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22:04
Is there a way to create a group class that requires certain members of employee classes?
@iShaymus You mean inheritance?
I don't think so
What does "require" mean in this context?
What do you want to do, there probably is a way yes
Making an app to do with firefighter crews
22:05
Firefighters are nice people
so a crew would require an officer a driver
and the rest general crew
I suggest you build a class Crew which has the bare minimum to be a crew, then classes Officer, Driver, etc. that inherit from Crew
so can i create a crew class that requires 1x officer 1x driver and then max_crew - 2 for the rest
Oh, so you want to have a maximum number of instances?
So I've got a Employee class > into a firefighter sub class
then s station > truck > crew classes in that order of inheritence
22:08
You should ask that as a question. Not in the chat, you will get better quality answers
class Crew:
    def __init__(self):
        self.driver = Driver()
        self.officer = Officer()
        self.rest = [FireFighter() for _ in range(max_crew-2)]
ok so you can define another class requirement from within a class
@iShaymus what problem are you trying to solve, on a higher level than this?
Its an availablility app for volunteer firefighters
so they can set themselves as available / unavailable etc and then an interface the shows who's available a not
or not*
So a combination problem, where you need a certain combination of people to fill a vehicle?
22:10
yes
want to be able to assess from the pool of available people if each truck has a crew combination availabel
makes sense, I'm not sure how I'd model it just yet
I've made classes for each Employee, Firefighter, Station, Truck and Crew
a truck has a minimum and maximum crew
so the crew needs to be 1x officer 1x driver and then max_crew-2
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ VLQs?
I know how to do the math but not how to make the Crew class require certain classes
Or anyone actually, what is a VLQ?
22:16
Very Low Quality?
How are you approaching the combinatorial part?
What is your heuristic?
I don't know yet @Aran-Fey seems to have grasped the concept, haven't tried the code yet
@iShaymus You can probably create a .validate method on the Crew class that makes sure the attributes .driver, .officer and .rest are satisfied (filled with active people and are sufficient in numbers)
Nope, I don't think that's gonna help you at all, actually
how you store the crew members is completely unrelated to the combinatorics problem
22:18
Should I make driver and officer a subclass of Firefighter even though they don't have any different attributes?
You can / should. Doesn't hurt to differentiate even if underlying attributes are all same.
You can't decide that until you know what metaheuristic you're going to use
If they don't have any different attributes, then probably not. You probably want an enum.Enum that models all the different roles like Officer and Driver
at the moment i just use booleans withing the firefighter class since an officer can also be a driver
This isn't a simple problem from what I understand
22:20
@Aran-Fey makes more sense
@roganjosh I think the model designs (classes) can be fairly independent of the heuristic / combinatorics solution
class FireFighter(Employee):

def __init__(self, last_name, first_name, dob, start_date, rank, driver = False, officer = False):
super().__init__(last_name, first_name, dob, start_date)
self.isDriver = driver
self.isOfficer = officer

