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DSM
DSM
16:00
@davidism: some colleagues and I got into an edit war because I was writing an after-action report in historical present and they kept inserting past.
Caring about grammar is such a burden. I didn't ask for this!
What exciting lives we lead.
Looking into this bike shed has made me realize that either I didn't actually learn about English in English class, or I've completely forgotten it all. Took me forever to actually find the right terms.
Same.
I don't really have a rule about tense in function docs, but I do try to always go with what is shortest. This usually means leaving half the sentence off in isX() type functions because you only need to describe the return value.
16:01
I seriously can't remember what English classes actually did. I certainly don't remember discussing modes for any useful amount of time.
I've read that imperative is correct however.
This isn't tense, this is mode. Which I didn't even consciously acknowledge as a difference until half an hour ago.
Just hang around on ELU stack exchange for a while and you'll get all the English you need
I remember vocab tests and classic-ish literature appropriate for eighth graders.
Imperative is what PEP8 states, I believe it is
16:02
I already get enough of the English from Fizzy.
might be a different pep
I don't really have a rule about grammar rule in function docs.
I was confused about what that meant until I read some example. Basically, it's not "should return" or "returns" its something like "return the sum of two numbers"
It would be totally legit to use the docstring as pseudocode for the function you're about to write.
user559633
@davidism That's how I felt/feel about NLP. "English is my primary language, how do I not know these things?"
16:04
A quick perusal through the pep 8 comment section doesn't reveal anything. The sample docstring they give is "Return a foobang", though. So I guess imperative.
There's a different pep for docs, can't remember the number.
Extreme literature challenge: explain why "the big red ball" is preferable over "the red big ball".
Iron man mode: no linking to internet articles that already have the answer.
DSM
DSM
Wasn't there an ELU question about that which hit the hot questions just a while ago? I remember reading it.
'''
Take two lists, ``a`` and ``b`` and combine them, then return the sum of those lists
'''
Adjective ordering is fun.
16:06
@DSM Yeah... I think I may have linked it in here, too
because it's been making the twitter/Facebook rounds
(some blurb from a book or article or something)
@davidism actually, indicative is better... imperative is more like mandating the things that the caller should do.
Just half an hour ago I read an amusing tumblr post saying "It is complicated to explain the placement rules for contractions we've".
236
Q: What is the rule for adjective order?

RegDwigнtI remember being taught that the correct order of adjectives in English was something along the lines of "Opinion-Size-Age-Color-Material-Purpose." However, it's been a long time and I'm pretty sure I've forgotten a few categories (I think there were eight or nine). Can anyone fill them in?

Huh, I never thought about it, but the second one does sound wrong.
I would never write that docstring, since it doesn't talk about whether a,b are modified and how they are combined, and what the relationship of the combination is to the return value
16:07
one thing to remember is that that imperative is 2nd p.
Yeah, I'm leaning towards indicative for function docs, imperative for tutorials / instructions.
Imperative is second person, but when I write docs I'm writing them as if the dev is doing something by calling the function (second person), not as if the function is doing something independently (third person).
> First and third person imperatives are expressed periphrastically, using a construction with the imperative of the verb let:

