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wim
wim
00:00
oh there was this question about globbing in a directory with a [ in the name
since abc[def] is a glob for abcd abce and abcf, how would you escape it if the directory was literally abc[def] ? you'd think it would be r'abc\[def\]' right?
I'm guessing 'abc[def]', no backslashes.
wait, in Python?
Are we talking about something like glob.glob, or shell glob handling, or what?
Huh. Python's glob.escape seems to behave very differently from bash glob escaping.
oh, of course, I didn't have a file for the escaped glob pattern to match, so bash left it unchanged. The same escaping seems to work in bash.
00:18
ah, yeah i would have guessed 'abc[def]'
order has been restored to the chaos
00:39
Very late brief cbg
01:04
Something's making my browser lag when I write long answers and I don't know what... maybe it's one of the userscripts...
can't reproduce, I don't know javascript
@Aran-Fey I've seen that. I blame the live view
Often worst in the middle of a long answer
okay, that saves me some debugging, thanks. I guess I never noticed because I never wrote long answers before :D
 
6 hours later…
07:03
recbg
Monty Python's Flying Circus is in Netflix!
07:42
cbg wrld
08:26
Cabbage
@Aran-Fey Try writing a long answer on SE.mathematics with a lot of LaTeX. Sometimes it gets so slow with the live view that I compose my answers in my editor, just checking small sections in the browser to make sure I've got the LaTeX correct. Two days ago the SO site was lagging horribly for me, but I think it was mostly due to my ISP, since browsing the Python docs was also a bit slow, and my slow old machine makes stuff like that more noticeable, I guess.
08:53
I know it's "Be Nice to Newbies" season, but why would anyone upvote this in its present state? stackoverflow.com/questions/50187485/… And I'm not happy that it's already got 2 3 answers.
The thing is, I'm pretty sure I tried to disable the live preview and it didn't help at all, so I'm kinda worried that either 1) my userscripts are at fault or 2) my PC is dying. But it's relieving to know that I'm not the only one who has that problem
or both?!
(or none of these)
It wasn't an exclusive or :D
ah, only Math / CS people can pull that off.
I want to hammer that as a dupe of replace every nth character so bad... but I hate hammering with "debug my code plz" questions
09:08
ello team
Is anyone interesetd in doing a quick code review of am mini-web-framework I made using Werkzeug and Jinja2? It is one file, one class. Super quick.
@Aran-Fey Besides, there's a better way for this case: use extended slicing and .join. Eg,
f"-{'-'.join(word[1::2])}{len(word) % 2 and '-' or ''}"
Sure, that's a bit too inscrutable for a newbie, but it can be made less compact.
I thinked you b0rked the parentheses there
nvm
what is this black magic?
Here's a version that doesn't use f-string.
words = 'These are some short test words monkey'.split()
for word in words:
    dashed = '-' + '-'.join(word[1::2]) + ('-' if len(word) % 2 else '')
    print('{!r}: {!r}'.format(word, dashed))
The annoying part is dealing with the trailing dash on odd length words.
Oh, I finally got it. For some reason I thought you were zipping two slices of the string, idunno why
Well, my first thought was to use zip, but then I remembered that .join works on a string. OTOH, doing it with zip could handle the trailing dash, I think.
09:19
It's definitely a lot more readable without the f-string
Yay, I finally got "Nice Answer" on this silly random image generator script over on U & L: unix.stackexchange.com/a/289670/88378
@PM
good job!
@Aran-Fey Agreed, but I think it's still too much "black magic" for a poor newbie to cope with, and I hate to encourage "magic incantation" / cargo-cult coding. So I won't post is an answer unless I can come up with a cleaner clearer version.
Thanks, @PyDever!
Does github include my clones in its clone count under traffic?
Does this look to inscrutable? I guess I can add some explanatory text...
dashed = ('-' + '-'.join(word[1::2])).ljust(len(word), '-')
09:28
I just highly doubt that one of my repos has 500 somethings clones. It just doesn't smell right.
@PM 2Ring
that does look a little wierd. I think some explanation text is definitely in order in this case. Apologies for butting in! : )
@PyDever There are a lot of sites that scrape stuff from places like github, and even pastebin, and put it up on their own site.
@PyDever All comments / suggestions are welcome; you aren't butting in.
If I post it as an answer, I'd break it up into small bite-size pieces, over several lines, and explain what each piece does. And finally I'd put the inscrutable one-liner version at the very end for those who like that kind of thing.
