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19:00
@Kevin and how often do you bake the same thing?
It's hard to riposte off of what is essentially a non-sequitur
@AndrasDeak So far? Never.
there's your problem:)
if you keep experimenting, you'll keep running into experimental issues
{relative} told me, the first one is for getting the mistakes out of the way.
@Kevin I remembered that image :D i.imgur.com/ZJnTFjN.jpg
Nice.
wim
wim
19:05
balaclava, balalaika, baclava, black lava ?
@wim yes. :D
I make potato pancakes. "Oil the pan", says the instructions. I add some oil. "That's too much oil", says {relative}. They're right. I make another batch. I add some oil. "That's not enough oil", says {relative}. Right again.
"I make potato pancakes" <- stop right there
@Kevin So you basically think like a machine learner, nice!
Woah woah waoh. Stop the press!
Anyone watch House of Cards in here?
19:06
Me!
@WayneWerner What's that? is it any good ?
The pancakes looked ugly in the end but tasted fine. Like mashed potatoes, except you can eat them with your fingers. Good qualities.
Yeah it is, and probably especially relevant now...
anyways...
Claire Underwood is the Princess Bride!
My brother just pointed that out to me. Mind == blown
Everyone loves House of Cards and I know as soon as I start watching it I'll say "why didn't I watch this sooner?" and yet even though this is a complete certainty, I still haven't started watching it.
19:08
Start tonight ;)
I watched the first two seasons, but the third season got some unfavorable reviews, so I decided to stop
when it comes to pancakes, I prefer the European version
the original House of Cards is short
just mislabel it as altruism and be happy
Dear creators of everything that isn't House of Cards: you're welcome for not making the difference in viewership one larger.
Dear shows I watch in lieu of HoC: same, but two larger.
19:12
Android app doesn't have chat?
@AndrasDeak True story. I make them with... 8 eggs, 4 cups of flour, 2 cups milk and 2 cups water. And a stick of melted butter.
@MYGz I think so. You have to use browser
@WayneWerner sparkling or still water?
Instructions didn't specify, so I just got some from the stagnant puddle out back. Water is water.
19:15
then just cook on a non-stick pan and shove directly into your crêpe-hole
like this:
nice loop
I mean the OP is just asking, "Do I need to import a module to use it?"
I... duh?
> Unclear what you are asking
:D
hey guys, need some help. I have a csv file with data and I'm using delimiter=",". Now sometimes my data does have the comma included however it still splits it as something seperate when i read from the file.
hello
can there be stray commas in those lines?
outside of strings
and how are you reading it?
and do you have an example line?
19:25
so for example, a line from the file is : 0,Test1,[1000],blah
my algorith uses this : reader = csv.reader(open("file.csv"), delimiter=",")
for w,x,y,z in reader:
so w = 0, x = Test1, y = [1000], z= blah, but my z may contain anything as its just written text, i was looking into the csv python documentation to see what could help me however having trouble fully understanding
so does that line produce your problem or not?
that line doesnt
but a line such as : 45,Test1,[1030],Hello,World does
*sigh*
@SylentNyte you have 5 columns there, unlike 0,Test1,[1000],blah
yes i am well aware of that
@SylentNyte You need to quote your columns properly.
19:29
You need to find whoever is generating those csv files and tell them to put quotes around that "Hello, World"
Oops beaten but two is better than one
>>> f1=StringIO('0,Test1,[1000],blah\n45,Test1,[1030],Hello,World')
>>> f2=StringIO('0,Test1,[1000],blah\n45,Test1,[1030],"Hello,World"')
>>> for f in f1,f2:
...     for l in csv.reader(f,delimiter=','):
...         print(l)
...
['0', 'Test1', '[1000]', 'blah']
['45', 'Test1', '[1030]', 'Hello', 'World']
['0', 'Test1', '[1000]', 'blah']
['45', 'Test1', '[1030]', 'Hello,World']
so simply adding quotes will solve my problem?
there's no way for the csv reader to deduce your strings a posteriori
@SylentNyte in case your vague description of your problem fully corresponds to your actual problem
19:33
yea sorry, I didnt quite know how to explain it
thanks for the help, i spent like ages tryna figure out the documentation to fix that
Adding quotes will fix everything until you discover that your strings already had quote marks inside them, which you will now have to escape with backslashes. That will fix everything until you discover that your strings already had backslashes inside them, which you will now have to escape with more backslashes.
@Kevin ._. well that will be fun, ill see what i can do about that
The ultimate solution is to threaten the person writing the csv data with a baseball bat until they stop sending you malformed data
or a csv
tbh this is just a project of mine
19:36
angular 2 or react; and react with what?!
If you're the one generating the data, then it will probably save you a couple headaches to also use the csv module to write the csv data. (or use an entirely different serialization method, like json)
just to like push myself, im going to have the file saved onto a raspberry pi acting like a server, and having my pc and laptop connected to that raspberry through some network. essentially tring to create like a messaging thingy with python
@Kevin Backslashes are not the only way. Double double quotes is another popular style of escaping value data.
yea tbh, looking through the algorithm now its not very efficient
there are a lot of unneccessary things being run
>>> import csv
>>> with open("data.csv", "w") as f:
...     writer = csv.writer(f, delimiter=",")
...     writer.writerow([45, 'Test1', [1030], 'Hello, World'])
...
32
>>> print(open("data.csv").read())
45,Test1,[1030],"Hello, World"
Ta daa, escapes the string for you all on its own
19:42
hmmm
whenever somebody's built a parser, try to use that
parsing stuff is tedious
thanks kevin
also, when typing stuff such as x = "Hello World", is it better to use " or '
or does it not matter
im assuming that ' is just prefered because its quicker to type; two keys dont have to be pressed
python doesn't make a distinction
They're functionally equivalent. I think " looks nicer.
i agree with kevin
19:44
I like ' because bash
and possibly MATLAB:P
Python prefers '
In [11]: x = "Hello World!"

