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00:10
@user6827096 feel free to ask if something else is unclear, we'll gladly help beyond a threshold:)
(I probably mean the google threshold)
thanks
that was last chapter about algorithms with examples writen in Python. No more Python for while.
everything in that question needs to just go away....close however you want. There is even someone who flagged a dupe for it
yikes, numpy
correlation coefficient from dicts, right....
"numpy". We don't even know if it should be numpy
or if they intended to use numpy
it's just all up in the air
00:18
Okay, thanks I just started programming in python so i'm really a beginner, I've tried: print numpy.corrcoef(dict_best, waited_books) pearsonr(dict_best, waited_books) — Nora K. 20 mins ago
yeah..."started programming"....*numpy*
they wrote down "numpy" so I'm pretty sure they intended to use it:P
not the hero they need, but the hero they want
What I meant was more along the lines of, do they really need it
but anyway....make it go boom boom
on it
1/3
hehe yeah.
one of them I tried explaining that their solution doesn't work. They are convinced that it could work.
There is no case where that solution is helpful
00:29
doesn't matter either way
that answer is wrong on multiple levels
different dicts can have the same values, and even if they have the same pairs, old dicts don't have inherent order
the answer will get you both false positives and false negatives
yup. Also, not to mention that you probably want to compare values from matching keys. So that won't work either.
Decided to throw that in there too
:D
just because I'm bored
00:51
2/3
 
1 hour later…
01:52
can't wait for #3 anymore:P
good night
haha
goodnight
@JeremyBanks you're famous, you know:P
>_<
I don't think he can honestly believe anything he wrote. He's not an idiot.
He think he's being willfully ignorant to be provocative. Yet I take the bait.
But, it's not so much for "falling for it". How else is someone supposed to take a official looking post about why he doesn't want to touch a certain version
Only after a bunch of people start calling him out in detail...he puts on his troll shades
"gotcha suckas"
right....right
I call bs
02:13
Which doesn't really help anything, TBH
Yeah, but then he disappears for a few hours and then starts posting obnoxious tweets calling people out for being mean to him
garners some eyes and then bam. BUY MAH BEWK!
I think I just realized what my next business model should be
That's one interesting thing that I noticed in the Railing on Rails post
He has an MBA & knows business
And he's trolling hard core
He's pulling a full Trump
He just posted a 60% off everything on his site :)
Of course
If you haven't read it yet
it's quite good
yeah. I read it earlier today. Poke also wrote one as well
it's on the starboard
She also had a series of great tweets to go with that
02:21
Yeah, Poke's was the first rebuttal I read. Then a bunch of tweets (mostly Eeevee's)
I tweeted a few
@zedshaw So.. are you a beginner?
(because Eevee was hurting his feelings, or whatever)
@Gryphus @zedshaw The problem is that the arguments are based on feelings and not based in research or fact.
I think the Python community just needs to shun the shaw. Someone who actively seeks to tear down and divide the community solely for profit is no friend of mine.
7
i created a console app with EF, after inputing rows with data, how do I export my database for analysis with Excel?


it's a windows phone app with a db, but how do I export db files?
@WayneWerner Yeah. But what big voices from the community does it take for him to cool it down.
@AdanRamirez Are you sure you're asking this in the right room?
02:53
Does anyone know why my django server is searching for favicon.ico when it is supposed to be searching for static files?
03:03
favicon.ico is/should be a static file
and browsers will request the favicon.ico file when they request from your site. So, there is that
 
1 hour later…
04:29
Morning
 
1 hour later…
05:55
anyone any good with anagrams?
my code is outputting the wrong thing =/
anyone here good with anagram algorithms?
or decent at it
06:51
cabbage
07:03
cbg
@Bhargav not gone insane yet?
He's speaking in vegetables. Clearly something has gone very wrong. ;)
@Jeremy lettuce!?
@JonClements Nope
Haven't yet dived deeped
@JonClements Sprouts :(
07:18
See... Resistance is futile and all that
Yeah :D
cbg @Martijn
 
1 hour later…
08:53
cbg o/
cbg
EWWW mod overload
#instaquit
How you all doing
cbg lads
cbg @khajvah
@AnttiHaapala how is the book going?
@khajvah well.. I've done nothing :D
it's got automatic build :D
that's a start
Is that yours?
sopython
@AnttiHaapala add "If you use windows, don't"
ah poke uses windows so np with that :D
he's an unfortunate .NET developer
oh right
09:10
he's so miserable he thinks windows is awesome :D
:D
The NOT YET NAMED Python Book
leave it like that
TNYNPB
@AnttiHaapala I'd start with an outline of what you want to teach. Get us a framework to write to.
(not a software framework, more like the skeleton of a barn. Give us a barn to raise!)
