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00:41
Suboptimal but simple solution: Add if len(date_time) == 8:
 
6 hours later…
06:14
cbg
should i upgrade my ubuntu 16.04 to higher version?
 
1 hour later…
07:26
Cabbage
cbg =)
07:46
I am trying to make a yield from work for a delegator. Anyone knows if it can be done for a statement of the form:
def delegator(args):
    for val in my_generator_func(args)
        yield postprocess(val)
without having to resort to a generator expression for the postprocessing call?
def delegator(args):
    yield from (postprocess(val) for val in my_generator_func(args))  # another way?
Can be done with an equivalent map call
works perfectly, thanks. I assumed yield from can only be used on proper generators, which I thought a map object wasn't
but it seems i misunderstood the PEP, and yield from can be used on any iterator.
08:19
insane-utility-bills cbg
09:17
Cbg
09:28
@Arne *iterable
there is a difference?
yes
the same difference that is between edible and eater... pretty much every eater can be eaten at least once, but not everything that is edible, eats... :P
s/eater/food/g ?
Oh no, actually I don't like that
@RobertGrant hey long time no see
10:35
@RobertGrant not much
working my arse off
11:17
who isn't...
12:45
Time to figure out how <audio> works
Oh good, 40% of browsers can't play mp3. I was afraid this would be too easy
go flac
I'm thinking .midi
Just go webm without video :-p
And if 40% browsers can't play mp3, then I guess they won't be able to play mp4 :-p
@Kevin Where did you get that stat? caniuse.com/#search=mp3
12:51
firefox, opera: no; chrome, safari, IE: yes
These are the only five browsers in existence.
That's a bad inference IMO. caniuse.com/#search=mp3 makes a nice calculation for broswers that support and no. of people using said broswer (and version), so we get 94.88% global users for .mp3 supported
I'm having a surprisingly hard time finding a .wav file I can download to test on. The first google hit for "sound test" wants me to subscribe to their service; the first four hits for "pachelbel wav" (which I chose explicitly because old dead guys who played piano while wearing powdered wigs usually have their songs available license-free) are either links to soundcloud, which don't appear to have a download button; or are "royalty free" sites which charge a one-time convenience fee of $40
Do they have, like, a Project Gutenberg, but for records, I wonder?
Are you sure that firefox' "no" is a hard no? On ubuntu and debian mp3 is a "non-free" package which has to be installed separately due to licensing issues or something
@Kevin en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WAV has some good samples
Archive.org has a lot of live music links, but I don't see a download button...
13:00
Right click & save as?
Ok, I right-clicked on their player and it says "this item, formats and more at Internet archive". No save as here.
I don't see any samples at all on the Wikipedia page. I wonder if it's a regional content blocking thing
Cabbage
Or are you saying 'there aren't any samples on this page, but click through to "Wikimedia Commons has media related to Waveform audio format." and then "For individual WAV files, see Category:WAV files."'? I guess I could do that.
Ok, that'll do, thanks
@AshishNitinPatil caniuse won’t tell you what formats are supported in browsers
Unless it's like an excruciating THX sound or something
Check this list for supported formats: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/…
oops, "11,025 Hz 16 bit PCM"
OK, you can choose from 11kHz and 8kHz
13:05
@Kevin You can Google search something like "site:archive.org file:wav"
The first link archive.org/details/… has some "wave" download options which are basically .wav files (see complete url) which you can right click and save
I suspect most of archive.org's content to be more long-form but I only want like eight seconds of sound
Don’t use waves please… :/ Rather serve both mp3 and aac or vorbis
My one and only client will be the Samsung-brand browser on my personal phone so I will support only and exactly what is required for that
100% coverage!! :D
lol
13:07
the source of the wiki page complete with .wav links in case you really can't find it
Thanks. On second look I see them now. The problem was with my eyes, not the page
I'm not that shocked ;)
@Kevin That’s what you get for only doing what’s necessary for your phone instead of also including your eyes in the compatibility list.
that's out of scope for tests
"But Kevin," you say. "Don't you think it's a good idea to uphold best practices in your project, even if you're only doing it for an audience that is happy with half-assed results (i.e. yourself)? After all, the habits you establish during practice will propagate forward into actually important projects"
13:12
I stopped suggesting that to you years ago
Good point, imaginary audience member. If I get to stage 2 where I'll be doing rudimentary sound editing, I'll see if an "export to aac" button exists.