Well in that case, I think it would be fine as long as it is broken up.
I might give it a go. There are already 4 answers, and the OP accepted one 45 minutes ago. Also, the OP never posted a MCVE like I asked, and really the question should be closed as a dupe. OTOH, this is a cute technique, IMHO, and it may help some mythical Future Reader...
I answer questions that are already answered. People still upvote and give you minutes.
point not minutes. know idea why I said minutes! :)
09:44
Me too. I've even got upvotes on stuff that I answered that was a couple of years old.
Is it necessary to update all my code from python 2.x to python 3.x
10:00
@PavanKumarTS It's a good idea, but it depends on what the code is doing. A lot of well-written Python 2 code will continue to function on Python 3, but some won't. And some code that still performs correctly may be made more efficient by modernizing it.
There's a program called 2to3 that is included with your Python 3 installation that can help with the conversion task, but it's not foolproof, some things need to be done by hand, in particular, stuff that involves Unicode, or handling of strings of bytes.
there are also very nice new features in 3
And string handling is broken in 2
If you're not using strings porting is easy, if you're using strings not porting is risky (python2 might have a lot of latent bugs)
What Andras said. Python 3 makes a very clear distinction between tstrings of text, which are always Unicode objects, and strings of bytes. Python 2 mushs these things together, and there's tons of Python 2 string processing code that is flawed. It may appear to function correctly on pure 7 bit ASCII text or stuff that can be encoded as Latin-1, but it fails on more exotic Unicode. Similar remarks apply to Python code that processes raw bytes.
When you try to run such code on Python 3 it will fail, in most cases with a helpful error message. This can seem annoying at first, but it indicates that the original code was broken and that it may have done Bad Things without you even realising it. ;)
I originally didn't like python 3's bytes because I didn't understand them :(
"python 2 just works, I'll stick with that" *facedesk*
10:16
I can relate to that. bytes are wonderful, once you get used to them. But it can take a little while to break the old habits.
That's where ruthless peer-pressure comes into play
i have 3 django projects written in python 2.7 and django 1.11. Unfortunatly django 2.x is only for python 3.x so i was bit confused as there will be some functionalities left out in django 1.11
Probably yes
Python 2 is losing support in 2 years the latest, better to port now than later
its still hurts my instincts to look at python 3
Why? :)
It's good for you, and good for your projects
10:27
python 2 was too lazy so much simple
Exactly! Lots of bugs you don't know about
What was OK in a lazy way is still OK in 3. Where you need to watch in 3 are the places where you should have watched in 2
You should try reading into how srrings vs bytes properly work in 3, and then it should be easy to port and fix your codebase :)
Python 3 doesn't give you more unnecessary work, and it gives you a lot
do i need to update all my plugins to python 3 or they sill work ??
Update
do you mean third-party dependencies?
10:31
i have some which is not in 3
yes
Are you online @AshishNitinPatil ?
Most things should be ported by now... but people are reluctant like yourself, making others delay the switch :(
:) too much lazyness kills.. so better i start updating my code. Thanks guys
I'd consider looking for modern plugins as replacement
@PavanKumarTS I'm afraid so :) Good luck!
I just spent some time writing up a tutorial-style answer for that Replacing every 2nd character in a string question. I did it in my text editor, so I didn't notice that the question was closed. I'd really like to post my answer, but I'm happy for it to be re-hammered after I post. Does anyone have any objections?
10:35
post it on the dupe target
I'm not a huge fan for reopening for an answer, and reopening to answer and reclose is out of the question, sorry
@AndrasDeak It isn't so relevant to the target, since the target is about replacing every nth letter. The technique in my answer is specific for replacing every 2nd letter, in the way that the OP of the new question wants.
@PM2Ring I am now, was busy with lunch
@AndrasDeak Fair enough. I guess I can post it on the dupe target, and explain at the top of the answer why it doesn't actually answer the question. ;)
My only objection is in regards to re-hammering the question afterwards. I wouldn't have closed the question as a dupe of that in the first place, because I think the dupe target is too much "why doesn't my code work" instead of "how do I replace every nth character" to be very useful as a dupe target
@AshishNitinPatil I was going to ask you to help me un-hammer and re-hammer that question: stackoverflow.com/questions/50187485/… since you were the one that hammered it.
