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05:37
Does anyone have any tutorials that show how to use the Manager objects to manage complex objects?
I'm super lost on this question, but I think that's mostly because I need to do more reading.
0
Q: Creating a Multiprocessing Ordered Dictionary

Seanny123I would like to create an OrderedDict instance that can be shared across processes. What I've tried Intro I've implemented a normal dict version, a multi-process dict version, as shown below. import multiprocessing as mp class BasicPen(object): """single process version""" def __ini...

@IljaEverilä But he asked for tutorials, that's off-topic on the main site.
That too...
The tutorial question alone was enough without the linked question. "I'm super lost on this question" + link is just advertising.
Legit.
I'll edit that post.
Ah, I see that editing a message has an expiration.
I'll keep that in mind for the future?
@Seanny123 A possibly rather stupid question, but have you read through the official examples?
Yeah, but none of them seem to deal with complex objects.
Just objects you can spawn off of manager
07:05
Cbg! Anyone at DjangoCon EU?
Nah, but I've always meant to learn Django so I can quickly hack out a CRUD app if I need to.
cbg
G'day Andy!
07:50
hey man @Seanny123 . sup?
Re-learning for the third and hopefully last time, how to do multi-processing in Python
08:12
cool
Hi all, is it possible to for someone to explain to me, how I can improve my questions as I feel I have been following guide properly...
however sometimes I still get no votes or down votes and am at risk of getting blocked, and don't want that to happen! For example is there something specifically wrong with this question that I did not get any votes for; question
Hi
I came here to ask a very basic question
I have installed python 3.5 in my windows machine
it has already added to my PATH variable
now I have wrote a very simple python file
how do I run this file?
when I double click on it, a cmd suddenly comes and disappear
numberOfStudents = input("please enter something")
inquiries = []
for(oneStudent in numberOfStudents):
    inquiries.append(input())
print(inquiries)
That's all what I have in my python file
08:28
@JudeNiroshan python <nameofyourfile>.py
@mp252 if you showed greater understanding of the error you're getting and what you've tried to do to get around it, you would get upvotes
@mp252 With a little googling you would've found out that user is a reserved keyword.
There are also many similar questions here on SO.
@Seanny123 Thanks, so ideally after I attempt to solve the problem on my own I should give a thorough explanation on what the error is and how I am generating the error?
@mp252 No votes should not be an issue (unpopular topic, too broad / detailed question, etc.), negative ones should be.
@IljaEverilä Thanks, after a while I did figure out I needed to use square brackets around the user table name. Normally I use mysql, I had to connect to mssql this time to someone else's database
@AshishNitinPatil Ah ok, I didn't realise this. I thought no votes as well are at risk of being blocked. As I keep seeing the "You are at risk of being blocked" when I ask a question.
Thanks everyone, I will structure improve my questions to meet these requirements from now on.
08:42
@mp252 I believe "risk of being blocked" should only come when you have somewhat consistently produced bad questions (or comments / answers) which were possibly flagged.
It's just speculation though, you should look up meta.stackoverflow.com for confirmation.
no, not "flagged"
downvoted/closed
if a large chunk of your questions are deemed low-quality by them being closed and/or downvoted, and/or if you deleted questions not long after an answer has been posted to it, then you're at risk of being blocked
but lack of upvotes on your questions signals that you could do better
09:07
@AndrasDeak Do you mean, in the sense I could do better at writing the question, or trying to solve the problem at hand?
09:19
writing the question:)
(part of which is trying to solve the problem yourself, usually)
09:33
Morning. :)
09:52
Cabbage
10:07
Ahoy all.
Heavily procrastinating from something I don't really want to do.
10:24
Cabbage!
Cabbage
@mp252 I tidied up the code in your answer to this question. You might want to check I got it right ...
Attention to detail (modulo dyslexia, et al) is a courtesy ot the reader
11:23
Quite amusing that my own dyslexia rendered the obvious error in my last message invisible to me
 
1 hour later…
12:24
My decision to make my Vector class mutable is coming back to haunt me.
