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12:02
@ChahatUpreti Guess you could try using [~\n], which (I hope) will match "anything but newline"
@holdenweb you mean in the '.' where i dont want newline to be a match?
@holdenweb and how do i integrate it in r'(%s.*?was shown.+?induced)'
Yes. I'd have thought r'(%s.*?was shown[~\n]+?induced)' would do it, but I'd be interested to learn the results of your testing
@DSM we appear to be missing you from stackoverflow.com/teams/5/sopython :)
12:18
Lol, FRUFL :D
I guess that is play on FLUFL Barry
@holdenweb it works, but only when there is no character at all between shown and induced. When there is, it does no match. I'll try to figure out
12:33
Hmm. Irrelevantly, I'll point out that the question mark after .* is redundant, since * means "zero or more"
@holdenweb depends on the context - greedy/lazy
cbg all
cabbage o/
Also, using a raw string means that [~\n] then matches anything except a backslash or a letter 'n'
Because:

In [6]: r"a\n"
Out[6]: 'a\\n'
cbg @idjaw :)
user559633
@Sean there's documentation, but there's also value in learning how to look at the source.
@tristan Because we often have to deal with inadequately documented open source software
user559633
@holdenweb sure, but also python has a pretty good convention around docstrings
user559633
>>> Flask('hi').test_client.__doc__
"Creates a test client for this application.  For information\n        about unit testing head over to :ref:`testing`.\n\n        Note that if you are testing for assertions or exceptions in your\n        application code, you must set ``app.testing = True`` in order for the\n        exceptions to propagate to the test client.  Otherwise, the exception\n
@holdenweb Inadequately documented open source software I can handle. Inadequately documented closed source software is usually the bigger problem.
12:48
@BhargavRao Careful with the getting starred - we don't want to disappoint out resident Star Lord aka @Kevin :p
Better: help(Flask('hi').test_client) surely?
user559633
If it's closed source, it's not my problem to troubleshoot :P
It is if you want to use it ...
@tristan no, but if it causes unresolvable issues in your software you would probably wish you could look at the source
@holdenweb How come you've got time for chat - thought you had a deadline and a major project to deliver :p
12:49
Is python really a c# competitor or gonna be, or is it just a myth ?
user559633
@holdenweb :/ i wanted to leave something for the guy to come across and say "OH MY. maybe Santa and the Easter do exist as ostensibly there is magic left in the world"
I'm managing :P
@Learner Yes. Python is a myth. It doesn't really exist! You're on to our hoax!
@Learner What sort of response would you even expect from that given the lack of context. Python and C# are completely different things. Is any language really "competing" with any other?
Python 3 is competing with Python 2 ;-)
user559633
12:51
@Carpetsmoker Oh, well then, there we go. I found a bug in a video game last week and actually felt a little...whimsy in being able to say "thing did boo boo. here's screenshot. good luck!"
@JonClements Lol, the Star Lord will perhaps show some mercy on me :/
user559633
python3 is trying to get all of us to use unicode everywhere. as an american, i won't be partaking
@JonClements I got my answer without providing any context :)
user559633
@Learner cool, you get one. i'm kicking you next time :)
user559633
This is a community where we create content and have conversations with each other.
12:56
I came in this room, thought I might get some motivation to look into it, because last and only time I looked into it, i couldn't really figure out what it could be used for, other then mining e.g. web
@tristan Well, the question is often "will it actually be fixed?"
user559633
@Learner Oh, okay, cool, with that background information, that's definitely a question that would be received well in here.
I've had corporate enterprisy super-duper expensive administration systems with obvious memory leaks crashing on me, and when reporting this in detail the response was "meh, maybe we'll look at it some time"
user559633
Python is an easy to learn/hard-to-master general-purpose programming language.
I would argue that hard-to-master applies to any programming language.
12:59
There seems to be a very common conception that languages are "for" things. But I don't think I've encountered any language with a scope as narrow as "you can use this for XYZ and nothing else"
@Kevin PHP, C, arguably.
