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2 hours later…
01:51
I asked few question in here in the last few days for an interview that was today. The interview went ok, but I know I will not be call back. I think my mistake was that I was reading interview question about software developer and not what I was the interview about. That it was a network engineer with python experience. Thanks everybody for you help in the last few days.
This was my first coding interview and I think I gain a ton of experience with just one.
wim
wim
02:11
Hey @MarcusS are you there
Yeah
wim
wim
I was trying to brush up on coin problem as preparation
it's not working properly
do you see anything obviously wrong?
I know how to do it with recursion, but I'm trying to use dynamic programming this time
I just tried outputting the results -- what are you intending to return exactly? It's giving me back a huge list of counters or something
wim
wim
yeah it's a list of counters
oh wait I see now
the length of this would give you the number of ways
wim
wim
02:19
I know
but it's not correct
it's not complete, some ways are missing
Is there any way to use not in flask forms?
{% if field not in ['city', 'street', 'zipcode'] %}
wim
wim
so I've missed something ... I'm staring at it 10 minutes now and can't see what
I have tried the above but it's not working..
02:54
Anyone home?
@wim making change?
def spam():
    X: auto @ property.template<T> X(*T, ...) = object
    class Y(X):
        pass
    return Y()
Python 3.6 is the future!
wtf is X: auto ... blah blah?
wim
wim
03:13
yes, making change
@wim I had a look at it but to be totally honest, I had a hard time following it
wim
wim
which part you didn't understand ?
it's only 10 lines ..
Might be easier to debug with a simple case
Try coins = (1, 5), total = 5
Should be 2 ways to make change -- your program returns 1 -- namely [Counter({5: 1})]
wim
wim
I think I've fixed it now
It doesn't detect the solution where you use 5 pennies
wim
wim
03:18
try that instead hastebin.com/otulejeleh.py
returning 0's for me
wim
wim
hmm, yeah, now it works with other cases and broke other cases
damnit
oh, whoops , stupid mistake in the return statement
return M[len(coins)-1, total]
wim
wim
yeah
hmm, still missing some solutions though
fuck, dynamic programming is a mind bender
Actually should be len(coins), sorry
and the 0 case needs to return 1
wim
wim
03:24
what 0 case?
considered the base case in the DP
1 way to make 0 change
wim
wim
err ...
(lot of combinatoric / DP problems require that kind of assumption)
wim
wim
how do I add that , and what is the consequence if I don't
doesn't matter much though, if you don't ever use the 0 case and you change the return statement, it works
wim
wim
03:25
what is the 1 way to make 0 coins, I should return an empty Counter?
ywah
wim
wim
actually , it should be a list with an empty counter I guess
now it matches the expected results so it seems to be working
I have it doing if total == 0: return [Counter()]
wim
wim
ok
damn, it gets slow for big numbers
I thought DP was supposed to be fast
It's fast when you're just computing the counts
If you're enumerating all solutions then it'll take longer
wim
wim
03:30
yeah
03:59
Are you finding all solutions or the minimal solution?
wim's approach enumerates all ways of making change
the normal problem just has you counting them rather than listing them
wim
wim
counting them is easier, you just add as you find them
and finding the minimal, you just take min as you go along
trying to think of other problems he might come up with
well, good luck with that
I need to get some speakers. The built-in ones on my monitor are shit.
that might have to be my day-after-christmas present...
04:20
Cabbage :-)
 
1 hour later…
05:30
pfft
this is again not funny
not funny easy
or not funny hard?
Trying to understand encodings. String are stored as bytes. Do all encodings use ascii characters for their representation?
@MohammadYusufGhazi no.
@MohammadYusufGhazi and in computers, everything is stored as bits... most of the bits are made into bytes
@idjaw funny hard because I don't again know if a) my code is wrong, b) I should write an optimizer
which sucks
note to self: read instructions, idiot
06:01
hello,

how to solve the problem: "Client.Timeout exceeded while awaiting headers" while pulling a Docker image?