I designed an Observable class, which executes a callback function whenever any of its attributes changes. x = Observable(f); x.color = "red" will cause f("color", "red") to execute. But if the user does x = Observable(f); x.position = Point(0,0); x.position.y += 1, then f will only be called on the initial creation of position, and not for the update to position.y.
If I had enforced immutability, the user would have to do x.position += Point(0,1), which would trigger the callback
My solution right now is to politely ask my users not to mutate any attributes of Observable instances, but this is not entirely satisfying.
morning everyone'
Morning
12:45
Trying to decide if it's worth it to create a Color class to represent RGB values, or if I should just use a 3-tuple, or if I should just use my existing Point class and hope it's understood that x y and z actually mean r g and b
What will you be doing with the values?
Ultimately I want to be able to do vector-like math on color instances, e.g. averaging them with (color_a + color_b) / 2
Or interpolation between two colors with color_a * (1-f) + color_b * f, where f is a float
I can already do this kind of arithmetic with my Point class, so that's the lowest effort solution
I think that a 3-tuple will do, no? Unless you want to implement the __eq__ function or something, not sure how tuples compare
>>> (255, 255, 255) * (1 - 0.3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: can't multiply sequence by non-int of type 'float'
Hmm, no luck there
One might suggest rewriting that expression to tuple(value * (1 - 0.3) for value in my_tuple) but in my actual code it is expected that that function work for Colors and Points and floats
#so I'd have to change this:
def interpolate(a,b,f):
    return a*(1-f) + b*f

#to this:
def interpolate(a,b,f):
    if isinstance(a, tuple):
        return tuple(a_value*(1-f) + b_value*f for a_value, b_value in zip(a,b))
    else:
        return a*(1-f) + b*f
Which is... Unbeautiful.
Hi every body

How can I combine the pandas.core.series.Series with scipy.sparse.csr.csr_matrix ?
12:58
So really my choices are "use the existing Point class, which may confuse readers because the attribute names don't match their intended purpose" or "create a Color class, which will have identical functionality to the Point class except its attribute names are different"
I want a sparse matrix
and now I want to add one more column to it
How can I do that?
Possibly I could make some kind of vector metaclass that creates classes that only differ by attribute name. Point = VectorClass("xyz"); Color = VectorClass("rgb")
13:11
@Kevin Any particular reason why you couldn't use named tuples?
newData = sc.sparse.hstack([newData.toarray(), tweetsData.TweetId]).toarray()
and get this error:
ValueError: could not broadcast input array from shape (3424,8667) into shape (3424)
Doesn't support arithmetic.
>>> Color = collections.namedtuple("Color", ["r", "g", "b"])
>>> Color(255,255,255) / 2
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for /: 'Color' and 'int'
\o cbg
13:29
cbg
I remember seeing a recipe for just that somewhere, but cannot find it :\
It's not too hard to implement, I'm just trying to decide whether it's a good idea in the first place
Yep, I guess numpy etc. exist for that already :P
Would you call a nested list of 2 degree a '2D list' in Python? For example [ [1,2] , [3,4] ] Or is it strictly just called a nested list ?
There's no official term for it but "2d list" is usually understood to mean that yeah
To me "nested list" is a more broad category and can mean [1, [1]] or [[1], [1]] or [[[[[[[[1]]]]]]]] or...
13:41
Thanks :D
If I'm trying to formally describe the structure I might call it a "list of lists of ints" or borrow "list<list<int>>" syntax from statically typed languages
I hate that c# <something > T.T Too edgy for me
The latter is especially useful for more complicated cases. Like, "a dictionary of tuples of integers and lists of dictionaries of strings and floats" is easier to misinterpret than dict<tuple<int>, list<dict<str, float>>>
Although that's an extreme example
I feel like ever since JS added async/await, Node feels significantly more "complete"
Now if Node would just have ES6 modules already… >_>
13:55
Then it would finally be a real language
no
not until they fix the awful type system
Yesterday I discovered you can't use js to get a string containing today's date in "MM/YY" format unless you write twenty lines of boilerplate or download jquery.
