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13:00
lol
if getcwd() == '~/Code/some-repo/*'
  :echom "What are you doing mate?"
endif
Don't think getcwd() will return a path with ~ ;-)
Or *
Morning cabbage.
Cabbage Morgan
user559633
13:04
learnlearningthehardway.com
itsahardknocklife.com
> First I'd like to thank Zed Shaw for writing Learn Python the Hard Way and making it freely available. This book's format and writing style is directly inspired by it.
daily pupper
:D
cute doge except WHAT'S WITH THOSE EYES OMG
13:09
That's a Doge!
doggg
learn vimscript the hard way is actually okay, though
user559633
So You've Decided to Spend All Your Time Organizing Your Toolbox and Other Tales from an Unemployed Carpenter
Ya'll need to catch up with the internet lingo. Doge is out, pupper is in.
@KevinMGranger does it tell you not to use vim because it inconveniently leads to wear of your arrow keys?
if not, it fails to live up to its predecessor
13:10
pupper / doggo / shoober, etc.
Doggo soon to replace pupper completely
They're different use cases.
I think Kevin has cracked SO chat for getting stars
13:12
"LCTHW teaches real robust C coding and defensive programming tactics on real hardware rather than abstract machines and pedantic theory."
wtf
Defensive programming? Is that like krav maga?
am I using abstract machine now?
Use nearby braces to injure your enemies...or just tabs if you use python.
spoiler - all your code are belong to Zed
Defensive programming is putting if(error_ocurred){...} after every single third party library invocation. Even for things like getting the system time where if an error occurs it probably means spacetime is unraveling.
13:14
Kneel before Zed!
@Kevin in which case don't you want to be made aware that spacetime is unraveling so you can take necessary action?
@AndrasDeak the point is that C is defined as the programming language that behaves like a certain program on an abstract machine.
well, defined by a loud minority, I can assure you
it's a motorcycle, baby
13:16
if(error_ocurred){printf("++ Please reboot universe and try again ++");}
user559633
@AndrasDeak it's a chopper
oh right:D
heheh
@IljaEverilä ^
guess I should watch it again
My pet peeve: zombie movies where they call zombies "zeds".
13:16
@AnttiHaapala good timing
user559633
O_O you can program vim ?
interestingly, that's one of my favourite parts of the movie, and I can quote the relevant part of that discussion
user559633
Zombie movies/shows won't call zombies "zombies" because then they're admitting it's a tired plot.
It's ok to not call them zombies, as long as it takes place in a universe where apparently they never invented zombie movies.
13:17
but my brain can only start at "whose motorcycle is it, baby?" to get it right
I'm pretty sure that's why they call them "walkers" in the walking dead
But a Z-related name makes it clear that they do have zombie movies and are just being coy about calling them what they are
@Kevin yeah, only genre savvy characters can call them zombies
@AndrasDeak loud minority?!
user559633
13:18
The concept of "zombies" exist in The Walking Dead, but only in describing the plot, in that it was once alive, then died, and is now forced to shuffle along until someone puts it out of its misery.
@AnttiHaapala are you trying to oppress the free thinking of The People?
like... "defined by the standard body, that consists mostly of representatives of the compiler vendors"
I like that in Left 4 Dead, each character has a special qualification that makes them effective in a zombie apocalypse, and one of them is "spent a full two weeks in college doing nothing but watching zombie movies".
@AnttiHaapala How many representatives are there? Compared to programmers? BOOM.
There's no doubt what sort of universe they live in, there.
user559633
13:19
@AnttiHaapala fwiw: i'm following this thread and i really enjoyed that line you called out
sorry, the point is that the only C language is the language that is defined in standards
C is not a natural language.
user559633
why are you sorry? i was being in earnest
I am sorry for you :D
You sure? It's got enough undefined behavior to be a natural language.
user559633
13:21
why? my life is going great and i've never been more delusional!
6
too much apologizing going on here....and this is coming from the Canadian
@KevinMGranger that's not definition of natural language though.
What is a natural language? Asking for a friend.
Doesn't Esperanto have exceptions?
Is it "a programming language whose specification is just its source code"?
13:22
now that's an unnatural language if there's one (besides PHP)
user559633
@Kevin One that comes about/develops with practice/use, opposed to a planned system.
