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18:01
@DSM not only that but, putting **d there in between :P
Anyone here working with Pycharm knows where it holds its list of interpreters? Mine configurations are corrupt and it mistakenly thinks I already configured a remote one I'm trying to add. plz halp
@EddB settings > Project Interpreters
@inspectorG4dget I know, I meant on file on disk. The list under settings doesn't show mine yet when I try to add it, it says it already exists.
Wait, might've found something under ~/.Pycharm50/config
~/.PyCharm50/config/options/removedInterpreters.xml was the trouble maker. It had the interpreter I wanted to add. Deleted it from this file and now it shows up again. Yay
They are 'what the fuck' forms, of course they're unclear.
I think it is a very apt name :P
18:33
I've recently begun following the tag, and the answer to most of these questions is "Don't use regex".
This guy knows what holidays mean
I support using regexes to solve every problem possible. It's the 'possible' and 'solve' parts that people fuck up.
@inspectorG4dget I know that quote like "If you have a problem and you solve it with Regex, congratulations: you now have two problems."
@PatrickBassut what's that slip on saturday?
18:40
@PatrickBassut I've seen it that way too. I just pulled this one out of Jeff Atwood's blog
@AnttiHaapala maybe a hotfix. You know, gotta do them.
No matter how ugly your regex line is, if someone has to fix it, they're only changing one line. That's why I like regex.
"measure software dev progress by LoC is like measuring the progress of engineering an airplane by how heavy it is"
To me, the biggest programming problems are deployment and minimizing the amount of stuff you have to change. Regex solutions address both nicely.
18:44
@QuestionC Two years to fix a long regex line. That's almost becoming a role.
hmmm 20 yr S.W.E. vet applied for a job here... and couldnt solve "write fn that takes a list and returns True if your name is in the list" ... they spent about 10 mins asking for clarification on requirements ...
some of the answers reminded me alot of SO OP's
maybe they were a manager?
also, which language?
they got to choose the language ....
If you have a regex that reads like the Dead Sea scrolls, you can replace it though. You just have to weigh that maintenance burden against the benefits.
18:52
(to be fair they had to pick before we gave the problem statement)
white board or IDE?
white board
@JoranBeasley and think about it, in their previous positions they were paid better than you are now :d
@JoranBeasley give me a language
lol yeah I could do it in pretty much any language i think
18:53
When I see a regex, I see an algorithm for a one-pass DFA that doesn't have any side effects. It's really convenient to reason about.
brainfuck
Ever ask someone to do something with sockets in an interview?
lol no ... we dont give them real brain teasers ... more of sanity check question that they can actually program
I got a socket question in interview. I flopped it :/
@Joran What kind of sanity check questions?
no not brain teasers ...
18:55
:D
"If you are programming and find it doesnt behave right, explain how you would figure out the bug"
    #include <string.h>

    int im_there(char *name[], int count) {
        for ( ; count > 0; count --, names ++) {
             if (strcmp(name, "Antti Haapala") == 0) {
                 return 1;
             }
        }

        return 0;
    }
groan I would hate that question so much.
do I qualify
18:55
yeah exactly
yes you would have certainly passed the test :P
since its actually a python interview you could follow it up with "Antii Haapala" in my_list
but we figure if anyone can program in whatever they can learn python ... theres marginally harder questions later ...
@BhargavRao Can you remember the substance of the question?
@AnttiHaapala that is a neat way to solve it ... probably not how I would have ... but meh
as a slightly more OT ... I have decided i do not like making apk's ... and kivy in general ...
@AaronHall Not much (2 yrs ago for a summer internship recruitment) ... Was something to do with firewall stuff. None of which I had the slightest idea of
ah, networking
Involved "socket programming".
19:02
the answer is requests.get(url,proxies=proxies)
@AnttiHaapala You have the space-everywhere style of programming. If I see your code I'll probably remove every space I see. :)
Just keep stripping down the code until it's held together by the weak nuclear force.
cbg Marcus
19:11
healthy, fibrous, green veggies, Marcus
Academia SE asks to refrain from putting acknowledged papers on the resume... :/ Now how do I tell the readers of my resume that the work actually was published.. :D
@JoranBeasley Would you have accepted def is_name_in_list(name, list_of_names): return name in list_of_names ?
