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14:00
In case you're wondering why I'm doing this, my ISP is redirecting all dns request to a localhost. DNSHijack
connection = {
  "port": 4000,
  "host": "127.0.0.1"
}
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(help="Start up a new server");
parser.addArgument('--port', type=int, help="port to run server on")
# want to store port in my `connection` object
args = parser.parse_args()
I don't wonder about what anyone does anymore.
And if you didn't want to load the whole of the lines into memory to just pick one, then you can do cMurl, = heapq.nlargest(1, rand_txt, key=lambda L: random.random())
I have seen too many things to wonder.
Now their logs are gonna be filled with Prono blacklists.
Maybe I could also make of list of sites blocked by them.
DSM
DSM
14:04
@JonClements: could you also do max(file,key=lambda x: random.random())?
even better for a single line, yes :)
am I the only person that uses L as a through away for lambdas? 'cos I'm not sure where I picked that up from, but appears to be my default go to...
I use x because science.
DSM
DSM
For me x is default non-index variable, and i default index.
Darn tooting.
@JonClements Hmmm. L as a function name isn't PEP-8... but naming lambdas is a dubious practice anyway. :) I tend to use func or f for a lambda I re-use eg, when doing a sort followed by a groupby. But I get this nagging feeling that I really should use a proper def if I'm actually naming a function. :)
14:14
You CAN'T "name a lambda" - all you can do is bind it to one or more variables. Its __name__ will still be "lambda"
^ What he said
bugrit @holdenweb :)
OTOH,
silly = lambda: "I'm silly"
silly.func_name = 'silly'
DSM
DSM
You'll still see lambda in the repr after that, though.
Morning cabbage.
14:18
>>> silly = lambda: "I'm silly"; silly.func_name = 'silly'; print(silly.__name__)
silly
>>> repr(silly)
'<function silly at 0xb74116f4>'
But maybe that's just a Python 2 thing...
DSM
DSM
Might be.
Happy Birthday, Blossom Dearie. Here she is playing & singing Manhattan
14:32
guys, dumb workplace question... is it considered disrespectful to suggest a sick employee should WFH? It's distracting
@corvid the disrespectful side is how you ask it
and are you their boss?
@corvid You have to do this
Nah, not their boss, but there's nowhere quiet to go to avoid it (small office)
do you guys have a normal WFH policy?
and do people do that often?
It's not a dumb question. I think they should work from home because:
a) they'll recover faster
b) they'll work better (more amenities to deal with illness)
c) they won't spread illnesses
14:35
(understanding the culture helps here, I don't know your office)
I also recommend buying noise cancelling headphones
people just shouldn't work when they are sick
take a day or two off, get better, and don't feel miserable "working" for a week
I have noise cancelling headphones and it still doesn't blur out the sound :| I think I am overly sensitive to the sound of coughing. Every time I hear it it feels like being punched in the stomach
can you work from home?
how close are you to this coworker?
ie, do you know them well?
maybe ask workplace?
they're the experts
14:39
enderland is the #3 rep user there :P
lol so youre the expert
I'm not sure about WFH policy, I never tried to WFH because I will get distracted too easily
a lot of the questions we have on this topic are more from the perspective of this - workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/41617/…
I'm actually not seeing something like this, probably would be a good question there too if you are curious ;-)
Thats agood answer, slightly different OP situation
a lot of companies have a game of chicken when it comes to taking sick days, no one takes them since no one else takes them
14:46
I hate that attitude, but it seems pretty prevalent. Workplace is pretty good about calling out the macho "never take a sick day ever" bs
Workplace tends to be pragmatic, some employers this will end poorly
I've never cared about taking sick time off, once I realized that it was better for me AND the company for me to be healthy
I perform much worse when sick. so it's better to take a day and rest and be better for the rest of the week than to suffer through it
not all companies or industries are supportive of this
I read somewhere that coming into work sick costs companies significantly more than working from home while sick or just not working and staying at home, which I definitely agree with
Not everyone thinks of health as being particularly important
some people think they can force themselves to be healthy
a lot of people have a "just power through it" attitude
14:49
screw that, if I'm sick I'm not working well
@Will lol I have already upvoted that. I wish SE's search wasn't horrible
It's funny there's so many questions about this because SO MANY people think they're tough and don't want to admit their weak human body is ailing
maintinence is not to be ashamed of, even racecars need to stop for an oil change
People with colds / flu should stay home and not spread their germs around.
