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00:02
@PaulMcGuire I do not know where to use the select module in my script. Perhaps, could I send the code and maybe you would know?
there are sockets going out and sockets going in. For the sockets going out, I modify them. Do I use a list for the sockets going both ways or just the one going in?
@BobEbert as the docs clearly describe you pass multiple lists for each type of thing you're waiting for: select(read, write, error).
what you select on entirely depends on what you're doing, which you haven't described at all
can I use pastebin?
@AndrasDeak haha..not so far
@PaulMcGuire Thanks!
00:18
It has been quite a while since I used select. As davidism has already said, you create a list of read sockets and list of write sockets and a list of error sockets, and pass them to select. You will get back 3 lists, those containing the sockets that are ready to be read, written, or, um, errored(?). Doug Hellman has a nice article here - pymotw.com/2/select
Doug's treatment of this subject will be far more detailed (and accurate!) than what I would post here off the top of my head
00:50
hey guys
hey @idjaw
hey :) how's it going
well, I was just about to break for dinner, so you'll have to mind the store
I won't let you down.
:)
I know it!
00:56
re-cbg
hey @PM2Ring
oh well this is new. First time that's happened
Help vampire alert: Run away!
It's up to you, of course. But I get a bad feeling about this...
Nope. Explanation is too long, and there is an image included. Pass.
01:37
Hi, I can't use easy_install and pip in Ubuntu. I have already added Python to $PATH i.e. in ZSHRC. Other Python command wouldn't have worked right?
FWIW, in old FORTRAN, variables with names beginning with I-N are automatically integer, all others are automatically real (aka floating-point); early FORTRAN only had upper case. But you could override that automatic behaviour by using an explicit declaration. Which leads to the ancient programmer's joke: GOD is real, unless declared integer. ;) — PM 2Ring 1 min ago
hahaha...nicely done @PM2Ring
Thankyou! It's an old favourite. Some dialects of BASIC also used that convention. And I guess there might have been some other languages that did it too.
not using implicit none is the devil
Drats, I got two down-votes on my U&L answer. Oh well, I guess I can afford to lose a couple of points on that one. :)
@AndrasDeak Kids these days. :)
Think of it as a primitive ancestor of Hungarian notation.
don't get me started on Hungarians...:P
(we're horrible)
01:51
You can be, but you tend to have a wicked sense of humour, so it balances out in the end. :)
btw I had to google Hungarian notation
I realized I've seen it before
shudder
so it makes sense that I dislike it as much as implicit variable types in fortran:)
I believe implicit none and intent(in):: and lack of labels make a fortran program palatable
and yes, I'm a spoiled brat:P
TBH, I haven't written any Fortran since the late 1970s, and I haven't looked at much Fortran code since then, either.
things have improved a lot with f90:P
it's still fortran, of course:D
02:07
@MattDMo Cheers man. Appreciate the back up there on that 'garlic' attempt. :)
no prob :)
well, 3 AM, time to sleep
good night!
I think you also gave the best "teach a man how to fish" answer, so I handed out an upvote
:) Thanks.
Well, they just accepted too. Message received.
Can someone tell me what is wrong with the select module in my script? pastebin.com/X10VQvZw
I'm stuck on this for the last 3 hours straight, it is so frustrating
02:24
@Bob
@BobEbert - the inputs to select will be lists of sockets - outputs is a list of strings
but to send the socket it has to be as byte or string?
And these programs are usually written in pairs, one to send and one to receive - are you trying to write one program that does both?
Gaaah, no - it is a list of sockets
the sockets themselves
I have netcat on a remote system (vm)
02:26
Like you did with inputs = [s]
Since you are reading only and not writing, then pass an empty list for the list of writers
data is a socket, but the usr is string (which is not what I want). I would need to change usr to a socket, right?
You don't just change a string to a socket. You might send it to a socket.
data is not a socket, data is the string of byte returned by s.recv()
The only socket you have in your program is s
It's starting to clarify
my goal here is to be able to send and receive packets asyncronously. If the only socket I have is "s", the how will I be able to read the input?
