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15:00
Pretty sure Ghandi once hit me with a nuclear warhead.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kasturba_Gandhi In May 1883, 14-year old Kasturba was married to 13-year old Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi in an arranged marriage, according to the custom of the region.
user559633
I always burn his farms first.
user559633
Yeah, Gandhi was a pretty big piece of shit.
3
Hghahnhdhi
@tristan He was a barbarian. And all due to an int underflow.
15:04
Oh well if he was 14 that's different :)
user559633
@RobertGrant I wouldn't trust a wikipedia on this. He was a known pedophile.
@RobertGrant The other way round, He was 13th.
There's a quote I wanted to put here about never meeting your heroes, but I can't find it. As a consolation, please enjoy this video.
@tristan that sounds pretty official
YOU CAN'T DISAPPOINT A PICTURE
@RobertGrant She was older than him. And in those traditional Indian child marriages the married couple don't actually get to sleep together until they're older. Note that the Gandhis didn't have their first child until they were in their late teens.
15:06
Yeah I read :)
user559633
It's the relations with children when he was much older that people have a problem with :)
user559633
...oh well if yahoo answers wants to tell me a thing
Oops I directed chat into the darkest timeline
IAmEvilRob
user559633
yeah, this is a pretty dark timeline
15:07
We were having such a nice conversation about Civ too D:
user559633
wherein you learn that anyone that has a need to be strongly perceived as one thing is "secretly" very sketchy
So your sarcasm hides...what?
More sarcasm.
user559633
crushing disappointment in society?
It's sarcasm all the way down.
15:10
ahh... so sarcasm is like turtles
Exactly. Sarcasm is definitely like turtles.
@tristan that doesn't sound sketchy enough
hei ppl, wanna a python puzzle
Puzzles are fun.
user559633
@RobertGrant yeah, difference being that i really don't care how people perceive me.
15:11
so, two pieces of code
mylist = []
mylist.extend(something)
user559633
sarcasm is like turtles: cute in cartoons, but ugly in real life and mediocre for soup
Perhaps it's a tendency to extrapolate massively towards iconoclasm
mylist = []
mylist.extend(list(something))
define something, so that mylist is different.
user559633
a willingness to not self-deceive to make things easier?
Hmm, maybe if you overwrite __len__ and __iter__?
15:14
Must be nice to be free of self-deceit
@Kevin that's what I was thinking. But wouldn't the list constructor call __iter__ in pretty much the same way that mylist.extend would?
Perhaps something could use all the available virtual memory, and calling list on it is just too much.
user559633
idk, it's not like a core value or something i closely hold, it's just that if i learn something dark about someone/something, i'm not going to discard that information to keep with the popular viewpoint.
@RobertGrant but then, mylist.extend would fail for exactly that reason anyway
True, although you were using someone's stance as a predictor of their sketchiness, not just reacting to evidence
15:16
@inspectorG4dget I thought that list first attempts to call len on its argument before iterating, so that it can more efficiently allocate memory. But it doesn't seem to be happening in my tests, so maybe not.
Or maybe it does call len, but doesn't blindingly trust it and stop inserting elements after len(something) appends
user559633
@RobertGrant sorry, should have made it clear that if you were holding signs in a park protesting policies that starve children, i wouldn't think to myself "man, bobby really likes hungry kids"
Again, now you're using evidence
throw a print in your __len__ to see if it does indeed get called
Ok. It's getting called. Both for extend(something) and extend(list(something)).
And Zaphod levels of indirection, so I'm tapping out :)
15:18
Hmm.
no magic involved, actually.
Given a class like:
class Thing:
    def __iter__(self):
        for i in range(10):
            yield i
    def __len__(self):
        return 5
user559633
sorry if i'm being frustrating, it's not intentional. i meant for it to be a throw-away comment while drinking coffee :)
I was hoping that list(Thing()) would evaluate to [0,1,2,3,4]. But it doesn't
@tristan I was here til 10 last night; I am not the person to figure out who's actually being frustrating and who's just there, sorry :)
I'll give you a star. That will redress things.
user559633
15:20
@RobertGrant heh, fair enough. let me know if i can help you get home sooner today.
list(iter(Thing())) ?
Here's a smartypants trick solution:
something = iter(range(10))