@khajvah they have a typing system but it just warns you about stuff
or blindly misbehaves
Hmm, perhaps I am being uncharitable. You probably could do it in one line, but it would involve some unpleasant string manipulation. My core complaint is there's no arbitrary date formatting method.
13:59
MOAR JQUERY
If my boss comes in tomorrow and says "actually let's have it in YYYY/MM/DD format instead" I don't want to have to re-derive the string manipulation from scratch, I want to delete "MM/YY" and enter "YYYY/MM/DD" and be done with it
you should never change already writte JS code
@Kevin You forgot the third option: define an abstract base class and have Point and Color inherit from it
Yeah I'm leaning towards that although I'm reticent to modify the Point class since I have about thirty projects that use it as a dependency. I guess I could create a branch that's local to this project.
morning cbg
DSM
DSM
14:25
Triumphant cabbage for all!
43 second cbg DSM
\o morning cbg Marcus
also @dsm I caught the highlights for North Cal's national champ game.... that call when it was a 1 point differences... I feel bad
DSM
DSM
There's always a question about how you officiate big games..
yup... but does March Madness not enforce video replay? cause it was a clear shot on the hand.
I'm pretty disappointed that sportsballs don't yet have millimeter-precision GPS units installed
14:31
How much R&D would that take, like a hundred million dollars? Just don't pay any of the players for a game and a half.
DSM
DSM
There's been discussion of doing it in football and hockey to confirm how far the MacGuffin was advanced.
Apparently the feature of matplotlib I've been using and has been deprecated is not a feature and the weird behaviour I'm seeing is by design
@Kevin there are actually video-based referees on the goal line in proper football
DSM
DSM
That doesn't help if the refs can't see the ball because of all the people pretending they've just been murdered who are falling down in cinematic fashion.
Oh, I don't like football at all, I was only noting :P
Construct a giant MRI around the field so you can detect injuries in real time
DSM
DSM
14:42
That would be a very big device. Google suggests the largest MRI in the world is still only a few m^3.
We just have to invent room-temperature superconductors. Chop chop.
I wonder if required field strength scales linearly with desired cavity size, or superlinearly. The magnet we need might lift people up by their fillings and uproot manholes.
manholes definitely, unsure about fillings
as the cavity grows, you're further away from the source of resonance which you're measuring
Hmm, are fillings magnetic? Gold, silver, titanium, nickel... Not sure about some of these.
my educated guess it that the intensity of the resonance decays with ~1/r^2, and you have to create that resonance with another field in the first place
@Kevin nope
I mean, Ni is a ferromagnet
but metal fillings are usually amalgam (Hg+some noble metal?)
Hg+Ag probably
they're basically metal dissolved in mercury:)
14:47
Kevin'd my idea, #MRI
@Kevin none of those are magnetic
In all seriousness, helmet cams would be a pretty cool addition to sports
Oh good. So we only need to worry about jewelry and piercings and... Oh, there's actually quite a lot of things we need to worry about.
14:50
@Programmer NHL has been slowly rolling them out :D
but im sad, we won't see NHL players in the up coming Olympics :(
lol
nor fake wrestling guys
nor underwater chess
@holdenweb Thanks for the formatting, will amend properly next time, I am also dyslexic and dyspraxic as well!
oh, NHL, I thought you meant NFL
handegg doesn't really appeal to me... too many commercials. The super bowl seems like it was trying to sell me something rather than 2 of the better teams of the season facing off.