I keep getting this error over and over again http://i.imgur.com/UIXw4kZ.png
@MarcusS this puzzle is very stupid
just got it
that was a mess
2nd puzzle in a row that I didn't like at all
I don't like when I need to stare at the input excessively
wim
wim
06:36
gosh, that took me forever
06:50
I know this is wrong place, but I wanted to ask about machine learning, but I couldn't find a group dedicated to it, so I came here, as this looked like the closest thing I could find. Anyway, I want to learn about machine learning/AI stuff, but I don't know where to start. I can't afford the courses on udacity/edx etc as they are quite costly(in terms of Indian currency) and I'm already paying a huge sum for my UG. So can someone suggest me some resources(websites/books etc)
wim
wim
makes me wish I'd done day 12 with function dispatch, would have been much faster to adapt
wim
wim
interesting that you still got the right answer, marcus
because you didn't put register d to 0 when you no-op all the decrements
you are just lucky because this line means there is no effect
but your modified assembly is not strictly equivalent logic to the original
07:07
ahha :D
I didn't clear C...
wim
wim
you have the bug too?
07:20
yea I cleared D IIRC but then didn't notice that it also ends up clearing C...
but this is really shit because it is halting problem to analyse whether there is a jump to in between the optimized code...
so yours isn't correct either
@wim I did see that actually, didn't bother setting d because it seemed useless
b gets pasted onto the rest of the registers
there
@wim @AnttiHaapala Did you guys ever try the Synacor Challenge?
07:40
wat
wim
wim
no, I hadn't heard of it - is it good?
the exact same code works when I just clone from repo but gives import errors on the already cloned repo
I mean it's subjective -- but I enjoyed it; wished it were longer
this is weird
Hi, guys i need your advise
I have three tables in my database let say company, brand and branch
all three tables can have multiple phone numbers and emails
so i created two other tables email and phone_number
and email table fields are id, refrence_id, field_for, field_value
so what you guys think is it good or should i create three different tables like company_email, brands_email and branch_emails
wim
wim
08:07
@AnttiHaapala not anymore
Now I detect if jumping into the middle of patched area, and unpatch beforehand if so!
Pycharm is dumb
so is unittests module
08:27
wow, I am the dumb one
(not news)
I put __init__.py in non-project directory
08:57
Cabbage
@WayneWerner FWIW, your "buddy" kto has vandalized their question. I guess someone should roll it back... stackoverflow.com/questions/41282993/…
Is MartijnPieters in?
@HusnainAli How is this question related to Python?
09:10
@MartijnPieters raised a mod flag for you on this stackoverflow.com/questions/40653334/…, trying to avoid another similar meta for ya, not sure if you like to get pinged or not in these case
@PetterFriberg thanks, I saw the answer in the queue before the edit.
09:29
@HusnainAli reference_id and field_for isn't a good design
cbg folks
you can have separate tables for companies/brands/branches or you can make tables polymorphic: i.e. have another table which will hold every kind of object and have foreign keys to companies/brands/branches and then keep one emails table
or you can keep multiple emails in one field
@HusnainAli I second @khajvah. Are you familiar with normal form? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_normal_form
cabbage
guys, I have a file having multiple lines, each line having many words which are synonyms. i want to create a dictionary such that a particular word in the file is the key and all other are its entries. for that I loop all lines, have a variable for the main word and create a list containing all other synonym words in that line. now, how to make the dictionary such that for each line, it generates a key (which would be the main word), and all elements of the list are the entries for that key?
09:56
Is the main word the 1st word on the line?
no, but i extract it somehow
So why can't you just do synonyms[keyword] = other_words?
FWIW, I think it'd be more useful to have dict with every word as a key. Eg, if the words are 'a', 'b', and 'c', then the dict looks like:
{'a': ['a', 'b', 'c'], 'c': ['a', 'b', 'c'], 'b': ['a', 'b', 'c']}
@HusnainAli the refactoring you have chosen is more generally applicable than separating out the emails into different purposes. It also lets the same email address be associated with several companies, branches and brands, which seems a more natural way to do things and also allows you to make interesting correlations that would be much more difficult with separate tables.
