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00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

00:03
@JGreenwell, are you referring to Schröedinger's Git?
00:35
@PaulMcGuire I certainly feel like a git when working with Git at times
01:05
stackoverflow.com/questions/35951924/… So I see this sillyness on my feed. - I'm really tempted to go in and explain that not the weird thing is that right is "0 degrees", rather the "weird" thing in game maker is that it uses a left handed coordinate system. Resisting to open that can of worms and having to explain vector math basics.
yeah those assumptions won't go:P
and brrrr... left handed systems are evil
Lot's of extra minus signs you'll have to take into account. Well it was done so due to it apparently feeling more natural for a 2d world. - So the "origin" is the top-left of the screen instead of the bottom-left
As that is also how screens are written by the GPU/monitor
you could still have z pointing into the screen...
@AndrasDeak indeed for 2d it's kind of trivial. (Though for lightning/visualizing the world it's also counter intuitive that into the screen is positive z-direction). - When we typically draw things we draw "down" considering our viewpoint to be "above" a scene, some kind of bird-view. We also consider ourselves hence to have a "higher altitude (z)". Of course any form of axis system is in the end a arbitrary decision...
01:20
yup
but I think someone's taking the heat for you:)
You realize that it's not a right handed coordinate system anymore. If you cross the x-axis into the y-axis, the resulting z-axis points into the screen, not out. I just want you to be aware. — duffymo 11 hours ago
But from working through dozens of calculations using rotating, moving etc axis systems I can only stress how important it is to keep things intuitive. 90% of my mistakes happen due to me taking an unintuitive shortcut and messing up the signs there.
@AndrasDeak Saw that. It's just that the whole post reeks of a deep lack of understanding (and I'm said to say: but so do nearly all posts with game-maker tag).
@paul23 and some of the answers:P
@paul23 well, just stick to transformation matrices and math and you'll be fine:P
@AndrasDeak Well the transformation matrix for a left handed system has different signs than a right handed :P
yeah, I know
but you only have to stick to a single set of matrices
I'm nowadays actually wondering if 4*4 matrices are actually better than 3*3 + an offset vector kept seperate. Sure for a point a 4*4 can be simply calculated as $p = A \dot vec$ . However when using a 3*3 matrix you can more easily combine rotations: $p = offset_vec + A \dot B \dot vec$
01:33
yup, affine transformations are natural with matrix+offset
also, the matrix
[1 0 0;
0 -1 0;
0 0 1]
will let you transform between your two systems:P
anyway, I'm off for a bit
see you later
 
2 hours later…
03:52
Did you guys see the new mobile chat webpage?
...Did I just see a career's ad that asked me to come "help fix wall street!" o.O
 
2 hours later…
05:43
@thefourtheye Anna, Can I call you today?
 
2 hours later…
07:15
cabbage
 
1 hour later…
cbg!! Why does help(os.sep) give help on Operator precedence? Does anyone have an idea?
@user3100115 because / is an operator.
It is as if you typed help('/')
Strings don't themselves have help information.
(On Windows, the equivalent would be help('\\')).
And just in case that wasn't clear, os.sep is a string, not a function.
@MartijnPieters That makes sense. Thank you.
@MartijnPieters I've been trying to answer over a few days now
67 % of the questions have indentation so bad that I give up reading
@AnttiHaapala Isn't Python wonderful? :-D
09:38
25 % are duplicates but they get 5 upvotes before the question is closed
it is... so far...
I want gold badge in C
lol that 740 is going to take an eternity
I think I'm soon going to have brain haemorrhage
"I know my code is messy, so please excuse me."
I don't believe so. Since I am inserting an element recursively, it starts at the root, and if this is not the correct place for insertion, it then creates 2 branches one for the left node and another for the right node. Note that, at this second level of recursion, it does the same thing again - making a total of 4 branches. At this point, each branch will have its own string, namely "00", "01", "10" and "11". This will go on until one of multiple strings then will be representing the exact point where the value was added (e.g.: "011101101"). — testTester 1 min ago
is this a troll :D
guy is using a binary tree to store data that he needs to go to every node recursively for inserts
09:54
Huh, I was able to hammer the question even though I added stackoverflow.com/posts/29932926/revisions
@vaultah downvote and delete
@vaultah the post originally had [python] ...
yeah
user2743227
10:23
Antti what do you consider bad indentation
user2743227
?
