« first day (2265 days earlier)      last day (2912 days later) » 

21:00
@AndrasDeak Both
@Kevin "Doesn't matter, had pet"
ugh. Had to connect my phone to my laptop, and use iTunes
what a crock of yam
heh, iTunes
like, why would you want to use your own file manager?
omg....and it's still not showing up....
this is hilarious
"what photos?"
21:02
I ran out of space on my phone
iCat mobile device
I backed everything to dropbox. So I just want to get rid of everything
it's currently rubbing its anus in your face, right before it starts shoving all your stuff down from the bookshelf
I swear if it tells me I need to install a separate application for this I'm flushing this thing down the toilet
That's irresponsible. Use a trash can, don't risk clogging the sewers.
@AndrasDeak you're on point
21:16
it required a separate application, but I had the application
I hate you so much, Apple
@idjaw how much did you pay apple for that application?
zero
I never knew it existed either.
Google told me to do a thing, and the thing was there
iTunes, Photos, Image Capture
three apps that are shit
so now, back to idjaw <3 apple
I'm supposed to change plans soon
I think I'm going to change phones and go back to Android as well
Anyone have a One Plus 3?
oh <3 you and your bundled plans
did @IljaEverilä have?
I am using honor 7 lite, the cheapest possible phone available that I found usable.
21:21
and haha. Consumer Report doesn't give recommendation to the new pro
wim
wim
anybody got printing working properly in numpy/ipython
?
wim
wim
@idjaw interesting
hopefully something they can fix in software patch
who else disassembled the assembunny for day 25? I see @Kevin did
21:28
@wim I did, certainly.
It didn't need disassembling, just analysing.
wim
wim
Yeah, I mean like "mental disassembly"
Are you going to push up teh codez, Martijn ?
And from that device what the start value should be to produce an oscillator. I'm guessing that the values for registers b and c (the second and 3rd cpy instructions) vary for everyone.
wim
wim
yeah. day 25 was the one for me to finally crack out the regex
Gist for day 25: spoiler.
I didn't...
21:33
That includes my updated assembunny processor class, which may not be all that useful without day 12 and 23..
because it was apparent that the people who did get to the starboard didn't either.
and ... the task was: "write a program that solves the halting problem"
@idjaw my mother does
@wim print how?:D
wim
wim
@AnttiHaapala bollocks
what is bollocks?
of course it is "write a program that solves the halting problem"
wim
wim
"write a program that solves the halting problem"
21:41
and then "write a program that solves the halting problem for this program"
Day 25 I just brute-forced with a heuristic
@wim what printing in numpy...?
wim
wim
the task was more like "reverse engineer this assembly"
but unless you analyse the input, it is "solve the halting problem"
if the clock sequence made it to 10 correct places I assumed it was the right index
wim
wim
21:41
"understand what it does"
the goal was for you to see that it's a divmod by 2
@MarcusS my code was easier, it just didn't assume anything
wim
wim
not to solve the halting problem, and not to just trial and error until you find a value for the register than works
it just run it so that if it ever outputs twice the same number, it halts.
@wim yes, so congrats, you solved the halting problem.
the point is you need to analyse the input but you cannot write a program to do it.
wim
wim
21:43
@AndrasDeak so that the printing arrays fills the terminal width
try print(np.arange(100)) to see what I mean
thanks, will do
@AnttiHaapala roger, OnePlus3 here
@idjaw ^
wim
wim
numpy wraps it to some stupidly low term width by default
wim
wim
21:45
and the ipython window resize handler was either never there, or got broken sometime
yeah, and it's not ipython
I mean, vanilla repl does it too. Or would you expect ipython to fix it?
wim
wim
I fixed it in vanilla repo with a post import hook
@IljaEverilä oh nice. What are your thoughts on it
wim
wim
my fix doesn't work in ipython
so I assume they also tried to fix it , and fucked it up
21:46
@AndrasDeak Don't know what kind of user your mom is. But if she is like my mom, I don't think her review would be in line with my use cases :P
wim
wim
I asked a question about it, but nobody bite yet. See here if you're interested: stackoverflow.com/q/41368940/674039
@idjaw Very likely, yes:D
@idjaw I've been extremely happy. Their droid version feels snappy and haven't felt a need to even consider roms. Seems to get updates at an acceptable rate (security patch level November 1, 2016 atm). Perhaps the single biggest minus has been the aluminium back cover; the thing is like soap at times.
@IljaEverilä How is Camera quality and battery life
21:49
@wim how about setting linewidth to be np.inf?
I have to say I'm very happy with the iPhone 6 camera
so I would love to get something that can equate to that at least
Battery life is ok for me, day or two with moderate usage. Charging takes 30 mins, so... I'm not a good judge of camera quality. It's been ok for me.
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak good idea, thanks!
quick check seems to work for me without resize
The camera sure beats the camera on ZTE Blade gen 1 that I previously owned :D
21:51
but if it works like that, it should be immune to resizing (as long as it doesn't yam up anything else)
wim
wim
Yep, it works perfectly.
Should I add an answer?
is it useful?
wim
wim
Sure. It's a fine workaround
@IljaEverilä 30 minute charge?
that's fantastic
Yeah they have that "dash charge" thingie
wim
wim
21:53
I'll leave the question for 24 hours incase anyone knows the answer to the signal mystery
nice
wim
wim
that's nice because I don't need the fucking shutil backport now either
I wonder if numpy has some kind of rc file sitting around somewhere for setting these options statically, like matplotlib does ...
I'm also very happy about not having all kinds of crapware preinstalled. There's some, but it's not too pushy. Some custom keyboard that you don't have to use etc.
@wim if it does, it's well hidden
21:59
I have a question if anyone could help.
@idjaw one thing my mother had an issue with was related to dual sim. There was something that she couldn't set different ringtones for the two sim cards? Something along these lies.
def some_text():
return """
You printed your first statement...
You printed your second statement..."""
I have an if statement that prints the above with print(some_text())
I was just wondering, is there anyway to add a time.sleep(n) in the middle of those two sentences when it is returned and then printed?
i.e. the end result being something like:
print("You printed your first statement...")
time.sleep(2)
print("You printed your second statement...")
time.sleep(2)
ctrl+k for code formatting of multiline messages, it preserves indentation that way
instead of returning the string, print these from within the function.