mylist = []
mylist.extend(something)
print mylist
#[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

mylist = []
mylist.extend(list(something))
print mylist
#[]
Take me away from this life, @tristan
@Kevin oh yeah, nice
so for some weird reason, python DOES call __len__, but apparently doesn't really use it
@Kevin that's obvious, but I did mean that something is exactly the same, so the two pieces exist in different universes.
15:22
Maybe it calls len for "first best guess" initial memory allocation, but goes ahead and iterates until StopIteration anyway, allocating additional memory or deallocating unused memory as appropriate.
otherwise, of course exhausting a generator will affect any further usage.
user559633
and my thing was kind of two separate points 1) not discarding evidence for the purpose of an easier world view/opinion 2) i'm more suspicious of people taking very strong/public viewpoints, to the degree that it becomes clearly important to themselves they're perceived to be associated with it (e.g. american politicians campaigning against gay rights). tl;dr: crab cakes tacos are pretty tasty
Yeah I figured making use of shared state was a bit cheaty :-)
Yeah I agree with both of those things
yeah, they both call BOTH __len__ and __iter__. This isn't going to work
... unless you wanted to introspect the callstack to change your behavior based on who called you
15:25
Given bereal's "no magic" hint, I'm now thinking if there's anything we can do without messing with dunders.
not without shadowing list to make a new function to do weird things
Haha, I was just thinking the same :-)
def list(iterable):
    yield from ([i] for i in iterable)
something = [1,2,3]
list = lambda x: [4,5,6]
Tadaa. Code block 1 prints [1,2,3] and code block 2 prints [4,5,6]
@Kevin great minds!
Not watched it but heard about it - heard it was pretty cringey.
isn't that the point?
yeah, list shadowing was out of the box
I had in mind defining only that variable.
Richard D James has this awesome way of incorporating his face in haunting ways in to his videos that is just awesome. One of my favourites is Windowlicker. Great track @tristan . I haven't heard this yet.
15:31
@Ffisegydd it's pretty dumb, but I was still laughing.
user559633
It seems that OverWatch is an embarrassing copy of TF2. Confirm/deny
I loved TFC
user559633
@idjaw it's from when richard d james uploaded a bunch of his earlier stuff to soundcloud under some randomly assigned username
cool! Had no idea that was done.
@tristan I think it's Blizzard's way of getting into the big business of microtransactions.
15:34
@bereal Ok. So stuff like this is out:
from random import random

mylist = []
mylist.extend([random()])
print(mylist)

mylist = []
mylist.extend(list([random()]))
print(mylist)
Just making sure all the loopholes are closed. :)
yeah, I need to formulate my puzzles better...
googles touching a file and returning if it exists in one line
user559633
@RobertGrant touch will make it exist. you want stat
15:37
@tristan Partially deny. It's TF2 with more characters, more variety, better story, and better art.
@tristan yeah, then it's different the second time :)
user559633
@Ffisegydd TF2 needed a story? I thought it was "they're a different color. attempt genocide" (oh shit video games are dark when you reduce them down to their elements)
@Ffisegydd would you use this, or would you manage d3 responsiveness manually in d3 by reacting to the resize event?
@tristan Yes, but based on the response to the story so far I doubt they'll stick with just a shooter. The universe/story they've created has got legs.
@Rob I've upvoted that answer in the past, draw your own conclusions.
Hm, okay.
15:39
(For the record, for other projects I think I've also reacted to the resize event, so...well...there we go)
I might comment stuff out and give that a go.
\o/ null answer!
I think when reacting to the resize event it was for a different reason.
So I'd be tempted to give that a try. Less D3.js logic is good for your soul.
Yeah agreed
Cheers :)
roy
roy
what is the recommended no of attributes for an object?
15:46
@roy Exactly the amount it needs, and one more for good luck.
I like to keep 'em in the single digits, but there's no hard limit
don't forget to add the kill switch, though. That's very important
The real answer is "however many you can put in before your programmer sense tingles"
0. Objects are inherently evil. Real programmers use variables with similar names to store data that is for the same object.
15:46
What's a good way to signify that you're making a statement on behalf of another person?