10:42
I don't have hammering rights, I just CVd, OP okayed the CV I think
@Aran-Fey Indeed. It would be nice to have a better target.
@AshishNitinPatil Ah, right.
but yeah, I can re-open if you want
(vote to)
@AshishNitinPatil No need. Aran-Fey and I both have the hammer.
But I'd prefer if you generalize (unless you can't) and answer on the target instead
I agree that Andras has a good point. And I can't really generalize that technique.
10:44
@PM2Ring yeah I know :) I felt you were just looking for my "okay" for some reason.
Well yeah. When I asked in here about un-hammering & re-hammering I was throwing the question to the room in general, and to people who had some involvement in that question in particular.
:thumbs-up:
I wish we had Discord / Slack style chats
Has anyone requested a "mark this question as a more specific version of another question" (i.e. all answers of question B also work for question A, but not the other way round) feature yet? I think we need that fairly often
Not sure about having a separate close reason (or even a sub-option), but wording the dupe close text itself might do the job I think
@Aran-Fey Not sure. I know that in cases like that Martijn will post a short answer to the new more specific question, and then hammer it to the more general one.
10:51
It shouldn't close the question, it should just be an indicator that working solutions already exist but may not solve the specific problem as efficiently as possible. Posting new answers should still be allowed
ooh, that does sound good
FWIW, I did spend time looking for a better dupe target for that question when it first appeared, but I didn't find anything I was satisfied with. And I've just looked at quite a few more, and none of them are really specific enough, IMHO.
@PM2Ring for want of a better alternative (i.e. a more specific dupe target) I think that's fine as a special case
@Aran-Fey I sometimes post a link in a comment and say "Does this help". So if the OP is advanced enough the more general Q&A may be sufficient for them. And if it's close enough, I'll then hammer. Or just leave it as a link, so it's visible in the sidebars.
cbg all
10:53
Also what Aran said; I didn't read the dupe
Reopening and answering if it's not a dupe is fine
@AndrasDeak It's kinda sort of a dupe, if you squint. :) But it's probably of very limited use to the OP of the new question.
@Aran-Fey [status-declined] on sight; too much misuse
So in that case, I will un-hammer.
ok, I won't bother making a feature request then :D
I'm currently writing some tests for an API I'm writing which uses an OpenAPI specification for endpoints that's a YAML file. This file lives in /swagger/api.yaml and I want to access this from /tests/test_endpoints.py. I want to run these tests with pytest but I'm not sure what the best way is to provide the path to the YAML file. The package isn't installed via setup.py otherwise I'd have used Tox to do this.
10:57
@Aran-Fey a comment would do the same and we have enough things that askers don't read :|
So the old dupe target is still visible as a link.
I wish there was a way to prevent duplicate answers from being reposted, but I guess there isn't a way to do that without closing the question
So I suppose leaving a comment will have to do
@Aran-Fey Do you mean when someone posts an answer that's virtually a duplicate of an existing answer on the same question? Yeah, a comment is the best you can do. You can also protect the question, but that only stops low-rep newbies, and it blocks all answers, not just dupes.
Of course, if you have enough rep you can cast delete votes on answers. ;)
No, I meant posting an answer that's near-identical to an answer on a almost-duplicate. Like this is a worse version of this
If they are close enough you can flag for plag
11:11
Nah, they're not that identical
@Aran-Fey fferri's answer isn't so bad. And maybe they did "borrow" some ideas from Eric. His original answer misunderstood the question, and he just had the code to replace letters with dashes at random places. He posted that original version very quickly, so I don't think he plagiarised it.
He is a FGITWer, and what I've seen of his code is often quite good, but I've also noticed that he does have a big tendency to post without fully understanding the question, which is quite common with FGITWers. You should have seen Kasra's stuff in the early days...
'course, it's a fairly obvious solution. You'd have to be crazy to flag that as plagiarism. It's more of a "We've already seen a ''.join(...) answer, what's the point of posting another one?" thing
It's basically the same solution, just presented by a different person. So now a solution that has already been voted and commented on must be voted and commented on again
It's less of a problem when the answer is alright, but when people post eval or exec answers or similar garbage...
13:15
In need of a good loop-over-values dupe, I found a mediocre one stackoverflow.com/questions/50189756/…
13:30
I'm still mystified why this OP isn't getting a NameError on his raw_input calls. stackoverflow.com/questions/50189726/python-syntax-error-with
Ha, nice
from __past__ import raw_input
@AndrasDeak I'm still looking. The best I have so far is stackoverflow.com/questions/48131756/…
We really should have one of those in our canonicals collection, since it's a pretty common error, especially for people coming from JavaScript.
