« first day (2255 days earlier)      last day (2920 days later) » 

how to sort a Counter object in descending order as per it;s value ? and not key ?
Counter is a type of dict. You may just do: sorted(my_counter, key=my_counter.get, reverse=True)
Here, reverse=True means to sort it in the descending order
i was trying c.sort(reverse=True) but yours worked...
c.sort(key=my_counter.get, reverse=True) will also work
By key param you tell the python the value based on which it has to perform sorting
print('\n'.join(sorted(mycounter.most_common(), key=lambda x: x[1], reverse=True)))
13:15
yep gotcha
it was not that hard as i thought
@jagdish That's pretty accurate for most of Python
i am new to this and still in learning mode
Stay in learning mode ;)
Happy Learning, Keep Experimenting :D
stackoverflow.com/q/40847961/2301450 unclear/tb (my vote aged away)
great answer by the way
13:22
LoL :D :D
@vaultah I think we should have a similar answer on Meta which we should be linking with the questions like this ;)
also with the question of "do this for me" type
user6568562
Cbg !
cbg everyone =)
I just answered a question that I guess should've been closed as "no mcve". You'd think someone with 2.7k of rep from asking questions would at least post some sample input data & expected output, even if they couldn't write any code... But I answered it because I felt like writing some code, and I enjoy bit-twidling. :)
@PM2Ring If you will check his profile, all the reputation that he has got is via asking question and not by answering them :P
13:37
@MoinuddinQuadri Yeah, that's why I said "someone with 2.7k of rep from asking questions"
FWIW, there are SO members who mostly just ask questions with much higher rep, although a lot of that rep is from old questions that have been viewed zillions of times, so they have obscene scores.
My "How do I break out of ssh when it locks" question on AskUbuntu has a pretty ridiculous score
234
Q: How can I break out of ssh when it locks?

Wayne WernerI frequently ssh into my box at home from school, but usually when I change classes and my computer suspends, the pipe will be broken. However, ssh simply locks up - Ctrl+c, Ctrl+z and Ctrl+d have no effect. It's annoying to have to restart my terminal, and even more annoying to have to close a...

probably over 90% of my rep there is from that question
I saw this Chemistry question in the Hot Network Questions a little while ago: Why doesn't H2O burn?. Some of the comments quote or link to Derek Lowe's classic blog posts:
@AnttiHaapala fuck datetime
13:53
Nice. People used to suggest arrow
but I guess that was before we all realized it was total rubbish
U&L doesn't have anywhere the amount of traffic as AskUbuntu, but sometimes you can get lucky, eg with this simple answer to How do I know which version of Debian I'm running?. It got quite a few points when it was fresh, and for some reason it keeps on accumulating points, which is nice.
well, maya is kinda new, 3 days old so we'll see..
I am not sure if I like it yet... :D
me neither -- but looks promising
I don't see separate classes for dates without tz and dates with tz...
13:57
fork + commit + merge :)
it is a nice tiny little project
very easy to contribute it
:)
It does look promising.
@PeterVaro Have you seen a project of kenneths that isn't good? I mean, some of them might be unfinished...
@AnttiHaapala My guess is that the Maya objects always use UTC as the timezone. Other timezones are handled as an input or output attribute. Evidence:
# Always.
>>> rand_day.timezone
UTC
@PM2Ring I still don't like it.
specifically because sometimes one needs to handle both
that is, points in time and different timezones.
user6820627
has anybody experience with turtle (a python module)
14:06
recbg
@AnttiHaapala Sure, but maybe Maya's approach to handling multiple timezones is feasible. I can't really make any judgments about it at this stage.
@AndrasDeak, cbg
Welcome to the SO Python Chat room, @LearnHowToBeTransparent. Please take a look at our Room rules.
@LearnHowToBeTransparent Several of the regulars here have experience with Turtle, so please ask your question, and if someone has the necessary knowledge, and feels like answering they will respond. However, at this time of day / week there's not much traffic here, so don't expect an immediate response.
user6820627
@PM2Ring no i am not going to ask any questions. just curious.
user6820627
!!afk not a python dev. just answer this question in teenage room chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/34658029#34658029
14:17
@LearnHowToBeTransparent Ah, ok. When people say stuff like "does anybody have experience with xyz" we get a bit wary, because help vampires often say stuff like that when they're looking for a victim. :)
But having said that, yes, I've used Turtle a little bit in Python, mostly just to answer SO questions. And I've played with turtle graphics in other languages, including Logo, but that was several decades ago.
user6820627
@PM2Ring if so you can enjoy JS canvas. it works like turtle but better.
