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00:02
daaaw missed 200 rep by 11 rep. I'll get you next time internet points
00:39
Hello frands
00:59
cbg
@idjaw you didn't ping me :P
Hey JGrindal
Hi all. I'm trying to update an integer saved in a file. If the file doesn't exist, it needs to be created and populated. Otherwise, the current value should be read and update.
I wrote this function and it works. Can it be improved?
FIXED = 10
def Updater():
# Update offset
co = 0
if os.path.exists(LOG_FILE):
with open(LOG_FILE, 'r') as fh:
co = int(fh.read())
with open(LOG_FILE, 'w') as wh:
wh.write(str(co + FIXED))
Please edit that last post, and change to "fixed font"
I guess it is too late. The option to edit is gone
repost (or riposte?) perhaps?
01:07
FIXED = 10
def Updater():
   # Update offset
   co = 0
   if os.path.exists(LOG_FILE):
      with open(LOG_FILE, 'r') as fh:
         co = int(fh.read())
   with open(LOG_FILE, 'w') as wh:
      wh.write(str(co + FIXED))
Not super-keen on a method named "Updater" (should be snake-case, and probably a little more descriptive), but otherwise, what else are you going to do?
well ... it works ok for a case where there is no possibility of 2 programs writing at the same time
functions methods should be verbs
or verb_subject
or verb_subject_with_explanatory_prepositional_phrase
I chose an arbitrary name to show my code......
There's only one process writing to the file
What is meant by "FIXED"? Is the file FIXED when it is updated?
Maybe a better name might be "COUNTER_INCREMENT" or "STEP_SIZE"
01:12
Sorry again.. Random variable name to show code.. The intent is to update the integer in the file by the same amount always..
I'll take it that the code looks ok (sans weird variable names).
What kind of improvements were you looking for? @AnttiHaapala already pointed out the potential concurrency issue, if this code could be run in multiple threads or processes.
I wanted to check for correctness (I understand the issue with multiple-writers)
file might exist but it isn't writable / readable
thus you'd still need to catch an exception
ok thanks
i'll wrap the alls to read and write with try/except
*calls
then you do not need the "os.path.exists"
just try to read it
01:24
@AnttiHaapala @PaulMcGuire thanks!
@AnttiHaapala Thank you :) I'll have to keep that in mind for the next time. :)
 
4 hours later…
05:02
SYN
05:40
CBG all .
life form detected
cbg
 
2 hours later…
07:25
cbg
why this one throwing error ... python3.5 -c 'import bz2'
07:45
@RajaSimon unfortunately we're not mind readers. Why don't you share the error?
Do you have a local file named bz2.py?
08:10
cbg
08:25
Finished Bleach last night. Weird finish to the series.
Oh that's why - Netflix doesn't have all the seasons
In fact it has 3 out of the 16 seasons
08:46
Cabbage!
hello guys
@MartijnPieters I assume your answer was also downvoted by Ethan?
09:39
cabbage!
[primarily opinion based] is it a problem that as a python noob, I'm getting familiar with python2? Would it be better to learn python3? Or is it wisest to be familiar with both?
cabbage
This online minesweeper is just terrible.
@AndrasDeak I'd say: 1) learn Python3, 2) mind the gap.
what gap?:D between 2 and 3?
yep
09:48
ah, thanks:)
There is quite some difference in some ways between Python 2 and Python 3. If you’re just starting, it’s a better idea to just start with Python 3. It should generally be a bit easier since there are a less common gotchas and it feels a bit more polished in terms of consistencies
@AndrasDeak There is little reason to learn Python 2 if you're writing your own programs. Most libraries work with Python 3 now. The chief advantage of learning Python 2 is that you can understand other people's Python 2 code, and possibly adapt is to your Python 3 program
@Carpetsmoker I’d argue that if you can write Python 3, you definitely can read and understand Python 2.
Awesome, melon guys for the feedback:)
If you're new, stick with Python 3 until you've felt that you've grasped that. Then (maybe) start learning some of the differences.
09:50
I'm definitely using my own code, nobody around me speaks python (and I'm a researcher, not a developer)
@poke Probably, yeah. But some differences can be confusing.
@AndrasDeak (maybe get a pet snake? :D :D)
All those little differences... Like, you know what they call 1/2 in Python 2? They don't call it 0.5? No, they call it "zero". Ok, and what about classes? Classes are classes, but they call'em "le new-style classes".
-1
Q: syntax error in python EOR