ranks = {'OS': 'Operational Support',
'RFF': 'Recruit Firefighter',
'FF': 'Firefighter',
'QFF': 'Qualified Firefighter',
'SFF': 'Senior Firefighter',
'SO': 'Station Officer',
'SSO': 'Senior Station Officer',
'DCFO': 'Deputy Chief Fire Officer',
'CFO': 'Chief Fire Officer'}
@iShaymus Use dpaste.com or pastebin or something similar for long codes.
@AshishNitinPatil that can lead to a whole lot of unnecessary complication
@AshishNitinPatil sorry
@AshishNitinPatil yes
22:26
@roganjosh true, if the models are only used in the solution (not for representation or other general use)
To do combinatorial optimisation in python, it's better to abstract away classes and just use array indices for different parameters in numpy arrays
At the end of the day, the best heuristics still rely on packing as many iterations per second that you can get
@iShaymus I presume you were the one who starred Aran-Fey's suggestion above. Just a note: we prefer not to star messages that merely help specific users, but instead star what is entertaining or interesting to a broader audience in the room
No, that wasn't me
oh, sorry for the false assumption then :)
to whom it may concern ---------------------------------------^
It's ok my last feeling was hurt a long time ago
5
22:34
We need to keep your emotions on their toes :D
@iShaymus take my star as a consolation for your hurt feelings
I think I might just do away with the crew class altogether and simply count the available officers and drivers from the DB
Sounds like a good plan
much simpler and achieves 99% of the same thing
@AndrasDeak Andras, please. There's no need to make assumptions about who starred my message. My comments are so good, they star themselves
4
22:36
@iShaymus I'm a named contributor to jsprit. It's a Java library though. There's a message board here and, as I found out recently, people can contact me directly from that. I use the same handle there. I suggest you raise the proper issue there and I will pick it up if you tell me you posted it.
I'm awful at Java, but I'm good at warping the capabilities of the library, and I also turned it into an API to call from Python.
stop starring your own comments dammit :D
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ It's Aran-Fey's own userscript at work
I can't stop it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I taught myself to code in VBA for officer. I'm officially broken for life and can't judge you on your use of Java
snakes are famous for their healing power
22:39
I hear cyanide can cure any current medical condition you have
@AndrasDeak Which suggestion are you referring to? If it is the code-only comment with a class Crew: ... definition, you could unstar it... or would you prefer not to?
I didn't choose to use Java for those problems, but Python just doesn't support the speed needed, unless you push it into numpy.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ it already is unstarred
no wait
I thought it was, because I was hovering above "cancel stars" when it disappeared from under my mouse... it just teleported
*shakes fist at Aran-Fey*
I was gonna point it out, but then Andras commented about it and I thought he'll handle it.
You can't remove my stars!
Oh, maybe you can.
:(
22:41
It was such a brain flip to understand inheritance after VB broke me
we're on rations due to Kevin's increased need for nutrients in Spring
@AndrasDeak probably one of Aran-Fey's userscript's secretive hacks.
@iShaymus I can understand. Although, I don't hate VB as much. Mostly because it really helps MS Excel excel.
Most of the excel VBA i use at work make it 99%vba and just uses excel as aDB
to stop the 'special' people from breaking everything
Ah, then I'd definitely hate VB more.
There's always more 'special' people no matter how foolproof you make your tools
evolution in action
22:46
The biggest thing I think is the lack of strict data types in excel so we always end up enforcing them with VB so the data can actually be used for analysis
python for office would be awesome. M$ should do that
I think they're trying. I saw some reddit posts.
@AshishNitinPatil don't tease me like that
or at least go C# if they won't do python
Hopefully the next generation won't suffer from the same torture. Python for all!
I'm sure python wouldn't be hindered at all if microsoft embraced it
They will look back on our VB code as if we were holocaust victims
22:49
Just SO python questions would be a nightmare again
@iShaymus some people might find that analogy / simili? offensive, but I get your point.
@AndrasDeak meh for?
meh for I can see your point but I wouldn't worry about it too much :)
looking at HTML/CSS layouts with floats and clears everywhere looks so comical now when you see grid layouts
@AndrasDeak ah cool. I anyway meant offensive to people in general, not particularly this room.
22:53
I know
From what I've seen, it becomes too emotional for some people.
(as it should)
I meant it in the context of people in the future look back like "what sad CompSi dictator subjected these poor people to the torture of writing code this way"
@iShaymus oh ****, that hit home with grids.
<div>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<div>

You know you'll miss it......
This is probably why I love python since day 1.
(did hate the unicode fiasco, but that's in the past now)
To expand on the love, it's more easy on you right from helloworld code. Just "print", so intuitive. Comparing that to PHP (vardump, etc.) & JS (console.log) is laughable.
23:14
Hey all, I have a SUPER basic question if anyone is on and would be willing to help
Hi! please indent your code with ctrl+k (detailed guide), you can edit/delete messages for 2 minutes after posting
Oops, my bad!
otherwise go on ;)
def add(x,y):
    x = 1
    y = 2
    print (x+y)
perfect, thanks
23:17
haha I know this is super easy, but I have been learning python for a few months and don't understand WHY things work the way they do
don't worry about it, we were all new once
So what is your question?
Why does that break?
Define "break" ;) What error does it give?
It doesn't
>>> add('potato',[])
3
works for me
23:20
oh crap
I think I have been calling it wrong
So I have been hitting control enter and then trying to call it like this:
add(x,y)
And what error did you get? (Note that I've asked this already, and for a reason)
name 'x' is not defined
my apologies, I missed that
So... if you don't have a variable named x, what do you expect to happen when you call add(x, y)? What value do you expect python to pass to the function as x?
My variable x was set to 1
Or, to give an example that's probably easier to understand: If you don't have an x variable and you call print(x), what would you expect to happen?
23:24
nothing, but if I said x = 1 I would think it would print 1
@AshishNitinPatil I wasn't woke enough to understand the unicode fiasco - just that randomly things would break so try some kind of thing that might fix them
now I know BADTIE - Bytes Are Decoded, Text Is Encoded
The trick is that your x=1; y=2 variables live inside the function, and you're calling the function from an outer scope where x and y don't exist
and no longer do I have problems of that nature
but anyway that function might not do what you want to do: it will ignore the input parameters and always add 1 and 2 for you, ask Simon noted
Or you will always get 3
23:26
@AndrasDeak can you elaborate on what you mean by "outer scope"
It looks like your understanding of functions is backwards. Arguments go into the function, not out of the function. If you set x = whatever inside of the function, it won't affect x outside of the function.
@AlexanderBiel I'm not sure. Have you tried reading a python tutorial yet?
definitely, I have read up quite a bit on it
@AlexanderBiel what do you expect out of this code...
BUT, it usually doesn't come from a beginner teaching a beginner haha it usually comes from someone very smart teaching a beginner
23:27
def stuff(x):
    x = 4