Except perhaps "Mathematica is for math" and "HTML is for marking up hypertext"
@tristan welcome to your lonely and insular world of ASCII only
user559633
@Carpetsmoker That's fair, but really mastering CPython requires some C knowledge, so I was phrasing it in terms of relative to the language itself.
user559633
@holdenweb hah, joke's on you, my world is already lonely and insular
13:01
How does it require "some C knowlege"?
@Learner That's almost a troll. Have you heard, for example, that Python was recently publicised as a major part of the experimental computation for the recent LIGO discovery of gravitational waves?
@tristan yup, and you're welcome to it
user559633
@holdenweb quality.
@holdenweb nope, but it sounds interesting
@Carpetsmoker If you really want to understand CPython you end up reading the C sources
user559633
13:03
@Carpetsmoker ...understanding what your code is actually doing, learning the foundation of things like datetime
looks like a really really weird language at first - python.org/about/apps
user559633
What's weird about that?
@holdenweb I don't know ... It seems a bit like saying that to really understand Newtonian mechanics you need to understand the underlying quantum mechanics
There are a few things that require C knowledge, like the ctypes module (strftime was not a great example IMHO), but for the rest, Python does a pretty good job of abstracting those details away to a point where you don't really "need" to know them
Even to "master" the language to quite a significant degree
I'd say it's more like saying "to really understand physics, you must understand quantum mechanics"
user559633
At some point, you need to say "okay, I don't need to understand the layer beneath this to use X," but in Python, X is the backbone of literally everything you do in the language, so in order to master the language, it's almost a requirement to at least be able to skim the source.
13:09
I think we're all on the same page here except for differing definitions of "mastery"
user559633
Agreed
@Kevin Yeah, I was thinking of a good way to phrase that ;-)
user559633
From the benchmarks that poke linked earlier in the week it seems as if Falcon is a quite fast (for Python) framework. Anyone built anything non-trivial on top of it? i'm considering it for the frontend to a project where that frontend mostly just validates headers and throws requests to a backend
Anyone use twisted framework for python regularly? Think it's worth it, or better to just use plain 3.5?
@Carpetsmoker Speaking personally, I make a point of learning as much as I can about the interpreter's behaviour while NOT reading the source. I find this tends to make my explanations rather simpler, because I'm not imagining the details behind the behaviours
13:15
Cbg
Disclaimer: I have read the source (and, indeed, once wrote a patch for the inner loop that executes bytecode), but I try to regard that knowledge as arcane
I occasionally source dive to satisfy idle curiosity. I get a lot more practical use out of reading disassemblies produced by the dis module.
Ex. "what are the comparative speeds of x = 2+2 and x = 4?" becomes easy to answer: count the number of byte code instructions.
@holdenweb Better to learn to drive a car rather than explain the theory of a combustion engine :)
user559633
are you counting the slow or fast bytecode instructions? :P
hi again, and Jon is driving again!:D
13:22
@tristan Yes :-P
In fact it is a trick question. The two statements produce identical byte code.
user559633
oh consts :)
user559633
i think i source dove the most when writing stuff with the socket lib as manpages usually explained a thing better than the python docs
@Kevin That’s not always a clear indicator though. Different byte code instructions have different impacts.
ok, revision: "count the number of byte code instructions, assuming one function's byte code is a proper superset of the other's"
If f() has bytecode ABC and g() has bytecode CDE, you don't know which one is faster. If f() has bytecode QRS and g() has bytecode QRSTU, you know that f() is faster.
yeah… in an ideal case
I could find exceptions to that :P
user559633
13:27
oh, but we're trying
user559633
does python always parse in linear order? what if the instruction is (QRS:> 1*1*1; QRSTU :> 1*1*1*1*0)?
Not sure what you mean with that notation
Ok, here's an exception. If two functions have the same number and type of instructions, but in different order. Let's say both functions have a branch caused by an if. f() has 9 instructions in the common case and 1 in the rare case. g() has 1 instruction in the common case and 9 in the rare case. On average, g() runs faster.
user559633
As in, can the interpreter determine that it would be an expression that's multiplied by 0 and just return 0? Or does it need to walk Q->U?
