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15:00
@RuslanDoronichev only in the class object method. You could pass teh class object isntead, namely def my_method(restaurant) but then you are passing the class i think
@PaulMcGuire oh! that's awesome. I'm actually really interested to know more about this network hardware you are working on. I deal with network "things" too.
Python3 to boot, 2.x is mostly in my rearview now (except for maintaining pyparsing compat)
@MooingRawr I know what you mean, but "class method" generally means a method that receives the class itself as the first arg. It's probably better to call them instance methods.
@PM2Ring right that was the term i was looking for Thanks @RuslanDoronichev please read PM's term correction
@idjaw - it is a network storage controller that you can configure to auto-post dormant/neglected/just-plain-old files up to cheap cloud storage, and auto-retrieve if/when they are eventually accessed - about a 75:1 cost savings vs local storage. It wedges into the NFS mount, so there is no config change required on clients
The company is infinite.io
15:05
@RuslanDoronichev Yes, you need to give self as the first arg in the definition of an instance method. But when you call it the instance gets passed as self automatically, you don't put it in the call.
Good morning everyone. I need your help experts. I have 2 .py files: a.py and b.py
a.py takes user input, it also imports b.py to run "b.py" script if user will input "c" in script "a.py" (something like redirection)
How can I do that? I created in both files: __name__ == "__main__": ...
So how can I run content of script b.py from script a.py when user types "c"
Take all of the code out of b.py's if __name__ == "__main__": block and put it in a function, perhaps one named main. Then make a.py execute b.main() when input is "c"
script a.py looks like:
-----------------------
import b.py

class A(object):
def getInput(self):
self.input = input('Users input')
if self.input == 'c':
#run script b.py...
#b.Class()?; b.py?; b? what should i type here

def main(self):
pass

if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

------------------------------
and b.py looks like:
-----------------------------
from a import A

class T(A):
def disp(self):
print('F = m * g')
def main(self):
disp()

if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
sorry but char doesnt show spaces / tabs
chat*
You have to hit the "fixed font" button.
Ahh thank you friend :)
15:20
Ok, well, for starters, calling main() will crash because you can't access methods of classes completely unqualified like that.
For class methods, you need to do A.main(). For instance methods, you need to do my_instance_of_A = A(); my_instance_of_A.main().
understand, thanks, im going to fix it
This is all assuming your if is in the global scope and not indented to be inside the class definition
@PaulMcGuire Cool! That's awesome. Is it cloud-service agnostic? i.e. can plug in to whichever cloud provider you want to use?
If it is inside the class definition, you can call functions without qualification, but that's a really weird way to do things
You almost never need to have anything other than function definitions and very simple assignment statements inside a class definition scope
time for lunch
bon apetite
appreciate ur tips
DSM
DSM
15:26
Friday morning cabbage for all!
Guess who spent until 2 AM last night fixing a pandas bug buried deep in the groupby internals? Yours truly. :-P
core pandas?
\o cbg
DSM
DSM
@idjaw: yeah.
I just realized, back when I was looking for a job I was applying to a full stack python position, and they asked me to send an example site I've built with my resume. I sent my hobby site instead of my professional site... I wonder if that's why I didn't get a call back lol
@DSM that's pretty awesome though :) good job
Cro
Cro
15:36
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?
DSM
DSM
The whole groupby code needs to be rewritten. It grew to handle new functionality and so it's deeply nested with branches everywhere to handle obscure corner cases. I'd be willing to accept a fair-sized performance hit just to make it maintainable.
Cro
Cro
EDIT:
oops sorry
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?
...
@Cro you can edit/delete your original post within a few minutes.
Cro
Cro
EDIT:how to use yield without returning the variable?
I don't want to return that variable
code
def next_batch(batch_size, batch_name, onehot=True):
    import numpy as np
    from read import unpickle
    from mlxtend.preprocessing import one_hot
    def calbatch(current_batch=0):
        yield current_batch
        current_batch += batch_size
    current_batch = next(calbatch())
    dict_data = unpickle(batch_name)
    label = np.array(dict_data['label'][current_batch:current_batch+batch_size])
    a1 = dict_data['data']
    a2 = a1[current_batch:current_batch+batch_size, :]
    if(onehot==True):
EDIT: like C++ variable
@PM2Ring sorry :( - puppy feels bad now
15:40
@JonClements No worries. I didn't see your answer until the page refreshed when I posted mine.
Kind of encouraging we both thought of doing it the same way though...
Indeed. Great minds think alike. :)
I did kind of find a dupe, but it wasn't in Python, I think it was C++.
(but fools seldom differ? :p)
That too.
@idjaw: There are several different cloud services that are supported. For testing I just use a local NFS "cloud", but yes, the idea is that multiple cloud options are available.
15:42
very interesting
@PaulMcGuire long time no see - how's things?
It was plain C stackoverflow.com/questions/40964458/… Obviously a bit larger than our versions.
Doing fine - just catching up with idjaw on network stuff.
BTW, with luck I should have an article coming out in Linux Journal (pyparsing-related, of course)
    @Kevin If I put main() inside if __name__ == "__main__": main() , it says main() is not defined. I tryed do simple code to find out why "function a" doesnt call "func b" but I dont know why it doesnt work, code:

    class Tst(object):
    	def disp(self):
    		print('s')

    	def rep(self):
    		return disp()

    t = Tst()
    t.rep()

 How is it possible that rep() doesnt want to call disp()  - it says that needs argument, but its self...
return self.disp()
15:44
@PaulMcGuire In my world of OpenStack, when it comes to storage, there are three types of storage implementations for image, block and object: glance, cinder, swift respectively
indeed, worked thanks man. Its obviouis self.disp() cos its in this call right.
same class, so needs self.
You can only call class instance methods by preceding the function name with an instance followed by a period. This is true regardless of whether you're inside a class or not. put disp() on the last line of your program and it will crash with the same error.
So back to that main, I have code but still its error with main, saying it needs argument...
class Tst(object):
	def disp(self):
		print('s')

	def main(self):
		self.disp()

if __name__ == "__main__":
	Tst.main()
@TommyL it needs a Tst instance.
You're trying to call Tst.main() on the class - not an instance of the class...
15:50
try Tst().main()
it would work because Tst() calls the constructor
[Now pondering whether we should introduce the concept of staticmethods... Nah]
no
staticmethods are useless
But it might be good to mention __init__
yes, worked, thanks for tips. I m new to OOP sorry for bothering but im curious and want to learn a lot
Let's focus on walking before we try to get a class A commercial truck driver's license.
15:52
I know init, i just didnt want to create it for this trivial example brother
@PM2Ring @PaulMcGuire ah now I remember why
@TommyL That's ok. We enjoy constructive curiosity. What we don't like is when people don't seem to absorb what we try to teach them.
Python 2.6 is b0rken but Python 3.6 shuffle uses randbelow which tries to be completely unbiased.
of course the sort by random would usually do equally well though.
@TommyL Fair enough, every class doesn't need to have an __init__. And it's good to keep things simple when you're experimenting.
^^ QFT. I'm happy to teach people who are learning, but when people are just asking random questions without bothering to think about them.... >:(
15:54
@WayneWerner What color is your hair! :D
@idjaw Swift is one of our out-of-the-box options, along with Amazon S3
@WayneWerner QFT == Quantum Field Theory? :p
@AnttiHaapala Ah. That makes sense. The sort by random can be biased though if the random keys contain dupes, as the Wikipedia link mentions.
@MooingRawr what hair? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
That's the point :D Is beard part of the classification of 'hair' ?
15:56
@WayneWerner Umm... thought it was red but using transparent dye?
My goatee actually has quite a bit of red, esp. with sunlight
what is there on the top of my head is turning quite gray
@PM2Ring - chances of duplicate values returned by random.random()? I assumed this would be vanishingly small, them being floats
@JonClements 'That hair color has yet to be unlocked. You find a scroll on hair coloring techniques, please roll to see if you can master the scroll '
@JonClements Perhaps "Quoted For Truth", a sentiment often expressed on message boards which means "I agree". Conventionally one actually needs to quote the thing you're agreeing to, but in these modern days anything goes.
I just quite fancied the idea of Wayne teaching Quantum Field Theory is all :)
15:59
@PaulMcGuire Agreed. The odds are very small, but not zero, especially if the list is large.
I was kind of sad when I learned that String Theory had nothing to do with the fact that when you put a bunch of string into a bin and pull a piece out that magically it's super tangled
but that there's actually a topology behind it
I'm kinda sad you didn't go down the path of the 11 string ways.
@JonClements ’tis a consummation devoutly to be wish’d.
@WayneWerner - my boss's daughter did a high school science project on the thigmatropism of ear buds thrown in a drawer
Someone should come up with "Rope Theory" - like strings, but just bigger...
16:01
@PaulMcGuire The modern random module is very careful to avoid inadvertently introducing bias. We were discussing it here several months ago. Eg when it makes a random int, it will loop instead of introducing a tiny bias in some numbers.
@JonClements it's just made out of a lot of string theories
Potentially, it could loop forever, although the odds of that happening are extremely tiny. :D
@PaulMcGuire that's pretty awesome. Some people did a thing at UC Davis des.physics.ucsd.edu/DSmithKnotting.pdf
@PM2Ring only if they're using the wrong module
@PM2Ring - I knew that randomness algorithms would be a potentially deep topic/rabbit hole, so I did the same escape valve/cop-out that random.shuffle uses, to accept an optional random arg to implement whatever random algorithm is desired.
Feb 12 at 10:20, by PM 2Ring
Hey @AnttiHaapala I had a look at random.py to see how random.randint handles the bias vs runtime issue. It opts for infinite looping. https://github.com/python-git/python/blob/master/Lib/random.py#L249 The worst case is randint(0, 2**k) because it calls getrandbits(k+1). Thus it returns after 1 call with probability almost p=0.5, 2 calls: p=.25, 3 calls: p=0.125, etc. I.e., the expected number of loops is almost 2.
16:10
Like: random = lambda : 4 # verified by die roll of [::], (except it has to return a value between 0 and 1).
FWIW, random.random uses getrandbits to generate 53 random bits, so it doesn't need to do any looping.
16:26
@JonClements candidate1, candidate2 ;)
Guys how can I print data with the same space. Like I want to print:
Jack 1
Alexander 2
to look like this:
Jack 1
Alexander 2
sorry cant show u exact due to spaces and fixed soesnt work
i want a space like:
Jack ------------ 1
Alexander -------2
but replace "-" with space
The fixed font button works, I promise
i know but that was a lil bit more complicated ;p
52
Q: Create nice column output in python

xeorI am trying to create a nice column list in python for use with commandline admin tools which I create. Basicly, I want a list like: [['a', 'b', 'c'], ['aaaaaaaaaa', 'b', 'c'], ['a', 'bbbbbbbbbb', 'c']] To turn into: a b c aaaaaaaaaa b c a bbbbbb...

