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00:12
out of the blue I'd say it's indeed in poor taste, but we all know wim and that he's a tomato, so this is only expected
That was not an original joke FWIW
was using distutils.dir_util.copy_tree to copy a lot of files. Turns out, I don't have permissions to copy some of them. Is there a good alternative to copy tons of files? Or do I have to make my own?
Sorry, to be clear, an I need an alternative that checks for permission and skips if I don't have it.
00:28
Are you doing this as part of an install, or at runtime? If the latter, is there a reason you're using an undocumented distutils function instead of shutil?
Yes there is a reason and it isn't a good one. When I was looking up ways to do it, I came across shutil for single file copies but found copy_tree for a whole directory. I had hoped it was more than just convenient and had some performance benefit. But I was only hoping and ended up diving in.
Did you look at the docs or help for shutil? It has a function called copytree.
It is currently chugging away copying over 500k files from one directory that doesn't have permission issues.
I thought I did... thx! Will look again.
IIRC, shutil.copytree will handle many errors by continuing on to finish all the non-problem files and then raising a combined exception for all the errors at the end, but there are some kinds of errors that confuse it enough to make it punt, like trying to copy a file when the dest has a directory with the same name.
But if the docs don't say, or if its behavior isn't acceptable, the docs also have a link to the source, as with half the other modules in the stdlib, and it's probably a pretty simple function that's easy to understand and modify if needed. (That's why they link to the source—because half the stdlib is useful as example code, not just as a premade library.)
I'm happy raising at the end. Trying now, and reading docs concurrently. Thanks!
 
2 hours later…
02:32
Any folks here familiar with how NumPy handles various array type conversions? If so I have a specific question..
@miradulo room rules:
> Ask your question directly. Avoid asking if it's okay to ask, or if anyone knows about a topic. Users may want to see your question before speaking up, and users who join later can see it.
Ahh right right sorry just supposed to ask.
In that case: Given an array of integers, arr = np.random.randint(0, 100, 10**7). Why might I be seeing this with NumPy 0.14.2?
In [123]: %timeit arr.astype(object).astype(str)
1.67 s ± 3.99 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)

In [124]: %timeit arr.astype(str)
4.99 s ± 37 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
02:51
samurai champloo remix anyone? youtu.be/deqOizceN1I
Or even more curiously
In [142]: %timeit np.array(map(str, arr.tolist()))
95.3 ms ± 247 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
Psst...
In [183]: np.array(map(str, arr.tolist()))
Out[183]: array(<map object at 0x114dba080>, dtype=object)
Unfair comparison, array does not unpack map
Oh durrr my bad, still my question for the first part holds.
Even with the fair comparison, which is what I was looking at earlier :P
In [145]: %timeit np.array(list(map(str, arr.tolist())))
2.32 s ± 6.32 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
In [7]: %timeit arr.astype(object).astype('|S3')
1.19 s ± 40.4 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)

In [8]: %timeit arr.astype(object).astype(str)
2.18 s ± 76.3 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)

In [9]: %timeit arr.astype('|S3')
4.61 s ± 82.2 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
You could speed things up more by using fixed length strings @miradulo
Sure, yeah. This isn't for any practical reason though, to be honest. I'm just curious why an initial cast to the object type speeds things up (it is similar to what tolist() does as well).
wim
wim
03:07
that's weird
I very briefly attempted to track down any extra work that astype would be doing from a numpy.int64 to a string in methods.c... but yeah I don't know.
It is the crux of the issue for the question jpp was posting on Meta about
wim
wim
which one is that
(map calls __iter__ obviously, and in Pandas 0.22 that now just calls ndarray.tolist) So his benchmarks in his answer aren't very representative of current-version Pandas & NumPy
Also it is actually astype that calls astype_str, and map uses an entirely different function that is just a Cythonized loop storing things in an array of object dtype, if you're reading his answer :)
wim
wim
wow what a stupid meta argument
So it seems like disjointifying the elevation to object dtype from the string cast does less work for some reason... it is odd.
wim
wim
03:20
he should just mention which versions of things he uses on the answer. no need to edit the question, put bounty , make answer community wiki (huh?)
Yeah, I thought that was weird too.
03:36
What's the difference between a notice and putting a bounty? Don't they have the same goal?
What's a notice?