@user1375469 in C language :?
that the inside of the function is dedented compared to the outside :D
in python it is easier of course. Anything that has inconsistent indent depth is bad
missing }
stackoverflow.com/questions/35968936/… btw why does python syntax highlighter lighlight do
user2743227
If I import numpy in my module, the import it again in my main script, does this use up space, or does my IDE (spyder) just import it once? I'm afraid of memory leakage
no, it does not use more space,
and your ide does not import anything
user2743227
My ide does not import anything? What does that mean?
10:34
that your ide does not import anything, it is your python/python interpreter that imports
I've almost used all my daily votes in the morning
mostly downvoting questions
Guys any of you know how to get points or find easy questions. I don't mind answering duplicates or downvoted questions.
please don't
@vaultah Does it have a negative impact?
I don't see how.
I should look for tags of libs I use I guess.
10:51
@Wally if you could post a question, knowing that you will get an answer regardless of the quality of that question, would you still try to make it good?
Ok. I'll try to find other methods. I don't think I need points anyway. i just need enough to get myself from loosing my question previlige
I made the mistake of searching SO for a question and posting mine. SO search is limited unlike Google. I gotta search Google first to avoid posting duplicates.
I'm looking for a cheatsheet or ready made examples of normal use cases like threading.
I tend to forget stuff.
For example a simple threading example with comments.
stackoverflow.com/questions/35969088/… this question got an upvote?!?!
useful?! shows research!?
Even I wouldn't answer that question. LOL!
11:14
I think I have to post that feature request to meta
that the upvote button needs to show a clear popup
tooltip right away
or that newbies would be asked "do you really want to upvote this, upvoting means you consider this question be well-researched"
this morning I answered 10 questions, used all my votes, cv'd several questions etc
and I got 77 rep
and that user there got 38 rep by copying my comment into his answer.
well perhaps he did write that answer a bit longer so it was original yes, but
well, this is weekend, I shouldn't be ansewring on stackoverflow
@AnttiHaapala I was tempted to do that many times. But I don't remember if I actually did. Many times people give answers in comments and don't post an answer.
I've done it too
And that makes it an easy steal.
everyone's done it
but I wanted that question be closed fast.
and deleted and removed
11:29
Ok.
So, it's OK to post others answers in comments as answers by adding more details?
it depends
not if the answer is "you're missing }"
and the question should be closed as offtopic
if it was some other error... but that is like "common sense", after you see { without } you'd think "of course, I am so stupid"
Yeah. That one was a terrible question.
everyone's done that too
but to give upvote to those questions, like, ??
it is not useful
you cannot google "syntax error at with" then you come there
"ah I was missing }"
user2743227
12:07
I just realized probabilities are an illusion. Like, whoa.
Probably Probabilities are an illusion
12:22
@BhargavRao can't see you in C room
there are some things to CV
@AnttiHaapala curriculum vitae is a noun?
Nah, CV here is close vote. :/
user2743227
12:51
Is there a function to find the gradient of a numpy equation?
user2743227
with respect to a numpy.
Looks like jython questions are unanswered.
And simple ones.
@Wally Hah, you can answer them then. :)
Yeah. I'll try.
user2743227
I'm trying to scale linear regression =/
13:01
@paul23 for the record, curriculum vitae is a noun
@user1375469 what's a "numpy equation"
"curriculum of your life", so it's a possessive structure (or whatever it's called, I don't even know how to speak about grammar in my native language)
but the bottom line is curriculum -> noun
user2743227
w*x+b=y, where all the variables are vectors.
user2743227
numpy.array
but...you're writing it manually
can't you write the gradiant manually?
as in [w,-1]
user2743227
correct me if i'm wrong, but you're telling me to hardcode an equation for the gradient calculated for the vector length, right? But I want to be able to write an equation for any vector length. Well, actually I might give up on that, i still can't figure it out.