x = 9
stuff(x)
print(x)
@WayneWerner I think that has two levels of confusion
@piRSquared Only if you don't get the model that's programmed to feel superior to the newer models
haha I should probably go back to tutorials and not waste your guys' time on little things like this :) haha im sorry
@AndrasDeak Probably, but it's a small enough example
@AlexanderBiel @AlexanderBiel what do you expect to come out of chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/42028786#42028786 ?
@iShaymus ctrl+k ;)
hit enter by mistake
23:31
@WayneWerner I also wasn't that "woke" back then, but I now fully understand what it was, and lately, also why it was. We've come a long way.
@WayneWerner to ask people who know what they're doing questions to learn
Also, for some reason when I retyped that all out it worked - I am not sure why it didn't the first time
    def add(x, y):
      x=1
      y=2
      print(x+y)

You aren't passing in any values for x or y

def add():
  x=1
  y=2
  print(x+y)
@AshishNitinPatil Indeed. Does Python 3.7 handle like... emoji/glyphs as distinct entities? I can't remember if I was just listening to a podcast that wished Python did that or if I was reading something new
Okay @iShaymus exactly! But what constitutes an "argument"
@AlexanderBiel arguments are what you pass into a function
23:34
def add(these are arguments)
for instance, print(2) the argument is the literal 2
Hmm. Is python your first programming language?
yes it is haha
x = 1
y = 2
print(x, y)   # x and y are two arguments to the function `print`
That explains it. A lot of tutorials, the official one included, work better if you already have a basic understanding of programming in general
23:35
@WayneWerner if you encode it right (UTF-8 is default, but might not have the particular emoji) then why not?!
@AndrasDeak see I know
So this works

def add():
  x=1
  x=2
  print(x+y)

this works because all the values it needs are there
@AndrasDeak that's 100% the issue. I am actually documenting everything I am learning right now from my perspective - which is a 100% novice.
Can't give an example since on mobile.
no I know it does. I am just trying to figure out what constitutes an argument in syntax or better question - when do I need to use an argument to do something?
23:38
(I meant emojis aren't special, they are treated as regular characters and displayed accordingly, AFAIK)
I don't have personal experience with any of them but there's a list of tutorials with the odd remark about level of proficiency here @AlexanderBiel
#This is the fucntion for adding
def add(value1, value2)
  print(value1 + value2)

#define your values
x = 1
y = 2

#call your def and pass in the two values above
add(x, y)
@AlexanderBiel I think you need to find a better tutorial / handbook.
@AshishNitinPatil that's very helpful, thank you
there's a book on that list that says "Teaches programming for beginners, using Python.". That looks promising
23:40
Specific examples by people here might help with this particular issue, but you are very likely going to bump into several others.
@AshishNitinPatil agreed
does iTunes U have the Stanford python course on it?
@AlexanderBiel just to be sure, please let me know if you found my link to the tutorials
>>> emoji = "\ud83d\ude4fxx".encode('utf-16', 'surrogatepass')
>>> len(emoji)
10
>>> x = emoji.decode('utf-16')
>>> x
'🙏xx'
>>> len(x)
3
I think that, roughly, is what I was thinking of (sorry for the multi-ping)
I think there are some places where you can do like... x[0] and it would give you not the whatever that character is

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