Mr.swag69i could yous some help with my syntax error EOF while scanning triple-quoted string literal import string Enters name name = input('Enter your name please').lower() #Code for the input of the sentence sentence = input('Hello '+name+' enter your sentance').lower()#to validate ...

I will never be able to understand how people can actually post such stuff
Do they not look at it?!
@poke I have a dachshund...does it count? (snake with fur and legs)
09:52
@Carpetsmoker Maybe they're very young, like, 12 years old.
They want to learn but they don't know how to ask so they just sort of go with what they think could help them
So they have little concept on how to ask questions correctly
Sure, I can understand not asking the question "correctly" or in a clear way. But anyone can see that the formatting is way off... I think even a 12 year old can understand that (if said 12 year old can program Python)...
I know people that are very not technologically oriented that try their hands at programming and usually come to these exact problems.
They tend to never read text in pages and end up not understanding a lot of really trivial things like how to format.
They probably have this notion that something is amiss but they don't know and are too busy panicking at stuff. Its a long walk to technology for some people
I noticed that whenever I stand beside my mother when she's using a computer she becomes clueless about everything, but when I'm somewhere else she always seems to be alright
Yeah, and I get all of that. What I don't get is the part of asking a question where part of your code looks like a header and the other is all on a single line\
Maybe that's just me ... But I would make sure that I get it right to the best of my ability (and then probably still get it wrong somehow, but not so spectacularly wrong).
@Carpetsmoker I need a close reason “I can’t even bother to read this”
10:07
Are you not fixing their markdown for educational purposes?:)
I started, but it was too off and gave up
Maybe SO should also give out syntax errors
@Carpetsmoker ooooh I see
"i know i am not the tiedest coder"
I assumed (for whatever reason) that they were missing a single level of indentation or something......
10:09
I don't know ... In general, I'm very wary of "fixing" Python code because of the significant whitespace
If it's a mess, you can never be 100% sure that you did it right
@Carpetsmoker yeah, I agree. I just thought that the 4 spaces for markdown were missing
10:23
belated cbg
Hello
Invalid salt...
can anyone help me out on this error
when matching hashed password getting this error
using bcrypt to has passwords.
hosted the code in linux machine. And Hashed pwd created in windows machine
@tiru Is there a reason you're not just asking the question on the site? That's what it's for...
comparing hashes in Linux
This is more of a socializing channel
and seeing this error.
okay
let me create one
thanks
10:46
#from __future__ import braces
x = int(input("please input a number> "))
if(x % 2 == 0): {
    print("that number is even")
}
else: {
    print("that number is odd")
}
Antti you have commented the import ?
It looks like a hybrid between Java and python :p
It must be from __ancient__ import braces
A colon and braces! What sort of frankensyntax is this?!
11:06
It's valid python 3 though
@poke Yup. Ethan is the author of enum. I do personally feel his downvote regime is rather strict though.
Splitting hairs there; my answer is correct, even if there is a nice trick of using a descriptor to fill both roles.
@MartijnPieters Yeah, I was actually considering leaving a comment along the lines of “Do you really fear our competiton in a closed question so much that you need to downvote our maybe overcomplicated but correct solutions?”
@AnttiHaapala You forgot to add end after the closing braces to make this work. And semicolons.
semicolons are not legal python. not in braced blocks.
lol
so where is this enum-flamefest?
11:19
@AnttiHaapala but commas are!
yes. Unfortunately python does not allow other statements in block compoud statements, besides expression statements that is. And even then you need to separate them with comma.
anyway, my brain even can't invent this kind of monstrosity, I stole it from @Rainer
that's how I write python
0
Q: How do define an attribute in Python 3 enum class that is NOT an enum value?

engHow to define an attribute in a Python 3 enum class that is NOT an enum value? class Color(Enum): red = 0 blue = 1 violet = 2 foo = 'this is a regular attribute' bar = 55 # this is also a regular attribute But this seems to fail for me. It seems that Color tries to include...