When s shows up in the list of readable sockets from select, then do recv on it
I don't think I've ever written code using a single socket for both read and write, there may be some extra handshaking involved
What is sending to the socket?
what do you mean
I need to use s for both input and output? since it can show up in the list of readable socket or writable socket?
02:34
Ok, it looks like reading and writing with the same socket is not that big a deal (after googling a bit...)
I'm not that advanced in this, bust reading through the doc on select.select and running your code with different parameters, the doc says that you need to send integers representing file objects. I messed around with sending in a list of just ints or just an empty list and things seem to be working. Beyond that, not much help. But, I hate to point you back to the doc, but did you reference to make sure the types you are providing to select are as they should:
I even made a list of your inputs by extracting fileno()
I just reskimmed the Doug Hellman article, it really covers all of this very well, complete with sample code. AND some nice links at the bottom to other resources and frameworks.
s,s,exceptions = select.select(inputs,[],inputs) -- could be the line since the socket could be used as input or output?
No! select returns 3 lists
s is not a list, and you don't want to assign to it anyway
and in your code inputs is a list of socket objects which won't be accepted in select
02:38
See, select is written for a program that might be working with dozens of sockets.
list_output, list_input, list_except = select.select(s,s,[])
So you set up reads or writes on a bunch of them, and make a list, and pass that list to select
The args to select are also lists
ohhh
so inputs =[s] was fine
so I create sockets A, B, and C, and I call select.select([A,B,C],[A,B,C],[A,B,C])
yes it was
if there is nothing ready to read or write, then select will return 3 empty lists
right
02:40
in which case your program should just sleep or something for a little bit
If the list of readables is not empty, then process them using the sample code from Doug Hellman's article, to receive the data that was sent to them.
And similar for the list of writables returned by select
And according to Doug, if there are any sockets in the errors list, then about all you can do is close them
I am paraphrasing like crazy from Doug's page.
Was I way off with my reading? because I lost you guys. :P
So, you pass in 3 lists, listing all the sockets that have reads or writes queued up, and you get back 3 lists, each listing just those sockets that have completed their reads, writes, or errors.
the select function is at the beggening of the script then, and furter has it goes, it populates the function and processes the lists?
select is inside the while True loop, because if you read in your 1024 bytes, there might be more to come later
on that socket
yep ok thats good
is it safe to say that its the same socket that get outs and goes in? receive,send,exception = select.select(inputs,inputs,[])
02:46
Here is the info on using select for non-blocking sockets, in one of the links from the bottom of Doug H's article:
"is it safe to say...?" - yes, that is the idea. You pass in lists of sockets, and get back lists of subsets of those sockets, those that are ready for you to do something with
yep, I was way off.
:)
If one of the mods is here... this thread & user needs some intervention: stackoverflow.com/q/35857657/1431750
But like the select HOWTO says, the concept is very similar between the C version of select and the Python version.
I never coded in C :P
And now you can!
02:54
I still am not sure how to fix this but I am sure I will get there
@aneroid - kerpwin1121 seems to just like bullying - see this post too stackoverflow.com/questions/33279374/…
PAUL!! I think I got it!
@PaulMcGuire wow that's messed up. this user seems to have some "help" bcoz at least 2 other ppl are voting up some of his answers. (and it's a user on a partner site so starts with 101 points)
@BobEbert - woo hoo!
@PaulMcGuire I think it works but if I input a command that dosen't return a packet, it stops there. Here is the updated script pastebin.com/y5Bsxuue
03:00
@PaulMcGuire It looks like that user's account has been closed. But I guess there's nothing stopping him from opening a new one.
I'm sorry Bob, but you seem fixated on this idea that select returns the data that is in the socket or something. That's not what it does. All it does is return 3 lists of sockets, the presence of the sockets in the respective list telling you what those sockets are ready for
thats what I believed yes
uhhh
I strongly suggest that you set this aside for a bit, and work through Doug Hellman's sample code. Then come back to your little test program, and revamp it in the correct select.select paradigm. As it is now, there is still too much wrong with it to just tweak it here and there.