@LearnHowToBeTransparent Oh, I've used JS Canvas way more than I've used Turtle, but I haven't done much stuff in JavaScript in the last year or two. I spend too much time answering Python questions on SO. :)
@khajvah, cbg
can I learn node.js in 5 hours?
14:23
I also enjoy doing graphics in hand-coded SVG, including SVG animation with JavaScript. But for non-dynamic 2D graphics I still have a soft spot for PostScript. For 3D stuff (like my avatar), I use POV-Ray.
@PeterVaro Maya looks good to me. Will definitely be contributing
@khajvah : Depends on the kind of deep knowledge you trying to learn. If you want to just print Hello World. You might be able to do it in 3 minutes.
@MoinuddinQuadri I have 5 hour practical test/interview
and have never done node.js
I have no idea why they called me
@khajvah: Test interview of? College or Job? If job, I will suggest to inform them before hand. In fact you should have done that when you were informed for that
job, they know that I don't know node.js
it's a node.js job nonetheless
Well. Then just go. May be they want to see your googleing skills :P
14:30
I already told them that I am experienced SO copy paster
If they know you don't know node.js, don't worry about it
you can explicitly refer to this if they expect you to know it anyway
you wouldn't want to work where they expect the impossible from you anyway
But the bigger question is, are you passionate about Node.js? If you are, and they select you; you won't face any issue. If you are not passionate, there is no point in going over there
I am assuming I will write a program
@MoinuddinQuadri I am not passionate about any particular language
^inb4 kickbanned from the python room
:D
Python is the least I hate up until now
14:32
Do I consider it as not passionate about coding OR you are passionate about coding irrespective of the language?
about language
I like coding
Great :D Go and be confident. All the best!
Yeah, get going. 5 hours only sounds like a lot if you're not a sloth.
@AndrasDeak damn
@MoinuddinQuadri TY sir
14:34
@PeterVaro Whaat?
> Laszlo Szombatfalvy, one of Sweden’s most successful investors of all time
oh, '56 emigrant
> Like Buffett, he started life in very humble circumstances. He arrived to Sweden from Hungary in 1956, when his native country faced Soviet oppression.
yepp
anyone knows how to go to upto certain distance on circle in turtle library ?
what's with all the turtles?
Oh, right, it's turtles all the way down.
Anyone for a spot of code golf? :) I have a 77 char solution.
14:49
:D
they can't even formulate their gimme-teh-codez specification properly
I'd love to give it a shot =)
@PM2Ring hmm
@jagdish Your question isn't clear. I think you're asking how to draw an arc of a circle. As the example in the docs shows, you can draw a semicircle with turtle.circle(radius, 180). So a quarter circle would be turtle.circle(radius, 90)
i found and done it...
@PM2Ring and the example remainder is off too, lol:D
15:01
@AndrasDeak A lot of kids these days aren't great at mental arithmetic. :) And I guess it might not be totally obvious that an odd remainder is impossible when dividing an even number by another even number...
BTW, that 77 char solution includes the printing stuff. The inner list comp / generator is 60 chars, including the brackets.
@PM2Ring not counting the returns/indentation, I'm at 181 characters, and the solution isn't quite working =)
(::goes back to debugging::)
though, it's longer, but there's some unnecessary stuff in there.
I came up with 101
i'm down to 143
@PM2Ring what does it ask actually?
that is, does it ask to print all numbers in that range if they have the sum in between there?
down to 125 now
sweet
and now I've got it working as well, and it's down to 122
15:06
@AnttiHaapala all remainders for numbers of that range
print the actual number
@AnttiHaapala For each number n in range(5959, 6500), let s be the sum of its digits. If s % 8 is in {1, 2, 3, 4} then print n
oops, you're right:D
sorry
now down to 113
91 =D
For range(5959, 6500) you should get 270 numbers printed. We can make the output more manageable by reducing the input to range(5959,5980), which gives 10 answers.
15:09
95 now
@heather Looking good!
down to 80
oh, lambda is longer than proper fun
wait, you got 10 answers for 5959, 5980?
15:10
that's not good
i only got 6
eesh
66 chars
86 with a lambda \o/
I'm done:D
For range(5959,5980) the numbers to be printed are in [5959, 5960, 5965, 5966, 5967, 5968, 5974, 5975, 5976, 5977]
wait, I printed twice
output 5959 5960 5965 5966 5967 5968 5974 5975 5976 5977
15:11
what is wrong with my code? ::smacks interpreter::
it is not a function tho
@AnttiHaapala Are you printing one number per line?
