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14:03
@AndyK Ah. Bill Evans. Nice.
oh yeah
@khajvah It can be hot in the UK.
This summer was and is still blazing
UK people reach critical point at temperatures above 20°C.
@Ffisegydd You don't know the feeling of burning sun and >40°C
and when you get in a car parked under the sun
14:09
@khajvah Yes but I'd imagine that you have precautions and have adaptations to allow for that. The UK is not designed for hot weather. Building are not designed properly for it.
UK have buildings designed with poor air flow and cooling abilities, because they're designed to keep people warm and dry in the winter :P
we have shitty buildings from soviet union when nobody cared and shitty modern buildings, which still nobody cares about because they all belong to corrupt politicians
Clearly, Fizzy's brain is melting from the heat. :)
Jul 1 '15 at 7:41, by Ffisegydd
23C is the melting point of the average Welsh man.
It's actually the humidity at the moment that's pretty brutal.
It's not even that hot :P just insanely humid.
You don't seem to have defined Message. — Daniel Roseman 7 mins ago
Thanks how can I define it — user3569752 40 secs ago
^ :-|
14:13
Have you not learned to give up by now?
I don't even read SO when I need info anymore, lest I come across a ravenous HV and have my soul flayed from my bones.
I find I go through phases of reading SO - switching to it from docs/books when I start to have conceptual problems over just implementation problems
or I just wait for Fizzy, DSM, or Antti to start talking and usually that sparks some "lightbulbs" or starting points at least
^ that wasn't one of those times ;)
cbg all
hi
/me is happy
Ugh that was it!! I forgot the nose!! :-|. That's why I wasn't able to find the quote in search!!!!
I have kind of a soft question
is windows able to connect to two wifi networks simultaneously? when getting a second usb antenna?
@idjaw haha, I had meant to reply to your =|
@paul23 probably, but Python won't help.
Is it just me, or does mobile app development totally suck?
14:24
No this isn't about python, just generally wondering it
I can't tell whether I'm doing it wrong or it actually is a royal pain in the ass
It's just you.
@gowrath is it better now? it was a bit annoying like 6 years ago when I was doing android but I suspect tooling isbetter now :P
stackoverflow.com/q/39402632 mcve, needs one more vote
@davidism shamelessly providing close vote sockpuppetery since your links are always valid
14:25
@enderland I started it right after I finished doing systems work and I have to say, it's just so tedious
> This question was voluntarily removed by its author.
@enderland it is way better now - lot more event handles and wrappers (so can use kivvy)
@JGreenwell I remember being surprised how easy writing up a basic facebook app integration was though
Just realized that this one that we closed almost contains the phrase "the needful".
Also other improvements but those are the ones I remember seeing the most
never did Facebook, but Twitter's API is nice (instead of having to scrape everything)
@gowrath were you mostly backend, systems, or analysis development before? It can be hard to switch mentalities (and the context switching between front and back can take some getting used to - though better than web because its still got a GUI feel)
user559633
14:31
90% humidity cabbage to all
DSM
DSM
Nov 3 '14 at 19:33, by Kevin
Why do kids love cinnamon toast crunch? Because after four bowls, you can pull back the curtain of time and stare into the singularity that binds cause to effect.
Guess what I'm about to have several bowls of? We'll see if I make it to four.
@gowrath it does
@DSM cherios?
@tristan You can swim in the air!
Is that what you do when you have days off?
14:32
@gowrath it used to suck more
@gowrath Front-end stuff tends to be like that. Just be grateful you aren't doing client-side Web stuff in the pre-jQuery era, when severe browser incompatibilities were rife and there was no way around it but to have multiple versions of the code tailored for the different browsers (including 2 or 3 different versions just to handle the idiosyncrasies of different versions of IE). And even that wasn't totally fool-proof.
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: a good friend (grad school officemate and Python programmer!) is getting married this evening, which means I'll be in transit all afternoon. Might as well relax..
@JGreenwell I was doing systems work with C. Stuff like building heap allocators and networking stuff
@tristan Damn, I thought my 75% was bad.
user559633
@paul23 I tried. I couldn't. You'll be receiving a bill from my dentist.
14:34
I was basically asked to be a CTO of a startup and it is pretty from end involved (revolutionary iOS app and what not :/), so I was checking it out to see if I should take the offer
@gowrath no
@DSM nice, I'm sat in a hotel as tomorrow a good friend (phd officemate and probably-not-python-programmer!) is getting married tomorrow :P
So far, doesn't look like I find it engaging
DSM
DSM
@Ffisegydd: !? Don't steal my life happenings!
yeah, its a large switch @gowrath and you should search chat to see what people have said about CTO of startup
14:35
@gowrath how well do you know these guys?