It's true it wasn't a Python question, but people actually talk about all kinds of stuff here, so I didn't regard it as completely out of scope.
For the future, however, there probably are rooms where you would get a more authoritative answer.
yes! so easy! i don't know why i was trying `for k in other_words:
synlist[main].append(other_words[k])`
it kept giving me KeyErrors!
10:11
@user1993 Oops! :)
@PM2Ring good point. could you explain why this is better? I also thought so, to have a synonym list for all words, but couldn't quite point to why it would be a good idea?
@user1993 Well, that way you can quickly get the whole list of synonyms of a given word from any of the words in the list, not just some arbitrary "main" word.
Also suppose you have a list of synonyms syns, it's easy to add them:
d.update({w: syns for w in syns})
My suggested strategy will use more RAM, but it's not too bad, since you're actually storing multiple references to each list in the dict, not multiple copies.
Assuming your synonym dictionary is d
10:16
@holdenweb, good point!
@PM2Ring is that so? wouldn't this make the dictionary n times larger? actually, there are ~100k lines in the file
and now that I have this dictionary, what would be the best strategy to use it in another program? I want to find, in another code - if 2 words are synonyms. should i write this dict to a file and then import contents of that file for this new program?
@user1993 the dictionary won't be as large as you think, because the storage of the data is once-only in the lists. So adding another item referencing the same set of synonyms will increase the size of the dict, but won't require any more storage for the list of synonyms.
@user1993 Sort of. Say there are 5 synonyms in a certain line. Then there will be 5 keys for that line, but the values for each of those keys will just be a pointer to the same word list.
@user1993 You could save the dict in JSON format. Or you could save it using the pickle module. Either strategy will allow you to reload the dictionary very quickly. Using JSON may be slightly slower, but it has the advantage that it's human-readable, and possible to edit in a normal text editor.
OTOH, that can also be a disadvantage, if someone tries to hand-edit that JSON data and makes a mistake... :)
@PM2Ring that I hope I can take care :) I tried to do that, saw the file - everything is in one line, i guess that's how its written.
so now, i can just call the json file as my dictionary (in the new program) ?
10:32
When you emit JSON you can set the field separator and the indentation prefix. I think both are set to the empty string by default to give a minimal JSON representation, but you can produce quite readable JSON if you try.
The json module has functions to read and write JSON objects.
I don't think there are any significant Python-3 differences
@holdenweb True, although there's a flaw in Python 3 JSON, but it's not relevant for this use case.
@holdenweb thanks holdenweb!
The json module will happily encode Python dicts that have a mix of string and integer keys, converting the numeric keys to strings to make them valid JSON. However, if you pass sort_keys=True to the encoder it will attempt to sort the keys before it's encoded them. That (kind of) works in Python 2, but Python 3 will chuck a wobbly when you tell it to sort a mixture of numbers and strings.
oh! then since I am working with Python 3, i won't sort
@user1993 As I said, that flaw is not relevant for your use case because you don't have a mixture of string and integer keys. So feel free to sort, if you want to.
10:48
actually many of my words are alphanumeric - but yes they are strings, so ya you're right. Thanks!!
Of course, sorting does make things a little slower when building the JSON data from the Python dictionary. And it probably uses more RAM, too. But that shouldn't be a problem for a file of a 100k lines
It doesn't make much sense to sort unless you are also pretty-printing. When a human has to read JSON it's useful for finding specific keys
11:28
Example says, sum of list of intergers to be the sum of it's individual elements.
for sample input [2,12,12] output is 24
how it could be possible
I appreciate any explaination
Possibly they want a list of the indices that give the desired sum, so for that sample data they want [1,2]. But it's hard to say without more info.
Hi, Andras. It's quiet here tonight. Maybe everyone's off doing Christmas stuff.
