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16:01
@AbhishekBhatia Is there a reason you can't use python 3? It would "all just work" then, even on a windows cmd prompt
For your particular case, you could use cp1251, I think
D:\Mahmud_model>chcp 1251
Active code page: 1251

D:\Mahmud_model>py -2
Python 2.7.6 (default, Nov 10 2013, 19:24:18) [MSC v.1500 32 bit (Intel)] on win
32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> print('hello')
hello
>>> s = u'\u0420\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u044f'
>>> print s
Россия
>>>
bleurgh
BTW - you will note its the REPL itself that doesn't like cp65001, you can't even do anything when it's set - try typing exit() in the python 2 prompt when the cmd prompt is on cp65001
@PM2Ring "Quirky proprietary operating system" - top marks for the appropriate level of dismissal there ;)
@JRichardSnape I just calls 'em as I sees 'em. :)
@idjaw: Well, Karan did say "As you can see the statements are missing inside the for loop. " So it's not really an indentation error, he just wants to know what needs to go in the for loop.
DSM
DSM
16:17
I can think of more reasons it wouldn't work than reasons it would, but I've sometimes wanted a place to redirect questions which aren't really questions but specifications and the OP really wants to hire a programmer for a small task.
Interesting concept, but I'd be demanding cash up front. :)
@PM2Ring Thanks, I realized a little later that they did mention that...And now just realized that they did a good job in tricking me in to dumping an answer, because they did not even attempt the meaty part of the solution....aw well.
Because I read it too fast...
You're welcome homework-grabbing-person.... you fooled me...you fooled me well.
Yeah, Karan has a bad track record on that front. But at least his questions are getting better.
I was going to re-edit my solution to mention the "slicing" part. But now I don't think I'll put in any extra effort.
DSM
DSM
@PM2Ring: in the pandas tag we tend to be a little more generous than some others are about answering questions if the problem is well-specified and has a solution which would be useful. But I've just seen a bounty which says "This question has not received enough attention" -- but it's not really a question at all. I'm pretty good at that sort of thing, but I'm not going to spend half an hour of my time when it's not interesting, I'm just doing the guy's work for him..
16:24
but if it is 500 rep then ...
slaves to the points....the fruit is tempting
@AbhishekBhatia summa summarum: windows sucks.
And even Microsoft knows it, that's why they keep being friendlier with Linux these days. :)
@DSM I can relate to that. OTOH, I'm wary of doing that for OP's that have shown cargo-cult tendencies in the past. But I must admit that Karan does seem to be improving.
@idjaw friendlier, like porting new viruses to Linux?
16:33
@idjaw Some people on SO disapprove of the bounty system. See Shog9's answer to meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/318497/…
@AnttiHaapala haha. :) Actually, this which is pretty cool.
@idjaw that is exactly the virion I am referring to
hahah...your hatred runs deep
@PM2Ring those are actually some excellent points
@idjaw Sure. But this issue has caused some upset in the SOCVR. Also see the linked question meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/318482/…
"non-closable open bounty constraint on questions?"
did not know that was a thing
16:43
Well, the idea is that if a question is good enough to attract a bounty then it must be a great question, so therefore it's not close-worthy. And I guess there's also the issue of whether or not the bounty should be refunded if a bountied question were closed, if such a thing were possible.
I can see it opening the doors to some complexity on assigning specific rules for bounty questions. However, doesn't a user need to have the necessary rep to open an X-value bounty?
if I open a question and want 500 bounty rep to it. Don't I have to have 500 rep for it?
@idjaw Well, I think you need 75 rep to even do a bounty, then the bounty amount is up to you
So, I can do a 500 rep bounty with 100 rep?
wow
that's broken
at the very least it should be a "payment"
16:46
It is
but it doesn't come out of anyone's pocket
You need 75 to even attempt a bounty, and you can only allocate what you have
bounties are "advertising" - nothing else
Or I'm wrong
that was my question though. If I have 100 rep, can I give 500 rep as a bounty
16:47
@idjaw yes - it comes out of your "rep pocket"
@idjaw nope - you could do a 50 rep bounty at most
DSM
DSM
I haven't thought about this much, but I find it hard to resist the temptation to take the position opposite Shog9's on any issue. It's been a useful heuristic in the past..