Let us (Let's) have a drink! (equivalent to a first person plural imperative)
Let him/her/them be happy! (equivalent to a third person imperative; constructions with may are also used)
“Mobile Virtual Reality” is like the least interesting thing to me
yeah]
ROUND ICONS!
Can I just say that ROUND icons somewhat disagrees with the phone name? Pixel? Shouldn’t the icons be rectangular?
lol innovation
Looks fine to me. The only kinda weird thing is the half glossy, half matte back.
Had to scroll around to find an actual pic of it in the stream.
DSM
DSM
16:25
So.. it's a phone? And people are watching the company discuss it? Well, I suppose lots of the stuff I'm interested in doesn't appeal to other people..
But did they have the C O U R A G E to remove the headphone jack?
it's a phone with an assistant botnet built in
that's it
Am I the only one who is scared about assistants?
Does anyone ever actually want to ask their phone for photos from last October?
@poke they already know everything, nothing new
16:27
IT KNOWS WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER (by looking at your photos from last summer)
@khajvah But I don’t want them to shove that into my face!?
Also, voice in general is still incredibly inconvenient because you still have to go back and check that it got everything right.
@davidism Yeah, like it totally put in a typo in that text message earlier…
I really want to use it for responding while in the car, but there's no way to stop and think or go back and insert/edit/remove.
16:29
damn
Car is about the only use for it
And then I should probably be driving
You have to have the whole message fully planned in your head and say it in one go.
@davidism It will become useful when it will be good enough that you will trust it
@davidism well, that's just like conversation though :)
right now, you don't know for sure if it will give you whatever you need, so you just do it manually
16:30
Perhaps the voice recognition software is better than it used to be, but it's just inconvenient if it doesn't get it right first time
exactly why people don't care about it now
Also it's only really useful if you're alone or people are being quiet
E.g. xbox open netflix may work because everyone wants to watch netflix
But xbox headshot that gu-oh never mind too late isn't so useful
is this a glitch?
650$
@corvid :P
@corvid every single one of those 1 stars was a sole outlier
16:41
Also the product in question is notoriously absolutely awful
@corvid LPTHW?
Is that Jeff Bezos' autobiography?
@AnttiHaapala even worse (shutters) comcast
I don't think even mein kampf has reviews like that and it's literally Hitler
Say you want to make a record of players and matches they played. Is it ok For the player class to have a list of matches played, and the matches class, to have a reference to the players that played the match?
Like a doubly linked class kinda thing.
16:46
@TomasZubiri Stored only in-memory, not on disk? That is, it should not persist after closing the program?
I'm trying not to worry about persistence yet.
So far all in memory.
Depending on $factors, there may come a point where you wish you had a third class that bridges the two, e.g. Participant, but it's basically the same concept
If I might suggest, I'd start thinking about persistence now. If you're going to have something like SQLAlchemy do all the work for you, why worry about it?
For example, the openpyxl package represents a spreadsheet in a workbook BOTH as a list of columns and a list of rows. So it's OK to have multiple pointers to the same thing for convenience of processing.
@RobertGrant Never heard of that concept, does it have a name?
@KevinMGranger Probably gonna learn sqlAlchemy with this project yeah.
16:51
Ultimately it should be driven by use cases. Do you ever need all the players in a single match? All the matches played by one player? If both, your representation would provide the necessary structures. You just have to be careful when updating such redundant structures.
SQLAlchemy is really great. It comes highly recommended
@TomasZubiri Probably :-)
Maybe in the case of openpyxl, it probably provided 2 representations of the same data. Rather than storing the same data twice.
Example: have a Match class, which contains multiple Participants. Each Participant would contain one Player, their start and end times for being on the field, and how many goals they scored.
But you may not need all that; it's just an idea
OK, I turned it into a poll, go vote.
16:58
Shouldn't you transpose those examples?
You said indicative or imperative but then your examples were imperative vs indicative. Could be confusing
;_; Grammar has destroyed me.
No votes yet, hurry