@Kevin no, it's "a programming language who is not ashamed of the mortal form it was given at birth, and will gladly display it in its full glory"
oh, like how php has six ways to escape strings because it grew organically over time. Truly a model to imitate.
"grow organically" is great because you can associate to a rainforest, or to a horrid fungal infection
whichever's your agenda
@AndrasDeak esperanto is not a natural language really.
13:25
@AnttiHaapala that's my point
it's completely artificial
yet I seem to remember reading that it has exceptions?
a natural language or ordinary language is any language that has evolved naturally in humans through use and repetition without conscious planning or premeditation
of so, then the fact that something has irregularities doesn't make it natural
"artificial" as in man-made, as opposed to all of those other ones given to use by N A T U R E
hits Kevin MG on the head with a club
Esperanto estas facila lingv- donk ow.
13:26
English isn't a natural language because I like to think we're very calculating about what cool parts of other languages we want to rip off and take for our own.
@AndrasDeak vietnamese doesn't have any irregular verbs, nouns or adjectives.
That's our modus operandi.
@AnttiHaapala that's logically irrelevant to my argument:P
user559633
Planned/constructed languages can end up being part planned and evolve into a natural language.
@tristan true.
user559633
13:26
@Kevin I know you're kidding, but that's a perfect example of a natural language.
however, even with esperanto this is not yet the case
user559633
Yeah, you need users for a natural language to happen.
who break your system and abuse it in hitherto unimagined ways?
and if all the speakers of esperanto are pedants, then it is not going to evolve
user559633
ACHIEVEMENT UNLOCKED: SUPREME SLAM ON AN UNUSED WRITTEN LANGUAGE BEFORE COFFEE
13:28
I believe the preferred term is "constructed language" or "conlang"
Hey, it's used! There are dozens of us! Dozens!
anyhow, the Python language is defined as "whatever the CPython does, less things that are noted as implementation details in the documentation"
user559633
@KevinMGranger It's either. "Planned" if you're trying to share knowledge with others. "Conlang" if you have to type it all the time.
the C language is defined as: "whatever is said in the ISO/IEC 9899:2011"
+ whatever extensions you want to have on top of it...
@tristan plang?
@AnttiHaapala + however we shit on everything that others thought would be a great idea -- by Microsoft™
13:31
yeah...
there is C as in 9899:2011, and then there is microsoft "C"
user559633
@AndrasDeak That's pretty solid, but I think "conlang" might be a wink/nudge as it's formally taking initializing morphemes
... the truth is that unless people start writing C we will not have bug-free programs.
the fact is that LCTHW doesn't teach C
it teaches Zlang
user559633
I promise you that I am capable of writing bug-ridden software in C.
@tristan I believe you!
;)
@PeterVaro
// WARNING: On some systems you may have to change the
// %ld in this code to a %u since it will use unsigned ints
printf("The size of an int: %ld\n", sizeof(int));
user559633
13:33
@PeterVaro That's just the motivation that I needed to continue failing at everything!
please do not let this guy near any mission critical software, ok?!
@tristan I thought you knew already: you can always count on me :)
@tristan yeah, plang just sounds too much like onomatopoeia
@AnttiHaapala I would really like to hack his site.. and well.. troll everything he did so far..
@AnttiHaapala Is that from LCTHW?
13:36
@PM2Ring yes
Isn't it just brilliant satire?:D
@PM2Ring you should take a look at his guide! you will cry, really
C's alright, I'll start using it more when it's done
user559633
I respect the hell out of Zed, but disagree with his approach to feedback (assuming it's maligned).
oh shit, Zed wrote that too
13:36
@KevinMGranger If that snippet's typical, I think I'll pass. :)
there goes my satire theory
@AnttiHaapala WTF?
> “Learn C the Hard Way” is no longer available for free
does he charge money for that piece of crap now???
exactly, now you need to pay for that shit
If it's free, nobody will believe it's not shit. You know how it goes.
It's like medicine that doesn't taste bad.
You see: LCTHW is that almondy-tasting medicine. Whatchamacallit. Cyanide.
13:38
@AndrasDeak that's not true, it was on the The Definitive C Book Guide and List for a very long time, before I deleted it from there a year ago or something
so people actually recommended that thing..
user559633
There's a fourth edition of Programming in C
... and it's sprint demo showtime ...
13:39
"But it works on my expensive compiler from Microsoft, so it must be valid C..."
user559633
more like conpiler...because..you..got..conned..