How about proceeding carefully to ensure that they can create virtualenvs with their Python? Or don't you intend to get into third-party packages.
may be obsessive about venvs at present - been writing about them and now writing a venv builder for our deployment system
@holdenweb I think virtualenvs should be introduced after introducing packages and pip
Depends whether they are planning a high-level ("install requests and suck this data down in JSON ...") or low-level ("this is how you write Python") book, I guess
But Zed Shaw's done such a good job in the latter market I'd have thought we all knew better than to compete :-)
09:21
:|
09:49
ok, my code works on local machine, but doesn't work on the server
exact same db
@MartijnPieters n1 interview ;)
So what's different, and what differences do you see in behaviour? "Doesn't work" is just a little vague ...
Apple opeb sourced darwib code
I wonder if you can compile your own version for your computer
10:08
@holdenweb When you say a venv builder, how d'you mean - a sort of ansible-esque tool that deploys all the various packages into it and around it?
ok I have to make a choice. Tie ourselves to aws or write docket containers for deployment and have a tiny bit more independence
a noob like me shouldn't be making these decisions but whatever
10:34
Why would you be tied to AWS?
as in, what's the configuration effect that ties you to AWS?
there are aws only technologies
aws codedeploy with amazon ecs
or I can use kubernetes
i feel like get and pop from dict are inconsistent
@marxin why ?
get has None as a default if key is missing where pop raises KeyError
@marxin pop would be analogous to retrieving with dic[key]
get is specifically for having a default value if key is not there
10:48
its a design decision I suppose
for me more convenient would be to have default None in pop like in get
@MartijnPieters better to sketch that in wiki
@marxin Doesn't pop have that behaviour too?
if you pass default arguemnt, you will get it if key is not present
thats the thing, it has argument for default
but this argument has no defaut value :D
get(key, default=None), where pop(key, default)
@marxin why do you assume pop should work like get?
it would be more convenient for me 8)
10:57
:D
for me it feels like small inconsistency, not a big deal ofc
it is consistent because the most common way of retrieving a value from a dictionary is dic[key], which raises an exception.
and pop's default way should be analogous to the most common way
so get should work this way as well
it wouldn't be useless for get to work that way because get is specifically for having a default value
d.get('key') and d['key'] would be exactly the same thing
which makes no sense
11:01
no, because you can provide default value
like d.get('key', None)
you use get for having a default value, you use pop for popping a key.
let me ask another question: What would be the analogous to d['key'], as in, what would raise an exception when popping?
wouldn't it be inconsistent if it didn't have analogous method to d['key']
maybe
@MartijnPieters added some skeleton to the wiki at github.com/sopython/pythonbook/wiki/skeleton
is everyone in sopython now allowed to do everything with that?
cbg
Cabage :)
11:13
@MartijnPieters or 2 first chapters
> Explain how to ask questions with trace back especially on stack overflow
yeah :D
I just wrote something without thinking about it too much
ah
perhaps should add how to google for error message
@khajvah edited
I wonder if there is any better way to learn python than reading a docs
@marxin yes
a narrative.
python tutorial doesn't detail everything
for example?
11:22
and getting stuff into there is rather.. difficult
I dont mean python tutorial, I mean lib reference
@marxin it doesn't teach how to google for errors. It doesn't teach how to ask questions on stack overflow. It doesn't teach lots of things that newbies are having problems with
@AnttiHaapala Googleing is the best skill a programmer can learn
I feel like python docs are for already programmers who are new to Python
for complete newbies, it's not very good
yeah, its different to teach someone how to write programs in general, and how to code in python
of course but there are core principles
the tutorial leaves out so many things
it superficially explains some of the things that are possible.
it also doesn't say "use these 3rd-party libraries"
it also isn't very prescriptive, more descriptive
I think there should be a thing like: "if you have read the python tutorial, you can skip to chapter N"
Coding book in the style of Peter Jackson-esque choose-your-own-adventure
@AnttiHaapala I feel like there is a lack of books on more architectural stuff
@khajvah it will get to that too
yeah I miss it as well, a lot of books doesn't cover good practices, tips how to organize project structure, etc
11:36
code organization, how to organize classes
@khajvah remember this book is not limited by weight
but we need the book that counters LPTHW. We really do
@AnttiHaapala yeap, start from there, so I can read :D
@marxin Actually, this is a BIG thing. It's completely non-obvious how to structure stuf when you're new.
jk
@Withnail this problem is in every langauge
I didn't learn that until I got my first internship
'Oh, just put the files wherever you like' is what i've heard said to newbies, but that's totally unhelpful if you don't understand the practicalities of how to get at it from different places.
11:38
I still am very bad at it
So yeah, a bit on that. Exactly.
