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23:00
I don't know sockets, but what do you mean by "having issues"?
I suspect there's more to that "issue"
Any errors?
Sorry was sandboxing with him

error: [Errno 99] Cannot assign requested address
happens on the bind
@khajvah yup
@ZachThompson did you google said error?
@AndrasDeak at first I wanted to write "this is ridiculous, stupid, dumb " but then I saw that video and I got sad
I have, I'm trying to understand what's being said in the explanation here -> stackoverflow.com/questions/19246103/…
23:03
2 days ago, by Andras Deak
I wonder how the "mac fanboys will buy anything" business model will work out for them
@ZachThompson good, I found that one too
@ZachThompson part of it is that if your friend is behind a router, you won't be able to just get through to him without port forwarding
                                                     For instance, he might have two siblings and parents on the same network, behind the same router.
                                                     All of them will have the same IP. Which computer should you target if you're using that IP?
this was interesting^
I mean, that's the part of the problem/answer I understand -----^
lol :D
trying to dodge arrows :d
23:10
I mean that kinda makes sense, except these machines are on the same router. We're using university machines on a special network
So we have very similar IP addresses. We should be able to communicate. We're able to bind using TCP.
We'll, I'm binding to my port, I'm not really sure what's going on on his end.
Hey hey hey
@ZachThompson there's also the part that says "If you're in school there's other dilemmas and routers in the way most likely." :P
@ZachThompson you would bind your own address
@Andras I did my homework :D
and connect to the other address
23:13
Like you said, in multiple lines, not single :P
@BlueMonday glad to hear it:) Good job!
Yeah, I'm thinking I'm supposed to be using s.connect
or alternatively use sendto and (possibly) recvfrom
Now is the hard part, squeezing it..
yup:)
@BlueMonday and just to reiterate: your teacher is a harmful idiot
23:15
:D
How did you handle the non-existing key cases?:)
foo = {}
    for x in range(1,len(network)):
        subDict = set()
        for k,v in network.items():
            if len(network[k]) == x:
                subDict.add(k)
        foo[x] = subDict
    return foo
I am using sendto
but I need to connect to the port before I do that don't I?
minor note: I wouldn't call that subset subdict
@ZachThompson no you need not
23:17
That's not the problem now :D
user6568562
@tristan It's a long shot, but I thought you may like this youtube.com/watch?v=TJd3jEoP8yI
Antti boldly goes where no one has bolded before:D
But thanks.
if this is a dgram socket
@BlueMonday it's not, hence minor note;)
23:18
Yeah, thanks. :)
1 question, how do I create new empty set and dict in the one liner? o.o
well, that won't be so simple:/
I'm pretty sure I can squeeze the rest, but that's confusing me
oneliners only make sense where it's simple
Yeah I guess
thank you @AnttiHaapala I'm sorry for being dumb deadline is coming up and I'm starting to stress.
23:20
hmm......
@ZachThompson you shouldn't consider Python socket module documentation as the socket documentation. Read the C man pages instead
@Blue I'm thinking that the most straightforward way to construct the missing keys as well, in one passing (for your oneliner), is to loop over your lengths in a comprehension
2.7 socket module docs are awful
if you don't loop over your lengths, you won't be able to set the missing length values to an empty set
no one can learn socket programming from that
23:22
Hm
but that's OK, Blue, since you're essentially doing that:)
we really need to just figure out how to handle the empty ones
Yeah, I was thinking somehow with the previous code, just to add the remaining ones with empty set
I suggest that you refactor your looping version, to arrive at a loopy version that can then be turned into a comprehension
you should all send your useless/harmful teachers here into the chat so that we can reprimand them.
I think I have working code, he doesn't seem to be picking up my packets though. I honestly think it's a problem on his end, but it's hard to tell since I can't really read what he's done.
23:24
in order to handle the empty case, you need to put an if-else inside your outer for loop: if (...) use a set else use an empty set
@ZachThompson you should be using ethereal or sth
stop guessing
I am so confused now.
@Antti Actually our teacher is cool, the homework is neccessary for final grade, so.
who assigned the homework?
Our teacher..
sooooo...?:P
23:26
Sooo, what? :D
they might be cool, but they're also a crappy teacher
@ZachThompson wireshark
"do this in a one-liner" is simply not how you teach programming
it might be part of how you hire somebody, one who already knows how to program well, and I'm also unsure about this
but you don't teach using idiotic arbitrary constraints that make people write contorted, shitty code
anyway, this is my suggestion:
3 mins ago, by Andras Deak
in order to handle the empty case, you need to put an if-else inside your outer for loop: if (...) use a set else use an empty set
@Andras Yeah, I read I am trying to understand
23:28
foo = {}
    for x in range(1,len(network)):
        subDict = set()
        for k,v in network.items():
            if len(network[k]) == x:
                subDict.add(k)
        foo[x] = subDict
    return foo
this in one line?
yup...
why not just use one lambda function
@Antti Yeah. I am not really familiar with lambda.
return the headache, let the teacher find out whether your code was correct or not
you can't just slap that in a lambda...
23:30
of course I can
OIT doesn't like it when we use wireshark on their network
in one sweet lambda, full of lambdas
I got an angry e-mail a couple days ago
@ZachThompson and you need to use this on their network?
Haha :D
23:31
wtf is this tshi
@AnttiHaapala if you can, please do, Blue will be very happy:D
@BlueMonday so does this code work?
Well we have to make sure it works on these computers in particular and apparently my partner's not able to winscp and move his files to and from these machines for whatever reason.
then notice that x is the key, you can use dict comprehension for the outer loop.
and for the inner you can use a set comprehension.