In [12]: x
Out[12]: 'Hello World!'
unless you have ' in the string
They are not the same. If you are writing the string
it's raining
then it's more convenient to use "..."
#Exception:

In [13]: x = "What's that?"

In [14]: x
Out[14]: "What's that?"
PEP 8, may its reign last a thousand years, tells us:
> In Python, single-quoted strings and double-quoted strings are the same. This PEP does not make a recommendation for this. Pick a rule and stick to it. When a string contains single or double quote characters, however, use the other one to avoid backslashes in the string. It improves readability.
19:47
And one more example:
In [15]: x = "But wait! She said, \"That's what she said\""

In [16]: x
Out[16]: 'But wait! She said, "That\'s what she said"'
Oo, that's an interesting question...
I usually reserve single-quotes for chars
by the seashore
@MarcusS how C of you
PEP 8 watches you when you transgress community style standards. It sees and does not forget.
Looks like repr(str) doesn't prefer pep8
In [17]: x = "But wait! She said, \"That's what she said. It's better to have two's\""

In [18]: x
Out[18]: 'But wait! She said, "That\'s what she said. It\'s better to have two\'s"'
Three backslashes instead of two!
gasp
Upside of ubuntu: lot of people are using linux. Downside of ubuntu: when I'm trying to fix a non-debian-based system, all I get are ubuntu search results.
19:52
Contrary to the PEP, for strings which don't contain " or ', there is no reason to choose one or the other delimiter, no rule. Use whichever one you prefer at a particular moment. For example, you may have been using "..." all throughout your program, and then later in the program, purely arbitrarily, decide to write, 'You know what, I\'m going to use \'single quotes\' around this string this time, for no particular reason!'.
quote = '\'';
unchanged = (osize == isize);
if (squote) {
    unchanged = 0;
    if (dquote)
        /* Both squote and dquote present. Use squote,
           and escape them */
        osize += squote;
    else
        quote = '"';
}
@AndrasDeak "-ubuntu" or "-debian". Or both!
The logic for deciding whether to use single or double quotes in 3.X. squote and dquote are the count of single and double quotes in the string.
TIL say command in OS X allows you to say stuff through the speaker
@WayneWerner I keep failing trying to use those switches, google hates me
I'll try anyway, thanks
19:53
wat
holy crap
And also, you can translate it to any language by specifying the speaker
Try this: say -v petra "I am a stinky crow"
@corvid say -v whisper "I'm not creepy"
I must not have this "petra"
Yeah you have to download it
or any in a different language, that's the German girl
hah. Nice.
19:56
I know you can download voices via system preferences => date and time => customize voice
...well? does the doorbell have wifi at least?
I'd use espeak though, but I also have Ubuntu and not OSX...
The doorbell has wifi but they installed folding@home on it and it's consuming all the cpu
Well, something good came out of that
That link just brightened my day! Thank you — code base 5000 23 mins ago
too broad (403 unauthorized) stackoverflow.com/q/41881276/344286
20:11
thanks for the help guys
no worries
So I remember reading something about shops online will store cookies, and use that to either raise or lower the price of an item you are looking at. If we have two shops that are in direct competition to each other, shop A and shop B, is there a rule against shop B to look up the cookies of shop A when you visit shop B's site, and change their price based on if you have shop A's cookies saved?
Browsers don't let one domain see another's cookies.
isn't there an option to enable/disable 3rd party cookies?
against sneaky tracking tricks that would otherwise be possible?
20:34
That affects what cookies get set where, not which domains can read which cookies.
my lack of web programming knowledge is showing:)