13:54
martineau hammered it to my dupe... and it got answered anyway, thanks
I think I'll add it to the dupe target list
Bit crappy question :/
Yamming mobile
Too much indexing in that question, hides the obvious
can be edited into shape though
It's not great, but it's fairly clear. Although it'd be better if it was a simple 1D list. And it didn't use array as a variable name.
Yup
I guarantee further confusion
I'll check from laptop but if there's no good target maybe I'll post a CW Q&A
13:58
Yeah, I was looking for one with a list of strings. When you have a list of int, you don't get the type error, you just get index errors, or the wrong items. :)
Since the OP of that question included neither the input list nor the error message, you can turn it into a list of strings no problemo
Error in the title
Oh.
Pretty strange how my brain instantly forgets about any information that's written in the question title
14:20
@PM2Ring this dupe is better! Fight me!
No but seriously, one of these two 1 2 should be a dup of the other, and I like 1 better
@Aran-Fey I saw that one before the one I selected, but I didn't choose it because it's about class attributes rather than instance attributes. OTOH, I guess the new question is probably also about class attributes. :) So I'll add your suggestion.
(I already have) :p
So I see. :)
I take it you're not in favor of hammering one of those two questions
@Aran-Fey Sorry, I got distracted. :) And I thought you were going to do it.
The newer one already has a linking comment. I suppose the newer one is the better target, though.
14:36
Well I was going to hammer 2 as a dupe of 1, but it seemed like you preferred 2, so I wanted to discuss it first
I'm easy either way. I suppose the general consensus on meta is to make dupe targets older than the hammered question, unless there's a substantial quality difference.
no, there's a lot of discussion out there that a newer dupe target can be fine
I'm unsure now that I've taken a closer look at the other answers. Martelli's answer is definitely less good than a lot of the other answers, there are some gems like this that can be very good with some polishing
I must admit I like the older one a little better. I don't like the attr1 = int stuff, and the older one has an answer by Alex Martelli, a core dev.
Yeah, Alex's answers can be a bit sloppy. But he has the street cred. :)
I actually like the clarity of the newer question because the class is so minimalistic
14:41
Ok. Let's make the new one the target. You can do the honours.
alright
14:58
cbg
15:15
@PM2Ring I found stackoverflow.com/questions/37619848/… for the iterating-over-values problem
but not much else
Could someone hit Ajax1234 with a wet fish for me? Thanks. I don't know if he always does it, but I just noticed that he uses 3 spaces for indentation.
I got to thinking how SO saves questions and answers in a database. Mainly regarding code, so that it's rendered correctly. It's not so easy to search; is there a blog about their tech?
@PM2Ring you can tell them yourself next time they come here, they're even pingable
@AndrasDeak Nice find.
thanks, it's enough not to write a separate CW Q&A
15:19
I'm unreasonably upset by the fact that Ajax names his variables a and b instead of k and v when iterating over dicts
@roganjosh I imagine that posts are saved as plain text with the markdown syntax that we use for formatting. This doesn't seem to have anything to do with how the code is rendered, other than the markdown is parsed when the page is loaded.
@roganjosh you can download the SO data dump which probably tells you the most
but I agree with Code-Apprentice, it's probably a separate rendering step; why should they do anyhing other than save the text in the edit box?
I'm unreasonably upset when people post a Pandas-only answer to a question that's not tagged Pandas... stackoverflow.com/a/50190817/4014959
I'm not upset with the 3 space indent, that's just a minor annoyance. But I am upset over:
That's clever, but very inefficient. It has to loop over the entire players list to construct a Row, and it does that every time you do a Players item fetch. So your demo code loops over the players list 4 times. — PM 2Ring 8 mins ago
dupe, list copy vs name binding stackoverflow.com/questions/49973613/…
@PM2Ring heh, I knew it would be jpp
I'm not suggesting they should do it in any particular way, I just got curious thinking about how one might save code in a bazillion languages so that it always appears with the formatting someone posted it with
15:25
you've missed out; these users have been doing the same thing for a long while
OTOH, he's responded to my comment by fixing his code. All is forgiven. :)
for scale, jpp is at 28k rep and a python gold after 3 months
@AndrasDeak that's an answer :P
oops
thanks, edited
So it can just be dumped into a string with spaces and line breaks to be stored, I guess
15:28
imagine that you call input() on the edit box; there's literally nothing that can go wrong; right?