I was looking at the question you linked, revision history shows a bounty and something called a notice
Ohhh, I've never noticed the notice before :P not sure, maybe it just bumps it like an edit.
wim
wim
04:00
the notice is an (optional) part of adding a bounty
the one who spent the rep on the bounty can add a short explanation about why they wanted to bounty that Q
interesting. I still need to offer a bounty sometime
04:34
anyways I asked about it on main now if anything comes to mind
I'm about to put a notice on it :P
TY for including version numbers
04:55
The only time I ever tried to offer a bounty on a Python question, I added a comment saying I was going to add a bounty in 10 hours when the time limit had passed, and Martijn Pieters answered it before the 10 hours was up.
I think I did once offer a bounty on a JavaScript or C/POSIX question, but ended up answering it myself a few days later because nobody else did.
lol that seems like something that Martijn would do.
I nearly offered a bounty on a MathStackExchange question that was a few years old with no answer, decided to ask a prof first and got pointed to a thesis from the 70s that covered the question in great detail.
05:24
I quite like the fact that I can upvote answers that I found really helpful.
05:47
There's a couple answers I'd love to award a bounty to on Cross Validated actually.. but sadly I have 120 rep there :P
06:01
Should I report a user if they are using their account to ask softball questions and then answering them on another account?
Literally the same user has the accepted answer on every one of their questions.
I would think so, that sounds like sock puppetry / voting ring / bad things. Custom flag for a moderator probably.
If I custom flag the question does it show up as a notice?
I think it just goes in the mod flag queue, but I am not sure
 
1 hour later…
07:20
cbg
@IljaEverilä sup?
The usual Java headache.
@IljaEverilä unlucky
07:27
@chrisz when you post a bounty you have to give a reason which gets written under the question. That's the "notice". Flags are a completely different and private thing
@AndrasDeak They didn't mention flags?
2 hours ago, by chrisz
If I custom flag the question does it show up as a notice?
@IljaEverilä longing for the weekend
08:16
m
09:02
Ah, I didn't see that
09:57
Morning all
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ done
hammered thanks :)
10:37
cbg
10:57
cbg o/
Your username reminds me that i'm hungry.
darn it, now I also need to order something
good thing I already had mine
11:45
Wow, 2 upvotes on this terrible question and 3 upvotes for the answer?
Oh look another one. Hmm, I smell a rat...
12:00
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ (>10k) The answer was self deleted. And there's more
sadly for them, we can still see their dirty laundry
Of course they could just be friends and all: stackoverflow.com/questions/49489990/…
I found a "bug" while flagging those posts
annoyingly, i cannot close that question (no good enough reason to), so I just downvote and flag instead
Brief cbg all. :)
12:11
My bitmap project has now taken me to finding the nearest multiples of 4
So it's back to some easy stuff. 3 * 3 = 9, closest multiple of 4: 12, 12-9=3. 3 padding
4*(round /4), even easier than I thought
12:26
Sorry about that. I had the scent of dinner calling me...
cbg. all
cabbage
8 is closer to 9 than 12
Yeah I need to work forwards not backwards.
12:28
then ceil rather than round
Here is what I need to organise: dpaste.com/31GYQ4R
-4*(-(x/4)//1) :D
whoops, I miss read that msg. Andras
Wow it works. Not sure how though. :/
it does 4*math.ceil(x/4) which you should prefer
12:32
Yep certainly looks like it.
probably (x/4)//1 is the same as (x//4), not enough coffee for me to be sure
Nope: >>> (6//4) returns 1
and what does (6/4)//1 return...?
1.0
so the same thing...
12:35
Just let me check what ceil() does...
please do
and make sure you're not trying to understand something I didn't write
51 mins ago, by Ashish Nitin Patil
reco https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49794450/implementing-gephi-in-a-ipython-not‌​ebook
needs 1 more
Well, there's that negation before the floor division that should be accounted.
So it just gets the integer part of the decimal. (not sure how well that explains it, but I know what it does)
12:39
okay, good... now to wait for the mods to one by one mark my flags as helpful ... :D
@Simon ceil? No, it doesn't
floor(x) is the largest integer not larger than x, ceil(x) is the smallest integer not smaller than x, round(x) is the integer closest to x (with various possible choices of breaking ties)
floor(2.5) => 2; ceil(2.5) => 3; round(2.2) => 2; round(2.8) => 3
Right got it. So what I said above applied to floor()
except negative numbers...
