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00:01
in The Ministry of Silly Hats, 35 mins ago, by Andras Deak
we happen to have a lot of jokes revolving around cheap Scotts
in The Ministry of Silly Hats, 35 mins ago, by Andras Deak
that's how it made it on our local news portal: thin-skinned Scots threw a fit about that:D
although we have a lot of other jokes, I'm not sure about the actual metric used in that "research":P
we do have too ... but nowhere near the amount of "How does a Swede..."
or "A Finn, Swede and a Norwegian..."
I think the number of Scottish jokes are comparable to cop jokes
00:27
New silver badge for completing a yearly Developer Survey. Incidentally, one has to link their profile with their survey results for the badge. I'm sure this is not all about this specific point, not at all:P
call me paranoid, but just because I'm paranoid doesn't mean I'm not being targeted
DSM
DSM
00:40
Yeah, no badge for me I guess. Although maybe that's only to be expected: I am Scots, after all. :-P
01:33
Hi! Does anyone know of any good resources on learning the asyncio module?
01:48
@PikeD. You can watch PyCon videos on youtube for introduction.
02:05
add(7, 8) # Calling 'add' normally returns 15 as expected.
add7 = add(7) # Partial application: 'add7' is a function taking one argument.
add7(8) # Applying the final argument retruns 15...
In the PyMonad 1.3 docs. Is it also possible with functools.partial?
DSM
DSM
>>> from functools import partial
>>> def add(x,y): return x+y
...
>>> add(7,8)
15
>>> add7 = partial(add, y=7)
>>> add7(8)
15
@MYGz: sure!
03:03
> coverage increased (+10.8%) to 100.0%
DSM
DSM
Pineapples for davidism. :-) I can honestly say I'm not sure if I've seen 100% coverage before.
@davidism: actually, while you're here, can you sanity-check an idea for me?
sure
DSM
DSM
So I'm doing some low-level socket programming and need both request/response and pubsub behaviour. Since one-time responses both to requests and ongoing intermittent subscription responses are being published to the same channel, I'm adding a per-message key to each message. All incoming messages get added to a Queue, and then you get() a message, see if it's addressed to you, and if not you put it back. It seems to work, but the get/put combination feels.. strange.
I'm not really sure, but you're right that seems a bit off.
03:19
you can do request/response over pubsub
DSM
DSM
I was trying to avoid starting a separate thread if I wasn't going to need one, but maybe I should just have one listener for all messages and then add the messages I receive to specific function queues.
 
5 hours later…
08:16
Cabbij
08:45
why is Python room so slow today
Did SO chat used to have an auto-scroll?
it does scroll automatically now
This is killing me. How can I make this print the same line?
s = ' {:3.6f}'; (s + s).format(-13.12345, -147.976732) ; ' -13.123450 -147.976732'
The second line is the correct one, i want a format string that will match it
09:08
I need to write an email to my young professor but dunno how to refer to her
"Dear professor" seems too awkward
dear professor johnson is the correct form of address
until you hear otherwise
from the proferssor herself
Johnson is the surname right?
yes
Dear Professor Johnson,
but her surname isn't Johnson
right, you would substitute her surname instead
09:12
oh, cool
@khajvah Mine isn't (when I return to the tab I'm at the scroll position I left)
refresh the page
Cabbage!
Refreshing the page puts me right at the top - Chrome
The Chrome team probably came to the conclusion that only 40% of its users found that feature useful. So it's logical to remove features that only such a small minority of users use.
09:24
my chromium is working fine
version 55
@khajvah i should say, by the way, that appropriate forms of address vary by country etc. Dear Professor Surname is appropriate in the american universities
i can't speak with confidence about other places
09:42
If I'm not 100% scrolled down the autoscroll doesn't work for me, are you sure you're fully scrolled down?