Is that to me?
@AndrasDeak Don't get me wrong. I agree he's phenomenal. And amenable to constructive criticism. It's just suggesting Pandas / Numpy / whatever to newbies who have a question that hasn't asked for it, and can be solved without it. OTOH, I guess it's ok to add an answer that's Pandas-only (or Numpy-only) if there are already plain Python answers.
@PM2Ring don't get me wrong, I think they're a horrible rep farmer
So the obvious issues are obvious :) Which is why I was curious how SO saves code for questions/answers
15:32
No, my point is I don't understand where there would be issues to begin with. You save the text and that's it. Whether it gets rendered is an altogether different issue, independent of storing those strings in a DB
:) He's undeniably a rep farmer. But at least his code is usually top notch. And IME he's pretty good at answering the actual question & not misunderstanding it.
cbg-afternoon
I don't care much for giving great answers to crap, close-worthy questions. I haven't looked at their contributions recently though
cbg
he gives obscure answers. "you can do this:" and then something the OP couldn't possibly understand. There's rarely something factually wrong with his answers, but the questions are likely to be of little use to others, so the focus should be helping the OP understand, no?
well, focus should be helping whoever has the same problem, but same thing, yes
15:40
I've noticed jpp's one-liners getting more like Ajax's, but he acknowledged the negative trend when I pointed it out and promised to do something about it
is it me or the questions have degraded recently...?
@roganjosh Fair point. But it's hard to get the right balance. You want to help the OP, but you also want to leave an answer that's good for a wide range of future readers too. OTOH, for many questions the future reader will have a similar ability level to the OP.
@AndyK It's you. You're getting better, so the questions look worse. :)
@PM2Ring probably
Honestly though, it's hard to tell. The quality hasn't been great for quite a while.
@PM2Ring you guys are here often, you see it first hand how things are evolving
Some of my questions are still great luckily
15:50
@AndyK de-
But I can't complain, I've scored some reasonable points over the last few days. Although I guess I probably should have close-voted some of those questions instead of answering them. ;)
@PM2Ring ha ha ha lmaooo
you managed to crack me up
@AndrasDeak yes?
_de_volving :P
@AndrasDeak ha ha ha
I'm happy to answer questions that aren't quite up to the standards if I get the vibe that the OP is sincerely trying to do the right thing and wants to learn. The no-effort homework dumpers can burn in hell, though.
7
15:51
stackoverflow.com/q/50191174/1222951 swap out a tag for python thanks
@PM2Ring (s)he wouldn't stick out in my mind otherwise. I couldn't say it about your answers, or andras', or anyone else I'm aware that frequents this room
@PM2Ring +1
@Aran-Fey got rid of [delegates]
got to start the bbq. Break time is over until The Voice's french version is starting
@PM2Ring in a welcoming way, surely
15:55
So if I see an answerable question from a sincere OP I'll answer it. An if necessary help them to improve the question. I don't insist on a perfect MCVE, complete with sample input & expected output if the question is clear without those things, unless I suspect the OP is a homework-dumper. But I will leave a comment to encourage them to post a MCVE if the question ought to have one added. (Not all questions are debugging questions, so not all questions need a MCVE).
@AndrasDeak Indeed. It's not like I comment: "With all due respect, you're a blithering idiot who's too dumb to own a computer, what to speak of programming one."
good, good :D
But you'll answer in the way that the OP might comprehend (that's not to call them stupid, but where they're up to in learning)
@roganjosh I try to. Eg, this tutorial-style answer I did a few hours ago: stackoverflow.com/a/50188670/4014959 I could have condensed that answer to a handful of lines, but if I did it'd be an incomprehensible "magic incantation" to the OP, and many future readers with a similar skill level.
Only the same with my most recent answer. I was just critiquing "Do this:" by a certain user.
16:06
is it relevant to python or the room in a broad sense?
Kind of, I was thinking about Python
HE talks about abandoned libraries and dependancy hell
It is broad and very entertaining
@roganjosh Looks good to me. And your comments on the question are good too.
My laptop seems to be stuck in 1024x768
Whew! Restarting fixed it
@PM2Ring but in relation to conversation we were having, I wouldn't process the CSV like that myself (I'd probably use Pandas). I just presented in a way I thought could help the OP.