12:52
eesh forgot they exist
what you said was int() which is round-toward-zero
ceil() is the opposite/
12:55
@AshishNitinPatil Ah, if only I could make my bank do the same.
@AndrasDeak Yes but what is the fun if I don't try to explain it for myself.
@Withnail Apply that to my crypto investments please :-p
it's pretty hard to beat the explanation of the definitions
you can still try to struggle understanding a definition, that's fun too
Love the 500 screen for chat - imgur.com/a/CCFxK
12:58
cat pics make everything better
please don't __import__
yes, don't __import__
yes got that thanks
you had the formatting right the first time
illustrated guide, sandbox, etc
13:00
here I will just paste the code(yes I know Andras):
end_tables = __import__(end_tables_path)
    try:
        end_tables.char2colour
        end_tables.colour2char
    except:
        print('The encryption table file you specified does not meet the requirements for being a "end_tables" file.')
        _exit(1)
...and your question?
how to check if there are the required variables in a file
Oh, you're doing a dynamic import. Still, don't dunder. importlib should be able to give you an idiomatic solution with no dunders
Hmm I wonder if ast could be used to determine that safely, without importing
I mean, easily, otherwise the answer is probably "yes"
13:05
Lol, found this in the docs(should have checked there first, before using __import__): docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html#importlib.__import__
> Note: Programmatic importing of modules should use import_module() instead of this function.
exactly
ah, OK, I didn't know you were referring to that
So is there a better way to check there is a better way to check if the imported file has the required variables?
Why not just
try:
    import end_tables.char2colour, end_tables.colour2char
except ImportError:
    print
    _exit
13:08
@AshishNitinPatil or even from import then
Or something similar (wrap into a function?)
well i am only doing it once, with one file so i don't think there is a need for wrapping it into function.
@AndrasDeak For idealistic cases, I'd do a from import as to keep the namespace clean, yeah.
oh, yeah, you're right, I missed that difference
rbrb
13:19
>>> import ast
>>> node = ast.parse(open('foo.py').read())
>>> {target.id for child in ast.iter_child_nodes(node) if isinstance(child,ast.Assign) for target in child.targets}
{'img1', 'img2', 'img2_normed', 'res', 'img1_normed', 'numpix'}
wooo
those are the global names defined in a foo.py I found lying around
I'm sure it breaks on a bunch of edge cases
does it work for functions / classes? (ast.Assign?)
ah, right, it probably doesn't, but I had assigned names in mind
cabbage, everyone
@AndrasDeak np, I thought you were doing something else
recbg JGrindal
No, you're right, I was doing this for Zeus' problem. Functions have FunctionDef nodes, and also imports should be handled appropriately
13:26
I am pretty sure there is (and I've seen some) a lot of places where Mr. Zeus' thing needs to be done. Let me dig it up.
\o first-game-of-the-playoffs-for-my-team-cbg :D
@AshishNitinPatil I'm pretty sure your solution is best unless there's security risk of importing foreign code
it's short and clear and checks exactly what it has to, I suspect
I think the most frequent usecase is for targetting only supported versions of a library (if not, fallback to something else)
(or fall hard with correct verbose error)
Using gnome with tweaks and whatnot is a little annoying now. Specially with the weird bug of natural scrolling for vertical scrolls, but regular scrolling for horizontal... -_-
13:37
Can't that be set?
Both separately? perhaps. But currently having it different for the unified setting (natural on / off).
oh, I think I had to set my scroll settings in a conf file on my debian...
oh wait, looks like a bug for horizontal scroll (doesn't matter what setting)
Section "InputClass"
        Identifier "touchpad catchall"
        Driver "synaptics"
        MatchIsTouchpad "on"

# additions by me based on wiki.debian.org/…:
# plus `synclient`
        Option          "TapButton1"       "1"
        Option          "TapButton2"       "0"     # multitouch
        Option          "TapButton3"       "0"     # multitouch
        Option          "VertEdgeScroll"   "1"
        Option          "HorizEdgeScroll"  "1"
from my /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/synaptics.conf
13:41
this is for a dell inspiron
I needed that because taps didn't work either
DSM
DSM
Thursday morning cabbage for all!
cabbage DSM
cbg DSM
14:10
Hello everyone. Today I come with two questions, one technical and one philosophical. Firstly: Is there a preadinto function for file objects? It could live in many places like os or io and I'm not sure that I've looked everywhere. It would work like pread in that it starts at a specified offset, but also like readinto in that it reads into a passed bytearray rather than returning the read results.