@AnttiHaapala no, it doesn't allow statements, full stop. Not even expression statements. :-)
The fact that a valid expression is also a valid expression statement is neither here nor there when you are abusing set displays. :-P
11:22
5 months ago ... o_O
@EthanFurman I don’t really understand why you feel the need to go to a closed question 5 months after closing it, linking explicitly to your answer again (which is also the accepted answer on the close target), and downvoting the two answers to this closed question when those answers may be a bit complicated but nevertheless both provide a working solution for the problem. Are you that overconfident that your solution is the only acceptable solution for this requirement? — poke just now
I’ve also flagged his comment to my answer which essentially says “or do it my way”.
You can't actually know it was him downvoting...right?
except only he and tumbleweed saw the post in the last week
Very sneaky way of strategic downvoting, though:P
@AndrasDeak I can’t but it’s incredibly likely considering that both Martijn and me received a downvote today, and he left 4 comments around the same time on that question and its answers.
pfft that answer
it's very...20k of him:D
11:28
Ah, Zero's question. Where's he these days? I miss him :(
zero had a bounty of 500 on that, I answered it well in time then Ethan took the bounty at the last minutes
so basically that is "my way", right?
11:41
cbg, all
cabbage o/
@poke some people just can't leave well enough alone?
@AndrasDeak We can't, but the timings are pretty conclusive.
Cabbage
11:56
cabbage o/
i released a module to pypi a day ago and it has gotten 100+ downloads
Congrats
not that it does anything special...i'm a bit surprised
do we have trolls on pypi :)
Can you give the link?
i discovered that there was no function in python that returned the remainder of the slice of an iterable
11:58
Nice name.
i asked a question some days ago stackoverflow.com/questions/35819360/…
@danidee the downloads can be from mirrors and some projects that track the technologies used in packages/version support
okay
sorry your documentation is a bit lacking :d
I do not understand what does it do?
yeah. i know will update it asap. i just wanted to get it out and stop procastinating
12:01
I think we need more.itertools :D
there are lots of things that are missing from itertools
one of the most annoying is the consume
the funny fact is that there is a deque with maxsize=0
Is there a take(n) function? That's handy.
You can answer your question now :P
Or take(iter, n) probably
@AnttiHaapala sounds useful:D
@AndrasDeak its pretty much only use is to consume an iterator
and it has been optimized to do it
so the python itertools docs say that while there is no consume in itertools, you can always create a deque of length 0 and feed it to it ... pfft!
12:05
:D so basically /dev/null
12:16
my point is that ...
deque is optimized to do something like that but you'd just create a throwaway instance
and thta is not the "one obvious way to do it"
@RobertGrant It's called islice...
Oh okay
I thought that detected if something is or isn't lice
It doesn't reify the values, but cool, thanks. Close enough!
"reify"?
Reification is the process by which an abstract idea about a computer program is turned into an explicit data model or other object created in a programming language. A computable/addressable object — a resource — is created in a system as a proxy for a non computable/addressable object. By means of reification, something that was previously implicit, unexpressed, and possibly inexpressible is explicitly formulated and made available to conceptual (logical or computational) manipulation. Informally, reification is often referred to as "making something a first-class citizen" within the scope of...
Sorry I'm not concentrating properly. And now Martijn's pasted that to utterly destroy me in a classy way.
12:27
:-P
12:41
What I meant was it doesn't automatically turn iterables into the objects they represent, but I get why that wouldn't actually be helpful
'materialise the sequence into a list'?
list(islice(iterable, n)) would do that.
Yup - either iterate over it element by element or materialise it in a list, tuple, deque, str, set/whatever...
Yeah I know :) Thanks.
I get why it wouldn't be helpful for a function to do that, I just expected it based on a different lazy lib I used once
12:59
cbg friends!
Bleh, why is machine code so frustrating? Apparently you need the length of a string to format it to a string rather than it interpreting it as a float?
@idjaw cabbage o/
o/
13:15
\0
Does machine code have strings?
Prize to the person to suggest some decent programming music!
Clair de Lune by Debussy
or didn't you mean "music involving programming"?
13:30
I meant "Music that is good to listen to while programming"
i'm really confused here requests is returning 404 when the url exists i confirmed it in my browser
That does sound confusing.
sounds confusing to me too. Because I have no idea what you are doing. :)
i don't know if it's user-agents or something because urllib was getting an error code of forbidden
@Ffisegydd Pretty lights, Pink floyd, Air
13:32
You'll need to provide an MCVE.
What's your Python code?
^ FML.
And have you tried it on a url that you don't control, like google?
import requests

