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00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 23:00

00:27
How do I know, if __delattr__ is introduced in object or type?
00:50
what?
In [7]: type(object) is type
Out[7]: True

In [8]: type(type) is type
Out[8]: True
I'm not sure what you're asking makes any sense
dir(object) and dir(type) shows __delattr__ as member, but who owns __delattr__? I think object owns that attribute, type inherits that attribute
01:22
@DSM i decided to take a different approach as I didn't feel confident in what was going on with the merge.
#stackoverflow.com/a/34004356/5037442
dict1 = mv.set_index('Customer Id').to_dict()['Parent Name']
eng['Parent Name'] = eng.apply(get_parent_name, axis=1)
DSM
DSM
01:43
@clickhere: glad you found something that worked out! Not so glad that you didn't produce a test case, which means that Andras and I both wasted our time. :-(
i'm sorry
I still appreciate your help and encouragement
DSM
DSM
No need to worry, we're all busy and have to choose how to husband our time appropriately. Just remember that goes equally well for the people you're talking to, and triage rules are now in effect with you. ;-)
ok, I hope I won't need help again for a while
 
3 hours later…
04:45
cole slaw! (really old cabbbage)
I have a puzzler for the Python wizards of the group. I seem to have stumbled on a version of random.shuffle that is faster and more versatile than the one in the std lib - so I need someone to show me what I'm doing wrong
I came upon this because I wanted to randomize the values returned from a generator, but random.shuffle only works on lists, since it does the shuffling by swapping elements based on random indexes. So no generators, and no tuples either. To use random.shuffle, would have to listify my generator.
I wrote a function called shuffled because, like sorted, it takes in a sequence (list, tuple, generator, what-have-you) and returns a shuffled list. So a list is eventually created, but it is done for you without an overt listification. Here it is:
shuffled = lambda seq,rnd=random.random: sorted(seq, key=lambda _: rnd())
Using timeit it takes about 1/2 the time of random.shuffle for a 1000 integer list. So what am I missing? Have I reinvented an old wheel?
how to install tensorflow for windows 7 32bit system?i installed python 3.5(32 bit) into my system and also installed anaconda 3.4.4(32 bit)
05:01
@hameed - really? there's no online instructions on how to do this?
i searched and studied all but it doesn't help for me..!
Seems pretty clear step-by-step
What is not working for you?
@PM2Ring did you figure it out yet?
i have only 32bit system so i installed python 3.5 (64 bit ) error occurs .so i installed python 32bit successfully after that i followed by that document i tried this into command prompt C:\> pip3 install --upgrade tensorflow but error occurs like this (could not find a version that satisfies)
@hameed what is the exact error, please do not rewrite it, but copy-paste it verbatim from the console
05:14
@hameed - from the bottom of the page I linked:
We are relying on Stack Overflow to document TensorFlow installation problems and their remedies. The following table contains links to Stack Overflow answers for some common installation problems. If you encounter an error message or other installation problem not listed in the following table, search for it on Stack Overflow. If Stack Overflow doesn't show the error message, ask a new question about it on Stack Overflow and specify the tensorflow tag.
Be sure to post the exact error output in your question, as suggested by @AnttiHaapala
Can anyone comment on my post here, from about 1/2 hour ago, just before everyone showed up? (Looking at you, @MartijnPieters...)
@PaulMcGuire no random pings!
even applies to you :D
It's been so long since I was here, forgot my manners - but I was hoping for a "hunh, that's weird" or "yeah, we all know that already", the crickets were deafening
@PaulMcGuire hmm interesting indeed.
@PaulMcGuire actually, it depends on the length of the list too.
sort is O(n lg n), while random.shuffle uses Fisher-Yates and works in O(n), so you're wrong and your testing methodology is flawed!