16:31
BTW I just googled your question and was the first link.
Not sure I know what you mean. Pressing the fixed font button is simple regardless of how complicated the text you're entering is.
Jack      1
Alexander 2
see, not so easy right xD
Oh, are you saying "when I space out the arguments so that they align visually in the text box, they don't line up in "fixed font" mode because the width of the spaces change"? Why didn't you say so
The problem is that we still see text in the edit box using proportional font. Copy/paste from logs and source code usually don't have that problem.
I vote that the fixed font button should also change the display font in the edit box.
16:36
as for curiosity, we can use in python ljust(value) method to create cool spaces, ex:
'test'.ljust(6)
works too
Whenever I need to compose position-critical text, I write it in Notepad++ using a monospace font, and paste it into chat
Im using notepad ++ as my python interpreter
i creat python scripts in N ++
create*
are you sure notepad++ is your interpreter?
compiler
python
but i use notpad to run python
N++ is a pretty good game but it's insanely difficult after forty levels or so
16:38
"editor" is probably the term you're thinking of.
what does forty lvls mean
stands for huge program?
cos u dont see tree vierw right
what editor should I use for python then
You ever get that feeling that you can't tell if someone is a markov bot or a real person?
no, Im new
I wonder what that will be like when face-to-face interactions are like that
I'm making a joke. The joke is that "Notepad++" is a text editor and "N++" is a video game where you play a ninja and jump around.
16:39
ohhh
Didnt get it
clearly
I'm curious if Tommy replaced that S.Nelson guy.... (not to be rude or anything)
so what IDE do u recommand for python then
I use Notepad++ and a cmd window.
me23
what if u write complicated project?
wim
wim
16:41
@AndrasDeak know any numpy tricks for this? stackoverflow.com/q/44462273/674039
lemme see
scite is a favorite of mine
wim
wim
I was thinking, if he converts those sets to sorted tuples instead, there might be something.
Complicated projects get Notepad++ and cmd and Windows File Explorer and git gui
wim
wim
This problem extends easily to parallelism, but the GIL will thwart any attempts to thread it. And the transport across process boundaries will probably make any multiprocessing version slow too.
16:43
I heard aboyt PyCharm, a lot of ppl are happy with that
about*
wim
wim
"happy"
but it is slow tho, a lil bit
wim
wim
as in, haven't found anything better yet.
thanks for advice anyway guys, at least I know how to use main() now :)
wim
wim
why does semi-colon feature exist in Python? is there any legitimate use case, that I don't know about?
16:48
yes, code golf
wim
wim
code golf is illegitimate
Embedding small programs into comments
@wim I've got nothing. Whatever I can think of only operates along 1d, and doesn't make good use of sets
Clueless newbies understand a = []; b= a; b.append(1); print(a) and I have no doubt they would misunderstand a = [] \n b= a \n b.append(1) \n print(a)
wim
wim
hmm, not a convincing enough use-case
16:51
ohh and here I m going to take this opportunity and ask important thing:
"I copy pasted that into the window and it told me SyntaxError: unexpected character after line continuation character", they'll say. I'll sigh and spend a paragraph explaining no, you don't type the \n, that's where you press Enter
why if i havea list a = [1, 2 3]
and I will assign b = a
and if I will del some items from b its ALSO affects a?!
wim
wim
PEBKAC. I mean something, that if the feature didn't exist and someone were to submit a PEP to add it to Python, convincing enough that the PEP wouldn't be shot down immediately
being able to post code on stack overflow comments is not convincing use-case
Apr 30 at 20:48, by Andras Deak
Mar 21 at 8:27, by PM 2Ring
@Drizzy In the mean time, here are a couple of articles that explain a very important difference between Python and most other languages. Other languages have "variables", Python has "names", and Facts and myths about Python names and values, which was written by SO veteran Ned Batchelder.
