out the function object. At any time. And each of these objects can have a different number of arguments. Here is an extreme example: import random def foo(): pass def bar(arg1): pass def baz(arg...

should not be mentionned that some static tools (but I don't know which one) can do the check ?
for simplest code
20:38
@Air Well as a rogue my DPS was pretty substantial, so I don't think that would have been a problem.
Air
Air
@XavierCombelle What static tool will be able to determine the outcome of random.choice prior to runtime?
I wasn't swooping in on dead bosses that I hadn't contributed to, or anything.
Air
Air
@Kevin so it was basically a Diablo 2 state of affairs, then. I always found that depressing.
@Kevin I hit a few more bumps, but I got past all but this... I am later in my program (where I was mentioning doing some diff-work) attempting to do splitlines against both of the lists individually, but it appears I cannot do it against the dict object(s). must i convert these to a string? i'll show the entire (small) block
@Air I don't speak about the example given by Martijn but about simpler version that until some extend can be checked statically
20:40
	props0 = properties_lists[0]
	props1 = properties_lists[1]
	props0_lines = props0.splitlines(1)
	props1_lines = props1.splitlines(1)
	d = difflib.HtmlDiff()
	diff = d.make_file(props0_lines, props1_lines)
Yeah, if props0 is a dictionary, you won't be able to call splitlines on it. Only strings have that method.
Air
Air
@XavierCombelle Such as?
You mean very basic argument checking?
DSM
DSM
Try0 to1 avoid2 numerical3 suffixes4.
def bar(foo):print(foo)
bar(foo1,foo2)
previously i was simply working with the content of the requests i was directly doing, so it was as simple as something like this
r3 = requests.get('https://someurl.com/thing?properties')
r4 = requests.get('https://someurl.com/thing?properties')
if r3.status_code == 200 and r4.status_code == 200:
props3 = r3.content.decode('utf-8')
props4 = r4.content.decode('utf-8')
props3_lines = props3.splitlines(1)
props4_lines = props4.splitlines(1)
d = difflib.HtmlDiff()
diff = d.make_file(props3_lines, props4_lines)
20:42
@spacecrab use list instead of numbers in your variable names
Suppose you could call splitlines on a dict. What would the output look like? Consider d = {"a\nb": "y\nz"}. Does d.splitlines return {("a", "b"): "y\nz"}? Or {"a\nb": ("y",z")}? Or some combination of the two? Or something completely different? There's no intuitive answer.
@Air yes I mean basic argument checking
@DSM and @XavierCombelle I am working on not using numbers in my variable names (hence why Kevin has been helping me so much, I suck at lists/dicts/semi-intemediate python concepts)
Air
Air
@XavierCombelle The fact that it's possible to perform static analysis on some Python code doesn't seem to me to be germane to the question, honestly.
Thanks to everyone who is both helping me and showing me the error of my ways :P
Air
Air
20:45
But, if you want to comment on Martijn's answer or on the question, by all means
@Kevin to conclude, being that the methods I was using to pass strings to difflib.HtmlDiff() are no longer relevant, what would be the proper way to pass the data from a dict through it?
It's somewhat frustrating as a beginner, because I feel like I'm fanning out so far so quickly, but I'm so close to just being done with it so I may properly learn
That question is very hard to answer for someone like me who doesn't understand the underlying goals & logic of the script as a whole. There's a million ways to get a list of strings out of a dict, but only 0.1% of those ways will give you a sensible program output.
cabbage @MartijnPieters
I see - sorry to be vague: I promise it's unintentional! effectively there is not much context outside of what we've discussed thus far, i get some json data (dict) from a web server, store it in the list as you had shown me, and now want to diff the data
20:52
cbg
if I'm being too needy or just simply need to go through more training/learning don't be afraid to tell me to get lost xD
Meta question: this SO question should actually be on Code Review. It's working, tested, complete code that he wants to have critiqued. Should I use a custom flag for that? I had previously just left a comment so OP would know the proper place to post it after it's 'd, but another user (snidely) remarked that it should be flagged instead
@spacecrab diffing dict is usually a bad idea as the order of key are not garanted
I'm going to make an educated guess based on what code I've seen. In your earlier code snippet, you populate my_list by calling request.get and then calling json.loads. But in your most recent code snippet, you only call requests.get and not json.loads. So you'd really prefer my_list to contain the un-jsonified strings rather than the jsonified dicts.
So rather than doing my_list.append(json.loads(resp.text)), you would do my_list.append(resp).
cabbage @MartijnPieters. As a mod yourself: thoughts on the above?
20:54
Then later, you can do props0 = my_list[0].content.decode("utf-8") and basically copy the rest of your diffing code from there.
Uh, I think. I only use difflib and requests once in a blue moon.
@Kevin I think I may have mixed you up a bit. My most recent code snippet was simply to display how I had done it previously, in comparison to what I am attempting to do now with the for-loops and dict stuff
Air
Air
@AdamSmith He's not trying to be snide; he's a mod on CR.
@Air Ooh good to know
Air
Air
Speaking as a mod, it's annoying when users post comments like that in general because frequently either A) the content is crap that we don't want on our site or B) the content doesn't fit our scope and we don't want it on our site
@AdamSmith If you did your research and you are sure it is on-topic on CR and it is of good enough quality, a custom flag asking it to be migrated is fine.
20:57
I'm half-tempted to suggest running pprint over the dictionaries and splitlining them... It's a bit hacky though.
Air
Air
The reason to use a custom flag is that the moderator who handles the flag knows to consult the suggested site's help center, search meta, or ping a mod there to ask if it's actually worth sending over
@AdamSmith: there are a lot of users that don't understand the meaning of either 'quality question' or 'on-topic on the target site'.
@Air I can see that. Specifically in this case I thought it was a well-formed question for CR, but I admit it's not as instantly obvious to me when something is a Bad Question on CR as it is on SO
And I would only do it if pprint sorts keys, which I don't know if it does.
Air
Air
Or, as @Martijn implies, check if you (the flagger) have a lot of rep on the target site and can be trusted to know what fits there
20:58
on-topic is obvious on CR. quality is less-so.
Thanks! :)
The mantra is: don't migrate crap.
And we only migrate if the post is strictly off-topic for SO already.
this stands directly opposed to crap rolls downhill
:)
None of this voting to close this as off-topic because it is a better fit on [other site] crap.
on a similar note: what does everyone think of this
Air
Air
It's tricky because when a user hasn't picked the right site to begin with, sometimes they are the type of user who doesn't read for comprehension, and even if you say right out, "This may be on topic at SiteName.SE, but only if you improve X, Y, and Z, otherwise it'll still be broad/subjective/etc." they'll just copy-and-paste to the other site without thinking about it.
21:00
@AdamSmith I'm standing here with a souped-up blower keeping crap from overflowing whatever is downhill from me.
Air
Air
2
A: Which software can create real mechanical simulation?