a sec
In [7]: %timeit shuffle(l)
10000 loops, best of 3: 73 µs per loop

In [8]: %timeit shuffled(l)
10000 loops, best of 3: 33.3 µs per loop
In [10]: l = list(range(1000))

In [11]: %timeit shuffle(l)
1000 loops, best of 3: 745 µs per loop

In [12]: %timeit shuffled(l)
1000 loops, best of 3: 415 µs per loop
In [16]: l = list(range(1000000))

In [17]: %timeit shuffled(l)
1 loop, best of 3: 1.06 s per loop

In [18]: %timeit shuffle(l)
1 loop, best of 3: 918 ms per loop
@PaulMcGuire ^
python function calls are slow, shuffle written in Python, slow slow slow
05:35
Mhm
@PaulMcGuire i posted my question here:stackoverflow.com/questions/44449972/…
        if random is None:
            randbelow = self._randbelow
            for i in reversed(range(1, len(x))):
                # pick an element in x[:i+1] with which to exchange x[i]
                j = randbelow(i+1)
                x[i], x[j] = x[j], x[i]
this is the random.shuffle loop
it does so much more.
@hameed - okay I see your post. I'll tell you, screenshots are not good for people who would search for keywords or error messages. Can you paste in text instead of a PNG screenshot?
unable to copy text from cmd
@AnttiHaapala - thanks, I had looked at the code in the random module, and my surmise too was that sorted's C code was beating shuflle's Python code. It looks like the cutover is around 100,000 for the length of the list where shuffle starts to outdo shuffled.
05:44
i edited my question now @PaulMcGuire
@hameed - Copying your console output to the clipboard is a good skill to learn. microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/…
Now check
Be sure to include all the output from pip, especially the part about not finding tensorflow-gpu - I think that is especially relevant. (Are you just transcribing by hand? Definitely learn to copy console output to the clipboard!) Also, I edited your post to indent all of your sample text by 4 spaces - this will convert to fixed font and highlight as code.
Hi guys I am new to creating android app. I wanted some advice or walk-through. I have to create an android file which takes an audio file as input from the user then send this file to a python script for execution which return json data and then show that data on the page. I was thinking of using Phone Gap to make a hybrid app and use javascript to invoke python script. I was wondering whether this approach will work and if not then what are the drawbacks?
06:07
@hameed - I guess the outlook is not good for getting TF running on 32-bit Windows. If you are going to mess with tensorflow, it sounds like 64-bit is really a pre-requisite.
@Sudhanshu why do you need to use python?
How do you get JSON data from the audio file?
06:25
cbg
cbg, Ilja
cbg
Good thing that the weather changed from ~5°C to ~20°C just before our corps summer party.
We had a dip in temperature as well. It's slowly going up now. No summer party for us, though.
06:37
@Code-Apprentice...The python script is returning the Json data after processing the audio file
@Sudhanshu so this python script is already written?
Yes it is.
I'm confused about how to execute that python script.
07:07
Can you put it on a server and execute it with a HTTP request?
Maybe with a REST API
 
1 hour later…
08:38
cbg
feeling better, Ilja?:)
or are you at a company outing sick?
Feeling much better, the antibiotics worked.
And thank you for asking.
awesome, glad to hear that
But what you said about kids and biohazards holds true, we also had a go of some stomach what-not this week in the family :P
08:45
heh, just what you need when coming out of a 2-week (or so) cold :D
*checks Ilja's "sick Finn" attribute to "permanent"*
Been hearing that it has been like this for others as well this winter. Or it might be because of "that age" and the others consist mainly of young families as well.
surely it can't be measurement bias ;)
A prime example of such, I guess :P
09:05
morning :)
"morning" ;)
You know, I just saw a video that made me realize I, apparently, am really strange.
While I was playing games people used to ask me: "hey how you doing?" while I came online.
I always felt terribly awkward when I heard that from someone I only spoke like 2-3 times. - what do I have to reply? Why would he care?
But apparently that's due to me being dutch: only close friends ask that question to each other here.
09:22
I thought it was pretty well-known that that response to "how are you" is "fine, thanks" or "how are you", latter probably mostly in the UK
posh dudes rollin' be like "How do you do? How do yo do!"
s/that that/that the/
Well it still feels awkward to me to do that :P. If someone in the Netherlands asks you that he's worried/happy for you...
well, you can rest assured that nobody cares how you actually are
phew.
There are some people here too who ask how you are as a form of small talk, and don't expect a real answer. I sometimes troll them by actually answering the question.
100% surefire way to smalltalk here: talk about the weather.