?
what do you mean "vector length"
user2743227
13:08
The size of the array. The length of the vector.
user2743227
[0,0] would have a length of 2, and [0,0,0,0] would have a length of 4.
oh
so you don't mean gradient as gradient with respect to f(x,y)=0
but rather the numerical difference of an array?
since that is np.diff(y)/np.diff(x) for a discrete function y(x)
I can give you a definite answer once I clearly understand what you mean mathematically:)
@AndrasDeak uh curriculum in the way it's used is no longer a noun, it's a form of the noun currere (meaning to run). "curriculum" is to currere like "runned X(lap etc)" is to "to run".
Not sure how that's called in english.
Sorry couldn't resist
hmm
@paul23 you mean something like "curriculation"?
isn't it a verbal noun, hence being a noun?
oh lol, that's still called a "noun" in english?
XD in Dutch those structures aren't considered nouns.
which might or might not make it a noun:)
well, your language is weird:P
it would be a noun in Hungarian, for the record
and my language is even weirder:D
Nope I mixed up "verb" and "noun"
ah, makes sense:)
english fail ftl
13:18
:D
I assume the words for "noun" and "verb" in Dutch are closer to the German counterparts, then
I don't know the terms in german ;P
> „Gehen“ ist ein Verb.
seems legit
that fits my grasp of the German language perfectly:D
> Die Wörter „Auto“ und „gut" sind Nomen.
I don't know why I don't learn languages from wiktionary:D
Well in dutch it's "werkwoord" (lit. transl: work-word), and "zelfstandig naamwoord" (lit: indipendent indication-word)
Oh goodie, grammar.
@MartijnPieters hello! Are you Dutch too?
and are you being sarcastic?:D
13:36
Yup, I happen to be Dutch.
And yes, I am being sarcastic. I "love" grammar.
:D
well most of us are not liberal arts majors for a reason;)
oh are we talking about grammar?
OH BOY!!! I'm so glad I decided to come online for this
oh wait...I forgot
import sarcasm

sarcasm.run()
you're being almost as snarky as if we were talking about java
sorry....I had a rough day yesterday. Plane travel makes me a cranky baby
hugs for everyone.
14:00
no offense taken, I just noted:D
and I meant "you" as a plural:P
and I don't like grammar either
cbg @AnttiHaapala
@AndrasDeak nope, that'd be nominal in English
noun of English is "Substantiv"
@AnttiHaapala thanks:)
easy for us Finns since all the linguistic terms seem to have been loaned from German
14:08
@AnttiHaapala shame, you could've gone with our ancient common words;) Except that our common ancestors didn't concern themselves with grammar...
Finnish word for mother is a Proto-Germanic loanword that no one speaking German language would recognize.
It's also common that the word survives as a loanword but vanishes in the original language. Finnish word äiti ('mother') comes from Proto-Germanic *aiþei (as far as I remember) but the word is no longer used in Germanic languages.
so see, that just proves that Finns are crazy
I'm convinced:P
whoever salts their anise-based confectionary is crazy
well, that'd include dutch ofc
14:11
naturally:)
@MartijnPieters KimFake
lol
I was left with no votes, now I have 2 votes left again :d
14:28
Morning cabbage.
cabbage
Mr. Morgan, sir. How goes the war
15:11
Hi guys
nobody is here ?
Cabbage @raian, Sunday, so a bit low traffic.
If you new around here, see the rules sopython.com/chatroom
And reply back with cabbage sopython.com/salad
15:26
that answer though: "as I told in comments, you have to use django"
in Flask admin can I hide [Save and add] button somehow
easily
contrib.sqla
user559633
lol "you have to use django"
@BhargavRao I've been meaning to ask: is it expected to use salad? I'd gladly do as the Romans do, but I feel like an impostor when I say cabbage:P
user559633
@AndrasDeak you don't have to use it
answer seems to be "no". I just need to copy the whole damn model
*damn template
16:30
huh, apparently I've been on SO for a year today :)
@AndrasDeak Some of us actively don't use Salad. Do whatever you want to, you'll make enemies either way.
