« first day (2267 days earlier)      last day (2910 days later) » 
00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

wim
wim
00:00
sum of Rs = sum of Ds = edge length
yeah -- so you have 2n movements, and you know n of them will be R's, and n of them will be D's
wim
wim
looks like it will be (2*n)! / n! ^2
yes
also known as (2n choose n)
wim
wim
related to binomial coefficients
2n symbols and you choose n of them to be R -- the rest must be D by default
wim
wim
00:05
nice
so obvious in hindsight ...
similarly if the grid is m by n then it's (n + m choose n) = same as (n + m choose m)
another DP practice: projecteuler.net/problem=67
If you want a slightly harder DP challenge: projecteuler.net/problem=161
wim
wim
will my day 18 solution for it also work?
i can't see that link
wim
wim
I didn't get up to 67 yet
oh, is it private repo?
But it's basically the same problem as 18, just with a bigger dataset
wim
wim
00:12
here was my problem 18 --> pastie/vanejajupu.py
It looks like it will be efficient enough for the big one too
I wish I had put that stuff on git/github instead of mercurial/bitbucket
At the time I was trying hg , but github is so much better
True story
@idjaw btw switch to play competitive pretty quickly .... its much much much better than quickplay
I waited way to long to switch to comp play (because i didnt understand how much better it makes the game)
wim
wim
00:31
Yeah I'll get back to Euler one day ...
I'm going to stick to doing them consecutively though
Their problems are as great as the web design is atrocious
lol
everytime i go to that site i think it looks so bad
it distracts me from the questions
01:00
What would you change about it?
wim
wim
First and foremost, the auth
Secondly, get rid of the annoying captcha and use google's one where you just have to click in a box
Then, I would make the input data always more machine-friendly - easy enough to copy and paste into source code without editing
Then I would just update the UX and html/css generally to not look like some PHP piece of shit from the 90's
You can make websites look good and modern very easily these days with, for example, bootstrap styles
01:27
codewars.com , codeeval.com , hackerrank.com
all much better interfaces ...
01:51
codewars is a fantastic interface, but they have huge performance issues.
@JoranBeasley good to know. Thanks. I'm just about ready to load the game up shortly.
 
3 hours later…
04:52
+1 for PE
 
1 hour later…
06:01
cabbage
06:17
Hi
can any buddy tell me how I can use this following function in other function with try and excaption
def validationOfPath(path):
try:
if not os.path.isdir(path):
raise ValueError("Path is not Valid")
except ValueError as err:
return err
like try:
validationOfpayj(path)
06:35
has anyone used Tornado Web Server
07:12
@AmanJaiswal please don't post the same message multiple times
@SohaibAsif you already know the rules, right? If you have a question about Tornado, just ask it.
07:26
ancient but...
@AmanJaiswal you're raising thew exception, then catching it and returning, not reraising
and what's this all with validation? just try to actually use the path
07:39
Cabbage
cabbage
can I do multiple selection of in pycharm where I select something and press something and have the next occurrence also selected?
07:56
hello
Hi
I am looking for a solution for my NLP problem
I want to get the root words for inflacts
for example 'previously'
can anyone help me out
@PranavWaila root words?
for example for 'previously' to 'previous'
'wanted' -> 'want'
I have tried with NLTK lemmetizer
wordnet lemmatizer but not able to handle such cases
what about "meant"?
08:08
well, I am not sure if there is a general way of constructing past tenses of words if it's not with "ed"
@PranavWaila this seems to do the most it is possible
I have tried all these approaches, not able to handle particular cases
:(
that's because particular cases are too particular
has-had, meant-mean, saw-see...
all different
09:08
@AndrasDeak N got 2 year jail sentence....
not even a manslaughter
09:33
who is N?
He who shall not be named.
cabbage all
Cabbage
@MoinuddinQuadri A prominent Finnish Neo-Nazi. You can search the transcript for further details, if you're really curious.
@wim That looks like it's related to the problem of constructing Dyck words, and other similar problems related to Catalan numbers: see the example about monotonic lattice paths in that Wikipedia article. FWIW, I was just writing Python code for that stuff last week, as I mentioned here.
I suppose one could refer to partial lattice paths constructed using Dyck language as Dyck moves. :)
09:57
@AnttiHaapala surely he didn't mean any harm; he kicked the guy in the chest with full swing in a jobial way. Accidents can happen.
brief cbg
guy who has been convicted of assaults several times
this was an "aggravated assault" and ... well, 2 years.