That’s what the peephole interpreter would do then
13:30
I would expect it to actually multiply it out left-to-right.
could do…
But I would also expect this to happen before run-time, if all the values are literals.
e.g. replacing LOAD_NAME x // LOAD_CONST 0 // BINARY_MULTIPLY by LOAD_CONST 0
re-cbg
13:32
It wouldn't necessarily be able to optimize away multiplication of non-literals, because what if one of the objects overloads their __mul__ method to be return 1? Then multiplying by zero doesn't give zero.
If it’s not a constant, then the peephole optimizer cannot work there; so that would be the job for a JIT
@Kevin Good point there.
Btw. since we’re on the topic of bytecode, does anyone know how to get dis.dis to return unoptimized byte-code? I.e. before peephole?
And it looks like the optimizer won't attempt to precalculate literal-on-literal operators if they're in mixed company:
class Thing:
    def __mul__(self, other):
        print "I'm being multiplied by {}".format(other)
        return other
Thing() * 2 * 3
#result: I'm being multiplied by 2
user559633
With that in mind, I wonder what Python would look like (speed-wise) if built-ins couldn't be modified at runtime.
One might expect this to print "I'm being multiplied by 6" if literals could glob together in any context
@Kevin ... Or be self aware :P
13:36
@Kevin Probably because commutativity is not defined on the operators
True.
Which is quite important for things like numpy to work.
Ah, very true.
That’s also why we have __mul__ and __rmul__ I guess.
yup
convenient for a matrix class
or if there's a quaternion/octonion class:P
13:38
@tristan That would probably only make its implementation a lot more complex since you would have to differentiate between “primitive” and “non-primitive” types (hello Java)
I forget, does the @ operator exist yet?
In 3.5, yes
Not sure if there is any builtin implementation on standard types though.
(A quick test with lists, tuples, and ints didn’t work)
Hey, you know what would be useful for determining which built-in types support the @ operator? Knowledge of C and the ability to source dive... ;-)
Conversational full circle achieved.
Oh, I have both!
brb
@Kevin Or... could just read the PEP
13:42
:-P
How much freedom do devs have in implementing more than a PEP requires? For example, If the PEP says "matmul must be implemented by ints, tuples, and dicts", can they implement it for ints, tuples, dicts, sets, and floats?
cbg all
TIL about tp_as_number
@mri3 cabbage
interesting
If anyone has worked on the raspberry pi. Would anyone happen to know why my program works on ubuntu but when i run it on a pi i get a Index out of range error?
13:47
And apparently there are no built-in types that have an implementation for the matrix multiplication
@mri3 Are you sure they're running the same version of Python? I don't know if that matters, but it's a useful diagnostic step anyway.
A quick grep through the 3.6 source for "matmul" turns up a handful of testing framework files but no concrete implementations
Unless you want to count the M class
@Kevin On the C side it’s even more boring, as there is nothing that fills the nb_matrix_multiply slot.
One is python 2.7.6 and one is 2.7.3
would that make a big difference?
13:49
I wouldn't expect it to make a big difference, no
@mri3 size of types?
could that matter?
Hmm, maybe if you're doing something fancy with serialization...
Ex. the computer serializes an object of size 4 and sends it to the Pi. The pi attempts to deserialize it, expecting an object of size 6, since the specification changed slightly between versions. (but this is speculation - I know of no such type that changed size)
user559633
@mri3 post the relevant section of your code in a gist or pastebin
@mri3, if you provide an MCVE I am interested in investigating further, but otherwise I'm out of wild guesses.
Augh beaten
OP marked it as solved as they figured out their problem. Cannot be re-produced.
13:57
Ok voted.
@idjaw argh, that title edit
removing it
argh
I voted before editing
now my edit would bump it into the reopen queue, I think
leaving as it is...
In [8]: class Thing:
        def __rmul__(self, other):
                print("I'm being multiplied by {}".format(other))
                return other
   ...:

In [9]: 2 * 3 * Thing()
I'm being multiplied by 6
user559633
@mri3 then MCVE and post a relevant example of the CSV lines. You're asking us for help, so it's on you to put in the effort.
