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00:00
Yeah. Okay, thanks. Useful to just say it out loud
that said, there might be a smart way to simplify it
number theory is a scary beast
Average consumption rate seems like a useful heuristic. The time computed with the average consumption rate can't be off by much.
Yeah I think actually I will look for a pure fractional data type in scipy
I've been told specifically that the average is not an acceptable answer
You can start the search there, and you'll be pretty close to the right value.
@user2357112 I already have the right answer through brute force – I need a more optimal approach
I think I have an inkling of an approach.... I think treating them as fractions and knowing how much each consumes per second would be faster
00:04
@BenjaminR if you swap your problem to cycles rather than speeds, you can probably use integers
You can use a heap to track which processes need input next, or which processes needed a value most recently if you're searching back through time.
ah good point
those are both good ideas everyone. Thank you.
Using the average consumption rate underestimates the amount of data consumed at any point by at most 1 byte per process, so if you jump the search to the time estimated by the average rate, you're at most N bytes ahead of where you need to be for N processes.
Using a heap to step back through time to the right time byte by byte instead of second by second takes O(N) time to build the heap and O(log(N)) time per byte, so the algorithm should run in O(N*log(N)). There may be better solutions, but this seems decent. (This is assuming constant-time arithmetic and assuming a process that takes N seconds per byte claims a byte to work on at the start of an N-second interval.)
00:25
@user2357112 Thanks! I will definitely try this approach
wim
wim
00:50
doesn't bounty count to rep cap? I hit the rep cap then won a bounty
it doesn't
neither do accepts
wim
wim
I guess it couldn't otherwise we wouldn't have any bounty over 200. dumb question :-\
that too
wim
wim
damn, I am liking sqlalchemy. much more pythonic than django orm.
session.query(Model.field1, Model.field2).all() returns things that you can unpack like 2-tuples ..
and session.query(Model.field).all() returns also thing which you have to unpack like a 1-tuple. It's consistent, but I wonder is there a kwarg or something I can pass to make it return the flat object directly instead of a nested one
01:05
Can't accuse the docs with logorrhea...
@wim there's always itertools.chain(*...)
01:33
@user2357112 Unfortunately using the average consumption rate is way off.
consider the following simple case: T = 15, consumption_rates = {2, 4, 3, 6}
the average consumption rate is 3.75 or 15/4
i.e. on average, it takes 3.75 seconds to consume 4 bytes
you're averaging seconds/bytes, whereas you should be averaging bytes/second
well then the bytes/second is 4/15
whoops forgot 1/
okay, then, in bytes per second:
T = 15, consumption_rates = {1/2, 1/4, 1/3, 1/6}
the avg is 5/16 bytes per second
no wait, it's 5/4
sorry
okay yep that gives the right answer
thanks
(the right answer is 12)
15 / (5/4) is 12
helloo i am new to chat just joined this site few weeks agoo..is there any upvoting or downvoting for chat
??
01:48
@ChaitanyaPandit welcome. No, there isn't.
You can star messages but that should only be reserved for things you think that would interest multiple users (so it's not for expressing gratitude)
thanks for the answer..so i can ask any no.of questions without any limit right??
you might also be able to flag messages, but only do that if something's really offensive. Just because you don't like something, that's no reason to flag.
and you can read some useful things on the "faq" and "help" links in the bottom right corner
Hi, @ChaitanyaPandit. Make sure you read our room rules.
@ChaitanyaPandit only as long as the people in the given chatroom feel like answering. Most rooms have a local set of rules, which you should always find and read first.
where are they? in the help? i mean the rules?
01:52
the rules, as I said, are local to the room. So you should look in the room description in the top right
the rooms which have specific rules usually link to these in an easily noticeable way in their room description
Annoyingly, the link to the room rules isn't visible in the mobile view.
that's not useful:/
Another annoying "feature" of the mobile view is that you can't reply to posts in the transcript. At least, I haven't been able to figure out a way to do it.
are we talking about chat in mobile browser?
because I can see the full room description, and can reply I think
I have the same interface, so the little arrow context menu on the left of a message (if you tap on the message first) allows me to reply/edit
maybe it's not the proper mobile view
yeah, I must've clicked "desktop" ages ago, I now found the "mobile" link
no wonder I did that, this mobile thing is awful
yup, no context menu in trascript
The only advantage of mobile view for me is that the text is a bit larger, but other than that, it's rather frustrating.
02:06
and the full version is pretty glitchy on firefox
but so is gmail, so that's probably the fault of firefox
good night
The full version of chat on mobile Chrome is also a bit glitchy. If you try to enlarge things to make them readable, eg the star board, you get overlaps that make it impossible to read it anyway.
