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18:00
way too many close votes age away
crap just doesn't get closed well enough
But what's the benefit of closing it in the first place?
and rep whores jump on the worst crap questions, so the sooner the closure, the better
It's still there.
@mgilson until deleted
It's not going to get a lot of traffic, so it shouldn't influence search results.
18:01
It's a pile of dung that rots under us. Not the right kind of compost.
Unless we can actually use that compost for something good
:P
See ... that's an analogy that I'm not quite understanding though. What exactly is the downside of this rotting pile of dung?
wim
wim
dupe questions act as signposts to shepherd different ways of searching a problem towards the good answers
@mgilson that you search for an issue on SO and find 50 pages of crap:)
@wim I think mgilson's question is why so much crap is dupe closed, not why dupes are a thing
But, presumably, if there was a good question/answer in there, that question would bubble up.
18:03
@mgilson "presumably"
DSM
DSM
Okay, let's go see if I can talk some sense into my colleagues. Long weekend rhubarb for all!
So you wouldn't have to sift through the crap.
for one, people vote like idiots
What happens if a really good question comes up, that is a dupe?
that happens to be a better formulated question than the question in that dupe
what then?
@idjaw -- Exactly
18:03
Furthermore, the more crap there is on the site, the more will new idiots think that crap is welcome here. This will lead to a crappy feedback, worsening the situation over time.
What happens if someone asks the same question in a new way that might resonate with other search keywords?
@idjaw dupe
@AndrasDeak -- I agree with that sentiment.
@mgilson that's what dupes are originally for, dupes that are kept for the future
that really act as signposts
but those are rare, and unnecessary after 5-10 signposts to the same target
the rest are just crap that happen to be duplicate crap
But if it's closed as a dupe immediately, it might not gain the threshold it needs to actually stay around (or be found in search results)
wim
wim
18:05
Could I ask you guys your opinion on this --> stackoverflow.com/questions/39841865/…
Also, sign posts only go one way.
wim
wim
I want to vote to reopen it, because user zvone has given a good answer in the comments
@mgilson upvoted, commented posts shouldn't get roombad, I think. And you can always dupe the old with the new better one, you just have to give a proper answer
wim
wim
I want to reward him for the answer, but the question was closed before he had the chance to post it, so he posted the code in a link/comment instead - and it fully answers my question
@wim remove the rot13 and I will gladly
wim
wim
18:06
Would you vote to re-open as it is? If not, what would you propose to edit it ?
@wim English
that's how we roll
wim
wim
Just from the title, or from the body as well? The rot13 is relevant to the question
title and body
code and examples can stay:P
it should be an English post with a question regarding rot13
rot13-English is not tolerated in the same way as Pig Latin isn't either
Yeah, I was under the impression that StackOverflow is meant to operate only in english.
at least that's my opinion:)
@mgilson that's pretty explicit
wim
wim
18:08
You don't like that there's a little bit of humour and a puzzle in it?
Though, I don't know where I got that impression.
@wim nope
It's probably my english-centric universe :-)
I don't find it humorous, and puzzles are off-topic
@mgilson foreign-language posts are very rapidly closed and deleted, possibly rerouting OP to one of the language-specific sister sites
Oh ... The post is encoded in rot13? Yeah, I missed that.
I find it humorous -- But also off-topic :-)
18:09
even in chat foreign language rooms are only tolerated as long as there are no flagged messages, because they can't be moderated
Air
Air
@wim I like that there is a little humor and a puzzle in it. I still wouldn't vote to reopen...
I can dig up some meta posts if you're interested, @mgilson
nah.
Probably not worth your time :-)
doesn't take much of it:)
Just so long as I have confirmation that my english-centric view of StackOverflow isn't entirely off-base.
Air
Air
At the very least, the title needs to be intelligible.