@BhargavRao I'd say that depends on how many pubs you have, and what level you're at (if you're just coming out of undergrad, then definitely add you ack pubs)
@inspectorG4dget I have one other "accepted not yet published paper". (2 in review). Can I still add them?
what is your current education level? what is the resume for?
19:18
Undergrad last sem
resume is for a job? for grad school? for ...?
job where (I won't be nobody will be offended if you choose to not answer)?
At any IT company near my place, B'luru, India. (Lol who get's offended) :D
I am so offended right now, hrrmphh
19:20
Personally, I leave all publications off my resume, but that has more to do with the industry I work in
ahh! in that case, here's my two cents' worth (disclaimer: I know North American job markets better than Indian markets; and I know the Chennai market better than the B'luru market)
Publications are seen a "too academic", even for R&D positions
agree in part with the "too academic" part
@JoeKington Actually I faced that prob
DSM
DSM
@JoeKington: I tend to leave my favourite pubs on my CV, mostly 'cause I liked 'em. :-)
19:22
however, it might actually help in B'luru if they pubs are relevant to project experience: "I worked on <this> project. It was awesome because <reasons>. And oh yeah, we managed to publish it"
Rejected in Citrix interview for my two overseas projects ;_;
It varies a lot by industry and company, too, in my experience... One company will see them as a very good thing, another will see it as a strong negative.
I'd wait for acceptance before mentioning the two in review
Yeah, I always feel a bit bad leaving stuff out... Especially stuff I'm proud of... Then again, I leave in the 5 years I spent working at McDonald's, which I really should get rid of at this point
@inspectorG4dget I think I will just write the title of the project, a line description about it and the project guides. Sounds good?
19:23
mentioning the ack pubs might help, as those are typically "the idea wasn't mine, but I wrote all the awesome code/software to help prove the other guy's idea. This shows that I'm passionate about new ideas, and that I can communicate well with people, and that I'm not a credit hog"
sounds good to me.
Also, feel free to take a look at my CV if it helps
@inspector you in UofT? Nice :)
Did my undergrad there... at uOttawa now
Came to conclusion before reading the stuff there :/
One of my friends did a summer internship there under Prof Inkpen
DSM
DSM
I still remember my U of T student number and my library barcode. 944xxxxxx and 217xxxxxxxxxxxx.
@DSM: represent! I was 995****** and I can't remember my library barcode, but I did remember it when I was stil lthere
@BhargavRao: she's good. One my good friends is doing his master's under her supervision. Did your friend do NLP stuff?
DSM
DSM
19:29
When I was there you had to use the last few digits of the barcode to log into the library computers. And in an extremely unusual coincidence, the last seven digits were a valid telephone number in my hometown..
bwahahaa! Thankfully, that wasn't the case when I was around
@inspectorG4dget Yeah, something to do with Micropost Data aclweb.org/anthology/W/W15/W15-29.pdf#page=127 I spent my summer on the east coast of Canada..
Ugh, mongodb counts months 1-indexed, that's dumb
as an aside decagon.applicantpro.com/jobs/318688.html ... although anyone from this room can expect a slightly harder question :P
@PatrickBassut ah just that I haven't programmed C a lot lately, there are 2 spaces too many (before -- and ++) but then that's ok for clarity.
19:31
@corvid I quite like that :)
@JoranBeasley Ahhh, you're on the wrong coast. :/
@RobertGrant But every javascript api starts at 0 so it's frustrating
@BhargavRao oh yeah, she's still working in that space. Damn! You should have called... we could have totally met up and SO'd it up, desi style
Hey :) I have kind of logical question to solve in python, so the input is : - number of books, number of cities, number of citizens that want the book per city, and if citizens can't get their book, their anger is calculated as number of users per city that can't have the book ^ 2, now i need to calculate minimal anger, anyone has idea ? :)
@inspectorG4dget I got my offer in Dalhousie University. (I had informed DSM before :D)
19:32
@corvid that is true :)
@BhargavRao waaaa!
@MarkoMackic I feel like some information is missing from that problem statement
err nm It was how i was reading it
I thought there was all the information needed
@inspectorG4dget Infact my project is still going on. Under Dr Stan Matwin. (CRC)
@JoranBeasley what you think is error ?
19:34
obviously there are less books than there are number of people wanting it,
@BhargavRao oh cool! IIRC he left uO some time ago
and you need to minimize the loss
but can we evade the anger by giving a citizen a different book that they want?
are we therefore trying to optimally distribute books per city?
