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21:05
CaH is so brilliant
user6845426
Hi all
hello @F.Bar
\o how goes it @F.Bar
user6845426
Can't complain :)
user6845426
Although I do have a question... what IDE do you guys use? :)
21:15
GVim
or VI
or VIM
pick poison and drink
@F.Bar We've compiled our favourites here: sopython.com/wiki/Python_IDEs
I use IntelliJ at work, and PyCharm personally.
user6845426
Thanks, I'll check it out now
Apparently Martijn uses Sublime3. At least that's what he said on Talk Python To Me :)
Vim when he's in the terminal. Vim for me all the time
I hate PyCharm. Only, I hate it less than all the other alternatives.
yeah I use vim too
PyCharm is fine, Antti. :)
21:20
Vim or GVim (if on windows and not using powershell too) for quick changes/testing small stuff for SO and Jupyter if you count it for most actual work
Rhubarb all.
see ya BhargavRao
user6845426
Im running OS X
I used to use Latex with embedded Python but then I realized I could embed Latex into Jupyter notebooks (and R code) so that's become pretty much my exclusive
this CAH hole digging business is rather stupid
21:25
one day (two days ago actually) I will know the end is upon us when I run a embedded Fortran program with a Latex wrapper on a Jupyter notebook which is primarily using Python 3
why is the dump truck 180 degrees from the dig
@AnttiHaapala so it doesn't fall in
well could be that the camera angle makes it...
@AnttiHaapala you know though....one thing that drives me nuts about intelliJ and PyCharm, the indexing blocks the entire app....so if you have a large app, you are screwed waiting for the stupid thing to index
this is especially painful with a fresh tox run
@max I missed that. Where you asking for a float range-like function or where you asking why range doesn't allow floats?
21:29
@idjaw that's not the only thing
user6845426
I'm torn between PyCharm and Sublime
one of them is an IDE
you asked for an IDE
user6845426
I've looked at the cons 'complex, steep learning curve' xD
"steep learning curve"
if you're making applications, use pycharm.
I've used both, PyCharm is good for very small projects (also used it for teaching pretty successfully). Sublime was better but took a lot of work to make into a full IDE <- pure opinion of course
21:31
if you're writing single-file scripts, you can use anything
user6845426
I'm going to be 'attempting' a handwritting recognition program
you can make sublime text work for you. You have to put in the time to find the right plugins
then there is learning the build systems
to add that extra customization for how your individual projects should run
PyCharm adds the debugger which is really priceless when it comes to writing larger applications.
pycharm coupled with python 3 type annotations is priceleess
@F.Bar using "built it yourself" AI/ML modules to learn or using the standard toolsets for work?
it actually knows what to complete. and it can highlight lots of errors in Python code
like "hey, this function doesn't take a keyword argument by that name"
user6845426
21:34
I'm looking at using a ConvNet, i've looked briefly at TensorFlow
user6845426
I've been advised against trying to implement my own convolution neural net
hmm...."using the standard toolsets to build a model which is the best fit for your particular company/need" is a better statement
that is good advice @F.Bar (though good practice when learning)
user6845426
I would like to try and build one myself but I'm pressed for time.
how to make 20 minutes go by faster?
work
:D
21:37
Servers are down. our portal that links with the states went down so i have nothing to do lol
im just browsing ncix and contemplating if i wanna buy a 400 dollar gpu ><
user6845426
May I ask what you guys do? I'm graduating in a few months... I'm scared to join the real world xD
Adulting is hard
user6845426
Yes I'm not ready to attempt adulthood
welcome to my life @F.Bar . I recently found my current job about 3 months ago and i dont know what dafaq im doing, im scared left right and center. I don't know so many things..... u have responsbility now (payment) no one cares anymore....