3
I'm starting to suspect that the guy has some turdish qualities
@tristan that's good :)
I mean, I don't write JS tutorials for a reason (well, many reasons, but one of those reasons is that I'm not an authoritive figure when it comes to JS (partly because I don't know any JS))
user559633
sometimes i fear that i'm only a firstborn away from making jokes like "they said windows 7 or better, so I used Linux" jokes all day
13:41
@AndrasDeak who could/should be an authorotive figure in your opinion?
@tristan I await that day impatiently:D
@PeterVaro the dude who wrote it, for instance?:D
anybody whose work can't be dismantled in a matter of minutes in a Python chat room
@AndrasDeak so the room became The Ultimate Hall of Judgement
I like it ;)
user559633
If I wrote a book on writing JavaScript with modern libraries, I'm sure it will be well-received in here, but in the JavaScript room, they'd rip it apart.
well either 1. they're butts or 2. don't write a JS book:D
but if LPTHW is any indication, I'd love to know how many students got confused beyond repair by Zed's explanation of pointers
user559633
13:45
Well, if I did write a JS book, I'd preface it with "what you need to know to get something working, before someone that knows what they're doing comes along to fix your stuff"
user559633
How does he explain pointers?
"you don't need to understand it yet, just do this: val* = *((int*)input_p);" or something iike that, I imagine
@tristan no idea
Eeeeeeek
user559633
What
I MADE THAT UP IT'S COOL
13:46
What a way to demoralize a bunch of students
user559633
IMHO, explaining pointers isn't bad. It's explaining when to use them.
@AndrasDeak val*?
>you don't need to understand it yet,

That part is the one that's a sin.
@PeterVaro well your variables should be int* val; to spare the stack, eh?;D
Ah to be young again, and to have to wait four weeks to learn in class what public static void main(string[] args){ means
13:49
> By now you should realize the pattern for this book is to use more than one exercise to teach you something new. I start with code that you might not understand, then more exercises explain the concept. If you don't understand something now, you will later as you complete more exercises. Write down what you don't understand, and keep going.
I didn't make that ^ up
@Kevin start learning Haskell then, and before you get familiar with monads, I can guarantee you, you will pray to know how to write a proper hello-world and understand all parts of the code ;)
Is this the guy who is anti python 3?
@AndrasDeak it wouldn't matter if those things were actually explained later
I rest my case
13:51
... but they aren't
@AnttiHaapala I disagree
I started learning haskell. My brain shut down once I got to applicative functors and it hasn't started back up since.
also marks the coming of the Year of the Doggo
I wish I could stomach learning Haskell just so my aversion to it would be justified.
13:53
Haskell is on my infinite to-do list.
@Kevin if your list is lazy evaluated, then we are all safe I guess ;)
@AndrasDeak it is a teaching method yes, but not one that I'd prefer
As lazy as it gets.
:D :D :D
13:55
Imagine if Zed A Shaw would be a math teacher...
ex45 would be
"don't use any of that new math that scholars are using, the old math is what people actually use, everyone get out your abacuses"
ex46 would be .....
Don't you guys hate it when first grade math teachers teach addition without first constructing the natural numbers from Peano axioms?
7
outrageous, indeed!
@AnttiHaapala maybe I am dumb... but what does that actually say?
13:57
I have three apples, but what is "three" really?
@corvid "By now you should realize the pattern for this book is to use more than one exercise to teach you something new. I start with code that you might not understand, then more exercises explain the concept. If you don't understand something now, you will later as you complete more exercises. Write down what you don't understand, and keep going."
@corvid so just write it into your notebook, STFU and continue working on those exercises.
I have the successor of the successor of the successor of zero apples.
> Don't be like that. The fact that the program is working now doesn't mean that everything is fine. The way UB will reveal itself is impossible to predict. Expected program behavior is one of the variants of UB.
nice
that's... a super bad way of teaching, isn't it? People would immediately forget it if it's not quickly relevant to whatever comes after
how did I use "immediately" three times in that sentence? BRB coffee
I only remember irrelevant things.
13:59
@corvid you can't argue with popularity!
@corvid after all, millions of flies have successfully learned from Zed's books.
eat shit, millions of flies can't be wrong
that:P
user559633
if there are that strong of opinions, why don't we write a python book of our own and distribute it for free?