"Implement these changes, per Fred" is what I've been using.
Maybe "as per Fred's wishes" ?
I dunno if that's correct usage of 'per'
user559633
That works. "Fred thinking; QuestionC typing"
I'd understand what you mean by "per Fred" though.
"In accordance with the Prophecy of Fred..."
15:47
"Fred Arnold says: do eet nauu"
"Yo, Fred said this: implement these changes, dawg"
user559633
"Typing this for Fred's lazy ass"
"So Fred has spoken, so it shall be."
"Yabba dabba do this: ..."
Unless you were discussing how many donuts were needed at the QuestionCCorp party, then it'd be confusing when your manager Fred tells you to order 8, because it'd be "8 per Fred".
15:48
@roy Didn't you ask that same question recently?
Then if there are multiple Freds, you could inadvertently order too many!
Measure twice, cut once.
user559633
8 donuts? "Right, said Fred"
-4
Q: Recommended attributes per object

royAre there guidelines on the number of attributes an object can have? i.e. class Customer(object): def __init__(self, name, gender, email, ... n): self.name = name self.gender = gender self.email = email ... self.n = n What should n be?

What's wrong with the advice you got there?
Speaking of QuestionCCorp, they aren't renewing my contract. I might have time to start earning SO Rep again.
15:49
If there's only one Fred in the office, "8 for each Fred" and "8 as instructed by Fred" has the same outcome.
roy
roy
@MorganThrapp yes. i have an object with 39 attributes and it doesn't feel right.
@roy then refactor it.
@roy Okay. Did you read the link jon gave you in the comments?
roy
roy
@MorganThrapp i went through it, in my case the rows in the db will not change over time, so was hoping to have all data in onetable
I really think that the advice you've already been given is plenty.
user559633
15:54
^
garlic
I think I may pick up Wheel of Time next week.
Do it.
It's a mighty tome and takes a while to get through, but worth it.
My brother's been slowly reading through it, he says it's pretty good. I just haven't been able to commit yet.
It's one of the few book series, Dark Tower is one of the others, that left a permanent mark on me. Literally. I dropped the books on my toe and now they call me Fizzy 19.
15:58
I couldn't get through Mistborn but I think that was at the nadir of my "capacity for frontloaded worldbuilding" cycle
Well you're a terrible person.
Mistborn are great.
@roy I can't see any methods in that class. Consider using a dict. If there are methods & you just didn't show them, then try to structure your attributes into logical groups that can be stored in containers like tuples, lists, dicts or sets.
Also, next time, do not come here with a fresh question that you just posted on the main site. Please see our chatroom rules for further details.
My ability to blitz through a work of fiction waxes and wanes according to a mysterious schedule. So it goes.
16:12
I'm trying to think of the last time I copy-pasted something from a website into an environment that could execute code. Maybe a couple weeks ago?
The most common occurrence, I guess, would be when the third party library I want requires fancier installation instructions than pip install thing
... Which isn't often the case.
cbg all
Typically when I copy something from a website, I paste it into notepad to see if they put any spam on my clipboard. Ex. if I copy a sentence from the New York Times and the paste begins with "visit New York Times dot com for more great content"
For me, it is a unique pleasure to defeat copy-paste ad-jacking by using View Source or the page inspector.
@WayneWerner cbg
Likewise using "view page info" to extract image files from a page that has nominally disabled "right click -> save image as"
I wonder if it's possible to clickjack the linux middle-click-paste
it doesn't appear to, at least in whatever version of Firefox I'm currently running
@Kevin My brother and I used to do that to get the .swf videos from adcritic
because they had all the awesome super bowl ads
of course now we have youtube, so... shrugs
16:29
Now the hard part is extracting video data from Youtube so you can play it locally.
There are services that do this, which I assume are literally magic.
I was about to link that :-)
Along with the comment "the fact that the source is freely available makes it no less magical"
Indeed, just the user's guide for all the command-line options makes my head spin.
Yeah, I just tried reading some of the code and then rapidly gave up.
@Kevin :) I mostly just use -F and -f to list available formats and to choose one. And -U to update. :)
youtube-dl is total delicious magic and I love it will all my heart. I only use it occasionally, but it's so good
16:37
I'd be quite interested in a breakdown of Youtube's streaming protocol, but googling "how youtube works" just gives me financial information about the company, and guidelines about what kind of content you're allowed to submit.
I only use it on music clips that I intend to watch / listen to multiple times. Or when a clip keeps stalling due to my ISP being slack.
I had to change ISPs a couple of months ago. Theoretically I'm now on a faster connection, with more GB/month than what I had before. But it gets a lot more dropouts when watching YouTube or when listening to audio streams from radio stations.