But I guess that the odds of catching a cold from an infected co-worker aren't as bad as the odds of catching a cold from a total stranger on crowded public transport. I used to spend at least an hour a day on public transport when I was living in Sydney. Since I moved out of the city the number of colds / flu I get per year has significantly reduced.
15:05
Also you've had all the colds, so you don't get them again
Don't you deal with more drop bears now?
Gorram drop bears.
Also - I'm enjoying Ajin, a Netflix anime
I need everyone's help. I've been adding a test suite for some existing software and I'm running out of test related puns for my commit messages.
Give me your puns.
There are no drop-bears in this vicinity. :) Actually, I've never spotted a koala in the wild. I have seen an echidna, but as soon as he spotted me he disappeared. Those guys can dig so fast it's like they just drop into the ground. :)
15:09
Getting a bit teste, are we?
something about an IQ test, "fortunately turned out negative"?
Name you test suite the 'dude, suite'
might be hard to apply to software:(
@AndrasDeak My last commit was "The tests are in, it's positive!".
15:10
But we have plenty of kangaroos around here. It's not unusual to see them lounging around on the football field in the nearest town, or crossing the main road.
roos in the street would scare me to death
Australian wildlife is so interesting, but scary at the same time. I don't really have much intimidating wildlife near me.
Hey Morgan. Did you listen to the Pink Floyd tune Grantchester Meadows that I linked for you the other day?
@AndrasDeak They're very timid, but it's definitely not a good idea to corner them.
@PM2Ring Oh, not yet. I completely forgot. Listening now!
15:13
:30226804 A Texan farmer goes to Australia on vacation. There he meets an Aussie farmer and gets to talking. The Aussie shows off his big wheat field and the Texan says, “Oh! We have wheat fields that are at least twice that size!”

They walk around the ranch a little, and the Aussie shows off his herd of cattle. The Texan immediately replies, “We have longhorns that are at least twice as large as your cows.”

The conversation has died down when the Texan sees a herd of kangaroos hopping through the field. He asks the Aussie, “What are those?”
@enderland you cannot reply to people with a fixed font for pasting code.
I did a gig at a local golf course last weekend. From the clubhouse I could see at least 30 'roos on the course. The golfers just have to work around them. :)
sigh. and I missed the eidt timeframe
@PM2Ring I'm really digging it. It's definitely much different from what I think of as Pink Floyd, but that's why I love them.
@PM2Ring Risk of hitting a kangaroo with the golf ball? "I also like to live dangerously"
15:16
I'm spoiled by being a mod on main SE site, can always edit my messages whenever I want
@MorganThrapp I did say it's a very chilled-out track. :)
(sorry for the reping)
Kangaroos on the road at night can be scary. They get kind of hypnotised by the headlights and just stand there, staring.
So the phrase in Australia is, "Like a 'roo in headlights"?
@AndrasDeak They'd probably just hop away. They have very thick skulls (and fairly small brains), so a golf ball wouldn't bother them much.
@Programmer Yes.
15:21
@PM2Ring it's good to know that they're so chill:D
@PM2Ring are they as big as deer?
The parents of an old school friend had a holiday place in the bush. One time we went there and discovered that a wallaby had figured out how to get in and raid the pantry. He was very hard to get rid of. Wallabies tend to be a bit smaller than kangaroos, and less timid, but also less aggressive when cornered.
@enderland No, an adult kangaroo is smaller than an adult deer in body mass, but I guess they look taller since they're bipedal.
and the whole "stand on my tail while I kick your guts to pulp" aspect makes up for their size
Very true.
well I'm more worried about hitting them in cars (well, deer, not so much kangaroos in the USA...)