Infinitive mode.
Should API docs use indicative or imperative mode? "Adds an item" vs "Add an item".
Activate the Infinitive Improbability Drive!
17:00
yes yes, in order to be good at grammar, you must go to a camp to concentrate:
"Sir, we are mining too many useless ores"
[Hitler rubs chin]
"So mine less"
[Grammar Nazi bursts through the door]
"MINE FEWER!"
[Hitler looks up]
"Yes?"
3
Ok, vote in my poll:
Workbooks.add
Workbooks.adds
Workbook.add
GetWorkbook.GetAdd
GetWorkbook.SetAdd
@davidism though...
java docs use imperative :D
@davidism My brain thinks indicative
@AnttiHaapala are they consistent about it? Python's docs aren't.
17:03
I prefer interrogatory. "Does this add an item? Oh god I am not good with computers"
@davidism lol, they aren't
functions/methods are named as imperative verbs
@Kevin this is a pretty good April Fools idea.
@davidism your poll now has 50 - 50; I clicked 2 javadocs links, the first used imperative, second indicative :D
is it possible to know the name of a function from within itself?
17:04
Overdid the hot sauce with my lunch cbg
How about introspective docs? "Why am I adding this item? What's the point of all this? Should I return an item? None? Why even bother?".
3
"If I write this doc, and nobody reads it, is it still a valid doc?"
hmm
@davidism imperative is an exception in Java
I change depending upon the project. I just use what feels right.
user559633
absurdist or nothing.
17:06
yeah: indicative it is.
user559633
this function cooks the fish for the goat in the kitten's grape bathwater
@davidism by happenstance the first link that I opened was written by someone as confused as you :D
If the caller shoots a toaster, I'm scared of ducks
I want surrealist docs. "Does this function do anything? Is it all just a dream? Who knows!".
the first click was for some interface that had one method called "dispatch" and the description started with "dispatch"; all the others that I clicked - and there were dozens of methods in various places, used indicative.
17:08
cubist docs: all code is written in giant ascii art letters.
user559633
what is the function's motivation? what drives it? what's its arc?
@MorganThrapp I saw that! So daring.
Use 3rd person (descriptive) not 2nd person (prescriptive).
The description is in 3rd person declarative rather than 2nd person imperative.
there is a standard for javadocs
@RobertGrant I meant expressionism. :P
That's why I deleted it.
17:10
I increasingly feel like maybe there shouldn't be a community standard for everything.
rhubarb
Anarchist docs: there aren't any
I want impressionist docs
wim
wim
what does imperative and indicative mean
Well your screen is composed of little dots.
17:13
@Kevin that smells like a new standard to me
user559633
Anarchist docs: they don't actually work, but people talk about them a lot
So docs about arguments shouldn't be "pass depth=True to perform a dfs instead of bfs" but "if depth=True, uses dfs instead of bfs".
wim
wim
whichever one is like "add an item" is better
@wim Imperative.
That's imperative.
DSM
DSM
17:13
For those keeping track at home: today's interview candidate is on SO, and has a respectable (sub-10k) rep. Having looked at his answers I think the technical side of the interview is going to go very well! #optimism
How many stars does he have. Important question.
user559633
It's me! You're going to be disappointed. Sorry.
wim
wim
also commit messages should be in past tense, like "fixed bug xyz"
@DSM ask him the questions he answered to freak him out
The Linux kernel style says that commit messages should be imperative too. "Add feature xyz"
17:14
Ask him the questions he asked but never got an answer to.
lol
Then get a bag out with $1000 in it and tell him there's bounty in it for him
user559633
Ask him what his favorite meta post is, and if he doesn't have one, that's a pretty good hire
What are your opinions on freehand circles
wim
wim
It's fixed in the actual answer now, but I just noticed that the second revision of ReallyMaxIntdidn't actually work in python3. Does anyone know why? Did some implementation details of functools.total_ordering change or anything?
python 3.5.0 here.
@Kevin trying to see if they're a well-rounded candidate?
17:16
Or if they're a bit sketchy
@davidism let me find a counter-example showing why imperative is wrong
ReallyMaxInt? What is this, php?
Strange question: is there a formula to get the complementary color of a given hex code?
user559633
IMPerative. Because it's as if imps are controlling your actions. Took me a minute, but I understand now.
@corvid yes
Did it at uni; may have forgotten it subjective decades ago
user559633
17:17
37
Q: JS function to calculate complementary colour?