(I'm using firefox, it may be a feature, because you don't want it to autoscroll when you're reading the backtrace)
it is a feature
I meant to say that the feature might be what's making you feel as if the autoscroll isn't working
It is a feature for sure that it doesn't scroll when you are scrolled up
And that feature quite often makes me lose the autoscroll
10:01
cbg
10:19
Yeh, definitely at bottom of page when I leave
@Carpetsmoker Bitter about backspace? :P
@IanClark haha, I don't even use Chrome
And backspace probably was a good choice. The problem in Chrome is that there's literally no way to rebind keys without jumping through a lot of hoops
This is why I don't like autofill in web forms. #phishing #security #infosec https://t.co/mVIZD2RpJ3
@AnttiHaapala Hidden inputs?
@Carpetsmoker Yeh, to be fair it probably was - and funnily enough I noticed a couple of days after that I pressed backspace and ordinarily I would have left the form I was mid-way through filling out, so I did have a "all right Chrome, you win this one" moment
^not using chrome
@Carpetsmoker yes, see the video
10:25
Surprised it does that
Sneaky ^
Apparently visible inputs, just hidden off the viewport
@Carpetsmoker how else would it autofill?
@khajvah I wouldn't expect it to autofill hidden inputs?
With a normal form I can review what I send before I send it; not so if it's hidden
@Carpetsmoker so how would it be usable then :D
@Carpetsmoker like, the chrome idiots refused to take out the autofill for password fields
@Carpetsmoker isn't it domain specific? I.E. You have to input at least once for each domai
10:28
so, I had a form that asked for a single new password for a newly created user... chrome/chromium thinks "yeah, I need to add the current user's password in that field, and perhaps put the login/email in the preceding box"
@Carpetsmoker The point is that working out what's "hidden" is non-trivial
It's not <input type="hidden"> in the case demoed
so now the solution is that there are like 7 different hidden password inputs to confuse chrome so that it doesn't dare to fill in the current user password in the one field.
you can even have it completely visible, just hidden under margins with overflow=none.
or sized 5x5 pixels; hidden under a layer with z-index, etc...
You'd expect rendering engines to be able to keep track of what they're actually rendering. You know, with the 100M of memory they're using and all...
10:31
even if the box actually renders in the view, it is very hard to deduce what information the user could read from it.
@Carpetsmoker use a textbox with a font that has all characters rendered with spaces.
Any with forex experience?
@Carpetsmoker It would make the Autofill functionality a lot more complex
white textbox with black text with all unicode characters mapped into space in the font...
or rendered as dots
Calculating visibility is so difficult. You can 1) move things out of the viewport altogether, 2) Cover things up with z-indexes, 3) Use opacity, etc...
10:33
Well, maybe disallow setting fonts on textboxes? It's an arms race of course, but throwing our hands up in the air and saying "we'll just give up" doesn't sound particularly great ...
so...
or... stop autofilling :d
or propmpt: these information will be autofilled
but no, it would decrease "usability"
Yes, that would be good
shitshit,
Can chrome actually encrypt passwords now?
appendix now useful :P
10:34
Like with a master password?
too bad I don't have one :(
I guess the point is that immediatley on autofill you've exposed the information to the page should it wish to capture it
Funny thing is my address is in Chromium autofill even though I'm pretty sure I never added it there
As I hardly ever use it
Looks like it's automatic from something
The "organisation" is set to 1985 (my birth year)
Oh, you can also add credit cards
yeah
I'm not sure that there's any real credit card vulnerability though
10:37
but it's not the same autofill, I expect more security
Seems to work the same @khajvah
@khajvah what would you expect from google?
No room to fill in the CVV code, so there's that at least, but not all websites even use that
@AnttiHaapala It's not Microsoft
@Carpetsmoker you don't need the cvv...
with visa, master it is just 3 digits
10:39
have you ever tried eventlet.monkey_patch() in a django project?
it seems to break Django
it has been demonstrated that it can be exploited by entering the cvv code in 1000 services simultaneously and the companies do not catch that before it is too late.
