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00:14
Nothing like answering client emails 5 drinks deep on a Friday evening. :P How's everyone else's weekend going?
late
I contemplated finishing that back-of-the-envelope calculation about Earth's curvature (re: flat earth documentary crackpots) that I started on the subway, but I decided I should probably sleep instead, being past 2 AM
Probably a good idea. :P I'm an old man these days, so I'm normally asleep by 11:30.
heh
it's less age, more circadian rhythm (and schedule)
That'll definitely do it. I'm also up at 6:30 every morning.
00:21
I'd love to sleep in later, my brain just doesn't let me.
I don't have difficulties sleeping past noon
but then again I'm a zombie if I ever have to get up in the early morning
I wake up early and don't drink coffee. Sometimes I feel like I shouldn't be a software developer. :P
I definitely drink enough booze though.
:D
as long as you can have extended discussion of various edible products, you should be fine (judging by the usual discussions here)
I wake up late and drink coffee; but I'm not a software dev ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
although my kind is also prone to living on coffee
> A mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems. -- Alfréd Rényi
for a loose meaning of "my kind":P
and I just found one of the bugs I've been chasing in our code
worth staying up;)
good night
00:46
Night, Deak.
01:00
@vaultah I checked the documentations del lke you said gets called before the interpreter shuts down and cannot use open.
Is there any way to call a function just before an object gets destroyed or deleted?
01:18
Hi there!
huh, may get one of those rare I'll listen to your advice and improve my post OPs - always a pleasant surprise
I need some help with sockets: Is there a way to implement something close to Remote Procedure Calls using socket.send / recv? The server waits for a message, the client sends one, the server checks for the message, runs the code depending on the message and sends back a response.
@MorganThrapp do you take caffeine in another form? I am personally a fan of really good tea or energy drinks over coffee most days (anymore)
I tried using nanomsg but I need a platform independent solution
01:41
@JGreenwell Nah, I just don't have much caffeine. Diet soda and tea once or twice a week, but that's about it. I have some shoulder/neck issues, and too much caffeine aggravates it.
hmm...well, when I learned to program (from people who worked during 60s-80s) there was a large subset that was "hippie" and drank fruit juice and decaf, green teas and stuff - so its not unprecedented to be a developer and not do caffeine :)
as long as you don't try to get people to drink whet grass - that stuff is nasty :P
Oh yeah, my mom used to be super into wheat grass. Nasty is being kind.
02:00
what's really mean is when they put them in a shot glass so you get tricked into thinking its a different type of drink :|
ahh...we had enough homework questions today, I was wondering when the Python is slow, it must be Python it can't be my code question would appear
02:27
how can I turn a 5D object into a 4D object with numpy.ravel() on the last 2 dimensions? Or would this be better suited for numpy.reshape()?
yeah I guess it's just reshape
5D object as in just a 5d array or as in a time-variant 3D gradient texture?
a 5d ndarray
if just array you can reshape if the other its a little complicated
ah, well. There you go then :)
i was a little thrown off cus when I was viewing the output in the debug window, I was seeing '\n' 's scattered making me think it didn't work properly
02:46
What's the point of a bunch of object instances that share the same __dict__? Unless they're using slots, the only thing different about them is their id().
 
2 hours later…
04:24
Yeah, I pretty much can't think of any either. To me, this means that "the Borg pattern" is really an anti-pattern. If I recall correctly, the originator couldn't think of any useful purpose for them either.
 
1 hour later…
05:25
@AaronHall wat :d
@AnttiHaapala Is this a timezone thing i'm missing or are you up egregiously late/early?
8:26
so I am up egregiously early :D
I've been up all night having a go at writing a heap allocator
Looked up and realized the sun had risen
 
1 hour later…
06:51
@holdenweb ^
how much easier would it have been if the stupid datetime didn't store a broken-down time...
all this mess to "fix" the datetime when it should have been fixed by a nuke.
07:22
Python 4: picosecond support!
Python 5: yoctosecond support!
Python 6: PLANCKTIME SUPPORT!
exactly
@Ffisegydd and then 6.0.1: updated approximate Planck time.
 
