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00:25
What is the typing-signature for a function like: def foo(int i, int j, *args, **kwargs)
TPredFunc = Callable[[int,int,...],bool] seems to fail
fail how?
00:41
should it work like that, with just [int,int,...]?
I'm looking at this:)
examples have things like Tuple[int,...] or Callable[...,ReturnType], but not a mixture
oh, and the *args are not necessarily int?
 
2 hours later…
02:26
@AndrasDeak nope - but the (predicate) is expected to always take two parameters, and potentially more. (Those more are transparently passed along)
02:37
@HEADLESS_0NE "en_US".lower().replace("_", "-")
man is so FGITW
Totally
it's nuts
makes me not want to writeup meaningful answers, lol
I gauge what I want to spend my time on. If I see that certain criteria were met in a question I'll put in the effort.
If it is a very clear FGITW, I'll just get something there if I know it off the top of my head
and then I"ll work on it some more
yeah, I guess I'm mainly curious for my own sake anyways
and holy crap lots of bad questions
haha! I got an accept on a 15 minute older answer with currently 5 less upvotes than the working top voted one, that I put time into lol
02:49
hehe
I'm sure I won't get as much rep as the FGITW person but hey whatever hah
well you got my +1 because you taught the OP something by explaining in detail.
I'm a sucker for explaining the why
same here....
(mostly)
its why I like slower sites, where FGITW isn't such a strong factor
02:55
Also good/easily answerable questions don't come as often.
 
1 hour later…
03:56
my good answers seem to garner me more points over time then my quick answers so I see that as my answer to Fastest Gun
....Also provides guilt that I don't go and improve them more often
04:46
GREETINGS!!!
05:29
have our coffee did we? ;)
 
1 hour later…
06:33
CBG all.
cbg
I have a project idea which might end up being harmful for people, should I do it?
 
1 hour later…
07:47
cbg
08:05
cbg
08:16
cbg
@khajvah if it harms wallets of Microsoft shareholders, then go ahead
It's a powerful surveillance system
Do you live in the US?
If so, go for it.
They seem to be all for it
I like the challenges of handling massive amounts of videos
09:19
guys, I have this problem
[float(a) for a in somelist]
I want to catch the value of a when an exception happens.
Which exception occurs when you do this?
ValueError
oh wait, it might be getting an empty space which is why the console is not printing
I am plotting a histogram with n, bins, patches = ax[f].hist(data, num_bins, normed=1, facecolor='green', alpha=0.5)
sometimes the bins are very wide
why would that be?
well, you can except a ValueError
num_bins = 50
hi @DSM
09:27
@GLaDOS but I am unable to get the value that caused the error
Hey up all
cbg fizzy
@khajvah You can always subclass a custom exception where you input that value.
@GLaDOS I think, the default one prints it, but it might be some weird character, as the terminal doesn't print it
@khajvah Do something like this:
def floatf(x):
    try:
        return float(x)
    except ValueError as exc:
        pass # do your thing