@mgilson it's entirely correct and official
if the asker is Portuguese, Russian or Japanese (maybe something else?), they are lucky, they can try their own subsite
otherwise English, period
Air
Air
You could try keeping the body as it is, but providing a translation in a spoiler below it (are spoilers enabled on SO?) and see if that flies
If you're really committed to the puzzle
It won't.
wim
wim
18:14
-6
Q: Does the import system save the parsed `# coding: ` declaration anywhere?

wimI've the following code in rknzcyr.py: # coding: rot13 vzcbeg flf pheerag_zbqhyr = flf.zbqhyrf[__anzr__] qrs trg_zbqhyr_rapbqvat(zbqhyr): pbqvat = h"... ree... qba'g xabj!" # ??? jung tbrf urer erghea pbqvat cevag 'this module was encoded in {}'.sbezng(trg_zbqhyr_rapbqvat(pheerag_...

Air
Air
But I'd bet $5 that eventually it'll get closed or edited into shape
@wim thank you, voted
and unvoted:P
wim
wim
Thanks. Please vote to re-open so I can reward the user zvone for his efforts
Air
Air
I think you ought to explain what the function should do as well, if you're going to keep the code rotted
If you just give expected & actual somebody's going to come along and say "boo this isn't PPCG" or "boo this isn't a free programming service" or etc.
@Air at this point it's clear that you can just drop the source and decod it with rot13
I think it's OK
Air
Air
18:17
I'm fine with it personally but I'm not as uptight as many high rep users on SO :)
"non-trivial code posted by high-rep user" vs "garbage post posted by high-rep user" makes all the difference
@Air I'm quite uptight
Air
Air
So does zvone's just parse its own source?
wim
wim
If it's opened I'll start a bounty to recover it from the -9 it got too ... :P
@wim bourgeois
nice question :D
Air
Air
18:20
Trying to read it without decoding reminds me of reading stuff in the mirror as a kid
wim
wim
Yes, that's what his solution does. Which is quite OK, and actually helped me ... however I'm also interested to see if the module loader does anything with the parsed value so we don't have to parse it twice ..
need one more vote
Air
Air
Zvone's gonna get sniped :(
> Last seen 6 hours ago
Should at least ping him
wim
wim
Sure, I'll ping him, if/when it gets opened
@wim btw, I guess your msg is wrong
wim
wim
18:21
And I'll award him a bounty regardless, if no-one else can find a solution that avoids the double-parsing
Air
Air
@wim The hero Gotham deserves
wim
wim
@AnttiHaapala hmm?
ah no, because it uses encode?
wim
wim
it's interesting that the h'havpbqr fgevat'' gets rot but the 'bytestring' doesn't , isn't it ?
18:25
h
@wim exactly...
wuzzat?
wim
wim
that was intentional ... my "hint" for how people could decipher the question
you should use a h'' string for that too :P
it'd be even more wtf
also you could hide the # coding: rot13 better :P
wim
wim
It turned out that obscuring the question was not a good idea
18:26
what's a h-string? lol, took me a while
wim
wim
it was closed in about 2 minutes as "unclear what you're asking", despite someone having answered it
but out of interest, how would hide the coding declaration? I thought that had to be in ascii.
@wim that's just code word for "don't be a dummy" and "we hate fun"
wim
wim
yes ... :P
@wim
# for this to work, use any of the following for decoding: rot13, caesar or aes
vzcbeg flf

pheerag_zbqhyr = flf.zbqhyrf[__anzr__]

qrs trg_zbqhyr_rapbqvat(zbqhyr):
    pbqvat = h"... ree... qba'g xabj!"
    # ??? jung tbrf urer
    erghea pbqvat

cevag h'guvf zbqhyr jnf rapbqrq va {}'.sbezng(trg_zbqhyr_rapbqvat(pheerag_zbqhyr))
(still works :P)
wim
wim
oh, you tricked the regex ...:P
18:31
:P
wim
wim
heheh.
it is deliberately lax, so that you can use something like # vim: set fileencoding=<encoding name> :
wim
wim
If I actually wanted to make it more obscure, I would have used zlib_codec or something
open now, @wim
rot13 is alive again!
next goal...put the question in the positive voting spectrum
wim
wim
18:37
thanks guys ... bounty started
wim
wim
Can questions with an active bounty be closed?