19:36
any way, the squares are the lowest if you share the books evenly
@AnttiHaapala i knew that , but what's the fastest, and least memory consuming algorithm to minimize ange :D
@inspectorG4dget Yeah, I guess he was there in mid November. He replied he was in conf there. :D
@inspectorG4dget yeah
bah I hate these kinds of problems
you divide the books so that in each city there are k or k + 1 users left without books
no need to program
19:38
i need, it's preparation for republic programming contest
I was gonna say "assign books to cities based on which city has the highest demand for that book"
@inspectorG4dget that i could try
yeah that's also pretty good...
I guess it leads to identical results
DSM
DSM
Is there only one kind of book?
@DSM yes
exectly
exactly*
let me try to distribute by highest demands :)
19:41
and see if it leads to the number of users without book distributed evenly :P
do you have a code checker that runs test cases?
DSM
DSM
I'm not sure that even distribution is right.
@DSM why not, you have 2 cities, 4 persons without book
you can divide them 2, 2; 1, 3 or 0, 4
if it is the sum of squares of anger in each city
sum of squares
@inspectorG4dget A small fix there. Change StackOverflow to Stack Overflow
19:43
2,2 wins in that one ... now prove through induction it works for k+1 :P
it is about minimu squares
what's the question?
12 mins ago, by Marko Mackic
Hey :) I have kind of logical question to solve in python, so the input is : - number of books, number of cities, number of citizens that want the book per city, and if citizens can't get their book, their anger is calculated as number of users per city that can't have the book ^ 2, now i need to calculate minimal anger, anyone has idea ? :)
@BhargavRao ahh thanks
DSM
DSM
Say we have citizens-wanting-books of 10, 10, and 20. And we have 10 books to distribute. The lowest anger I can come up with is (1,1,8), for differences of (9,9,12). What am I missing? I agree that we want to balance the distribution of errors, I don't know that k or k+1 gets us there.
(I've noticed that I assumed that every city should have someone with at least one book. I should fix that.)
19:47
Is it saying that there are C cities, and Z citizens who want the book per city, or are we assuming that for city 1<= c <= C, we have Z_c citizens (citizens of city c) who want the book?
DSM
DSM
I assumed the latter.
if you give the one city 10 books
DSM
DSM
Okay, if I allow some cities to get 0 books, the 10,10,20 and books=10 case seems to have a best-case of (0,1,9).
exactly, because it spreads the discontent citizens evenly
DSM
DSM
19:51
What "k" are you thinking of for which 10,9, and 11 are either k or k+1? ;-)
(I'm sure I'm just missing something obvious, but I can't see it yet.)
ah k is the floored quotient
and then the remainder is spent on +1s
ah now I realized it...
yeah @inspectorG4dget's approach is the best one
does #in
now if we have 10 books, 4 cities , and input of users that want the book is following : 4,5,2,3 what would be the error @inspectorG4dget
that's input per city
ah thta is not interesting
19:56
my test case says that minimal error shoud be 4
i mean , my instructions
you should take 9,13,2,4 and 10 books :P
I'd say 4 (citizens without books - then you'll have to compute total unhappiness), according to my algorithm
that being said, x^2 + x^2 < (2x)^2, which might invalidate my logic, driving us back to that k/k+1 balancing logic (I forget who said that)
but 4 is minimal error too because you leave each city without one book ?
this is correct. However, according to what I originally meant, I would have had an error of (0,0,1,3) instead of (1,1,1,1); the latter is optimaler than the former
DSM
DSM
optimaler!
20:04
Does unhappiness grow linearly or is there some multiplicative effect where the inner city reaches a critical mass for riots because they don't have enough good reading material?
optimal... optimaler... optimalest (aka optimum - depending on direction, that's optimax or optimin)
@AaronHall their anger is calculated as number of users per city that can't have the book ^ 2
@inspector Optimal Prime.
@Ffisegydd that would be the best prime number that transforms into a bester prime number
>>> [i ^ 2 for i in xrange(11)]
[2, 3, 0, 1, 6, 7, 4, 5, 10, 11, 8]
@AaronHall I think Marko meant ^ to be the exponentiation operator
20:07
**
Oh yeah I read it as that and couldn't work those results
yeah :)
Hmmm... There's a new SO Jobs posting that's 2 blocks from my house.. Weird. Didn't expect a software company to open offices in my neighborhood...
DSM
DSM
Convenient!
True! I'm tempted to apply, just on the basis of proximity!