joojaaYou should be asking mechanical engineering questions on engineering.se. Engineering.SE wont accept external resource questions so in this case you should ask software recommendations. Depends on how accurate your simulation has to be, what you need to simulate and what the audience of your resul...

@inspectorG4dget IDE questions are OK by me.
@MartijnPieters That's why you've got the diamond-encrusted ninja suit, and I'm asking a meta question in chat :)
Air
Air
@AdamSmith ^ Example: The user who posted this question read that answer and decided to just copy their question to Engineering SE.
And that was after we talked with joojaa in chat and I asked him nicely to edit his answer not to point to us... which he did. But as we can see, People Don't Read.
So moral of the story: custom close vote recommending migration is almost always a bad idea since it encourages OP to re-post crap question. If the question isn't crap to begin with, flag a moderator. If it is, close as off-topic
21:04
@AdamSmith: in this case, there was already a flag on that post from a CR moderator greenlighting migration.
So that one was easy :-P
@Kevin that's what I thought. Apparently some other user has a different opinion
Thanks @MartijnPieters :)
@AdamSmith check. Too broad if it is asking for a wholesale improve this for me make-over.
Now let me go review it....
Now, whether it's a good IDE question, I dunno... But it's on topic at least.
Air
Air
21:06
@AdamSmith Just one of those opaque SE policies that almost everybody has to learn the hard way. And that probably only applies to some subset of the network, since sites get to make their own policies. :)
Ugh... that feeling when you realize that you misunderstood the task you've been working on for a week, and wasted most of the week as a consequence
60
Q: A guide to Code Review for Stack Overflow users

durron597You're on Stack Overflow and you've found a question that seems to be about improving code. You are trying to be helpful, and you put a comment in the question: You should try asking on CodeReview.SE instead. —YourName 2 minutes ago … and suddenly, out of nowhere CodeReview.SE users swoop i...