url = 'http://69.64.38.41:8000/trusted/trusted'

result = requests.post(url)

print(result.status_code)
ooooooh get
13:34
._.
does this still count as rubber ducking?
pycharm blinded me :)
@RobertGrant According to recent standards, that would be is_lice
@Ffisegydd Erik Satie: Trois Gymnopedies
13:39
@GLaDOS thanks for the reminder; added Air into my music mix (Moon Safari and The Virgin Suicides)
Never heard of the Virgin Suicides
I'll check that out
great soundtrack. To add to that, check out (if you haven't already) Kruder & Dorfmeister, Boards of Canada, and Sigur Ros
Should show up soon in my recent listened list at last.fm/user/mjpieters
Now, I know what I'm listening today as well! :)
13:41
@MartijnPieters Is that your hand on the keyboard?
@BhargavRao no, but my hand would look pretty similar when placed on a keyboard.
Is it possible to conjure some sopython coding music mix?
if we're all on the same genre
Which veggie do we name it after?
strawberry
because it's essentially a jam
Your friendly cabbage introduces - Strawberries <drum rolls>
13:44
I think that I can scrobble to last.fm from spotify
I've decided to go with some movie soundtracks, but ta for the suggestions I'll put them in the deque.
@idjaw that's what I am doing right now.
@MartijnPieters oh cool! :)
@MartijnPieters Radiohead street spirit - amazing music - one of my perennial goto tracks.
@GLaDOS I like your thinking. Tristan used to have a Spotify list that was 12 hours long. I also approve of the name Strawberry, even though in general I disapprove of Salad in all forms.
I'm currently on Amazon Music.
13:48
Strawberry - Easy salad listening
@Ffisegydd Just noted you were at aber.ac.uk for undergrad - did you come across Rudi Winter? I've used his materials on the web for inspiration a lot.
@JRich Yeah I know/knew Rudi. Great guy.
Cool - nice to know that the man in real life matches the virtual impression on the web :)
What, you mean a gigantic German man that loves beer and has a laugh like Father Christmas?
I know a Rudi like that:D
13:52
Sounds like a fantastic man!
@Ffisegydd Just need to make sure that the music is on the same page.
@GLaDOS we could always have different sets of recommendation. Don't need to all recommend the same thing. After all some music suits different situations.
When I'm doing cerebral work I prefer classical, but when I have to smash out some code I prefer electronic/house.
As long as you don't get death metal after simon and garfunkel's sound of silence
When I'm coding I need something fast paced with no lyrics.
it can be any genre, as long as it keeps my head bobbing
@GLaDOS you'd just have to have separate playlist collections I suppose.
13:55
That could work nicely
@GLaDOS I was just looking for some instrumental Lordi, although that's not death, just heavy
@GLaDOS @Ffisegydd would this be something that can go on the wiki that members can optionally provide a 'what we are listening to'? That way people can use their service of choice to output a playlist history or something.
@idjaw yeah definitely.
@AndrasDeak to each his own I guess
It might be there is a 3rd party website that allows you to catalog playlists that are agnostic to service, and if not then we should make a startup to do it.
13:57
well, as mentioned before, last.fm is collecting spotify play data to show what you have been listening to
that's a start
There should be a service that knows what sort of programming are you doing currently and sets you up with the correct genre to match it
I also need the same music when doing intricate coding or just mashing seemingly random buttons in an organized fashion