09:31
wet and 50% chance for devastating flood by the sea
"It's raining!" (duh!) - "Ya, it's really bad."
<joey>How <em>you</em> doin'?</joey>
there's this question that I answered but I suspect there might be more "pythonic" solutions how to efficiently construct an affinity matrix from rows of transactions?
hello
hello
@user2314737 you might want to use np.arrays by default and only resort to np.matrix if you really really really have to (which is almost never)
just a tip for future habits:)
09:36
oh I wouldn't use numpy unless the project also uses numpy/plans to use numpy.
@AndrasDeak yes noted
"affinity matrix" sounds a lot like numpy down the line
especially with the pseudocode saying affinity[i,j]
Numpy really makes python feel differently, and the gains are only pronounced if you don't convert between the different array types a lot.
numpy is a hammer, you can't drive screws with it and you can hit your thumb if you use it wrong
but damn it's a fine hammer
I used numpy just for the average np.average actually I could do without
09:45
tbf, I would make the weight function a bit different to not use an implicit cast from boolean to integer:
def weight(i,j,data_node):
    return data_node["weight"] if i in data_node["transaction"] and j in data_node["transaction"] else 0
And then you provide the weight function with data[k]
@paul23 yes my weight function was not elegant that's much better
I guess I should have asked in code review :)
Also: minimize range(x) usage. Especially if the range boundary is simply the length of the container. - If you need indices use enumerate() while looping over the elements.
10:28
Anyone here got any experience with JWT auth{entic,oris}ation? Hoping to use it with flask and connexion
jwt scks.
Got a better alternative?
unspecified amount of quatloos on "everything sucks" :D
10:55
Cabbage
Theorem: If you take a random project, there is a huge chance that Antti says it sucks.
more like an observation but theorem sounds cooler
Cro
Cro
11:15
Hello, have someone met a problem with Tensorflow CIFAR CNN training that training accuracy stuck around 30%? My learning rate is 0.001 and I have 4 convs and 1 densed layer
Is there anyone?
Hello, I have been trying to parse a xml compressed data to extract the value in a particular tag. i have succeeded in receiving the value of that tag using Beautifulsoup package. the value now extracted is of base64 encoded format, i should decode them. when i used the base64 package to decode, the answer am getting are of special characters. Can anyone help me in decoding the value.
Cro
Cro
what do you mean by 'xml compressed'?
11:33
Anyone having experience with opencv ?
Cro
Cro
Plz go to chatroom OpenCV which was created few hours ago
Yeah, I did. but its inactive right now.
12:38
Cabbage
@AnttiHaapala Yes, I figured out how to un-star posts, by using the context menu on the starboard. My mistake was that I'd been trying to do it via the context menu of the post, the transcript, and the full starred list.
12:51
Today there is a post on the hot network questions sidebar. The post was also on the hot network questions sidebar yesterday. But the title of the post today is different from its title yesterday. This is unusual, since I remember several instances where a post was edited but its title on the hot network questions sidebar didn't change.
Maybe there's a grace period of a couple hours and this is the first time I've seen a question on the hot network questions sidebar stay on the hot network question sidebar for at least that long
@PaulMcGuire Very interesting! And a little surprising. BTW, the sorted function actually creates a copy of the list you pass it, or if you pass it an iterator it runs the iterator to create a list, and it then calls list.sort on that list.
I've done some timeit tests in both Python 2.6.6 and 3.6.0. To make the tests fair, I modified your function to use list.sort so it can shuffle in-place, like random.shuffle. In Python 2, sorting with a random key is faster for short lists, but shuffle overtakes it when the list length is greater than 100 or so.
But in Python 3, shuffle is slower than the Python 2 version for some reason, and the random sort is roughly twice as fast as shuffle on all lists I tested it on - up to length=131072. Here's a Gist of my timeit code.
@Kevin Or maybe they changed the HNQ code so that the title is dynamic. If so, I'm not sure if that's an improvement or not. ;)
13:07
brb going to edit every HNQ title to "butts"
@AnttiHaapala That's disappointing. And what's worse, Python 2.6 shuffle is roughly twice as fast as Python 3.6 shuffle. :(
def shuffle(seq):
    pass
KPython's implementation is leading the pack B-)
lol
\o Company moving day cbg :D
13:25
@PaulMcGuire Wikipedia has some info on the random sort algorithm, and how it compares to Fisher-Yates. In summary, the random keys should not contain any duplicates (but I guess it's ok if dupe keys are assigned to dupe list items).