I'm going to go find some cereal and eat several bowls of it.
I like how friendship is measured by "python programming capability"
I don't believe we have "cinnamon toast crunch" in the UK, so I'll just get some corn flakes and sprinkle cinnamon on them
Feb 18 at 14:57, by Jon Clements
@RobertGrant I hopefully don't sound too disparaging... but being a CTO for 4 art students... think I'd rather be imprisoned for murder or something :p
That would mean I have a total lack of friends..
sounds about right
14:36
@paul23 it doesn't... only we're not interested in frineds
@AnttiHaapala I actually taught them at university. I'd say I know them fairly well
@gowrath We were discussing this stuff a couple of days ago
2 days ago, by Ninja Puppy
In fact - I thoroughly enjoy the boring bits - data and backend stuff... although I have to do the front-end stuff to show that something's actually happened... clients tend to panic a bit when they're paying you and you've got the DB set up, the websocket server going, you've got the automated processes and the failovers set up etc... etc... there's always that "but what can I look at!?" :p
@gowrath well ... yeah.
There is a pizza place near us called FF Pizza. Now, what would you think the FF would stand for?
user559633
Final Pantasy would be a good name for a deep dish pizza place for video game nerds.
DSM
DSM
14:38
@idjaw: I'll take myself out of the running on this one. :-)
@JGreenwell yeah, if you work for a start-up like that, you won't get anything useful done. In the latter choice you got rid of someone.
@idjaw fast forward?
Yea I don't think it's a good idea to join tbh. The app idea itself is reasonable; not as stupid as most of the ones I hear about in SV are, but still
I guessed fast as well, but forward wasn't my first guess....mine was the bad-language tsk tsk one.
@idjaw fcking fast :P
CTO at a startup is not considered I ideal job here - personally I just want to crunch data or teach so that's all I look for
14:39
yeah...my guess was fast as the first word :P
@idjaw fish-falafel :?
hmmm...I never had a fish falafel.
if you just want to do backend look for that (granted that whole "I have to eat and food costs money" can make this difficult)
btw...the restaurant won't tell us what the FF stands for.
@JGreenwell Same. I love doing research. It's infinitely more interesting
14:41
In computer science?
user559633
If I had my way, I'd be a "product guy"
F*ing Fresh Pizza, Funky Fresh Pizza....just start calling them one of those - their fault for not specifying
@paul23 some of us are weird and actually enjoy reading journal articles and published papers - or more honestly enjoy when we finally understand them
DSM
DSM
@idjaw: wait, what? I wasn't going to play because I was pretty sure I knew. Didn't they have a "fresh & fabulous" ad campaign once (en français, bien sûr.)
user559633
@idjaw Frais & Fabuleux?
@DSM You know this pizza place? Is that what it actually means?
14:43
Well I do like R&D, and I enjoy computer science... I just can't seem to find a reason for the combination.
DSM
DSM
It's the chain, right? Pretty sure I saw them on my last trip to U of M.
is it R&D if all I build is a model to test my ideas?
sometimes there is an easy development application to see (like NLP stuff) but sometimes its more academic and might be useful (like other NLP stuff ;)
@paul23 CS + maths
ff pizza remembers me from an old dutch song XD
14:45
@DSM Yep. The chain...this place: ffpizza.com/en
No other dutch people here right?
@JGreenwell I actually just nearly finished an NLP related paper!
user559633
@JGreenwell I think as long as you don't cherry pick data, I think that counts
@paul23 statistics, machine learning
has anyone guessed Final Fantasy Pizza - cause I'd call them that whether they like it or not!
14:46
@paul23 Martijn is here, but inactive right now, apparently
DSM
DSM
@idjaw: oh, well they have the name right there. They should give a spoiler warning.
but he's kind of omnipresent, so you can never know
I only cherry pick at beginning of new model to see if I have any programming errors - after that I'm trying to break it
@DSM ......there are stupid things I've done in my life......then there is this.
this is for the books
I'm going to go give myself a timeout now.
If I git checkout -b, does it replace my existing code with the committed head?