Also, you can always create your own sound files :)
We have more abilities than just texting here you know :-p
wikihow link to windows 8 things...that seems like a new low :P
I exist on the abstract conceptual plane which doesn't have "matter" per se, so I can't record my own sound
13:13
That was the simplest one without additional installations :-p
And it had to be Windows because AFAIK Kevin doesn't linux
@Kevin Ah, I forgot you might as well be chatting from the new Tesla in space. No air for your voice recorder.
On that note, you can record audio without a voice from text - milesgis.com/2012/05/31/… & stackoverflow.com/questions/9900137/…
Hmm it's weird to me that I can't play .wav files inside Firefox. Clicking on one, all I get is a dialog box with "save file" and "open with..." options. Cunningly, I tried "open with... Firefox", but that just opens the dialog box again
Chrome is somewhat better in that regards
And if all else fails, you can always create a "test" html dummy page & embed the audio file
I can't do that yet because I'm only two paragraphs through the <audio> tutorial ;-)
I never realized that I usually don't listen to things directly embedded in firefox
I listen to MBMBaM via Firefox so I know they can play sound in general
If they wanted to support .wav, they wouldn't even need to implement new UI; it's already in place
I wager two quatloos that it's already possible, but I don't have some mozilla.sound.wave.allowNativePlaying attribute properly set
13:34
there's a media.wave.enabled (true by default)
Let's see... Mine is true.
@Kevin ffmpeg -i sourcefile.wav -c:a aac file.aac && ffmpeg -i sourcefile.wav -c:a libmp3lame file.mp3
Cool.
I thought ffmpeg was deprecated in favour of avconv or something. Perhaps I'm getting confused
No idea, I don’t think you can “deprecate” something as ffmepg that easily.
13:43
hmm, yeah, it seems to have been a debian thing
208
Q: What are the differences and similarities between ffmpeg, libav, and avconv?

whyWhen I run ffmpeg on Ubuntu, it shows: $ ffmpeg ffmpeg version v0.8, Copyright (c) 2000-2011 the Libav developers built on Feb 28 2012 13:27:36 with gcc 4.6.1 This program is not developed anymore and is only provided for compatibility. Use avconv instead (see Changelog for the list of incomp...

will the real ffmpeg please stand up
DSM
DSM
> During the transition period the "not developed anymore" message was displayed to tell users to start using avconv instead of their counterfeit version of ffmpeg.
That's not cricket.
Monday morning cabbage, BTW.
What a mess, really.
OpenSource is really terrible sometimes.
13:48
This is quite a good read on the whole fiasco - blog.pkh.me/p/13-the-ffmpeg-libav-situation.html
Debian did switch back eventually… wiki.debian.org/Debate/libav-provider/ffmpeg
OK this is weird
> The Libav logo uses a zigzag pattern that references how MPEG video codecs handle entropy encoding. It was previously the logo of the FFmpeg project until Libav was forked from it. Following the fork, in 2011 one of the Libav developers Måns Rullgård claimed copyright over the logo and requested FFmpeg cease and desist from using it. FFmpeg subsequently altered their logo into a 3D version.
Wow, people and their ego.
> If you are using avconv then you are using Libav. If you are using ffmpeg you could be using FFmpeg or Libav. Refer to the first line in the console output to tell the difference: the copyright notice will either mention FFmpeg or Libav.
from poke's linked post ^
$ avconv
ffmpeg version 3.2.5-1 Copyright (c) 2000-2017 the FFmpeg developers
wat
haha
probably an alias?
try which avconv
13:51
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 6 Dec 11 18:31 /usr/bin/avconv -> ffmpeg
yup
this is funny because I'd have installed avconv if anything
you got no choice now :-p
(unless there's an option to install an older version, or you compile it yourself)
I'm sure that if I installed avconv it would just overwrite that link
I bet that the latest installations (from debian sources) would actually just make a link to ffmpeg :-p
Possible. But I don't have an opinion to begin with, and looking at stuff that poke linked I don't think I mind ffmpeg
Yeah, I’m definitely sticking with ffmpeg :P
14:00
All of this reminded me of theregister.co.uk/2016/03/23/npm_left_pad_chaos (similar story, but much more breaking)
heh
Developer definitely yielded his powers and IMO was in the right.