"Now I get unexpected indent", they'll say. I'll sigh and say, no, don't type "Enter space b equals", the space between the newline and b is just so you can tell they're separate tokens. Just type the b without the space.
16:52
It's also useful for writing one-liners in the shell using the -c option. Although that itself is mostly useless.
python -c "import telnetlib;print(telnetlib.Telnet('bofh.jeffballard.us', 666).read_all().decode())"
All of this is taking place over the course of hours, mind you, because clueless newbies are constantly being distracted from their own questions by roasts in the oven they forgot about and solicitors calling with exciting opportunities for them
wim
wim
@PM2Ring right but that could be done other (arguably better ways) e.g. multiple arguments passed to -c . or here docs.
@wim Considering how much code is copy-pasted straight from SO messages, maybe it should be a convincing use case.
Ok, I'll pay the multiple args to -c. I'd forgotten that was possible, and the --help doesn't mention it... Here docs are good, but does the Windows command prompt have them?
wim
wim
Since when did Python care about Windows? ;)
I suppose it's just a case of, the feature existed for so long , and the only chance to remove it (Python 3.0) wasn't considered.
16:59
And often when I want a one-liner it's so I can post it online somewhere, whether that's an SO comment, or elsewhere. So a here doc doesn't quite cut it for that situation.
is there a way to wrote multiliners in the REPL?
I ran into that just today and couldn't
not even in ipython, shift+enter just executes
wim
wim
???
just works, for me.
I can paste multiple lines of text into the REPL and it works OK
Useless? I wrote this just the other day:
alias ring="python3 -c \"from time import sleep as slp;import sys,datetime;p=lambda s:print(s,end='\r');fl=sys.stdout.flush;p('\a');fl();slp(.5);p('\a');fl();slp(.5);p('\a');fl();print(datetime.datetime.now())\""
If you're saying "is it possible to have something like this?"
>>> print("foo")
>>> print("bar")
foo
bar
Then I don't think so.
17:01
When I'm running a long program, I typeahead "ring" and it beeps and shows me the finish time when it's done
@AndrasDeak Not exactly. You can enter this:
for i in range(3):
    print(i)
    for j in range(3):
        print(j)
@Kevin paste yes; I want to write them
@PM2Ring and no loops:P
But not this:
for i in range(3):
    print(i)
for j in range(3):
    print(j)
see you guys until next time, thank you everyone for tips again, I learned a lot today thanks to u my mentors :)) Bye
I can hack around it by writing if True:\n :P
17:03
>>> print("foo");\
... print("bar")
foo
bar
>>>
Use case for semicolon: found B-)
wim
wim
hah
@AndrasDeak if you don't want it to REP then don't use a REPL ...
:P
I was more surprised that ipython can't do this
From my cursory explorations of the REPL source, I would rate that feature as "hard to implement"
BTW, @PaulMcGuire I just did a quick Birthday Problem calculation using the approximation formula given in that link 1 - exp(-n*(n-1)/(2*d)), and the odds of getting a dupe with 53 bit randoms is >0.5 when n ~= 111750000. So if you're shuffling huge lists, watch out. :)
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak how would you propose the syntax looked. Or are you proposing for some kind of mind-reading feature.
17:08
My semi-serious point was that multiline can't be REPLed manually, so we need semicolons. I'm not talking syntax, only interactive behaviour. Shift+enter is hardly black magic.
wim
wim
>>> def foo():
...     pass
... foo()
...
that works in iPython and is a syntax error in python REPL
so, they already do some kind of magic here.
> ...point was that multiline can't be REPLed manually, so we need semicolons
^ I don't follow that logic
@PM2Ring - but if I get a dupe, then that means there is a 50/50 chance that two items that should have shuffled didn't.
@wim it might only be obvious if you're Hungarian
@wim yes, but that only works in blocks
specifically, I wanted two print calls with a sleep in between for Cro's line-overwriting question earlier, and noticed that I can't do that without pasting
so I used semicolons