15:29
The cassowaries (/ˈkæsəwɛərriː/) are ratites (flightless birds without a keel on their sternum bone) in the genus Casuarius and are native to the tropical forests of New Guinea (Papua New Guinea and Indonesia), nearby islands, and northeastern Australia. There are three extant species. The most common of these, the southern cassowary, is the third tallest and second heaviest living bird, smaller only than the ostrich and emu. Cassowaries feed mainly on fruit, although all species are truly omnivorous and will take a range of other plant food, including shoots and grass seeds, in addition to fungi...
Apparently those are ones to watch out for ^^^ :)
let me guess, another bird with deadly huge claws and strong legs?:D
(TM) Australia
@AndrasDeak Although, it's more "while I eviscerate you with a single swipe of my feet".
nice:)
"Australia: The land where most animals can kill you..." said the Australian tourist board never...
Australia has been trying endlessly and consistently, but humans just can't take a hint.
15:32
lol
Hell yeah. Male cassowaries during the nesting season are far more dangerous than 'roos. And outside the nesting season they are still fairly territorial, but just a bit less psychotic. :)
All this talk makes me want to go more...
Wow... I love this bit from wiki: They are often kept as pets in native villages [in New Guinea], where they are permitted to roam like barnyard fowl. Often they are kept until they become nearly grown and someone gets hurt.
I've never been into cassowary territory, but I've seen plenty of emus, including a few pets. They're far less dangerous, but you still have to be careful if you get close to them in case they decide to peck you in the eyeball. :) Of course, you're unlikely to get that close to a wild emu, they'd just run away.
For those who haven't seen it before, here's a lovely coastal carpet python who decide to estivate in our rock wall a few years ago:
Nice... is that a 2.x or a 3.x Python? :p
15:41
His head and the tip of his tail are inside the wall.
@JonClements I only have Python 2 installed here. :)
Ahh... if that's a 2.x - I'd be worried about finding a 3.x! :p
They're no danger to humans: we're too big to swallow. :) They're great for discouraging mice and other small critters, though.
Umm... never mind humans... I'm worried about ninja puppies!
I heard a kid was swallowed when he was on a morning walk in the government school hostel. The hostel is on a hil
well... I've seen pictures of where a python and alligator had a bit of a run in...
15:46
I'm glad I don't have to deal with much in terms of animals taht will kill me
Unable to find the one I heard. But found this telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/southafrica/…
Our pythons aren't that big.
that was probably an anaconda
I think at this point in time, its no good using python 2.
@PM2Ring cute snake, there:)
15:48
Unless you really have to.
@GamesBrainiac but if that's what slithers into your house...
The farmers around here love it if a python takes up residence in their banana storage shed because they keep the rats away.
I had to work on a really old codebase, python 2.5 with no code comments.
Back then they didn't have python-requests.
from digestion import rats
for rat in shed:
 rats.eat()
About 10 years ago we did get a green tree snake inside this house, but there are no photos. The animal rescue people came and moved him. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrelaphis_punctulatus
15:52
@Anna it might not be wise to keep eating from the shed as you loop over it
consider going over in reverse order
@PM2Ring that's the second non-venomous snake you've mentioned in ten minutes. Are you sure you live in Australia?
@AndrasDeak :) Well, I did see a young King Brown on the lawn here a few years ago. That was a bit scary since he was only about a metre away from me.
> Mulga snakes have, however, been noted to bite people who were asleep at the time.
that's more like it
"Screw you in particular" -- snake
DSM
DSM
I'm glad I don't have to worry about snakes. We have a handful of rattlesnakes which are venomous but they're incredibly rare.
I've never seen a snake outside of a zoo. The worst animal we get here is geese.
And the Jersey Devil, if you want to get cryptic.