*left
Ok, fun part's over, now for front-end design. I need to cram ~25 buttons into a 360x640 window while minimizing the amount of scrolling/swiping/pinching/clicking to reach any of them
14:03
@poke hah, I'm hopeful that was a pun
it’s left-pad, not right-pad :P
@Kevin lol, good luck cramming
@Kevin use one big scrolling box of buttons, like on a slot machine ;)
DSM
DSM
Algorithms >> button cramming.
Like, guessing which button the user will want to click on next? It's not completely impossible...
14:07
you only need to take at most 25 guesses according to the law or large numbers
and only 25! possibilities
just two buttons. one is the current button, and the other cycles the current button through a list of the rest
DSM
DSM
Hmm. I meant just that I enjoy writing algorithmic code more than thinking about UI stuff, but if I've inspired you to think in terms of some sort of automatic button-rearrangement schemes I'm happy to have helped.
@DSM story of every backend dev who hates frontend
DSM
DSM
I never claimed to be original, only to be right.
14:09
*left
Inspire yourself by this
I think v1 will just have five categories of five buttons, which can expand/collapse at a click. So on average the user only needs to click... Let's see, p(next button is in same category as last clicked button) == 0.20... 1.8 times.
you can take the signal from the accelerometer and swap between button groups with a flick of your wrist
wingardium nextbuttonosa
then only one click is needed
\o cbg
14:12
The interface is scream-activated, requiring zero clicks
@DSM feels good beating the B's but I'm not sure about Plekanec (at least we get Baun out of the deal too....), I guess a rental is a rental...
I wonder if I can implement expand/collapse-on-click categories with just css.
Spoiler alert: You can.
DSM
DSM
@MooingRawr: any trade involving the Habs makes me worry about a Trojan horse.. but FWIW I don't mind Plekanec, as long as we're not hoping to get much scoring out of him. And we didn't give away the barn.
stackoverflow.com/questions/13630229/… accepted answer says "yes, but the style only persists for as long as the button is held down" which is... Not quite useful for a mobile page.
Other answers have suggestions involving checkboxes and disguising hyperlinks as other kinds of page elements. I suspect these are not best practices.
14:20
we gave up Valiev, Rychel, 2nd round pick in 2018.... I feel the price is a bit steep when Plekanec is already thinking of playing his 1000 game as a Hab if we don't win the playoffs ...
DSM
DSM
Ehh, what're the odds that V or R were actually going to move up? If we'd gone for someone bigger we'd probably have had to give up a first, and that would've been way too much.
@poke Nice. I guess a couple invisible check boxes aren't going to hurt anyone.
I wonder if I can get "only one box can be expanded at a time" behavior if I switch to radio buttons...
I don't mind the players being shipped off since they wouldn't be moved up (even if we have a few injuries), they feel like they are the backups of the backups . I mind the 2nd round pick ....
DSM
DSM
So now it's really "is P worth a second-rounder?" and I have to admit I had to look up the stats. I think I prefer P over Moore.
14:26
Hi. I'm looking for an option to copy data files in my setup.py script but also perform some modifications (i.e., replacing some strings in these files or expand template strings). I have searched for 60 min now but am clueless. Does anyone have an idea?
could you provide a mini example of what you want? Personally I don't really understand your question.
Whoops wrong url... There we go.
@Kevin I'm slightly annoyed that I can't re click Toggle 1 to collapse it again.
I'll need to do some testing to determine whether that's more annoying or less annoying than having to explicitly click a category in order to collapse it before going on to expand another one
14:35
instead of clicks you could hover, but I find hover to be hit or miss, if done well it's really good, else it's a mess.
@MooingRawr I'll try to describe this here as gists don't like directories. In my python package, I have a file "foo.ini.tpl" that contains a line "some_dir={my_path}". On installation with python setup.py --some-dir=/the/dir, I would like to copy over "foo.ini.tpl" to "foo.ini" into the install directory and have the line read some_dir=/the/dir.
Unfortunately changing between the two designs requires me to change 2*num_categories+1 lines of code. I know, I will use javascript to dynamically create the categories, in which case switching requires only 1 LOC changed.