Slightly annoyingly it comes out of your pocket and never goes back, even if you don't award it to anyone
seems like this system is up for review.
Which is presumably to stop people never awarding it, but still.
doesn't seem very clean cut
16:49
well bounties are pretty well defined - you need 75rep to offer one
then the rep amount you offer for that is taken off your account immediately
What's not clean cut?
OK. There it is. "taken off your account immediately"
Got it! :)
And you can't go over your own rep total, right? So if I have 100 rep, I can't give more than that. Or, as mentioned, I think the max was 50? Is it all based on how much rep the OP has to determine what kind of bounty they can open?
the min is 50
so if you're a 100 rep user, you can do a bounty, but the most you'll be able to do is 50
your rep will drop to 50
Thanks for bearing with me. I get it now.
You and I could offer a 500 bounty
16:52
cabbage all
cbg @davidism
the thing to note though, is that a previously bountied question, the next bounty has to be "double" the min.
Bounties are making more sense now. This also explains how I can open a bounty on something that isn't my question
cabbage @davidism
@davidism Some Good news for you stackoverflow.com/teams?sort=members :-)
16:54
@idjaw indeed... it's used to "reward" an existing answers sometimes - you don't need to be the question owner to post a bounty on it - all you need is 75 rep
I noticed we passed the SO team a couple weeks ago.
So your dream has come true. 4 left for a century :)
First "team" to pass 100 I hope - wonder if we get swag for that :p
@JonClements Thanks for the explanation.
@JonClements SOpython shirt for all the hundred members :D
16:57
Yes, please.
We're a brilliant example of all you can achieve with the new Teams feature.
So, nothing?
SOpython shirt FTW
Teams is clearly the connective tissue that holds this community together.
500 rep and a SOpython shirt to the first 100 members of SOpython. And a shiny gold badge that is simply 'TEAM'.
I dream big.
16:58
if we can get enough interest - it's doable
added my name :)
If Tristan's design is the one we're going with, I'm buying 100.
I want tristan to also do a design for the snakeoil institute
I would buy that too
oh man...I would totally buy a snakeoil institute shirt
Please have a shirt ready by PyCon, I would wear the cabbage out of it.
17:00
^^ditto
user559633
It should make you guys easy to find at least.
user559633
please do not actually print that shirt
user559633
it would be the worst joke-backfire since i sarcastically told my exwife that we should totally have kids
I never know when tristan is serious.
We need a serious tristan tag
17:02
@tristan I think I just want your avatar displayed all over my body, thanks.
3
user559633
okay c ya l8r guys!!
He should start his messages with, Serious:-
user559633
user559633
game of thrones needs to come back
hahaahahh
17:03
I'm getting so close to being half way done with the last book. :P
user559633
Serious:- if you want a new tshirt design i will draw one. please do not send a throwaway dick-joke to the printer
@tristan Can you make a non-throwaway dick joke?
in the form of a snake?
user559633
@MorganThrapp tell me where the hyphen should be in that sentence and i'll get to work
@tristan don't worry, I was referring to the sopython community logo, not the one posted above
17:05
We require a timeless dick joke for the ages.
A dick joke hand crafted by spanish artisans.
Look upon my dick joke, ye mighty, and despair.
4
@tristan "Can-you make a non-throwaway dick joke?", better?
user559633
5/7
Maybe a recyclable dick joke.
user559633
17:06
what a throwaway culture we live in
Recycle-a-Dick.
user559633
also, the python logo is a snake. too easy.