\o/ \o/ \o/
too bad I don't know python
and we like the official tutorial?
@tristan that's what I've been saying all the time
user559633
14:02
i was really bad about following my new year's resolutions from last year, but i think i'm going to write "don't complain; create" on the back of my hand with permanent marker every day next year
user559633
i learned python via the python tutorial and dive into python
I've been thinking about forking the "think like computer scientist - learn with python"
@corvid I now offer a non-abacus course. THAT'S how to handle a migration
@tristan asdfasdfadsf
can't edit
I meant: official tutorial is not for learning to program :/
bin it, retry:P
14:04
I want to write a _why-esque Python tutorial one day.
tbh the thing is, if you want to learn a language, you will need a project that you are personally involved -- that's how I learned everything => I wanted to make something, which needed a particular language -- because once you are involved, and curious, you will learn easier and faster
user559633
@AnttiHaapala oh, you mean like "the python tutorial is for learning python, not programming?"
First I gotta get gud though
I bet this room would create a pretty good python book though. I've actually learned a lot of very good information from looking through the sopython-site repo. The learning flask book was alright, but had its meh moments
14:05
@tristan that's how I understood that
@corvid yeah you're probably right
@tristan the book should be good for both...
starts documentation.sopython.com
like "skip 3 first chapters if you know programming or you think you know programming"
Kevin's poignant guide to python?
user559633
14:06
i think deciding on a voice, audience, and goal is crucial to writing a "good" book
@AnttiHaapala "or if you just want to learn the hard way"
@PeterVaro I agree that learning anything in a Vacuum is not the most motivating thing.
If I'd write anything, it would be something with a motive. Like, programming games (with x) or analyzing data (with x)
@tristan the audience should be the LPTHW readers...
user559633
i have a feeling we could probably write a "Learn the Parts of Python You'll Actually Use" book that's < 50 pages.
14:06
@TomasZubiri exactly!
naturally
user559633
@AnttiHaapala Yeah, hard pass.
Antti wants a capitalist coup d'état
Of course we'll end up with two books, one with Flask examples and the other with Pyramid ones
14:07
well, my idea would be a hyperlinked guide
where you could hide some stuff
like "don't you teach me any silly flask things" :D
rhubarb for now, you have my axe for a python book
@tristan I can do it in one page
(well, at least others did)
that's all I'm using on a daily bases ;)
user559633
@PeterVaro Oh wow, nailed it. I know how to use the entire standard lib now.
@AnttiHaapala So if someone really wants to know how print works internally, he can? but those who don't, can move on?
14:09
@PeterVaro you should release that as LPTHW: Iron Man Edition
I bet he copyrighted the term LxTHW, so only because of this fact, I can't..
That and that page is copyright the Python Software Foundation
I'm in deep trouble then..
I wonder if that is allowed
14:11
o.O
14:34
So I'm using ArgumentParser and the optional fields relate to the optional parameters with default values of my function call. Do I have to check each one manually if they're not None to pass to my function call?
I should probably MCVE because I bet I used poor terminology.
user559633
Are you wondering if optional parameters that aren't specified on the command line are set to default values of None?
No, how do I not pass None to my function call?
Huh. I thought LVSTHW was already a Zed thing
ArgumentParser lets you set defaults for the arguments if they're not specified.
Ahh, I must have missed that.
14:38
The function call doesn't even need to know you have defaults.
Did I correctly assume that this question was not a good question for stackoverflow? codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/143543/…
argparse is confusing but super handy.
Yeah, I was looking at the tutorial in the python docs and didn't think to check documentation because Friday or something.
@TomasZubiri Well, for one thing, that's not Python.
Which I just commented, lol
the best thing to do would be for thing in things[1:]:, probably
14:41
sorry. Too much php in my head.
but if you can't do that for i in range(1, len(things)):
@TomasZubiri It's not a super great question in general. There isn't an idiomatic way to specify skipping the first element of an array.
@QuestionC I'm pretty sure either slice or starting your range at 1 are idiomatic
if i == 0: # Skip the first element
  continue
I've never seen anyone do anything else that wouldn't make me scream
like, that ;)
14:42
Don't forget to deal with IndexError
I would say that a slice is the most idiomatic way, unless it's an iterator. In which case I would just call next() on it before the loop.