@PM2Ring took me a while, but I see what you did there :P
@AndrasDeak It takes a while if you pronounce Dyck as Dike and not the other way
@Antti, Kannada Mainittu Torilla Tavataan stackoverflow.com/q/41394180/4099593 :D
Do we have a good canonical explaining why PEP-0008 says that doing if greeting is True: is the worst way to test a boolean?
I've found this: what is the correct way to check for False?. It's not bad, and the linked questions add more info, but it'd be good to have something that's more succinct.
@BhargavRao :d s/Mentioned/Mainittu/
Fixed that :P
lol google cannot translate that correctly
Google messes up half the stuff
"Kannada mainittu, torilla tavataan." -> Kannada mentioned, the square is found.
even though some has hand-translated "Suomi mainittu, torilla tavataan." -> "Finland mentioned, see you at the marketplace."
@BhargavRao google algorithms are not really adapted into Finnish language...
torilla is ~"at the market square"
It's even worse when you try to translate Tamil and other Indo-Dravidian languages.
so a better almost correct translation would be "... is found at the market square"
because you can use it like that: "albino pigeons are often found at the market place" - "torilla tavataan usein albiinopuluja"
but instead it just keeps the word order, and tries to find a closest match in English for that word order :(
Is the algo for Google Translate open source?
I don't think so
and it is useless without their data :d
10:23
@BhargavRao Maybe, but it doesn't really explain why PEP-0008 says that if greeting is True: is even worse than if greeting == True:
Hah, True that.
one problem with google is that it thinks in words...
@PM2Ring That's the nearest that I could find. I'm not sure about finding another one as I've not come across anythin near to that :/
it doesn't understand morphemes of Finnish language, the translation would be much better if it could split the words into morphemes
@PM2Ring actualy it isn't. greeting == True is the worst.
The reason I'm asking is that I quoted that PEP-0008 stuff in a recent answer, and I got this comment in response:
why is if greeting is True: bad (no, worse!) according to pep8? — hiro protagonist 35 mins ago
10:26
yeah that wording is misleading there
@AnttiHaapala I disagree, because "the is test should only be used when you explicitly need to test identity of objects, not for testing object's values", as I just said in those comments. ;p
Wouldn't it be worse because "is" is for object/reference equality, whereas "==" is value equality?
Hi, @hiroprotagonist! Thanks for dropping by. You should take a quick look at our room rules.
cbg! just wanted to say thanks for the 'greeting/True' discussion. the 'breaks ducktyping' argument seems the most compelling.
Well, both if greeting is True: and if greeting == True: break duck-typing, but the is version breaks it worserer. :) Conceivably, in Python 2 (where you can redefine True) if greeting == True: could still function correctly with a redefined True but the is version won't.
10:36
so None is a singleton therefore is None is ok, True is 'just' a constant and therefore it's not ok? ...i could live with that. q8) (and i'll beware of the worserer breaking of duck-typing!)
Cabbage!
I think is True is “worse” because the is behavior cannot be overriden by objects, so when you know something is True, then it’s a boolean, and for booleans you can just leave it all off. While == True may call some custom logic for non-booleans.
But I still sometimes use is True when I have some multi-state variable.
E.g. if repeats is True then repeat inifinitely, but if repeats then repeat repeats times.
another compelling argument. thanks! i may become an avid defender of this pep8 rule i disliked at the beginning...
@hiroprotagonist Pretty much. I'm not quite sure how modern Python defines True and False, they could be singletons AFAIK. But even if that's the case, it's redundant to say if some_condition is True: instead of the more readable if some_condition:
@poke Fair enough. Although I hope you write explanatory comments when you do that sort of thing. :)
Yeah, usually the possible values for that variable are then documented somewhere
I actually do this quite regularly with argparse, where I have an argument that has a default value of True but can take an int, so I can differ between --foo and --foo N
10:51
@PM2Ring thanks for the invitation here, the nice chat & the interesting discussion!
have to go... rbrb!
I just grepped all my Python code for 'is True' and 'is False'. I found a single hit of the latter, but fortunately it was in code I didn't actually write. :)
@hiroprotagonist Catch you later!