@mri3 also, what line is producing the error?
14:02
58
@AndrasDeak Yeah; cosmetic edits for questions like this won't matter too much anyway, as they'll be removed by the system in a week or so on account of being closed and having a low view count
A full stack trace is preferable but I don't know if the Pi provides that much info
Morning cabbage.
@Carpetsmoker is that a thing? Don't you need downvotes for roomba?
I totally understand. I just tried pasting the csv file and it wrapped
14:02
Whoops, I missed the //Index out of range error here part in that document
@mri3 It's probably OK if it looks like pastebin wraps it. I expect we can still get the unwrapped version from the "raw" viewing option.
ok
Without having read all the code, I wonder if this is a line ending issue...? Suppose that your computer is Windows and the Pi runs Linux. Then one uses "\n" as a new line indicator, and one uses "\r\n".
@AndrasDeak Possibly ... The delete reason from Community is "RemovedAbandonedClosed", doesn't say "RemovedAbandonedClosedAndDownvoted"
@AndrasDeak A, I found one with no votes and was deleted by Community
So as long as no one upvotes it ... (...and you can never be sure, I've seen the strangest stuff being upvoted...)
@Carpetsmoker nice. But I think that only happens after a year
user559633
lol socvr at the heart of an annoying meta again
14:07
and yeah, people upvote all sorts of crap:S
@AndrasDeak Doesn't look like it: " closed as off-topic by Carpetsmoker♦ Jan 13 at 13:36 " -> "deleted by Community♦ Jan 23 at 3:00 (RemovedAbandonedClosed) "
10 days
@Kevin I wrote the program in Ubuntu 14 laptop
Unless SO has different logic ... But if anything, I'd expect it to remove crap faster
@Carpetsmoker sauce: The system will automatically delete closed (not as a duplicate), unlocked questions with zero or negative score having no upvoted or accepted answers or pending reopen votes, that were closed 9 or more days ago and haven't been edited in the past 9 days.
you're right
14:08
@AndrasDeak Yeah, I'm used to that :D
@Carpetsmoker :D Glad to hear we have something in common
@tristan you mean the bounty one?
It's unfortunate that I can't even attempt to replicate this behavior, since I don't own a Pi.
@mri3 did I miss a pastebin link?
Also I can't attempt to replicate because the code isn't an MCVE :-P
14:12
@holdenweb It got moved to the rotating knives on account of being incomplete
It may be worthwhile to seek help on the main site, if you can include all the information you've given us so far plus a stack trace.
I expect SO proper to have more Pi users than rooms/6
Thnx, chased it down - but it's hardly an MCVE, so a little complex to debug the issue.
Yeah, doubly so since it's hardware-specific.
Thats why it is difficult to produce an MCVE when i ask questions. So sometimes i'm just hoping for a point in a good direction to start researching the issue
@mri3 have you tried the poor man's debugger, printing out various variables to see where they start differing on the two systems?
for instance, whether the csv parsing is the same
Well at the very least, us saying "There is no obvious problem here" eliminates a swath of possibilities.
Now you know to stop hunting for a misplaced parenthesis or something
14:22
@mri3 What exactly is the full error message you are getting on the Pi?
In [4]: my_unicode=u"Hi \u2119\u01b4"

In [5]: len(my_unicode)
Out[5]: 5
In the above code it means there are 5 codepoints. But ain't H i and space not code points?
don't know if it's just me, but gmail appears to be going slower than a snail right now
I'm not sure if I agree with "it means there are 5 codepoints".
umm... even the mobile app freezes...
@AndrasDeak parsing "seems' correct
14:29
Gmail is working OK for me.
@JonClements Works for me :/
@QuestionC trying to get you the full trce for you
H i and space are code points.
There's a difference between mapping to old ASCII values and mapping to absolutely nothing.
I had to google the word "Code Point" by the way. I don't understand why they don't just call them unicode characters.
I don't always have time for TV - but "The Night Manager" is well worth watching @Ffisegydd @holdenweb
@JonClements was planning to watch myself:)
good to know, thanks
14:39
@AndrasDeak Yes. Thanks for that. I rewarded the OP for their good behaviour with an upvote. I guess that some people would frown on that, but I like to encourage people to accept, especially if they're newbies.
