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23:00
Maybe it's a cultural thing.
wim
wim
that's not TDD and I will edit wikipedia if necessary ..
You'll need to :-)
just flag it with content dispute
"the article contains unsourced statements and it's stupid"
wim
wim
haha
(keep going guys, Im going. thanks)
wim
wim
23:02
Django, for example, is a project developed in TDD style
@user6827096 see you
wim
wim
every change goes in with a test verifying the behaviour does as expected. usually in the very same commit.
that makes complete sense to me, whether or not it's TDD
Ah - test-accompanied development. :-D
wim
wim
You can write the test first if you want, and sometimes I do, but you don't have to. And saying you have to write the test first, or it's not TDD, is just religious fundamentalism
23:03
Well it's not just that - writing it first has useful properties
@RobertGrant it's Schrödinger's test: nobody knows whether the box (commit) containing test and code contained which first
wim
wim
If it's a bugfix commit, I usually write the test first - a test which reproduces the bug - and then commit the fix.
well that's a pretty special case
E.g. you're more likely to write tests that test the requirement; if you write it after, your thought processes are now strongly influenced by the code you wrote and the mental model of the problem you have now you've written said code
wim
wim
You can get the benefits of that without being religious about that
23:06
Depends on what you're testing, right? The requirements or the original (surely:P) working code
wim
wim
after a while, when you're writing code, you are always thinking to yourself "how am I going to write the test for this stuff"
Also (although this is also a maturity thing) you're less likely to write tests whose shape conforms to the code and more likely to write easily testable code
wim
wim
and it influences your style of coding already
Hmm.
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/116940?m=36063640#36063640
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/6?m=36063643#36063643
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/7?m=36063639#36063639
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/11?m=36063638#36063638
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/17?m=36063606#36063606
... I thought what we had was *special* :-(
@wim Well, that was my second point, but not my first
wim
wim
23:07
but, it's a discipline that takes time to develop, I guess. And one way to develop it would be to force yourself to write test first for a while
@ZeroPiraeus busted
My first point I don't think should be dismissed by an accusation of being religious
FWIW I don't think wim accused you in particular, he's only making general remarks
Fair enough
wim
wim
@ZeroPiraeus LOOOOL
23:09
I guess the point as (as so often) "do it in a way that reasonably works for you but don't overdo it for the sake of overdoing"
Not that I mind criticism, but religious fundamentalism (by which I think is meant "dogmatism") is often just unfounded namecalling
@AndrasDeak definitely don't overdo anything
wim
wim
take everything in moderation, including moderation ...
But writing tests with a brain that just knows the requirements, and doesn't yet have an implementation in mind, is not overdoing it, I don't think
wim
wim
you can't. the first thing your test will do is get ImportError
then you have to go and define the name
Course you can
wim
wim
23:15
then you go back and call the interface. then you have to go and define the interfaces.
The test doesn't doesn't have to run. But do you write a test for your test?:P
@RobertGrant To me, outside of a specifically spiritual context "religious" has a useful meaning distinct from "dogmatic" – but then I'm a Marxist, so I don't see dogmatism as necessarily bad ;-) I can see how an actually religious person might get irked by it, though ... is "cargo cult" a better phrase for you?
wim
wim
I've tried it, and it doesn't work too well - you write them at the same time, hand in hand.
No - I'm not worried about whether or not it's perjorative, just whether it's accurate (or do I mean precise?)
Maybe different approaches work better for the both of you?:P
@RobertGrant s/religious/zealous|fanatic/ and I think it is
23:17
@wim your tests will fail (which is good) if you don't have the function/method defined, but that doesn't mean you can't write code before you run them for the first time
wim
wim
true I guess
I think to be able to write meaningful tests, you have to have already a very clear idea of what your library code will look like before you've written it
I think cargo cult is worse than either of them, sorry :-)
@wim agree with this
wim
wim
And I usually don't have that clarity until I actually start writing the library code
it's like, waterfall vs agile
That's what I meant about designing before you write, which is a skill that's often best learned with pen and paper before you can just do it in your head
wim
wim
maybe better coders already know what their library code is going to be structured like immediately, but I'm not at that stage yet
23:20
Waterfall vs Agile's temporal resolution is too coarse-grained for this - if you have to deliver a function and its tests in the same sprint then it's no less agile to write the tests first
But I know I sound like a dickhead saying all this, so I'll stop :-)
wim
wim
you don't sound like a dickhead
Not at all!
consider wim's baseline:P
wim
wim
^ that guy sounds like a deakhead
you have no idea
23:23
I definitely do. Agile, TDD. Next I'll be recommending SAFe and talking about a new innovation called APIs
wim
wim
it's a shame pytest isn't core lib
(Also I just said innovation. Argh.)