(PS: I think you should add five lines of javascript for this)
So I need to use js in order to use the css-only solution which I'm using so I can avoid using js
@poke ohhh i like this :D but JavaScript makes me cry a bit
14:37
@Manuel of you're on linux you can use tree to get a simple graph of your directory structure
@Manuel I'm not sure if there's an automatic way of doing this (I'm sure there is). I'm hesitant to provide a manual solution since I don't want to send you down the wrong path.
@MooingRawr Doubly messy since I'm targeting mobile platforms
@Kevin ahh alright, didn't know that good call :D
Is this personal, or for a company ?
Personal.
Kevinal
3
14:40
I find when I want to make a web app or something, if I hit a wall where I have to / should use JavaScript, that project generally gets put into my bin of "will-check-back-later-when-I-want-to-deal-with-it". I never get back to those projects :\
brief cbg
So I understand/approve of Kevin's CSS only approach.
cbg Jon
@Manuel The only Config changing I know of is docs.python.org/3.6/library/configparser.html but I'm not sure this is what you are looking for because it sounds like you want the template to be updated before being formed into a config file.
@MooingRawr thanks
14:53
Beat me to it :-) I got bogged down trying to remember how to change classes in js. Hint: it's not myElement.class = "blah"
DSM
DSM
Are we supposed to be able to toggle the first Toggle 1?
Also a fun* quirk: the argument order for element.replaceChild is not oldElement, newElement, but rather the reverse
Because god forbid it act anything like string.replace
weird bug.... if you Toggle 1, then click Toggle 4 , and then click Toggle 3 two of them are "dropped down" is this desired? nvm I just noticed you dup toggle 1 and 2
Yeah, it's demonstrating that you can have multiple accordions that don't interact
The fourth and fifth toggles are their own thing
Ooh, I like this querySelectorAll method. For no other reason than because I can call forEach on the return value. [glares daggers at .getElementsByTagName and friends]
Goodbye Array.from()
cabbage
15:04
Yo
cbg \o
long time no see Davidism, how have you been
I was skiing last week.
Went out in a snowstorm and couldn't feel my feet for a while.
But it was really good snow.
nice, I bet it beats the constant rain you usually experience :D
I live in San Diego, the land of "it rained a couple days this winter."
15:27
hey
whats the use the of mulithreading in python if there is a GIL?
(not a piss take)
it's one of those Monty Python jokes
@Permian well... it's CPython that has a GIL - other implementations don't necessarily have it...
(when one thread is waiting for something (IO, networking), it may yield the CPU to other threads just fine)
but it wont work like multithreading in java right?
@AndrasDeak but if it waits for other threads, its not true multithreading?
fortunately I'm not intimately familiar with the subject and I don't know how java works and I don't know what "true" multithreading is, so I'll let others chip in :P
15:35
@Permian I use it primarily for implementing unconventional control flow. The fact that the result is no faster than a single-threaded implementation is immaterial to me; my interest is in having a concise and readable implementation.
interesting
why does it read better?
isnt it just introducing unecessary complexity
You can write a threaded program to display "1 2 3 4...100" and "a b c ... z" interleaved with one another in like ten lines of code. If you want to do it without threading, you need to basically write your own multitasking system.
output reliable threading produces...
Well, perhaps that example's too simple, because interleaving lists isn't that hard with zip trickery.
@Permian Only if your code isn't already complex. You wouldn't use threading for Hello World, but you might use it for a chat server.
yeah i can see to use it for a chat server
because you are doing simple things interweaved
15:38
Umm... a chat server is probably more suited to concurrency and futures/async
but pyhton stills uses blocking threads
which makes it slower than the equivalent java program
and therefore unsuitable
@JonClements Sure. I'm kind of using "threading" as shorthand for "any module that provides concurrency while still being restrained by the GIL"
Python's going to be slower than Java pretty much across the board and multi-threading in most cases never improves performance as much as the effort taken to design it and implement it properly. It's more about the concept of using them...
