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16:02
@Kevin they screwed up with the name, the first name is the same as "Niner" in Finnish, surname could be plausible but why would they have a nickname like that - it is not used as a given name by any person in Finland. Idiots :D
Right now, neural networks can generate novel images of birds and flowers from purely textual descriptions. Clearly the scammers have improved on the design and are using it to generate pictures of hot singles in your area.
Welcome to the terrifying future
How far away are we from having neural networks generate food by text
DSM
DSM
.. wait, so the future has pictures of attractive women being sent to me, free of charge? This future is not as dystopian as I was led to expect.
:D
oh well reported
A proper dystopia looks like a utopia from a distance.
16:07
Like Star Trek. No money?!
Only close scrutiny reveals that they're grinding up the oppressed underclass to power their hot singles algorithm or something
I am pretty much immune to friend requests from such imaginary singles.
DSM
DSM
I expect "from a distance" is as close as I'm likely to get to Eastern European supermodels, real or virtual, so again on balance it seems like an improvement. Of course since I don't have an FB account the matter's kind of moot.
Once catfishes become indistinguishable from actual humans, the human courting process will break down and our species will go extinct within a generation.
@DSM so, just join FB, your problem is solved instantly. Pictures of attractive women being sent to you "free of charge".
DSM
DSM
16:13
I've successfully avoided joining anything resembling social media in the past and am looking to continue that record. (sighs tiredly) But I suppose if they pay me for my time I am willing to look at their photographs.
"The population trends towards zero due to nonviolent causes" is one of the more interesting apocalypse scenarios, to me. It can be one of the more peaceful ways for the world to end (although not always: see Children of Men for a counterexample)
My answer to that printf question just hit 80 upvotes. :)
Other than the pre-acceptance violent outlash, you just need to worry about keeping all the nuclear power plants from exploding once there aren't enough technicians to keep them running
DSM
DSM
So we need to encourage herbivores to study nuclear maintenance, I guess.
I'm completely in favor of using the last fifty years of mankind's existence uplifting a worthy candidate species to our level of intelligence.
16:16
@DSM you're not the only person craving for asocial media.
hmhm
time to go home I guess..
Then we can be the mythical Ancient race in their legends. A+ legacy, would toy with nature again
DSM
DSM
@AnttiHaapala: say Halló to your stalker for me. #callback
FT: Where to go in 2017 includes Finland... The best part about visiting Finland is the return trip.
@Kevin I want to re-read Brin's Uplift stories again. But I no longer live near the library that I originally borrowed them from. Oh well.
@Kevin which one do you suggest?
DSM
DSM
16:22
What happens if you uplift a species which can't manipulate objects well enough to develop technology? Do they just write poetry and talk about number theory all day?
ahha :D
perhaps that has already happened :d
The game Full Bore spends some time exploring the culture of an uplifted species that doesn't have opposable thumbs.
It's not exactly hard scifi (they can somehow make neon signs, as a random example), but basically they just cavort in the ruins of the society that predated them
I recommend it to anyone that plays block-pushing puzzles of their own free will.
I have no free will.
@AnttiHaapala Seems reasonable to start with an animal that already exhibit some signs of intelligence. Apes, corvids, cuttlefish, octopi, dolphins, dogs...
I just saw this interesting SO Meta question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/340377/…
16:30
Hard mode: Nematodes.
How do I debug a generator/generator expression/iterator? I learned the hard way recently that adding print() statements consumes these and then breaks the code that follows.
@DSM what's wrong with number theory?
Expand the generator into its own function, if it isn't already a function; then put print statements inside the function.
DSM
DSM
If a genexp requires debugging it's probably too complicated to be a genexp.. although I've been known to add print(something) or stuff on occasion. But adding print by itself doesn't consume anything.
@Code-Apprentice: nothing, but I don't know whether discussing it will keep our uplifted dolphins sufficiently occupied.
@DSM In Brin's Startide Rising there are uplifted dolphins. They're dependent on cybernetic enhancements to do delicate manipulations. My feeling is that would make you feel pretty vulnerable.
well, the genexp isn't very complicated. But it calls a non-trivial function that is probably not working correctly. I'm trying to narrow down which particular input the genexp sends which causes an incorrect output.