@TomasZubiri You should probably delete that question :P
Isn't a slice an unnecessary copy?
I'm not sure, TBH
I don't think it's a deepcopy
let's find out
Slices perform shallow copying
14:43
@TomasZubiri Why are you posting PHP questions in the Python room?
In [11]: x = [[1,1,1], [2,2,2], [3,3,3]]

In [12]: y = x[1:]

In [13]: y
Out[13]: [[2, 2, 2], [3, 3, 3]]

In [14]: x
Out[14]: [[1, 1, 1], [2, 2, 2], [3, 3, 3]]

In [15]: y[0][0] = 42

In [16]: y
Out[16]: [[42, 2, 2], [3, 3, 3]]

In [17]: x
Out[17]: [[1, 1, 1], [42, 2, 2], [3, 3, 3]]
in case you doubted what @vaultah said
and now I know - slice is just a shallow copy, which is what I was pretty sure because Lisp cdr
@WayneWerner my own home-grown thing — Hello lad 1 min ago
:(
don't do that
That should be closed as a tool rec.
It's a straight tool rec.
Heey, I did that when I was suffering from NIHS
user559633
@vaultah Same, but I diagnosed myself with a set of criteria that I invented
That question just makes me so sad
it's not like they haven't been around here for a while
14:50
That question just makes me so sad,
StackOverflow user Hello lad.
Brought to a close vote,
A tool rec? Nope.
Can't have questions being bad.
I'll forgive the vote/nope slant rhyme
@KevinMGranger Yes, it is. But if the list isn't too huge it's not worth worrying about, since copying a list is really fast.
because that was just darn good
The nope line could be replaced with "Because, and I quote:"
DSM
DSM
Morning cabbage.
14:56
Morning, DSM.
DSM
DSM
Way late to work today because of "personal injury at track level", as the euphemism has it. Shut down the main line for an hour.
At least with cellphones these days I can text everybody to let them know I'm going to miss all the meetings..
And also you can dial in :-)
(Although probably not from a station, now I think about it)
Can you dial in through cyberspace!?
DSM
DSM
NumberFirm has some security kabuki which means I need to use their notebook instead of my own, so I can't work from home unless I bring it. Annoying.
I work in a rural area so what happens in that case? I'm thinking in terms of people getting paid by the hour.
14:59
Here also has kabuki that means I can't really work from home at all, so I have little sympathy :)
DSM
DSM
Ehh, I don't know. I know a report on Canadian business law which was written entirely by Americans would go down badly, mostly because of the assumed conflict of interest, even if their insights were objectively better than our own.
Can someone add the mocking tag to this question? stackoverflow.com/questions/39919699/…
please
@DSM "One of the group is understood to be a dual national, with citizenship of both the UK and another EU member state."
so it begins...
(if someone else adds it, do I get the tag count for that?)
15:03
@AnttiHaapala frickin Mudblood
Someone just pointed out I had a letter published in New Scientist: newscientist.com/letter/…
@idjaw That's not very nice, we won't mock people for you.
Hey Chislehurst! I'm from Chatham.
I love UK place names.
DSM
DSM
@AnttiHaapala: you're welcome to believe that the very concept of "conflict of interest"
is silly, and you should always just get whoever's best, regardless of their identity. That isn't the standard usually applied, though.
15:05
@MorganThrapp oh yooooooooou
@DSM dual citizenship...
\o/
Still needs more JPG.
this 2010s UK starts to sound more and more like Germany from some other decades
DSM
DSM
15:06
@AnttiHaapala: umm, yeah. That's why there could be a conflict, no?
Well there was a conflict in that decade, yes
I for one would be keen on annexing Calais
DSM
DSM
That seems like rather a problematic place to want to take over, at the moment.
That's true
Let's annex Marseilles and work up
@AnttiHaapala "featuring Jack Black"? Featuring Sarah Michelle Gellar! :D
@AndrasDeak and..?
15:11
that's much more important:P
I am not a buffyist
still, SMG>Jack Black:P
Pretty much any gun is
Por que no los dos?
>>> 'SMG'>'Jack Black'
>>> True
15:12
@AndrasDeak I didn't name that video :D
Well you should've done a better job at it!
15:30
rbrb folks
15:58
Going to our Tech Friday meeting - "GPU Encounters in Numbaland", then off home. Rhubarb, all, good weekend

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