DSM
DSM
Webstuffs are like magnets to me. Nobody really knows how they work.
I wish I understood webstuffs half as much as magnets:D
First you must understand that the Internet is like a series of tubes.
each a proverbial rabbit hole
20:39
Once you get that you'll be surfing the information superhighway in no time
DSM
DSM
And the tubes behave counter-intuitively. #socketprogramminghangover
self-foot-shooting or massacre kind?
hey guys i have a question. Im writing an web in flask that uses senna (NLP) im wondering can i run .exe on azure?
@Kevin dynamic programming :thumbs up:
20:44
"Collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge" concern.
in reality they simply want to pre-generate a collection of keys/passwords and want to hardwire them in each function prior to distribution
I need to start looking into code gen soon too, for a library I'm making. Is the "best" way just a templated string and exec?
or just replace?:D
Last time I did code generation it was mostly via compile and the ast library.
Ah, so there's a cleaner way? Noyce.
20:51
IIRC it required Java-like levels of object instantiation. You need to create like eight nodes to insert x = 23 into a statement list.
DSM
DSM
Usually when I think I need codegen I can avoid it with a mini DSL.
So... templated strings? Got it.
Possibly there was a faster way to do it than the way I did it, while still being more best-practicey than exec. I dunno, I only put like twenty minutes of effort in.
If all you need is templated strings, why do you need to generate code? Why not just write some conditional logic for that?
The library I'm making lets people declaratively create classes to represent serializable messages for a certain protocol. It would be relatively trivial to give them a nice __init__ for free, so I want to do that.
20:56
Having never used metaclasses before, I wonder if a metaclass would help.
DSM
DSM
Sounds like you could do it with a factory instead, he said, waving his hands quickly.
It's settled, then. Write a metaclass factory.
DSM
DSM
(handshake across the border)
My hand won't reach so you'll have to shake my knife. Just, uh, grasp it by the flat parts.
are you a beaver?
20:59
Negative, I am a meat popsicle.
(hmm, apparently Popsicle is a trademarked term, like Kleenex or Xerox. TIL)
DSM
DSM
Huh, didn't know that.
What's the generic term we're supposed to use instead?
I'm already using metaclasses, although the metaclass part isn't necessary in 3.6
Negative, I am a meat ice pop. Hmm, doesn't have the right cadence.
I only knew about frisbee and velcro and teflon, mostly because of Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
21:01
I want a generated init because it'll give better error messages
@DSM water Kevin
@MartijnPieters with the triple "read the docs" stackoverflow.com/questions/41882819/…
DSM
DSM
@AndrasDeak: nice.
@davidism yeah, that post shows very little initiative in the research department. Those three links are the first three hits on Google for 'flask templates'.
If only "top answerers" counted "closing as dupe" as answering, I'd still be on the 30 day board for Flask. No one can Google.
21:20
@Kevin does if (squote) needs brackets ?
21:37
@Danilo try without?
but that looks like c(pp), so I'd say "yes"
 
2 hours later…
23:55
cbg all
I asked this thing a long time ago and got a really good answer, but I can't remember what it was. =_=;

If I have a sequence of values and a NumPy array, and the sequence contains all unique array values, is there an easy way to convert the entire array to index values corresponding to the sequence?
So if I had an array [['cat', 'dog', 'dog'], ['luigi', 'cat', 'cat']] and a sequence ('cat', 'luigi', 'dog'), is there a simple way to convert the array to an output array [[0, 2, 2], [1, 0, 0]]?
I seem to recall it being something like, output = my_array[seq], but that doesn't work for me.

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