@wim trg_zbqhyr_rapbqvat is not the name of the function
wim
wim
yes it is
it's just encoded
Air
Air
@wim no
Not unless a moderator refunds the bounty
18:38
haha 450
"This question has an open bounty and cannot be closed"
amazing
wim
wim
should I write # coding: rot13 trg_zbqhyr_rapbqvat
so I can roll it back to the jacked-up version now? lmao
I deleted my comment on your question to set a more serious tone to your question :)
@wim though I can perhaps break that code, lets see
ah no, that's pretty robust...
wim
wim
18:45
just started another one, btw stackoverflow.com/q/37400807/674039
@wim disappointingly legible
Yesterday my dentist left a voice mail saying that I needed to call them to confirm my appointment for next week. Today I left a voice mail confirming my appointment for next week. At no point have two humans communicated with one another. I have a feeling I'll show up at the office and the receptionist will tell me they gave my slot away.
That's okay, you can charge them a cancellation fee, right?
Kafka, if you're narrating my life, I would rather be in the giant beetle story than the crushing bureaucracy story, thanks.
18:51
django orm <3
user6568562
Cbg everyone [ : !
So I'm curious about the rot13 question ...
user6568562
After days of no internet, me revoilà [ :
Why is it pbqvat = h"... ree... qba'g xabj!"
@randomhopeful cbg, I noticed your absence:P
18:55
but 'this module was encoded in {}' is unrotated?
wim
wim
Antti and I were discussing that earlier. Interesting, isn't it?
31 mins ago, by wim
it's interesting that the h'havpbqr fgevat'' gets rot but the 'bytestring' doesn't , isn't it ?
Oh, I missed that.
user6568562
@AndrasDeak My man ! : D
I was going to note that the room is randomhopeless, then got distracted and forgot to do so:D
user6568562
18:57
Haha, that would be a Room 6 zing alright
wim
wim
@mgilson it really nails home the point that 'string literals' in python 2.x are byte literals. they're bytes, not text, so the parser doesn't futz with them .. ! at least that's how I understand it
Yeah, I can go for that interpretation.
19:22
What's more Pythonic? Grey or Gray?
@QuestionC white_black_mix.
How did Gandalf spell it?
^^
stackoverflow.com/questions/39924431/… Too broad. Worth reading though, because it doesn't even begin to make sense.
in wxPython everything is spelled with proper english (colour not color, Grey not Gray) (wrt QuestionC)
it makes me crazy sometimes
19:25
@MorganThrapp It makes sense, it's just lacking a MCVE...or at least some kind of effort
@idjaw I guess, I just don't understand how you would go from a music file to an image.
Unless they're just talking about a map of frequencies.
yeah..I think they are talking about frequencies here
that was my interpretation
That makes slightly more sense.
user6568562
Something like WMP visualizations, maybe
can anyone here help with a getting started type question about celery?
19:32
Have you read the room rules? Why am I losing my mind? Is this not the syntax?
nope, sorry checking..
Missing the protocol
user6568562
@MorganThrapp It should've worked
Huh. Didn't know that was needed.
user6568562
Oh, I see. I'll leave my comment to remind me to work on my unhelpful eagerness
19:36
@MorganThrapp just read the rules, I guess I didn't violate any rule asking that, except that it was a preamble which is discouraged
@AsifMD Yeah, as in we're not going to kick you or anything, but there's a ~0% chance of getting a question answered unless you actually ask a question.
The ~ part means you might or might net get a random picture of a cat instead. Choose wisely.
@MorganThrapp Thank you for the tip!
Speaking of cats, I started following @EmergencyKittens on twitter. 100+ Would recommend.
That reminds me of The Jeff Goldblum picture
Jurassic Park?