I hope that wasn't too harsh, but you have sort of jumped into the deep end of the pool here
03:06
spent the last 5 hours on this and didn't learn much (you did a great job, its not you, it was just really complicated for me), it is just frustrating haha
Here is some conceptual pseudo-code
# set up lists of input sockets for reading and output sockets for writing

while True:
    readables, writeables, errors = select(readers, writers, [])

    # at this point, readable and writeable contain all the sockets that have io ready
    for readable_socket in readables:
        # do reading stuff

    for writeable_socket in writeables:
        # do writing stuff

    for error_socket in errors:
        for socket_list in (readers,writers):
            if error_socket in socket_list:
                socket_list.remove(error_socket)
Does that make sense?
So in your case, you could initialize both readers and writers using
readers = [s]
writers = [s]
i'm trying to rewrite it
Well I have to break off here, and I've already reached just about the limit of what I have to say about select.select. Doug H is a much better writer than I am, and the socket programming HOWTO that he links to looks pretty good too. Good luck!
@PaulMcGuire Thanks Paul, that was a great help :)
03:43
@PaulMcGuire is there some weird planetary/moon alignment today? seems SO is attracting the crazies (stackoverflow.com/questions/35858306/…)
@aneroid Well, there is a solar eclipse tomorrow, and a lunar eclipse in 2weeks. :)
@PM2Ring wow really? gonna google to see when and where it's visible from. thanks!
Some of those comments definitely deserve flagging, especially the last one.
@PM2Ring agreed. but prefer that someone else does it since i'm in the thread
i think i'll be able to see a partial tomorrow :-)
I'm too far south. :(
@aneroid Flags are anonymous. At least, the person flagged won't know it's you. But I've already flagged it, so a mod will deal with it shortly.
03:57
yeah, i know the person can't see it. I've already flagged their question to be closed. but i meant, to let someone "uninvolved and objective" do it. this one is obvious, but i general i don't flag it if i'm in the convi
Fair enough. That question's now closed, BTW.
@PM2Ring but i'm not going to stress it :-)
ah great
hee hee hee
0
Q: Java vs Python: when to use what language in software development and why?

psunThis is a generic question to understand the capabilities and limitations of Java and Python. I'm not trying to find which is the best programming language. But to know when Java can be best and when Python can be best.

how often do we/SO get that question? lol!
am I horrible if I want to see an epic battle occur?
04:00
lol!
depends on how bored you are. if we had a way to tell everyone above 200 rep to ignore it completely, (or lock them out), then one would surely ensue ;-)
super LOL @ fge's comment: stackoverflow.com/questions/35858689/…
baaahah
Sorry, I had to vote too broad on that one.
I did too
me too. closed
also, "make our own wheel" - laroueduchiffrage.remilemonnier.fr/new
04:06
Looks like I'll miss the lunar eclipse, too: I'm too far east. Oh well, better luck next eclipse season. But at least my ancient but trusty Moon phase calculator predicted both of them. :)
my son gave me a good one today: "daddy I don't love you on Sunday's, only Tuesday"
thanks, son.
thanks.
Kid logic, ya gotta love it. :)
04:22
Next Big Programming Language: laroueduchiffrage.remilemonnier.fr/3c093bf9 :p
05:07
When I saw LifeScript there I was kinda hoping it was an esolang based on Conway's Life...
@PM2Ring Game of Life you mean? yeah, that would've been interesting. maybe some lang that's optimised only to solve/do Game of Life and such operations
Yes, Game of Life. But I was thinking of a language that does its operations in a Life grid, since it is Turing complete. Various people have created Life patterns that do arithmetic. A simple bit string adder was created several decades ago, and there's a fairly well-known pattern that generates primes.