Most of the wildlife I see around here are birds. We get quite a few visiting our birdbath, including 4 species of parrot, the most frequent of those being rainbow lorikeets. I should take a photo or video of them bathing, but here's a photo off the Net:
16:07
off topic question (apparently :P) but how do you guys manage situations where you are trying to adhere to pep8 but still use descriptive variable names?
@DSM I generally don't worry about snakes. Of course, you do have to be cautious if you're walking through long grass in the bush, or disturbing old piles of wood... In our yard small snakes don't survive too long, since we get plenty of kookaburras here, and they love snakes.
the weird aussie animal situation is escalating:D
me: "hey, these look like kingfishers" --> "oh, they're a kind of kingfisher"
@enderland which part of PEP8 is stopping you from using descriptive variable names?
@AndrasDeak it's not, but using `` is really annoying
oh weird
tried to show the \ character
but it... vanished
16:12
@AndrasDeak Our next-door neighbour hand-feeds a kookaburra that he's befriended. But even untamed ones will get pretty close to humans if they think they can get some free meat.
DSM
DSM
@enderland: I think your concerns about pep8 and line length have reached the point of diminishing returns..
I know but I don't have a choice
>.>
@enderland Try to avoid using backslash continuation. An expression in parentheses, brackets or braces will automatically continue over line boundaries.
@PM2Ring that's the purpose of my question, if I'm doing something where I end up that long
like:
my_kangaroo = self.animals.kangaroos.new_kangaroo('my name!')
stuff like that sometimes ends up really long
Descriptive variable names are nice, but try to keep them terse. I find it annoying when the names are so long that they bloat the code.
16:16
I was using abbreviations for a few objects and got a comment in code review to not do that :P
@enderland Turn that into my_roo = self.animals.roos.new_roo('my name!')
DSM
DSM
@PM2Ring: I think our hobbies may affect our perspectives..
18 hours ago, by DSM
Like lots of things, I find it depends on the circumstance. When I'm writing math-heavy code, I actually prefer shorter variable names to longer ones.. longer ones can make it harder to see the patterns in the equations.
ie, I have a docker_runner object I abbreviated to dr
@PM2Ring sounds awesome:)
@DSM I do that too.
16:17
We've just seen a eurasian jay yesterday, here in the city, which is as wilderness as it gets:)
@AndrasDeak yeah i didnt think that one through
i mean i imported rats i had to use it
otherwise my linter will yell at me
@AndrasDeak The butcherbirds are more fun. They like you to throw meat to them so they can show off by catching it in mid-air. It's fun watching a group of them compete. Sometimes they eat the meat straight away, sometimes they'll stash it somewhere for later.
maybe like this.stomach(rats.digestion(rat))
16:21
I'd go with boring and non-lethal.
@enderland "Things should be simplified as much as possible, but no further". Abbreviating stuff that much can be ok while you're actually working on the code, but it's a nightmare for others trying to read your code, or when you come back to it 6 months later.
@PM2Ring yeah. I'm doing systematic renaming now, I'm normally horrible at naming things
Good naming takes forever to learn. I'm still getting better at it and I've been coding since the early 1970s. Of course, back then, we could blame lack of RAM and language limitations for our small names. :)
I can't do it well at all
though I'll say I'm... younger :)
When I can't come up with a good name, I rethink my design.
16:29
@Kevin that is something I normally do, particularly for methods
Ignoring that impulse is how you end up with FactoryManagerBeanSpringManagerFactory classes.
ObRef: "There are two hard things in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors." - Phil Karlton & Leon Bambrick. twitter.com/codinghorror/status/506010907021828096
Yeah, I am thankful I am not alone in this problem, but... still an annoying one
i guess what im saying is i totally want to make like a robot python and code its behavior in python
Yo dawg, I heard you like Python, so I put Python in your Python.