I do the same unless the question is so bad (but then I don't answer in the first place)
Yeah. That's my logic too. If the question is sufficiently well-written that it deserves an answer then it deserves an upvote. And if it's not, then why the yam am I attempting to answer it? :)
yup:)
and the answer is: rep whoriiing!:D
Exactly
@Kevin what would you say?
14:50
@QuestionC File "flash.py", line 72 in bang. self.dfu=g.get_dfu(self.make,self.dex). File "/opt/flasher/getters.py", line 103, in fget_dfu return make['dfu'][dex]. IndexError: list index out of range
I couldn't actually find anything in the documentation that describes exactly how len works on a string.
Other than "Return the length (the number of items) of an object." which is unhelpful
It's a container of characters. I don't know if they have to document that it doesn't return number of bytes.
i had to type that out ...typo *get_dfu
@QuestionC Because that's ambiguous. "unicode character" could refer to the codepoint, or to the glyph, for those codepoints that have glyphs.
Well what if the string is an "e" plus a combining diacritical mark? Is the length 1 or 2?
14:52
Oh, so like flags.
user559633
Python 3.4.3 (default, May  1 2015, 19:14:18)
[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple LLVM 6.1.0 (clang-602.0.49)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> len('д')
1
Python 2.7.10 (default, Jul 13 2015, 12:05:58)
[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple LLVM 6.1.0 (clang-602.0.53)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> len('д')
2
user559633
len behavior is different in 1 v 2. oh. pm2ring just addressed that. i'm going to stop typing
Python 2.6.6 (r266:84292, Aug 12 2014, 07:57:00)
[GCC 4.4.5] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
TAB completion available
>>> len('д')
2
>>> len(u'д')
1
No results found for "two codepoints, one glyph".
:)
re-cbg snakes
How's the moose going?
user559633
14:55
@PM2Ring i'd rather watch the video that's referenced than deal with unicode issues :)
@PM2Ring fantastic. Today's ride to work was much smoother. Vinny zipped through traffic with ease
Ahhh D3. My oldest frenemy.
DSM
DSM
That's a pretty young frenemy. Morning cabbage, all.
cbg dsm
cabbage DSM
15:01
Me and D3 have been battling for millennia. I was trying to get hieroglyphics to stay inside their bounding box when Egypt was still young.
And morning to you too.
Morning, DSM.
hello guys anyone here that has ever been part of SPOJ? I need help with a solution (approached in 2 different ways) giving TLE and I suspect it isn't a time limit problem but rather a problem with input not being properly consumed or something
Hey guys, quick question to any mathematicians here (@Kevin) If I have 2 numbers, Say a "baseline" and a "result" and I want to get the factor of difference, (IE: baseline=10, result=20 - this is a factor of 2 greater, or baseline=20, result=10 - this is a factor of 2 lesser) What is the best way to calculate this?
@InbarRose division?:P
15:08
well.. I am currently getting the percentage difference.
not that I'm a mathematician
@InbarRose find largest number and divide largest/smallest?
But I want to be able to give a report in a more human readable form, so that I can display this to the customer and he will be able to know what it means easily. Saying that something took 42.5% less time than normal is nice, but saying that something is now faster by a factor of almost 2 is better.
@InbarRose division?
divide the old by the new, you get the factor
That's not exactly true.
15:09
how so?
For the second case
oh, when it's slower?
yeah, you need some heuristics to always make sense of it
or faster for instance
def f(baseline, result):
    factor = baseline / result
    print("Baseline: {}. Result: {}. Factor: {}".format(baseline, result, factor))
    if factor >= 2:
        print("Factor of 2 or greater.")
    else:
        print("Factor less than 2.")