[floatf(a) for a in somelist]
ok thanks
09:32
:29247255 What is discouraged?
@InbarRose Nevermind, I saw except Exception as exc
Yeah, at first, but then I realized it was dumb
I usually catch Exception and then raise it again, only so I can log the data or do some final work, etc.
I will kill myself if this is just another windows-encoding problem
What data are you dealing with?
some financial data coming from a csv
09:38
did you check your locale?
yeah it must be fine. This is a new data so there can be some problems within it itself
Using the csv module I hope, and remembering to 'rb' ? :)
yeah this works with a 100% accurate data
Cabbage!
@Martijn I laughed at this:
> I'm not here to waste my time. A declined flag is a waste of my time.
I must be weird considering that I waste a lot of time on SO…
10:06
For csv module as a beginner I found this tut awesome.
@khajvah Python 2 or 3? Python 2's CSV module was known to have Unicode issues - could that affect things?
@holdenweb Python3. Thanks a lot, the problem was within the data
10:24
what's the difference between /usr/lib/python3 and /usr/lib/python3.4
i peeked into the folders and it seems 3.4 contains the main .py for modules installed under /usr/lib/python3
i'm asking this because i installed beautifulsoup and i can't import it, even though i can see the folder there
I think if it updated to 3.5,6,7,8,9 you won't be able to access it
yeah, the packages installed with pip seem to go to python3, so you will be able to access it when you update
Does anyone know why this won't work.?
print(recent_update) // 2016-03-03 21:46:40
updated_on = datetime.datetime.strptime(str(recent_update), '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')
print(updated_on.week) // nothing
@khajvah If you call !#usr/bin/python3.4 it won't run cos 3.4 is no longer there.
@khajvah and @Wally, is there a way to tell python or pip that i want it to install to a particular location?
10:27
@danidee Why would you?
I guess virtualenv
i know could just download the beautifulsoup.py file and place it beside my scripts but i don't want that
until i try and try and try and maybe fail :)
Getting "import error"?
yeah
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
10:29
@danidee did you install beautifulsoup4?
Yeah.
sudo pip install beautifulsoup4
or pip3
pycharm doesn't even suggest it when i'm typing import
one of the versions is old, you have to install beautifulsoup4
@khajvah yes i did i just tried it again and it's there but it's under 3 not 3.4
it should be under 3
10:30
It should work then.
is Pycharm suggesting bs4 if you type
import bs
>>>import bs
>>>print(bs.pl())
JabbaScript
@khajvah @Wally it is bs4...
@khajvah I tried that I have Beautiful Soup 4 but import bs gives an error
that is one sucky module name however
it's bs4
10:37
my bs stands for bullshit, I don't know what you are all talking about
Okay. Sorry
I thought he was a beginner. Looks like he is experienced so I might be talking bullshit. LOL!
@Wally no man, I never said anything about you. It was just about JavaScript. :D
sorry for misunderstanding
Ok. Cool.
I need to improve my English.
@khajvah pycharm dosen't even suggest bs4 or Beautiful soup when i'm typing
@danidee Is pycharm configured properly?
@Wally thanks for helping, btw
10:45
Try ipython3 or ipython. Do they suggest bs4 if you press tab after
import bs
Maybe a Pycharm problem as @khajvah mentioned
ok, finally a good reason to use ipython :)
11:08
There is every reason to use ipython.
It's a fantastic stack.
agreed
Especially with the Jupyter notebooks.
Re-CBG all.
In fact, I read an interesting article from Airbnb earlier on using Jupyter for knowledge sharing medium.com/airbnb-engineering/…
@Ffisegydd Do you mean iPython notebook?
Or is Jupyter different.
11:12
@Wally I mean Jupyter notebooks.
They're the same thing.
Well, sort of.
Ok
iPython notebooks don't exist anymore.
Hey. I'm a newbie in this chat. What's the meaning of "cbg"? :)
@Kentzo cbg or Cabbage = Hello
They've been changed into Jupyter notebooks and now support multiple languages, but from a Python POV they're the same.
11:13
@poke I did too.
@poke: he then proceeded to spend a time on reading all my enum answers and give feedback..
@Wally funny
@Martijn lol.
Yeah. LOL! I only remember cbg and yam thoug.
11:25
@poke: ah, and he has started flagging wrong comments about enum.
haha
Enums. What a weird obsession.
hi!
Is the enum guy really the enum guy, or just a high priest of Enumism?
@AndrasDeak He is.
The very one.
@AndrasDeak beware the enum guy does visit this room occasionally. If he see this he will enum you :P.
that makes it...sad
If I am to be smitten rightly by enum, so be it!
11:36
Who actually is the enum guy?
yesterday, by Martijn Pieters
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...