@DSM no, print itself doesn't consume anything. But a for loop to print the elements of the generator does.
16:36
@Code-Apprentice What Kevin said. Or just tee the generator if it doesn't chew up too much RAM.
or print(list(my_gen))
The problem is a little too nebulous right now to give more concrete advice.
@Kevin Here is my slightly more concrete question on SO: stackoverflow.com/questions/41339358/…
or you can make a custom generator that prints the elements as they're iterated over
16:39
@AnttiHaapala ooo...that sounds like an interesting idea.
I'd also have to figure out how to print only when in "debug mode" but not print when in "production mode"
Updating a dictionary within a function. Typo, if you consider mixed indentation a typo.
@Code-Apprentice Or just make a version with prints & stuff in it that you debug, and when you're convinced that it's correct create the clean production version from that.
yah, that would work, too
When I want to put diagnostic printing in my code and I know I'll be too lazy to remove it later, I define a function log(msg): if DEBUG: print(msg). Then I can enbale/disable all output by changing one line.
I assume you have a global DEBUG defined somewhere, right?
16:45
Yeah, or I just stick a literal if True: inside log's def
and change to if False: when you are done?
that's handy
Obligatory notice: don't do it like that in performance-critical code because you'll waste time with function calls that ultimately don't do anything important
well...during the conversation, I ended up doing print(list(my_gen)) and then copy-paste the output into a unit test.
@Kevin Indeed. But when debugging stuff that uses recursive generators you may also need auxiliary lists or dicts to handle temporary data that aren't really needed once you're certain that your logic is correct.
fortunately I have no recursion in my current situation.
16:47
It can be handy to have a log function even if you fully intend to remove it once you get production-ready code, if only because it's easier to ctrl-f for "log" and delete them all than it is to ctrl-f for "print" and have to decide on a case-by-case basis whether it's diagnostic output or regular output
@Code-Apprentice For that kind of stuff I just use if 0: and if 1: since it's easier to change. And easier to spot that it's part of my development "scaffolding", since I never use that in my real code.
DSM
DSM
min((print(x) or x for x in result),key=key_fn), if I really wanted to avoid materializing anything.
ooh, if 0: would save me literally dozens of keystrokes a year.
@Code-Apprentice answered with my idea
DSM
DSM
@PM2Ring: me too! I don't use False or True because I sometimes do while True:, but searching for 0: or 1: always brings me there.
16:50
@AnttiHaapala Thanks. I got the ping on my phone. Haven't looked at it yet.
I'm counting this shiny new knowledge as a belated Christmas present.
I have notifications from the SE app set to a distinctive sound.
Rhubarb
DSM
DSM
Rhubarb for PM2R.
17:05
i want to make a web app that retrieves saved items from reddit with praw. i don't want to use js, and i was wondering if django is suitable for such work? seeing as i probably won't use a lot of databases, only the api
Based on my very limited experience with django, I can confirm that it is suitable for making a web app that interfaces with APIs.
I don't know if there's any sentence beginning with "I want to make a web app that..." for which "django is not suitable for that" is a valid reply
Except perhaps "I want to make a web app with performance requirements that can only be satisfied by hand-crafting my own server using on-the-metal assembly"
But that's assuming the conclusion.
I read somewhere that Django wasn't a good framework if you only were to work with APIs and do databases, but that might not be true?
wim
wim
17:24
I don't think that's true
Django's maybe not a good framework if you want to do lots of websocket / real-time things like e.g. chat. But that might change with the new channels project stuff.
oh, okay
i will start working on my project then haha
Trying a framework and later deciding it doesn't meet your needs is a good learning experience, though it may be frustrating at the time. Of course, there's nothing wrong with prioritizing "getting my thing working" over "learning Very Important Lessons (tm)", so it doesn't hurt to seek a little guidance beforehand.
Still good to try it out because it may turn out to be more appropriate for a later project, if not the current one
DSM
DSM
At work we do a bunch of API/db interaction leading to web pages and we use flask, but our apps tend to be pretty lightweight.
17:38
I dislike the gray area for typo-ey questions where it's sort of not a typo because you get the feeling that if the OP rewrote his code from scratch, it would still have the same mistake because the problem is not in OP's clumsy fingers, but in his not-entirely-correct mental model of how the language works
Voted anyway.