:D
I couldn’t grep all my code.. Too fragmented xD
also too much not-python
@poke I guess that makes sense, although I feel a little uncomfortable using True or False like that. I'd be inclined to use a string, so that it fails noisily if I accidentally use the True or False special value as an integer when I'm not supposed to.
hmm
I don’t like magic strings
hehehehe… @PM2Ring
11:06
@poke Cute, but evil. :)
sopy-site does it, so it must be okay!!! xD
@poke I agree that magic strings are a bit dubious too. I suppose a more pure solution would be to define a constant object as the magic value, even a simple FOREVER = object() for your original example, and DEFAULT_SORT = object() for the sopy code
yeah
But adding an object that does nothing just for the sake of giving it a name also feels weird xD
DEFAULT_SORT = True
FOREVER = True
Problem solved.. xD
LOL
@poke object instances don't chew up much RAM
>>> import sys;sys.getsizeof(object())
8
11:25
They still exist!
:o
Well, yeah. :)
TIL sys.getsizeof(object) returns 200 in Python 3.6 but in Python 2.6 it weighs in at a whopping 436 bytes.
@PM2Ring so, you're explicitly testing if the object has number value 1, makes sense.
though I'd rather write it as "== 1"
>>> 1+0j == True
True
I don't think this OP is going to score well in their assignment with their current code. In particular, take a look at the class Process definition in the final code block. stackoverflow.com/q/41394665/4014959
@AnttiHaapala I guess it's a semantic issue: if you want to test if something is equal to 1 then you should make it obvious that you're doing that.
OTOH, I don't mind using bools as indices, eg, print(('no', 'yes')[thing==other_thing])
11:52
<-- is in love with Python
@PM2Ring but that's what it is doing :D
and True and False are identities
also
>>> class Foo(bool):
...     pass
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: type 'bool' is not an acceptable base type
so the only way that there is a value that compares equal to True that is not a number, is a case where the equality is not transitive
ahha though not true, as True.__eq__ returns NotImplemented :P
>>> True == FakeTrue()
True
tricky...
@AnttiHaapala That's why I said it's a semantic issue. Syntactically, it's testing equality with 1, but semantically it's testing if it's equal to True. And if you really need to test if something's equal to True you probably want to test that it's identical to True, and so you'd use is, as in Poke's examples.
12:13
True...
 
1 hour later…
13:19
oh wow
where's the people?
:0
Dec 24 at 13:39, by PM 2Ring
Ain't nobody here but us cabbages...
And OP is going to reply "thanks a lot, but the result still has a number greater than 27 in it... I need to iteratively subtract until everything fits in the range" and then I'll reply "why didn't you say so?" and suggest something with modulus
But I won't be able to just say [item % 26 for item in seq] because OP decided that the legal range included 27, so it will be [((item-2)%26)+2 for item in list1] or something goofy like that
Hey @Kevin Yesterday I wrote a M:tG combinations program for the xkcd forum
@Kevin I agree that it smells like a Caesar Cipher question. Maybe the reason for the 27 is that they're also encoding the space char. But I suspect one or more off-by-one errors.
I'm amused they immediately got into an argument about WUBRG vs WBKRG.
I've never been fond of WUBRG myself, but I can't change history...
@Kevin I took that as a sign that they had no other complaints about my post. :)
13:34
Methodology looks sound from here. Approved.
Ooh, my office is getting an early dismissal at 12:01 PM.
... I knew I should have rolled in at 11.
Thank you! I guess there might be a clever way to do this, but brute-force is easier. :)
Why do I ever fight the compulsion to stay in bed for three more hours ;_;
@Kevin Nice.
I wager 0.9 quatloos that the clever way can be found by writing a brute force solver for the general case and not just N=5, then plugging the sequence into the OEIS
OEIS #4815162342, aka the legal covering commander pair sequence...
Whats the difference between _ast and ast modules, and another modules with single underscore?
13:42
Well a leading underscore is the idiomatic way of signaling "privacy" so I'm going to guess that _ast is intended to only be used by other built-in modules and not user-written code.
@MaxLunar usually the underscore version is a C-compiled module.
and the non-underscore version the Python wrapper with fallback code if the compiled module is not available.
In the case of _ast, that module contains code that is shared with the Python parser.
The documentation mentions this explicitly:
> This is the base of all AST node classes. The actual node classes are derived from the Parser/Python.asdl file, which is reproduced below. They are defined in the _ast C module and re-exported in ast.