(Also also I said new innovation.)
I think you're missing some of the externalities, though; you really need to take the helicopter view.
Oh yeah, nice. The big rocks in first?
wim
wim
I shudder to think how many people have been turned off testing just because unittest is such a PILE_OF_POO
23:24
I created unittest
wim
wim
I hope you are joking
@wim what would change if pytest were core, other than it being included with each installation?
wim
wim
more people would use it first, and see how testing can be fun
(it was a serious question, I wasn't sure if there's something basic I'm missing about it being a third party library)
23:26
I just thought how amazing it would be right now if that were true
@AndrasDeak I guess just that people view it as the official lib
E.g. I wouldn't bother with any non-SLF4J logging lib in Java
OK, thanks
gesundheit
wim
wim
why isn't requests core lib? because it moves faster than core lib is allowed to. it's better that way.
I imagine that SLF4J stands for "standard library for four java"
wim
wim
same deal with pytest
It's a problem ... Python now has a big box of batteries of all different shapes, some of which are leaking, so a) core devs are reluctant to throw even more in there, and b) someone's bound to scream blue murder if a near-dead one they still use is thrown out.
23:28
@wim but then you don't want it to be core, do you?
wim
wim
I don't want it to be core, no
wim
wim
the same as I don't want to write my web stuff with urllib
you wish to live in an alternate universe where it could be core
wim
wim
urllib2, urllib3 , or whatever
actually I just wish unittest would go away
so people couldn't use it
wim
wim
it wouldn't be so bad if there was no core lib unittest
for example, setuptools is not core lib
23:42
Hi all
I've been beating my head trying to come up with a fast solution to something and I want to pick brighter brains than mine.
Basically imagine you have a set of n processes which have defined data consumption rates
e.g. {1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/7, 1/11, 1/18, 1/50} bytes per second
i.e. p0 consumes 1/2 a byte per second, or in other words, 1 bytes every two seconds
but imagine the set is huge, like 100s of thousands of processes
assume their consumptions rates are all unique
(but not relatively prime - some may be congruent to others if we just examine the integer denominator obviously)
well if it's a set, they're bound to be unique:P
haha, true
the desired output of the script needs to be: if we have a total available data size of T > 0 bytes, how many seconds until T = 0 (i.e. we run out of available data for the processes to consume)
23:51
so obviously one could just grab the integer denominators as a list and treat them all like counters and decrement them and whenever a counter hits zero you decrement T by one and then reset the counter in the list
(most primitive solution)
That last panel just makes me laugh every time
You could also compute an average consumption rate, compute a rough estimate for the time, and then sniff around that time and see if you can come up with a precise value more easily (I'm not sure)
(this is optimisable using numpys obviously and subtracting the smallest counter each time rather than merely decrementing by one)
@RobertGrant :D
@AndrasDeak yep that occurred to me but it gets messy. Obviously it's faster than just exhaustively doing it.
The other thing that occurred is to sum all subsets which are congruent to each other and reduce the list of counters dramatically
23:55
yeah, for instance you can look at the overall gcd and do a modulo with that
well the overall gcd for these elements is always 1
the distribution of the values is just too great
I mean for the strides (i.e. the reciprocal of your speeds)
oh, I see
well I meant lcm :D
yeah the lcm is more atoms than ar ein the universe
OK, so brute force it is:P
@MarcusS might have a fancy algorithm up his sleeve if he comes by later
Yeah there's no obvious combinatorics solution. You can reduce the 'space' of the problem a bit but the amount of effort involved makes me think I am wrong.
So I obviously have the optimised brute force option as a baseline for comparing against, i.e. testing for the right solution
I have a test set which goes to 40,000 processes needing to estimate time to consume T = 100 billion bytes
23:59
the problems seems complicated enough that I'm sure you're not seeing things

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