@PM2Ring no, all numbers in one line
boooo:P
15:12
75
for all numbers on separate lines
oh shit that post got an answer in the grace period
75+enter that is :P
@AndrasDeak flagging as vlq because it doesn't explain code
@heather OK, hopefully Antti will delete the question before it gets into any queue:P
Also downvoted, partly because worthy of a downvote, and partly because I was at an odd number in reputation =)
15:16
are you an odd-hater?
sum(map(int, str(n))) - this is a legitimate way to sum all the digits of a number, right?
nope
wait
@AndrasDeak no, I like prime numbers; I just like hitting multiples of 10 in my reputation
no, that might be right:)
huh
then I have no idea what the problem is.
15:17
yeah, that's right:)
75 still my shortest
@heather Wooo, Found another friend!
that makes my solution 73:P
the function anyway, it needs to be given 2 integers still
I want my rep to be a multiple of 5.
@BhargavRao, it's very nice to have that =)
it's calming, almost
15:18
Just realized that I've got 14,641 helpful flags, That's a nice palindrome! ... It's the square of 121, Which is a square of 11.
7
I can get it down to 66 chars, printing one number per line, but that involves list comp abuse: calling print in the list comp, but I guess that's tolerable for golf. For all numbers on one line without abusing a list comp, I can do 68 chars.
that's awesome @BhargavRao!
@PM2Ring I did that, abusing a listcomp
Thanks :D
@AndrasDeak ah I hardcoded
15:19
@BhargavRao Those are binomial coefficients: (a + b)**4
@AndrasDeak it prints or returns?
prints
print or return? :D
and returns a few Nones:P
15:20
Here's my original solution:
print(*(u for u in range(5959,5980)if 1<=sum(map(int,str(u)))%8<=4),sep='\n')
@PM2Ring same as mine but you missed the 77->75 optimization
for n in range(5959, 5980):
    if ((sum(map(int, str(n))))%8) in range(1, 4):
        print n
lambda n,m:[print(k) for k in range(n,m+1) if 0<sum(map(int,str(k)))%8<5]
And the list comp abusing version:
print(*(i for i in range(5959,5980)if 0<sum(map(int,str(i)))%8<5),sep='\n')
15:21
[print(u)for u in range(5959,5980)if 1<=sum(map(int,str(u)))%8<=4]
the solution that is having issues is the appropriate name for mine =)
as a function:
@AnttiHaapala D'oh. :slaps self:
lambda *x:[i for i in range(*x)if 0<sum(map(int,str(i)))%8<5]
anyone mind pointing out to me the error in my solution?
15:23
@heather in range(1,5)
right ^
another error is using Python 2.
oh...
that is the worse one.
and you have some unnecessary parentheses
15:23
and it lists 10.
and whitespace:P
cut out some parentheses
and it works
no PEP8 for code golf
what's PEP8?
oh, right nvm
style guide
anyway, usually python3.6 is best for code golf
15:26
@AnttiHaapala why?
more shortcuts
oh.
well, cutting out the parentheses and such, I'm down to 76 characters.
and not including whitespace.
@heather you must count the whitespace that you're using.
including newlines and spaces for indentation.
15:28
For example, Python 3.6 syntax is a little more liberal about accepting the * "splat" operator in places that earlier versions don't allow. Also, 3.6 has f-strings, which can make fancy printing more compact than older ways of doing formatting.
this characters = total unicode codepoints
count just jumped back up to 90, then. darn, now I have to figure out how to get it on one line.
for example here you can switch str(i) with f'{i}' but it doesn't save any chars :D
and the print can go on one line with the if
it can?
wow
didn't know that
down to 81 then
15:31
@heather z in range(1,5) is longer than z in(1,2,3,4) and 0<z<5 is shorter still.
true.
and now it's down to 69 =)
including whitespace.
ok lets change the rules somewhat
sum of digits mod 9 :P
@AnttiHaapala That makes it a bit easier. :)
just change it from %8 to %9 then, right?
how is it easier?
lambda *x:[i for i in range(*x)if 0<i%9<5]
@heather because i % 9 is the sum of the digits % 9
>>> 12345%9
6
>>> 123450000%9
6
>>> 12345000000000%9
6
15:37
oh, seriously? that's cool.
yup
same for mod-3
what sum?
whether or not the mod is in there; that's shorter (and correct)
@heather Antti's code works because 10%9 == 1, so (10**n)%9 == 1 for any n>=0. Thus for any number (a + 10*b + 100*c + ...) % 9 == (a+b+c+...) % 9
i think that makes sense
15:41
I was trying to find a nicer way of doing 1 <= n <= 4
0<n<5:P
for n in range(5959,5980):
    if 1<sum(map(int, str(n)))%8<5:print n
@Code-Apprentice, cbg
15:43
@heather need to include 1
change to 0
right?
Yep. And you can use a single space for indentation when doing code golf.
you still have a spurious space in the map()
ack, spurious spacing!
