« first day (2209 days earlier)      last day (2966 days later) » 

20:00
I listen to podcasts and such but have never tried an audiobook.
Narratives vs conversation seem pretty apples-and-oranges regarding how well I can follow along if I'm tuning out half the time
FWIW I don't understand podcasts
user6568562
@Kevin Exactly. The focus level I'd need for an audio textbook is uncomputable
Then again, Welcome To Night Vale is pretty narrative-y. There are interviews and such, but the vast majority of the time it's just Cecil talking alone.
user6568562
You can zone out from time to time when listening to podcasts
user6568562
@AndrasDeak They can be alright while driving
DSM
DSM
20:04
Audiobooks can be surprisingly immersive. I like them a lot. But I'm also a podcast addict (bit of an Easter egg there)..
20:17
Only audiobook I could ever really get into is the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy radio show (...which isn't really an "audiobook" I suppose)
I'm pretty sure Douglas Adams is cheating
@AndrasDeak yeah it could
yeah I didn't expect it to:D
so did you enjoy fycon?
yeah, but not enjoying the headache
user6568562
20:26
@AnttiHaapala How about some Paracetamol ?
user6568562
> Some studies have found an association between paracetamol and a slight increase in kidney cancer, but does not affect bladder cancer risk. [From Wikipedia, your everything gives you cancer partner]
20:43
welp i did nothing today at work, was nice chatting with you guys, Rhubarb till tomorrow morning ;3
take it easy and have a nice day
user6568562
Laters @Rawr [ :
@randomhopeful paracetamol is toxic...
After a day of intermittent research, I've found (untested) examples for building Windows, Mac, and Linux wheels with Appveyor and Travis. So much effort just to build wheels for markupsafe. dropbox.com/s/vyu1q9audnghdcf/py_wheel_notes.txt?dl=0
Why is there no service for this yet? (Because no one built it.)
user6568562
@AndrasDeak Dang, seems like everything's either useless and boring or trying to kill you
user559633
lol the thin skin is real
user559633
20:57
@tristan: You apparently haven't paid much attention to the list of people who inhabit the lounge. A fair number of us are well versed in as obscure of weapons as you'd like to name (and probably more you can't name). In a just world, however, the hate speech directed toward us in this thread would already have resulted in at least two people enjoying short...vacations from SO. — Jerry Coffin 11 mins ago
pfft :D
way to miss the point, dude
comment deleted now
all of them, of course
user559633
Yeah, hopped into lounge to talk as I figured it would get removed.
Hopped into lounge? I also like to live dangerously
user559633
They're fine. Smart people.
user559633
Seriously though, what the fuck -- deleted comments because of a bit of back and forth chat?
21:00
@tristan all the time
it's routine to mass-delete comment threads if there's a minor blip on a radar (read: any kind of chat flag)
mods usually don't think twice to delete comments
user559633
21:22
the selenium toolchain is pretty sucky. installing the new geckodriver and calling it as described in the documentation results in a hanging command, even with lots of verbose flags thrown on the end
This sounds like a job for... SO Documentation! *fanfare*
user559633
oh god, i want it to work, not a wall of text that paraphrases the actual documentation
maybe the errors made during plagization cancel out the mistakes in the original corpus
21:57
Hi !
cabbage
What noSQL light db would you use, with dictionary syntax access ?
22:11
rbrb
glad I worked from home today. Really let me catch up on yard work. Will have to do some work tonight...but all good. Wife is working, so nothing better to do :)
user559633
i wanted to do some browser automation tests today. looks like i'm going to submit a path to selenium tonight.
patch?
curious to know what you found
user559633
the new version of firefox has something different with webdriver or something...idk. it's not consumer grade :)
user559633
22:25
IRC "ftw"
hmm....so it seems to need a port being specified explicitly
you found an answer on IRC?
user559633
yeah -- they changed the driver
user559633
brew just has an old one
ah. Yeah I've moved away from brew for exactly that reason
for certain libraries
I would think that brew would have done a better job at making sure it had latest versions
user559633
yeah. up to whomever maintains it
user559633
22:35
bbiab
ghost.js > selenium imho...
you're just saying that because it's almost still Halloween
lol naw... just less problems imho ... everytime i mess with selenium it takes a looong time to get it working ... and somehow ghost.js just kinda works
backing up slightly, how are we sure that we and the aliens have the same positive/negative convention for current?
electrons are fairly well definable, unless they live in a region of the universe that's made up of mostly antimatter
"the stuff that you can shred off from atoms"
and there are strong signs that there can't be regions made up of mostly antimatter in a reasonable vicinity of the Earth
so that's why I was talking about electrons rather than current
22:50
I don't think I've heard of ghost js. @JoranBeasley you have a link?
is it in any way related to phantom?
selenium is pretty powerful though.
"Positively charged plate" isn't ambiguous?
Although what actually comes to mind is, would it matter? If we're only going to have informational contact, wouldn't a flip isomorphism be fine as an alien model of us?
possible (as long as you don't discuss parity violation-related phenomena:P)
Which parity violations aren't preserved by a flip iso?

