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19:00
go back to #1 and laugh back harder
Just take them in flipflopping 1 hour increments until HR gets upset and then tell them you were not sufficiently trained.
Refuse to conform to their ways. All leave hours are beautiful.
We had training which included a "these pay codes are ones you should never use...". If I should never use them, why am I able to?
there was a guy who was supposed to fix that bug in the system but he used the wrong codes and got fired before he could
Lol, we just were forced to upgrade because the company was sunsetting the version we were using... it was 4 major releases behind.
19:08
I am giving #1 the benefit of the doubt because #2 tends to ramble and maybe #1 was thinking "oh boy, you asked a question in #2's range of hearing and area of expertise, here we go"
The ramble lasted approximately the time between my previous two messages so that was an accurate expectation for #1 to have
Guys I'm having a brain fart. What do you call variables you want to use as like fixed variables (not immutable) that act as like "settings" for a program that you can change later. You usually place them at the beginning of the code like APP_NAME, TIMEOUT_SECONDS, etc.
Management says "use the second category because the yearly rollover limit is lower on that one and you don't want to miss out". Problem solved.
Variables you want to stay...constant?
@Ffisegydd sorry yeah
he was answering you
Fizzy: "constants" :P
19:13
fixed variables (not immutable) I can't reconcile this. What do you mean?
This is like beginner programming stuff
it definitely wasn't not a double negative
say you want to run your program again and u want to change a few parameters
later in the future
you could pass it in, but it would be easier to change on the spot
config?
Yeah
19:15
Constants still count as constants even if you change them in between program executions.
As long as they keep the same value within the life cycle of a single execution from start to finish
Right
Yeah I should have added "change them only between program executions"
Thank you guys!
4 mins ago, by Ffisegydd
Variables you want to stay...constant?
I'm having a lot of fun with functional programming and tacit programming lately. My colleagues are not having so much fun, though.
Likewise, "mutable" and "immutable" refer to the ability of objects to change during execution. A tuple doesn't become mutable just because you change (1,2,3) to (4,5,6) in your source code while Python isn't running
"The hell does pipe([prop('key'), map(foo), reduce(bar)]) mean!?"
Yeah, python isn't haskell. Why you gotta do that
19:20
...I'm even considering learning Haskell...
I do wish there was something to fill in this blank though:
lispy python :: Hy
haskelly python :: ????
Plus I'm actually doing that in JS, not in Python :P
Have you heard of Elm? Very haskell like but you don't need a Ph. D to understand it, and it compiles to JS
I have heard of Elm, colleague really recommends it
wait, does a PhD automatically imply an understanding of functional programming?
19:22
It does, did you not get your FP badge when you got your doctorate?
nobody told me :(
When I got mine I got a big book full of plots that took my 6 months to craft, an FP badge, a shiny penny, and a crippling sense of emptiness.
A PhD doesn't imply an understanding of functional programming. An understanding of haskell implies a PhD.
(I kid, it's not that bad)
@Ffisegydd so many pennies, now that you have one of those so-called "jobs"
I also got a superpower, the ability to work at 50% capacity but be praised for going the extra mile (turns out people in industry are really lazy)
19:25
I'll have to keep that in mind :P
Which industry is this, again? Just tech in general, or something more specific? Or is it a secret.
Well from other PhD students I've spoken to "tech in general" though that might be more because our supervisor was a psychopath who insistent on an insane amount of work, so actually "50% of his expected output" is "reasonable"
The old "training in 100 times Earth's gravity" approach
Tie weights to your ankles while doing pull ups and also cry yourself to sleep at night.
Note that wearing extremely heavy wrist guards will not make you highly resistant to carpal tunnel. Quite the opposite in fact, according to my doctor!!!
19:29
I've started to get a bit of CT, I think it's because I'm getting old.
-- dictated but not read, transcribed by Kevin's personal typing parrot
I unironically referred to one of my knees as "the bad one" the other day. #oldfeels
I have concluded that I cant see any obvious pattern for d3p2... going to move on to some other ideas I guess :\
There is a pattern
But does the pattern give you better than O(N) runtime? That's the question.
Or is there? Maybe there isn't and I'm telling you this to drive you into a downward spiral of despair from which you'll never quite recover, looking for something that doesn't exist. Driving you to madness just for the sheer sick, twisted pleasure of it.
But no seriously, there is a pattern.
19:36
We prefer "afternoon teatime with the hatter" madness over "crying in the padded cell" madness, if you can aim your downward spiral at all.
Chat needs a Slack-like giphy command.
Chat needs a lot of things.