I've learned it just by looking on githubs of various apps / libs
and get whats best from there
the hard thing is scraping general concepts from various projects
I found the Two Scoops explanation of project layout pretty helpful, but it still took me a while to get what was going on the first time I looked at the cookieCutter layout (which diverges from that a bit), especially making the leap to environment variables.
it's hard to cover this topic
11:42
design patterns are separated from the language however sometimes its easier to use one with this or other language
this is a difficult part
@marxin design patterns doesn't cover the core concepts. Understand the actual problem and what are the final goals is general for every language
I read design patterns book but I didn't understand core principles
hmm, I had always opposite feeling, that design patterns define core principles but doesnt go into details
and language specific features
i mean, it says "if you have this problem, there is a pattern for it"
but identifying your actual problem isn't easy
or trivial
ok, thats different then
@khajvah there are so many bad projects
that are popular however
@khajvah and also, what is missing is: "how to program this pattern in Python"
11:49
@AnttiHaapala if my project gets popular, it will join that list
a Java programmer comes to Python, and writes the design pattern with 700000 classes
@AnttiHaapala most of the time, you can google them
yeah java vs python thinking is always a challenge
however java style is not bad
it won't end up being a disaster
one class one file principle in python... :D
11:51
Cabbage
The Gang of Four book established many useful patterns, and tried to give realistic use cases for them. But some techniques are inappropriate in some languages, or better cast differently, and you can't build a program by sticking patterns together.
So I prefer to use patterns as a way to help me think more abstractly about the design of the solution to a particular problem.
there is creative part of programming, which books don't cover
"flowerpower python from scratch"
@holdenweb they're still the same patterns but not every "class" is a class statement
@PM2Ring cbg
11:55
Hi, Bhargav.
in Python a class with "doThing" is implemented as something that does __call__ without extra arguments.
-> a function.
I thought that would be covered by better cast differently
Python class names are factories. You can use a concrete class name for a factory.
@khajvah Only if you know the language of what you're looking for, ime
@khajvah It's pretty hard to teach creativity in any field, but you can kinda pick it up by osmosis by interacting with creative people, and studying what they do and how they get there.
12:00
Imo, the creativity of programming comes with fluency - it's like music, it's hard to improvise if you can't do the basics. Some people can - but for most people, the ability to write music comes with being fluent-enough on the instrument to unlock what's in your head.
Whether or not you have anything in your head, well... that's up to you. ;)
But it has to be active study. Merely reading good code from good coders is unlikely to make you a good coder. You have to play with the code, modify it, re-arrange it, etc, to get the feel for what works well, and what's not so effective.
Yes, you have to DO the code. Then, at leat, I get a feeling when my code is good.
ultimately, it comes down to beautifully abstracting stuff
I dont agree, I think that code review has a lot of benefits
looking on a code of someone else gives you more ideas and let you look on some problems from different point, then you can compare it and say " oh, this is clever"
@Withnail Definitely! I was going to post a musical analogy, but decided on a different tack. :) FWIW, I play guitar & blues harp, and I do a fair bit of improvisation, especially on the harp. But I wouldn't be able to do that if I hadn't spent the time just practicing the boring basics.
12:03
Code review is something very useful if you work with coide in a professional way, in my opinion
@marxin what he means is that after that you have to apply it to your problem
it was an answer to @PM2Ring
"reading good code from good coders is unlikely to make you a good coder" - disagree
@PM2Ring Yeah, I never got the point of scales when i played piano, because I had a rubbish teacher and never got to the point of doing improvisation, even though I was quite far on - when I started playing guitar and wanted to play noodly kirk-hammet solos, scales were the thing that got me way closer.
@marxin "merely" reading code, is what he said :D
And with guitar,the assumption is that you want to write your own stuff, so improvisation with what you have is taught from very early on.
Basic thing > How Are You Going To Use It? > Practice > Use > Next
12:07
@marxin Passively reading good code is a good thing, but to really get the full benefit from it, and to fully absorb it, you have to actively engage with it.
yeah you need to understand it, its like reading a math book
if you just read it without trying to understand it makes no sense
yes
Agreed. And you won't absorb much if you don't actually get down and do the mathematics.
I like calculus ..
@Alex have you studied real analysis?
12:14
Actually physics, but it involved lots of math...
real analysis is where calculus starts to make sense
cbg
Cbg, Jovito.
user6568562
@Jovito Hey Jovito, and yeah I was talking about Jack White
you're late hahaha
user6568562
12:20
Drama effect
It was super effective.
@khajvah and when you go for shopping
Is there a time limit when you have been kicked out of a chat? Can the room admin keep you out of the room for ever?
@Alex feels more like a "ban" feature
So then a kick is for a short time, and a ban is forever?