Air
Air
If I were an X-Man I would be like Gambit except instead of making playing cards explode I would make deadlines explode
3
@MartijnPieters Huh, I get a 403 on that.
@MorganThrapp ? What proxy are you behind? Are you trying to access it over https perhaps?
Data point: I don't get a 403 on that.
21:15
@Kevin seconded
No 403 for me. Morgan must have messed up again
Ok, let's graph.
yes  X            X            X
no                                                   X
       me       adam       fizzy        morgan
Close enough. Data analysis friends, please find the trend line.
Do some least squares to it or something.
Stupid HTTPSEverywhere. :/
Morgan's X is not above Morgan's name, Kevin.
21:17
That's ok, the imprecision of the x coordinate will even out due to the law of large numbers.
Four is a large number, right...?
SCIENCE.
Excellent work @Ffisegydd. Your research grant check is in the mail.
Everything was fine, until the science nation attacked.
Cue Science News Cycle. "What you don't know about Morgan Thrapp's https settings may be dangerous for your children!"
Incidentally, one million demerits for phdcomics.com for making it impossible to find the original source of that image. Get your SEO in order, guys.
21:24
why is pycharm telling me that it can't find vsvarsall.bat? I just want a numpy, I don't want bats
@inspectorG4dget Pfft. AI? I bet you've never even had to fight one of your own creations after it tried to murder you and take your skin. I bet you do that "AI" stuff that's basically "I will spend 4 years trying to make a planner that can move a box from A to B"
then again, if I find that .bat, does that make me Batman?
@inspectorG4dget Well, numpys eat bats, so you need bate to attract them to your computer.
@inspectorG4dget gah, is pycharm really trying to compile numpy for you?
@MorganThrapp: damnit! where can I find these .bats? do you happen to know a .batman?
21:27
IIRC vsvarsall.bat is the file installed by Visual Studio that is inexplicably required by a wide variety of interesting software that should have the sense to bundle its own dependencies without making the end user do it. </grump>
Sounds about right, yes.
578
Q: error: Unable to find vcvarsall.bat

okadaI tried to install the Python package dulwich: pip install dulwich But I get a cryptic error message: error: Unable to find vcvarsall.bat The same happens if I try installing the package manually: > python setup.py install running build_ext building 'dulwich._objects' extension error: Unab...

Consider the wonders of Gohlke.
well, I'm trying to install one of several packages to visualize some stuff. I couldn't find pygame, so then I figured possibly matplotlib or numpy. Both are crapping out on me
If all else fails, Tkinter.canvas lets you draw rectangles.
21:29
If you draw enough rectangles and rotate them slightly, you can make their corners look like a circle.
Just close your eyes and you can visualize whatever you want.
I need to draw points connecting fake gps coordinates
Leaflet.js?
checking out gohlke
I'd just use the Google API actually, if you want to see what it'd look like.
21:32
they're /fake/ gps coords, i.e. grid points, in this case. So Google API doesn't really help too much
ok, how do I "install" a wheel?
@inspectorG4dget using pip..
Tyre iron.
super! thanks :)
ahh... I must find Robert Downey Jr as he exits the gym - that oughtta tire iron man
help! pygame-1.9.2a0-cp35-none-win_amd64.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform. But I'm on x64 win7
21:37
Using 3.5?
Heh, Vincent Vega.
29
A: Cannot install numpy from wheel format

Simeon VisserShort answer: rename the file to numpy-1.9.1%2Bmkl-cp34-none-win32.whl to install it. You can check what tags your pip tool accepts for installation by running: import pip; print(pip.pep425tags.get_supported()) In this case pip is incorrectly detecting your operating system to be 32-bits and ...