we need more bunnies cute things.
Damn you giphy.
Booze chat. A friend got me a bottle of "irish cream" and I'm not sure if I'm supposed to drink it directly, or put it in things that one normally puts cream in.
19:44
Irish cream is lush. You can drink it with ice for quite a nice drink. It also works really well in coffee instead of milk.
There's also various cocktails that it goes in
Can I bake a cake with it?
Yeah
It's really nice in something like a banoffee pie
Chemistry query: if a recipe has ingredients that contain alcohol, does that imply the finished product will also contain alcohol? Can I serve irish cream cake to minors?
Or does it, like, denature or evaporate or whatever
Depends on how you cook it. Giving alcohol to kids is fun though.
I think for a cake you'll be fine though.
Plus Baileys is only like 18% so it's not that strong.
Is this why weed brownies are more popular than irish cream brownies
19:49
Irish cream brownies are amazing.
I'd just drink irish cream as-is
It's a nice after dinner drink
same goes for chocolate liqueur mhmmmm
They have a dairy-free version now. I've been meaning to try it
Grandma Kevinson recommends a bit of cooking sherry for the food, then a bit of cooking sherry for the chef, then repeat until done.
19:53
"A little wine for the recipe, a little wine for Julia"
Well I've just discovered how to change my avatar now I just need to find a suitable picture. : )
Hasn't seemed to have updated on here yet.
it takes a few minutes
Well I have changed it but I am not satisfied what to so I will change it back very soon.
In order to uphold the law of equivalent exchange, agents have been deployed to replace your real-world face with an identicon.
This explains the lag. Transit times, you know.
touka koukan is savage
19:56
Heck I'll just keep it for a few hours. : )
I look rather ridiculous!
The process is reversible, but consistently described as "unnerving". I hope they're not speaking literally.
I like the fact they give you the option of your old icon.
Does anyone think a cute dog avatar might improve my chances of getting upvotes?
let's just pretend you never asked that
Asked what?
20:01
exactly
I didn't ask anything. What are you on about. :-)
The most important part of an avatar is whether you can convincingly place Winter Bash hats on it and create the illusion that it's actually wearing the hat.
Wow it feels really strange having a new avatar. Like someone I am on someone else's profile.
Could someone give me a link to learn those one liners codes?
I have never seen a tutorial for one liners, and I consider myself an enthusiast.
for x in range(11): print('How do I learn how to use them then?')
20:07
lambdas and list comprehensions will get you 90% of the way there.
Insane python one-liners are not taught, they're earned.
I think it's better not to think of one-liners as their own category. They're just short Python programs, so if you get better at programming Python programs, then you'll get better at one-liners.
The best secret to one-liners is not doing them
To truly master them you need 7 black candles, a dread altar, and the blood of a php developer.
I'm tempted to start writing a tutorial and then give up half way through, as is my custom.
20:10
question
wait
actually I need to test something before asking my questions
Hmm, I'm mildly surprised that -1 in xrange(100000000) isn't O(1)
that's python 2 tax
ok
that's weird
question is the following
I'm reading this article on GIL
Yeah IIRC 3.x gives you the intelligent in stuff
20:14
I thought the entire point of xrange is that it returns an object with greater powers than an ordinary list
it's memory efficient, and that's it
That's dumb and I hate it
I think it's just an iterable. 3.x range is the powerful one
>>> nums = xrange(100000000)
>>> -1 in nums
False
it takes 6 seconds to run
@Kevin at least you'll always have izip
20:15
Good thing I have never used xrange ever, so my misunderstanding of its utility has no practical impact on my code
and yet when I do this on python3
@AndyK see the above discussion ;)
@Kevin what do you mean by greater powers?
python3's range (unlike python2's xrange) explicitly looks at from:to:step to determine whether a given integer is in it
Powers such as "doesn't take up a million bytes of memory" (true) and "can do -1 in giant_xrange very fast" (not true)
20:16
@AndyK in 3.x it's intelligent enough to be able to say that for x in range(start, stop, step) then, based on x, start, stop, step whether it's "in"
they're equally good for iterating over, but testing membership is O(1) in python 3
ok guys
very interesting
I was not highly familiar with the big O notation but currently reading it
The lesson here is to use python3
@KevinMGranger doing it, Sir
You will be forced into it one way or another.
20:19
I stopped using py2 a while ago now... 3 to 4 years
: )
Thanks for enlighting me on the subject
yay?
heads-up: if you'll get over-excited by one-liners I'll keep telling you that one-liners are overrated
I'd forget that page and start learning decent python and then you'll notice that one-liners just happen on their own when adequate
"decent Python"?
20:26
Python as she is spoke
New and improved Day3.2
def spiral_num(n):
    last_root     = int((n - 1) ** .5)
    last_odd_root = (last_root + 1) // 2 * 2 - 1