@Ffisegydd thanks:D
@AbdulelahAlJeffery that code you mentioned would strip all characters outside Latin-1
not just hearts or other emjoi
exactly
I found this regex [^\x30-\xFF] to work perfectly
I saw you say garlic yesterday Fizzy :P ;)
16:36
is there any resource where a I can "see" the full sets of unicode symbols that can be matched within any unicode character set
@JGreenwell Sometimes to talk to savages one must act the savage.
the exception the proves the rule, eh
@Saleem your coding header is wrong. it should be literally # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-Antti Haapala 29 secs ago
@AbdulelahAlJeffery ^
try that fix with saleems answer
I knew it and I used it before saleem suggestion
16:39
@AbdulelahAlJeffery unicode.org/charts
Any suggestions on this question. I have improved it from before:stackoverflow.com/questions/35791965/…
I added this line # -- coding: utf-8 -- on top
rx = re.compile(ur"[^\x30-\xFF]", re.UNICODE)
filtered_comments = re.sub(rx, " ", comments)
you need to have the source string also in unicode
(God I hate Python 2)
If the source string is str not unicode, that is probably going to fail
16:45
I just wanted to say "should I curse at python now"
yes
curse at Python 2 and switch to Python 3
my latest graduate projects are the first time I get to use Python 3 (with IPython too) and I used to wonder why people insisted on switching......now I get it
Rhubarb
in python3 this line breaks rx = re.compile(ur"[^\x30-\xFF]", re.UNICODE)
OH GOD it finally worked
I didn't need this # -- coding: utf-8 --
Thanks @AnttiHaapala
17:02
haha! finally beat git into submission!
Hey guys has someone used mDNS with python? I need to list all the development boards available in the network, but I haven't found anything until now
cbg guys
17:15
Hey, quick style question. For a cached function, do you prefer to directly return the result, or return the caches copy of the result. I'll show you what I mean.
def cached_function(x, y, _cache={}):
	cache_key = (x, y)
	if cache_key in _cache:
		return _cache[cache_key]
	else:
		result = expensive_function(x, y)
		_cache[cache_key] = result
		return result
		# OR
		return _cache[cache_key]
I usually return the result as I thought that would avoid a re-lookup from the dictionary and just simply as that's what my CS professors have always done (so grain of salt)
I tend to go back and forth.
But yeah, that makes sense.
user2743227
17:44
Is there a place I can get feedback on my code?
codereview.stackexchange.com Just make sure to read their rules first.
user2743227
thx
18:32
@MorganThrapp What JGreenwell said. return result avoids the redundant dict lookup. You may be interested in looking at this answer I wrote a few months ago that compares the speed of various memoizing strategies.
@PM2Ring Ooo, thanks! Yeah, that would be super helpful. I'm trying to cache API results from a particularly slow API.
I wish you had memoization vs kwarg cache for the same approach.
I could just time it out myself, but I'm curious if decorator vs kwarg has any speed benefits. Though, even if it does, I think the kwarg is a little easier to read.
Your current code (with return result) is probably the best you can do without getting rid of the wrapping function. Using a decorator to do memoization is convenient, but noticeably slower, due to the extra function call.
18:48
I'm having a similar problem atm. Calling up a API of zipcodes with lat/longs for distance and location calculations (in this case would be easier, well faster, to write my own but its required for project so "optimize, optimize, optimize")
cbg Antti
@MorganThrapp you've got worse problem in your code
in that cached_function.
you're using in to check if a key is in cache
Oh? What should I be using?
instead you should do [], then catch KeyError.
18:51
Really? Why? That seems way more expensive.
there is no point optimizing the "expensive function" into cache when your cache lookup is slowed down
it is not.
Catching a KeyError is faster than a lookup?
NO
but you are not catching KeyErrors,
if you're catching KeyErrors all the time, then what's the point in having the cache?
+1 ^
dict.__getitem__ does not throw unless there is a cache miss
18:54
Because the function talks to a slow and shakey API, so I'm trying to avoid hitting the API again if I can help it. This function just checks if a record exists already, but the calling function might be called 3 or 4 times if the API failed to return a response.
Most of the time the data I'm looking for won't be in the cache.
ohh! I'm using that - thanks Antti
and remember you can write result = _cache[cache_key] = expensive_function(x, y); return result
no need to pretend that it is more lines if you take the result in another variable
@AnttiHaapala Ok. But if you expect catch misses to occur more than (say) 10% of the time won't catching KeyError be (on average) more expensive than an in test?
hmm how to test this nicely
I would say I'm going to get a cache miss at least 75% of the time, but each call is a second, and I'm calling it 10k times minimum, so even saving 25% of the calls is a lot of time.