f(10, 20)
f(20, 10)
#result:
# Baseline: 10. Result: 20. Factor: 0.5
# Factor less than 2.
# Baseline: 20. Result: 10. Factor: 2.0
# Factor of 2 or greater.
15:11
I'm not sure I exactly get what you want to achieve
I want a more human readable output
but I'm probably saying what chalarangelo said
you have 2 cases: slower/faster than originally
and then you can compute the factor with division
Lets call it "better/worse"
Or maybe you're asking for:
def f(baseline, result):
    factor = baseline / result
    if factor >= 1:
        print("Faster by a factor of {}".format(factor))
    else:
        print("Slower by a factor of {}".format(factor**-1))
f(10, 20)
f(20, 10)
#result:
# Slower by a factor of 2.0
# Faster by a factor of 2.0
yeah, probably that ^
15:12
Hmmmm
Thats more like what I wanted
at least that's what I understood
Yes, then it is generic for both better/worse
Thanks kevin. That is what I was missing (factor**-1)
DSM
DSM
There is a bit of a bias there, though, one of the old "how to lie with statistics" ones.
factor**-1 ??? Why not just 1/factor, or 1./factor on Python 2 if you don't from __future__ import division
but if the percentage is near 10%, I would find it more palatable than a factor of 0.9
15:14
Well I only provided you guys the [mcve] of my issue :)
There is a lot of other optimization going on. Just wanted to figure out how to make a generic factoring thing and im not a mathematician and I was starting to make really complex functions for something that should have been simple (thanks kevin)
What DSM said. Consider doing something like (new-old)/old, since that gives you info about the change in value.
@PM2Ring I already have that, and I am satisfied with it, but you know what they say - no rest until the boss is happy, and the boss wants to know the difference by factors....
@chalarangelo I don't know what spoj is, and I'm not going to go there to find out, but cross-posting across sites is really bad form.
I'd suggest you look for help in one place and one place only.
@PM2Ring No particular reason.
15:18
@chalarangelo watch out for that 1/integer thing
you bump into an infinite loop, overhang is 1/n=0 for n integer
it seems to work fine though, the formula works correctly, but it takes too long
switch to 1./(cards+1) or 1/(cards+1.) should be OK
V.7
V.7
Hey ... is Sublime Text written on Python ?
@Kevin Fair enough. :) I just have an ancient prejudice against doing exponentiation when a simple multiplication or division can be used. Probably because several of the first languages I used didn't have exponentiation, or if they did needed to use a library function. I guess Python's ** is pretty fast, and I think it's optimized for simple integer powers... but I suppose someone with iPython could do a quick speed test...
or does python3 do true divide by default?
15:20
@V.7 Wikipedia says "C++, Python"
@AndrasDeak I tried it on Ideone with the supplied input set and worked fine, ti probably does it by default (I am just now starting to code in python)
In Python 3, / is always float division.
@PM2Ring oh crap, thanks
V.7
V.7
Thx ... so then I could be here
sorry @chalarangelo, nevermind me then
I should remember to not say anything python-related:P
15:20
@PM2Ring I just did a dis on it. The bytecode for x**-1 is longer than 1./x
DSM
DSM
>>> %timeit -n 1000000 x**-1
1000000 loops, best of 3: 80.9 ns per loop
>>> %timeit -n 1000000 1/x
1000000 loops, best of 3: 63 ns per loop
(In 2.7 at least)
DSM
DSM
Not that it matters in the real world. :-)
20 ns!
Yeah especially in Inbar's case where I expect console I/O to dominate
15:21
that's like... 10^8 muon resting lifetimes
so any ideas on how to scrape off some time from my code? I have no idea why it gives me time limit exceeded...
V.7
V.7
I just want tell you that if you using a Sublime Text and you're using a SFTP Plugin for it, I could sell some codes for it for a little price ... :)
oops, no, that's 2.2 microseconds
V.7
V.7
you're *
Is that supposed to sound sketchy?
15:23
@AndrasDeak or 0.0000012 jiffies
Hmm, did we ever come up with a room policy for solicitation?
@Kevin Yeah, it doesn't matter - I make this calculation maybe a dozen times at the end of a long performance run just to make a pretty label for the boss :P
@excaza :D
Somebody go and put "room policy for solicitation" on the agenda.
@Kevin that'll be $1.50 please
15:24
Ok, the bitcoins are in the mail.