I agree with you. *Typo* is not a right description in this case. But the same section also says *these are often resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers.*
OP already got enough answers. In my opinion it is better to close such questions with best reason it could fit in.
And should not forget to tell the OP about the mistake ( in case no one pointed it out) before making close vote
Oh definitely. A question closed as typo should never end with OP thinking "but I still don't know what the problem is..."
18:16
Damnit 2016!
Carrie Fisher dead at 60.
George Michael dead at 53.
Etc.
:-(
DSM
DSM
I think a friend once noted that the cover for Wishful Drinking was absolutely brilliant. Very sad that some of the stories from it probably help explain Fisher's premature death.
On January 1 2016 I had a hangover, my first ever New Year's Day hangover, and I worry that this somehow caused all the bad events that occurred between then and now. As if my generally responsible drinking conduct was the axle upon which the universe turned, and that single morning caused a precession that threw every other mechanism into chaos
I'm sure everyone else that also secretly believes they are the most important person in the world has similar feelings, albeit for different reasons.
e.g. "I knew I shouldn't have switched to diet soda last January"
haha :D
bad python quiz:
what is the value of isinstance(sys.version_info, tuple)
18:32
I'm going to go with "False".
Hey all
I am working with wxPython and making strips that scroll vertically to show rankings and statistics for teams during local robotics tournaments
When you print version_info, it looks like a tuple, but it's not actually a tuple. But perhaps this is a double trick question and it is actually a subclass of tuple? idk
DSM
DSM
Me too. I think it's a namedtuple, and the question is only interesting if that isn't a tuple subclass.. and IIRC they do some weird exec trickery to build it, so maybe it's not.
and whenever I show a bitmap image(sponsors) scrolling on the screen, the whole timer seems to slow down...I'm only running the timer at 60fps(1000/60)
>>> type(sys.version_info).__bases__
(<class 'tuple'>,)
Bamboozled again!
DSM
DSM
18:34
Hmmph! This has not been a good day for me guessing random Python facts. At least it proves I'm not cheating :-P
the correct answer is: it is False in Pythons 2.7, 3.0 and 3.1, True in any other pythons where it happens to exist.
and RIP Carrie Fisher
>>> type(sys.version_info).__bases__
(<type 'object'>,)
Ah, I see. My first one was in 3.5 and this one is in 2.7.
@JoshMenzel I don't know much about wxpython specifically, but if your code looks something like:
def periodic_thing():
    do_some_work()
    #repeat in 1/60th of a second
    after(1000/60.0, periodic_thing)
no
It runs as a timer
... Then it may actually periodically run much slower than 60 fps, if do_some_work is computationally expensive.
so timer.start(1000/fps) #in this case 60
ever 1/60th of a second the function gets called
the source is on github
I'll link the file you want
the setupRankPanels
generates the required number of panels
then the updatePositions function updates the panels position
18:45
Man the first two google results for "wxpython timer" are really unhelpful.
A code example followed by the text "this didn't work". Not inspiring much confidence there, wxpython wiki.
exactly
Meanwhile wxpython.org/docs/api/wx.Timer-class.html looks autogenerated and contains half a sentence of actual English
that's my other source
18:50
docs.wxwidgets.org/3.1/classwx_timer.html is a little more explanatory but doesn't shed a lot of light on your specific problem
well like I said, the scrolling just slows down quite a bit after the logo image shows up on the screen...
If I set the fps to 30
it's fine
and considering all the timer does is update positions
another idea I was playing around with was only rendering say 14 panels
enough to keep the scroll going, then just re-assign ranks and update label texts when the particular panel leaves the screen
but I can't really make the scrolling go any faster
than what the cpu can handle
As near as I can tell, wxPython's timer is just a wrapper for wxWindow's timer, which is just a wrapper for the Windows API's Timer, which should be as accurate as you can get without writing your own operating system and firmware
ok. So the only big issue here is how to make it not slow down when a bitmap is drawn
I still think there's a potential for slowdown if the work you're doing (and any work the OS has to do in response to the work you're doing) takes longer than the duration of the timer
that's what I was thinking
19:00
Because AFAIK Windows' window message queue is single-threaded so it's entirely possible for callbacks to get backed up waiting for other things to finish
hence why all the networking sides of things is done in it's own thread
at least I solved that issue
not to mention
Perhaps you could rig something up that measures the actual time between callbacks and returns early from any of them that are appearing behind schedule
Reducing the FPS during periods of heavy work, but improving apparent responsiveness anyway
I have no idea how to do any of that
I could barely make this scroll correctly
Me neither.