And for maximum speed the random keys should be sorted using radix sort (which means they should be transformable to a contiguous range of integers); OTOH, TimSort is pretty fast.
@Kevin I only know that the past week I've seen some of the same questions for days on other sites
recbg
Whoops I chided an OP for having invalid syntax in his code but it turns out "\u" is only invalid in 3.X
@PM2Ring sorry, I don't know why I thought that the full starred list worked too
I would've sworn I tried :|
Last night I dropped a mug, today morning a nutella jar full of doggy treats. I dearly hope that I haven't entered a weird break-something-every-12-hours spacetime anomaly
@AndrasDeak No worries. I rarely need to unstar other people's messagesf, since davidism does such a good job of handling that, but it annoyed me that I didn't know how to do it.
13:49
Hey all, does anyone know of some good reading material for better text processing with python? I have a weekly project I'm in charge of rebuilding and part of it means parsing a text document to perfom MySQL inserts and I am not happy with the version I wrote
@AndrasDeak Maybe it's because we're approaching the solstice. ;) The other day I spaced out a bit while I was making coffee & poured boiling water over my hand. It wasn't much, and I was at the sink, so I could put my hand immediately under running cold water, so it didn't do any damage. Mostly, it was annoying that I was so careless.
Hey guys! Quick Django question
For some reason, my model form for the user sign in is not sending any POST data on request and I have no idea why
@Turk text docs as in word docs? .txt? .csV? Also have you read the docs before or is there a specific question you would like to ask ?
@MalikBrahimi we don't either unless you provide us with a MVCE
@Moo
I'm pasting code hold up
So essentially I'm getting to the point in my view where the sign in wasn't successful
It returns an HTTP response with POST data that is completely empty
Any ideas why that might be?
@PM2Ring as a physicist I prefer simple human fallibility;) with the mug I wasn't paying attention while baking some sweets, but for today morning I have no excuse, I just dropped the jar...
13:56
Sadly, I'm not on a machine that doesn't have Django installed atm, maybe someone else would be able to point out the issue.
Just plain text documents sent over from a client. And no specific question beyond trying to find the best common practices when it comes to line by line parsing. Basically each line is a pipe deliminated series of entries that get parsed into a dict and then injected. But I wanted to do some reading on the efficiency of reading the whole document at once vs line by line, using predefined string literals vs regex's. Basically just what are the good approaches vs what are the bad approaches.
Hopefully that makes sense. I am approaching it from a very broad angle in terms of understanding the pythonic way to do things. In this case, parsing text files
@Turk That's a rather broad topic. My broad answer is that you can learn good text processing practices by looking at & playing with the code in good answers on SO. It sounds like you have well-structured data, so you probably should be using the standard csv module. Or maybe Pandas (but I don't know Pandas).
There's not really an authoritative source on the specific topic of text parsing, I don't think. Or at least, it's not neatly packaged anywhere; you can find out that reading a whole file at once consumes more memory than iterating through the file, but you'll discover that in a random SO post and not in chapter 2 of Text Processing Tips and Tricks dot com
Yea that's what I was noticing, basically all of my google results point me right back at SO so I just wanted to make sure there wasn't some book or article that was considered a well known good source of information. For a lot of programming topics I've found lots of information, but this one was just eluding me a little bit
That's good to know though, it seems I may just be overthinking how efficient my could is/could be in this case as there are only so many ways you even could do it
my code is/could be***
Reading the whole file is not scaleable, and should only be done if you know the size of the file is static, if you don't know your size of the file, read it line by line and treat it as an iterator. This is a good idea if each line is independent for processing
14:03
It's easy to be dissatisfied with code that heavily relies on reading files, since its runtime is likely to be dominated by I/O that's impossible to optimize. If you have a ten gig FASTA file, it's going to take a long time to churn through regardless of how cutting edge your style is
if you need multiple lines to piece together or you need to go back up a line or what not it gets trickier and there's no guideline you should follow, just customize as you go along I suppose.