@AnttiHaapala I did a safely optimized version (I think)
@PM2Ring it seems so, yes:)
I should be doing Real Life Things myself, promised the missus I would:P
poking some holes in conrete walls is fun \o/
11:47
@AndrasDeak Well, that's one way to have a white Christmas. :)
yeah, 10+ degrees celsius forecast for Monday :/
damn you are lucky
I'd prefer -10 and snow
don't make such wishes
I couldn't walk a few days ago
reached >-20 degrees at night
Is there a way in python to create a simple plot graph without installing any lib?
11:55
@khajvah why?
@AndrasDeak it felt like my face was peeling
@IsabelCariod sure
@khajvah you sure?
@AndrasDeak yes, there is a way
Isn't tkinter the only built-in gui-ish thing? And that doesn't sound like too easy to use for graphing:P
I saw an example some time ago, creating a plot with math lib
11:57
@IsabelCariod matplotlib
and that's not built-in
@AndrasDeak I never said one should do it. I just said it's possible :D
there's alos ggplot and plotly, neither of which are built-in
@khajvah I didn't wish <-20, only ~-10 (and you missed the relation sign :PP)
Yash "It's a special guy"
he really is
lesson learnt: watch the full video before posting
@AndrasDeak >-20
4 mins ago, by Andras Deak
@khajvah you sure?
was it also >-100? :D
12:01
no, between -100 to -20
@AndrasDeak So I need to install libs first?
you should
@khajvah if x in range(-100,-20+1), then "x>-20" is false
@IsabelCariod yes, but why wouldn't you?
you should do what's convenient/straightforward with built-ins, but if you need additional functionality, use the proper tool
matplotlib is the best tool I know of for plotting (2d) stuff
@khajvah ----v
In [456]: -25>-20
Out[456]: False
@AndrasDeak I know
?
you sure?:D
12:04
hold on
have some coffee, dude
oh wow
the problem I must send the code to my teacher
can we delete this conversation from SO?
what to tell him? "Please install that lib" Sir
12:05
and also from my memory
:D
@IsabelCariod yes
add the lib in requirements.txt
It is unprofessional and annoying
if he is gonna run the Python code, he should be ready to install dependencies
if it's just an executable to double click and run, then there are some ways
@khajvah I can't do that...how about I bookmark it instead?
@IsabelCariod ???
what does your teacher teach?
if not matplotlib, use what they teach
if plotting is not part of the project, send the figures exported to pdf
I don't understand at all
use tensorflow that plots all kinds of stuff:P
12:11
I can tell you for sure that he doesn't expect you to manually write the plotting code
I am 100 percent sure
Are you doing AI without any third-party libraries...?
damn
a Perceptron
that's bad
12:13
yes
very
are you not even using stuff like numpy or scipy?
@IsabelCariod 1. You will waste a lot of time doing unimportant stuff. 2. You won't learn the proper way of doing stuff
I use math lib
wow
you might have to write the plotting code yourself...using a rock to chip off bytes in the RAM
but seriously, I don't know what your teacher might want or expect, and without knowing your problem specification, nobody will
if you need to submit the computing code, and some pictures as results, the teacher doesn't have to be able to run your plotting functions
you can just give them the relevant computing code, and some figures in a pdf report
12:16
good idea, I will do so
Thanks for all
no worries
@IsabelCariod There are various ways to do simple graphs without 3rd party libs in Python. One way is to output your data as a SVG file, I can give you an example, if you like. But it's better to use a proper plotting package.
@PM2Ring show example
@PM2Ring right, I didn't think of stuff like that
@IsabelCariod you're lucky we have a guy whose hobbies include writing SVG from scratch:P
7 mins ago, by Andras Deak
you might have to write the plotting code yourself...using a rock to chip off bytes in the RAM
one level above that ^
@AndrasDeak PM has every kind of hobby
12:22
yeah, he has even more facets than his profile pic
I guess it's just a simplifying intersection of 15d with 3d
@IsabelCariod Here you go: unix.stackexchange.com/a/166921/88378 I wrote that code a while ago, so it's for Python 2 but it should be easy to convert it to Python 3, if you need that.
