« first day (2769 days earlier)      last day (2406 days later) » 
00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

00:08
I think that was an intentional reference. Didn't the creator call his intro blog post "IDs in Disguise" or something?
00:18
@roganjosh It just returns an XML error.
<Error>
<Code>MissingKey</Code>
<Message>
Missing Key-Pair-Id query parameter or cookie value
</Message>
</Error>
Exactly what you'd expect from the fact that the OP is getting a 403 error in his non-token-using code.
No secret evil router-destroying worm visible in the headers or anything.
Except to the extent that XML is an evil everything-destroying worm.
00:36
cbg
How do I subtract a star?
HAH
@piRSquared you can't remove stars after a grace period :(
Just sat down. Kids did not nap today (my wife says). Off to get dinner. Need to code. Rbrb
Don't cook and code :D
Well, the saying is "don't drink and code"
but I've heard of success stories from intoxicated programmers.
00:51
Hey, what do you guys think about this approach for multiple camera recording synchronization:
- Ask all the cameras to start sending a live feed to a server
- Once all the target cameras are transferring data, *mark* that instance as the start of the recording

I'm having trouble with the implementation, it seems that the files get corrupted during transfer. Maybe because I have threading conditions being verified in the recording loop? It might introduce random delays
By mark I mean: start writing those multiple streams to files
Damn, I got it. Jesus, I'm dumb
The metadata is being discarded
Sometimes socabbage is your rubber duck.
it's actually so happened that in the process of asking a question and creating a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable Example, I ended up solving my problem
sometimes I end up self-answering, sometimes I discard and go on my merry way
I don't post a question until I've got the mcve ready to go. I still usually end up editing, but not as often as I do on answers; usually it's something like "On second thought, nobody needs to see that commented bytecode that was exactly what I expected it to be, just leave the actual source and input set".
01:15
It turns out it's that wasn't the only problem. I should have thought this through, hm
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I realize I shouldn't have just dumped that in here, sorry :P
But actually describing the problem to someone forces me to rethink it
@RodrigoSilva that's the whole idea behind the concept of rubber duck debugging. Speaking about your problem to someone else (even just speaking out loud) forces you to put yourself in the shoes of the person you're explaining that thing to and look at your problem from different perspectives. It literally forces lateral thinking
@RodrigoSilva this is exactly the place to chat about python. I was kinda upset I didn’t get to read more about what you are spying on
Literal lateral alliteration, love it
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I wasn't sure the rubber ducking thing was meant at me, I had idea that was a thing hehe. But it does make sense.
@piRSquared Well, I can show you the code if you want to. What I think the problem is: the moment the streams actually start being written into files is not guaranteed to be "valid". As in, it will most likely be data somewhere in the middle of a frame, which will collide into the next frame on the target stream (written file)
And the metadata is gone, since I don't write from the start of the stream
So I'm thinking two solutions, I force the messages to be a frame/second, defining a basic unit, or I write the streams from the start and save the timestamp where the files are actually valid (by valid, I mean all the streams are active)
The code will be refactored, I'm testing stuff out
Another option: Just keep track of the metadata for each stream, plus all frames since the last keyframe. When you want to start writing, write the metadata, flatten the frames into a new keyframe, and write that. Then you can just continue on from there.
01:32
The thing about working frames is I'd need to keep track of the received data, in order to know to which frame X data belongs to
So when the moment I wanted to start writing the streams, I'd be able to understand if any bytes should be ignored (incomplete frame?)
And it would be dependent on the video format, hm...
 
1 hour later…
@RodrigoSilva This is how we solved essentially the same problem in Flash Media Server. Then again, I only had to write it to work with FLV (a format designed for our server) and MPEG-2 (a format designed to be so simple to stream you can do it with $10 worth of hardware). When one of my coworkers had to add in support for H.264 in MPEG4 containers, it was a bit of a nightmare.
Anyway, if you don’t already break things into frames, and have code available that can distinguish keyframes from iframes and build a new keyframe on the fly for all your video formats, it’s probably not worth doing.