Secondly: Why does Python call anonymous functions lamdas? A true lamda function only performs one atomic operation on exactly one input variable. Did anyone ever suggest using something like a func keyword instead? If so, why was it shot down?
@ocket8888 I'd guess because most languages call them lambdas
@ocket8888 I doubt you'll find something that low-level in the io module. If it's not in os, it probably doesn't exist
@Aran-Fey Yeah, I was worried that's what that meant. There probably isn't an underlying syscall of that type to use, so Python wouldn't be saving me any work by providing one.
@vaultah lame.
@ocket8888 arguable
"standard / convention"
wim
wim
14:17
You are right that lambda in python is not a true lamda function. They are only a crippled def, and shouldn’t really be included in the language at all. A better name for Python anonymous function would be lameda
@ocket8888 Where did you read that lambdas only accept one argument? I see the expression used synonymous with anonymous function, which has no such restriction.
FWIW, I prefer writing lambda: 5 over something like () => 5
@Arne the term "lambda" is from "Lambda Calculus" which is predicated on a system where functions perform one operation on one input variable. It's a paradigm used extensively (albeit in various altered forms) in functional programming to "raise" functions.
DSM
DSM
Words have a habit of being generalized and used to refer to broadly similar concepts. Life's like that.
Lots of programming languages tend to make it synonymous with "anonymous function", but the two are actually pretty different. So it's weird to me that we have lamda instead of func.
14:21
According to Dive into Python, they're borrowed from the lambda feature in Lisp. I just looked that up, and it also accepts multiple parameters. Go complain at Lisp first.
seems close to bikeshedding to me
@wim A more mature version of lambda in python should properly be caalled muttona.
12
@davidism that's pretty much exactly the answer I was looking for, thanks.
I literally did a search for "python lambda name" then "lisp lambda".
Well, obviously Python didn't "invent" lambda, but if the discussion about whether to rename it never took place and it was just copy/pasted from a different language, that's something I couldn't Google. To be fair, I have no idea if anyone here was involved with the addition of lamda to the language, but it couldn't hurt to ask.
14:24
If you want to look at the formal reasoning, you might also check out typed lambda calculi. They are probably what the programmer-understanding of what a lambda is is most closely based on.
linguistis used lambdas as multi parameter functions for ages
mathematicians do not have a monopoly on that letter
From : https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/173441/what-triggered-the-popularity-of-lambda-functions-in-modern-mainstream-programmi

Lisp was the first programming language to implement it.
And after all, what is in a name...
"that's something I couldn't Google" ... everyone else proceeds to search for it just fine?
link to an archive of the Python dev discussion?
Why? Search for it yourself, we'd be doing the exact same amount of work.
14:28
You mean because it didn't turn up in your google search? You know, if you want to be unhelpful, it's much easier to just say nothing at all.
The "Googling" skill (aka : how to ask an indexer) is one of the most important skill to have nowadays, in any fields in my opinion.
All he means is that it's better if you look it up yourself rather than asking here (since that'd involve lot more people doing the same thing)
garlic
14:31
@excaza ah, thanks for reminding me that python is ~25 years old.
happy to help :)
DSM
DSM
No wonder it's suddenly interested in type annotations. When kids are just out of college they make a lot of silly decisions. ;-)
lol I can't see a 1.0 (direct 1.0.1 from 0.9.9)
I won't apologize for attempting to have a discussion, though it appears I came to the wrong place for that.
14:35
I have a calculation as such answer = (x * (10**y)) % mod. x is single digit number, y is huge(upto 10^18). mod is 10^9 + 7. How could I make the calculation fast? Currently it takes ages to complete.
(3rd argument to pow)
DSM
DSM
Yep, the third argument is the key.
In [4]: x, y = 2, 10**6

In [5]: x, y, m = 2, 10**6, 10**9+7

In [6]: (x * 10**y) % m
Out[6]: 814657583

In [7]: (x * pow(10, y, m)) % m
Out[7]: 814657583
It's worth reading up on why it works, of course.