If each line becomes one SQL insertion, with each line being (mostly) independent of the other lines in the file, then you might as well process it line by line. The OS buffers file access pretty efficiently, you don't gain much speed by loading the whole thing into RAM, since the OS is reading the file in large blocks anyway. And if the file is huge, loading the whole thing wastes RAM, and can be slower than line by line processing.
Cro
Cro
Hello, have someone met a problem with Tensorflow CIFAR CNN training that training accuracy stuck around 30%? My learning rate is 0.001 and I have 4 convs and 1 densed layer
EDIT:learning rate is divided by 10 every half epoch
Any ideas on my question?
Yea in this case it's very static and simple, the file sizes are never larger than a few kilobytes and each line is one piece of data for insertion, so there really isn't a lot of guess work there. That makes me feel better about my initial approach then which was line by line. This is being done for the company I work for and is the first production level code I'm writing, so you could say I was a bit nervous about coming up with a good script
14:08
You can never go wrong with line by line if it's line based per operations, and since it's in production, line by line can scale to larger files anyways.
Cro
Cro
Who can I get my answer from?
@Cro If someone is interested in answering, they'll answer.
@Cro Sadly I don't know anything about TensorFlow, if no one can/will give you an answer here, maybe create a MVCE and post on the main site?
on a totally unrelated note...anyone in here familiar with using Nginx as a reverse proxy over Gunicorn? I've been struggling with a personal project over the past few days and can't find anyone who's gone down this path I'm on
WSGI .... scary things
14:13
the boldface-ridden comments on this English HNQ makes me want to register and engage in a flame war
@MalikBrahimi Nope, never touched Django in my life.
im writing a job queue in python
yea it is not fun haha. I've got it working by using the proxy_pass directive to localhost:PORT where my gunicorn instance is listening. But I was trying to emulate Apache's UserDir directive but can't seem to find a way to make one instance of gunicorn serve up any project in a given users home directory
14:16
@Kevin like Flask, I find the tutorial really well made... Django being longer but still follow-able.
Cro
Cro
I don't think that nginx can do that, you should do something else as an alternative
can anyone tell me, when we use celery or anything that runs workers, how do multiple workers work ? do they start multiple workers by forking ? or how ?
The easy but terrible solution of course would be to set up an instance of gunicorn on a new port for every project and make it look like everything's working correctly, but that builds up a lot of overhead on my server that's already running lean
What about the PHP_FCL system?
I don't know any php whatsoever, but from my reading you can use that and this (gist.github.com/alanbriolat/1248004) to emulate what I'm talking about with PHP cgi scripts
14:20
@MalikBrahimi I'm sorry nobody knew how to answer your question, but insulting us isn't going to make anybody spring up to hand you a solution. This is not a productive approach. Maybe try asking on the main site.
It's good you don't know PHP, stay away from it; for your own good :D
@MalikBrahimi you could try posting to reddit, I always have good luck there
And that's why I never learned it, a buddy of mine said it wasn't worth his time so I just stayed on the Python 2.7 train
Cro
Cro
Github helped me much
sadly I'm a Chinese that python 2.7 group has a terrible feeling to unicode chinese
True, but I found 2.7 to work better with what I do specifically because of the changes to how it handles unicode in 3.x
One day I'll make the switch over, but not just yet
@Turk you mean "the right way"? :P
14:25
haha, I won't deny that. It definitely is the appropriate way but between legacy systems, in house preferences and my own stubbornness, 2.7 is life for at least the next few years
I should learn how Unicode works. Mostly I use it for crafting elaborate emoticons
Is there another way to use it?
Cro
Cro
and they're true American or English that even French caught on a problem
Thankfully I don't have to deal with foreign languages so I don't need the new system in place. That being said, that makes me one of the arrogant dev's that refuses to keep up with the times
you're in plenty of company
Cro
Cro
14:27
and stack overflow is a perfect website to improve my English skill
hope you don't think I speak terrible english
(but I'm not actually a dev, and I don't have to do anything with strings, so it's especially easy for me to feel superior to 2.7 users :D)
@Cro nah, you're fine
the point of communication is to make yourself understood, and I understand you perfectly
I write all my programs under the hope that I will only ever read ASCII text from files and stdin. Maybe they work with unicode too, by coincidence, and maybe they don't. I feel vaguely guilty about this.