@Permian By that reasoning, all programs are unsuitable except for the very fastest implementation. Counterevidence of this claim: languages other than assembly exist and are popular.
i dont really see why they bothered implementing them in python
DSM
DSM
15:42
Multithreading, capital letters, I suspect there are lots of things other people find value in that you don't. ;-)
i see the use in java
You need to evaluate on a case-by-case basis whether some particular implementation is too slow or not. If Python completes the task in 100 ms and Java completes it in 10ms, and the rest of your program takes 10s because it does networked I/O, it doesn't really matter which one you use.
its like a feature implemeneted so that it works when someone can remove the GIL
If you're saying that the one and only purpose of threading is to make faster code, I think you're selling it way short
oh ok
thats the bit i misunderstood
i thought concurrency and parallelism was for speed
15:45
Certainly that's a very attractive feature. But it's only one of many :-)
thanks guys
Poorly written threading will be slower - some people try to use it to alleviate non-cpu bound constraints and surprisingly - it doesn't help :)
what?
this is false
threading is always faster
it's the bees knees
Bees in general are highly parallel, so it must be true
def _inc(n):
    n += 1

for i in xrange(3):
    thread.spawn(_inc, i)
15:54
Ahh... but the bees knees aren't as good as the mutt's nuts...
it's totally faster ^
hivemind propaganda
A hive is basically like ten thousand processes
@FlorianMargaine for when writing n += 3 is too simple :)
@JonClements not the same ;-)
check it out, my code is even more useless.
15:56
but being fast at being useless is better, right? :p
it probably exits before even being able to run the threads anyway
all that said...
anyway... your lack of any queue, mutex or semaphore disappoints me :)
in cpython... with the GIL...
threading is not very useful...
an event loop is most probably a better idea
I love me some gevent
what gevent give you that threading cant?
what does**
greenlets?
16:00
"Greenlets provide concurrency but not parallelism." eh?
Asynchronous IO that looks like native IO
(I prefer gevent over asyncio)
wtf is all this?
lol
Writing asyncio in Python is certainly a bit more of a chore than node :)
@Permian I interpret that to mean: you get asynchronous control flow, but it isn't faster than single-threaded code.
Even node sucks
16:02
So, same as threading.
Gevent monkey patch is really good
@Kevin except you don't have the overhead of threads
Same-ish.
@Kevin the difference is usually great.
Is it smaller than two orders of magnitude? Close enough for horse shoes, hand grenades, and astronomy ;-)
whats the point of gevent?
16:04
But yeah, I get your point.
@Permian how about you go read about it for a while, maybe try it out?
Your constant "why" questions are starting to drag.
gevent is compilcated stuff
DSM
DSM
Yesterday I learned that Rust devs sometimes use "Rustaceans" as their name for themselves. I'm torn between admiration and disdain.
16:18
Stage 1 of my personal project complete, which is all I can do on my work computer. Now to wait and see whether Evening Kevin will get off his butt and do stage 2.
maybe current Kevin should give some incentives for future Kevin to work on the project :D
Morning Kevin: if you do stage 2, I'll let you play Zelda afterwards.
Evening Kevin: counter-offer: I play Zelda and don't do stage 2.
Morning Kevin: See, this is why we don't talk.
@Kevin Uhm, no, you can’t? :o querySelectorAll returns a NodeList just like getElementsByTagName
monday cabbage
...wilting and soggy
@poke technically speaking, getElementsByTagName returns an HTMLCollection
16:22
Yeah my understanding was that querySelectorAll returns a NodeList, and getElementsByTagName returns an HTMLCollection.
@FlorianMargaine Which is pretty much the same thing though :P
The former implements forEach (for modern-ish browsers) and IME HTMLCollection doesn't
Oh!
> Although NodeList is not an Array, it is possible to iterate on it using forEach().
TIL
HTMLCollection.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;
problem solved...
>> document.getElementsByTagName("DIV").forEach
undefined
>> document.querySelectorAll("div").forEach
function forEach()
16:24
@Florian Yeah, and then we put that in a library and eventually, something conflicting happens, and we can’t have contains but need includes… xD
:D
I just for…of everything, so I don’t need forEaches on things.
forEach is for pussies, yeah
I'm scared to use for...of because I keep hearing horror stories about iterating over all of the attributes of the array object and I'm pretty sure that's just if you do for...in but I can never remember it 100% clearly and looking it up takes longer than just doing .forEach
you usually want map, reduce, etc anyway
16:27
That’s for…in, yeah @Kevin. for…of is nice and good.