I'll try that
There is a huge difference in time taken
14:52
@ocket8888 gph.is/2dg3Uos
@AshishNitinPatil Sprouts.
np :)
Alright, my extended(6 day work-week) weekend is here, so I'm out for playing some dota2. rbrb folks.
rbrb
@AshishNitinPatil rbrb, gl hf!
15:21
PyTest is so much better than JUnit
@JGrindal What's the most important feature that you like in PyTest that makes it better than JUnit?
It works with Python!
DSM
DSM
For some reason I find this comment hilarious, both because of committees in general and C++ in particular.
3
@AndreyTyukin setup and configuration in PyTest is much easier than JUnit.
Plus, I like base asserts much more than assertTrue assertFalse, but that may just be the old school fella in me.
@JGrindal I can't compare it to PyTest, but I'm not sure what you find complex about the setup of JUnit. You can usually just create a plain vanilla maven project, and then go a long way without modifying anything in the configuration of JUnit. What configuration do you mean, for what use cases? Agree on assertTrue, the name is tautological.
15:37
@JGrindal "base asserts"?
As in Python asserts?
huh TIL you can calculate x**y%m without calculating x**y... as explain here stackoverflow.com/questions/14133806/… Time to go to the wikis
@RobertGrant He probably means the assert-keyword. It's not used in JUnit, because it throws exceptions that are not very descriptive. Instead, JUnit provides bunch of somewhat verbose assertFoobar-methods which generate more comprehensible failure messages.
@RobertGrant as in just using assert rather than assertTrue or assertFalse in JUnit
@MooingRawr That's just (x * y) % m = (x % m) * (y % m) % m applied inductively. Simple rule: whenever you multiply or add numbers mod m, you can apply the mod m before adding and multiplying. If you do this in case of pow(a,b,m), you can guarantee that all intermediate results remain smaller than m, instead of blowing up to a gigantic number a ** b.
@AndreyTyukin The way that JUnit handles rules and categories can get really confusing. With PyTest, it's much more straightforward.
15:49
@JGrindal Could you give me a hint how you actually use PyTest? I mean, how is it integrated in the toolchain? I'm currently trying to learn python properly, but I'm somehow struggling even with the simplest project. I don't even know when I'm "allowed" to commit, because it's not clear what tool to ask whether a commit is "valid". I've tried using PyBuilder, with mixed success so far. Is it commonly used? Or does everyone use something else?
(not sure whether opinion-based software recommendation questions are on-topic in the chat, sry)
DSM
DSM
They definitely are.
@AndreyTyukin Sure! I used to do TDD, so I wrote the tests first, but in the new project I'm working on, its a little different.
@AndreyTyukin interesting, I'm now going to go look up the inners of pow to see what they do or do they just do what you expected? ie pow(a,b,m) = (x % m) * (y % m)
DSM
DSM
That's not what you should expect (assuming you meant a=x,b=y).. ;-)
@AndreyTyukin We have each module with a testsuite, so we write our code, write our unit tests and load the tests into the module suite which should run and pass before any code gets "firm" committed (if there is a commit for work that is WIP at end of day or some such, it's generally committed with a NFICS tag - "Not Functional In Current State")
16:03
@MooingRawr The definition of pow won't be that simple, it will probably rather use square-and-multiply. To make you more motivated: you can even compute rightmost digits of the incomprehensibly large Graham's number using very much the same simple insight. Try it, it's fun.
Before we pull into a major branch, we run the full suite, just to make sure one branch didnt break another.
That's our basic workflow.
@JGrindal "each module with a testsuite" - does this work nicely if you have many interdependent modules in different packages?
@AndreyTyukin We currently have 9 modules in varied packages, it works great.
We have something like 4,000 individual tests in the full suite
@JGrindal And those tests are all discovered and executed by PyTest? I assume it can compute coverage and produce reports too?
@AndreyTyukin correct
on both counts
FYI, a really good "best practices" document for pytest is available at pytest.readthedocs.io/en/2.7.3/goodpractises.html
16:12
@DSM sorry my mind is else where :D (already checked out)
cbg guys, does anyone know what the performance overhead of calling os libraries for, say, a find /dir/ --extrafiltershere equivalent would be?