Quick! To the StartupMobile!
this is actually a pretty interesting project. If you can put together a list of "what people are listening to" and then best effort to create a playlist in your service-of-choice, that would be awesome!
(this probably totally exists....)
@idjaw probably.
I was thinking more a project that would allow you to put together a playlist and then "export" it to whatever service you wanted.
14:00
exactly
I probably didn't word it right. But that is what I meant, @Ffisegydd
Morning cabbage.
So I put together a service-agnostic playlist on Fizzy.com and then I can export to Amazon, you can go to Spotify, etc.
Ah right, I thought you were doing some predictive stuff.
Morning @MorganThrapp We just started a new startup. You're in, you have no choice.
Yeah, that would be super helpful. Maybe even show which services have the highest percentage of the tracks on your playlist.
I suppose I could take a 3rd job.
atta boy
14:01
an IDE plug in that based on the libraries you are currently coding with/to chooses songs
Hmmm strokes beard this should be do-able...
@MorganThrapp cabbage o/
on the topic of music, some Venetian Snares. Which I highly recommend
Oooh he's good
totally
and Canadian. :D
14:02
in a weird way
I see what you mean.
I gotta move this party to work. Heading on the road. Keep this up! :) This is an interesting little project.
temp-rbrb :)
@idjaw Ooo, that's really good.
Starting point for services you'd want to be able to output to: musicmachinery.com/music-apis
@idjaw like
I'm listening to Pretty Lights right now,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezuIJtX9nMM
14:10
If there was a genre for music that is best fitted to walking down an urban lit alley in a rainy day at night, this would be the go to guy for it.
@MorganThrapp great
14:28
I call shotgun on Chief Data Officer role.
As long as I can be the Chief Senior Lead Junior Developer Officer.
As long as I get "Ninja Puppy" :p
(that's a proper job title that one!)
No pets in the office! Apart from cats.
Lol, Nailed it :D
I'll be the Puppy Inspector! To... make sure there are only cats in the office.
14:35
Bobby, you gotta keep out three puppies ...
What is this? The set of Total Recall?
What is this? A startup for ants?
What is this? this is What?
What is this? ¿sıɥʇ sı ʇɐɥM
wow, I could compute the volume of a d-dimensional simplex!
completely off topic, but I'm very happy with it:)
I can roll my tongue.
(Actually I can't ;_;)
14:42
:(
I feel for you, that's genetical, right?
I can touch my feet
unlike computing the volume of a simplex...
Nature vs nurture: the debate on d-dimensional simplex computation.
@BhargavRao with your scapula?
@AndrasDeak Nah, with the tip of my fingers
14:43
@BhargavRao it's something;)
I can touch my feet too, it's easy, I just sit down and touch them.
Dunno what the big deal is.
It's tough if you are fat :-(
oh, standing up!
now that's impossible:D
Yep :P
Ah right. I assumed you could just touch your feet.
I do it all the time when sat down.
user559633
14:52
hello "friends"
@MorganThrapp I want a business card with this title.
@tristan cabbage o/
@GLaDOS You're welcome to it as long as you pay me royalties.
Morning, Tristan.
user559633
Morning :)
Doesn't have to be my business card
Mexican managers in metal quarries are
Señor Lead developers?
14:55
Morning acquaintance.
DSM
DSM
Morning cabbage for all!
cabbage DSM o/
Finally got my mod hat - woo hoo!
Morning, DSM!
Morning DSM and nice hat pup.
14:59
@JonClements there's a mod hat then:)
congrats
@AndrasDeak There was, is and will be forever :P
aaaand back

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