In Ancient Times I was happy to spend time learning the details of image and animation data formats, but then it all got too complicated. These days, I'm happy to have a vague overview, and leave the messy details to a library. Of course, to get maximum benefit from the library you need to learn its intricate details, and the library docs often tend to presume that you have some familiarity with low level stuff. :)
Still, it's sometimes possible to do stuff with a minimum of fuss and a bit of googling, eg the silly one-liner random anim maker at the bottom of this answer
 
2 hours later…
04:37
Anyone with ideas for this question? OP seems to want something that numpy doesn't seem to support
04:53
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Does he want some way to return a view of those indices? If so that's def tricky
I don't know if that makes a difference? They just seem to want to use pos to index that array
05:06
That was my opinion (-:
"there's no better way than my answer shows"?
yeah, I'd be really surprised if there was. Well, if there was, Divakar would've answered it by now
and politely handed me my butt on a platter
data[pos.T.tolist()] also works
Yeah, there are a lot of hacks and variants to what I'm currently doing. But I think data[[*pos.T]] is as cute as it gets; and that's only because 3.6 makes it possible
it is cute. I'll give you that
sleep rbrb
it's early! rbrb
05:15
3:30 am wake up. I'm driving from Irvine to San Diego to be in the office by 5:00 to 5:30
holy cheezits
do you have to work with people in different timezones?
that can be a real pain...
06:11
@abarnert You mean the dot-com boom I guess. And yeah, really need a purge for some really stupid & useless projects floating around. Less scams, more security, better UIs, and we'd be off to a better future.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ train wreck
@user2357112 I am making a browser extension (hopefully will finish in some finite time) called crypticon :D (to help identify cryptocurrency addresses easily with gravatars / identicons)
cbg
cbg all!
Is there some way to make pytest play nicely with pathlib Path?
Yup, that's a help vampire in the most unholy sense of the phrase
pity that question isn't being deleted fast enough...
@shuttle87 perhaps stating the troubles would make it easier for others to pitch in.
06:21
@pytest.fixture
def client(tmpdir):
    """Create a test client to send requests to"""
Speaking of help vampires, I noticed a fair bit of HV activity in the transcript. Next time that user appears, please try to keep it brief. He needs to get familiar with the basics of Python before he can make useful progress on that project. There isn't much that this room can do for him until he learns those basics.
So the default fixture creates a tmpdir that's a LocalPath which is a pytest defined path, I'd like that to make a pathlib Path. So what I've been thinking is just to do something like convert that pytest path to a string then pass that to pathlib Path. Is this a good way to solve it, something about this bothers me a bit. Not sure if I should be bothered however?
I had hopes that that user would improve, but it ended up going in circles so I took the next tangent I could find and hopped off
It just feels like I'm writing code that should be handled somewhere else with this Path issue.
06:31
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Wise move. If more people would take the time to get a decent base in core Python before they attempted to use frameworks like Pandas, Numpy, Django, etc, many SO questions wouldn't exist. A similar thing applies to GUI frameworks, even the built-in Tkinter. Maybe it's just me, but I find it baffling that someone would even try to do complicated stuff before they know how to do the simple stuff.
It's hard to cut off a complete newbie which is why I cut them some slack. But indeed they need to sort it out themselves
FWIW I told them as much
@AndrasDeak Indeed you did. Let's hope he takes the hint.
You had a hard time cutting him off cuz he said "Andras" is a beautiful name... he had you wrapped around his pinkie :-P
*him/her/them/Apache helicopter
@BornaAhmadzade "Can I write a program that sees in how many ways, we can write the integer n as the sum of two or more integers without recursive function?" (I assume you mean positive integers, otherwise the answer is infinite, as abarnert indicated). What you're asking about is called partition counting, or the partition function.
@BornaAhmadzade Yes, it can be done iteratively, but a recursive version is much less painful to write, and it's reasonably efficient if you use memoization, eg lru_cache. FWIW, I have a recursive version here that takes about 10 lines.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ no, it's a very confused user
07:29
Being terminally confused (or even bona fide stupid) doesn't make you a help vampire. Garlic is all about attitude and I can even imagine otherwise skillful users trying to out-source their work/research to others if they are lazy enough
07:51
@PM2Ring There were early FORTRAN compilers where you could call a function with a constant argument and change the constant b y assigning to the parameter inside the function!
@holdenweb Nasty! I can kind of see how that could happen, but I haven't written FORTRAN since the late 70s, so my knowledge of FORTRAN compiler details is very rusty. ;)
ah, the good old "2 = 3" trick
@AndrasDeak Yes. It wasn't supposed to happen, but call by reference on a constant gave its address, which was treated like the address of a variable
When I reminded abarnert recently about that answer he showed us some evil code that does allow you to mutate Python integers. chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/6?m=42298177#42298177
@Simon Maybe. But your proposed target focuses on cx_freeze, and although I don't use Windows I understand that other things, eg Pyinstaller, may be more popular. Also, I know that cx_freeze used to have a reputation for not working correctly except in simple cases, but maybe it does a better job these days. So for now I'll leave it open until we get some feedback from the OP.