I've created a few Life patterns that use the adder circuit to do fancier arithmetic. I built a Fibonacci sequence generator and a general multiplier circuit. My most ambitious pattern is a Collatz sequence generator.
holy f* and wow
i've never written a GoL prog. and some of the "optimised" solutions i've seen of it, frankly, go over my head (and i'm pretty good at programming, in Python)
*decent
eg. i understand bit manipulation but i don't understand how someone foresees a bunch of bit manipulations into a pattern that solves /does a specific func / outcome
05:24
You can see the Collatz generator here, and you can read about it here; that thread also has the Fibonacci generator and the other patterns I mentioned
Like most complex tasks, you need to operate at a more abstract level. You'd go crazy trying to figure it out at the base Life cell level. You use well-known Life components, like glider guns and reflectors and build them up into more complex circuits.
oh yeah, i saw a collatz sequence vid on youtube while looking up math paradox's (eg infinite hotel)
*hilbert
ok, tbh, most of the words you used in that last line went over my head. i've never done CS formally
in school and then college (which, ironically, was at a lower level than what i did in school). then self-taught
in your seq generator, what exactly were you trying to achieve? finding longest sequences that end in 4, 2, 1... ?
or the pattern of numbers in the sequence over diff starting points?
@aneroid A glider is one of the most well-known life patterns. It's a moving oscillator that cycles through 4 configurations which move it one cell diagonally. A glider gun is a life pattern that emits a stream of gliders. A glider reflector is a pattern that acts like a mirror for a glider stream, assuming the reflector & the stream are aligned correctly, otherwise carnage ensues.
so a glider is the thing appears as moving blocks? and the glider gun 'generates' these patterns?
@aneroid You feed my Collatz pattern a starting number in binary, as a stream of gliders. A glider in the stream represents a 1 and a glider missing from the stream represents a zero. The pattern then does the Collatz iteration on that binary number. When it gets to 4,2,1, it just keeps cycling. I guess I could've built some stop logic into it, but it would've made the pattern much larger.
@aneroid Yes.
i need to read-up on Conway, if only to learn about these concepts. sounds really interesting
05:37
You can see a pair of glider guns in my ConwayLife avatar:
yeah, i did notice that
The gliders interact with the square block, shifting it back & forth.
the four square-dots being reflectes?
*reflectors?
No, that block's not a reflector because it kills the glider that interacts with it. But the interaction is interesting because it recreates the block in a new position.
was about to ask that...that is cool!
coz i notice there's one in the middle (5th) which actually moves a bit between positions but cycles, so never actually goes away
05:42
Yeah, I was quite pleased to discover that. Although it's quite likely that that reaction had been discovered previously. OTOH, a previously unknown interesting 3 glider reaction that leads to infinite growth was only discovered last year, even though people have been investigating Life patterns for over 4 decades now. So there's still plenty of scope for people to discover new stuff.
@aneroid Oh yeah. Sorry, that middle block is the one I thought you were talking about earlier. The blocks at the ends of the glider guns do function as reflectors / stabilizers for the "queen bee shuttles" that are the heart of the glider gun.
ah ok
is the aim of this (in general) to find sustainable or looping patterns through behaviour rather than programmed logic?
Sort of. :) There are a lot of simple patterns that are either stable or simple oscillators. And there are families of moving patterns known as spaceships, the glider is the simplest one. So you collide spaceships into various targets (including other spaceships) and see what happens. :)
Many of the well-known patterns can be synthesized by colliding gliders together in the right way. So by careful placement of glider guns you can create quite complex stuff. Also, there are some small patterns called rakes that are moving glider guns, they're fun to play with. :)
it's going to be an interesting weekend
Here's the 2nd-smallest space ship, known as a LWSS or lightweight spaceship. It moves horizontally.
It can be produced by colliding 3 gliders together. So by careful positioning of 3 glider guns you can build a LWSS gun.
05:59
ok, what is the diff between a glider gun and an LWSS gun?
However, there's also a type of reflector that turns a glider into a LWSS, which is more compact than using 3 glider guns.
@aneroid A glider gun just spits out gliders. There are a pair of glider guns in my avatar. A glider is smaller than a LWSS and it moves diagonally, like this:
yeah, that one i've seen.
i forget the rules of on-off-ness
checking
(i think i'll need to read up on this before i understand what you've put)
is there a way to export/save the chat or recent history?
I don't think so, but you can get a permalink to any Chat post, and look it up later in the Transcript. Hover your mouse near the top left corner of a message and you'll see a down arrow. Click on that arrow and you'll see "permalink" near the top of the menu that pops up.
BTW, the best Life program is Golly You can see an example of what can be achieved with some glider loops feeding into spaceship generators at the top of the Golly homepage.