23:33
Yeah, I have no idea how to do that
@AnttiHaapala but still that doesn't trivially transform
inside the dictcomp you have "set comp except if something", at least as it's written now
DSM
DSM
I'm coming in late to this, but isn't it something like foo = {x: {k for k,v in network.items() if len(v) == x} for x in range(1,len(network))}?
oooooh I see what you mean
exactly, that --------------------------------------------------------------^
foo = {x: {k for k, v in network.items() if len(v) == x} for x in range(1, len(network))}
good job, gentlemen:P
now bring your tar and feathers
23:35
so yeah i guess that's how you do it...
Hmm
Yeah :D
DSM
DSM
I'd probably take marks off for being inefficient, though -- it scans over network for each possible x when it doesn't need to.
the trick is that the setcomp will perfectly give you the empty set when none match
@BlueMonday you had unnecessary network[k] there at least...
23:35
@DSM you missed a fine detail from earlier
DSM
DSM
@AndrasDeak: what's that?
Oh I see.
3 hours ago, by Blue Monday
Yeah, but the homework requires one liners, so.
I don't think teacher worries about efficiency :S
DSM
DSM
23:36
.. I've been having a bad Python day. I got more upvotes from a single one-line Julia answer than from a collection of Python ones. :-/
hence
2 mins ago, by Andras Deak
now bring your tar and feathers
from collections import defaultdict
foo = defaultdict(set)
for k, v in network.items():
    foo[len(v)].add(k)
this is ~how you do it right^
but that doesn't construct the missing keys
can't be done in one line beautifully
DSM
DSM
That's very silly. I'm not going to say there's no pedagogical use for it, but the problem with the last batch of candidates I interviewed wasn't that they couldn't one-line things, it was that they couldn't code.
23:38
which you shouldn't, anyway, but the homework is homework...
@AndrasDeak it will, if you access them by number
@AnttiHaapala on access, yes, so not on construction
Professor Oneliner will surely penalize that
let's start an initiative to downvote one-liner solutions that are less efficient than the readable ones. 😀
Blue already had a slightly complicated version that didn't contain the default empty set cases
that would work fine with a get(key,set()) later
23:39
Yeah.
so add [k[i] for i in range(1, len(network))] to keep mr oneliner happy
but that doesn't fit in the oneliner:P
so wrap it in a lambda :D
DSM
DSM
Hmm..
and it might be ms oneliner
@idjaw some users are way ahead of you
23:40
@AndrasDeak can't be
sounds like a man
can be, although unlikely
It's mr :)
@AndrasDeak sounds like a man that we call in Finland "full-body d*ck"
:D
Richard Full-Body
23:42
@BlueMonday do you have example input and output
Blue said he's cool, so probably not a bad person, just a bad teacher
Wait wait, your code works @Antti.
for new code
FWIW it was DSM's code first:P
23:43
What new code?
which he hasn't showed yet
I am confused now xd
I think he wants to codegolf your homework to screw with the teacher
just give him some example IO
you already have it in a pastebin somewhere
annnnd what's codegolf?
too many questions, laddie :P
23:44
:D
found the link from earlier, no longer available:(
Yeah, well I am trying to squeeze this aswell pastebin.com/5810pduT
it really was pastebin
that's no input/output......
It's different function.
I can see that:P
23:46
:D
good luck with it
Yeah, I am gonna need it lmao.
something like:
lambda network: (lambda result: ([result[len(v)].add(k) for (k, v) in network.items()], [result[i] for i in range(1, len(network))] and dict(result)))(__import__('collections').defaultdict(set))
it's oneliner and it's a function already
23:48
__import__('collections').defaultdict(set), you sneaky thing you
it is more efficient.
if it works.
idk, I never ran it.
DSM
DSM
Ehh, heck with SO today. Going to go watch a movie in Hindi. Rhubarb for all!
@AnttiHaapala well, you don't have any IO, so you can't
@DSM have fun, DSM:)
hope tomorrow's better
Can I return that o.o
@BlueMonday if it works :D
23:49
@BlueMonday you don't return it, it's already a function
though transcripts are public :P
or do you mean as a homework?
@AnttiHaapala with the state of the search feature on SO chat...I wouldn't worry a lot
so perhaps your teacher would be lenient until the point that he realizes he was called Mr. Richard Full-body.
23:50
haha:D
@AndrasDeak I am talking about google
@AnttiHaapala can you actually google transcripts?
@AndrasDeak ofc
I am not sure how to call this
23:51
that's how I found out that I am the only human in the existence to have used ereyesterdaily in the internet
ah, /transcript is allowed
@AnttiHaapala you're also the second and third:D
@Antti, that won't work, since I have to return the result :)
and now fourth
3 mins ago, by Andras Deak
@BlueMonday you don't return it, it's already a function
Unittests..
23:53
that returns what you need
if it works
@BlueMonday it is a function that takes in network and returns the result, if it works.
unittests? perks up
:D
someone's perky now
It's okay, I'll try to figure something out.
I just practiced my presentation. It is long....I need to cut things out
Probably need shorten my first half
to talk more about the solution
23:54
@idjaw you'll end up with 5 slides of emoji and stock photos of HR teams
it's actually 40 slides of emojis
the last two are stock photos of angry business
throw in a Trump to be topical
and happy business
Make CI Great Again!
23:56
deploy the CI Joes
This happens when I call it <function <lambda> at 0x018F9930>
then you need to debug it
note that you failed to give Antti some example input when he asked for it, so you have to fix it yourself now

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