@AndrasDeak I've also created simple images by plotting pixels into a 2D list and then manually converting that to a PGM or PPM file. :) That was before I discovered PIL.
I occasionally create PostScript from scratch in Python. But I'm more likely to write the whole thing directly in PostScript. :)
@PM2Ring it's really cool, Thanks!
No worries
@PM2Ring I execut like this, "python graph.py 1 1; 1 -1; 0 0; -3 -2" , is good?
12:35
did you try?
try running the data-generating script, and look at the format
you might have to use redirection on unix: python graph.py <<<'1 1; 1 -1; 0 0; -3 -2' in case the input is a single string with no newlines
@IsabelCariod No. The input data to that program should be in a file, with an X Y pair on each line, as shown in the question. The data should be sorted on the X values, otherwise you need to sort the points list before you send it to points_to_SVG
13:08
Sometimes when I do grep "foo" * to search for foo in the local directory tree, I forget to include the asterisk, and I twiddle my thumbs for forty seconds waiting for output until I notice that it's waiting for me to type something. This is an inconvenient failure mode.
it's not failure:P
I'm sure it's an absolutely essential feature for grepping arbitrary piped file streams or something, but I don't do that so it's nothing but a hindrance for me
@Kevin just paste file1 file2 |grep foo is enough for a real-life example;)
@Kevin That's not grep's fault. :) But I guess it'd be nice if it printed a prompt when it's expecting data from stdin in an interactive terminal.
13:14
wait, even better: paste - - <file1 | grep foo
I think we're all on the same page here that the behavior I describe is intentional and important and annoying specifically to me if no one else
Oh, I've done it more than once, even though I use grep regularly.
Hmm, my AoC answer isn't right, even though I'm only making one tiny unfounded assumption about the structure of the input data. What could the problem be???
I was joking, but now that I've removed the assumption, I still get the wrong answer... Hmm.
Where's wim with his test suite when you need him
:(
I can give you 2 inputs with two results:P
part1/part2
Hmm, I better not. I suspect there's a high chance one of those inputs is my input and I don't want to be spoiled
13:29
yup
I can spoilerpost the part1 input alone if you'd like
Ok, that couldn't hurt.
cabbabbages
OK, just a sec
@idjaw cbg
@Kevin day23 input
if it's not yours, I'll post the answer too
Ok, it's not my input.
okey dokey
13:33
you guys buy anything for the steam winter sale?
I expect that I'll get part 1 right and part 2 wrong, since it's structurally very similar to my input so the bug will probably occur the same way
@corvid Steam tells me these items on my wishlist are discounted: Gunpoint, Bioshock, Beyond Good and Evil
Bioshock is probably super cheap right now
Yeah.
@corvid not yet.
13:36
I played about an hour of BG&E in high school when I borrowed it from a friend, but I couldn't stay focused. I remember there being a lot of moving parts.
I'm aware it's received a ridiculous amount of acclaim over the years so I know I "ought" to like it
But OTOH I never finished Shadow of the Colossus either.
What is it with me and universally loved games I can't get through?
@AndrasDeak As predicted, I got part 1 but not 2.
most of those games might have been designed for regular humans
@Kevin interesting
These days the games I buy are mostly indie games, because they're shorter, and Tomb Raider, because it's Tomb Raider
My part 2 answer is smaller than my part 1 answer, which I suspected was wrong before but now I know it's super wrong.
@corvid *because boobs, FTFY
Even with my multiplication optimizer disabled. I thought my addition optimizer was pretty bulletproof, but I guess it isn't.
13:40
speaking of Tomb Raider, I really want to get Tomb Raider Go
those two phrases are synonymous though, one is just slightly more classy sounding
:D
@Kevin I started with only that; took >0.25 <1 hours
For my own input it mercifully finishes after maybe four minutes.
are you taking care of weird cases caused by the new instruction?
user6568562
Cabbage !