14:57
cabbagee fellas
I finally am getting the hang of django and i have a question.. about model forms.
its cool that it can generate fields based on the model
but how do i modify the HTML , like i dont want to use model forms , in the sense, I have my own HTML UI page
@Anarach :D
every tutorial seems to go the model forms way where they build a blog and show how model forms work
and now modelforms stop being cool
15:00
@AnttiHaapala I dont want to be sacrilegious about django and model forms here but ireally need to use my own HTML
Anyone have idea how to solve this problem stackoverflow.com/questions/43207533/…
@AnttiHaapala would you say they stop being the model of forms :D
model forms suck :-( i mean the UI thing
@mayureshpatil sopython.com/chatroom read the chat room rules please, mainly, "don't post newely asked questions"
@AndrasDeak Well I did mean NFL, but in general it would be a cool addition.
15:01
okay.. So i am guessing everyone has this problem? with model forms
I basically want to get rid of this "{{ form.as_p }}"
but still be able to send data to my model
otherwise I have no idea what you're trying to do which I will just walk away :D
@Programmer I was talking to Mooing there:)
ohh sorry@MooingRawr i red those rules now...
@AndrasDeak ahh, I understand what was happening there now. My office is currently being sprayed by skunks so I'll blame the confusion on that.
Wait, are you actually a pug? Office in the bushes and all?
If so: you're a good boy :P
15:09
I think my life would be simpler that way. Unfortunately, my office is just located in a rural area.
Did that come off sounding like a sob story? I meant eat, play, sleep is the dream :P
did you know, skunks don't like the smell of their sprays either? I feel bad for them more than their victims
I meant ":(" for your sad reality
Phone cabbage
15:12
cbg
o/
\o
Hey @AnttiHaapala Do you have anything to add to this?
Your for char in z: w += chr(char) loop could be written more compactly as a list comprehension: ''.join([chr(c) for c in z]). Or you can decode it in one step like this: z.decode('latin1'). That works because Latin1 is a proper subset of Unicode. But IMHO it would be much simpler to write a separate Python 3 version that just uses bytes / bytearray rather than abusing text strings like that. Trying to do this sort of stuff in a way that works on Python 2 and Python 3 is a recipe for madness. ;) — PM 2Ring 25 mins ago
morning cabbage.
Oh MCVE makin', which leads me to run thing.__class__ on my jinja variable which produces str and then I remember it's a json string, doh
rb folks
15:30
rbrb
@MooingRawr well thank you but doesnt help me much
@Anarach welp I give up on that good luck :D
2
Q: How to take data from textboxes in Django without using the automated model forms?

EristikosI have a very simple thing I want to do, but for some reason I haven't found the solution yet. I have a form in HTML <form id="user_form" method="POST" action="/ProjectName/home/"> {% csrf_token %} <div class="registerLabel"> Full name: </div> <div class="registerTextL...

This is my exact question :-D
welp follow it then :D
16:29
remember how I was mildly annoyed with having to use someone's tool and he kept changing on how to use his tool? Well business came back to my team and told us that they wont be needing that feature. Pro: I don't have to deal with that tool anymore, also I learnt some lessons I guess.. Con: a week's worth of work just went into storage (until maybe business wants the feature again).
cabbage all
\o good morrow
Been having an interesting discussion about Werkzeug (not) handling chunked requests: github.com/pallets/flask/issues/2229
DSM
DSM
Brain hurts (just reading that, I mean).
16:34
Every time a Werkzeug issue comes up, I have to learn so much about HTTP and RFCs.
This is the main way I discover features that Werkzeug supports now.
@PM2Ring I'm not @AnttiHaapala, but I would point out that ''.join([chr(c) for c in z]) is unnecessarily inefficient. Since str.join takes an iterable argument there's no need to instantiate the list, you can just write ''.join(chr(c) for c in z)
I think in this case it is more efficient, since join can rely on the length of the iterable. It's a balance though, depending on the number of elements.
Most of the time I wouldn't worry about it and just use the generator though.