Yeah, the entire system is stupidly insecure
I guess it could have a popup saying "Autofill the following: x" - probably not terrible UX to then just have to press enter
That reminds me of MongoDB
But then, people remember passwords with Chrome which is seriously stupid too, should browsers remove that feature?
10:43
You know, where it was listening on all ports with no auth by default
And they were against changing it "because it wasn't good UX"
Now all those database are scraped and/or hijacked. Great UX there.
Clearly with Mongo that's BS because you're dealing with developers, but there is a genuine trade off between security and ease of use. Finding the sweet spot is the goal
@Carpetsmoker sure but I blame devs more
I like the "Secure" https change that Chrome have made I think...
^ password input on non https stuff?
10:49
@IanClark so, xss injecting scripts from 3rd party https sources.
I think the distinction between the advanced certificates (? I can't recall the official name) where you get "PayPal [US]" e.g. and normal ones wasn't totally fair
:P - @AnttiHaapala I do think that clicking "Secure" could link to a "more info" which might provide novice users with better security
But they still do that?
@IanClark EV
That one ^^
In 2006, researchers at Stanford University and Microsoft Research conducted a usability study[12] of the EV display in Internet Explorer 7. Their paper concluded that "participants who received no training in browser security features did not notice the extended validation indicator and did not outperform the control group", whereas "participants who were asked to read the Internet Explorer help file were more likely to classify both real and fake sites as legitimate".
:D:D:D:D
10:55
> read the Internet Explorer help file
Things I definitely don’t want to do ever.
@poke see the docs :D
so they used "picture-in-picture" attack :D
and those who had read the help file saw the address bar in a screenshot embedded on the page "yeah, green, seems legit" :d
11:34
@IanClark It should be secure by default. Making things insecure is easy, making it secure isn't
@Carpetsmoker I'm just saying ultimate security isn't always practical. I can't get my parents to use LastPass let alone have them use Tor over a VPN, or not give away private information online
@IanClark Yes, but that isn't applicable here. You can't just shrug away real security problems with "meh, UX"
Especially when the UX effects are mild to non-existent
"Tor over VPN" is not a good comparison
If you take away a feature that many users use (like autofill), you necessarily remove ease of use. Unless you can communicate to the users in a succinct and visceral way why giving up that option is worth it, you have to reach a compromise
some reporter in Finland asked ticketmaster about why they're not using SSL certificates to safeguard the tickets and session info
The inquiry was eventually forwarded to the London HQ, whose answer was that "internet is not secure. Use a safe network"
@IanClark I never said it should be "taken away", just that the user should be informed better what info is going to be autofilled
11:45
I agreed
It seems that in Chrome you already have to explicitly say "use autofill", so if they would expand the UI of that, we might already be there
> I guess it could have a popup saying "Autofill the following: x" - probably not terrible UX to then just have to press enter
 
1 hour later…
12:48
Hi everyone, whats the best way to run python scripts from a cloud/network? So that they run on a scheduled time, even if you're not logged into the cloud/network at that time or don't have your computer turned on
AWS & CRON?
"best" is pretty subjective. You can do it lots of ways
You could use a PASS like Heroku and use Heroku Scheduler
L.C
L.C
Hello all, I am wondering if you could help me I have a semi structured data .txt file that i need to pull information from and create into a database what would be the best way to do this. The .txt contains over 1000 bits of data so it is very large
PAAS*
L.C
L.C
I have experience in python but never in this manner or using it alongside databases
12:58
@L.C over 1000 bits of data...
@IanClark oke thanks!
@L.C FYI your message above contained 2000 bits of data.
if you meant to say "pieces of data", no it is not very large even then.
as for the "best way", no, there isn't one "best way"
L.C
L.C
@AnttiHaapala I aplogise if I've got this incorrect i was simply trying to state it's a large dataset
nothing you've said convinces me that this is a large dataset and that the text file wouldn't be the most appropriate storage for it.