And to get back on-topic, you can control Golly with Python scripts.
sweet, was about to ask about Python
so chat history is permanent? yikes!
ah there's a "full transcript" button at the top :-)
@aneroid I'm afraid so. :evil grin:
06:13
lol
ahah
You can delete messages if you get back to them within the edit window. And I think mods can delete older messages. Room owners can move messages to trash, but that doesn't delete them.
that's ok. just wanted to know
as a privacy advocate, i would prefer such things to be clearly indicated rather than deduced
*advocate in this case being - not a public speaker or blogger or anything like that. more of a believer
i've saved the permalink of when this Conway convi started
Well, everything on Stack Exchange sites is permanently archived. However, only mods (& I guess SE employees) can see deleted comments. And all users with more than 10k of rep can see deleted questions and answers.
deleted answers i think starts at 2-2.5k (iirc), coz i can see those
deleted questions, not ure
*sure
CBG all.
06:24
No, you need 10k to see other people's deleted answers or questions. See stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/moderator-tools However, you can always see your own deleted posts.
BTW, when you need to edit your last Chat post just hit the up arrow on your keyboard, although there is a time limit.
Hi, Vignesh.
ah, good to know. thanks
nothing to edit so far ;-)
Hi PM :).
07:15
cbg
07:44
Top of the morning to you
Good day to all
08:08
cbg
cbg, all
08:37
Cabbage!
I just saw this question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/35862094/how-to-convert-a-parameter-variations-dict-to-object-in-python

Isn't what he wants to do pretty much discouraged?
Did you ever encounter a time where you needed to update the instances _dict_ upon initialization?
I don’t think that’s what OP wants to do?
Or do you mean Daniel’s answer?
I wanted to say that both things seem discouraged
Both? The other being what?
08:49
wat
the first: including **kwargs in your classes initializer so that you will ignore additional named parameters being passed without throwing an exception

the second: updating the class dict when you initialize so that you will include additional named parameters passed
By the way, how do I escape double underscores in the SO chat?
Use markdown:
`__dict__`
@GladOS in fact self.__dict__.update(kwargs) is something you do see in code from time to time. IMHO it should only be used when you aren't also binding local names individually first, otherwise your code can become a hostage to fortune. But for the Bunch class, for example, it's legitimate.
__dict__
thank you
@holdenweb Maybe if you had a builtin Bunch class in python I'd use it. dictionaries are still better in my opinion.
These sort of things are implicit, you don't know what parameters they get and that's one of the things future bugs are made of.
Also, classes tend to be harder to serialize and pass, which is another downsize.
A matter of opinion. Personally I really like the convenience of attribute access, but to give predictable attributes you somehow have ot control the update. Swings and roundabouts, I suspect
09:15
Nowdays people would probably suggest using collections.namedTuple but I personally find the declaration of the type a bit overweight (I don't like having to put attribute names in strings, which could be explained my my typing deficiencies)
09:26
I don't like it either, for the same reason, a lot of times, when I have unknown parameters I tend to need to serialize them. I'd rather use a Bunch class with overriden get and set state methods rather than a named tuple though.
But still using a dictionary is still better than both in my opinion. even though this
    foo['bar']
or this
    foo.get('some_var', 'default')
annotation is cumbersome at times
09:49
Dear friends, how to create a deb package using equivs-build for a python APP?
INITIALLY I use chkinstall but it have 'bad package' problrm
@holdenweb types.SimpleNamespace?
blech, morning document-writing cabbage to y'all
10:05
cbg
cabbage
Cabbage @Farhan.K o/
cbg(["sean", "farhan"])
Cbg @Sean
Documentation, eh, @IntrepidBrit
It's exciting, I assure you.
10:17
Inspired by that, I might do my outstanding paperwork
I can almost feel the crackle of excited expectation.
Oh the endless schism, is it harder to write documentation - or to get people to actually read it?
10:35
definitely the latter.