I think we've benchmarked it in the past, and passing a list comp to join is a little faster than passing a generator expression. But is it worth the time you spend typing an additional two bracket characters??? It's hard to say, but the time we've spent arguing about it probably eclipses the potential savings by several orders of magnitude
Mar 29 at 11:54, by PM 2Ring
.join has to scan the strings twice, once to determine the full length of the destination string, and then a second time to copy the strings. If you pass it an iterator it has to build a list. So it's better to just give it a list in the first place.
now fight ;)
Let's break out the timeit
16:40
sounds like a melee weapon in this context
Swinging around a grandfather clock like it's a greatsword
Movie-impression-time: the last X-men is so bad
DSM
DSM
I can't remember if it was Hettinger or Martelli who first taught me the .join exception to use-a-genexp-everywhere.
I'd take either of those people's word without bothering to check. Thanks for the feedback
Clearly there should be a compiler optimization that converts genexps to list comps for you if it's inside a join call
16:48
I doubt that would be worth the core dev time
DSM
DSM
Ah, RH.
IMO catering to my whims is the best use of anybody's time
DSM
DSM
Wow, that was only five years ago. Feels like more. Just think of all those lost milliseconds of time..
who upvotes these things?
user3047181
16:55
can i use subprocess to spawn some commands, and then exit from the ssh session without killing those commands?
tmux and screen are your friends - they can keep a session alive and you can reconnect to it later. Meanwhile, the work proceeds as normal!
Not sure how you'd do that with subprocess calls
It would almost certainly have to include some paramiko voodo
That. If you just want to background it no matter what, you can run it with nohup. If you want to do it in the python level, you'd have to make the root python process ignore SIGHUP
user3047181
ah yes, nohup. thanks
SIGHUP is the signal meaning "the terminal has gone away". Usually your shell passes this on and everything DIES. nohup ignores it, but you'll still have IO errors if the terminal goes away and you write to stdout, so nohup also captures the output.
DSM
DSM
I remember using nohup in cargo cult fashion long before I understood what was going on, scattering nohup.out files everywhere. #nostalgia
17:00
I'm still doing that. Is that bad? :P
user3047181
@KevinMGranger all my output goes to logfiles anyway though so I should be okay?
Probably, I'm not a doctor
39 nohup.out in my entire home, not that bad
although the one in my ~ is 11 MB large
is the plural if nohup.out nohups.out?
At least it's not nopup, that would be sad
just checked: nohup.out is always created, even if there's no output
DSM
DSM
17:05
Sep 21 '15 at 16:51, by DSM
We'd probably say attorneys-general up here (governors-general, lieutenants-commander, etc.)
^ I don't know if this rule applies..
FGsITW
that's what I had in mind
@AndrasDeak the same way shell redirection always works. Gotta check that you can successfully make the file before you maybe need to write to it, no?
DSM
DSM
I have to admit "nohup.out-s" is more practical, but "nohups.out" sounds cooler.
Hello people!
17:07
hi
Just my first time on the chat. :-) Hope you people are doing great! Hi from Sri Lanka.
Like "gins and tonic" - grammatically correct, but a little odd-sounding
I've always found "gin and tonics" weird
I hadn't even known that plural was a thing until I read H2G2 for the first time in English
Gin ad Nelli Juice tastes so good! I dont know if Nelli fruit is available where you are.
Its called Nelli cordial.
:-)
nope
although neither is quinine
17:22
They say "gin and tonics" in HHGTTG so I just assumed that was the right way.
Well, they also say gynnantonyx so I don't know
exactly
but unlike some people my native language is not English; we call it "gintonik" with a dzs at the beginning :P
the "g" in "gintonik" is pronounced unlike that in "GIF" :P
Oh don't get me started
17:56
making self-modifying code easier is one of those questions where I admire OP's grim tenacity in doing something odd for far longer than the average person would consider reasonable.