It would be useful
but simply printing the time differences will just slow it down
19:06
still 4 days of 2016 left...
I don't want to guess who dies
I hear the queen of england has a bad cold...
anyway...I'll probably leave it the way it is
it works
it's stable
just not scrolling fast enough
or at least not on the raspberry
that's another thing
this is being designed specifically to run on raspberry pi
Hmm, well, I don't know enough about the pi to say whether that makes a difference
it seems like it is
unless my data update method is not running separate from the gui like it's supposed to
19:13
I'd expect it to be quantitative (ex. "the pi has a slower processor than your typical desktop PC, so slowdown issues are more prominent") rather than qualitative (ex. "the pi has a completely different window message handling system than what you'd find on your typical desktop PC")
and my program only uses 50% of the pi cpu resources
Hey. Looks like it got merged
right before the new year. Rejoice Flask users
19:38
RIP Carrie Fisher
yeah =/
20:08
How can I make my python program distinguish between Windows and Unix platform?
As per the doc: https://docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.name , 'posix', 'nt', 'java' are currently registered with `os.name`.

Is this the correct way to distinguish between OS?
if os.name == 'posix': #Unix System
elif os.name == 'nt': # Windows system
elif os.name == 'java' # What OS does it represent?
yeah
looks like the number of panels makes a huge difference
in my script
so I'm gonna have to rewrite it to update statuses
so once it leave the screen->set new rank and update texts
@MoinuddinQuadri why not sys.platform?
sys.platform will distinguish between linux, other unixes, and OS X while os.name is "posix" for all of them.
Java is an OS now? I don't like this information.
My code is supposed to run same on all flavors of Unix. That's why there is no need to identify each one
20:13
The docs already account for returning multiple Linuxii
I don't see how trying to make sense of java is better than writing a marginally longer logic statement
As per the Python 2 doc: docs.python.org/2/library/os.html#os.name there are 6 names registered with os.name: 'posix', 'nt', 'os2', 'ce', 'java', 'riscos'
that's not really any better
@excaza: Makes sense. Document for sys.platform is more clear regarding the os versions. I think it is better to go with it. It will result in less chances of unexpected errors
Perhaps you could write your code so that it runs the same under any OS, without you having to distinguish between them. Try to avoid OS-specific commands; for example, instead of doing subprocess.check_output("ls"), use os.listdir().
It's all right for you to say "no, I really do need my OS-specific behavior" here, but make sure that you really do need it.
@Kevin Let's say I want to sort the 2 GB file. Won't be doing it in Python be slower then sort /path/to/file. I think there will be huge difference between both the computations
20:22
I do expect it to be slower, but the question is how much slower, and whether the difference in speed is worth worrying about. Those answers are specific to your particular situation.
It's all right for you to say "it's a lot slower and it is worth worrying about" here.
I never measured the difference between those. But my understanding is that the utilities like sort, uniq, grep are designed and are optimized at the Unix level. Doing such operation via shell would be more efficient as compared to achieving the same in Python. Though, we have to make checks for OS type.
Let me re-think upon it. As you mentioned, using python version will be more compatible and less prone to errors. Personally I feel it is better to do it in Python
If I was interested in making it both efficient and cross-OS compatible, I'd use fast OS-specific approaches for OSes that had fast OS-specific approaches, and I'd have a generic Python approach for all the other ones.
Interesting, I just noticed this on the 3.6 changelist: "A global or nonlocal statement must now textually appear before the first use of the affected name in the same scope." That should clear up some corner cases that have baffled newbies since forever.
Oh man, maximum recursion depth exceeded stack traces are no longer a hundred lines long. This release is 🌶🌶🌶 HOTTT 🌶🌶🌶
the starboard has been Kevined
DSM
DSM
20:36
I'm planning to move a number of our applications at the office to 3.6 and make that the new normal, but not until 3.6.1 comes out-- while I personally enjoy testing new releases, I can't justify spending NumberFirm time on it.