    a    = last_odd_root
    head = a ** 2
    tail = n - head
    size = a + 1

    layer    = size // 2
    quadrant = tail // size % 4
    position = tail % size - layer

    return layer, quadrant, position

def spiral_distance(n):
    layer, quadrant, position = spiral_num(n)
    return layer + abs(position)

spiral_num(45), spiral_distance(47)
Sorry, Day3.1 for now... 3.2 coming soon
not sure about one-liners
keep it simple , ok. But keep it as Haiku, ko
20:48
@piRSquared try not to spoil stuff pi
Sorry! I made a poor assumption 2 days passed. But I'll continue to provide spoiler views. Good call. Thx @MooingRawr
:D I mean most of us post our answers here see the star board :D you are more than welcome to welcome others to view your answers if you so wish too
As did I... which just makes me feel more foolish
@Simon That said, here are some principles that tend to pop up a lot when I compose impractically short code.
If you can bend your mind around Y combinators, then you can write Turing-complete expressions in one line and do virtually anything. Although it won't necessarily be the way requiring the least amount of characters, as the last example plainly demonstrates
I could write another ten examples with list comprehensions and/or generator expressions, if I wasn't going home in two minutes
what's the official timezone database name of the Advent of Code tz?
21:05
I thought it was EST
@Kevin thanks ; )
Current UTC time is 2017-12-05 21:09:07+00:00; waiting 7:50:53
:P
@Kevin did you write that yourself.
@AnttiHaapala ?
so
my runner will wait until very moment, then print an excerpt of the data, up to 7 lines and tell how many lines were omitted
I've tiled a browser window where I can load the instructions as soon as they appear :d
21:15
ah
I am ready :D
now to sleep ->
so am I; I'll zap for that challenge right at 9ish CET :P
:p
right at :D
you can always count on my precision
@AnttiHaapala I clicked that believing it was released! I hope you are happy, for what you've done.
21:20
rb folks. time to zzz
dat answer
also here: when titans clash
I'll drown in to-delvote tabs
Hmm, I wonder if those firefox pockets would be good for something like this
meh, it needs another account so I'll pass
that Ajax person will soon be a python gold badger :|
21:40
That's fine, I trust them to have 0 incorrect closures
I'm more concerned about reopenings :P
But that's something we can actually report them for
I guess...
21:53
2nd opinion? I'm thinking of either fixing or reverting the most recent edit: stackoverflow.com/a/1011962/3579910 as it says he added the bounds checking and failed to do so properly: at the end of the list obj will equal next_ (which is also a terrible variable name). Editing further deviates from the author's intent, reverting removes somewhat useful info. I'd ping the author but he hasn't posted in years...
@TemporalWolf the author was last active a week ago
> Last seen Nov 27 at 17:20
definitely don't roll back, maybe ping
though I'd agree that the edit shouldn't have been made
His last post is from 2013 though. I'll ping him and note the issue.
last edit in June this year, last comment in September
22:28
afternoon cabbage
22:50
cbg.
23:03
Wow I just made the most idiotic mistake ever. I forgot def at the beginning of the function.
Is it considered bad practice to use the same variables in different functions if they are not related?
For example on here: dpaste.com/3B1F9RP
Not at all
So I can use all the variables in a function in another function as long as the variables are not global.

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