That guy, yeah.
oh I thought you meant picture as in motion picture
19:44
I'm just starting with Celery on windows, and after starting a worker from command line, I am trying to call the task from python console, but typing:

from tasks import add

always results in error message: “ImportError:No module named tasks”.
This is probably something very elementary that I’m missing. Can anyone tell why the import is not working? Should I expect the tasks module to be available from python console just by running the celery worker?
Have you googled the error?
I'm going to guess that it's celery.tasks or similar. Quick google suggests celery.app.tasks.
y morgan y
FIZZEEEEEEE
In the hopes of showing that if you spend literally 30 seconds on google, you can learn things on your own.
19:46
@MorganThrapp au contraire
@wim worse than that :P
@Morgan what is the weather going to be like here tomorrow?:P
python 2 behaves as if the whole file would be read into a byte string, then decoded using the encoding into unicode string; then the bytes-literals are parsed... and after which, the contents of the bytes-literals are re-encoded using the encoding...
@MorganThrapp what should I make for supper tonight
19:48
What is the meaning of life?
@idjaw Matzah ball soup. Because I want it, but I keep forgetting to buy a soup pot.
Thanks Morgan-bot
@Morgan set an appointment for tennis tomorrow evening
which means that if you're using something like zlib as the encoding, your bytes literals would contain some very interesting things :D
@Programmer INSUFFICIENT DATA
19:49
@MorganThrapp turn my stove off
ERR: 503 insufficient cheese.
uhh...@MorganThrapp is my house on fire
Outlook fuzzy: please try again.
@AndrasDeak Yes I did, and could not find anything related in the first page of google
redo from start
19:52
SyntaxError: Error -3 while decompressing data: incorrect header check
I'm trying to fill out a job application and they want a story of a time when I did troubleshooting on a major bug. I'm having trouble coming up with something, and I can't decide if that's good or bad. :P
Deciphering a non-MCVE question on SO
Just link them the room 6 transcript
You want to know me? Here...read this -> room/6 transcript
what do I do when my PRs are in review?
19:53
make coffee
drink a beer
both?
Sep 2 at 14:57, by Morgan Thrapp
Does repetitiously mispronouncing surreptitiously make you defenestrate your thesaurus?
Hire me pls.
Sounds good to me!
Just say "Oh check the room 6 transcript to find out about me, I post under the name tristan." then get arrested.
haha
@wim try this:
# coding: unicode_escape
print 'ä'
@wim: Your question, though funny, is a dupe of stackoverflow.com/questions/38374489/…
20:02
Didn't know you had a python 2 install Antti. You sure you're feeling alright?
good god. A rot13 dupe, Antti using Python 2.....
this is a lot in just a few minutes
@Ffisegydd he had to hack the neighbour's network
I reckon he has a special computer for it.
That he keeps in a glovebox.
it's probably hard to type in a hazmat suit
(Antti is going to log off and log back on and say he got hacked....)
20:03
@MartijnPieters so, move your answer to the other question, then close this one as a duplicate :P
@Ffisegydd I didn't install it.
Ah so it's bloatware then?
@AnttiHaapala the bounty does make that tempting, but I really can't do that and live it down on meta ;-)
he used that great tool, 3to2
see the first red rectangle
@Ffisegydd ^
20:09
@AnttiHaapala saved with what file encoding?
@MartijnPieters anything goes, python 2
@AnttiHaapala not entirely, the bytes content does matter. unicode_escape == latin-1 really.
ew beer is lame
@MartijnPieters well, for this demonstration any 8-bit encoding where ä is not in 0-127, works...
#coding:unicode_escape
print '''
'''
this then :P
@corvid depends on the beer.
@AnttiHaapala :-P
20:14
where I'm from people love IPA :\
that to counter wim's thinking that bytes literals are plain bytes that are not encoded...
IPA is ok
and so are many other things
right now in Finland there is this silly IPA boom
every brewery thought that they want to be hip and produce an IPA
now there are breweries who think it is now cool to say "we do not make those fscking IPA's"
@corvid I can understand your feelings towards beer then. I come from the German/Dutch/Belgian beer traditions.