Although had you said "to write good documentation", the jury may be out.
any idea where to find the documentation on the methods that appear in the list:
`from flask import Flask
import unittest

dir(Flask(__name__).test_client())`
Google.
have literally spent hours looking
have asked a dev at work
and he didn't know
spent 20 minutes on it together
Hmmm - you might need to work on your google fu. Google each word with python e.g. dir python, Flask python etc.
I can feel Fizzy fizzing. Nay, fulminating.
specifically - these methods: 'get', 'head', 'open', 'options', 'patch', 'post', 'preserve_context', 'put' <- they don't seem to be documented in flask's documentation anywhere...
(those methods are what appears in terminal after the aforementioned dir() is run)
10:40
@poke possibly, but note the SimpleNamespace docs say "However, for a structured record type use namedtuple() instead."
there are a couple of others like: 'run_wsgi_app', 'session_transaction', 'set_cookie', 'trace' that I can't find either..
@IntrepidBrit The real problem, though, is once they've read it, getting them to ACT on it
holden, I would love it if that was my problem.
@Sean Have you thought about using IRC to the flask team - IIRC they hang around on the pocoo channel, but I may be wrong. I do know they are quite responsive tho
Or raise an issue in the repo
I finally think the light at the end of the tunnel may not be an oncoming train
Looks like we are within a day of achieving a stable build that can serve any domain, even from behind a load balancer
This has taken days of painfully unravelling hidden dependencies and over-tight couplings, but it looks (fingers crossed, touching wood) as though we are close now
@holdenweb thanks, I'll check that out. Re-reading my comment from earlier, I realised I should have said 'documentation on the names returned by the dir()' or something to that effect...what I wrote could be read as me asking about doucmentation on unittest/Flask etc :-/
10:50
@Sean made sense to me. Flask does still have quite a bit of magic in it
11:15
cabbage
cbg all
cabbage Jon o/
Hmmm. Should I install RISC OS on my RPi?
11:21
/o\
user image
3
*this here yet?
didn't find by searching
what type this book?
That was posted by the official FB handle of StackOverflow
When I saw that on FB I was like do you really need a book for that :P.
11:28
cabbage
cabbage
Hi, I had a question. I want a regex expression that matches any character (one or more characters) but also including newline as a possibility. .+? does not include newline, but again newline doesn't HAVE to be there. Any ideas?
cbg, Jon
any body please advise me : askubuntu.com/questions/743412/…
cabbage all
11:33
cabbage
has just realised the room's been open behind everything for the last 14 hours
user image
3
Joint 1st! :)
YAY!!! Davidism's dream has come true \o/
Dec 14 '15 at 17:17, by davidism
we're still on the front teams page sorted by members, but we can do better. I won't be happy until we pass the Stack Overflow team.
We need 10 more to become the first to cross 100
@ChahatUpreti If you set the re.DOTALL flag it should match newlines too.
> Make the '.' special character match any character at all, including a newline; without this flag, '.' will match anything except a newline.
11:38
@holdenweb @BhargavRao is it possible to have this feature for some of the '.' in the regex and not for others?
Can you give a small example?
I'm not sure I can condone joining the team!
When there are two .s in the regex, you want the first to include newline and the second not to? (Or something like that?)
yes. my regex is r'(%s.*?was shown.+?induced)' here the first '.' shouldn't include but the second should
@BhargavRao Where do I sign up? :P
I've joined, but would like to officially declare my displeasure at the wrong kind of whisky being in our stack.
Hmm, Interesting. I am thinking of using | operator for that as I don't think DOTALL supports that stuff.
+1 @IntrepidBrit
I prefer my whiskey in the .jar :P
(Yeah, stupid joke but I had to make it)
bin.append(whiskey)
face.drink(whisky)
11:49
94 now
Somebody outta star that bad boy
Though as we all know, Gin is better than both.
Get. Out.
Come now friends, to each his own.
(on a friendlier note - apparently the "new" Edinburgh Gin is really good. I'll bring some down when we get around to frolicking)
11:57
No point arguing over liquor preferences.
There is enough for everyone :P
I feel privileged that I have a micro-brewery, a gin distillery and a coffee roasters all within walking distance of my flat. All I need is a whisky distillery and I can basically just wall off this part of the world, and code self medicated for the rest of my life.

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