def some_text():
print("You printed your first statement... ")
time.sleep(2)
print("You printed your second statement...")
time.sleep(2)

And call it without print as: some_text()
@JakeStokes make a function that would split lines in the string, and then print each part with delay.
or that ^
22:04
That's what I thought. Thanks for clarifying.
Just thought maybe there was a way I didn't know ^^
22:16
[[entry[0] for entry in list], [entry[1] for entry in list]] looks ugly. There has to be a smarter way to do that.
@wim I just tried the signal bit itself in ipython, and that doesn't fire when resizing
there's a similar post here about another signal
sigint seems to work there
from operator import itemgetter as ig
[[*map(ig(i), lst)] for i in range(2)]
is that an identity?
>>> lst = ['ab', 'cd', 'ef']
>>> [[*map(ig(i), lst)] for i in range(2)]
[['a', 'c', 'e'], ['b', 'd', 'f']]
oh, it's not
22:22
@AnttiHaapala works. and is like magic to me :D
@MarioDekena if these are always sequences of 2 you can use zip
list(zip(*lst))
although that's a list of tuples
>>> [*map(list, zip(*['ab', 'cd', 'ef']))]
[['a', 'c', 'e'], ['b', 'd', 'f']]
BDFL is twitching somewhere
also makes sure that the code doesn't work in Python <3.5 :D
I don't get the hate against map
22:25
I don't hate map, but I can see why someone would hate map(list,zip()) :D
holy... yeah all of it works! yes only seq. of 2. gonna use the zip version without map. roger python v3.5
wim
wim
22:37
Huh. Never knew yyou could use map like a non-truncating zip
>>> map(None, 'abcd', 'ef', 'g')
[('a', 'e', 'g'), ('b', 'f', None), ('c', None, None), ('d', None, None)]
weird?
how is that even supposed to work?
wim
wim
totally weird
map and filter can both die
comprehensions are python .. map / filter / reduce are ... something else
ah, map(func,*iterables)
wim
wim
> If the function is None, return a list of the items of the sequence
How is None a func?:D Shouldn't the first arg be callable?
wim
wim
22:40
of course, how obvious
oh, didn't read along, sorry...
wim
wim
same shit with filter
In the face of ambiguity......
wim
wim
they use None instead of bool
haha, help(map) doesn't mention this
"haha"
at least filter does
wim
wim
22:42
if your first positional argument is optional, it shouldn't be the first positional argument
Make an iterator that computes the function using arguments from
each of the iterables.  Stops when the shortest iterable is exhausted.
this is sooo not what map seems to be doing
@AndrasDeak wrong verison
wim
wim
you're reading the python3 doc and looking at the python2 behaviour
In [51]: sys.version
Out[51]: '3.5.2+ (default, Dec 13 2016, 14:16:35) \n[GCC 6.2.1 20161124]'
>>> list(map(None, 'abc', 'de'))
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not callable
wim is using obsolete Python.
wim
wim
22:43
no, I'm on 3.6.0
while at it you could try how is the behaviour in 1.5
But...py3 filter does allow the first one to be None:D
wim
wim
I just happened to be in a venv of a 2.7 project :P
no you're not
:D
@AndrasDeak yeah thats bad
and what's even worse is that there is a shortcut for None but none for bool.
confusing as yam
wim
wim
22:45
@AnttiHaapala explain me why filter is filter(function or None, iterable) and not filter(iterable, function=None)
>>> list(map(lambda *a: a, 'abc', 'de'))
[('a', 'd'), ('b', 'e')]
none of us are Dutch
so python3 map is definitely not inserting Nones
map(lambda()) is kryptonite for wim:P
@wim that's a good question.
22:46
so you still need itertools.zip_longest
... with starmap
In [58]: list(zip_longest('abcd', 'ef', 'g',fillvalue=None))
Out[58]: [('a', 'e', 'g'), ('b', 'f', None), ('c', None, None), ('d', None, None)]
not for that ^
23:08
lambda *a, huh
23:19
So, Inside seems to run on wine. But now I'm wondering if I really want to pay money for a game that I can't natively play on my OS:/
Which OS?
linux
> Heya,

Our goal is of course to get INSIDE into the hands of as many gamers as possible, but at launch, the game will only be available for Windows and Xbox One.
We can't say anything about other potential platforms at this point. Hope that makes sense.

Cheers!
> Yeah IIRC the only reason you ported LIMBO is because it had to be on Linux for HumbleBundle. Wont hold my breath...
wim
wim
23:37
who has the most hats
there's a leaderboard
alecxe on SO
and on SE altogether
Martijn is #10 on SO
wim
wim
I thought it might have been alecxe
I hope they do something different for winter bash next year. Hats is getting old.

« first day (2265 days earlier)      last day (2912 days later) »