Night, Andras.
 
1 hour later…
03:22
cbg
 
4 hours later…
07:17
recbg
Does anyone know if fractions.Fractions has any limits?
i.e. is there an upper limit to the maximum size of numerator or denominator?
I'm trying to sum 40,000 fractions of the form 1/x and it's taking forever
@BenjaminR Fraction stores numerator and denominator as int
there is no limit
thanks @AnttiHaapala I didn't think there was
I wonder how I could speed this process up
is this a puzzle?
no it's an actual thing I'm trying to do
07:26
or are these just some random numbers that really might not sum up to anything sensible...
yeah they are just rational numbers less than or equal to 1 and greater than 0
for accuracy I cannot reduce them to floats
I will try splitting it into chunks of 1000 numbers
well, you could do a test with smaller amount of them, see if the numerator and denominator get ridiculously large
user6845426
08:04
cbg
10:36
Cabbage
morning.
@BenjaminR Of course it's taking forever. Consider how large the lowest common denominator is going to be. You can use the Fraction.limit_denominator method to stop the denominator of the sum from getting outrageously huge. Alternatively, use the decimal module or the 3rd-party mpmath module and use fixed-point arithmetic with a sufficiently high precision.
Evening, withnail. I've been having fun with recursive generators. I suppose I ought to edit the question to make it a little more clear, but hopefully future readers will figure it out when they see the output of my code. :)
@heather I saw your SO question about prime factorization. You may find this code of interest.
10:54
I realized that I have several answers that are tagged numpy or matplotlib but not tagged python. The temptation is strong to retag them to boost my python score, but some of those Q&A-s are pretty crappy so I don't really want to bump them to the front page, even though it would be right to tag them with the language:/
user6845426
cbg o/
user6845426
How is everything this fine saturday
sleepy as far as I'm concerned
user6845426
agreed.
10:56
Mildly hungover
user6845426
xD
friend's going back to Aus so felt justified.
:D
user6845426
Valid
user6845426
I'm hoping to travel Aus next year
sounds Aus-ome
:|
11:02
Booooooooo @AndrasDeak
@AndrasDeak They really should have the generic python tag, and possibly a version-specific python tag too, but I can understand not wanting to do it if the questions are cringe-worthy. OTOH, you could perform some judicial editing of the questions to make them more presentable...
Well not cringe-worthy (I usually don't answer those), but I found one asking how to create a column vector in numpy... (from my early days in the tag)
so they'repossibly too trivial or specific
I'll have to check each
we're talking about ~dozen posts alltogether, so easily manageable
@AndrasDeak Yeah, that should be fine. SO regulars appreciate it when people clean up old posts. If the only clean-up you can do is to add the missing tags it might be considered too trivial by some, but since it's only a dozen or so posts, it should be fine. It's not like you're flooding the front page.
11:18
I mean the questions themselves are too trivial; I'm not worried by sole retagging alone
In case anyone's interested, Divakar updated his SO tag cloud script. Here's mine. Unfortunately it's python2-only due to a dependency in wordcloud.
That shouldn't be a problem. Lots of SO questions are too trivial. :)
11:56
Early morning cabbage everyone
user6845426
cbg
12:14
How is everyone?
user6845426
12:38
Tired
I was thinking of making this a Python programming day, but maybe not.
every day is Python programming day 🐍 🎉 🐍
4
I am reviewing some C++ materials, so I think I may need to do that instead. It is more time-intensive than doing something in Python, of course.
12:59
@DSM bah... won't bother looking at pandas if you're about then :p
DSM
DSM
@JonClements: hey, I barely visit the tag any more~! I got more rep from explaining why Julia treats 'a' and "bc" differently the other day than I had in any pandas question in some time. :-P
Did I ever mention that I hate relative python imports?
All I want to do is import something, is that so hard?
Hello by the way, I suppose.
DSM
DSM
Hey, Fizzy. Good to see you're enjoying your Saturday. ;-)
@DSM Here's that "format preserving encryption" code I was talking about the other day. It's adequate for producing shuffled sequences of integers, but it's definitely not crypto grade. OTOH, by changing the hash function to something stronger it could be made crypto grade. The experts suggest using AES, but I reckon a decent crypto hash like SHA-256 should be adequate. gist.github.com/PM2Ring/05781675cbd6b717a044c5cced266948
Doing a Kaggle competition, tearing my hair out at python imports rather than focusing on data D:
DSM
DSM
13:06
@PM2Ring: cool, will have a look! Although probably after breakfast, math without cereal is just asking for trouble..