so that's what came to mind when we started discussing the legitimacy of semicolons
I like them and I'd hate to see them go
@PaulMcGuire Kind of. They'll end up next to each other. Think of it like two cards in a deck that get stuck together.
with a bit of hyperbole I guess; they're still just semicolons
17:14
@AndrasDeak next you'll be trying out from __future__ import braces :)
oh I've done so many times; no luck
Within the resolution of 53-bits, they probably should be next to each other. Just that 1/2 the time, they will be next to each other in the wrong order.
True enough. For n=134000 the odds of a dupe are around 1 in a million. But if you're doing serious random sim work, you may be doing a million runs.
OTOH, if you're doing serious random sim work, you may want to use something more high-calibre than the standard random module. Even though it's quite good for general random work, it's certainly not crypto-grade.
mersenne twister ftw (however that works)
I know that would probably be OK for monte carlo simulations
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak couldn't it be implemented with shift+enter ?
17:21
what's "it"? And I don't know
@AndrasDeak The random module does use the Mersenne Twister as its default RNG. And it's great, but it does have its limitations.
oh, I keep assuming that the built-in-est (sorry) randoms are always congruential
wim
wim
multiline statements in repl
don't know why I do that with a language the sort of which is Tim
wim
wim
print('foo') <SHIFT+ENTER>
print('bar') <just ENTER>
17:22
@wim I would expect it could be, yes...
wim
wim
so why do we "need" semicolons for this feature?
But it's not. So as long as it's not, we need semicolons.
wim
wim
we "have" . not we "need".
your PR implementing the feature can remove semicolons from the language as far as I'm concerned
wim
wim
maybe this is an english language thing. about the casual meaning of "need".
17:23
nah, I understand it clearly
I don't need anything from the repl, any proper program is executed separately
Python doesn't need semicolons, but I'd be mildly annoyed if they were removed from the language.
that ^
11 mins ago, by Andras Deak
with a bit of hyperbole I guess; they're still just semicolons
Sometimes, a semicolon is just a semicolon.
reading the HNQ, eh? ;)
oh, I linked that post here myself
Yeah. Fattie does go a bit overboard on the boldface, but that's his way.
17:26
I blame 5 hours of sleep
@PM2Ring does "boldface" have any connotations with weight? In Hungarian, it's called "half-fat" which makes their username quite relevant
I am registered at EL&U, but I don't often post there.
@AndrasDeak :) Not exactly, but we do use the terms like weight, light, and heavy in that context.
:)
thanks
right, I am aware of font weight
There are only 31 open issues on Flask. Contribute today or / then there will be nothing left.
18:01
Nice! Way to work that backlog
18:48
So turns out my Master Widget Report List page displays reports in alphabetical order, and all reports are named using MMddyyyy formatting... Our users have been scrolling through ten pages of results to hunt for the most recently created report.
it could be worse...you could have those months written out with letters, so first every April, then ...
Good news: I can easily change the formatting to yyyyMMdd. Bad news: we can't just purge the list, or rename existing reports to use the new format.
Choices:
- Write a custom sorting function that smartly determines whether a name uses MMddyyyy or yyyyMMdd, then convert to DateTime and compare. In Visual Basic.
- Just sort alphabetically and descending, so the new 2017MMdd reports are neatly ordered, with all the MMddyyyy reports conveniently separated from them since months 01 through 12 all come lexicographically before 20.
Anyone wanting reports from before June 9 will receive our best wishes and positive vibes for their harrowing journey
Choice 3: switch jobs
Sage wisdom.
determining the file format isn't actually that hard since all of our reports were made this millennium. So really it's just is_new_format = s.startswith("2")
But more vb-looking, no?
18:59
Yeah. probably IndexOf == 0 or something