20:10
step 1: roll out of bed and into the shower
step 2: drip dry on the walk to work
step 3: ???
step 4: profit
The irony of this is that I already walk to work, but it's a two mile walk... I think I'd actually miss the walk, with work being that close!
@JoeKington where do you live?
Houston
Not exactly a hotbed of the software industry
ok so the weather's usually pretty good
Or a place where walking to work is normal
20:12
I'd cry over a 2mi walk to work in Ottawa, Canada in the winters
But yeah, not a lot of snow
Well, except for the 6 months of >100 deg F temps with ~100% humidity...
... and my tears would freeze into icicles, which I'd use to stab everything because I'd be so frustrated with the cold
Heh! I used to live in Wisconsin... I actually kinda miss the frozen-hair mornings! Icicles in my beard were kind of fun! (Until they weren't anyway...)
What genre would you say Katy Perry is?
how is the coldest weather in ottawa
20:16
Not just pop, but that upbeat female singer pop about confidence or how great life is or love and stuff.
hmm, usually warmer than Oulu in winter
Is "annoying" a genre? :p
user559633
pop?
@Question Poppy...pop...
@tristan how's the Blighty job search going?
Blighty as in destroying potato crops for profit?
user559633
20:19
not really a job search -- only fired off an email to that one place and didn't hear back. dropping a message into a jobs@ address is less than ideal because i have no idea if my message was filtered, has yet to be seen, or they saw it and thought "lol he'd just get ketchup on everything"
DSM
DSM
My guess is "of or pertaining to England".
@DSM So 'Yes'
user559633
which is to say, thanks for asking @Ffisegydd, but not really much of a search
Saying "ketchup" instead of "catsup" means you've done your homework. Nice.
Back to the Katy Perry question, bubblegum pop is probably the closest fit. I don't know why I'm bringing that back up...
user559633
20:21
might have had a butcher's hook or two @RobertGrant
DSM
DSM
Useful comment I left to myself in testing code: "// this becomes O(N^2) if we do it every step during insertion.." I like a bunch of runtime tests and have a tendency not to care too much about efficiency during testing, which can catch me out..
Nice again!
cbg all, long time no see
@tristan would a dev manager get paid more than a senior developer in the manager's team in your experience?
user559633
20:26
@RobertGrant depends on the company and the dev, but typically yes, dev managers get paid more than individual contributors
Is that a technical person as well, or more like a project manager?
user559633
@RobertGrant not many managers can code, in my experience
(I realise I'm asking a question I should already know the answer to given my initial question)
user559633
seems really commonplace for someone to make a buddy and get promoted to manager or just get a title through attrition
Yeah that's my experience as well
20:28
Managers who can code often fall into the 'Enough to be dangerous' level of competency.
DSM
DSM
That sounds like something I'd be interested in. :-)
"I could have done this in Access in a fifth of the time!" blam
user559633
i've been a manager before. can confirm. i can't code for shit.
Oh wow it's worse than I thought
To be fair, would you actually want to code for shit?
user559633
20:30
seriously, my abilities are somewhere on the spectrum of "child like" to "a constant source of disappointment for everyone that wants to see me succeed"
Getting paid would really stink
user559633
@MorganThrapp better than most startups
@tristan lol I really don't think that's the case
user559633
i spent about 30 hours of my vacation coding on little projects. no ragrats
@tristan Haha.
20:31
@tristan Startups pay you in the promise of future shit.
rbrb, need to get up early tomo to see the French prez :P
I guess you have to become an a-word to beat pm salaries as a technical person
@tristan Too much time moving a mouse, not enough time lifting. Brah.
user559633
i'm reasonably convinced that the react framework is a system to get paid more to write HTML
@MorganThrapp in that case, does foursquare pay in the promise of geographically specifically placed shit?
user559633
20:32
@Ffisegydd haven't even lifted in months :/
@tristan Yeah probably, though it does have a higher barrier to entry than vanilla SPA dev
user559633
i "get" it, but still not convinced it's better than templating + a bit of lightweight handler attaching
does anyone use google inbox, the gmail replacement?
Being involved in a moderately complicated client-side thing at the moment, I get the need for some sort of structure (not that I use any)
@inspectorG4dget yes, exclusively.
DSM
DSM
20:36
?! There's a gmail replacement?!
It's much better than GMail.
Occasionally. I tried converting to using it exclusively, but found that I don't like it as much for most of what I do...