L.C
L.C
It is for an assignment I have been given, I am supposed to take the data out of this .txt correctly structure it and place into a database under set columns. It is a free choice assignment designed so that i am able to choose what language etc. i use to complete it and I have chosen Python as it is one i'm more comfortable with but have never used it in this manner
13:06
Cabbage
@L.C The description sounds like there'll only be one table to populate, is this correct?
o/ @JRichardSnape
Cabbage, all, btw
#
L.C
L.C
@holdenweb Yes there will be one table with 4 columns that will be populated
OK. So the problem boils down to "extract the data from the text file one DB row at a time, and write each row to the database as it's produced"
It's fairly easy to find information about how to write databases from Python, and I'd recommend the use of the sqlite3 module because it's built into Python. But you can start with a dummy "write to DB" function that prints out what it would write - that way you can verify your extraction routines before you start tangling with database.
L.C
L.C
13:13
ah I did not realise sqlite3 was built into python, yes I'll have a look into that now. I think as well after sitting back and looking at what i need to do i was probably over complicating it in my mind
8
13:25
cbg
Hi - is there a way to define a valid range of runtime values for a Python variable - so that it will be checked by the interpreter before it is set?
if val not in valid_range:
    raise ValueError('Invalid value!')
:P
thanks :) someone mentioned that Java has annotations, I was wondering if I could "identify" or "mark" a variable with a valid type and range and the program would exit with an exception if it was violated
I believe java has very little in common with Python
you can have assertions in both, if that's what you mean
13:32
yup, I am aware of that, thanks - I am reading a bunch of json data and sometimes it has invalid values - i want the program to reject those values if it falls outside the range - i thought maybe there is something more "pythonic" that I am not aware of
I don't see why validating your own data would not be "pythonic"
I guess you could always overcomplicate it by defining a class that checks its values automatically on setting, but that probably isn't what you need
using asserts to check inputs is not pythonic
asserts never fail
if you say "sometimes it has invalid values, the program should reject", it means you're abusing asserts
hmm
assert foo == 42
assertions are for "this should never ever happen", right?
13:35
right
that's also why they're disabled in non-debug mode in certain languages/compilers (right?)
means: "by this time foo is guaranteed to be 42, or I the programmer am a fscking idiot"
right
no, i get that
actually i have about 50 json keys that need to be parsed and saved, but only if they match a type and range
so, right now, i am checking using "isinstance and "in range" to reject values that I think are invalid
why don't you include validation in parsing?
I am doing that already - I was just wondering if there is another/better way to do it
13:38
ah, I see
e.g. i could define, at coding time, that the var errorCode can be of type "int" only and the values are 200, 404 and 503
so if the 3rd party API sends me a -1 or 480 or "?", I can reject it
right now i have 2 checks for every var (about 50 of them)
it struck me that maybe there is a way to annotate or decorate a python var with a type and range (i understand python is typed at runtime)
So the type and value of a Python object "belong" to the object itself, not to a name you've happened to bind that object to.
ok...
"name you've happened to bind that object to" - that's assigning an object to a "name"
like myalias = myObj
where myObj is an instance of some class
@sami Sort of. Essentially, the name is a dictionary key and the object is the associated value (although for efficiency reasons it's not always implemented via a dictionary).
ok thanks
13:49
:/
my code works without psycopg2 monkey_patching but it shouldn't
@sami However, if you want you can make an object that tests the value that you attempt to store as one of its attributes. Of course, doing such tests slows things down, but if you need it it can be done using Python's powerful descriptor machinery.