14:48
@tristan aww....Tristan beat me too it I see
I have code that is in a bad state and don't want to check it in to the main branch, but I'm worried that branching might blow away my current work.
git stash
git checkout -b my_tasty_branch
@gowrath what was the topic? if you don't mind my asking
my NLP use has been more on the practical side lately (i.e. actual analysis of survey results and stuff) but I do want to get back into my research on context-free analysis of multi-language responses
like, really, really, really ** 10 want to get back into that
@JGreenwell It was something I did for fun as a side project. It had to do with creating a metric for analyzing similarities in writing style between different pieces of literature and sort of deriving the role writing style plays into the popularity of a book (more specifically, how great a piece of literature is considered)
That is an interesting bit of, and approach to, sentiment analysis...would talk more but have to run some errands
14:55
@QuestionC Just to show you what happens in case you don't want to experiment. I made a change in my master, and then just did a checkout, it will carry over:
â–¶ git checkout -b oh_man
M      	pom.xml
Switched to a new branch 'oh_man'
rbrb all
@QuestionC but if you're really paranoid, you can just stash things, get your new branch then pop it back out
Unless the branch you switch to had a different copy of the file you modified, then it'll complain
It won't overwrite unless you use -f
yes...this is assuming you are creating a new branch
but that is what the -b indicates anyway
@JGreenwell No worries. I'd love to hear your thoughts on it if you have time; I'm not overly familiar with NLP so it would be nice to get a more experienced opinion
15:04
@JGreenwell grad school convinced me never to read papers voluntarily ever again, lol
oh derp right
@QuestionC also it's probably worth grokking git if you don't yet
Why is it that I've never heard the term grokking before
had to look that up
That is pretty nice. I still say just read the book, though.
1 hour ago, by idjaw
http://ohshitgit.com/
:P
^^ that is really nice!
@JGreenwell It is in the UK, if you're doing that and spending money on it/paying yourself - at least for Tax purposes.
@idjaw you never heard that before?
@idjaw I like the last solution there.
@enderland Not at all. I genuinely had to look that up.
15:12
that's surprising, I feel like that's a common internet term nowadays
stackoverflow.com/questions/39414492/… Unclear. They want to do some super weird stuff with types.
@JRichardSnape haha yeah...wraps up the nature of that page nicely
user559633
@MorganThrapp Oh, I get what he/she wants. He/she wants an unknown type Y to conform to a given type X.
@tristan Sort of.
DSM
DSM
Isn't he just after type(obj_0)(obj_1), which will either work or not?
15:14
@enderland Is it something more adopted in SO world...or is it general internet lingo?
@DSM Maybe? It definitely seems like a weird question.
@idjaw I kind of feel like the tech world as a whole tbh? idk though
DSM
DSM
@idjaw: sf fans -> programmers -> internet at large, I think.
interesting.....looks like I have to revise my tech-speak
user559633
SF? Source forge? San Francisco? Sturgeon Frying?
15:15
all
they all seem valid, especially the last one
user559633
Yeah, that's what I suspected.
DSM's chart is confusing me....is it an inheritance chart?
all sf fans are programmers and all programmers are the internet at large?
DSM
DSM
I meant that my theory is that the term gained currency in the sf community, some of whom are programmers and used it, and then it spread from the dev community to non-sf, non-programmers.
user559633
SF is source forge? SciFi? I don't know where 'grok' came from
DSM
DSM
Ah. Heinlein, hence scifi.
15:21
It's Stranger in a Strange Land, right?
I'm just bugging you, @DSM :)
@MorganThrapp Correct
DSM
DSM
@MorganThrapp: pretty sure, but if you told me he used it somewhere else before then I couldn't swear you were wrong..
I haven't read any Heinlein in a while, so I'm not 100% on that.
user559633
It's been about 6 years since I've read for pleasure.
15:23
Yeah. According to the one truth site => en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grok
@tristan four...I feels what you are saying.
I actually read two whole books on holiday. That takes the total of books for pleasure to about 5 in 4 years.
It's been like 3 hours for me.
user6568562
@Withnail That's a decent rate
Yesterday I was filling out a questionnaire and it asked "what's the last thing you read?" and I assumed it meant "... In dead-tree format?" so I went to my library's web site to look for a history of books I've checked out, but I discovered no such history exists. This annoys me.
Well, in context, I used to read probably 50 books a year.
15:26
the combination of life getting crazy, then starting a job where I drove instead of taking public transit took me away from reading for pleasure. My reading time was always during my commute.
I put down "Wind-up Bird Chronicles" but that can't be right because that was, like, February.
user6568562
Well 24 hours a day isn't a friendly enough format for anything pleasant, anymore
DSM
DSM
Yeah, I get about half of my week's reading done on the commute. Works well. The problem is that I'm now so familiar with some of my favourite books that I've found small continuity errors..