08:14
cbg
@abarnert ah well, I thought it better to have someone take another look since the router dropping in the exact same second does push the correlation/causation couter-argument to the kerb a bit :)
08:34
@PM2Ring Pyinstaller also says that it can't cross-compile :(
@holdenweb I think the OP of the new question realises that the cross-compilation makes it tricky, and wants advice re Wine, or maybe a VM.
Good luck with that, I'd say. He'd be better running a VirtualBox Windows image.
09:07
change cbg
eh, change not reflected in chat -_-
closed
@Aran-Fey If I may ask, how long did it take for your profile changes (including name) to get reflected in Chat? My profile is updated everywhere except chat -_- (good 20 mins now).
09:43
@AshishNitinPatil Just a guess, but maybe it'll update if you leave all chat rooms.
tried that, logged out of everything too.
will retry, thanks
nope, and I don't think it's caching, but I might be too eager and impatient.
Although, for some weird reason, my updated profile didn't get carried over to the network, even when I chose "save for all networks" option twice (or maybe thrice). Updated that (network profile) a while ago, separately.
Will try going off-chat for a while... rbrb
10:01
rbrb shadow =)
no, it's caching, often takes half an hour or more
you can track your profile without sending a message to see when it's changed ;)
then again people logging in an hour from now will see your changed profile in the room, so it'll work retroactively :D
10:16
how am I supposed to list all "folders" inside a directory? (no deep search)
just first level
next(os.walk('.'))[1]
@AndrasDeak in python?
you didn't say anything about python
have you googled "python list directory"?
yes
but I had to search "first level"
did os.listdir not cut it for you?
10:18
so I found that
that gives me the files
check each file if it's a directory?
I still don't know how, but the thing I posted gives the first-level folders
@AndrasDeak how? checking the extension? cause that is not reliable
did you actually look at the documentation of the os module?
nop
that's why I said I don't know how it's working
> it yields a 3-tuple (dirpath, dirnames, filenames).
now it makes sense
os.walk sounds like overkill to me, not that I know the os module well
10:22
updated finally :D (so I was basically impatient / cache is slow)
I'd probably use scandir/listdir with docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.stat
@shad0w_wa1k3r after reload, yes
uf, I don't like how python docs are organised
oh, os.path.isdir, even better
I guess walk is using isdir internally
10:26
by a countryman of mine
@Neoares The very first example in the pathlib docs looks good...
10:47
there's too many ways of doing it
I already chose dir_list = [item for item in os.listdir(path) if os.path.isdir(os.path.join(path, item))]
what I don't know is which one is faster
@shad0w_wa1k3r IIRC it took almost half a day for the name to update for me personally, but other people could already see the new name earlier than that. I guess logging out of chat and re-joining the room might help speed it up
how do I respond to messages from the transcript :I
oh, I got it right the first time. The new name tripped me up.
11:02
@Neoares I suspect pathlib is faster, since it's a relatively new module. Some of its functions are definitely faster than the old ways from os.
Cabbage
@Aran-Fey yeah, that probably did the trick, it's fixed now anyway.
@Aran-Fey it's meant mostly to be safer from sometimes scary places like Reddit comments, Twitter and Twitch chat. Can't do it on GitHub because it would very likely break lot of things and is unnecessary, SO is easier to handle and isn't too affected by name changes, so :shrug:
actually, all your github stuff will still be available under the old name until someone else starts using that name
but yeah, it's definitely safer not to change it
@Aran-Fey I'm aware of that, but just safer / lazy to not change. Also, I get to enjoy dual handle identity :D
jjj
jjj
11:21
cabbage for all
Thanks. That missing grave accent was beginning to annoy me. ;)
jjj
jjj
:D
jpp
jpp
11:59
stackoverflow.com/questions/50370301/… - duplicate (couldn't hammer myself as didn't have [python], I know it's only 2 mins young)
@jpp Hammered
I also added to the dupe target.
jpp
jpp
@PM2Ring, thanks
12:17
Anyone knows which type in the typing module is the correct one for <class 'module'>?
types.ModuleType
cool, that does it. Just a bit unfortunate that I have to import both typing and types
@Arne You could probably also use type(typings) as the type >_<
12:31
@poke test.py:9: error: invalid type comment or annotation
test: ty.List[type(ty)] = []  # the line in question
aww :(
FWIW, I found that image while searching for articles to link to this OP.