How Does Youtube Work? is the closest to what I wanted, but basically just says "the server puts the data into packets and sends it to you, and your computer reassembles it into video". Unsatisfying.
Weird while loop guy has just updated his question: stackoverflow.com/questions/37409755/…
When I first read that question, I got the impression that weird while loop guy assumes that a while loop terminates immediately when the condition becomes false, regardless of where you are in the loop.
Ex. He'd expect this to terminate after one loop:
x = 0
while x == 0:
    x += 1
    x -= 1
Or one half of a loop, rather.
But I couldn't confirm my suspicion because his writing style is pretty opaque to me.
That last edit was "I still can't articulate a question, but you're all mean".
~sigh~.
16:49
It's fun to watch OPs depict themselves as persecuted champions of truth-seeking.
The recommendation to have them step through the debugger is probably the best hope of getting them to understand
@Kevin I'd like to help him, but he is pretty hard to understand, and I get the impression that he'd probably misunderstand me too.
If he could simplify his code sample down to just one loop, it'd be easier to psychically debug.
You can ignore the outer loop. I think they just don't understand how while loops work, or are very sleep deprived
It's strange-- they clearly understand indexing: stackoverflow.com/questions/35178255/…
It's disturbingly easy to develop a mental model of a programming language that matches reality 99% of the time, but diverges wildly in the corner cases.
The same phenomenon is at work in questions like "Q: why is my recursive function returning None? A: because the recursive branch doesn't have a return statement." All those people think that calling a function twice causes the second one to totally replace the first in the call stack. Or something like that, if they don't have a formal understanding of what the call stack is.
16:57
I remember overhearing people at school ask lab tutors why their if (condition) { /* code */ } void { /* code */ } didn't work. When asked what they'd expect it to do, they said "I don't know."
@Kevin Yeah. I modified the condition in his outerrmost while loop slightly so it'd run, and changed his inner while to an if and it kinda worked ok. But that some_list[n] += some_list.pop(n+1) doesn't make a lot of sense, especially if there are more than two identical items in a row.
@KevinMGranger Ah, the "magic incantation" technique of coding.
The "throw syntax at the compiler until it does what I want" technique
Not the OP's problem, mind you
In the "mental map" metaphor, those people have big blank spots on their maps.
Whereas this OP has a full map with incorrect borders
Can't hardly blame them for packing a kayak and finding themselves in the desert.
He should have taken a left turn at Albuquerque.
Bugs Bunny would be the worst OP. You close his post and he goes "of course you realize, this means war". Within hours, SO is a pile of rubble.
@KevinMGranger Hopefully, the debugger will help him. Personally, I like the old-fashioned method of stepping through the code on paper to check that it does what you think it does. Even that's not fool-proof if you have a gross misunderstanding of how the language works, but it generally gives you a pretty good feel for what your algorithm actually does, and it tends to sink into your brain more effectively than watching it happen in a pretty on-screen step-through.
My earlier comment here re: that question:
3 hours ago, by PM 2Ring
How do you politely tell this guy: "Python's len function and while loops aren't broken, but they way you're trying to use them is" ? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/37409755/common-failure-with-while-loops-why
@Kevin I'd rather deal with Bugs than with Elmer.
Need to come up with some simple Python questions to see if a candidate who puts "Python" on their resume actually knows Python. I just realized the canon is perfect.
hahaha
most astonishing: mutable default argument comes to mind
Need something somewhat evil as a bonus question.
list-comp lambdas should do the trick
17:19
"Complete the sentence: function calling in Python makes use of 'pass by _____'". Leave enough room in the answer space for an essay response.
Full marks for a complete breakdown of name-value binding.
my answer: "__the following mechanism which is fully compliant with Zen. First, it is noted that explicit is better than implicit ..."
My coworker is trying to port some C# code to Python and asked me why the outputs weren't identical. My lame response was "maybe slicing and String.Substring don't have similar arguments???". I am not a very good language ambassador.
Now he will think that Python is dumb and unintuitive and does not do the needful.
@davidism "Why should .join generally be used instead of chained string concatenation?" could be good.
17:26
Although it does seem like my lame reply is right. s.Substring(a,b) in C# is not equivalent to s[a:b]. It's equivalent to s[a:a+b]
5
A: Python range slicing and indexing behavior