I downloaded this thing, "LINQPad", which is supposed to basically be a .NET REPL. But it's giving me 'InStr' is not declared, where InStr is ordinarily a globally accessible utility function. So it's more like a .NET REPL with everything from __buitlins__ deleted.
@davidism What do you mean David?
I mean if you want to contribute to Flask there are still open issues. Once people contribute there will there will be no open issues, which is the goal.
I appreciated the wordplay.
Hi guys, can anyone here tell me primary differences between comtypes and win32com? Which one should I use?
If you want the next challenge, there are 139 open issues in Werkzeug, and 90 in Jinja.
19:04
What if their contribution is opening new issues?
:-| but also that's ok.
@KevinMGranger is there any other way to contribute?
that's news to me
With code or documentation changes
uhg documentation, the only thing harder than naming variables
Triaging old issues to see if they're still issues. Writing tests to improve coverage. Profiling and improving slow paths.
19:05
Dec 6 '16 at 0:45, by Antti Haapala
There are two hard things in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors.
Reminds me of the hydra game. Even if issue count appears to increase locally, eventually you'll win.
Alright you have me there. The days I've spent on off by ones is just to many, I'm only 23, I'm too young for these grey hairs
"eventually" might take 2^2^2^2^100 years though
@Kevin bit late reply;) Our musings with an ellipse made me look around and I realized that matplotlib has some built-in backend-agnostic widgets. They're not very fancy (to say the least), but anyway I put together a little ellipse+spokes plotter with a few toggles gist.github.com/adeak/36cf2d8812ac7f6e00df5eb3b850b918
I'm not happy with the fact that the check button doesn't seem to register the callback the first time it's pressed (after something else has been interacted with)
so if you want to force a redraw using the check button, you need to press it thrice:(
and of course I just threw together the positions and whatnot, it looks awful :D But it's good to know that it's possible to do interactive (in this sense) plots with matplotlib
cc @PM2Ring because it might be mildly interesting (?)
Neat, I didn't know that matplotlib had interactive elements. Nice demonstration.
I also noticed that oddness with the check button. If I make it so "true angles" is Xed, and then click on the alpha slider, not even changing the value, just clicking where it is now, the radial lines jump to the position they had when "true angles" was not Xed.
19:14
oh, now I remember I forgot to properly document the "true angles" thing
I'm not sure how clear that is a priori, I just wanted to see how difficult it is to locate points based on elliptical angles vs proper polar angles on an ellipse (answer: not at all)
That OP eventually confirmed my "t != angle" guess, incidentally
19:28
Cbg
DSM
DSM
19:48
Hmmph. pd 0.20 got rid of its rolling ols, and statsmodels hasn't picked it up yet. :-/
just started learning MetaProgramming
What do some of you use for building your projects? e.g. maven, gradle
looking to see if there is something as agnostic as maven that isn't maven 😀
make is pretty agnostic
20:04
have you used it for packaging, and orchestration of vms and deploying said package?
ultimately a standard responsibility for maven would be to:
- run unittests
- package app and build a deb
- get puppet files
- bring up vms
- orchestrate with puppet recipes, then run deb.
- run integration tests
I've never looked beyond maven because it always did the job fine. But as I'm looking to make big changes with a lot of the build scripts, it would be interesting if I can also see if something at the "maven" level could be improved as well
I'm joking :P
hahah
dammit Kevin
^^
LOL
20:21
I just created this handy polynomial for calculating the number of days in a month.
def m(n):
    return 30 + (55324684800 - 157540917600*n + 183552086520*n**2
        - 118007622744*n**3 + 47176126250*n**4 - 12438149240*n**5
        + 2223910920*n**6 - 271308972*n**7 + 22243650*n**8
        - 1172160*n**9 + 35860*n**10 - 484*n**11) // 39916800