3
DSM
DSM
There's one place in a codebase I maintain where I just hack sys.path because life is short. It will probably always be too short to sort out the problem.
Aren't relative imports fixed now in Python 3?
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File ".\src\model\2017-03-01-initial-submission.py", line 7, in <module>
    from ..features.extract_time import time_transformer
ValueError: attempted relative import beyond top-level package
;_;
I guess that makes sense. No going beyond the top-level package. It may be a security problem.
13:11
But I'm not!
DSM
DSM
Aren't you?
There's __init__.py everywhere
I even wrote one on a sticky note and stuck it to my monitor
THE WHOLE PC IS A PACKAGE! JUST LET ME F**KING IMPORT MY CODE!
Ahhh... have you made sure there's also one down the back of the couch? :p
Hey up, Fizzy. I heard some Welsh on a local world music radio program today. 9Bach are back in Australia for a Womad festival. Unfortunately, they're half way across the continent, so I won't be seeing them. :( Here's the song I heard:
Just add to the PYTHONPATH
Forget about relative imports. Save kittens.
13:15
^^^ looks remarkably surprised that someone said "Save kittens"...
Because everyone loves kittens.
I need to do some coding today. Haven't done much lately.
Code, code, code.
Other than a little on a consulting project, that is.
Need to work more on that ten find time for one of my personal projects.
13:23
How do you decide what to code, Code?
That is a good question
Usually depends on my mood and what gets me excited at any given moment
You should work on the great unsolved computing problem - working out why my relative imports don't work.
I hear there's a Millennium Prize being offered for it.
Don't want to take away the satisfaction of solving a difficult problem yourself
SXSW this week...I want to go to that some day
I had fun writing those recursive generators earlier. It was definitely more fun that writing that bloody dictionary symmetric difference timeit code I did the other day. :) I guess i shouldn't complain- the timeit code's got 3 upvotes, although I won't get any points for it since I posted it as community wiki.
Especially the tech stuff
What do they call it? SXSW Interactive, I think.
13:44
cbg
13:56
What kind of organizational tools do you use for personal projects? Do you ever go all Agile or Kanban for these? Or even some modified form of such industrial tools?
I write my requirements down on bottles of gin and whenever I complete it I get to drink it.
It's kinda like Kanban, but there's tonic and cucumber at the end
And my Definition of Done changes as work goes on and I get more drunk
I'm trying to decide if you are actually serious or not...
Half serious, I don't always have cucumber.
p.s. I love the dragon fractal.
Fractal generation is one of the many programs on my To Do list.
I did write the code to do it I think, but no idea where it is now.
14:06
@Ffisegydd and depending how well it's going - sometimes not even the tonic? :p
I'm not a barbarian Jon.
@JonClements cbg! Long time, no chat
Oh... you might remember me better as Code-Guru. I got demoted.
I remember ya :)
Is here somebody uses Kali Linux 2.0 Rolling?
That's the one from Mr. Robot, right?
@JonClements wasn't sure if you knew my name change.
14:15
Anyways - how ya been?
Life has been crazy. Doing good, though. How about you?
I saw you are a mod now. Congrats!
Errr... thanks... been coming up two years year :)
hectic busy here as well... c'est la vie and all that
yo bobby g!
Yeah, I have not been on SO consistently over the last two years. In and out as time allows.
Yeah, I have not been on SO consistently over the last two years. In and out as life allows.
Finally almost have my Enthusiast badge... as long as I don't miss a day in the next week.
14:31
Consultants https://t.co/Ixl3YDpJk3
user6845426
I applied for a consulting job and got declined:(
guys, cbg
user6845426
cbg
i have a question. What is the difference between `return '.*'.join(t.generate() for t in tokens[::2])` and
cbg
14:37
for t in tokens[::2]:
    return '.*'.join(t.generate())
given some function generate
the second is going to return the result of just the first iteration of tokens
the first one is using an expression to eventually call join with '.*' as the separator
yes, got it. so what would be a way to write the first in the form of the second? basically i wanted to do some printing in between to check things out
Use yield rather than return
The method you're looking for is called a generator
def foo(tokens):
    for t in tokens[::2]:
        yield '.*'.join(t.generate())
something like that
I think....
@Ffisegydd, on replacing return with yield, it gives <generator object generate at 0x000000000B7D9948>
14:47
@user1993 at this point you should read up on generators.