@AndreyTyukin ohhh more math theory. I kinda miss Marcus being in here
find is usually blazing fast, and I know that os.walk is very slow for some redundant stat'ing reasons(which is why os.scandir is the go-to now)
docs on pkgutil.iter_modules: "Yields ModuleInfo for all submodules on path". Docs on pkgutil.ModuleInfo: "New in python 3.6". So what did iter_modules yield before 3.6?!
@JGrindal Ok, thank you very much, I'll take a closer look at it. The py.test tag also seems to be used quite a bit more often than pybuilder.
16:15
@Aran-Fey I'm guessing ordinary tuples
I guess I could check the 3.5 docs like a not-idiot
They've done something similar with the traceback module in Python 3.5
@AndreyTyukin Yeah, it's kind of the defacto test package (well, it and unittest, on which it bases a great deal)
@vaultah Turns out you're right; it yields tuples
@JGrindal Thanks! I guess I googled something too java-centric and non-standard. Will definitely take a look at py.test. If it integrates with PyBuilder somehow: even better. But it seems as if it is useful enough on its own.
16:21
I'm pretty sure I read somewhere that unittest is actually based on JUnit so you can't be any more java-centric than unittest
@OneRaynyDay A lot of the conventions that unittest grabbed were stolen from JUnit - the goal was to make "JUnit for Python". pytest took a lot of those concepts and improved on them, making them more pythonic and easier to deal with
@OneRaynyDay That's probably true to some extent, because JUnit influenced so many other frameworks.
@OneRaynyDay What I meant: I was looking specifically for a build-tool, the first google hit was PyBuilder, but this seems to be used much less often than other stand-alone tools that do only testing.
Yeah, I understood both of you guys
@OneRaynyDay On the other hand, there is pybuilder-pytest plugin, so maybe I can integrate all those tools in the end under the umbrella of pybuilder. Then I get my entirely javaesque "build tool" that does all the things at once, from getting the dependencies to generating the .tar.gz. But first, I look at pytest in isolation, just to understand how each component works.
Interesting article, cross posting from reddit: Incrementally improving the performance of a python script, until nothing makes sense anymore. TLDR: putting your code inside a function can make it faster, in spite of function call overhead
16:37
@AndreyTyukin sgtm
@Kevin The answer is actually pretty obvious. Not using a function optimizes out a single function call, not N of them, so it's not going to make any difference for moderately-sized N. So, if locals are even the tiniest bit faster than globals, putting it in a function will win easily. Locals are faster than globals in most implementations of most languages.
You do have to understand a bit of the internals of CPython to understand exactly why locals are faster than globals (the compiler turns local variables into indexed reads from an array, but global variables into key lookups on a dict), but try to imagine any other implementation and it'll usually turn out that way, and never turn out the opposite way.
For example, imagine the most naive, unoptimized implementation of lexical scoping: look things up in the local scope, and fall back to progressively higher scopes until you hit builtins. So, either way, the variable is found in the first scope, right? But the local scope is a smaller namespace—it doesn't have module attributes like __name__ in it, for example—so it's still going to be a bit faster.
KevinScript doesn't qualitatively differentiate globals and locals ;-) it only has variables local to a particular scope, and one of those scopes happens to be the global scope. Even so, one might expect an algorithm in a function to be faster, if there are fewer names in that scope compared to the global scope.
Ha, you exactly described KS' scoping rules while I was typing them up :-)
I'll cop to "naive, unoptimized implementation". Doing the easiest thing that works was a common design principle of that project.
17:13
I really meant "naive" more as in "the first thing any smart person would think to try" rather than "stupid"—it's exactly what the first Lisp with lexical scoping did, for example.
@Kevin This is why nobody uses KevinScript. It's poorly optimized
like JavaScript.
The next simplest implementation is the exact opposite one—compile everything to "fast locals", and just make globals (and builtins) closure cells instead of special-casing them.
I never really realized how awesome it was in the SOPython room until I went over the JavaScript room. Holy yams.
I experimented with hacking up CPython (I think either 2.6 or 3.1; it was a while ago…) both ways to measure the performance differences. (I'm not sure where the code is, because I apparently never migrated it to my github fork when CPython moved there.) The globals-as-closures had too many subtle semantic differences to run the benchmark suite; the no-fast-locals version was a little faster on some benchmarks but more than twice as slow on others (including anything with closures).