1 hour later…
09:00
[shrugs] Nothing I can do about that one until Guido lends me the time machine ...
@MikeVandenberg numpy.ravel does only one thing: flatten out your array into 1d (without copying it if possible)
you will always need numpy.reshape if you want to change the dimensionality of an array into something other than 1d
cabbage
@AnttiHaapala hey that was written by goshawk in 2012!
also, and we think Guido vetoed it on a YAGNI basis
reeeeal benevolent:P
09:22
In a talk and the speaker has marked their slides as "CONFIDENTIAL"
Which is very strange to give at an open conference.
I don't know if they've left them in by accident, added them foolishly to seem "cool", or really think that that makes it confidential.
maybe he wants to violate the code of conduct without offending a broader audience
"viewer discretion is advised"
I think I'll ask at the end :P
When did someone add to the room tags!?
room topic changed to Python: The *productive programming cabbage. Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom [python] [python-2.x] [python-3.x]*
09:42
Didn't get chance to ask if he's serious about the confidential, I'll assume he's not :P
Sup @JRich
10:07
@Ffisegydd it had been like that for a long while
Jul 21 at 16:50, by davidism
room topic changed to Python: The *productive programming cabbage. Room rules: http://sopython.com/chatroom [documentation] [python] [python-2.x] [python-3.x]*
Shows how much attention I pay D:
Cabbage
Morning cabbage.
@Ffisegydd ... hem... so that the documentation talk doesn't go elsewhere...
Hmm... markdown is broken on the feedback message
If I gave a crap I'd file a bug report
10:13
Hey @AndrasDeak I originally forgot to give you credit for that Numpy code of yours that I used in that colour interpolation answer the other day. Sorry about that!
FWIW, the OP's real question actually requires a much more complicated form of interpolation. Fortunately, they didn't chameleon the original question. Here's their new question, if you want to take a look.
The interpolation function they want to use looks interesting, but my guess is that it'd be unbearably slow in pure Python, due to the heavy use of Gaussians, but I suppose it'd be ok in Numpy or scipy.
hola amigos!
its been a while
Hi, Games Brainiac.
@PM2Ring oh, don't worry about it:D and thanks
I tried to speed it up, by the way, but failed
@PM2Ring and thank you, I'd probably just try to use scattered interpolation with scipy
anyway, I find a fine +3 accepted answer discouraging;)
@AndrasDeak Fair enough. It is a great answer, but I get the feeling that the OP would love an answer that implements the sigmoid interpolation algorithm mentioned in the question.
room topic changed to Python: The *productive programming cabbage. Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom [documentation] [python] [python-2.x] [python-3.x]*
10:29
room topic changed to: Stop changing the topic all the time!
Andras, I noticed in the transcript that you were asking about filesystems for an SD card. IMHO, the most sensible choice is to use FAT, especially if you want it to be readable on multiple devices. Often, flash drives are optimized for FAT: the 1st sector (where the file allocation table lives) is designed to be able to handle more write cycles than the rest of the drive, but I guess that's not so much of an issue with modern devices.
I guess you could use NTFS if you want it to be Windows-compatible, but NTFS is a journaling filesystem, and journaling is generally not desirable on flash devices. Journaling adds unnecessary write wear to the drive, and it's rarely useful, unless you're in the habit of pulling drives out during writes. :)
The journaling variants of Linux's EXT family of formats permit you to disable journaling; I don't know if that's possible with NTFS. Also, when mounting flash devices it's a Good Idea to use the noatime option; obviously, updating the access time of a file every time you read it causes more unnecessary wear to the drive.
no, no, ntfs is out of the question;)
I ended up with exfat
also, thanks for all the info, let me just internalize it:P
@AndrasDeak Cool. I don't think you need to worry about the noatime option on FAT, since IIRC it doesn't store access time. But I could be mistaken. :)
dunno:)
bah, I also regularly have a buttload of IO overhead from time to time, on my laptop:S
I'm always wondering if I should reinstall the OS or wait for my drive to die
I should be backing up anyway
Which OS?
10:42
ubuntu...
14.04
It probably didn't help that I temporarily encrypted my home directory for a few months
I might have screwed up the unencryption step
Yeah, backing up stuff is a good idea. :) When a drive takes extra long to do writes from time to time it can be a sign that it's encountered a bunch of bad sectors. But hopefully, it's merely because the writeable space is fairly fragmented.
Allegedly, modern filesystems don't need defragging, and the overheads of writing a big file in a zillion small pieces is negligible. But in reality you can often get a noticeable speed improvement if you back up everything (using, eg, rsync), zapping the partition and writing everything back.
Of course, you can't do that with the root partition of a running system. That's where a bootable USB comes in handy. :)
my home is a separate partition
and the slow-down is intermittent, so I don't think it's something like fragmentation
Fine. It's rare for root to need defragging, since most of its contents is rarely modified. But home can get pretty messy. :)
@AndrasDeak You probably should run badblocks on it to see if it has bad sectors.
SMART stuff tells me I don't...
haven't tried badblocks, though, thanks
nevermind, that's reallocated sector count
cabbage
10:58
cbg
@AndrasDeak encrypted your home directory how?
if you did the ecryptfs shit...
I've deleted my home directory twice in the past 2 months.
@AnttiHaapala I think I did
well, improved your SNR for sure
@AndrasDeak ecryptfs is shit.
SNR?
@AnttiHaapala now you tell me:P
11:00
signal-to-noise ratio
5
A: How does ecryptfs impact harddisk performance?