Can you make a shirt design that's dicks in the shape of the recycling logo?
user559633
let me see if i'm sharing my screen with the office before i start
user559633
"whatcha doing tristan?"
oh nothin just drawing a dick cycle
17:08
Am I the only one who is interested in the SnakeOil institute as a shirt as well?
user559633
man i should open a patreon
Hell I would take an "official" diploma to put on my wall too
@tristan I would patronize you.
user559633
@MorganThrapp A++ you grows up and you grows up
Looking at the team page, I'm confused... Who is the original JRS?
user559633
17:12
@BhargavRao Definitely.
user559633
if we actually want a logo, peter varo is incredibly talented, so maybe we could bribe him into making one
user559633
it's so classy in here today
especially when Mac is involved
Today is the day of reinstalling everything because my OS shit the bed, so yeah, I have nothing better to do.
user559633
17:13
booo wikia is crap
user559633
i have a pretty bad headache and i'm adjusting from a 15" monitor to a 27" monitor, so my attention span isn't admirable
17:25
Wow, every time I think we've found the last bug before deployment another cycle of "oh shit, that's not right" starts up. Been going on for several days now. Raised lots of interesting tickets, s'pose we'll have time to attend to them soon. About everything that could be wrong with the deployment structure of the site was.
The mythical last bug...
heck - with a diamond mod cap, a sopython team shirt, I'd look pretty damn cool :p
Well, hardly "the last" - we currently have about 490 unresolved issues
@JonClements Now now. We need a Sopython cap also -_-
17:49
"Diamond cap" made me free associate to Jojo's Bizarre Adventure and now I'm wondering what all of our stands would be like.
I guess I should've looked for a dupe target for this: stackoverflow.com/questions/35874023/… but I couldn't resist the opportunity to try & explain how names work in Python. :) But I was a little surprised to see a 8k+ user say:
for entry in a creates a copy of each item in your list and presents it to you. If you modify it "in the loop", you're affecting the copy not the original list-object. Keep this in mind when using loops and things. — Torxed 26 mins ago
That seems to be the ad-hoc mental model that most people form, if they don't look up how it officially works
@BhargavRao I don't think so.
DSM
DSM
I've found that the fact that the coincidence that assuming two false but plausible ideas -- (1) that there are primitive and non-primitive types in Python as in some other languages and (2) that Python passes certain types by value and others by reference -- covers a lot of cases people come across means that a lot of people wind up with a broken mental model of how names and objects work in Python which works most of the time. These people tend to be hardest to convince that they're wrong.
18:04
@Kevin Sure, and that ad-hoc mental model will leave you confused when it doesn't explain stuff where it doesn't apply, like my example. :)
@PM2Ring Ah fine. I left a small comment linking another question.
It's hard to convince them otherwise because every example you can come up with that disproves their model, they can contrive some corner case rule that covers it
Eventually the model would collapse in on itself, but it takes more time than I'm willing to spend on a SO comment chain.
@BhargavRao Ok, but I don't think that's really relevant to my OP's question.
@PM2Ring I think it is a bit relevant and definitely a good read for the OP.
Shall I remove it?
@BhargavRao Well, it's useful information, but it is a bit of a tangent, IMHO. OTOH, I presume the OP is coming from C (or similar), and is trying to understand Python via those foreign concepts, so anything that points out the differences may be helpful.
I'd hoped that this might be a good dupe target, but inspectorG4dget's answer repeats the "makes a copy" fallacy.
18:24
can someone dupe hammer this one....I cv as broad, but I think this answers it
18:37
In today's episode of "Newbies write the darndest code": 'NameError' in Python Program. Lotsa luck, Daniel!
@PM2Ring I just added a canon for that yesterday... hammered
@PM2Ring patient man
Guys. What's a good way to find a free port? I think my strategy causes a big problem
oh beans, that wasn't actually the dupe, that's what I get for seeing "input" and "NameError" and not reading
18:42
@davidism Um, I don't see how that dupe target is relevant.
yeah, I reopened, I'm dumb
whatever, that thing will never survive the roomba anyway
About eight dupes have already been pointed out, however. List flattening appears to be a perpetual favourite problem for noobs
@holdenweb as a noob, I concur
Actually, it could be salvageable. Change the if statements to if variable == "speedLimit":, elif variable == "distance":, etc, and then call it like tryAndExceptInputInt("speedLimit"), etc.