Or better, is the problem that these high-tech aliens don't think about left-right distinctions? What could we deduce about them?
left-right is silly if you don't have two distinct sides, but handedness in general is meaningful and you should want to distinguish the two kinds of screws
and I understood your question as "it doesn't matter if we consistently misunderstand each other regarding left/right". But, for instance in the Wu experiment, left/right are coupled to something different, the handedness of the coil determines which direction gamma rays will be more likely to emerge
so it's no longer a matter of misnaming right and left, at least that's how I see it
23:03
I'd like to use a dict
that is saved to disk every now and then
i.e. a simple database with db['hello'] = 'hi'
what would you use?
that's a bit broad. Because you are explaining something that has several different solutions
@idjaw a persistant dict
i.e. every time i restart the process, i'm able to reload the dict
and every time i setitem to the dict, it's written on disk (sync)
Right. Again, it all depends on the scale of this thing. Because, you have out-of-the-box something like shelve
@idjaw: i wanted to use that, but some people or some posts told me this module is crap...
@idjaw lol sorry i think its ghost.py and it uses phantom.js
(or maybe just modelled after phantom.js
23:09
haha
I agree that ghost has crazy dependencies, and I actually failed to get it up and running even after installing millions of X11 related libraries. Ghost is a horror story. — Pykler May 13 '13 at 21:52
I wonder if that is the same ghost
@idjaw what do you think about it?
lol im pretty sure i just did pip install ghost.py
pretty sure...
@Basj This goes back to what I originally said. It all depends on your use-case. What the real requirements are for this persistency. I mean, if it is a really small application, shelve is fine. If this is a large-scale application you are talking about and you are looking for a key/value store, you can use something like redis or whatever else is in the same domain as redis that fits your use case.
@idjaw : let's say < 100 MB data
I cant remember if it was redis or something else ... but i had 280GB of tempfile caches when i used one of those nosql engines a little while ago
(persistent tempfiles that were not purging on restarts)
23:14
280 GB?
@Basj is this a single threaded process? No concurrency?
single threaded, yes
If this is a small personal project and doesn't have much complexity, shelve should be fine.
import shelve
db = shelve.open('spam.test')
db[1] = 'blah'
# TypeError: Integer keys only allowed for Recno and Queue DB's
it's a shame integer keys are not allowed
I don't want to do ugly things like for i in range(100): db[str(i)] = ...
If you're not happy with it then, use something else.
I don't really use shelve all that much. When I've come across use-cases to have key/value stores for whatever app I'm working on, they have always been fairly large applications that needed to be distributed across different systems
we decided to go with redis
23:17
Ok
I've looked at that, but it goes out of my small single-file database
@Basj did you see if there were ways to work around that/
as a quick lookup
@idjaw yes here the trick is simply to use a string instead of an int as key
isn't that crappy design?
i think so
at least the error should say "only strings allowed"
this seemingly arbitrary prohibition of integers is confusing
23:24
well yeah, buuut
>>> dict(1=3)
  File "<stdin>", line 1
SyntaxError: keyword can't be an expression
>>> {1:3}
{1: 3}
same for dict(1.1=3) and dict(True=3)
I hope
and anyway, apparently literal is faster than constructor
so we bypass that by just not using it :P
I'm sure generating the keys is the real bottleneck in a database:P
sorry i'm lost, what are your conclusions? :)
oh, we went tangential
we weren't really talking about that specific thing hehe
23:28
ok :p
we pulled a Canadian on you (hope this catches on)
you seem to have an idea of what you want to do. You don't like the certain restrictions you are having with shelve/pickle
> we pulled a Canadian on you > i'm not native english, can you explain ? ;)
me neither
@idjaw well i'm even thinking about subclassing dict, and add the fact each time an item is added, let's serialize to disk... this might be ugly though
23:29
it's a commonly used idiom that I've just invented, meaning that we distracted ourselves from your discussion by making use of a Canadian
:)
and in this example, I'm the Canadian
yes, that ^
that's what i thought
Also, you should consider somewhere along the line whether constant IO when the dict changes is worth it
23:31
i.e. not serialize on each addition?
yup, depending on you can get away with it? need it?
I need to head out.
bbiab
really, it just came to mind, I'm not sure it helps anything
but my notion is that IO is very slow and you might not want to do too much of it too often unless you have a good reason
@idjaw see you tomorrow:)
rhubarb, all
that's if you are still here when I come back :P
yep
23:33
oh you're leaving hehe
ok
i'll go too now
last thing: do you often use python as daemon?
if so, do you use python-daemon ?
[picture: snek with horns]

« first day (2209 days earlier)      last day (2966 days later) »