Antti HaapalaI am programming with python in my home directory, and I have a Python virtual environment for project packages. For my programs startup times are considerably slower on eCryptfs as Python issues many stat() system calls when locating module files; because many of these stat calls result in "fil...

now you tell me
(I think I did this last year)
wait, this only concerns while you still have ecryptfs set up, correct?
@AndrasDeak Well, if the reallocated sector count is zero (or small), you should be fine. OTOH, the automatic sector reallocation only happens when bad sectors are encountered during normal reading & writing, running badblocks forces the drive to look at every sector (or a range of sectors you nominate).
it shouldn't be a problem after undoing it
11:02
@AndrasDeak yeah, but did you undo it :D
@PM2Ring awesome, thank you
@AnttiHaapala I did:D AFAIK:P
mount
also run full smarttests and paste to some pastebin and then link here
oh I had no idea you could run mount like that
hehe @AndrasDeak perhaps you should go to unix.sexchange and read the top N questions there :d
nothing ecrypt-related in mount
@AnttiHaapala guess I should:D
I believe the only remnant of my ecrypt dabbling is the temporary user I set up
11:05
@AndrasDeak e2fsck can also do a badblocks scan, if you give it the -c option. But have a look at the man pages before you do anything. badblocks can take a while to run on a large drive.
@PM2Ring yup, already have (read the manpages, that is)
I went with badblocks because that will surely not do anything to my drive by default besides reading
@AndrasDeak do the smart dump as well
100% "iowait" cpu load while running badblocks in my root partition...
I don't think that's good
@AnttiHaapala will do, thanks
maybe after a reboot:D
ha, you can run it at the same time
sudo smartctl -t long /dev/sdWHATEVER
The number of people who think a list-comp is a better replacement for what ever they do in a loop, is too damn high. :|
11:08
@AnttiHaapala I can, but the IO is partially locking up my system
it took a minute for synaptic to load
maybe 2 minutes
          long - [ATA] runs SMART Extended Self Test (tens of minutes). This is a longer and more thorough version of the Short Self Test described above.  Note that this command  can  be  given
          during normal system operation (unless run in captive mode - see the ´-C´ option below).
or use the -t short
I even uninstalled ecryptfs, it seems
then sudo smartctl --all /dev/sdWHATEVER -> paste to pastebin
OK OK OK:P
will get back to this after a reboot
@BhargavRao Well, a list comp can be slightly faster than the equivalent code using .append in a traditional for loop. And a simple list comp is compact, so it can help readability, if it means that the function fits on one screen instead of 3. OTOH, there is a tendency to write incomprehensible list comps / gen exps that are much harder to read than traditional for loop code just to get the code into one statement, and that's just dumb.
Here's an example I saw earlier today. In order to implement the code in a list comp the author uses indexing, which makes the code both slower and harder to read. I wrote a gen exp version that doesn't need indexing, but it's still less readable than my traditional for loop version.
11:19
@PM2Ring I just saw a post with a list comp of the second type.
Their only idea was to get it in one line.
@PM2Ring Yep, true. In many cases (I'd say most) the traditional looping construct is far more readable than their List-comp or Gen-exp counterparts.
@BhargavRao One-liners were important in Ancient Times, when people used dumb terminals, they don't make much sense these days.
(Aside: @PM2Ring do you have long nails? I usually press enter instead of ' whenever I have long nails)
now it's taking forever to copy 1 GB to my new USB drive, again with 100% iowait
makes me a sad panda
@BhargavRao I do have long nails: I'm a guitarist. OTOH, I just trimmed my nails today...
indeed shouldn't have formatted it with ntfs, it seems:P
11:24
Cbg
speaking of nails ^
Opinion, plz!
cabbage
haha hiya
@Withnail I agree
11:24
@Withnail cabbage \o
we were speaking bout nails and with"nail" enters :D
I just answered this question with a comment of 'That's the default behaviour of SlugField in django', and an explanation of how to override it to do what he asked
@AndrasDeak ...
I won't advise you any more, useless anyway :d
@PM2Ring Ah, that explains it. I hate it when I miss type because my nails are long. (or vice versa) :D
I thought ntfs was straightforward, as I might need to put it into windows PCs, and I might need >4GB so not fat32
11:26
We should have a rendition of PM's music here. :/