@AnttiHaapala I didn't even think about that. I'll definitely do that.
19:00
@MorganThrapp then the optimization is meaningless
I made a func that does (x, y) -> and calculates sum but now I need some good test data
how to generate good data for it, perhaps zip(range(1000), range(1000)) for some misses then range(100), range(100) for some repeats
I really hate timeit
@PM2Ring thanks for the support!;)
It's the least I could do. :) And it is a good answer - I don't know matplotlib, but I could follow your answer.
I knew this would happen typical fuking stake overflow just there to not help but to criticise ,IF U FUKING READ PROPERLY THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH MY CODE BUT I NEED HELP FINSIHING IT. — SchoolHelp 4 mins ago
Thank you, I appreciate it:)
19:08
Stupid steakoverflow. Why won't you help me finish my blue cheese butter.
Q.E.D.
at 1000 misses to 100 hits it still is on average faster
Huh.
I thought exception handling was much more expensive.
it is, but everything else is more expensive.
Good to know.
if you make the list * 10
then i get 0.21 to 0.26
which is significant already
so not doing in makes the overhead of function call + caching -20 % if there are lots of hits to be expected.
and if there are not lots of hits, then it means everything will be dwarfed by the speed of calculations, or your caching does not make sense at all (even though it will probably still be on par)
19:16
Sure, but what in the case of a high miss rate? Like 90%?
@AnttiHaapala That actually surprises me a bit too.
@MorganThrapp my initial
Yeah, the API is definitely the limiter.
paste.ofcode.org/zKnDKwmdJtFc9j8xvKjyhn this is 1000 misses to 100 hits
it recreates the function in initialization
or did I understand the "number" wrong
I did
a sec
hehe :D I retract
break-even is somewhere at 1 hit to 1 miss
@MorganThrapp ok, does not matter at that point, anyway my point is that you should optimize for the cache hit, not for cache miss.
FWIW, here's a comparison of in vs get: stackoverflow.com/a/35451912/4014959
19:26
@AnttiHaapala Yeah, that definitely makes sense.
that is different. get does the method lookup.
cached get does local load followed by tuple build
in does neither of these.
@poke how about the other
looks like comment
@AnttiHaapala It’s one of those gray-area cases.. It could be an answer but just a very bad one..
I would flag it if you flag it.. :D
"following code to the view part control partial class"
so it is inside a type, but how were these partials, can you even do private in them?
Yeah, partials just mean that you have multiple physical files for the same class. It makes no difference in semantics. And for WPF views, it’s the so-called “code-behind” which is always a partial class.
@poke casted delv-vote also
Anyone ready to give me a bit more programming/interface design help? I now have a constellation object - this is a "group" of satellites with the same orbit flying at regular intervals (though different satellites, in each "slot"). Now I wonder what should happen if one changes the interval number (ie from 4 to 6 satellites). What should happen to the already filled slots, delete them, or "move them"? Or should I make the size of constellation constant over it's lifetime to prevent this?
I favour immutability
@paul23 how about real life:
you just do not move the satellites around
can sum1 help me with stackoverflow.com/questions/35791965/… . I am stuck with no headway.
19:43
@AnttiHaapala Well yeah, but the program is to simulate & find the best constellation configuration (simplified: more but less heavy sats vs less but heavier).
@AbhishekBhatia this is the third time you're linking that question.
Sry, I can't figure how to debug this issue. All seems well, thus asked.
Also with immutability do you mean just "describe" the number as immutable or would you hide it (self._number + property to read it)?
@AbhishekBhatia Can you read it without using apache, simply directly using python + sqlite3?
Then it seems logical that the problem is in either the flask setup or apache. Seems a setup-error somewhere. I have zero experience with flask though, but try reading a simple text file from the folder using python's default options.
Also can you run flask without a third party server backend? - That would also be a test you could do. (One of the things I like in django, their build-in server software that just works)
Oh and test if apache can serve a text file in from the directory (without going through flask, just as webpage).
19:52
@BhargavRao both answers are gone :)
@poke Yep, by the same 3. (Both were comments and NAA, imo)
^ always seems weird to me that UK considers itself more atheistic but has massive celebration/time off for Christmas
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