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user559633
21:00
I think I found my calling, and it's disappointing that my calling is writing cheesy sci-fi for an extremely specific audience.
It happens independent of but concurrent to the Nerdcop cinematic universe.
Extremely specific audience is why The Big Lebowski is a thing
@Kevin with a crossover at the end of season 3
user559633
Nerdcop: Copy on Righteousness
too bad the original gets the axe after 6 episodes
21:01
Nerdcop: Dirty Cache
100% would watch
5% would watch again, they are your fanbase
user559633
@KevinMGranger click
@tristan how did I never think of this
user559633
21:03
@KevinMGranger Your brain is probably focused on useful things. That's where you and I are different.
user6568562
@tristan Yish, but okay ! I've got a couple of comical situations
also, one's own name is virtually transparent to one's brain, just like the blood vessels on your retina
user559633
@KevinMGranger this video makes a lot of sense to me
poor fish
21:06
I really enjoyed reaching the rank of Granger in Stardew Valley, because then it looked like the character screen just said my full name
Just got notified that this is on special if it interests any of you folks.
user559633
i'd watch you play it
vaguely reminds me of Gender Wars, speaking of 80's
(released in '96)
stackoverflow.com/q/40664943 too broad, hasn't read the tutorial
user6568562
Man, Kendrick Lamar is really mood friendly
21:11
@davidism well, uhm, I was trying stuff and clearly at this point I didn't know what I was doing so yeah, I did that because I read it somewhere and saw someone who did it and I was just wondering if it was going to work. Clearly it didn't. — fuhrerguxez 37 secs ago
and you thought that fuhrer in a username would be an ill omen
user6568562
Well, this one questions his actions, at least
21:29
300$ picture book....three hundred dollar picture book...theverge.com/2016/11/15/13635788/…
well...it's the cheapest mac book yet....
wow...not narcissistic at all
I wonder how the "mac fanboys will buy anything" business model will work out for them
this is going to be a Christmas hit
With an s? Or a real one?
haha
or you meant Christma :D
21:32
yes...the other holiday
Christ, ma shit
21:44
wel
well, im done with soap
that thing can, well yeah, don't have a nasty enough word for it
you can edit/delete your chat messages in the first 2 minutes after posting
user6568562
Man, this object oriented thing, it's well f*ckin thought of
user6568562
I finally understood the basic premise of what a class should be !
user6568562
Also, f*ck this prototype paradigm !
Meh, it's all the same imo
user6568562
22:08
Maybe, man. I wouldn't know how to argue with you. But the point is, I finally get it
wim
wim
>>> class A:
...     def foo(self):
...         print("'sup dawg")
...
>>> class B1(A):
...     def foo(self):
...         sooper().foo()
...
>>> class B2(A):
...     def foo(self):
...         sooper().foo()
...         __class__
...
>>> sooper = super
>>> B2().foo()
'sup dawg
>>> B1().foo()
RuntimeError: super(): __class__ cell not found
super should be a keyword , this shit is bonkers
user6568562
@wim I know you have little patience for ignorance, but I really would be thankful if you would explain to me what is going wrong in here and how come you're not defining any init_
user559633
You don't like magic?
user6568562
I would've if I could've understood
user559633
oh, was talking to wim
user6568562
22:17
Oh I should've thought so :D Sorry
>>> class A:
    ...     def foo():
    ...         pass
    ...
    >>> x = A()
    >>> dir(x)
    ['__class__', '__delattr__', '__dict__', '__dir__', '__doc__', '__eq__', '__format__', '__ge__', '__getattribute__', '__gt__', '__hash__', '__init__', '__le__', '__lt__', '__module__', '__ne__', '__new__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', '__repr__', '__setattr__', '__sizeof__', '__str__', '__subclasshook__', '__weakref__', 'foo']
@randomhopeful technically init comes for free. The only reason to write your own is that you want to write your own
inheritance means that whatever you don't define will be kept from the parent class
user559633
88
Q: Why is Python 3.x's super() magic?

Zero PiraeusIn Python 3.x, super() can be called without arguments: class A(object): def x(self): print("Hey now") class B(A): def x(self): super().x() >>> B().x() Hey now In order to make this work, some compile-time magic is performed, one consequence of which is that the fol...

user6568562
@WayneWerner Oh I see. I'm gonna research into that ! Thank you, dude
22:20
I was under the impression that new style classes simply inherit from object, but that's not exactly the case
>>> [k for k in dir(x) if k not in dir(object)]
['__dict__', '__module__', '__weakref__', 'foo']
@AndrasDeak what with class Foo(object): pass; x = Foo()?
save foo, yes
>>> class B(object):
...     pass
...
>>> class A:
...     pass
...
>>> x = A()
>>> y = B()
>>> [k for k in dir(x) if k not in dir(object)]
['__dict__', '__module__', '__weakref__']
>>> [k for k in dir(y) if k not in dir(object)]
['__dict__', '__module__', '__weakref__']
I was also under the impression that new style classes are the default in python3, which seems consistent with the above
user559633
new style is the default in py3, yes
user559633
"new"
:)
I guess nowadays this should be the class, and old-style py2 should be called archaic
22:23
what's the old style?
BTW I haven't seen Antti in a while
@FlorianMargaine class A: pass in python 2, without (object)
@AndrasDeak he was there today
user559633
he was here earlier
complaining about something
@FlorianMargaine ah OK, thanks guys
@FlorianMargaine so he's fine:D
user6568562
22:24
@tristan Ouh, now I know what my next thing to understand is ! Thank you, man
user559633
@randomhopeful happy to help
@AndrasDeak uh, in py2, class A: and class A(object): are different?
Python 2.7.12+ (default, Sep  1 2016, 20:27:38)
[GCC 6.2.0 20160927] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> class A:
...     pass
...
>>> class B(object):
...     pass
...
>>> x = A()
>>> y = B()
>>> dir(x)
['__doc__', '__module__']
>>> dir(y)
['__class__', '__delattr__', '__dict__', '__doc__', '__format__', '__getattribute__', '__hash__', '__init__', '__module__', '__new__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', '__repr__', '__setattr__', '__sizeof__', '__str__', '__subclasshook__', '__weakref__']
@FlorianMargaine ^
the former is the "old style classes"
>>> type(x)
<type 'instance'>
>>> type(y)
<class '__main__.B'>
you really want to use new style classes
22:25
yeah, I'm only using them because it's the current style
which are the classes in python 3
but I didn't know it actually mattered to use (object)
in python 2, very much, and I think it's pretty deprecated to omit that
Right, I read this here, sort of canonical:P
> This reflects the fact that all old-style instances, independent of their class, are implemented with a single built-in type, called instance.
 
1 hour later…
23:57
Hello, this might sounds like a stupid example, but to access the main sys.stdin inside a multiprocessing pool ?

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