I wonder if OP just wrote that code and used a parser to turn it into a list :D
@Kevin You don't get it do you? — kyrill 6 mins ago
I'm out of touch with the youths of today
If by "it's a troll", he means "you, Kevin, are a troll", then he correctly identified my "technically correct, yet practically useless" commenting style that I use to needle OPs that irritate me
I believe they mean OP is a troll
as in "nobody can be this stupid and this entitled at the same time", which is a fundamentally flawed assumption yet it might lead to the correct result in this case
18:11
is there a term or a theory for if I read about something (old or new, popular or unpopular) after reading/learning, the next little while, most of the comments/conversation/topics are on that subject I just read about ?
in general: cognitive bias
perhaps confirmation bias, as a narrower term?
not really
There's a specific name for the phenomenon, and I know this because it was mentioned in the room in the last month or two.
attentional bias?
Cause like if I read about some theory on wiki, that isn't very popular, I would see a stack overflow question on it, and then when I get home, I would read a reddit topic on it ... and i find it weird...
@MooingRawr that can also be due to memetization
18:13
maybe ill read that wiki and let you know :D
ideas can be suggestive and contagious and they start living and mutating on their own (what "memes" should actually mean, rather than new-age lolcats)
Found it: "Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon"
so part of that can be something going viral, and multiple people are thinking about similar stuff do to them having seen the same thing
maybe..... :\ but it bugs me... like "I just read/learnt about that just now. why am I seeing it everywhere now, before I didn't see it (or I would have looked it up)"
@Kevin named things always elude me
@MooingRawr that's probably just cognitive bias
18:15
Last mentioned two weeks ago
Mar 21 at 17:41, by Kevin
@DSM Baader-Meinhof phenomenon, plus the fact that I'm largely unoriginal.
Thanks :D
@AndrasDeak Oh okie, I should go read up on it (the link you sent) thanks.
> Frequency illusion
great now I cant wait to see all these new cognitive bias :\
due to the frequency illusion
Don't forget the cognitive bias that makes you discard all sorts of almost completely valid information because you think it is riddled with cognitive biases
for what it's worth, knowing about cognitive biases is very useful, because it helps counteract some of the stupider notions hardwired into our way of thought along the millennia
Sometimes you really do see eight red cadillacs in a row, not because of the frequency illusion, but because the Red Cadillac Enthusiast Club is cruising around town
Basically just don't overdo it
To counteract my negativity towards js this morning, TIL that its let keyword allows you to bind values to anonymous functions in a loop. In comparison, this can only be done in Python using a variety of peculiar workarounds.
//javascript
callbacks = [];
for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++){
    let x = i;
    callbacks.push(function(){return x * 2;});
}
console.log(callbacks[2]());
//Result: 4

#Python
callbacks = []
for i in range(5):
    x = i
    callbacks.append(lambda: x*2)
print(callbacks[2]())
#result: 8
One possible fix for Python being callbacks.append(lambda x=x: x*2) but ugh
Good job js for having a feature that I wish I could have in Python. A rare feat.
18:40
I've seen the latter a lot and it makes sense to me
matlab also binds the namespace of anonymous functions on definition
Well ideally you should be able to choose between either behavior rather than have one forced upon you
so I disagree with your "ugh"
Let me put it this way. I understand perfectly how lambda x=x works here, but I would prefer to never have to explain to a newbie how it works.
DSM
DSM
I hate to admit it, but I like the C++ lambda syntax for capture by value and reference.
you mean all that weird magic with & and whatnot?
"use [&$&^] to signal that you want to capture by value unless it's a full moon closer than 2 months to the winter solstice"
18:53
Use this symbol, which also has seven other meanings in different contexts, because lol
This has happened to me several times recently. I'd say it was early onset dementia, but TBH I've always worried that I may be a hypochondriac.
That happens to me every once in a while. Switching "question" and "answer" is less worrying to me than switching, say, "question" and "cranberry"
Maybe you're just going insane.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.
It would explain my bewilderment at the world around me these days. Speaking of which, how are preparations going back in good old Blighty for the war with Spain?
19:00
All I'll say is that last time Spain tried it on, Elizabeth I sorted it out, I'm sure Elizabeth II can manage.
but she will not be amused while she's doing it
she'll wish her corgi army was at the height of its power
All those ex-pats? Moles.
Waiting to wreck Benidorm.
Hey Pops,

Have you tried building a wall?