The _ast module is compiled from a generated file, Python-ast.c.
Thanks. So, ast wrapper module takes something from _ast, which is actually generated by Python-ast.c, as far as I understood, right?
oh i found this line, from _ast import * -_-
now gonna find the _ast.py file
It's been a while since my C* days but I'd expect a C-compiled module to end in .dll, not .py
or .lib or something idk
guys there are so many good movies :| why is everything so great
13:53
or is that something else?
_ast_gen.cpython-35.pyc i think i found it
But .pyc is Python bytecode and C code does not compile to Python bytecode. Only Python code compiles to Python bytecode.
holy cow
i had made a program that scrap data and save that JSON in a file now i want to show that on Tornado
13:59
*scrape
it's skreyp, not skrep
then why it is scrapping
not scrapeing
scraping
it's not scrapping, it's scraping
scrap(!)ing?
scrape -> scraping
scrap -> scrapping
tape -> taping
tap -> tapping
There's not much of a satisfactory answer for "why does the gerund form of 'scrape' not have an E in it?" beyond "because that's how a lot of verbs ending in E work"
14:03
It's only as logical as the rest of English, but it's so
does somebody know when we will get PyPy3 for Windows?
Nope
Also, hope -> hoping
hop -> hopping
pythoning
nope (->noping)
14:09
DSM
DSM
Am I too late to bring up dope/doping and elope/eloping and mope/moping vs. mop/mopping?
English cabbage for all!
poke->poking
I'm glad we sorted this out:P
DSM
DSM
14:24
Oh, we need the double-letter one to be a word too? I might be able to make a case for dop/dopping, but elopping isn't a word. :-/
Wait, why isn't "mop/mope" in the output... Oh, mope isn't in this linuxwords file that I downloaded at random from a sketchy website.
Or did I take the time to extract an official word list from an Ubuntu VM? I can't recall.
DSM
DSM
mope is in my /etc/dictionaries-common/words, FWIW.
rate -> rating, rat -> ratting
@Kevin advisee?
I sense false positives
Do varying Linux distributions tend to have the same word list, or do they tend to make their own?
@AndrasDeak I think that falls under the pattern of "add an E to [verb] to get the word that means "a person that is being [verb]ed"
DSM
DSM
14:28
Sometimes you have to add other bits, like ripe/ripening and rip/ripping.
I'd expect all distros in a family to use the same word lists, eg all Debian distros should have identical lists.
AFAIK, Linux word lists tend to be inherited from the ancient lists originally compiled for Ispell
@Kevin yeah, but the result is not a verb
or did we drift away from the original issue?
Oh yeah, there's definitely a bunch of noun false positives in there.
alga/algae for instance.
Sohaib has been patiently waiting for someone to tell him how to display JSON using Tornado all this time
@AndrasDeak Kevin appears to have drifted away from that issue. :)
DSM
DSM
Presumably it's the same as displaying anything else, you just put in some JSON for the anything else.
14:32
@Kevin it builds character:P
@Kevin i love you
but yeah, unfortunately I can't help with his actual question
Actually he didn't word it as a question, so it's possible that he was merely informing us that he was writing a tornado application that displays JSON, not because he wanted help, but because it's fun to share info about projects you're working on
Anyone here interested in Machine Learning?
14:34
I like my systems deterministic and predictable :-)
i have zero knowledge on tornado so its bad if i ask a question if i know nothing
so i ask a little
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: this is true! I've even been known to post graphs from work I'm doing.
I usually don't have a problem answering questions from people that don't know very much about the subject they're asking about, but in this case I don't know anything about Tornado so I can't help
Perhaps looking up Tornado tutorials would be instructive... I bet "how to display text" would be pretty close to the beginning.
I already did that display the text
and "how to display json"?:P
14:37
now i am trying to do is if there are 3 to 4 texts
in a queue
data is changing
so suppose some i show hello now new data came and i want to show that and so on
If you're asking "how do I continually update the text on a page based on ever-changing data on the server, without making the user refresh his browser?", I'm going to go with... AJAX.
basically my scrapper scrapes some information and store in JSON format in notepad file
i dont want to store in notepad file i want that data to show on tornado
and then the new data came and tornado get the new data
At this point I should probably google to confirm that Tornado is some kind of web framework. Because all of my previous messages sort of depend on that assumption.
