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oh yah...I starred it already
using branches, I see! very nice
yeah =)
branches are so useful.
I probably go a bit overboard with them. On one project, I probably have 20 branches atm.
what part are you working on now? @heather
@Code-Apprentice, well, I finished the dict thing you guys recommended, and now I'm trying to split it up into a functions file and a main file that imports the functions file, and I'm having issues
and then once I finish that I'll go back to the database work.
I saw the function.py file. What part are you having issues with?
I did a simple run of your code and it worked without issues. Of course, that was only through one branch of your code.
00:17
well, right now when I run and input 1, 0, Hadamard, it gives the error "NameError: "Hadamard" is not defined"
and I'm not sure if all the variables are being stored properly, with the functions
What exact version of Python are you using?
@heather Do you enter "y" after that sequence of inputs?
or does the error occur before you get to that point?
it occurs before I get to that point
How are you running your code?
oh, darn, I think I figured out the problem
are you doing python main-file.py?
00:25
yes
I'm asking all these questions because I didn't get the same result again ;-(
but i just checked the version, and it's running 2.7.6, but I coded in python 3
yup, okay sudo apt-get install python3 should fix this
try python3 main-file.py instead.
yup
00:26
oh, okay
sounds good
you might need to change the python symbolic link or use python3 explicitly
the python3 thing might be working, but now i'm having trouble with not having numpy installed
try sudo apt-get install numpy
did that, now i'm installing scipy
then I should be good (hopefully) to go
good luck!
00:34
i'll let you know if it works =)
I will smack my computer
ImportError: no module named numpy
wait, let me try one thing
yep, nope, doesn't work
tomato
maybe I need to install python3-numpy, let me try that
What happens if you run python3 and import numpy from the repl?
no module named numpy
yah, try installing that package
are you on Ubuntu?
00:41
yes
and yes, it worked!!!
=D
now I know it's working and I can merge the branch and work on the database/2 qubit problem
and i have the environment set up so I can test my code
sounds good. Keep it up!
Let us know when you encounter other problems.
okay, thanks for your help!
00:44
I have to go now, have a good night
 
4 hours later…
04:58
rdy
05:13
shit rank 40 :/:/
stupid pycharm again
I couldn't copy from terminal and typed the password, no, it is hexadecimal idiot, that 1 is not a lower-case L
still rather well because I woke up 8 minutes before
wim
wim
this one needed megaflops man
but I feel I could have squeezed it in 2 less minutes
wim
wim
I'm doing it on a slow ass macbook
toy computer
wim
wim
I must have got an unlucky input, it took ages to grind through
05:17
what are your timings
thanks, your aocd module helped a bit :D
wim
wim
it took 75 seconds
for both?
wim
wim
yeah and then another 75 seconds when I had an off by one error :(
luckily I didn't have those
./runit.sh 5 42.03s user 0.03s system 99% cpu 42.111 total
wim
wim
yeah still pretty slow
05:20
ok let me find my final count
25176241
ah I did lose some time because I had 6 zeroes in my startswith
@wim 10 seconds off... used bytes and %
wim
wim
md5 needs bytes, doesn't it ?
Is there any better way to get from 2 to b'2' than str(2).encode('ascii') ?
wim
wim
?
I'm on 3.5.2
format = door_id.encode() + b'%d'
to_hash = format % counter
wim
wim
pffff
05:30
25 % reduction in runtime
but I only tested it afterwards
wim
wim
so b'%d' % 2 works, but b'{}'.format(2) is not supported
or I used
door_id = (d.data.strip() + '%d').encode()
wim
wim
that sucks
it makes sense.
format returns unicode strings
how would you handle them in binary
one would need bformat with __bformat__
wim
wim
it does make sense, yeah, but a convenience of python 2 is lost here with no replacement offered
05:32
"python 2"
it was backported from Python 3, but, yeah...
anyway, format would be the slowest in Python 2, so ... yeah... :D
interesting, I am now trying digest instead of hexdigest
Morning ;)
hey whats up guys i have a quick question
i read that sorts like smoothsort can work well on nearly-sorted lists
what are real-world scenarios where lists are nearly sorted? I couldn't find any online
ask a user for many random numbers between two bounds. You're almost guaranteed to get sorted runs
weather data has sorted runs, so does stock price data
has anyone upgraded to os x sierra yet?
05:55
@wim you've got some inefficiencies in your code
first of all, I now put the code in functions. locals are way faster than globals
format is way slower than %
in python 3.6 f'' strings will be faster than %, for strings. not for bytes, because of the extra encode
also your last if, you should put it inside the other if, because everything on the main loop level slows it down
hmm also, if on line 17 should be indented
WAT?!