stupid stupid windows
numpy-1.9.1%2Bmkl-cp34-none-win32.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform
still the same problem
Try it with cp35.
Also, could you possibly be using the wrong pip? I've done that many times before.
21:42
ok it worked now... kinda (I get a different error):
Exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\basecommand.py",
 line 211, in main
    status = self.run(options, args)
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\commands\install
.py", line 282, in run
    wheel_cache
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\basecommand.py",
 line 272, in populate_requirement_set
    wheel_cache=wheel_cache
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\req\req_install.
wrong pip? I have only one python (and therefore only one pip) on this machine
@inspectorG4dget Ah, I wasn't sure. I have 3 different versions on my machine.
Lost count of how many versions I have on my Mac.
I remember Martijn once mentioning he had something like 7-8.
Grrr, downvoted because someone thinks Unicode encoding issues with a terminal are off-topic?
I have 2.7, 3.4, and 3.5.
They deleted their comment now..
21:44
@inspectorG4dget Even if your machine is 64 bit - is your python install?
oh I have quite a few versions on my mac as well. This is just my work machine, and it's a windows box... bleeping pain!
If you open an interpreter, does it say 64 bit or 32?
@JRichardSnape good question. I think it is. I'll check
c:\Program Files (x86)\Python 3.5\Lib\site-packages>python
Python 3.5.0 (v3.5.0:374f501f4567, Sep 13 2015, 02:16:59) [MSC v.1900 32 bit (In
tel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
Nope, 32.
21:45
Bam. Doctored.
trying with x86 pyg
PROFANITIES!
Exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\basecommand.py",
 line 211, in main
    status = self.run(options, args)
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\commands\install
.py", line 311, in run
    root=options.root_path,
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\req\req_set.py",
 line 646, in install
    **kwargs
  File "c:\program files (x86)\python 3.5\lib\site-packages\pip\req\req_install.
Did you open the command prompt as admin?
You should maybe clean out the pygame dir too.
So it's a clean install taking place.
huzzah!
doctor'd!
thanks all, muchly :)
windows should really make a sudo for their cmd
If that doesn't work we'll have to turn to black magic. Someone fetch 7 black candles, the dread altar, and the blood of a PHP developer.
21:50
if you have a branch in git, and you merge it back into the master and delete the branch ... can you checkout the hash from the now deleted branch (and git will think you are on that branch?)
Ah, the joy when you beat the vcvarsall scourge. Congratulations!
I offer myself as tribute.
or you should install it to the default location that does not require admin..
Yeah, Program Files can get a little weird.
Just looking at old messages of mine. I was so young and full of hope.
21:56
I'm just young and full of booze.
Not currently, because I'm at work, but I wish I was.
DSM
DSM
22:12
How do you spell "pyew!" as in the sound of a laser blaster, "pyew pyew pyew"?
I've usually seen it rendered simply as 'pew'
as in the ancient saying: "less QQ, more pew pew"
DSM
DSM
QQ reminds me of my time in HK. :-)
Python 3 imports: when I do from .base import BaseThing as described in this highly upvoted answer, I get SystemError: Parent module '' not loaded, cannot perform relative import. I must be missing something obvious.
DSM
DSM
Using that exact pattern, I get
>>> import mypkg.derived
>>> mypkg.derived.BaseThing
<class 'mypkg.base.BaseThing'>
Air
Air
@duozmo When you do that from where in the file system, exactly, relative to what you're importing?
This means you are running a module inside the package as a script. Only run scripts from outside the package. — Martijn Pieters ♦ Jun 7 '13 at 10:27
Okay, yeah, I was in mypkg/
Oh look, I’m not the only one with that question
DSM
DSM
Nothing new under the sun, as they say.
22:40
Somehow my searching failed me
Air
Air
Do you have mypkg/__init__.py?
Air
Air
so in e.g. mypkg/foo.py you have from .base import BaseThing, correct
I don’t have foo.py. I’m trying to replicate the answer exactly
Air
Air
In the REPL?
22:45
At first in the REPL, but then I got worried it behaved differently so also am trying $ python ...
Air
Air
I think vaultah's answer on the page of Martijn's comment, above, will make things clear
Yeah I need a few minutes to go through this material
Should I have __init__.py? It’s not in the example
Air
Air
Well, I'm not too savvy about packaging myself, but if I'm understanding what's going on correctly you need mypkg loaded before you can do the explicit relative import, and I believe that's what __init__.py does?
IIRC the init file is the difference between a package and a directory with a bunch of scripts
My understanding is __init__.py basically christens a folder as a “package”. I’m confused why it’s not in the mypkg example, but assume the omission is intentional
Air
Air
@duozmo That may not be a great assumption... "Consider the following tree for example" could be meant to imply "the following partial tree"
22:50
I figure with 61 upvotes and 0 comments, can it be that wrong?
Air
Air
Dunders get omitted sometimes for the sake of brevity. It's not that it's necessarily wrong so much as there are things left unsaid, that upvoters either understand already or haven't run into a problem with not understanding...
Then again, it could be wrong. I'm still reading. And learning.
DSM
DSM
You don't need __init__.py for the import itself to work. I assume that's why it was left out.
mypkg might be better named mytree.
@DSM You mean for from .base import BaseThing to work or import mypkg to work?
DSM
DSM