16:32
Rhubarb time
Rbrb, pm.
its going to take me a while to remember that rhubarb is the ok vegetable and rutabagas are the angry vegetables
Cabbage!
and a good salsa 2 u, now join me in throwing these angry rutabagas at their mortal enemy, the papayas
I'm having a small existential crisis because I'm trying to come up with a description of myself that will still be valid five years from now but all I can come up with is "I am a human being"
16:44
welcome to existence, which has no meaning or purpouse other than what you make for it
I gave that speech yesterday :-P
I call myself feistdaddy pickletickler
i mean even that statement is only sure to be valid in 5 years depending on a few factors
what if the singularity comes along
then you could be really special
like the unfortunate reality is that any of us can check out of this mortal coil at any time, we just don't know, and if such a thing were to come to pass, arguably it would be "was" not "is"
16:47
If the earth explodes three years from now, then the thin wisp of plasma that once comprised me could hardly be called "human" any more.
Something something death and taxes.
brief cbg
dont worry wisps of plasma will still be taxed by Space Cruz
Of course he'd survive. The zodiac killer's life force is bound to the stars from which he took his name.
he will have a laser-beamable face
Oooo, this file transfer is going to take 4000 hours and ~78 million minutes.
Dom
Dom
Hello pythonistas!
I wonder if I can ask a quick question?
cool name
No, you already did. You only get one.
17:00
Come back tomorrow ;-)
Dom
Dom
Can I ask another (this) plus one more then? :D
Why ask if you just want to ask your real question anyway?
You just did it again!
Ok, ask the question. But now your balance is at negative two questions.
Have you read the rules, friend?
Dom
Dom
17:02
I saw a few rules in a popup as I came in, any others I should see?
It's dangerous to go alone, take these.
Dom
Dom
that's not my Q btw :P
Literally the link in the description that says "room rules".
Just ask.
Hey guys
Asking a question
You do not need to ask if it’s okay to ask a question.
keyword "need"
Dom
Dom
ok I read them, broke one already :/
17:04
We had a big conversation about this last month.
@davidism Not enough blinking and marquee-ing
The conclusion being roughly "we would prefer people not to ask to ask, but if they do we aren't going to kick them for it"
Gentle hazing isn't out of the question, though.
@Andy that's the problem with userscripts, it's only blinking on my screen.
TLDR: The answer is yes, you may ask questions.
Dom
Dom
I'm just wondering if my for-else conditional is valid
def register_user(self, request):
    for player_name in Player.query(Player.username == request.username):
        return AddPlayerResponse(message='Username %s already in use. Please choose a different username' % request.username)
    else:
        current_user = endpoints.get_current_user()
        user_email = current_user.email()
        username = request.username
        Player(username=username, email=user_email).put()
        return AddPlayerResponse(message='User %s Successfully Added' % username)
it works but I don't think it should?
17:05
Looks OK to me.
Why don't you?
Dom
Dom
I've never heard of a for-else loop
It's not very common.
But for-else is indeed valid. here it is in the language spec.
i forgot for-else is a thing
for_stmt ::=  "for" target_list "in" expression_list ":" suite
              ["else" ":" suite]
17:08
in fact ive probably done a ton of nested loops and fors that would be simpler with for-else because i keep forgetting lol
Dom
Dom
ok thanks guys I see :)
I don't think I've ever used it, myself.
It's one of those things that's so obscure that you might want to not use it in order to make your code clear
longer, but clear
Huh, I actually have a couple places where I could use that.
I mean, code that makes you do a double-take might be less than clear
17:09
I've used it ocassionally. try/else is useful too.
I never think about it.
stackoverflow.com/questions/9979970/… Here's a nice write-up on the construct
#I just don't see why I would do
for x in y:
    a
else:
    b

#when I could just as easily do
for x in y:
    a
b
Dom
Dom
Is it less clear in my code Kevin?
17:11
sweet im now in the "top 7% this week" i feel really good about my internet points
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: those two don't do the same thing, though!
Why is Tkinter so confusing to learn
@DSM When would they not? Does the else not run if y is empty?
I'm still not clear on when the else does NOT execute
IIRC, only when a break occurs in the loop.