@Ffisegydd look at above question
I'm now in the process of trying to know what enum is. LOL!
@Wally really? No C background?:)
No. I only know Python. When I see Python code I understand it.Other languages confuse me. I'm a hobbyist only anyway.
Me too (hobbyist, that is). Sort of. But here in The East undergrad programming is always C-based:)
11:47
Especially the having to compile every time or not having an interactive interpreter are other (more) reasons.
I could say Python is my Sole Waifu and learning other languages is like polygamy. (That's another way of saying I was unable to learn other languages). LOL!
I'm trying to learn IronPython and Jython though.
I get the pain. But luckily they introduced Python in my country in +1 ans +2
@Ffisegydd WTF. At first look I thought s another oilpaint filter kinda thing then I looked at the doodle in the left. WOW! I'm going to try it.
12:02
@Wally oh it's not pain:P
I can't imagine comprehending pointers when the need comes, with only high-level background
Yeah. I was learning arduino and I tried to learn pointers, but never really got them
@Ffisegydd that's nuts
Says it needs GPU. :( I'll have to set it up on my Windows PC which is going to be a pain. I'll try without GPU first.
integrated gpu doesn't cut it?
@AndrasDeak This kind of stuff is very GPU/CPU intensive
I saw a presentation by picsart, they were doing this kind of stuff and had problems with smartphone power
12:08
But it still runs, just takes ages, right?
or does it actually need a dedicated gpu?
dunno
of course the end result is the same:)
You'll need a good NVIDIA card with CUDA to run this software on GPU, ideally 2Gb / 4Gb or better still, 8Gb to 12Gb for larger resolutions. The code does work on CPU by default, so use that as fallback since you likely have more system RAM!.
So I finally found a purpose for my GTX 970
still not going to buy a video card :P
If I had a dog I'd call him git. "git fetch!"
12:18
I've never used a fetch command . clone commit push only
But it is being showed in autocomplete.
Will look up.
You have autocomplete in terminal?
Dogs are cool though. They are like friends except they don't betray you.
@khajvah Tab
oh, I thought it shows suggestions
@khajvah it should
I mean, apt-get tabtab gives me all possible commands
for some reason it doesn't work after "man", but usually it nails the context
I meant something else but realized that I am dumbtelling right now
so I will stop :)
12:24
sorry
If there is only one command it autocompletes. Else suggestions
fetch           filter-branch   format-patch    fsck
git f TAB
12:40
fsck git
git-fsck - Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in the database
morning cbg
13:02
:D
@AndrasDeak you need zsh
% git fetch
fetch      -- download objects and refs from another repository
fetch-pack -- receive missing objects from another repository
oh, is that a feature?
not bad:)
13:04
% gcc -Warray-bounds
-Warray-bounds       -- Warn if an array is accessed out of bounds
-Warray-temporaries  -- Warn about creation of array temporaries
though if I could remember tar -cvzf ..., I guess I'll learn git when I get there;)
ok, that's much more useful:P
% tar c
f  -- specify archive file or device
v  -- verbose output
and menu completion, you can use arrow keys to navigate the list ofc
what's a menu?:P
I very comfortably don't know bash
% git diff -R
FETCH_HEAD         HEAD               master             ORIG_HEAD          origin/master      origin/production  production         stash
d1b28f4  -- [HEAD]    user privilege also searchable (47 minutes ago)
b7d5c94  -- [HEAD^]   do not error on search when filtering active. (51 minutes ago)
ca402ab  -- [HEAD^^]  force milestone column width in inline displays (2 hours ago)
e74d8b6  -- [HEAD~3]  translate inv mail (2 hours ago)
I'm happy with it:D
13:07
@AndrasDeak This would be something for you: tldr-pages.github.io
@poke I'm not sure:) I'm usually more concerned with shortworded man pages
I like to RTFM
@AndrasDeak ^
But most FMs are so super long and bad.
@AnttiHaapala wait, I'm missing context now
there is menu completion, I can complete a commit for -R without any problems
that is the completion menu for git diff -R <TAB> on my zsh command line
13:09
Hmm is it possible to make a truly "global" variable in python? Which is not local to a module? (Or is there a more pythonic way to handle things such as #define DEBUG, "compiler switches" for C++)?
aah, I see:)
thanks, both of you
from settings import * apparently makes a copy of the variables (so modifying doesn't change it for other modules)
@AndrasDeak I can use arrow keys to navigate the commit I want to the command line
not bad:)
@paul23 imports generally create a name that reference the imported thing. So everything that would overwrite that name (the variable), of course does not affect the source.
13:11
my problem is more like I never remember to press TAB :D
so i do things the hard way
# Just like this does not change x
x = 2
y = x
y = 5
It only works when you have a mutable object you modify. For example a module.
So import settings gives you a module object settings which you can mutate
s/x/2/ :D
I just don't want to have to type settings.VARIABLE = true - and wish to import it using the from ... import ... syntax so I can change it as VARIABLE = true
@paul23 Strictly, it copies references into the local namespace. So you can mutate them and have the changes seen, but rebinding them will turn it into a purely local value