@F.Bar you should be scared
21:41
Never used ConvNet or TensorFlow (heard a few people say they liked it) - last time I did OCR I just used OpenCV with Sklearn and NLTK (Sklearn for frequency style analysis for one set of users; NLTK for deeper analysis of language)
you have little to no safety net... rip adulthood
user6845426
I'm dreading being told by an employer to implement something by the end of my shift
the constant fear of failing and being homeless... the fear of not making the next payments when need too, dont know what's going to happen to the economy in a few years. will you still have a job? will you lose yours ? will you not find a job ? will you go homeless ? so many fears..... and we are still young
I teach people stuff (elementary full-time; college when I tutor or get adjuncts)
user6845426
I'm hoping to travel for a year before settling down
21:44
@F.Bar that rarely happens .... and when it does you have to use your judgement to see if it's feesible, most of the managers in software/app dev jobs already went through coding lackies, they know what can be done and what cant
anyways im an application dev atm... c# and company's legacy code
user6845426
Nice! I've also been contemplating doing a masters. I've recently realised that I don't have a portfolio to even showcase myself xd
after all taht talk about the fear of unknown idk if i wanna spend 400 dollars on a gpu now ... >< i can afford now but should i save it just incase something happens in a few months?!?!?!
if u dont mind i can tell u what happen to me...
user6845426
Buy it now!
user6845426
Live for the moment xD and sure
user6845426
or is that moto my lack of understanding adulthood lol
21:46
my dad forbid me to get a job , not even those part time at a fast food joint or what not. I was given an allowance to buy food if my grades were good. I had to focus on school. In university, I wasn't much of a socialize, because of personal reasons. So I didnt make connection. I graduated with 3.0-3.5 average i was lazy but w.e. Real world hit find a job. Oh no I have no experience, no connection what do i do?
@F.Bar if you are planning to do AI/ML work or doing projects involving language processing it might be a good idea to do Masters. If the research involved in the college allows for practical learning in these areas (for instance my dissertation was on "Student Engagement" but involved a massive amount of NLP using NLTK).
So everyday I would go looking for an open source project I can help (didnt find much) or coded hobby programs, fan sites, fan applications all in python, slap it to github, and sold myself through github xd
user6845426
damn I should really start doing something
point being, in our business it helps to have experience and connection, but people want 2 things from a coder, are they a good fit to the team socially? and can they code, if u can do both jobs are easy to find
but getting your foot in the door is the first step, go to job fairs and what not, or PyCon if u can xD if you want a job in python, so many recruitors there
21:49
@AnttiHaapala I don't know...that sounds odd
@idjaw @AnttiHaapala and the timing is very convenient
oh and if u arent use to giving up 10 hours of free time a day, u arent ready for work life .... that was my biggest hurdle I had to climb.... lol jumping from doing what ever you want to, sit here and give us code is huge and really sad :(
@idjaw @JGreenwell that's 11 months old comment
oh, wait...nevermind
stupid eyes not reading things correctly
user6845426
21:50
I'm quite used to given up 10 hours a day. When I get significant amounts of time off, I always go to work full time in construction
The good old passing single value to execute
@AnttiHaapala is that a true story ?
@MooingRawr who knows
not going to lie, if that was a true story, that triggered me a bit
@MooingRawr it's on the internet, must be true.
but somehow I could imagine that happening
21:52
@MooingRawr Part of the reason I liked Graduate school was between TA, tutoring, research projects, and standard classes - I came into the workforce and was very used to the workload (but I've heard others who did not do those type of tasks, i.e. could pay for college without or did not want to teach, say the same thing as you)
of course, you are on the interweb with me right now so you guys are true xD @AnttiHaapala
user6845426
@JGreenwell I'll let you know how I get on with Tensorflow xD I'm also using OpenCV for pre processing
define truth
@IljaEverilä also downvoted roseman
@JGreenwell It's really hard... REALLY hard.... and such a shock, to learn that in adulthood, no one cares about others (or rarely) it's all about money flow. There's no safety net and people can be replaced.
thanks that killed 15 minutes xD 5 more and i get to go buy a gpu.... (dont think I will tho now)
@JGreenwell also I think being a TA or a teacher is pretty awesome, you do similar things each year, year in and year out
21:55
yeah, I'm glad my advisor made sure I had set deadlines and really kept the projects I worked on pretty cut-throat (only got to do projects I wanted if I produced results; could be negative but needed to show work and provide "what went wrong or where next analysis" if it was)
@MooingRawr @idjaw @JGreenwell well, I googled, that's the only time that account has mentioned zed, at all... but they write rather regularly about python
at my current company we release quartarly patches, we have a list of things we need to get done before patch day comes, if we finish early then we have nothing else to do.. or we could start on the next patch's list (but it usually get changed around alot). point being dead lines arent really a thing at my company.
user6845426
In my uni, a lot of post grads get employed into the fac to do first year marking and lab help. So thats always a plus
@AnttiHaapala thanks.... but im going to believe it's not true. i dont like jumpping to conclusions xD
I can never understand people in Graduate school who complain about TAing - actually I can when its a quick "man, I wanted the RA position....oh, well. Back to work." Most people just seemed to be whining "Wait?! I have to work and not just attend classes?!"