DSM
DSM
17:16
Yeah, for-else is for-if_no_break.
is there anything that lets me like, enter into debug mode when generating django templates
because that would be fresh
#find the first thing with some property
for x in y:
    if has_some_property(x):
        print "Found the thing"
        break
else:
    print "Did not find the thing"
googles it ah i need pycharm because OF COURSE I DO argle garble
Dom
Dom
I would love to find an IDE that allows debugging on server side code the way VS does for C#, any suggestions?
I only write desktop programs, so nope.
DSM
DSM
17:18
I am the server.
@Dom i basically do that with pdb.set_trace()
but yeah its not super pretty
im guessing that giving money to jetbrains is once again the answer to that kind of thing
user559633
@Dom epdb or pycharm has that.
Dom
Dom
thanks Anna and tristan, I'm looking into them
i googled epdb and i found that it exists but there are like no docs that i can find
Dom
Dom
17:21
I had PyCharm on trial but since I don't have an income stream from Python it's not something I'll pay for atm
actually, does it work in the free version?
i know you dont get any django stuff on the free one
its frusturating for me b/c pycharm is cheap compared to the software others in my dept use (esp the 3d animators) but since i basically use python/django to speed up metatasks if i tried to get them to pay for it it'd be an obnoxious, uphill battle
DSM
DSM
Admiral Ackbar's first name is apparently Gial now. #TIL
Dom
Dom
my main issue with it is the subscription model. I'd like to just purchase it outright and keep it with no further payments.
ooo free for learning purposes..
user559633
@Dom you do with pycharm. $250 gets you all of their products, for as long as you want to use that version. $89 for just pycharm
Yeah, I use the community edition. I'd love the pro version, but even community is great.
user559633
17:29
$89 is about the cost of a video game and i bet you use your IDE longer than you play fifa 2016
I don't think you can any more. Not that I've been able to find.
the only video game i play is undertale and it is $74 cheaper than a pycharm license
ok ok i bought nidhogg the other day that was $69 cheaper still though
Dom
Dom
@tristan I can't find where it says that
aha it's called a perpetual fallback license
user559633
heh. i saw nidhogg in its original form back when i was at NYU :) funny that it turned into a thing on steam
though i remembered there's a trial and id really like that template debugger so i just installed pycharm. basically my dev environment is an ubuntu vm with all the files, and i'd been using sshfs to open the files in atom, then running server, pdb, etc over an ssh terminal BUT
17:32
Hi there. I've just upgraded my pandas from 0.16 to 0.18 and my magic to load an external script has stopped working, giving the error 'ERROR: File '$screener_file.py' not found.' The command I am using is: %run $screener_file. screener_file is simply a strong containing the path and file name (e.g. screener_file = '/home/betaadjusted/PycharmProjects/scripts/screener36.py')
is there a way in pycharm to just like, open from ssh
I've looked through the docs, googled, checked stackoverflow, tried various permutations, and can find nothing on this. %run '/home/betaadjusted/PycharmProjects/scripts/screener36.py' works fine, but my old code is used multiple times so I'd rather not change it!
user559633
@Anna x11 forwarding ?
can anyone help? :(
@tristan i mean if i wanted to run pycharm from the vm but i dont really
17:37
nyeh hehe
DSM
DSM
@Carl: that's not a pandas thing, it's an ipython/jupyter thing. I'm afraid I don't use that pattern -- calling from a variable name, I mean -- but I think the approved pattern today is something like
>>> screener_file = "hello.py"
>>> %run {screener_file}
hello, world!
I don't know if the behaviour changed or not, but if it did I'd be surprised if there were a way to recover the original.
Thanks, that doesn't work for me
%run {screener_file}
ERROR: File `'{screener_file}.py'` not found.
DSM
DSM
What version of ipython or jupyter are you running?
IPython QtConsole 3.2.0
Python 3.4.4 |Anaconda 2.3.0 (64-bit)|
I knew I shouldn't have updated pandas the day before a deadline ... doh
DSM
DSM
I'm on 4.2.0. I'm afraid I don't have a version old enough to test.