Nigel TufnelTo quote Guido van Rossum himself: [...] I was swayed by the elegance of half-open intervals. Especially the invariant that when two slices are adjacent, the first slice's end index is the second slice's start index is just too beautiful to ignore. For example, suppose you split a strin...

I will say, that was one thing that threw me when I switched to Python. I was used to start, count for slicing args.
it's just more beautiful that way
I blame C# here. They should do Substring(start, end) rather than Substring(start, length).
16
A: Weird for loop statment

Martijn PietersThe for loop uses a[-1] as a target variable. The for loop assigns each value in the list to that one variable. That happens to also be the last element in that same list. So the list changes with each step through the loop: >>> a = [0, 1, 2, 3] >>> for a[-1] in a: ... print a ... [0, 1, 2,...

If I want to be truly evil.
17:28
Coworker says he gives up. Mission Failed
you could also ask for the difference between if any([a==5 for a in iterable]) and if any(a==5 for a in iterable)
@davidism Good call.
That q/a spawned a pretty crazy applications: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/28397425#28397425
"Without using an interpreter, describe the output of the following program:"
funcs = []
for i in range(10):
    funcs.append(lambda: i)
print(funcs[5])()
haha
17:31
Whoops, misplaced a paren on the last line there.
Did you?
Well print(funcs[5])() and print(funcs[5]()) behave identically in 2.7 so it doesn't matter there
@davidism that's wild
In 3.X you'll get TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not callable rather than the intended output of 9
But maybe it's fine to leave that typo in and see if any applicants identify both the intended binding "gotcha" and the unintended version incompatibility
@Kevin but print(funcs[5],)() in 2.7 will raise Tuple cannot be called
17:34
As long as we're being evil.
Here's one I saw last week. What's a at the end of this?
b=1,2; a = b == 1,2
7
I want to say True but I suspect it's a trick.
"Trace the execution of a = a[0] = [0]; print a"
@Ffisegydd The trick is that == has higher precedence than the tuple-creating comma
ah, so it'd be (False, 2)?
17:38
"Determine the result of 1<2 == 3<4"
You're no fun ;-)
But I <3 using start < thing < end etc.
so I've got some experience with that one
'a' in 'abc' == True is fun too
This seems like a good time to link sopython.com/wiki/Common_Gotchas_In_Python which contains many surprising behaviors.
17:42
could someone please explain to me why 1<2 == 3<4 is False?
Because 1<2 and 2 == 3 and 3<4 is False
Chained operator comparison. It's syntactically equivalent to (1 < 2) and (2 == 3) and (3 < 4)
argh beaten etc
Similarly, 'b' in 'abc' in 'zabcd' is True
So, I have to pay a parking ticket, but the place I need to pay it is only open 9-12 and 1-4. So, basically, if you work during the day, you're completely screwed.
This feels like something out of bad sketch comedy show.
Note that in chained comparisons the middle elements are only evaluated once. Eg,
>>> g=iter(['abc', 'def', 'ghi']); print('b' in next(g) in 'zabcd', next(g))
(True, 'def')
17:49
Handy.
 g = [(1,2),(2,4),(3,8),(4,16)]
print list((None for g in g if (yield from g) and False))
#result: [1, 2, 2, 4, 3, 8, 4, 16]
The wackiest of syntax.
@MorganThrapp Do they take payments by mail?
@inspectorG4dget Yeah, I was pretty uh... impressed by the utter lack of comprehension of this societies mores.
trolling or is this for real? stackoverflow.com/questions/37420476
I was even on his side because he was so confused... up until he didn't even read the link that he was sent
Do not attribute to malice etc etc
18:04
hahaha
Yeah... I'll help people that help themselves, but that's just bad
and naturally I try to show what I've done to help myself when I ask others for help
especially when they're not getting paid