18:45
finding numpy.ravel() made my life complete again
(I know that's not exactly the same, but that's what I end up using all the time)
DSM
DSM
The two standard idioms -- the nested listcomp and itertools.chain -- are neither of them obvious to a beginner.. (True story: there was a bug in a stdlib flatten function because they shadowed a type name. :-)
Hmmm. I might post that as an answer...
So...Call me crazy/stupid, whatever....but this.....isn't it clearly stated in the base of the documentation why this is happening here
@BhargavRao I was implying jonrsharpe...
@JRichardSnape He's the "other other JRS" :/
19:00
Yeah, he picked that although he was here first. Now we just have to imagine a shadowy other primal JRS, stalking the early corridors of Stack Overflow.
Or something like that.
I'll change my name to "The original JRS"
OK, time to go home. Rhubarb, all
Rhubarb o/
Little known fact: I'm known as the Jolly Ray of Sunshine, or JRS for short.
I should totally change my name to that.
19:03
@JRichardSnape THE ORIGINAL JRS ^^^
Disguised as a Ninja :O
The OG JRS
My True Name's initials have an unusually small Hamming distance from JRS.
I'd say that puts me at about #5 in the line of succession.
one day I'll meet a real Kevin Kevinson....one day.
I just have to move to a patronymic society like Iceland and produce an offspring. Not totally impossible.
user559633
i'm going to give any offspring a patronym because i think it would be awesome. Thor Tristanov <<lastname>>
19:10
*Tristanovich
Hmm, what's a good way to iterate through all the lattice points in R2, where each point's manhattan distance from the origin is <= X...
Well, I'd start by measuring Manhattan.
Ex. [(i,j) for i in range(100) for j in range(100) if i+j <= X] but without having to specify an upper limit for range, and ideally without having to filter anything out at all
DSM
DSM
First, we take Manhattan.
@Kevin all possible self-avoiding walk paths
@DSM then we take Berlin!
19:11
Some sort of zig-zag pattern? Give me a sec...
user559633
@AndrasDeak No, it would probably be Tristanov. An-suffix, like Romanov
I don't care what order I iterate them, incidentally.
DSM
DSM
@AndrasDeak: nice catch. :-)
@Kevin is a rejection method too inefficient?
@Kevin what about range(X)?
oh, I see
then you need to reject
I'd go with a discritized circle then
Speed isn't enormously critical since I'm only running it once with X equal to about 20.
19:14
range(-X,X) --> range(-sqrt(X^2-i^2),sqrt(X^2-i^2)), modulo off-by-ones
I suppose my priorities go: readability, concision, run-time
With "elegance" floating around somewhere on the complex plane
well, in that case, x,y=np.meshgrid(np.arange(-X,X+1)); inds=x+y<=X; x,y=x[inds],y[inds]?
then just loop over their zip
(main motivation: the little I know in python is numpy)
Hmm, I'm inclined to do something with Cantor pairing.
just because it has Cantor in it, right?;)
Haha Yaaay. Silly games are fun
DSM
DSM
Bah. 35.
What's wrong with [(i,j) for i in range(n) for j in range(n-i)]. Or do you need negative i & j as well?
Thanks Fizzy, Now I will waste the next hour :P
Yeah, I want to have negatives as well.
I'm about to try:
def iter_lattice_within_manhattan(size):
    for s in range(size+1):
        for x in range(1,s+1):
            y = size - x
            yield (+x,+y)
            yield (-y,+x)
            yield (-x,-y)
            yield (+y,-x)
19:22
[bug] on that page, Has no title :/
Which I don't know if it will work or not
4 yields? does it work like that, returning each in turn?
Yeah, generator functions are allowed to have as many yields as you want.
@Ffisegydd Damn. I got 1 wrong, 18 right. (91=13*7)
awesome:)
19:23
I thought it'd amuse some of you (especially PM :P)
Oh Damn, 1 is not prime.