I want something super thick and powerful. IPAs are to effervescent
@AnttiHaapala Not just in Finland....I think the ripple is anywhere where beer is popular, this is happening
And if you don't like IPA, suddenly you have lost street cred, because you have like IPA to be considered someone who likes beer.
I had a nice raspberry blonde ale earlier
20:19
that sounds interesting
I'm debating whether I should have beer or wine tonight
Why not both?
I don't have any preferences really, more often than not beer is better than no beer... and I drink every style
that's why I don't agree with what corvid said there ^
I'm drinking a lot more wine lately. And of course gin is always welcome.
@corvid I'll pull you a shot (espresso) :P
Cider, rum, or mead. Top tier. They're just alcohol sugar
20:24
Rum I can get behind.
wim
wim
@MartijnPieters Perhaps not exactly a dupe...? I asked if it was retained anywhere after it was parsed
@wim That's why I left a comment about your title question.
So any answer to your post would have to duplicate all of the other post and add 'no, it is not retained anywhere other than the source code'.
wim
wim
Although the linked answer is useful, it would have been polite to wait a week for the bounty to end to see if anyone was able to recover the encoding or provide evidence of the encoding being forgotten after the module is loaded. A comment claiming that's what happens is not particularly convincing ..
I can state, without a shadow of a doubt, that the parser does not retain this information.
wim
wim
You should have answered and collected the bounty then :)
20:35
@wim search for check_coding_specin the Python source code; that's the function that is replicated in the tokenize module in 3 that I backported.
wim
wim
# coding: punycode
print("hello world!")-
trailing - ..
@MartijnPieters out of curiousity, do you have an explanation for why the unicode string is rotated but the bytestring is not ?
beyond Antti's explanation?
54 mins ago, by Antti Haapala
python 2 behaves as if the whole file would be read into a byte string, then decoded using the encoding into unicode string; then the bytes-literals are parsed... and after which, the contents of the bytes-literals are re-encoded using the encoding...
@wim looking through the tokenizer and ast for this atm.
I thought that was in response to this mystery
but it looks as if Antti already sussed that one out.
bytestrings should not be decoded, so are indeed re-encoded after having been decoded anyway.
wim
wim
20:44
ahh ok
geeze, it's so complex
Can't errors happen during decoding? Does that only happen during encoding?
otherwise this could lead to odd bugs
wim
wim
I guess they don't know where the bytestrings are, until AFTER the file has been decoded!
so we decode, tokenize and parse, then re-encode any bytestring literals .. since they should not have gotten decoded
@AndrasDeak absolutely. but you stated your file was encoded to "declared encoding" so if you managed to sneak in bytes inside bytestrings that are not using that encoding, that's your problem as a programmer.
wim
wim
python 2 is so forgiving ... you can do this :
>>> 'hello world'.encode('rot13').encode('rot13')
'hello world'
yup, str.encode() includes an implicit str.decode('ascii').
wim
wim
20:50
python3 is not so nice:
>>> 'hello world'.encode('rot13').encode('rot13')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LookoutError                               Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-2-27e7d2408ea5> in <module>()
----> 1 'hello world'.encode('rot13').encode('rot13')

LookoutError: What are you trying to do?  Don't be an idiot
@wim bytes.encode() is an attribute error ;-)
oh, wim is doing that fun again
but of course you don't get that far because rot13 is not a valid str -> bytes codec.
wim
wim
@MartijnPieters it fails in the str.encode
yes, which is why I qualified that. :-)
so ''.encode('ascii').encode('ascii') gives you an attribute error.
wim
wim
20:53
does python2 let you use # coding: base64
@MartijnPieters I get a lookup one
@wim try it?
oops, I don't
I swear I did:D
@AndrasDeak sure you did ;-)
oh, you said ascii, sorry
wim
wim
20:54
I can't seem to get it working
>>> ''.encode('ascii').encode('ascii')
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'bytes' object has no attribute 'encode'
>>> ''.encode('rot13').encode('rot13')
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
LookupError: 'rot13' is not a text encoding; use codecs.encode() to handle arbitrary codecs
anywho, in Python 2, '\xe5'.encode(*anything*) fails with a UnicodeDecodeError exception.