And again, I really don't think pandas has anything to do with how ipython magic is interpolating variables.
17:41
ok, thanks
maybe I should update my anaconda ...
would you recommend reinstalling from a newer package?
or using conda update?
To jump back to the topic of 'straya from earlier, what is this. dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3563007/…
Dom
Dom
does "pythonic" mean easy to read or something else? Because sometimes I see really hard to read code that people call pythonic.
@Dom It generally means someone who is new to python thinks that writing python means how many statements can I put on one line.
user559633
@Dom it means using a lot of the idioms and style conventions. e.g. not having your text be too wide, relying on things like if x: instead of if x > 0, etc.
DSM
DSM
@Carl: I don't know what version of things anaconda has in its distribution right now. But are you sure you ran the test I showed? If you didn't define screener_file, that's the error message you'd see.
Dom
Dom
17:45
lol! I prefer to break it down even if there's a much shorter way to do it, is that pythonic?
yes, I tried it. screener_file is set to the file_path
I may as well update anaconda anyway ...
its weird that something like this should change ...
@Dom explicit is better than implicit, flat is better than nested, beautiful is better than ugly
sparse is better than dense
Dom
Dom
@KevinMGranger sounds like a careful balancing act, ie. use short code in some places and long code in others?
DSM
DSM
@Carl: I'd double check to make sure that it's set to what you think it is right before you do the %run, just in case.
oh sweet this is exactly what i want blog.jetbrains.com/pycharm/2013/03/… EXCEPT IT ONLY WORKS WITH VIRTUALBOX WHICH DOESNT WORK ON MY WORK COMPUTER FOR SOME REASON ARGLE GARBLE
17:47
Thanks DSM, I did check all that
i am angry
angry about virtual computers
tried many different permutations, including adding brackets %run( etc.
I'll update my anaconda and try your suggestion
if that works your end, it'll probably work mine
DSM
DSM
@Carl: then you're just in the unfortunate situation of having an error message which is exactly the error message you'd get if it weren't defined. You can see my concern. :-)
do whatever is the most readable
if not then I'll just apply my manual fix and move on. Undoubtedly I will have to fix some deprecated functions
hah yes I see your concern :)
it seems not to be reading the variable as a string, but treating as the actual file name
@tristan looks promising thank you
DSM
DSM
@Carl: it certainly was a good idea to upgrade pandas, we fixed a lot of bugs since 16.
user559633
:]
eh idk this is some devops crap
i have the environment set up
17:49
I saw there seemed to be quite a few changes. I had issues with inplace not always working as intended etc. I hope I still get the same results from my backtests! otherwise I might be looking for a new job soon :p
devops crap hehehe
user559633
ugh i just wanted to computer i didn't want to work
DSM
DSM
@Carl: you really shouldn't be using inplace anyhow.. it doesn't really offer performance or memory benefits.
why do you think i started coming to this chatroom @tristan lol
Good to know. So better to just use df = new_df ?
Dom
Dom
17:53
Every time I start a new learning project it seems to take longer to get everything working than it does to write the code, I feel your pain @Anna
DSM
DSM
In general, yeah. I think Jeff (project lead) would have gotten rid of them entirely if not for the backwards compatibility problems.
I think I had a few instances where the inplace = True actually didn't update the data frame! certainly had some errors. Got there in the end though (I hope!).
pandas is pretty cool
@dom yeah even worse i have everything working pretty well i just hit its ceiling D:
now im like "ok now pycharm plz just like, use the thing i have i dont need devops just open it up u can do it why cant u do it oh god"
@tristan you on hangouts?
Dom
Dom
On a different note, I'd like to get involved in some open-source projects, anyone need a good docs writer?
17:57
@Dom you want to write documentation!?
@Dom Every single open source project.
Dom
Dom
@enderland to start with, it's something I'm good at and helps to learn the code
they say teaching others is the best way to learn
DSM
DSM
How many times do you want that closed, Morgan? ;-)
@DSM pew pew
17:59
Oops. :P
But I do really want it closed. ;)

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