13:43
cbg
Only the two cases specifically mentioned in the problem: view spoiler
user6568562
@AnttiHaapala That's unfortunate : /
Maybe I'm flipping a sign somewhere... I made my addition detector as broad as possible, so it can also detect subtractions, but the arithmetic gets just a little hairy
Hi, @randomhopeful
@Kevin how about view spoiler?
13:46
Here's some seasonally-appropriate music from Tom Waits: Christmas Card from a Hooker in Minneapolis
user6568562
@PM2Ring Hey [ : I'll check it out, I like his songs
Listen carefully to the lyrics. It's a veritable work of genius.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure I account for that
13:49
then I'm out of ideas:)
take comfort in that your mistake is not straightforward
Here is a line-by-line trace of the part 2 execution for the input you supplied. The biggest numbers I ever multiply are three digits or fewer, so my tiny output follows logically from that.
OK, I removed my fix for the last [view spoiler] of mine, and the answers didn't change
@Kevin oh, you already have [spoiler] in there, not just your original optimization. That makes the range of errors much broader
do you account for jumping in the middle of a [spoiler]?
It's not clear from the trace, but I am view spoiler, if that's what you're implying
Continuing the Christmas theme: Fairytale Of New York - The Pogues, featuring Kirsty MacColl.
@Kevin yup, yup
no, I'm out of ideas
user6568562
14:00
I read that basic hand signatures means that you're possibly hiding something psychotic. I'm gonna switch to using my thumb prints just to be safe
what does "basic hand signatures" mean there?
user6568562
Not only was I worried that my checks could easily be falsified now cashiers all over Tunisia will find out my tendencies
user6568562
@AndrasDeak Simple signatures from what I understood
user6568562
> Handwriting expert Paula Sassi, who also never met Gardner, said his signature is very basic, which shows that he tries to hide his negative side, but it comes out, nonetheless.
@Kevin your instruction lines suspiciously don't decrease
let me check the similar rendering of my own code
@randomhopeful ah, I see
14:04
Yeah I agree that it's unusually linear. The part one trace of your supplied input is much loopier.
I think I know the problem -_-
I've just printed my step-by-step:)
user6568562
@PM2Ring I liked the song, now I'm listening to his cover of ol'55, one of the first songs that made me love the guy
Yep, there's my problem. After I find the solution for part one, I don't reset the instructions to their original state for part two.
:(
heisenbug ftw
I feel like I don't really understand what these graph databases are for
14:18
@randomhopeful What do you mean "cover"? Tom wrote Ol' '55! But anyway, here's his greatest composition, IMHO: Kentucky Avenue
user6568562
@PM2Ring Ooooh, I see. I thought it was written by the Eagles
user6568562
I dig Kentucky Avenue a lot
It's very hard not to cry listening to Kentucky Avenue...
Hi, I keep getting connection timeout while pulling an image : i.imgur.com/UIXw4kZ.png . Any idea about this?
Does anyone know a libraray similar to bisect
*library
14:29
what is wrong with the current bisect?
Its not working for my case
Im using vectors which are of length between [2000, 3000] against 3d grid of 200^3. Even though the vectors are of different length, the bisect is giving me the result.nonzero() of same length 99 cells. Is there any limitation in bisect method ?
2
Q: How can i interpolate a vector on a 2d grid

vinitaI have generated a 2d grid of length 100 and I have got a vector of tuples which some 2d points. x1 = np.linspace(-1,1,10) y1 = np.linspace(-1,1,10) grid=[] for i in x1: for j in y1: grid.append((i,j)) #The vector vec=[(.033,-.22),(.5,-.9),(-.77,-.01),(.5,.2)] What I want is to it...

Hi, @inspectorG4dget Here's a recent clip of Andrea Motis singing Baby Boy. Pity she doesn't play trumpet on this piece, but I think her skilled vocals more than compensate. :)

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