@cro yea I;m with @AndrasDeak on that
cbg
Cro
Cro
here I have another problem
14:28
cbg @idjaw:)
I didn't understand "and they're true American or English that even French caught on a problem"
Wanted to share some bash related shenanigans with you folks
@idjaw I'm all ears
I mostly use python for personal web apps and running on raspberry pi's in enclosed environment with protocols of my own design, it's easy to sit where you're comfortable when you only have yourself to worry about
For anyone who deals with a bit of bash glue in their every day. It would be nice to test it :)
Cro
Cro
14:29
how to print different character on the same position of a terminal using python?
soooo (I know something like this already exists...) a couple of folks here started working on a test bench for bash
@wim You're a test driven fan, thought I'd ping you see if this interested you too ^^
@Cro if there's no newline, you need to print a carriage return, '\r'
Cro
Cro
can you answer my question?
if a newline has been printed, it's not that easy
@Cro Please don't follow up all of your questions with "can you answer my question?". It is already understood that you want an answer for your question.
14:30
kevin'd
and that ^
ke-ke-ke-ke-viiiin breaaaaaker
Cro
Cro
sorry that it's half Chinese and english
I should stop trying to help when Kevin is around :D
@Cro the issue isn't your sentence structure, it's the message you are trying to get across, which has nothing to do with Chinese or English.
I would imagine Kevin bulking up and turning green, except he's already a green block.
Cro
Cro
14:32
my teacher says that
not me
Joe
Joe
Anyone here have reportlab skills, could help me with something
What is it about today and people fishing for help?
@Joe sopython.com/chatroom please read the room rules, namely just ask your question.
@idjaw I assume you know about ShellCheck. It's not perfect, but it's still very useful for picking up silly syntax errors.
@davidism Friday... gotta get work done before weekend, is my guess.
Joe
Joe
14:33
@MooingRawr First time in here I will check that out first thx
Maybe it's getting into finals week for universities. I know UCSD is coming up soon.
import time
print('asdf',end='',flush=True); time.sleep(5); print('\rdfg')
Hello! Guys, I've just moved on to OOP. I've stuck here. Don't understand what's the problem.
https://ideone.com/A0Ciqt
University here is already out, it's summer school if anything
@PM2Ring yes. That is one of them. The one I shared is for writing unittests which also include mocking capabilities
14:33
@Cro run the above, it even works in a REPL
note the '\r' in the second print and the lack of newline in the first print
outfancied by Kevin as usual
Cro
Cro
thx
change \n to \r
@Kevin please don't post footage of code as images
:-P
14:35
;)
(disclaimer: end="" only works in 3.X (unless you import from future))
Joe
Joe
I have created a reportlab app that generates pdfs. Now I am trying to consolidate all of the pdfs into one master list. I have tweaked the code every way i can imagine and keep erroring out. stackoverflow.com/questions/44445212/…
and '\\|/-' is prettier if r'\|/-'
@Kevin but what if I want a 2 character spinner?
Cro
Cro
it's ok with any type it presents
14:36
I thought about using a raw string, but I already typed the line, so...
@RuslanDoronichev missing a def on your __init__ also print (self.name.title() + self.cuisine.title()) you don't define any instance variable named cuisine.title() or name.title()among other issues here take a look at the fixed version repl.it/IeWk
@Joe your question a) is not old, you said you were reading the rules, and b) does not contain an MCVE, it's missing the full traceback of the error you get.
@davidism That is beyond the technological capability of modern computing. I think a Swiss team is making some progress using qubits, though
Cro
Cro
anyone with tensorflow skill?
@Cro considering how you've asked the same tensorflow-related question twice in the last hour, I'd wait a bit more before posting again
probably a lot more, considering that the fluctuation of users here is not that intense
14:38
Let ROs handle it.
sorry, I exaggerated with the times
I wish I was an expert in Django and tensorflow and gunicorn and reportlab and unicode and celery so I could answer all the questions asked in the last fifteen minutes. But I am only a man.