Forgot that :(
Oops that should be y = s-x
And it doesn't yield (0,0)... Guess I'll have to yield that manually at the start
@AndrasDeak Generators can also have return, as long as you only return None. That can sometimes be handy when you're writing a recursive generator.
Hovering dangerously close to my threshold of tolerance for inelegance, now
@PM2 based on our conversation last week re. Greek etc cyclopslang.org
19:26
@Kevin why is the x loop not with a range(0,s+1)?
do you get the points on the axes this way?
oh, due to +-x, I guess
Yeah, I get the points on the axes because y still iterates from zero. But it does cause the origin to get excluded though.
So I think it's (0,i) you're missing
@Ffisegydd Awesome. :)
I'm not sure there's a way to both 1) include the origin; and 2) yield the origin no more than once
@PM2Ring thanks for the tip:) I probably won't be using that for quite a while, but it's good to know still
19:27
... Without doing something like yield (0,0) explicitly at the start
Bloody Chat scrolling when I'm trying to link...
@Kevin you're missing the x axis, I'm telling you
lol @ azure
python 2 that does not have sslcontext
aaaah
@Kevin nevermind, I see what you're doing
not mirroring, but rotating by 90 degrees...so of course, you're right, sorry
19:43
user image
4
Things are coming together now...
wo0o0o0o0
pretty
Looks nice
It's a reverse-engineerment of @PeterVaro's gif of the day
now add color :D
pp_
pp_
Makes me dizzy but looks nice
19:44
I'm not wholly satisfied with the way all of the cubes beyond a certain radius seem to rise up near-simultaneously.
it's smoother than the original gif
I'd like something more like a steady rippling outwards.
Just pre-purchased Overwatch. So excited I just can't hide it.
Really? I wasn't super impressed with it.
I didn't get into the beta.
19:46
@Kevin nice mate
Of course, I'm not a big TF2 guy either, and it's basically Blizzard does TF2.
I played the beta tutorial then stopped
I played the beta for a week or two.
"like" is irrelevant - you will become one with the cabbage :p
Stay on the path to cabbage, you'll discover a lot in your life
19:48
I am confused as how are strings processed and stored in python. I read somewhere str is a sequence of bytes. To me it seems a sequence of characters.
When I encode a unicode string as bytes say
>>> u"hi \u2119".encode("utf-8")
b'hi \xe2\x84\x99'
Why doesn't it convert ascii to bytes as well?
which is "hi " in this case
Well, are we talking about 2.7 or 3.X? There was a fairly significant change to strings between those versions.
I am talking about python 2.7 as I mentioned str is a byte string. In 3 it is a unicode string I think.
@AbhishekBhatia There may be some map-territory confusion here. If you're asking, "why doesn't the string display as a sequence of nothing but "\x[some digits here]" escape characters?", it's because it doesn't display escape characters if there is a better option for display.
For example, these strings are identical despite looking different:
>>> u"hi \u2119".encode("utf-8") == b"\x68\x69\x20\xe2\x84\x99"
True
>>> b'hi \xe2\x84\x99' == b"\x68\x69\x20\xe2\x84\x99"
True
So there is some processing at the terminal?
Internally, it's all bytes, when you ask for the repr of the object you get a string with bytes represented as ascii or their escape.
You're confusing the data with the representation of the data.
19:56
Whenever you write an expression statement on the REPL, it will call repr on the result and display that (unless the expression evaluates to None). So in that sense, some processing is ocurring.
I think the essential observation is, one value can have multiple valid representations*. This is no different from 0xFF being equal to 255.
(*repr() will almost always return only one of those representations, but that doesn't make it more "correct" than any of the other ones)
Perhaps a more apparently bizarre but similar concept is to type a = 017 into your repl. Then type a. Then be somewhat surprised. Then realise you input that number in octal, but the repr() is showing it in the more conventional decimal.
cabbage, all
cabbage
DSM
DSM
Which was a terrible design decision. Fortunately now repaired, but because of the original mistake we can't zero-pad numbers on the left. :-|
cbg @inspectorG4dget!
20:05
Puppy!!!!