06:31
aight thanks inspectorgadget
 
1 hour later…
07:41
Cabbage
@AndrewHu Here's another common case where you need to sort an almost sorted list. You have a sorted list that you want to add new data to. You could sort the new data and then insert the new items into the old list, but it's simpler (and generally more efficient in Python) to just extend the old list with the new data, and then sort the extended list.
OTOH, if you need to do this a lot it may be better to use a data structure that's designed to maintain its data in sorted order, like a heap
@PM2Ring I wonder if it is even better to sort the extended data first
that is, sorted_list.extend(sorted(new_items)); sorted_list.sort()
@AndrewHu there is also merge in the heapq module for merging n sorted inputs
@PM2Ring funny again, how "python 3 didn't add anything":
@AnttiHaapala Well, you don't need to do that, but it can make the insert operation a little more efficient. OTOH, depending on the actual old & new data, the overhead in sorting may be more than the overhead in inserting unsorted data.
Is AOC5 just a brute force or is there some clever trick?
cbg folks
08:29
@Ffisegydd brute. nothing clever.
@Ffisegydd if you find a clever trick, you've just broken bitcoin
Fun, brute-forcing MD5 hashes. Did anyone find a better approach than incrementing a counter?
(It doesn't take long, but MD5 is a broken algorithm, albeit that using text makes it harder to produce collisions).
ah, thank you train connection, now that I caught up with the conversation I can see others have discussed this already :-P
@MartijnPieters nope, naturally there's no better approach
there is the avalanche effect, which during finalization round will completely change all bits including the beginning ones
however I did try cloning the md5hash
it will be slower
the best optimization is to use bytes %
@MartijnPieters (aoc spoiler)
08:49
morning all
I build a docker image from this dockerfile. However, when I run the image in a container, the container automatically exits. Any ideas?
FROM ubuntu:16.04
MAINTAINER Ming "[email protected]"
RUN apt-get -y update
RUN apt-get -y upgrade
RUN apt-get -y install sudo
RUN echo 'Updates have been done...'
RUN echo 'Installing essential libraries now...'
RUN apt-get -y install python3
RUN apt-get -y install python3-pip
RUN apt-get -y install libpq-dev
RUN pip3 install psycopg2
EXPOSE 5432 8001 8002 80
CMD echo 'hey welcome to my container'
CMD mkdir /home/myworkdspace
i did docker build -t my_postgres . and docker run -it --name testContainer1 my_postgres
is it because of the last 2 CMD commands? that is causing it to exit?
gg italy for rejecting democracy
08:55
:D
Needa help
?
got it fixed :)
@AnttiHaapala exactly what I used.
I wrapped the whole thing in a generator.
09:04
Cabbage!
roughly 45 seconds total for both solutions.
My 'do I have enough positions filled yet' test probably could be more efficient.
Nope, doesn't make any difference; there are not that many candidates that you discard again.
is there any gain of doing import MODULE, instead of from module import function?
@Ming what was the solution?
for example, i just want to disable traceback, so i just need "tracebacklimit" from sys
09:10
@AnttiHaapala haha in austrian language this picture "Joo ei" -> is "Jo eh", which also means -> no :D
is there any performance indications of importing whole libraries like that, instead of just the function?
@manuzi1 :P
@manuzi1 pretty close :P
:D
thats a no + gtfo ;)
@manuzi1 yeap. In our office, a manager / damager starts a sentence... "Should we...?" - "Joo ei."
09:21
but anw: thanks, as TIL :D
ello
@Kevin.a cbg
09:43
Cbg
Morning.
How is Monday treating everyone this side of the Atlantic so far?
I've just about thawed out enough from my bike ride to type.
It's brilliant. A bit foggy in Ljubljana but my mood is great.
How are things over the Channel?
Our temperatures are just below 0°C and gloves for me are barely necessary.
Likewise, except for the bit about the gloves, cause bike. :D
I'm quite chipper, just over two weeks and then I'm off for a fortnight. \o/
Oh, I bike as well.
Oh, a fortnight. Fancy.
:o I had gloves on and I could barely feel my fingers by the time I got in to the gym. /been out of scotland too long.
Ljubljana hey? I think Slovenia's the only place in that region I've not been to, should probably remedy that...
09:58
Well if you're ever here, I can't help you much. Don't know anything about bars and restaurants. :)
Hah! Andras was the same when i was going to Budapest. :p
10:15
@Withnail I was trying to remember which side of the Atlantic you were and "chipper" and "fortnight" helped a lot :-)
@RomanLuštrik I really like The Dreams, an Allman Brothers tribute band from Slovenia. Here's a clip of their cover of Don't Want You No More / It's Not My Cross To Bear.