OTOH, sometimes you get sincere OPs but they don't do what's necessary to clarify their question, like this guy: stackoverflow.com/questions/50189659/…
16:18
Hello all, I just wanted to ask, does anyone know what setting the parameter "stream=True" does, for the requests module, i.e. requests.get(url=url, stream=True), I would like to better understand when and were I would need to use it
Hi. Did the docs not explain it?
What are you trying to do?
I was trying to check if a set of links returned the code 200 or not, and without setting stream=True, it was taking python way to long to process the url, so was wondering
You could use requests-futures to send async requests
16:25
@AndrasDeak Thanks, I see, i actually looked at this doc, but under the heading Streaming Requests, but it got a little confusing
Tip: find in page ;)
I think i get it, so stream allows requests to only retreive the header information, instead of the entire script, right?
that is why I guess I was able to more quickly check if a url returned a status code of 200 i guess
@roganjosh Just wanted to check if a url was up or not, so I guess using requests works good enough, now that I added this stream parameter, but thanks alot :)
I don't think stream can do that, but i can't tell you exactly what it does do
You should test the method with a known good and a known bad url at least
If you want to know whether a url responds with 200, you absolutely can send async requests
16:30
@AndrasDeak Yeah I did, lol on my previous code the bad url, straight away returned a status code of 404, but the good one took long to return 200, but after setting stream=True, the good one returned 200 much quicker :)
@roganjosh I know, its just my script works, but just wanted to better understand why xD
That's promising
You can look at the .text or something of the response and see what it contains
Your script sends a request, sits around waiting for a response, then sends another.
@roganjosh Yes and no, although it works exactly as you have said, I have set requests to also timeout the request within 3 seconds, so its a manageable wait for my purpose :)
I wasn't talking about a timeout. I'm not sure what was resolved by you raising the question here but hopefully it's sorted for you :)
@roganjosh Haha, sorry for confusing you, I was just trying to understand, why setting stream=True, allowed my script to more quickly retreive the status code, which based on the docs link @AndrasDeak sent, I think i finally understand why, so thanks alot for all the help :)
16:41
No problem
17:23
Hmm, should this really be closed? I wanted to use it as a dupe for this...
@Aran-Fey The target you chose looks good. I guess Martijn et al closed the closed one due to lack of effort by the OP, but the other one also lacks a MCVE...
Yeah, I found a better dupe afterwards. Someone linked it in the comments of the closed question. So no more reason to try to get that question reopened
 
2 hours later…
19:27
@Aran-Fey can you not use a closed question as a dupe target?
I mean, sure I can, but then nobody can post answers
huh, wonder how that got closed as "not a real question"
It wasn't a question that shouldn't be answered, it was just a dupe
I wonder if Martijn's vote came from much earlier, when the question was an effortless homework dump, but then close votes hadn't started aging away yet
@Aran-Fey now I'm even more confused...
19:33
I think you literally can't close as a dupe of a closed question...can you?
or does it only have to be answered?
but I don't care enough to pursue it.
I think it just needs to have an answer with a score >= 1
and I'm not sure of the closing policies. I'm pretty sure that I've seen a question closed as a dupe and the linked dupe is also closed.
@Code-Apprentice Usually when you close a question as dupe, people can still submit their answers on the dupe target. But when the dupe target is also closed, nobody can post answers anywhere, and the question wasn't bad enough to deserve that
Ahh...I understand what you mean now. And if the dupe target already has the appropriate answer, then there is no need for additional ones
19:36
but then again the point of dupe closure is that existing answers on the dupe solve the source problem
I'm pretty sure you can dupe-close an exact dupe to a closed unanswered question. That is, the OP reposts an exact dupe of their closed question.
OP's repost is special-cased, yes. I don't know about closed either in that case, just unanswered
if it's non-dupe closed then the dupe can be closed as well I guess
@AndrasDeak I'm pretty sure it works if the original is closed. The idea being that they're supposed to edit the bad original into shape, not merely repost it.
Ok, thanks :)
I haven't handled such a case since I got the dupe hammer, but I remember dupe-flagging stuff like that which got subsequently closed. Possibly by Martijn.
19:43
just because Martijn can do that doesn't imply that it's generally possible
Nice work on that frames question, @abarnert
@AndrasDeak True, but I'm pretty sure that was before he was a diamond mod.