I'm wondering if there's another -better- way to handle such "compiler switches". (IE to start displaying extended debug output etc)
13:14
wtf?
how is that possible or is the code wrong, @poke @paul23
@holdenweb yup which means I can't add at the top of main.py DEBUG = true and expect it to work everywhere.
ah no, package named bar
interesting post
badly written, not interesting at all
if you have package named foo that has module/class/anything named foo then you're doing it wrong. c.f datetime.datetime
@AnttiHaapala -.- you know the post wasn't about how to name things.
13:17
@paul23 of course not, but the only interesting part was that "from bar import a"
Inside bar.__init__.py!
so I was like ... "well why doesn't it work that way", but it was because I thought import bar not import bar.bar
also, that wouldn't even work like that in Python 3, so it is just Python 2, lack of relative imports, bad module naming and general confusion from that.
@AnttiHaapala Which code are you referring to?
@paul23 That’s just not possible. VARIABLE = whatever will always assign the value whatever to the variable. It will replace it without caring about what it was before.
@Antti Yeah, the __init__.py part was pretty hidden ;)
13:21
I made it more visible :D
@poke Is there then a way to pass such "compiler switches"? (Arguments to imports maybe?)
Guess I could use command line parameters here, but never thought about making those change during execution.
@paul23 well...
you could make your DEBUG be a fancy object whose __bool__/__nonzero__ is a method
but you would have to know it beforehand :P
@paul23 There is no compiler switch for that because it’s not possible by design.
Some people write a config module that generates a structure of some sort from the data in a config file, then have that object available everywhere by importing the module. But without playing games (e.g. putting your "global" objects in the builtins namespace) there's no way to do it without everything importing a common module
If you want to check for “outside switches”, you could check environment variables
13:28
well, that builtins could be the kludge that paul23 wants :D
just never import anything anywhere,
@holdenweb Configs? Are you mad? :D :D
but set __builtins__.DEBUG = True
it sure is horrible
But that again is a change of a property on an object, not a global variable :P
there are no global variables in Python...
all are properties of module objects, if not something else
@poke Well what's the "pythonic way" then to do "those things"? So that you can make a difference between when running for debugging and running as "application"? Pass the debug property constantly around as argument to constructors/functions? - That opens the "problem"(?) that certain objects might be working under debug and some under normal behaviour.
13:31
@Antti Well, local variables; an assignment without a member access on the left hand side :P
But I guess I go for the simple solution of a config module where I import and refer to it constantly through the module.
@paul23 see, the real problem is having global mutable state
Well, you could use the debug command line flag
never use global mutable state :d
But I wouldn’t call that pythonic. I’d rather build your application in a way that it does not differentiate between a debug mode and a normal mode. It’s more common to just pass environment configurations around.
But such an environment configuration wouldn’t be used like if env == 'DEBUG': do stuff but rather something like if config.shouldDoThingsInThisWay: do stuff
13:34
exactly
@poke Well then call it "extended display mode" instead of debug :P
or even better, inject some other stuff that does something different...
print('Normal stuff')
if config.verbose:
   print('More stuff')
logging.error('Some error happened')
logging.info('Time now is 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC')
@poke Well it's already doing that - I just didn't "want" to have to type "config" in front of it each time, and was really startled when the from config import * didn't work.
13:36
@Antti +1 if it’s just about displaying stuff
or behaviour, like
if you need to send emails, then it is better to have a dummy interface for sending emails than to if config.send_emails: ... else: ...
@paul23 config shouldn’t be a module but an object that’s—ideally—injected
DI all the way: SmtpEmailSender and DummyEmailSender
and: get_mailer(config)
or similar
generally the more branches you have in your code, especially those that you disable when running in development mode, the more buggy your code inevitably will be
While it's nice that starts to become overkill for my application at the moment. (I'd have to rewrite a lot actually to implement a "viewer", and then also abstracting away where the viewer displays to - can be a file or just print etc).
But that’s usually how things end up when you have tighly coupled things throughout your application.
13:43
Anyways, thanks for the replies have to go now for a bit, but I'll check what I do later. I'm basically at the point where I need to transform my "set of scripts & functions, loosely bound together" to a "logical set forming a complete application" - it's starting to turn unmaintainable otherwise.
13:53
morning everyone
Cabbage :)
@corvid gafternoon
we australia now
australia now has pretty much midnight

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