@AndrasDeak cbg
@Kevin Rethinking about it. I do not think it is good idea to go with OS dependent utilities specially when I myself do not know much about Windows (with no machine). My earlier thought was that I will wait for someone to contribute the code for Windows :P
I should be going ahead with Pythonic way as of now
something something premature optimization something something evil :)
Asynchronous Generators are my favorite in 3.6
Anyway I was looking at the changelog to figure out why 3.6's registered os.names are 'posix', 'nt', 'java', whereas 3.5's are 'posix', 'nt', 'ce', 'java', with the hopes of finding a PEP or something that discusses precisely what these names represent, but I couldn't find anything
Confusingly, when I look at os.py in my 3.5.1 source, it says os.name is either 'posix', 'nt' or 'ce'., which is different from either of the documentations
@excaza haha... sometimes.. but it is good to take in account the possible factors.. it helps in keeping the track of the things needed to be optimized in future ;)
@Kevin May be some JAVA developer recently joined the Python community and secretly did the changes :P
DSM
DSM
20:41
@Kevin: I don't have any mention of Java in 3.6 os.py names. Curious.
Wikipedia tells me there was a JavaOS that was discontinued in '99. Maybe it's still being supported in new Python releases???
DSM
DSM
More likely something Jythonic, i.e. we're on the JVM, if I had to guess.
Maybe "registered" doesn't actually mean anything in regards to what's in the source code. Maybe "registered" means "we got a nice letter from Sun asking to be on the OS list, and we very respectfully filed it away for later"
My other guess is "it returns 'java' if you're using Jython"
I occasionally see "Amiga" get mentioned in the Python source, so we can't necessarily discount the possibility of supporting old OSes just because they're old.
DSM
DSM
True enough.
What kind of score do you think a question like "what environment do I need to get os.name to return 'java'?" would get if I posted it on the main site?
I'm going to guess... -2 and a comment asking for an MCVE
20:49
I do not think that any of the theory is True. Reason being, there are 6 names registered as per Python 2 doc ('posix', 'nt', 'os2', 'ce', 'java', 'riscos') where as just 3 for Python 3 ('posix', 'nt', 'java')
@Kevin downvote, doesn't show any research
@Kevin We will fight back for you. Go ahead ;)
maybe that could be my ticket to Python fame
DSM
DSM
Jython 2.5.3 (, Dec 21 2015, 23:18:42)
[Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (Oracle Corporation)] on java1.8.0_111
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import os
>>> os.name
'java'
what about sys.platform?
20:50
I think between all of the room regulars, we contain 90% of all the world's knowledge about Python. Asking in here should count as "enough research" :-P
7
DSM
DSM
That's what comes after on:
>>> import sys
>>> sys.platform
'java1.8.0_111'
oh
right, duh
Makes sense. As Java is platform independent and runs in its own JVM
Interesting. Can you still use subprocess to talk to the real OS?
DSM
DSM
>>> import subprocess
>>> subprocess.Popen(["echo", "yes!"])
<subprocess.Popen object at 0x4>
>>> yes!
20:54
In that case, then you can't determine the answer to "will subprocess.Popen(["sort", ...]) successfully run the Unix sort command?" just by looking at os.name
You'll get "yes" for posix, "no" for nt, and "maybe???" for java
DSM
DSM
EAFP, I think.
Agreed, provided all the OSes play nicely in returning consistent error codes
Wouldn't put it past Windows to return 0 on a failure when everybody else returns 1
Or they have a command named sort but it's actually an acronym that has nothing to do with sorting
>>> subprocess.check_output("sort")
"Processing... All contents of C:\ successfully erased"
21:10
Why there is no such thing as WSGI for PHP, why it was so necessary to develop this WSGI for python, was there not a way such that apache or any other webserver can run python scripts as it runs php by just adding mod_php in apache?
Or actually I need dumb dumber dumbest explanation of WSGI, reading from many days not getting clear view. Most of the python frameworks implements their own webserver also, I feel like why don't you leave web server job to apache and do just app. dev.
Hey guys, I'm working on a project that explicitly requires I raise my exception AFTER completing a couple of cleanup operations.
Is there any way to preserve the traceback after x operations in an except?