Pekka 웃Does anybody know, off the top of your heads, a Javascript solution for calculating the complementary colour of a hex value? There is a number of colour picking suites and palette generators on the web but I haven't seen any that calculate the colour live using JS. A detailed hint or a snippet ...

I like the way he only wants an answer off the top of people's heads
definitely don't look this up
(It is a reference to this if that wasn't clear)
user559633
classic SO is the best SO
> sorted(iterable[, key][, reverse])

Return a new sorted list from the items in iterable.
Use functools.cmp_to_key() to convert an old-style cmp function to a key function.
The correct answer is "they should be red"
17:18
@davidism ^
What's the problem with it?
wim
wim
It's b0rked
>>> ReallyMaxInt() > 42
False
like @total_ordering didn't do his job
I mean, I know functools is just a dumping ground for shite that Guido doesn't care about, but it should basically work right??
Hmm, now I'm not even sure if imperative is right. Maybe that's actually declarative.
what's "declarative" :D
17:22
Words don't actually mean things, if that gives you any consolation.
My brain is melting, time to stop.
It's all spaghetti. Argh.
mmmm...
def get_higher_int():
	current = 0
	while True:
		yield current
		if current + 1 <= current:
			break

		current += 1

def really_max_int():
	ints = [x for x in get_higher_int()]
	return sorted(ints, reverse=True)[0]
17:23
@davidism indicative mood.
python docs are all wrong
they're internally inconsistent.
at least javadocs have rules :D
You're welcome
Then why aren't Java's getters / setters "getsPasta" / "setsPasta"?
Now they have to be consistent between names and docs.
Because you're using it, not reading about it # random reason
@davidism they're docs
not method naming
setPasta is a "message sent to the object" in smalltalk terms, but the description is separate from it. The setPasta is to be understood by the object, the docstring is to be understood by the user.
There is something to be said about an entire program written descriptively-- but there are little to no mainstream languages that encourage that
17:29
if i was making a sort of test harness framework that had a gui interface ... would it be bad form to use the docstrings for the test description that is displayed to the gui user? in your opinions?
Are you ever going to want to document the code itself separate from what's shown to the user? Probably. I'd keep it separate
I'm pretty sure test frameworks already use the docs next to the tests when given certain flags.
Off-to-PyData-London-rhubarb-ly y'rs - steve
You could make a decorator or something if you still want it to only take up a separate line
@holdenweb cool, have fun!
DSM
DSM
17:30
Data-ish rhubarb for holdenweb!
But the real question is would those test descriptions use indicative or imperative mode?
Oh wait I think I misunderstood
lol @davidism there is a reason i wasnt an english major :P
I know what all those words mean on their own, but when used together like that ...
@KevinMGranger i was inclined also to think that using the docstrings in this was was incorrect (that said i can almost guarantee the docstrings will not be used to document the test function, you know what docstrings are typically used for :P )
I think I misunderstood the question, though. If this is testing-related stuff being shown to technically-minded folks, then sure, why not
its to show to technicians ... it is for a production release testing tool
(technicians == assembly line workers... not programmers)
ie some hardware comes out and needs to be verified before being shipped out ... this typically involves stuff like excersizing cellular data modules and sampling known analog values etc ...
def testCellular():
     """ this tests the celular module of productXYZ """
    do_some_crap()
spelling for the lose
17:38
Since these are functions at the highest level-- that represent tasks the user would be interfacing with, I'd say docstrings are a fine place for that.
But I'm still a youngun, my ideas are not based on the kind of experience the other have here. So I'd start with answering their most important questions
So, indicative or imperative mode?
lol ok ... so back to thats not totally batshit crazy of an idea ... (I already have it done ... I just started second guessing if that was appropriate) ... heep in mind other programmers will be writing these tests for the products that their team is working on ... I am trying to standardize some of out production testing tools (right now there is no ryme or reason and you have to build a complete program for each new product... when the tests are all very very very simillar ...)
lol i dont even know wtf that means ... im pretty sure @davidism was being sarcastic with that question ... (although maybe not)
He was, as was I.
that said if i had to pick the test descriptions are indicative ... the testing its self is imperitive
I don't know if tests are imperative, but they're definitely very important
stackoverflow.com/questions/39855572/… Not about programming. Specifically mentions that they want to do this without programming.
18:01
How can I check if my input variable (sys.argv) is an integer and greater then 0 ?
Easy: sys.argv will never be an integer unless you set it to one.
^
sys.argv will in fact always be a tuple(or is it a list?)
try:
    howmany = int(sys.argv[1])
except:
    print "Usage: main.py [input]"
    sys.exit(0)
Well, what does int() do when the input isn't an integer?
18:03
in fact the items in the list will always be strings ... so it will not be an int even then