I've never looked at the JS room, but from checking out a few others: Is it (a) 100% holy wars about React vs. Angular, or whether ES2017 2017 is the universal savior or completely irrelevant, etc. that frequently turn into 4chan-style flamewars, or (b) idiots posting "gimme the codez" questions that they couldn't get answered on the main site and people piling on to insult them instead of just telling them you can't do that?
@abarnert Mostly. I mean, right now, they're talking about abortion, so that's a little different, I suppose.
17:24
Surely it's too late for that now. Third-term abortions are one thing, but JavaScript is over 20 years old.
A huge number of chat rooms on SO are extremely close to having "anything goes" culture
Anecdotally, I got some decent advice the last time I was in the JS room.
I think I made them mad afterwards when I complained that their language works differently in every browser. Don't think I should go back for a while.
Just switch browsers before you go back.
Also I think I made the C# room mad when I was trying to apologize for asking questions that are difficult to answer because they're ambiguous and they kind of interpreted it as "it's a shame you guys aren't able to answer difficult questions". Maybe I'll just stay in the Python room.
Might try for a hat trick and say inflammatory things about divs in the html room
Did the HTML4 designers not realize that "div" and "spanner" both mean "idiot"?
17:39
cbg
After 2 months of trying full-stack development and wrestling with the front-end, I've given up trying to actually smooth things out properly with Ajax. I'm just going to default to an epilepsy warning on the landing page re: clicking anything.
I think that came mostly after I did actually design everything to the best of my ability, testing it on Chrome/FF/IE and then viewed it from another PC that wasn't connected to the internet and clearly ran an earlier version of IE. Half of my table was actually inside the side nav bar
reimplementing <blink> tags in html5 using ajax: a practical demonstration
Can we just go back to Gopher pages, tack Markdown onto it in place of CSS, and use JSON directly over TCP instead of HTTP for API calls?
There's some stuff that really baffles me about the move to CSS. Like width="50%" in a table header doesn't work properly because they decided it should be specified in CSS. But, I don't see how it's in any way ambiguous
17:51
Hey guys, when I use subprocess.check_output on something like find
find sometimes gives errors like Permission denied which is perfectly reasonable
however, check_output short circuits and doesn't give me the rest of what I wanted(or any of the previous work). Is there a different function or some workaround using check_output?
It was purism from the XML-heads on the HTML committee. A table specifying that it's half the width of the page isn't bad because it's ambiguous, it
it's bad because it's about presentation rather than structure.
What do you mean by "short-circuits"? check_output doesn't raise until the child exits with a nonzero error code.
I had two tables on a page with a space between. The top one had 5 columns, the bottom 2. The second column of the top table needed to be wider, so I specified it as 20%, 30%, 20%, 20%, 10%. But no; this only worked when the table had data in it. Without data, the top table needed to be 20%, 28%, 22%, .... (so summing to 48%) to be aligned. Really?...
Also, is there a reason you're using check_output instead of run? Are you still using Python 3.4 or something?
@abarnert I am not using python 3.4, 3.6 :o I guess I never caught up with the times
@OneRaynyDay If you're asking "can I still capture the output of check_output if it raises an exception?", you may be able to extract text from the exception's output attribute.
17:56
I guess it's easier to illustrate than to explain by words:
The width-of-empty-tables thing was about enshrining a bug in Netscape (that IE had copied) as intended standard behavior, not about a principled design. Things like that were part of the argument that convinced people that salvaging HTML for layout was just impossible so they might as well let the XML purists have their way.
$ find /a/b/c -type l
/a/b/c/d.txt
/a/b/c/e/f.txt
find: "/a/b/c/e/g": Permission denied
At least this gives me the first two entries
How are you making that call from Python?
HTML design frustrates me because when I look up something like "how to align three boxes side-by-side, each occupying 33% of the screen", the SO page always has thirty solutions, each of which only works in 1/12th of all browsers. Wayyy at the bottom there might be a table-based solution that works perfectly, but everyone recoils at <table> elements because it's not enterprisey enough
With code like: return subprocess.check_output(["find", "/a/b/c", "-type", "l"]).decode("utf-8").split("\n")[:-1] it does not save any of that
If I try except it, only the exception can be printed from the error.
@vaultah It's not from python, it's from bash, I just wanted to illustrate an equivalent statement in bash

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