21:59
@JGreenwell I love the idea of teaching, grading (or coding a software to grade for me), seems so much fun
i dont think i would give up my current job to be a teacher unless it's a university level prof, but still
@JGreenwell Could be worse. Undergrads with full tuition: "Do we have to come to class??"
...........I have a very interesting response for those people @WayneWerner
@WayneWerner oh those are easy, i had a prof who answered: " do or do not, there is no try. If you don't wanna come don't I dont care, if you do wanna come I will do my beat to teach you and help you learn, but if you are just here to try to learn, then I am failing at my job because you should be able to learn not just try." but I thought it was kinda stupid because if someone wasnt trying to learn you arent failing at teach that student... but eh
Mine was, "no, you can give me your scholarship"
I think he was just a star wars fan and wanted to quote yoda...
22:02
@MooingRawr I didn't say it is true, but I am not jumping into conclusions about falsehood either... the way how they write that seems to be like... they don't have anything against him. and neither does that come up later...
welp freedom time, nice chatting with yall have a good one \o rhubarb
@AnttiHaapala i didnt say u said it was true im just thanking you for your services ;3 (#google skills)
@MooingRawr I had a history prof who said that he didn't understand his easy ratings on ratemyprofessor.com - if you didn't come to class you probably wouldn't get a good grade
I mean I was reading an old reddit thread about LPTHW, when I came across that...
and then did a longitudinal study on what that guy was writing about lpthw and zedas.
22:05
Last person who asked me (in a Logic course): I told him "No, in fact you can pass this whole class without attending a single class or taking a single exam. You just have to write me a new proof on <insert unsolved problem here>."
I think the last one was the "automorphism problem" @WayneWerner
max
max
@JGreenwell haha I realized I was wrong! I thought float in range() would be O(1), but it's not! :) so I deleted my question
still waiting on that proof too
max
max
so weird at first, I was thinking why is float in range() even allowed... then if it's allowed why is it slow?
@max you could have asked
@max it is also a dupe
max
max
22:07
but then I realized range() is just a sequence, supports in by iteration
@JGreenwell Nice. Very nice
max
max
so the interpreter literally tries to see if 1.5 in range(int(1e10)) by going through all the items
next time I'm gonna ask for Traveling Salesman - non-heuristic method
@max also: 99999999.0 in that range is going to be slow, 99999999 in is fast
max
max
it's optimized for integer because it's a good use case, but float isn't optimized because who in their right mind would ask if 1.5 in range(10) anyway.. it succeeds randomly if float point arithmetic happens to result in .0 which then compares precisely equal to an int
22:09
that is a Python 3 optimization. In Python 2, xrange doesn't have any special __contains__ implementation
I do remember the kid's answer which was basically "I'll never need to know this stuff so why do I have to learn it?" and when I asked what he wanted to do it was, of course, "develop artificial intelligence"
max
max
yup, that now all makes sense... the only weird thing is why python allows 2.0 == 2 in the first place haha.. i wish it was TypeError to avoid accidental bugs
hem, that would make math more difficult, in Python 3
a == 2 * a / 2
TypeError??
@JGreenwell trololol
max
max
if a is int, why not? encourages people to use // with int. it's never safe to use / i think if you plan to compare it afterwards.