I feel like no matter how you do this, you're still going to have 50 lines of boundary/type testing, so you may as well do it the simplest way (which is probably the way you already have it)
PM2Ring - I will take a look at this
thanks :)
@Kevin I am planning on refactoring my code, I wanted to see what was the best approach
i remember years ago when i read programming for the first time, me and my not-so-smart friends used 20 if/else statements rather than trying to understand for loops
I just noticed that someone (probably Martijn) deleted my comment on the evil of using a BOM with UTF-8. I guess that's fair enough. If you're using Microsoft stuff that needs a BOM, then you're kinda forced to use it. :) stackoverflow.com/questions/41591368/…
13:56
since i don't have a community of Python developers where I live, I am not sure of best practices
anyway thanks guys
No worries, sami.
@PM2Ring it is still wrong
@AnttiHaapala I'm glad there are some things about Unicode that we agree on. :)
we agree on everything where you're right.
14:03
I always get pissed when comments get deleted for no good reason
and disagree on those things where only I am right.
@PM2Ring the whole discussion was getting too noisy, and the OP had stated that they couldn't edit the file anyway.
@AndrasDeak comments are always ephemeral, they are not designed to last.
"I've got a measuring tape, now I need to know the weight of this thing."
@MartijnPieters yeah, I know all the rationale behind it and the official stance. It still annoys me:P
deletes 10 more Andras Deak comments
14:05
:D
I do have more than enough noisy comments, I'll tell you that
Hey @Kevin How goes the ImageMagick bug-hunting? FWIW, I've occasionally used it (TBH, this distro uses the GraphicsMagick fork, which I presume has the same bug), but I have an aversion to giant monolithic programs with a zillion command-line options / parameters. I prefer to do CLI image processing with the good old NetPBM programs.
@BhargavRao I know a better solution! navigates to the delete account option on Andras Deak's account.
I have to be prolific if I want to keep up with the mods
@MartijnPieters :PP
@Andras Quick quick, fill your dev story. :D
(The bug was fixed, BTW)
what bug?:D
14:07
@AnttiHaapala Get a lever and something with known weight? \o/
@PM2Ring Yesterday the dev promised a fix for bug #1 in the next nightly build. He remained silent on bug #2 so I get the feeling he doesn't consider it a bug
Actually I'm pretty sure that's how mechanical scales work anyway :P
@Kevin Did you figure out whether it was a dithering artifact? In some cases when using Floyd-Steinberg error diffusion errors can propagate quite a distance.
129
Q: Moderators can't delete spammers or puppets with attached Developer Stories

Brad LarsonIt appears that moderators cannot currently delete any accounts that have a Developer Story associated with them. We are locked out of all deletion options. Unfortunately, this has prevented myself and other moderators from deleting sock puppets, spammers, and trolls who happened to have attache...

@BhargavRao oh, didn't know about that one
14:11
@PM2Ring The bug still occurs when I disable dithering with the +dither flag, so I don't think so
@MartijnPieters Understood. A tangential discussion about a controversial topic like that just adds unwanted noise. But I couldn't not respond to that guy's comment suggesting the use of a BOM. :)
@Kevin Is it an actual bug or is it just an edge-case resulting from the way something is done? (in the same way that a JPEG artifact isn't exactly a 'bug')?
(I ask because I've used IM a lot over the past few years without any issues, so I am wondering when this bug occurs)
\o cbg
Cabbage @moo \o
14:16
how goes it BR?
All's fine here, Thanks. How about you?
had weird dreams... ATM shooting double money out of what was deduced from your account, chapters (a book store) selling rate 18 stuff, video wise, sql functions not working as intended creating mass chaos in my work place lol other than that it's swell
@AndrasDeak too many bugs inside your monitor ;)
@Kevin One problem with almost all colour quantization algorithms is that they try to find the best set of colours to represent the source image without taking dithering into account. Which is pretty crazy considering that almost all images that get colour quantized are also going to get dithered in some way or another, so you really want to choose a set of colours that will combine effectively.