@Ffisegydd: have you interfaced it with a desktop client at all?
Nein.
I didn't even know there was a desktop client.
has anyone had any success interfacing it with any desktop mail client?
user559633
20:37
@RobertGrant the composition of elements thing is okay, but it's just shuffling around what ultimately does the templating
It should be the same as accessing your gmail account from a desktop mail client, right?
On the backend, they're identical, I thought...
I haven't been able to find one - best I can figure, it has something to do with snooze and done not being standardized yet
Yeah you're probably right
user559633
is inbox another closed source protocol?
Well the part I like about Inbox is the web UI so I wouldn't ever bother using a desktop app.
user559633
20:37
e.g. hangouts embrace/extend/extinguish of xmpp?
Unless the desktop app was exactly the same as a web ui, in which case why bother?
yes, but users are thus far unable to snooze/done from desktop applications
but that's the thing - I'm looking for offline access... not to mention that a desktop application also helps me unify my workflow for gbox + other emails that are non-google based
@tristan - No, it's just a different UI and paradigm for handling e-mail. But without being able to "snooze" an e-mail, it's not really inbox
@JoeKington before inbox, my snooze used to be star
DSM
DSM
What the heck is snooze? It's like all of a sudden everyone's speaking a new language.
20:40
so after try-out would I still have a soul?
Fair enough. Mine still is :) Can't get used to inbox...
The whole idea behind Inbox is that you click "Done" on an email and it disappears. It's still in your inbox for you to access it, if you need to, but it gets it out of your way.
@DSM - It's basically a delayed reminder to answer an e-mail.
user559633
@DSM know that snooze notification from outlook that you hated from the early 2000s? turns out they just didn't market that mofo
I regularly only have 3-4 emails in my Inbox, with the rest hidden away as they're "Done"
20:41
Yeah, I'm really enjoying inbox.
and bundling is awesome
I like bundles
Yeah the bundling is great.
bundle all the things
I keep getting emails from Styx. So I created a filter - now I have a bundle of Styx
I also created filters for charitable organizations. They form a Humble Bundle
@tristan it's like MS Passport - at the time everyone hated the idea of a single identity, for ill-defined reasons. Now everyone does it with Google and Facebook, two companies with more of a vested interest in your behaviour.
ok I'll stop with the puns now
user559633
20:44
user559633
this looks like an interface written by a programmer, right?
Wow... I'm slow... I just got the Styx bundle pun...
user559633
[in a bad way]
@tristan too much styling.
looks programmer written
user559633
20:45
@Ffisegydd cheers, back in a few with a cleaner one
The colours don't clash enough.
Needs more orange
user559633
considered doing hotdogstand
mmm orange
mmm hotdogs
MAAAARGE! can we have orange hotdogs for dinner?
hmmmmm
20:48
hey! what do you call an autobot mouse?
Answer: Optimouse Prime
someone just posted a question with a scheduling problem. I have half a mind to answer it with an evolutionary algorithm
user559633
@inspectorG4dget i'd be interested in reading it if you write it
bah! here I go actually, never mind. This would take me at least half an hour. I'm a little too lazy for that today
DSM
DSM
@tristan: I didn't even own a computer myself until about 2002 and it was an old notebook I was running linux on, so actually I don't know much about Outlook..
@DSM - You're not missing anything...
well, he missed having his RAM and his insanity taken from him
20:55
I never realized how painful e-mail could be until I had to switch to using Outlook all day...
Well, you don't need either of those...
sheesh! Outlook was terrible. I've only had to use it the one time... and thankfully never again
user559633
i have to use outlook because of $dayjob
@inspectorG4dget: not sure what Facebook did to it, but Outlook on Mac is reasonable. But we don't use email much in FB anyway.
user559633
add in that i get ~30-40k emails a month and it's just unmanageable
DSM
DSM
! I don't think I've gotten that many emails in my life.
20:59
Also, on a side note: I'm glad I'm not the only one here who wound up not owning a computer until fairly late in life... I bought my first computer when I was 25 and starting my PhD... Before that, it was always computer lab at whatever university I was at... (High school was pre-computers, for me, but that's a function of where I'm from. I'm not that old, but rural Tenn. lags behind the times a bit)
you work at FB?! FB owns Outlook now?!
But also, I usually have about 15-20 applications running (plus at least 10 daemons) and therefore need everything to be as lightweight as possible

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