22:12
no. just no.
user6845426
Why isn't OpenCV a nice easy install -.-
@WayneWerner what happens when parents pay completely for college and ask you for no return on their investments
@F.Bar cause no scientific libraries are easy installs
like at all
seriously, not joking, get used to installation pains
max
max
@AnttiHaapala I guess I'm not sure I understand why == is even defined for float. I probably missing something obvious, but I thought == is too unpredictable, so it's better to avoid it entirely. of course, it's fine for int.
user6845426
I didn't realise I can use xcode as my IDE for Python xD
Because you're on Mac, apparently ;) OpenCV is an easy install on Linux
Conda might be of help to you there
but I don't use conda at all so I can't vouch for anything, aside from I hear people talking about it
and you have to admin, anaconda is a pretty cool name
user6845426
22:17
It is a cool name
I do a lot of mathematical calculations and I've never ran into a problem like that with comparisons.....granted, I run into enough rounding errors with floats or decimal that I rarely check if anything "equals" anything. Instead using heuristic based checks or using a set of acceptable ranges (or just checking the unacceptable) to see if I'm within my margin of error.
@max hemm
max
max
@JGreenwell Yeah, that's what I do too. So I kinda learned rule of thumb for myself "never == with floats". Maybe I'm too extreme, but it works. So I guess why not disable it completely haha
you need == to check if 2 float values are equal
There are certainly occasions where you'd want to do that
Though probably less on the practical side of things
22:20
@WayneWerner I like Anaconda
so what do y'all think, how long until the damn excavator tips over?
max
max
I suppose if you want to use a dict {x/10: ... for x in range(100)} to create a lookup table for 0, 0.1, 0.2, ..., 9.9 and you never do any math, but just want to look things up .. that would be a use case for float ==
I am pretty sure at some point there will be an accident and the Cards against humanity says "ok we'll stop doing this and give the remaining money to charity" and then the internuts will be furious
@max and that wouldn't be a proper use case...
I agree that == should not even be defined for floats. It's hugely misleading.
max
max
oh it wouldn't? why? I mean if someone wanted to store sensor data where sensor reports time in 0.1 increments.
22:25
lol.
If I saw a lookup table like that I'd probably flip-out
max
max
well i don't like it either, but i was trying my best to come up with devil's argument against my own idea :(
then I'd send a bunch of multiplication tables to the programmer with a sign that said "Learn basic math"
you wouldn't use == for a float lookup table. Bisect perhaps
max
max
and yeah, i just realized, how would you actually (safely) create those keys to be exactly 0.1, 0.2... if you /10, there's strictly speaking no guarantee float precision won't mess things up. so i take it back, this is not a good use case.
22:27
Floats are not numbers, they're approximations. Two approximations can't equal each other.
max
max
i come back to my original lack of any idea as to valid use cases for float ==
@AnttiHaapala Probably only if they couldn't figure a way around it. After all - they bought and island
waits for the "Floats are numbers too!" protesters to show up
Intel Underestimates Error Bounds by 1.3 quintillion
I hope they've got some good lighting for the night :D
22:29
They're not. If I have 20 bucks give or take a few, and you have 20 bucks give or take a few, we don't have the same amount of money.
@AnttiHaapala That's delightful
Getting rid of float equality would just make programs more correct.
@AnttiHaapala Looks like they had a big generator with work lights on it.
ah yeah I didn't watch it for some time, gets dark quite fast :D
now one gets only 1.5 seconds for one $
fast inflation
was a poor attempt at a joke @QuestionC - you are completely correct that floats are approximations (infinite number into fixed number of bits requires this)
22:33
I just hate float equality so much.
do you need a hug?
I don't get to talk about the horrors of float equality at Thanksgiving, y'all have to humor me a little.
cause I'm not giving you one but still someone might ;)
I'm assuming QuestionC is one of those who think Ulps is one of the worst curse words
22:49
>>> from decimal import Decimal as D
>>> from math import sin, pi
>>> D(pi) + D(sin(pi))
Decimal('3.141592653589793238462643383')
TIL, beautiful!
They should have hired Mike Mulligan
I remember once learning a "PI song" to memorize the first 20 digits
@WayneWerner my son loved that book when he was younger. Then I found an Animanics episode based on it and was the "best dad ever" for a day
wow mind blown:
Sin() is trivial (for almost half of input values)

For small enough doubles, the best answer for sin(x) is x. That is, for numbers smaller than about 1.49e-8, the closest double to the sine of x is actually x itself.
anw rbrb for now
bedtime
There's some pi in here:
woah
Good try chrome, that wasn't the link to Youtube
night Antti

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