Love, America
We did that once. It's taken a while, but we do seem to be on track now to get rid of the Scots.
Only once we've dragged them out of the EU kicking and screaming.
Along with slightly-less-than-half of the whole UK.
The Scottish are notoriously short, so it works.
If your fortification can be stumbled over by a sleepy cow, consider fortifying more.
Scottish Cows are notoriously short, so it works.
DSM
DSM
We're notoriously short-tempered, too. >:-|
Every Scot I've called a cow has seemed offended, so I guess that's true anecdotally
19:13
🐮 => moo
@ThiefMaster whoa, have we always been able to edit the target branch for GitHub PRs?
let me guess: Shetland is on Scottish soil?
as in: Shetland sheepdog, Shetland pony...
must be a really small piece of land
@AndrasDeak Dude, quiet. The Daily Mail might be listening. One war at a time, ok?
as long as they don't know that there's OIL there
Assuming that's not a rhetorical question, yes, the Shetland islands are part of Scotland, and 500 square miles is really small for certain definitions of small.
If it was a rhetorical question and part of some larger hilarious satire, excuse my boorish behavior, remembering that I am a dim American
19:20
I can't vouch for "hilarious" but my remark tied in with the discussion about Scots being wee free men
Ah, I see, because shetland ponies are small ponies.
both Shelties (wee Scottish sheepdogs) and Shetland ponies (wee ponies) seem to originate from Shetland
Rough Collie??
wow
we call them Scottish sheepdogs, which is funny because googling "Scottish sheepdog" leads me to Shelties
let's split the difference and agree on "wee Lassies" :P
sorry to anyone who's uninterested in the linguistics of dog breeds (although shame on you, whoever you are)
On the topic of small ponies, I learned that there is such a thing as a miniature horse
If a tiny horse did not exist, it would be necessary to create one.
What about tiny hippos?
19:25
you mean hypohippos?
there was a short documentary about those on TV ^
:D I know there was :D
It is also necessary to create tiny hippos. Sciencemen are hard at work on the problem.
Maybe doctor panda can help us :D
19:26
Miniature horses are found in many nations, particularly in Europe and the Americas. The designation of miniature horse is determined by the height of the animal, which, depending on the particular breed registry involved, is usually less than 34–38 inches (86–97 cm) as measured at the last hairs of the mane, which are found at the withers. While miniature horses are the size of a very small pony, many retain horse characteristics and are considered "horses" by their respective registries. They have various colors and coat patterns. Miniature horses are friendly and interact well with people. For...
Doctor Panda would create a miniature panda and paint it gray and tell you it's a hippo. Doctor Panda is untethered from the shackles of normative morality.
with international travel being commonplace, the natural need has arisen to transport your horse in your hand luggage
@MooingRawr that's about my sportsball understanding
19:29
My co worker is looking at me funny... can't stop giggling at the "names"
@WayneWerner I want to see you name like professional teams based on their logos, one day
@davidism nope, but since a few months or so
@MooingRawr I guess understanding is probably wrong - care is probably more accurate ;)
Though, I do like hockey
DSM
DSM
Sport of sports.
I do think sports are more interesting when blades are involved, but the particular usage in hockey is not what I had in mind
Fencing is the dumbest sport ever, sadly
"hyah!" Okay we're done
19:46
woot, Hungarian!
Compare that with the action in Olympic Badminton: youtu.be/bYRYJykFi5k
badminton is murder
almost as scary as women's soccer
DSM
DSM
I'm no good at anything requiring twitch reactions, more's the pity.
This is what I imagined fencing would be more like:
Sword fighting will be more fun when fully immersive VR comes around and you can chop your opponent's arm off without going to jail
19:51
I can hardly wait for the "we didn't realize that using real guns + VR could lead to real death" lawsuits in the US
DSM
DSM
I like watching kendo. It's like dancing, broken up by bursts of banging and stabbing.
@AndrasDeak 'tis but a scratch
something something butscratch
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