I think I'll reformat it with exfat
@AnttiHaapala but what I asked you about is my microsd, which I did format with exfat
Except, I can't see where that default behaviour's defined, not in in the API Docs and not in the sourcecode for SlugField or the validate_slug source - and now I'm wondering if that's a bug for the OP - anyone have any insight? Is it done in the regex that the validate_slug function uses?
@AndrasDeak just upgrade windows machines to linux
my father-in-law and nearby-photocopy-shop will be thrilled by that prospect
I haven't had a windows machine in my home for 10 years, maybe more
if it weren't for those two (and some conference shenanigans), I'd probably just use ext4
11:29
wife always complains about her ubuntu. But she'd complain even more if I refused to fix her windows :d
my wife is even more hostile towards windows than me, which is something
photo...copy...? sh...op...?
there might be a better word for it
I don't have the hardware to print photo-grade photos at home
nor posters
visions of Andras photocopying handwritten zines. Such a hipster.
:P
you've been to Hungary; I just trade a chicken for a copy of my notes
11:33
Dude, I just paid with my Monzo card everywhere. :P
I'm off for a while, I'll let smartctl run in the meantime
is there a close flag for 'OP has misunderstood fundamentals of what they're asking'? - 'too broad' doesn't seem right for that.
Monzo sounds like portmanteau of Gonzo, Ponzi and Moron
Testing has begun.
Please wait 179 minutes for test to complete.
Test will complete after Sat Sep 17 16:34:22 2016
sweet:D
@AnttiHaapala datetime rewrite? Scary thought. Have you ever used mxDateTime? Rather better thought through, perhaps. The work of Marc-Andre Lemburg
11:35
unclear?
as in "I can't believe that's what you're asking"
or just custom it
This one - sort of misses the point of the db, to my mind. It's not like they're asking about how to archive old stuff.
Huh, didn't realise I could custom reason.
@holdenweb isn't that something that was the inspiration for the datetime in the core
"You can add, subtract and even multiply instances"
like wat?
Multiplying timedeltas I can see. But what's the square root of yesterday?
mxDateTime was quite thorough, and served my needs well for a long time
groundhog_day = date(1993, 2, 2) * 12043
Biggest bugbear today is lack of 3.x support. Not a conversion I would relish tackling
11:40
yeah but still it confuses point-in-time with representation
@Withnail That's too broad!
The question I flagged, you mean? Or the one I answered?
@Withnail Sadly, we don't have "OP has CHDS" as a close reason.
Apr 11 at 8:42, by PM 2Ring
CHDS = Coital Hint Deficit Syndrome. I.e., they don't have a fucking clue.
The django and db one
LOL
I'm sure I'll reuse that at somepoint. :D
11:45
Time problems are easier once you realise that time has to go forward all the time. But people get confused about time zone changes to localtime ... erm ... all the time
Also, local date conversions still have to be applied. Even though we keep exchange data with a datetime timestamp in UTC, datasets that cross UTC dates are for single days in their place of origin. So you can't just blindly "use" UTC without being aware of such broader implications.
leap seconds! leap seconds!
yeah, my timelib would have a ...
...holiday inn?
that makes sense in this context, right?
None of which, of course, are really appropriate for a "let's get started with datetimes" class.
11:48
dunno what to call it, "PointInTime" :D
moment? :D
people would confuse it with momentjs
haha
Twinkling :d
Leap seconds are indeed a monumental pain
instanter?
'So when you have your instance of instanter, then you can... '
Nope, the instances should be called instants
@holdenweb I could also overload @
hey that would be kewl
Your instant instance of instanter?
11:51
Ooh, I'm loving that!
from timezones import Europe
x = Twinkling('2016-01-10T12:34:56')
x @ Europe/Helsinki
"Take an instanter.instant instance..."
ah that wouldn't work
x = Twinkling('2016-01-10T12:34:56Z')
x @ tz.Europe.Helsinki
The modified version above
Better!
which would be
equal to x @ tz['Europe/Helsinki']
but easier to type
11:54
That is indeed true, and could be arranged with modest amounts of __getattr__ wiring
So does tz['Europe/Helsinki'] equate to tz['Europe']['Helsinki']?
Or does `tz['Europe'] have no meaning?
no meaning
but could yes...
Well, if we're making it look like a nested namespace ...
Presumably by your equivalence, tz.Europe == tz['Europe'] should hold
perhaps then...
Well, maybe not strictly ...
Worth noodling with, maybe
The @ operation was inspired
And so back to my regularly scheduled life
The weekend ...
yeah need to think about it a bit.
12:03