Mornin' all
@RobertGrant :D
is fortnight not a thing in the US?
Nope. They get very confused by it
huh. TIL.
10:22
Also, in Texas if you say: "Meet you at half seven", you will be standing around wondering where everyone is
For some reason, they treat that as "half TO seven"
'tis madness
On a related note, Americans generally don't use the term "long weekend". Instead, they say "3 day weekend". I've even seen "4 day 3 day weekend". :)
That's horrific
10:44
cbg
@IntrepidBrit this is standard Finnish idiom though.
you can only say "half seven" or "six thirty"... should you use anything else and people would get very confused :D
and six thirty is AM
@Withnail -10 C here, I took the bus :D
The 'half to' is quite common, I think that's also the cause auf deutsch. 'Est ist halb neun' is 8:30
Don't think our buses would run in -10 :D
I took the bus not because of the temperature, but because I fell on Friday and bruised my shoulder... :P
-10 is fine
its not that cold
-10 C is pleasant
-2, -3 is better though
-25 is annoying
the lowest in my life I remember was -35
quite funny
10:52
-2 here in austria ;9
so close to the sea here that probably the -35 is the lowest I've experienced too
@AnttiHaapala That's fair enough - I know the Spanish speaking world is the same.
user6568562
18° here
@randomhopeful proof?
@Withnail Starting to think our little island is the odd one out, again.
10:58
:D
how wrong you are
@IntrepidBrit halv sju in Swedish too...
user6568562
@AnttiHaapala goo.gl/Km7IJK
@IntrepidBrit can't imagine when that's ever been the case.
rolls eyes
@randomhopeful proof
user6568562
@AnttiHaapala Oh lol. Okay, okay
user6568562
18 °C, excusez-moi
11:00
18 ° = 10 % ABV
user6568562
That would make a fine wine
@AnttiHaapala Good old Swedes!
The weather bureau here predicted we'd get up to 35°C in my region today. It only reached 28.5°C and it's now down to 24°C (at 10PM). And we finally got some decent rain. It's been very dry here for the last 2 months, but a storm hit around 5PM and it's been raining ever since.
BAH part 2 is kicking my ass
the test input works but the actual doesn't
annoyed cbg
@AndrasDeak off by one?
11:06
I don't think so. I get overwritten letters, so 11 numbers generate the 8 after overwriting a few
I don't think that's by design...
I don't get why it worked for the test and not for the real one
and it worked fine in part 1
@AndrasDeak the rules say "take the first matching one"
oh fuck me, thanks
so you store them in a dictionary iff not pos in dict
yeah, sure, I can think of a dozen ways
thanks:)
I thought I read it properly after submittin the wrong answer:D
and I was so happy that I had to change only minimal things
I see you were active at 7:12, @Antti:D
11:25
@heather yeah, you have to handle these return values somehow...
it might be easier (?) to define a class that does your operations, and store these operation-specific parameters in attributes of a class instance
just a guess, I've never done OOP on my own accord
11:47
something like ops.set_gate(qubits) that does the reading depending on number of qubits possibly, and sets ops.qstat, ops.mem1, ops.mem2 etc. In your current code btw, these mem* variables are globals, but you need to specify global mem1 in your functions when you're trying to overwrite them. Otherwise you're just defining a local variable of the same name in the function, that dies when the function call is over
but defining a class might be more elegant than using globals
OOP might be more suited to your overall read-stuff-in-parallel-and-determine-what-to-do-with-much-headscratch
you can have state then, and not just procedurally look at your inputs
post-design-meeting cabbage to you all
12:04
@holdenweb cabbage
why did no one tell me about this??
have just seen a scribbled doc that suggests I'm being put on a bunch of meetings/subcommittees as 'internal IT lead'.
of course i'm the internal IT lead, i'm the only developer.
so you're also the outernal IT lead and the internal IT tin
Feel free to balance how much of my time I spend snapping at people in meetings vs actually making stuff though.
exactly
AoC done
I saw you in between the two parts:>
12:06
@AndrasDeak mind = blown :O
(I knew about dots, but not the plus....which would be a huge plus)
@AndrasDeak really bugs me when email form validation refuses to accept addresses with the plus in.
I tend to use +trainwifi or +airportwifi or whatever nonsense I'm signing up to so I can route them straight to the bin.
Wish I'd realised that when I was doing user testing about 5 years ago we had about 30 sequentially numbered gmail addresses we used instead... :D
12:10
stupidstartuptest1, etc.
heya
@AndrasDeak , so with the global/local variable thing, is that what's happening with qstat right now?
12:32
@AndrasDeak cbg :)
cbg all
13:00
@heather There's some good info on Python's scoping rules here: Short Description of Scoping Rules. That's a rather old question, so the answers mostly focus on Python 2, so please see Antti's answer for additional info that applies to Python 3.