All exceptions, some exceptions, custom exceptions?
wim
wim
Anyone have a cool one liner for getting a dict out of a string like 'key1: 1, key2: 2, key3: 3' ?
21:20
All exceptions
@mSatyam Python Frameworks have web servers to fasten the development process. But None of the framework are suggested to be used on Production environment. For production, we also use Nginx/Apache etc
wim
wim
a dict of strings to integers , that is
try:
  0/0
except Exception as e:
  some_cleanup_function()
  raise e
Stack trace gets dissolved.
Thankyou all.
So mod_wsgi is just like mod_php is my understanding correct (just hyped). There is nothing special we need to do after adding mod_wsgi to apache. Also can we then make default file to process as index.py instead of index.php while using mod_wsgi
@wim well I suppose you can wrap it with curly brackets and literal_eval?
21:22
@wim >>> my_string = 'key1: 1, key2: 2, key3: 3'
>>> dict(i.split(':') for i in my_string.replace(' ', '').split(','))
{'key3': '3', 'key2': '2', 'key1': '1'}
wim
wim
The best I could do is {k: int(v) for k,v in [pair.split(': ') for pair in s.split(', ')]}
but the intermediate list comp seems ugly to me
@vaultah wat, are you really recommending eval as a cool trick?
anyway, I'd have to quote every string with " to use eval which would not be fun
Oh
I answered something similar in the past stackoverflow.com/a/35154249/2301450
I done derped myself, sorry for the hassle. Just need to raise without the exception.
@neet_jn Take a look at traceback module. You will be needing that to get the stack-trace of previously raised exception
wim
wim
the eval hack would be eval('dict({})'.format(s.replace(': ', '='))) I guess
21:28
>>> import ast
>>> ast.literal_eval("{'key1: 1, key2: 2, key3: 3'}")
wim
wim
I guess the double-comprehension is the only way :(
@wim What about d = dict(zip(*[iter(s.replace(':','').replace(',','').split(' '))]*2))
DSM
DSM
I was thinking of something similar, like {k.rstrip(":"): int(v.rstrip(",")) for k,v in zip(*[iter(shlex.split(s))]*2)}. But to be honest, if at all possible I'd just fix the input format-- I like data which is easy to parse.
agreed
DSM
DSM
The Real World is calling. Rhubarb for all!
wim
wim
21:42
@MarcusS that leaves the values as strings
I have no control over the input format
I despise the zip-splat-iter thing
it's the opposite of pythonic imo
I were you, I would have gone with writing a for loop:
>>> new_dict = {}
>>> for item in my_string.replace(' ', '').split(','):
... key, val = item.split(':')
... new_dict[key] = int(val)
...
>>> new_dict
{'key3': 3, 'key2': 2, 'key1': 1}
BTW how can I paste the code as code block in chat?
wim
wim
yeah, it's kind of verbose though
The nested comprehension doesn't look too bad, I guess --> github.com/wimglenn/advent-of-code/blob/…
I would have ignored doing that due to creation of intermediate tuple. Specially when you are using that within another for loop
yay! I fixed my bug!
21:58
Hey! Anyone of the NumPy gurus know if this can be improved in terms of performance?:

    def inNeighborhood(matrix, value, x, y):
        height = matrix.shape[0]
        width = matrix.shape[1]
        for yi in range(max(y-1, 0), min(y+2, height)):
            for xi in range(max(x-1, 0), min(x+2, width)):
                if matrix[yi, xi] == value:
                    return True
        return False
wim
wim
yes, it can
use return (array == scalar).any()
where in your case the array is an appropriate slice, and the scalar is just "value"
just watch out if your array has floats in it and your value is just "close"
because 0.1+0.2!=0.3
wim
wim
generally in numpy , if you are looping over indices, you're doing something lame
its integer or boolean at the moment. @wim oh that is smart!
@wim yeah i know. i always try not to, but sometimes i cant think of an alternative. but looks like there almost always is!
wonder how the native-ish value in matrix.ravel() works in terms of efficiency
@wim haha! bookmarked ;)
wim
wim
anyone have a python3.6 rpm link?
I'm still on a beta build
 
1 hour later…
23:28
why not just build it yourself?
Fin-Den 0-2... time to go to bed.
I'm hipster like that - I like my artisanal python
@AnttiHaapala jeeeeeeeez man....
00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

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