Now they just need to implement for...of for dicts and I'm all set
@Florian Do you use reduce that often?
@poke surprisingly, yes
@Kevin What are dicts?
going from an array to an object is a quite common scenario
16:29
(for key of Object.keys(myObject) @Kevin)
That's way lame, though.
Very safe though
But I want to live fast and die young
(metaphorically)
I don't have to do for x in myDict.iterkeys() in Python so therefore I should be able to do for x of mydict in js
Never mind that dictionaries and associative arrays are apples and oranges
or, uh, s/associative array/whatever the name is for the object that {1:2} evaluates to in js/
typeof says it's an "object". Ok then.
oh, btw
querySelectorAll is unsafe, because it's a live NodeList
“unsafe”
16:38
Unsafe in the same way that you shouldn't modify a Python list as you iterate over it, or something else?
former
well
probably even more given that users can hit an action and remove the node while you're iterating on the list
As long as I don't segfault, I'll muddle through somehow
stuff like that
I've had race conditions in my last two js projects despite being seemingly single-threaded
In particular, Image.onload and Audio.oncanplaythrough not triggering if you set the element's source before you register their callback
ah, concurrency... ;-)
16:44
@Aran-Fey To add some excitement to the language!
DSM
DSM
Word of the day: gnathostomata. Spoiler: you have an example closer than you think!
OP demonstrates that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
Naturally articles about Gnathostomates will cherry pick from only the coolest examples
user4229770
17:05
Hello Guys, can some one help me with django ? :)
just ask your question, no need to ask if you can ask a question
user4229770
I have a tree with categories and products, and I want to print products as well, how could I do that ?


https://bitbucket.org/cyberkishor/django-mptt-demo/wiki/Home
DSM
DSM
17:28
Excel's short tab name length is quite frustrating. Even when you're in the middle of Pythonizing a process to get it out of Excel, somehow it knows and tries to fight you.
17:38
lunch cbg
@DSM Whats the limit? I know its pretty short.
DSM
DSM
30ish. You can put more in there programmatically but not via the UI, it seems.
18:17
@DSM Isn't biological ontology great?
They just make up unpronounceable words for every day things
Excerpt from a legacy project: <td height="24"><font face="Verdana" color="#000000" size="2">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp‌​;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&n‌​bsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;SPOKE COUNT:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&n‌​bsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
Sigh
you should generate those &nbsp;s dynamically with a perl script
18:34
Ugh, some user wrote a really impressive sounding post, but their actual answer is incredibly error prone and not very useful.
And I got sucked into a comment thread trying to demonstrate that.
(For example, so that the requester can pass in a variable defining how they want the behavior handled...) It's clear you have a strong opinion as a moderator on how this should be implemented or clarified. This was just an attempt at consolidating and clarifying what I thought were a series of bad questions and answers. I'm feeling pretty discouraged right now and happy to go along with what you want. You win... Would you be able to edit what I have to clarify your intentions? — Brandon Wang 23 secs ago
No, I don't want to fix your answer for you.
wim
wim
... well that explains why the thing is now kinda working
moderator, eh?
I have improved my legacy project by putting a one foot high picket fence around the 200 foot sinkhole.
@davidism hey, no hard feelings. Was genuinely just trying to be helpful and contribute back to the Flask community. I understand that you want to make sure there isn't any bad guidance out there. I'll change the answer myself.
@BrandonWang the summary you have rebutting the other answers is great. It's just the code that needs fixing. :-)
18:45
@davidism I'm just going to take out the threading example-- you're right that it confuses people more than necessary, and I don't want someone coming along and running into those caveats.
I'd remove the decorator and just show defining a function, and passing deferred arguments to it when setting up the thread.
@davidism Changed. I'm glad we were able to clear the air here, too. It's always hard to contribute to an established community, and I'm sure it's hard on the other side to keep the quality up too. Thanks for working w me on this.
Can someone please help me make this line PEP-8 compliant?
df['census_year'] = np.where(v.between(1991, 2000, inclusive='both'), 2000, np.where(v.between(2001, 2010, inclusive='both'), 2010, v))
hello guys

I've got a secret message from a friend.
It's in hexadecimal.
I've tried decoding by converting it to ASCII but it had no meaning.
Do you have any ideas so that I test that?
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