In the example import I gave above, I had no __init__.py. So both. :-)
Air
Air
@DSM But you supplied the name mypkg
Is vaultah's answer wrong or am I misunderstanding it?
DSM
DSM
23:00
@Air: yep, I supplied the name mypkg. But the line in derived.py is still from .base import BaseThing.
Air
Air
I see.
user559633
cbg
DSM
DSM
rhubarb!
@Air I’m seeing the same behavior you did if I start python outside mypkg/. But let’s say I’ve got two adjacent files, one.py and two.py, and I just want to use functions in two.py within one.py. Possible?
Air
Air
Let me see if I can walk myself through this. The package must already be imported at the point of the relative import. Either __package__ or otherwise __name__ will determine where we look for the module.
What are the odds we also look in cwd just for good measure?
23:15
cabbage
Air
Air
@duozmo Okay, so... when one of the adjacent files imports the other, that seems to work fine? I only get the error you're seeing when I try to do a relative import in the REPL itself. So far.
And when I try to run the importing module (I have two.py importing from .one) with -m.
Neither of which I'd really want to do, but maybe you do?
I’m still figuring out what the best structure is. Won’t really be able to decide until I get all this import business figured out
user559633
the best structure is a triangle igloo
Air
Air
@tristan Ice teepee?
user559633
structurally strong, but also kind of vulnerable. ~~~like me
Air
Air
23:26
t-t-tristan-kun!
Well Python’s documentation does leave me feeling like I’ve been left out in the cold
user559633
the official python 3 documentation, including the beginner's tutorial has left you out in the cold?
Air
Air
Hmm. I usually feel pretty good about the official Python docs. Certainly relative to a lot of the docs out there.
I often feel like it’s missing the squishy inner filling of practical examples, which is why I come to SO
Air
Air
All hail Documentation, then.
I think package structure, topically, is quite a departure from the rest of the "learning Python" experience (and this is probably generally true for other languages)
23:37
Its compounded by all the legacy Python 2 discussion (which is often not marked as Python 2 discussion, leaving you to infer from publication dates) that leads you astray
user559633
@Air lol that garbage
user559633
a scam to get stackoverflow users to write 3rd party documentation while stackoverflow corp makes money from their business arrangements
user559633
sweet feature guys, we all wanted that
Air
Air
Not sure how it's more of a scam for users to volunteer to write that type of content for a platform that has a revenue model than it is for users to volunteer to write Q&A content for same
user559633
it's not, just a bigger ask with less reward
23:40
@Air Yeah I’m looking forward to it coming out of beta.
Air
Air
@tristan Less reward than badges and rep? Wow, that is a ripoff!
user559633
no, i mean, when you help a user, you're ostensibly helping a person. when you write documentation for linkedin APIs and can't name your variables "fartdick", that's not rewarding anymore
Air
Air
Can't say I've ever run the risk of shadowing that particular name.
user559633
actual "heh"
Air
Air
lizard.jpg irl?
user559633
23:43
hey, maybe i'm wrong though. maybe dragon slayer rockstar ninja robot documentation writing will be awesome
Air
Air
I'm not saying people should want to participate in it. I'm really not sure I want to participate in it. I just don't really empathize with most of the negative feelings toward recent feature proposals.
user559633
It's fun to feign sincere annoyance.
user559633
I think it's most fun because the staff is all like "hey we made this feature no one is excited to have...YOU'RE WELCOME!!"
user559633
If it was just "we did this thing, maybe check it out?" then I don't think that features would get announced on meta with a near-negative score.
Air
Air
Their "make the world a better place" enthusiasm does bait out the cynicism a bit.
user559633
23:47
Oh yeah totally.
user559633
Making the world a better place by increasing the DO THE NEEDFUL ASAP #LINKEDIN questions on the Python tag on our platform.
Air
Air
But, you know, not everyone can be like me and have a job where you're literally saving the entire planet from becoming a giant ball of cancerous, burning trash.
Some people need to get their validation with a little affirmation, a little pep talk, a little workplace kool aid. I understand. I'm not totally removed from the suffering of you little people.
user559633
What's your job? I decided today that I'm okay with walking away from mine.
Air
Air
Well, basically, I spend a week querying a database by hand for esoteric, poorly-documented category codes, then typing them into an Excel spreadsheet containing another agency's esoteric, poorly-documented category codes, and then I realize that the person I'm helping left out a key piece of information and 99% of that didn't need to be done and won't actually be used
user559633
That sounds awful. I hope your hobbies are fulfilling.
Air
Air
23:53
Then I take an overly long break to walk to Rite Aid and buy two Little Debbie cellophane pastries (for only a buck!) that will probably give me diabetes around yesterday or so, come back, stare at Excel, try to copy and paste things to different worksheets (but of course it's too big for the clipboard, would you like to continue without undo?), decide fuck it, my bargaining agreement is disgusting, and go home half an hour early.
This prevents childhood leukemia.
I'm poking fun and blowing off steam, of course. The crap work is for a reporting requirement that comes around once every three years, it'll be over soon, and I'll be able to get back to doing moderately fulfilling things.
I do love hideous cellophane pastries, though.

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