print([m(i) for i in range(1, 13)])
#output
[31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31]
:D The leapyear version is left as an exercise for the reader.
highly practical :D
It's like the opposite of code golf.
code bowling
(I've heard it discussed in The Nineteenth Byte)
although the conclusion was "it doesn't make sense"
Agreed. No matter what algorithm you come up with for a particular problem, there's always a more inefficient way to do it.
Although it can be fun finding ways that are seriously slow to do stuff that doesn't just involve stupid tricks like busy looping. There's a thread on the xckd Coding forum in that vein.
homage to Rube Goldberg, I presume
20:29
I've seen that code in production before.
When saying you're sorry just isn't enough: dailyhive.com/vancouver/criminal-code-canada-duel-laws
what..no!!!!!!
NO NO NO
> Fraudulently pretending to practise witchcraft (section 365);
Canadian covens knew their lobby work
DSM
DSM
Licensing laws are often just guild protectionism.
20:44
I blame my inability to see that already quoted as witchcraft.
An old favourite silly algorithm: sleepsort
echo $(for a in .3 .1 .4 .5 .7 .2 .6;do(sleep $a;echo $a)& done)
3
Python 3.6.1 becomes default Python runtime Tuesday, June 20th, 2017 http://dlvr.it/PL5KYR
Only for new projects, existing ones keep the old default even if they didn't set a runtime, but still.
Indeed!
@PM2Ring that is utterly fantastic
20:53
It's not practical, but it's still good to understand why it works.
magic, of course
21:08
at least you can do that in Canada now ;)
21:47
LPTHW strikes again. The OP is up to exercise 46, and is attempting to use setuptools / distutils but doesn't know the difference between a list and a dict. stackoverflow.com/questions/44466916/…
22:13
@PM2Ring does LPTHW seriously recommend wrapping a setuptools import in try..except and fallback to distutils?!
@ThiefMaster No idea.
I've never read LPTHW, and most of what I know about it is from the odd questions it tends to inspire on SO.
@PM2Ring that's awesome
Glad you like it. I must admit I was intrigued the first time I saw sleepsort, I think it was somewhere on the xkcd forum.
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