15:44
lambda *x:[i for i in range(*x)if sum(map(int,f'{i}'))%8+3&4]
65 characters now
What are we code golfing?
no need for space between , and str
for n in range(5959,5980):
 if 0<sum(map(int,str(n)))%8<5:print n
there we go
@PM2Ring heather beat us^, that'd be 66 in python3 :P
15:47
@AnttiHaapala, there's no way I beat you guys. you had one line solutions!
non-one-line is just +1 char
indentation another
who the yam upvoted that answer
grrrrr
@heather I don't understand. That link doesn't have a cold golf problem.
does it not?:P
@Code-Apprentice, yeah, I just realized I linked the wrong thing
sorry!
right, wrong link
hehe:D
15:50
^
for n in range(5959,5980):0<sum(map(int,str(n)))%8<5and print(n)
65 in python 3 (will print also False's in interactive console)
sorry, 64
curses, now I have to try to make mine shorter =P
lol, golfing someone's homework problem.
for n in range(5959,5980):sum(map(int,str(n)))-1&4or print(n)
61
Started this with my son. We got as far as the first letter of his name and changing colours when clicked. Then he had enough.
Well. I tried. Will try again later :D
15:54
(again it doesn't work correctly in interactive shell)
hmm...didn't do the linky thing...aw well
weird duh
how old is he
four and a half :P
transalted into finnish
probably too young
but I was really excited to do this with him.
I think it was more for me than him
:P
15:58
:P
as always
haha:D
@idjaw you might just give up, I guess, no matter how much you try he will turn into a chemist.
a microchip off the old block
@AnttiHaapala hahaha. Well played!
Anyone familiar with cheap robotics kits? Perhaps with a Raspberry Pi.
16:03
my dad's got a couple of raspberry pi's, i have an arduino that i sometimes use/mess with
@Code-Apprentice That's my fault. See chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/34658454#34658454 Some of us like to post correct but unusable answers to gimme-teh-codez homework questions, but unfortunately that sort of thing is discouraged these days as being too snarky. So I turned it into a round of golf instead.
"unusable" as in it uses advanced language features that are obviously beyond the scope of a beginner class?
@heather My two nephews are probably close to your age and starting to learn about robots in school and/or extracurricular activities. Not sure if they are doing much programming yet. My brother (their dad) didn't know many details. (He's not a programmer.)
@Code-Apprentice, yeah, there's a robotics extracurricular and an engineering class at my school. There's a chance, if they're in the extracurricular, that they are using LEGO NXT.
16:13
What state are you in?
They are in Texas.
iowa
miniinthebox.com/robot-cucaracha-de-energia-solar_p104152.html looks fun. I might get one for my kitten.
oh...it doesn't walk. It just vibrates.
yeah, just realized that ^
shakes its booty
16:29
@Code-Apprentice Yep. Incomprehensible comprehensions are preferred. :) But really, any code that's obviously too advanced for the OP, so their teacher will immediately know they didn't write it. Another trick is to "hide" a message to the teacher in the variable names.
I am having the weirdest problem. Even when I switch my Day 17 solution from A* to full BFS traversal, I still only get the one shortest path as output.
@davidism are you returning when you hit the exit?
you need to store it and continue
I am, that's the weird part.
I did something similar, and only got part of the outputs
Like for the initial example, it still only traverses 15 nodes then appends the shortest solution and the queue is empty.
16:37
hmm
Code?
please don't be something stupid
Find all the neighbors, put them on the queue, append and continue if it's 3, 3.
Rhubarb
16:45
oooh, that itertool is neat:)
Hmm, it doesn't find any solutions for the second and third examples before exiting.
But it works (for part 1) for the first example and my input.
aren't your conditions off-by-one?
y<3 vs y>1
maybe the optimal path doesn't run into those cases which you miss
;_; it was something dumb
thanks
no worries:)
This is the second time I've done something like that.
16:48
JavaScript isn't bad
@khajvah who are you trying to convince? Yourself or us?:D
Myself
and then after that, you all
and then we will all become webscale developers
@khajvah of course it isn't!
our python will have web scales
@AndrasDeak only JavaScript and Node.js are websclae
I'm definitely renaming Flask-ASGI to WebScales now.
As soon as I get around to figuring out ASGI.
16:52
@khajvah: I am not convinced :P
I want to have a prototype for PyCon, so only 6 months left.
on serious note: I like the event based, async, stuff
of course the language is ugly but coffeescript fixes that
I am interested in contributing to any nice python based open-source project. Any suggestion?
@MoinuddinQuadri pypy
its CPython api support in particular

« first day (2255 days earlier)      last day (2920 days later) »