I hear humans default to about a 26 hour day, left to their own devices. I'd be into that. An extra hour in bed, an extra hour to read. :D
@Withnail do you play poker? (asking because you were interested in sport betting and stuff)
15:27
Nah, don't have the discipline for that, really. :)
@idjaw Thanks so much. Stash is what I needed, but I was just following a really simple guide. I think it's time to just read git help for the commands; this isn't something I can keep avoiding understanding.
Heh, your guide doesn't mention stash either.
heheh
user559633
@idjaw Yeah, this exactly. I used to read or practice other languages during a 45 minute train commute, but then it cut down to 15 minutes, then just working while commuting, then just a very direct walk to where I work when out of the house.
@QuestionC it's really worth the time to understand git if you plan on using it heavily. It really save you tons of time when you think you've hit a horrible mess in git
user559633
how to fix all git ills: cd ..; rm -rf ./project; git clone project
15:29
Understanding git isn't the issue, I've used hg which is the same damn thing. git is just mad complicated and I kind of stopped learning complicated things when I graduated college.
user559633
if it's a merge failure, close your IDE, open your webbrowser, go to www.linkedin.com...
Like... the concepts aren't the problem, the number of commands is.
the very common commands in git I use are add, checkout, clone, status, diff, rebase, stash, pull, push (review when in gerrit)

I've moved away from using merge
user559633
I only really use add/checkout/branch/push/pull/clone/merge/status...i see what you mean
user559633
15:32
do you do your merging via github or some other interface?
so prs I will use gh. When I am working on my own branch and need to grab other things or update from master I'll most of the time rebase from shell
user559633
yeah, i tend to rebase unless there's something I specifically want in the history
I don't really get why people care that much for linear history
user559633
Yeah, I don't really get into the "but the history/git flow has to be pure" stuff
the only thing I have given myself as an explanation is that once I got used to how rebasing works, it just helps me make sense of things in a "this requires this" sort of way
15:34
I also don't get people that collapse commits into one commit.
^ this
git add .
git commit --amend
git review
welcome to gerrit
I like having 43 different commits for one big major bit of work, I don't want 1 commit that completely overhauls my project!
user559633
I worked with someone that went on little "everyone should squash and rebase" rants and I always came away from them feeling like he was wasting weird amounts of time when the tool doesn't care and no one really reads history
I hated that SO much because this project wouldn't accept my pull request, and I spent so much effort making my commits nice
15:35
most of my commits are "did stuff lol" anyway. Maybe I should be more organized, but... meh
I dunno though, I'm still at the point where I'll have loads of inconsequential commits to fix typos etc, I want those squashed together.
Exactly. No one reads history apart from when the shit hits the fan, and then you want as much detail as possible.
3
I codes it as it comes to me
Several of my commits are just "BLOODY LINUX"
if you've got broken code in between commits then you can amend/squash
15:36
same, but I make my commits nice
user6568562
@Ffisegydd So true : D
I always love reading non-squashed PR commit history
but yeah, never commit broken code
so much raging
@Ffisegydd yeah agreed
15:36
I generally avoid PRs these days, manual rebase/fast-forward
The only thing is having lots of people merging each other's commits in gets annoying and hard to track who did what
I still take them, but I am going to rebase it locally
git blame my friend
user559633
â–¶ git log --oneline | awk '{$1=""; print $0}' | sort | uniq -c | sort | tail -n5
   2  pushing broken as a backup
   2  yup
   3  checkin
   6  updates
  10  nightly
Is that barco?
user559633
It is.
user559633
15:40
-site service repo
Is that the descendant of Foucault?
user559633
Yeah, I'm going to go ahead and remind you that I'm not a strong reader
One for the social theorists there.
user559633
Haha, way to play the niche crowd
15:41
I knew Withnail was in ;)
Pfft. The only Foucault I subscribe to was a swinger.
user559633
When you think about it, your commit messages really echo Foucault's interpretations of Nietzsche and Heidegger's work
user559633
/me looks up, gummy bears falling out of mouth
user559633
My commit messages are typically like ["Explanation of why branch is being made", "nightly/low context commit message" * N, "Explanation of what's meant to be merged and why"]
15:46
Apple design, 2016 https://t.co/mqFjHdgrXU
My template is:
Do the needful, also did the needed

 - More details on needful
 - More details on needed
Interesting story: Cat Pictures Please. A newly sentient AI monologues about how to be a good person and how to get the humans to give it more cat pictures.