With some research, you'll understand more.
you need to pet fizzy and feed him whisky for a second answer. To do that, you need collect 10 mushrooms in the kokiri forest, and then he'll show up.
sounds about right!
I'm at 8 mushroom right now
I hate mushrooms.
I'd suggest you start again with bacon.
14:54
this has all been for nothing
because I ate all the bacon
to look for the mushrooms
No help for you.
15:06
I have "cabbage" - how long can you wait for it to defrost?
I currently have that bacon now
you should not have announced that
user6845426
I know this isn't Python related... just looking for opinion. I have an app where you can take pics and overlay text. When uploading to my Heroku server, would u guys say its better to upload the image n text seperatly then build them back together at the other end or somehow merge the two and upload together as one... if that makes sense
depends if you want/the server needs to know what the text was or whether it just needs to store an image
Should users be able to select the text, search it, copy/paste it, etc.?
user6845426
Nope, just see it
15:12
Then it probably doesn't matter. Just store it into the image. Done.
Another thing might be scaling. If you have a small image and zoom, the text-as-image will not scale well. If you redraw the text each time, on the other hand, it will look good at any zoom level.
user6845426
I'm not allowing for zoom so that shouldnt be a problem
Well you can store it into the image if you want. The only other thing is compression. For example, if you put text on a photo and compress it with JPEG, the text edges will look bad. If you have a picky customer like me, I may look at it and think it looks like crap.
user6845426
Yeh thats what I was thinking. Ive been trying to research how companies like Snapchat/Instagram do it. But cnt seem to find anything
So basically storing text separately gives you more flexibility but you have to do more work. On the other hand, putting the text in the image makes it easier for you.
What about cropping the image? Most likely you'll want to move the text afterwards.
user6845426
Wasn't going to crop the image
15:25
To answer the Snapchat question, you would just have to use the app yourself and see what you can do. For example, if you add text, can you move it around later? If so, then it means it is stored separately from the image.
user6845426
Yeah I think im going to go with just merging them together, the text is just to be viewed and not to allow for any further editing. The only thing im concerned with is the compression and loosing quaility. But... I guess i'll just have to see
@dipper also... I suppose the other thing to consider is re-use of images... so if there's only n many images (or you want to try and reduce storage by not storing every single image) etc...
If you don't allow zooming then the quality probably doesn't matter either.
user6845426
Oh really? Awesome. I just need to figure out how to merge the 2 xD
Zooming also includes things like printing or upgrading to a higher-res display. There is an implicit zooming going on.
DSM
DSM
15:39
Mispronunciation of the day: I said "munchie-packing" (to load one's backpack with treats) when I meant "monkey-patching" (to dynamically modify behaviour at runtime).
hehe 😀
15:52
@DSM we need a meaning for that now :)
 
3 hours later…
19:15
@idjaw how did you put smiley?
cbg
Umm... looks like it's encryption function question asking hour or something :)
I is here
ah..nothing to do. Andras did the thing
Thanks Andras
*tips hat*
19:31
@idjaw so where's the d, j, a and w then?
4
@JonClements I give them the weekend off
that's nice of you :)
They do a lot throughout the week
recbg
No one showed up to my meetup ;-(
Had to change the time from the previous two, so that might be part of the problem.
Was it because I have a body in my trunk?
20:00
awww, sorry about that
about the body?
He's fine. I swear!
@SterlingArcher dat uppercase though
Anybody ever see a __attrs__ object attribute like this? github.com/kennethreitz/requests/blob/master/requests/…
(I did a relevant google search for: python "__attrs__"
but not seeing anything likely in top results)
it might be something original
But I'd think Kenneth Reitz probably wouldn't just make up his own dunder stuff...
20:11
present in several places, it might just be dunder abuse
I guess he doesn't want it mangled
Maybe it was __slots__ and he undid the slots?
20:32
Maybe Tim Post lost his keys? :p
@AaronHall there is no special meaning for Python.
The code just uses it in the pickle methods.
hello
I have a regex which remove text between [] and ()
re.sub("[([].*?[)]]", "", result)
but but I'd like to remove text between {}
20:49
gotta-go! :)
I tried to change the brackets [] with {} but no result
{ and } have a special meaning in regular expressions - you'll want to escape them using \{ and \}
Have a look through: docs.python.org/3.5/howto/regex.html if you're new to regex and python
Is tensorflow only available for python 64-bit?
21:49
Someone can help me with python+selenium click on facebook like button?
 
2 hours later…
@PM2Ring You are 100% right, but even when limiting the size of the denominator it is still too expensive – I will try the other packages, thank you.
23:56
cbg

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