12:25
@randomhopeful Haven't listened to his solo work yet. What you referring to exactly?
cabbage
need to ask some non python help
go ahead sohaib
sadness is when a python developer doing excel work
oh well....
user6568562
@Jovito Terrific question. His live voice, nowadays. It's god awful. We're light years far from Blackpool lights
12:35
so what is your question?
@SohaibAsif Well, There are other rooms for specific topics. If the question is way off topic, Then kindly refrain from asking it here.
He can ask. no?
> way off topic
Then it'd not do much help.
suppose i have a column in excel and in it has addresses like this 'http://www.tropic-park.com/es/index.html' i want to strip the addresses to this "tropic-park.com"
(I don't see any excel chat group)
12:37
i wrote the program but my boss said dont use code to strip this instead use excel by hand
this is so lame
user6568562
@SohaibAsif Transform cells into text format, then find replace (find field : the part you want to get rid of. / replace field : leave it blank)
@randomhopeful what do you mean by "Transform cell into text format"
Is there a way to reuse SQL code?
user6568562
@SohaibAsif Make sure each cell is a text cell. Highlight all cells in that column, right click menu, Format cells. First tab (numbers), choose text. So links get displayed as text, not hyperlink.
user6568562
Then, Ctrl-f and switch to replace tab. Enter the part of the link you want to get rid of. Under that, Replace field, you leave it blank. Then you click on the replace button. And voilà
12:44
@SohaibAsif if you really must. do this in one cell (substitute A1 for your cell reference).. =MID(A1,FIND("www.",A1)+4,LEN(A1)-FIND("/",A1,FIND("www.",A1))+3)
Note that uses horrible fixed constants and you have no error checking
Or, do it manually like random is suggesting.
@khajvah No, all SQL is single use
;)
@JRichardSnape i have to reuse a block of code
:(
@JRichardSnape i dont want to do it manually because i have a column called "Website" and it has thousand off entries
I warn you all I am in Friday Silly Mood
@SohaibAsif Try my formula then!
i just so hate my boss
maybe I can do it with "with" statement
12:47
@poke with sphinx it is rather easy to refer to Python 3 documents so that the urls don't break even if things are moved around
user6568562
@SohaibAsif Skip the convert to text, and just do the find-replace method. It might be your lucky day
One more question: this says I should .rollback() after every SELECT. Is it really good practice?
@randomhopeful i want to apply it to whole column instead of doing it one one by one going to rows
user6568562
@SohaibAsif Well, click on replace all, and it will replace all cells containing http
@khajvah wat?
12:52
I think you need to make a copy of your spreadsheet and try out one of the methods, @sohaib. You will realise that either will do it nicely. Unless, of course, you have misdescribed your problem and what you really need is a clickable hyperlink with the display text changed. In which case, good luck...
> It is also good practice to rollback or commit frequently (even after a single SELECT statement) to make sure the backend is never left “idle in transaction”.
@khajvah not after every select. You should rollback or commit after the transaction.
@khajvah ok, your reading skills are off.
you should rollback after you've completed your session.
ok I got it
:D
12:52
even if it only contained a single select statement
not that you should rollback after every select statement if you're executing 5 sequentially.
BTW @antti if you were needing a native speaker to do some proof reading (I think I saw that yesterday) I can assist.
my transactions are mainly single SELECTs that's where confusion came
Although @poke will probably correct my English grammar ;)
possibly :P
user6568562
@SohaibAsif imgur.com/a/cqT61
user6568562
12:54
Scroll down for part 2 in case it isn't intuitive
@AnttiHaapala I wouldn't rollback after a single SELECT if my transaction had two. You know that right? :D
@randomhopeful i replace the first part of whole column "http://www." with blank space
no, because you just asked above^
but now there is a space appearing
-_-
12:55
@SohaibAsif with ''
user6568562
@SohaibAsif Don't put any space
user6568562
If you don't put anything, there won't be anything
Confucius says "Do not type a space if you do not wish one to appear"
7
user6568562
It will just erase the part you entered in "find what"
but, foobar.com is a valid url. It isn't a valid absolute url. It means "folder or file named foobar.com relative to the current url"
user6568562
12:57
@AnttiHaapala Hence my suggestion to convert cells into text
@SohaibAsif just use python and copy results to excel file
so your boss is happy
but I guess that only the TLD was required here....
user6568562
@SohaibAsif Undo your first find and replace. And this time, leave the replace with field blank
i wish i could use it
my boss said
you need to teach me excel
-_-
boss.replace()
12:58
i already made the code and strip it
but there are surely edge cases that urlparse module would handle out of the box
you need to write your logic, waste time
but, yeah, what has to be done has to be done

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