hey, anyone played around with david beazley's curio?
Hiya @Games, Tis been a long time. Howyadoin?
@BhargavRao doing well man. Writing a lot of software these days.
@BhargavRao have you graduated yet?
That's some great news. Best of luck
Yep, Have started working. Job's in java, I'm enjoying it.
Oh, which company?
Endurance (EIG).
12:09
Thats pretty neat man :D
Yep, Thanks :)
12:22
@AndrasDeak I just bashed out a quick answer before I realized something that simple had to have a dupe. Was going to delete it but I got distracted by other stuff.. deleted now.
@AndrasDeak my wife is the same way (hates Windows with a passion, loves Apple) whereas I just find it annoy, massively annoying mind you, and have a dual boot for work
also cbg all
Cabbage Green
happy saturday all
@tzaman thank you and sorry:)
12:34
@GamesBrainiac How ya been!?
@idjaw Aye Capt'n. Happy weekend!
@BhargavRao aye! :)
@Martijn seen your poster, met your mates got some stickers :D
Also found out how to pronounce Martijn from the Dutch speaking guy
@JonClements they only had the second Rama book so I got that (and two Terry Prachetts and two Sandersons)
12:39
@Ffisegydd Jeroen :-)
Cool!
Had to hang my head in shame and explain that I use git exclusively
@JGreenwell sweet... you're not missing much from not reading the first book first... books 2-4 should be read in order though as they're really more a separate story from the first...
@Ffisegydd Well.... better than admitting you use a copy of Microsoft Source Safe from 2003 or something....
VCS is for paranoid people. My hard drive is 3 months past its estimated failure date and is wor-
@Ffisegydd Have you seen the latest update to GH PR reviews? It's getting very gerrit-like.
12:42
yeah, I'm actually pretty excited about the Sanderson find (its the 2nd and 3rd book in the new Mistborn series and I have the first but never had time to get/read the rest of the series)
I've not seen the pr part yet but that makes me happy. The projects bit is just a Trello clone
now all I need is the final book in the Kingkiller series
anyone else taking part in the breakthrough competition?
@Ffisegydd oh yeah, absolutely. Initial inspection on the images they showed before I read the article I thought they were originally referencing trello, but it was actually their thing.
Sanderson!? What's the news?
12:44
btw has anyone used blender over here?
@MartianCactus a food blender? :p
@JGreenwell I've only read the 1st one, Rendezvous With Rama, but that was decades ago, so I've forgotten most of it. But I remember enjoying it at the time. :) Which Pratchett books did you get?
nope!! The animation software...
I love Sanderson's books (still waiting on Oathbringer)
gotta run...kids start swimming lessons today!
rbrb for now
12:47
Interesting Times (which I've finished, enjoyed, and think it has the best description of AI that I've ever heard) and Unseen Academicals
@MartianCactus I know what you meant... yeah... I've used it... well.. it'd be more accurate to say - tried to use it... haven't produced anything more than some basic logos
rbrb @idjaw hope the kids enjoy it
is it good?
like, can you make nice animations?
its free so..
@JGreenwell I just started re-reading Unseen Academicals today.
@JGreenwell I suppose that depends on the lessons... if it's throwing 'em in a pool and going: "Right - just don't drown and stop screaming!" - I don't imagine it'd be very enjoyable :)
12:49
at least they stop screaming when they start drowning
@JonClements that's how I learned
@MartianCactus oh - it's got loads of features and yes - there's mini-movies that have been made using it... perhaps because I'm not trained and there's so so so so much functionality in it - I just don't have a clue what some stuff is meant to do or what I'd use it for etc...
Terry wrote:

"What? Lemmings? Merely because the red army can fight, dig, march and climb and is controlled by little icons? Can't imagine how anyone thought that...

Not only did I wipe Lemmings from my hard disc, I overwrote it so's I couldn't get it back."
I remember that game both fondly and with hate - so I get that
I love the Golem elements in a few of his books - the one who becomes part of the Watch and the ones involved with the Theif/Con-man who became Post Master and head of the Bank - could be a Jewish thing or a robotics thing; either way I just think their neat :)
12:58
@JGreenwell were you the one who asked me about the khan academty account thing?
probably
since I think I'm the only one here who uses it to teach
realllyyy?? U are a teacher??
wow
nah its not to vote
it was just a program that I made which immitate a voting machine

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