An interesting approach to this problem is discussed in an article by Mitra & Gupta. I've had some success at implementing this in PIL, but it still needs some tweaking.
what I don't get is how the local translation invariance gets broken by the colour reduction
14:29
Another option is to use the rather impressive NeuQuant algorithm. Because of the way that algorithm selects colours they naturally tend to work well together when dithering. In fact, the author claims they work so well that you don't even need dithering most of the time.
May whoever designed MS Paint to have no way to get the hex code of an eyedropped color be forever cursed to step on a lego every night of his life
There's a PNG implementation of it that does adaptive dithering: it only turns dithering on in regions where the colours are fairly uniform so the dithering doesn't interfere with regions with a lot of detail in them.
morning everyone
\o good morning
Morning corv
14:41
@MarcusS If it's an edge case, then it's an edge case in an algorithm way more sophisticated than "map each color in the input to one of the 256 colors the algorithm selected somehow" because anything working along those lines couldn't possibly produce this output
google authenticator kind of pisses me off, it doesn't account for people who wipe their phone every week, like me :\
Is it obvious that I'm getting increasingly frustrated in that thread, because the one guy keeps suggesting "well naturally the colors will change when you go from more than 256 colors to 256 colors" in a way that implies he hasn't looked at any of my test cases?
let me see:P
Now that I've learned you can embed images straight into posts, I'm really beating them over the head with the output. The only way he can ignore it now is by smearing vaseline on his monitor.
I get the impression that he isn't (fully) reading your posts
14:46
@corvid you could always print out the QR code and keep it in your wallet
yeah but I got like 10 of them
@Kevin yeah, your issue is clear here
You could also give Authy a try, but I don’t really trust that thing. Before you can even test it, you need to sign up with your mobile phone number.
@Kevin did you read the newest post about the order of commands? Might be relevant
Well, this is a disaster. If I put +dither in front of -colors, then the artifacts go away. This doesn't change the fact that I think that it's still a bug to have speckles of this kind with dithering, but now I've lost all credibility. "Foolish newbie made a mistake in his command, therefore the problem is with him and not the software."
14:51
:/
so....why is dithering important here?
I mean, why is it needed for colour reduction?
I don't trust anything that's not from a big-name developer
@corvid It’s even qualified as “Top Developer” by Google.
something something just like the NSA
But seriously, corvid, if you wipe your phone every week, don’t you do any backups? I assume you have root, so just get a good backup tool and backup the data of the Google Authenticator app.
I don't load from a back up that defeats the purpose of wiping the phone
14:56
You could also just roll like Kenneth Reitz and just have them txt codes to you
@corvid Data backup != partition backup done by recovery.
they ran out of green tea in the office... i can't function normally now :(
had i known I would have went to a timmy's for something :(
@Kevin hypothesis: the dithering algorithm is aware of the variance of colours in a given region, this is why most of your sky is sky-coloured with only a few speckles. But the horizon has some fine structure nearby, leading to a much larger speckle density. And said speckles will occasionally be such that their colour is close enough to the sky that it gets binned into the same colour, producing those artifacts. Opinion?
Just like you can format your computer and put back your best_sopython_quotes.txt into your home directory without “affecting the wipe”, you can backup some application data without it affecting your phone wipe.
any test case for this scenario should invole a pattern that has structures of varying size from the pixel- to the macrolevel, just like your tile pattern. How about some nice fractals?
14:58
But I don't trust them because I am paranoid, I also wipe my PC probably every week and start from scratch
I also have like, 5 apps total on my phone: reddit, starbucks, fandango, inbox, and spotify
are RAIDs a good idea to store like semi important stuff? like stuff that would make me sad but 'not cripple my life' files ? I remember reading that RAIDs are only for stuff that you don't care to lose since it's not really reliable, has that changed or is that information wrong in general ?
there are many kinds of raids
@MooingRawr Depends on the RAID :P
if you keep track of your drives failing, I'm sure a RAID is more secure than a single disk you use for backups

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