@wgwz I can imagine that they either a) have a friend that they hate right now or b) think it'll be much help against a DDoS
@WayneWerner or (c) wanna build an "Under Construction" page
Then you'd return that, not nothing
It sounds like basically they want to... leave a socket open? Close the socket? I'm not really sure
BitBucket adds build service: blog.bitbucket.org/2016/05/24/…
@WayneWerner Nope, nor do they take cards. Cash or check only.
18:10
Last Saturday my friends and I watched an educational film from the 70's called What is Nothing?. Unfortunately, it taught me nothing about nothing.
I did learn to fear Binkles the Dumpster Clown, but that's beside the point.
@MorganThrapp That's insane. I'd expect them to at least take a check by mail. Heck, it's probably more than 90% of cities in the US do that when you get a traffic violation, rather than have you appear in court.
Guess the only other option is to take a sick day...
(for most people)
Extreme pessimist viewpoint: inconvenient hours are just another tool by The Man to oppress the permanent underclass, letting them choose between using extremely limited sick days (which they might not even have, if they used them on actual important things like caring for their sick children), or getting increasingly threatening legal notices and late fees.
Rock, meet hard place.
@WayneWerner sick idea, bruh!
18:27
@Kevin "Do not attribute to mailce etc etc" ;)
(though the net result is still the same)
Taking off the devil's advocate hat. My actual viewpoint is more like: having had close contact with government workers, it seems things are inconvenient and slow not because of a coordinated conspiracy of evil masterminds, but because of individual actors acting in their own rational self-interest that just happens to produce a load of bad consequences for everyone but them, death-by-a-thousand-cuts style.
^ that. Unfortunately the system is designed to be that way...
not sure how one would go about fixing it, though.
Another Tim Peters gem in this week's newsletter
Sure, in the same sense that tumors are designed to suck up resources and resist their own removal.
Maybe designed actually implies that intelligence was behind the creation of state/local governments ;)
18:33
@Kevin I'm not convinced you're wrong.
Only the Secret Shadow Government knows for sure.
I'm excited, I finally spent some money on an actual new(?) computer. Sure it's a little older, and just a Lenovo desktop... but 8GB Ram > 4 and 3.4GHz > 2.4
also its card reader is (probably) not broken :P
did you get a fancy video card?
The one in here I have is decent
though the one that comes in the machine might be better :P
I was hoping with the announcement of the 1080, the prices would have changed a bit
but no0o0o0o0
Hi All
hello
cabbage
cabbage
18:47
@idjaw Wait for the 1080 to start shipping
yeah. That's the next plan. Hoping for a good drop in price.
can I post a question here or it is not allowed ?
is it a question you posted on the main SO site?
btw. here are the chat rules: sopython.com/chatroom
18:49
Please read our rules sopython.com/chatroom
Oooh, @ghosts that's not a very good SO question :(
Hmm, This reminds me of my message on the github issue.
i.e. lmgtfy.com?q=python+xml+parsing+example will produce plenty of results with even less waiting
@ghosts please make sure you read the links that davidism posted on how to ask and how to put together an mcve.
18:52
ya read them just now
It seems like this one might just be needing to start a background task and then issue a redirect somewhere. It's hard to tell though because there is not much detail there
Yeah, I'm not really sure what they want there. There's been a few other times when "ignore a request" has popped up, but they must have been deleted.
I want to specifically use vtd-xml for processing
anyways, I will wait for some time before I post it here
as per the rules

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