I'm happy that in 3.X they changed the syntax for octal literals to something more explicit.
Someone on Puzzling posted an interesting puzzle about a theft together with what I thought was a fake CCTV footage
looks like it was real D:
8
Q: Watch the video and figure out who stole the documents?

TanujMs. Shipra is a renowned scientist in TIFR, Mumbai. She recently discovered a new way of gaining huge energy from the water-current at a much lower cost. Considering its future application, many companies were after her research paper. She finally decided to file the patent. On February 4th, 2016...

@DSM Absolutely agree. BTW - 35 on the prime game is impressive. I've only managed 30.
I got 22 :'(
Generators v/s Returning a List - Python is not beautifully formatted but I am interested if there are any non-obvious run-time penalties for either approach.
I'd expect there to be some overhead for generator functions since it needs to juggle values around the stack as it moves back and forth between function scope and iterating scope. Not to mention catching the implicit StopIteration at the end.
OTOH, appending N values to a list is amortized O(N), which a generator function avoids by not having a list to begin with.
So both approaches have an O(N) penalty that the other one hasn't got. Which one has the lower constant coefficient, then?
20:14
@Kevin syntax error = not beautifully formatted?
Yeah, to speak euphemistically :-)
ofc the generator is obviously preferable if there's any chance that you'll stop iterating the iterator before it's exhausted.
@inspectorG4dget I like how the bullet points slowly devolve into engrish.
> Others follow us sell may be fake and bad quality.
DSM
DSM
An admirable, if unexpected, commitment to authenticity..
Makes me think that this is a bootleg copy that lifted the first three bullet points from the original manufacturer and then they added the last two as an afterthought.
20:18
Lol
From the FAQ: "Q. just let me know that can i write answers in exam using this ?"
My immediate reaction:
> What does it mean when it says that when you push the emergency button and it blocks all other buttons?
> It means that once you push the emergency button - the watch
@Kevin But, why male models?
@Kevin true. It's all the more reason that whenever I administer a test, it will be open book
Oh Amazon reviewers, never change "this is amazing. it helps me cheat on my test and it is smart and i never got caught 2/5".
man this 1 rep away from 6k is just pointing at me and laughing.
20:24
@MorganThrapp The seller may have been abducted by Candle Jack.
@Kevin Huh, that's weird, he didn't say Candle Ja
@idjaw fixed
@HEADLESS_0NE well aren't you just a wonderful person. Thank you. :)
wait and you're from Montreal as well?? You got even awesomer!
me too!
crazy!
20:27
And I just LinkedIn stalked you. What a time to be alive, lol
hahaha.. YAY
feel free to send me a linkedIn request if you wish
Wat. You look nothing like a lego!
I dunno, I can see it.
@idjaw done :)
Fizzy does that mean you look like some weird spirally thing?
20:34
@idjaw You work in django mostly?
@Programmer only after 8 pints.
I don't drink :[
@HEADLESS_0NE No. currently, a lot of Flask.
8 pint of coca cola would make you pretty spirally.
Oh man, that's too much coke. :|
20:36
Tell that to Scarface.
8 pints of gin actually.
@Programmer What! Not even Water?
@Ffisegydd So, ~4.5 bottles of gin?
That's uh, that's a lot of gin.
I thought I liked gin, but damn.
@BhargavRao just alcohol lol
@MorganThrapp Only after 8 pints of gin is the human brain capable of comprehending my True Face.
20:38
@Programmer Same here, High five
@Ffisegydd Your true face looks like an ER?
It transcends vision.
8 pints of gin will definitely transcend vision.
41 on prime game. I am retiring to drink gin.
Bleh, PyCharm is looking for Python in the wrong location. :/
20:47
is this in a new project, or it just "changed" to a different python?
Looking For Snakes In All The Wrong Places.
@idjaw Well, it's an old project, but this is after I nuked my OS and reinstalled. Some of the settings seem to have persisted though.
ooh
OH right and you're windoze
I feel for you man
It works in the interactive console.
@idjaw do you attend Montreal-Python meetups?

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