(I was only remarking on the ninja skills :D)
Good point. :)
I wonder what happens if 2 people attempt to dupe-hammer 2 questions to each other simultaneously... :) I guess the event with the earlier timestamp would take precedence.
19:58
probably a race condition
Probably.
if you say some code has a race condition, are you being racist towards the code?
the code is being racist towards itself
20:16
6_6
from binascii import unhexlify

In [391]: %timeit int('FF', 16)
276 ns ± 13.6 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000000 loops each)

In [392]: %timeit unhexlify('FF')[0]
177 ns ± 6.8 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10000000 loops each)
Not what I was expecting
though of course this would be fair only for integers 0-255.
20:58
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ How fast does bytes() do it? I'm on my phone, so I can't test it myself, and I can't remember the exact syntax to pass it a hex string, but iirc it's something obvious like .from_hex()
hello guys, I have a question!
I wrote a Python-script for my private use. I googled a part of my code on Internet and I found it on this website https://repl.it/repls/PurpleOutgoingMole.
My question is how they got this code from my laptop? I got hacked?
It's this website famous for hacked programs?
Any Input is appreciated
You nearly had it, there's no underscore
In [415]: %timeit bytes.fromhex('FF')[0]
195 ns ± 4.21 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10000000 loops each)
the python naming inconsistencies are really starting to annoy me
We need a python 4 just for the sole purpose of cleaning up the stdlib and builtins
For those lucky enough to have 10K here is the most hilarious question I have seen all day stackoverflow.com/questions/50193956/…
21:02
looks more like "no mcve" to me
@Aran-Fey OP updated, looks like it was a typo that was accidentally left out of the question resulting in code that worked
Huh, go figure, a typo cancelling out another typo
@AhmyOhlin why did you google code you wrote yourself?
because I wanted to check if the whole of code belongs to me.
what do you mean?
@AhmyOhlin Ah, my Ohlin
21:14
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ que?
looks like I missed some juicy gossip sessions earlier today :-(
I wouldn't have had it with you around
A part of this code doesn't belong to me. It's a function to get the signal of GPIO-Raspberry Pi. Anyway the problem is, I was wondering how they got the code from my laptop. so i checked the Website. It looks like online Interpreter.
Weird
21:21
yeah, it's an online interpreter
the one people usually use for python
I can't remember that i posted the whole of code in here or in other forums.
Sometimes When I have a question I posted a part of my code but the the whole of code
The question is why they do that. Nobody can use this code or will understand it because it's half in german and half in english
I googled one of the comments and I get zero results, not even repl.it
@AndrasDeak. Please check this comment
Pin 40 (GPIO 21) als Eingang festlegen und internen Pull-Up zuschalten. Der Schaltkontakt wird zwischen dem Eingangspin und GND angeschlossen (z.B. Pin39)
21:42
hmm, but adding quotes somehow breaks it
I don't know
@Simon I guess you could count Ada as a programming language named after a snake, if you spell it "adder" :)
Laurel :)
21:58
I never thought I'd spend half a week on a script that finds all unique names in the stdlib... (e.g. strip is unique and can only refer to str.strip, but something like pop could refer to dict.pop or set.pop or list.pop) Somehow I've ended up completely rewriting this thing 3 times, and it still doesn't work as it should....
I can't get over the crazy placement of the parentheses
new_result = {
  i : [c.get(i) for c in data]
  for i in set(reduce(
    lambda x, y:getattr(x, 'keys', lambda :x)() + y.keys(), data)
 )
}
I figure one can go up and another come down but it's closer to being not-crap than it was before
at least PEP-8 would say so
Took me a while to grok that lambda x, y:getattr(x, 'keys', lambda :x)() thing... should I tell him about the 3rd parameter for reduce?
nvm, it's actually worse than I thought. And it doesn't work in python 3.
Hence the "I am not a fan" comment :p
Actually I haven't read all that much into it but if I can't understand it at first glance, something is wrong with it
or with me
The not working in Python 3 part might be a slight problem for future @Aran-Fey
22:47
A bit of a problem, yeah.
Hello, has anyone an idea how I can troubleshoot flake8 not finishing?
I'm trying to use flake8 for linting of a Python project
I put it in a docker container
However, neither on bare metal on two different machines nor in my docker does it ever finish before I kill it after around 15-30 minutes
Others doing the same can run the whole container within maybe 2 or 3 minutes
23:15
Rhubarb all. :)

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