"Tornado is a Python web framework and asynchronous networking library". Phew.
@SohaibAsif There are a couple of people who use this room who know something about Tornado, but they aren't here at the moment. And you probably need to do more study yourself before you can ask them questions that they'll be happy to answer.
All the tornado experts are on vacation, try again next year ;-)
14:44
i am going to post the question but i am a liitle confused because i have write a little code and might be my question was not clear and will get negative votes
Hallelujah
but i will post it now
and thanks everyone
for the help
14:54
listen and enjoy
http://www.gigwise.com/news/108818/radiohead-ukelele-ok-computer-karma-police-paranoid-android
Festive-perineum-cbg to all.
DSM
DSM
... ?
okay?:D
I get it...I do...but why?
I'd rather not copy google's one-box definition
15:03
I think I'd appreciate this cover more if I had ever heard the original.
@Kevin Don't know what style of music you listen to, but I would strongly recommend listening to Radiohead's OK Computer. Probably one of the best albums in our generation.
Ooh. I need to add that to my vinyl-to-buy list. Having finally got a nice turntable, I can dust off all the old ones.
DSM
DSM
Ehh, Radiohead didn't work for me. I can see why some people would fall for it, but it didn't take.
Although I'm impatiently waiting for my other half to get back from work, as I forgot my amp didn't have a phono stage. ಠ__ಠ . Hifi shop is en route.
@DSM I'm mildly surprised. But, I'm not a music jerk. So I totally respect that.
:)
I'm afraid to jump in to vinyl.
15:06
let the Music Taste Wars commence
My past has proven to be very scary when it comes to collecting things that cost a lot of money
I'm more 'jumping back into' vinyl.
^^ that's what scares me. Maybe when I get my basement renovated and I can justify a nice listening room :)
My favorite musical genres are alternative, whatever is on radio preset 3, and songs sped up 30% with an anime girl on the cover art
@idjaw Very good! Thanks
15:09
@PM2Ring :)
I really wish I had a Kevin IRL
@idjaw Hah, yes. At some point you find yourself in a furious bidding war on ebay over an original second-run-pink-vinyl-pressing of Nirvana's Bleach, and question your life choices.
Ya'll get the best parts of me while my meatspace friends have to take care of my high-maintenance needs. Pretty sweet setup.
@Withnail I have been down that road for Smashing Pumpkin albums....I'm missing a couple I would love to get my hands on
But I do also have a quite a few rare ones
you know you have it bad when you try to buy the same single because certain releases had different cover art
Mm, nice. I've never had Melloncollie... on vinyl, but I'd be happy with a reissue on that.
There are reissues btw
really beautiful ones too....I bought the CD versions...but I got the Mellon Collie reissue
I also jumped in the very expensive Adore reissue that was signed by Billy Corgan
Yes...I paid a lot for Adore...that's how big of a Pumpkins fan I was
and I loved that album
@Withnail I couldn't resist. Look how gorgeous it is: spfreaks.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/d6h_1296.jpg
15:18
cbg
cbg
Ohhh, that's nice.
Comparably nice with the Vitalogy double gatefold. cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0105/4542/products/… (edited to have nicer picture)
@idjaw Hieronymus Bosch meets Le Petit Prince
@idjaw Ok, giving it a shot now.
@Kevin oh cool. 😀
15:24
Thank you Youtube for making it easier than ever to listen to music without paying for it
@Withnail I haven't listened to that album in a very very long time
@AndrasDeak check this out: illustrationchronicles.com/…
thanks, weird:P
hehe yeah
15:40
Obviously listening to OK Computer now. rolls eyes . And any suggestion that I'm highly suggestible, is just a load of rich creamery butter.
haha I'm listening to it too
DSM
DSM
Has anyone here ever set up their browser to call a text-to-speech program for the chat room? I'd like to have a half-nap but still hear if anyone says anything clever.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Track six, Karma Police... Oh hey, I know this one.
15:46
FWIW, my favourite Radiohead song is Just. And my favourite Smashing Pumpkins song is Rhinoceros.
Well "know" in the sense that I've heard it on the radio a hundred times, but not "know" in the sense that I ever knew they were saying the words "karma police"
00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

« first day (2267 days earlier)      last day (2910 days later) »