You may also find this article helpful: Facts and myths about Python names and values, which was written by SO veteran Ned Batchelder. A brief summary (with nice diagrams) can be found at Other languages have "variables", Python has "names".
@PM2Ring Is there a special reson for the “SO veteran” title in front of his name? You do that a lot…
I'm guessing it's a term of respect - people like Ned have contributed a lot to the Python ecosystem
@poke Well, Ned is a SO veteran, but I haven't seen him post since not long after I joined. I assume newer members may not have encountered any of his answers, which are generally of very high quality, so I like to let them know that I'm not just linking to some random blogger. :)
FWIW, I don't type that stuff every time I post it - it comes from a Firefox userscript that generates common SO comments.
@Withnail i had to remove the CMD lines
was that still the case running it with the -d flag?
13:14
And yes, I do have a lot of respect for Ned. I've linked to his "Facts and myths" post a lot, both in here & on the main SO site, and I reckon he's entitled to my respect, and the extra traffic I send his way. The "Facts and myths" post isn't perfect, but it's pretty damn close. :)
@Withnail i didnt try it with the -d flag. but my guess was it was running my CMD command and then exited because it completed the command. so even with the -d, i would assume it would still complete
yeah, that's sort of why i was asking, i was wondering if it worked like running a shell command with nohup, so would keep running even after running those commands? hm.
i see. hmm. maybe will give it a try later.
let me know if you do! relevant to something I'm doing later in t'week.
will do. or you can also copy my dockerfile code and just build it.
haah
13:18
\o cbg how goes it ?
$%£"$TG£"$£
Finally catching up on my advent of code. I dislike this part 2.
oh yeah. murrr.
@PM2Ring aah
FWIW, you can get the script here: gist.github.com/kms70847/b600792c78b0790c3c4d
13:38
So... What are the odds AoC is a long con to get millions of participants to construct an md5 rainbow table for the administrator?
DSM
DSM
Multicoloured cabbage for all!
@ming interesting, I get this when I run it in daemon mode.
97869744dcf5docker: Error response from daemon: invalid header field value "oci runtime error: container_linux.go:247: starting container process caused \"exec: \\\"-d\\\": executable file not found in $PATH\"\n".
@Kevin seems like there are easier ways to do such things
Yeah, a simple botnet would do
wow @Withnail
no idea what that is
13:40
Probably get one off the deep web for as much as he's paying in web hosting now
DSM
DSM
Don't we all use the same input, though? Not a very long table, if so.
I don't know, I haven't compared my input to anyone else's.
I guess it would be tricky to provide unique-ish input to each user for challenges that require a lot of brute force
It's different
I don't know about the test, but I know the input is
because my turtle code for the taxi cab produced a different image when someone else ran it
it looked like mine, ish, but rotated 90º
DSM
DSM
Has that always been true? I feel sure I compared specifics with people last year (although it's been too long for me to remember the details of the questions.)
back
13:46
It would be fairly easy to write some code that would seed some random values up. Might not be true for all of them.
Well if each input requires the calculation of a million md5 hashes, and he's got, say, ten thousand unique puzzle inputs, then he's got to have some monster hardware
Hi, DSM.
Nov 29 at 12:42, by PM 2Ring
I keep missing DSM & Fizzy. I want to know if any of our data science / probability experts have any suggestions re the question Andras & I answered the other day: http://stackoverflow.com/q/40828527/4014959
DSM
DSM
Because md5 is well-distributed, pretty much every input will have roughly the same time-to-N-quint-0s. I think he would only have needed to try a bunch to verify that the behaviour matches expectations.
@PM2Ring: hey, @PM2Ring. I'll have a look, although before my morning coffee I'm basically only capable of doing AoC. ;-)
Well he's got to calculate the answer for each input eventually, either 1) when he originally wrote the question; or 2) on the fly, when each user submits their answer to see if it's correct. Unless this is one of those problems where it's easier to verify an answer than it is to find one, he can't avoid calculating a billion hashes.
@DSM Thanks! There's no rush, and it's not a big deal, but I'm curious to know if there's a simple solution in terms of well-known random distribution functions. Please feel free to write your own answer. :) But if it's something that I could learn about given a few keywords to get me headed in the right direction that'd be cool too.
13:54
@Kevin Plus, they'd actually have to be providing the hash. Unless that's part 2, I haven't made it there yet.
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: hmmph, you're right, I didn't even think about the validation side. I was just thinking that he wouldn't need to search to find them. (See coffee comment from before.) He probably just chose some number of keys and is cycling through.
I wonder how hot my Pi is getting

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