I want to print unicode characters in python cmdline. Using answers from stackoverflow.com/questions/10569438/…
:-P
I get this error:
>>> print u'\u0420\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u044f'
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "C:\Anaconda\lib\encodings\cp437.py", line 12, in encode
    return codecs.charmap_encode(input,errors,encoding_map)
UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode characters in position 0-5: character maps to <undefined>
@chalarangelo: Ah, the old harmonic series balancing thingy. i2.photobucket.com/albums/y43/PM2Ring/BalanceA0.jpg
@AbhishekBhatia I don't know how to fix that, but if you figure it out, please let us know, because:
Mar 4 at 12:43, by Antti Haapala
We need a canonical target for UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode ... maps to <undefined>
We're looking for a nice Q&A to add to our Common Questions page.
DSM
DSM
15:25
Russia!
Positions 0-5 appear in the Kama Sutra text, so I guess we know what you're looking at
Classic literature? ;-)
haha... I am just using the example stated in one of the answers.
@RobertGrant Where did the positions 6-13 disappear? o_O
There are only 5 positions the unicode escape, right?
15:28
@AbhishekBhatia Can't you tell your terminal to use UTF-8 encoding?
Yep, but there are 14 positions in the book mentioned by Bob
DSM
DSM
I have a general policy against talking about unicode with people using Python 2.7, but I think the issue is on your terminal side. That code works just fine on its own:
(2.7) dsm@winter:~$ python
Python 2.7.10 (default, Nov 25 2015, 17:37:23)
[GCC 4.9.3] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> print u'\u0420\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u044f'
Россия
V.7
V.7
@DSM ?
DSM
DSM
@V.7: ?
V.7
V.7
So ... guys ?
15:29
@V.7 it's absolutely inappropriate to discuss what you want to discuss here.
V.7
V.7
Do you want some cheap code for SFTP plugin ?
Please don't do it.
V.7
V.7
ok
@PM2Ring@DSM how to do that?
This reminds me of my own unicode struggles:
Jun 30 '15 at 13:54, by Kevin
Ok, so to use Unicode I merely need to 1) use the magic chcp 65001 command 2) switch to this ugly font 3) only use Python 3 because forget this noise in 2, 4) switch the encoding in Notepad++ if I want to actually have unicode chars in my source 5) use the magic # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- line. So easy.
I believe step 2 means "alter the font of the command line to...", uh, Consolas? Or was it Lucida Console. One of those.
15:32
@AbhishekBhatia Sorry, I don't use Windows. But see stackoverflow.com/questions/388490/…
@V.7 Narrow escape there ...
C:\Users\sony>chcp 65001
Active code page: 65001

C:\Users\sony>python
Python 2.7.11 |Anaconda 2.5.0 (64-bit)| (default, Jan 29 2016, 14:26:21) [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
Anaconda is brought to you by Continuum Analytics.
Please check out: continuum.io/thanks and anaconda.org
>>> print u'\u0420\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u044f'

LookupError: unknown encoding: cp65001
@holdenweb not really - they're on timeout now
Should think so too
New meaning for "gimme the codes".
15:36
I really hate reading C code :|
really? why?
I hate to C
@holdenweb I don't tolerate blatant disruption to a room (and this isn't the only one that user has done it to) - so I gave a timeout - bit busy right now - but will look at the account later and see if it's worth keeping
@AbhishekBhatia This may be helpful. But as I said, I don't use Windows, and I have little interest in trying to troubleshoot bugs in a quirky proprietary operating system.
this might be of interest for Firefox users.
hehehe syntax error question with a syntax error in the title.
15:52
@Sean Now I see your actual question, I see my flippant reply was (as they usually are) unhelpful. I don't know about documentation, but the code on flask's github shows the object you seem to be running dir on to have a local variable preserve_context and the methods are inherited from the werkzeug test Client it extends.
Google-fu exercised.
Right - paperwork.
I wish I could pay someone to fill in boring forms and perform boring procedures for me. I also wish I had the money to do so.
@idjaw All kinds of weird types and headers and feels hard to read through

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