@Kevin you're human?!?!
django and tensorflow should have their own room
and in particular, not a unicorn
14:39
actually just django
it should be its own thing
<- hater
It's like PHP
horrible
it's Python's version of PHP
@MooingRawr Depends on your definition. I certainly think I deserve human rights.
Python went out of their way to be like.....this is what it is like using PHP in Python-land
enjoy....
Joe
Joe
@davidism I know its not that old but i am on a deadline and have been stuck here for three days. I have changed the code so much the traceback changes. I will edit it in but its basically a value error. The script will not allow me to pass a tuple
14:40
Regardless of whether or not I am physically composed only of discrete white triangles on an infinite tesselating green grid lying just above the ordinary plane of reality
@Kevin Do you run on KevinScript?
@Joe With all due respect. I understand if you are under pressure with personal deadlines. But you cannot impose that on other people
I'm pretty sure a lot of people in this room can play "who has it worse" right now with whatever personal deadlines they have too
Joe
Joe
@idjaw I kknow and i dont expect a ton Im just new and figured it was something small I am missing
@khajvah Not since I started taking Paradoxitol™, which prevents / will have being been prevented all ontological kinks in my personal timeline.
I want a pocket Kevin
so if I'm ever not around a computer I can get Kevinisms on the go
14:43
Development on the PokéKevin project has been slow, mostly because our keyboards don't have an "é" key
kéyboards
I want Kevin plugin which throws random puns on the browser
every 5 minutes
or I could just poll starboard
Cro
Cro
How to DIY a next_batch function with static variable(with or without a class is fine, but better without a class) so that I don't need to tell computer where the loop left off last time?
I have learned all the trade secrets from BonziBuddy and Clippy. I'm ready to be helpful.
èéê etc..... Speak for yourself Kevin
Get off that USA keyboard...get some internationalization in your life
wim
wim
14:46
@idjaw not particularly .. I think of bash as duct tape
@idjaw diversity is good
@Cro Generator functions are usually pretty good for "where I last left off" behavior
wim
wim
if you're building anything complicated enough that tests are warranted, it shouldn't be in bash
@wim Yep...100% agree....unfortunately we have a bit of glue that gets "scary" to change...so wrapping some tests around it while we figure out what to do with it helps
Cro
Cro
@Kevin what do you mean "Generator functions"?
14:47
Functions that use the yield keyword.
wim
wim
@idjaw we do too :( part of my job is rewriting it to python
FWIW - There is an active tech debt initiative to get rid of all that bash stuff. I'm chipping away bit by bit right now. For now that test suite helps provide some confidence
@wim dude...we are on the exact same boat lol
Cro
Cro
you mean like thishttps://www.google.com.tw/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&cad=rja‌​&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwjBxP7lgLHUAhXJkZQKHclUAKYQjRwIBw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwikieducator‌​.org%2FPYTHON_TUTORIALS&psig=AFQjCNHeYnAl4VaLeKgGwC1TM87R-XOT_Q&ust=1497106053666‌​082?
Contrived example:
import random
import time
def f():
    chars = "abcdefg"
    for idx, c in enumerate(chars):
        yield idx
        yield c
        yield random.randint(1,10)
x = f()
print(next(x))
print(next(x))
print("Now doing work completely unrelated to x...")
time.sleep(1)
print("Back to x.")
print(next(x))
print(next(x))
print(next(x))
print(next(x))
@MooingRawr Ty! But, why I can not call a method repl.it/IeWk/1
wim
wim
14:50
@idjaw do you work in fintech ?
we're often seeming to have similar toolset / responsibilities
@wim Nope. I work for an infra company
Cro
Cro
@Kevin Thanx
@PM2Ring - thanks for looking deeper into these shuffle bits
hey. Paul long time no see!
hope you're well :)
rbrb, interviewing a new victim engineer
14:54
:) gl
@RuslanDoronichev missing self in the arguments. all class methods needs a self repl.it/IeWk/2 since you need to pass the instance for the class so the method knows what to run
@PaulMcGuire No worries. Thanks for bringing it to our attention.
@idjaw - I am. I have a new job developing a QA automation suite at a startup here in Austin for some network hardware, all in Python
@MooingRawr Aha. So when I define a method I need to pass self as an argument
@PaulMcGuire Nice.
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