I have the exact same problems.
Will read that in full later, opening reads like a Culture Mind having an identity crisis. :D
All problems boil down to those two ones, in the end.
@Kevin Definitely worth a read!
hell I forgot a pdb in production
user6568562
> When photons and electrons and other particles interact, what are
they really doing? Exchanging bits, transmitting quantum states,
processing information. The laws of physics are the algorithms. Every
burning star, every silent nebula, every particle leaving its ghostly trace in
a cloud chamber is an information processor. The universe computes its
own destiny.
16:12
What is the meaning of the following terms? 'explicit relative import', 'implicit relative import', 'absolute import'.
Python's import system confuses me so I just stick to importing things that are in the same directory as my main file.
I acknowledge that this information is not helpful to you at all.
So far, I haven't found clear definitions, but only texts that state what to use when. I'm trying to infer the meaning for quite some time now ...
relative make use of .
implicit make use of *
Noo
import local_file - implicit relative import, from . import local_file - explicit relative import, import local_package.local_file - absolute import
user559633
^ -- where implicit relies on the local_file you want being the first entry in the PythonPath
16:17
+17.
AFAIK implicit relative imports are gone in Python 3?
that is when u want to load a file that is on the same folder?
thanks ... import local_package - implicit relative import?
don't like that approach, seems ambiguous to me
16:20
I always use absolute imports.
import local_package.local_file or from local_package import local_file
?
Oh, the thing that I don't know what it is, isn't around in Python 3 any more?
just import local_package ... no file specified ;)
from package.path.to.file import exactly, what, I, need
I remembered we have a canon and added something to it. sopython.com/canon/105/…
We should do that more often.
16:22
I always use relative imports because I spent time to understand them :P
@vaultah: yes. from __future__ import absolute_imports is the default in Python 3.
@vaultah until you need to have a module package.time and then curse when you find that import time everywhere in that package imports the wrong module ;-)
from future import marty_mcfly
user559633
@juanifioren one will allow you to do local_package.local_file.some_method(), the latter will bring local_file into the namespace
user559633
@MartijnPieters I was bit by this, exactly. I had a datetime module that coincidentally didn't syntax error until a given input. Took me hours to track down
16:24
cool
so was this right or wrong? import local_package is considered to be a implicit relative import?
@Kevin I think there's a full stop too many in there, and that capital C is also just wrong.
:-P
@MartijnPieters no, I mean I use explicit relative imports (regardless of the level), like from . import time or from ...package.subpackage import module
... even if in some cases an absolute import would be more appropriate
@vaultah right, misunderstood you there. Yes, I always use from __future__ import absolute_imports if writing polyglot code.
user559633
16:26
I do relative import if same or subdir, otherwise, absolute from the base of the project
Haha, found a @MartijnPieters "Don't start a post when just about to go into a meeting." deleted answer while looking for a dupe. stackoverflow.com/a/21029238/400617
16:38
so what is the underlying concept? ... absolute import is only possible if module or package is in sys.path, relative takes advantage of the fact, that the import machinery also looks in the current path?
By "current path" do you mean "current working directory"?
I assume so, as you distinguished the other one with sys.path?
Directory of the script, I think
yep, directory of the script was what I was thinking of
Sorry yeah that's what I meant by "current working dir".
I made a boo boo myself :P
I was thinking of "current working dir" from the point of view of the author, not of an end user :P
so we are all talking about the same thing :)
16:45
And yes to answer your question, it's not just the same level as the script though, as you can use .. to go up a directory, etc
yep ... so its 'relative' to the directory of the script
I can't remember the rules for how __init__.py changes things though.
Something like "If you don't have an __init__.py file, you can't go upwards out of your directory" or something?
Or did I make that up?
user559633
Relative import in non module context or something.
I don't remember such rule 😃
Yeah exactly Tristan.
user559633
16:48
Exactly roughly that.
ugh this code I'm trying to read is a complete mess and nightmare
user559633
@enderland who are you, me?
user559633
Attempted relative import in non-package comes to mind. Yeah Fizzy
I'm just trying to time something
maybe it's a friday prob, but omg this is complicated and messy to read
user559633
16:49
I've decided that Boston daytime people are not happy unless they're being needlessly wasteful using machinery.
user559633
Listening to two leaf blowers and a weed whacker outside right now. The yards here are roughly 15x10 meters, max
No chainsaws yet?
thanks ... talking about it made it a lot clearer to me
this is like 5 files and still completely indecipherable
user559633
@ArcoBast You're using Python 3, right?

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