OK, now I'm reading your prior messages, Martijn:P
wim
wim
# coding: base64
IyBjb2Rpbmc6IGJhc2U2NApwcmludCh1ImhlbGxvIHdvcmxkISIpCg==
3 mins ago, by Martijn Pieters
but of course you don't get that far because rot13 is not a valid str -> bytes codec.
gotcha
20:55
because that's not an ASCII-safe string so decoding fails.
wim
wim
I think it's valid base64 python code that I wrote, but when running it I get SyntaxError: bad argument type for built-in operation
what gives?
@wim I don't think the tokenizer likes the embedded newlines.
b'# coding: base64\nprint(u"hello world!")\n'
don't you need ENcoding?
wim
wim
I tried without first, same issue
# coding: base64
cHJpbnQodSJoZWxsbyB3b3JsZCEiKQo=
@wim That still has a newline in it.
cHJpbnQodSJoZWxsbyB3b3JsZCEiKQ==?
wim
wim
20:59
this is what I'm doing
However, base64 decoding in Python 3 is a bytes->bytes codec
wim
wim
>>> file_contents = 'print("hello world!")'
>>> with codecs.open('/tmp/example.py', encoding='base64', mode='w') as f:
...     f.write(file_contents)
...
>>> # manually add in the coding declaration ...
>>> os.system('python /tmp/example.py')
  File "/tmp/example.py", line 2
SyntaxError: bad argument type for built-in operation
256
I'm using python2.7 here
@wim I get SyntaxError: codec did not return a unicode object.
Source code:
# coding: base64
cHJpbnQgJ2hlbGxvIHdvcmxkISc=
$ bin/python -V
Python 2.7.12
Because even in Python 2, base64 is still bytes->bytes
wim
wim
2.7.5 here
interesting
I'm off to a wine festival held at George Washington's estate. I'll let you know if you can feel the rumbling from him spinning in his grave
wim
wim
21:06
I don't see why it shouldn't work... rot13 also encodes bytes to bytes and it works
>>> type('rot13')
str
>>> type('rot13'.encode('rot13'))
str
oh, wait, that does the implicit thing doesn't it
wim
wim
I guess it's going 'rot13'.decode(sys.getdefaultencoding()).encode('rot13')
@vaultah are you aware that the lineno ast post has a bounty on it? Is your answer really not helpful?
@Code-Apprentice cbg
How's Python today?
@wim Python 2.7.7rc1 fixed this.
- Raise a better error when non-unicode codecs are used for a file's coding
  cookie.
Note the 'better error' part there.
@wim it's 'ebg13'.decode('rot13').
when reading the file, that is.
>>> 'ebg13'.decode('rot13')
u'rot13'
That produces Unicode..
21:11
is that why we have python 3?:P
wim
wim
21:25
@MartijnPieters Thanks. Indeed, that's a less mysterious error message!
21:44
Hmm...I always thought MTFL stands for malevolent tristan for life
 
1 hour later…
22:45
So I have an API that uses a mysql connection, cur = mysql.connection.cursor(). I have another script for importing excel csv, using the exact same connection, except I'm getting an error because mysql.connection is NoneType
Why is mysql.connection nonetype in another file, but works in another? I literally copied the connection params over and triple checked them
Are you obtaining connection in the same way in both cases?
note that I'm only marginally more useful than a rubber duck
Yes, literally the exact same way
Same DB, same credentials, same everything
It's driving me nuts lol
so are you sure they are the same?:P
Don't you sass me >:(
lol
And are they running simultaneously? And if yes, is that supposed to work?
22:57
Yes and yes
I tried to kill the API process to make sur it wasn't a conflicting connection but same result
is there anything in the connection call that could fail with one of the inputs that should be similar?
Not that I'm aware of

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