@KevinMGranger -> go to except and exit
whats wrong with that solution?
the int need to be higher than 0
else: print "howmany > 0", howmany>0
add that at the end ...
import sys
def could_be_converted_into_an_int(s):
    try:
        int(s)
        return True
    except ValueError:
        return False
if could_be_converted_into_an_int(sys.argv[1]) and int(sys.argv[1]) > 0:
    print "OK"
else:
    print "Oops"
18:05
try:
except:
else:
def greater_than_zero():
     try: return int(sys.argv[1]) > 0
     except ValueError: print "Thats not an int!"
     return False
like this: ??
try:
    howmany = int(sys.argv[1])
except:
    print "Usage: main.py [Größe des Spielbretts]"
    sys.exit(0)
else:
    print "howmany > 0", howmany>0
sure that works ...
should say true or false as long as you give it an int as argv[1]
It output with 0 as input:
howmany > 0 False
because 0 is not gtrater than 0
...
with higher than 0:
18:08
if you want it to be true you need greater than or equal ...
howmany > 0 True
^^ I want a large poster of this on my wall
(if you want zero to be true...) ... at this point you need to go look up some tutorials on python i think ... how did you figure out to do the try/except? did you just ask on stackoverflow and someone told you how to do it... but you couldnt figure out how to then check if its greater than zero?
error return outside function
No myself
^
@idjaw lol i like the php one so much ... I wish there was a python one
18:11
@linuscl it's time to stop asking here and start reading a tutorial. You're lacking fundamental understanding and debugging skills and we can't spend time helping you with that.
@JoranBeasley Maybe I will use if...else.
@davidism Do you recommend one for me?
@JoranBeasley solved:
if int(sys.argv[1]) > 0:
    try:
        howmany = int(sys.argv[1])
    except:
        print "Wrong input"
        sys.exit(0)
else:
    print "Wrong input"
    sys.exit(0)
@davidism Have already read Dive into python
@davidism otherwise I couldn't write that ^
18:17
@linuscl you have issues still...
pass 'a' as your argument ...
@linuscl OK, then next it's time to read this: skidmore.edu/~pdwyer/e/eoc/help_vampire.htm
@davidism lol yeah I know ... zipping up now :P
@idjaw If you make a poster of that, let me know. I'll buy one too. I've been doing some C#, and that one is ErrorWayToRealForMeRightNowException.
I would even want a high res one of C# just for the Jon Skeet reference
I feel like the Python one would be something about trying to rescue the princess, but when you try to mutate it, you end up mutating all castles so that none of them have a princess.
18:28
@JoranBeasley What's the improvement you made?
Has anyone experienced odd behaviour bouncing between patch versions of Python? I have a use-case on my end I want to investigate further, but I was playing around with 3.4.0, 3.4.3 and 3.4.4 (installed over each other in different order). My tox environment now constantly throws TypeError("Cannot extend enumerations") for some code using enumerations. It's not so much about the error I'm asking, but any odd shenanigans with doing the weird version bouncing I've been doing?
@davidism :| k
@idjaw lol the last one is amazing
@idjaw Maybe that feature was added in a patch version? Which one did you install last?
Though, according to the changelog, it didn't change in 3.4. I'm completely stumped.
@MorganThrapp I found this
which refers to when it was introduced, and it is listed as 3.4
I think I actually rolled back from .4 to .3
and then went back to .4
yes -> .4 -> .0 -> .3 -> .4
:) I probably asked for it.
18:33
hey guys, is there a special argument on setuptools.setup() that runs certain requirements only when i do python setup.py develop?
Yeah, but they're all patch versions of 3.4, right?
yes
And it's 3.4.0 where it got introduced.
So it shouldn't have affected it, because the behaviour should be the same for all of the patch versions.
exactly. if it was something introduced in some other patch version. I can see how something maybe got borked.
@JavierBuzzi there isn't. You can put dev-only requirements in a file like dev-requirements.txt and recommend pip install -r dev-requirements.txt for setting up the dev env.
18:35
can someone help?
thats what i feared. is there a pep somewhere for this that got rejected?
hello
@beginner please read our room rules. Don't post recent questions.
sorry
18:36
actually, that's not even Python
@JavierBuzzi Are you doing this to run tests?
no, for actual development
OK. To expand slightly on what davidism said, I pretty much do exactly that. I have a test-requirements.txt and I just install that separately.
However, because I use tox for my testing, I let tox handle all that for me
i have 3 internal packages, that my main app uses. and well i just wanted to make my life a little easier.. but i guess im stuck with python setup.py develop; pip install -r .... .. great
You can add -e . to the top of your requirements. That's the trick Heroku uses to support installable projects.
18:40
i dont follow @davidism, i know that pip install -e <package> is the same as python setup.py develop
If your complaint is that you have to run two commands, then you can reduce that to one command and still get your project installed in dev mode by putting -e . at the top of the requirements file and only installing the requirements file.
Wooo, Python silver.
^^ \o/ congrats
oh i see, file system: setup.py, requirements.txt. requirements.txt has: -e .
and then do `pip install -r requirements.txt` and that will take care of it?
@davidism ^
18:44
huh. ok
didnt know that. thanks!

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