13:18
\o cbg
still contemplating on if I should go to this lunch "celebration" for delivering something to a client... The project has been a 4 month process, but I've only worked on it for less than a week and a half, feels like I did nothing why did I get invited to it :\
does so have a store?
Without you, they couldn't have finished.
is it rude for me to decline or should i go meet the clients along with my VPs even though I did what I think is little to no effort
13:21
If I wasn't here someone else on my team would have took it and finished it and they would have gotten invited lol
that t-shirt, does it have another cute animal instead of a kitten ? but on second thought, I wouldn't want a puppy to die.. say no to dying baby animals
Always take an opportunity to meet people. Our type of people have a problem with social skills. We need to take every opportunity to break out of our shells. Seriously, go and talk to clients and people.
social skills lol, I once was in a meeting being asked a question, and I ended up solving the whole problem while trying to explain what the problem was.... lack/poo social skill? I call it problem solving on the fly with humans rather than rubber duckies.
The more you talk to people, the more others are aware of who you are and what you can do. The more others know about who you are and what you can do, the more likely it will be that you are thought of when a problem comes around that needs solving. GO! It's good for you.
And yes, it is impolite not to go (-:
13:37
[off-topic git] stackoverflow.com/a/2006241/2689986 This is all I want. Reading that answer, then finding out that it really works felt soo goood.
@MooingRawr Also, devs usually underestimate their own skills/work and overestimate other's. So, while knowing neither you nor your project, you probably did more than many of the other people who will also sit at that table :p
@shad0w_wa1k3r that's what SO is about. finding good reliable answers to programming questions :D It does feel good following someone's problem who already has an answer for you at the end of the path
Ello
Cbg
The .after() function in TkInter uses integers... Is there a way for it to use floats?
@MrBlob No. Those integers are in milliseconds. Why would you even need floats?
13:52
Cos I am making snake.
And if it's great than one it goes super slow
Then the delay arg to .after isn't your problem.
What would you suggest
I suspect that your code is doing some unnecessary or duplicated work, and that's what's slowing it down. But it's impossible to say without seeing some code.
I suggest you make a MCVE of just a very basic version of your program that does very simple animation, eg just move the snake head around, don't bother eating anything or growing the snake. See if it still has the same slowness problem. If it does, post the code somewhere and link to it here.
   def move(self):

        min_x=0
        max_x=1000
        min_y=0
        max_y=600
        x = self.canvas.coords(self.snake)
        if x[0] > min_x and x[3] < max_x and x[1] > min_y and x[2] < max_y:
            self.canvas.move(self.snake,self.coorsx,self.coorsy)
        else:
            self.game_over()

        self.speed = self.speed
        self.canvas.after(self.speed, self.move)
I don't have anything beside a moving block
14:09
@MrBlob That's not a MCVE. But anyway, I don't see anything in that code that changes self.coorsx or self.coorsy. And self.speed = self.speed is a pointless waste of time.
morning cbg
The probable fix is to not call self.canvas.move, or even do that if x[0] > min_x and x[3] < max_x and x[1] > min_y and x[2] < max_y bounds test unless either of the snake's x or y coordinates have changed since the last time you drew the snake.
o/ cbg @Code
@PM2Ring Those get changed further up
And I am a bit stupid
BTW, that bounds test would be a lot more readable like this (and a little faster):
xlo, ylo, xhi, yhi = self.canvas.coords(self.snake)
if xlo > min_x and xhi < max_x and ylo > min_y and yhi < max_y:
    self.canvas.move(self.snake, self.coorsx, self.coorsy)
14:14
I thought I set speed to 1... Turns out I had it at 10
@MrBlob Ok, reducing it probably won't help much. You need to give Tkinter time to do its work. If you make the delay too small you can get a "traffic jam" of canvas update events that actually slow things down. We spent a bit of time here investigating that. I'll try to find a link...
Oh
Ok
gtg
Why do you define min/max x/y in your function ? :p
@MrBlob Sorry, I got a bit mixed up. Here is the discussion I was thinking of. But it's actually related to a slowdown in plotting pixels in a PhotoImage. You may find it interesting anyway. But the effect I mentioned before is real, and I generally don't use a delay less than 10, and try to keep it to 20 or more, just to be on the safe side.
Today I learned that Pylint fails if you try to analyze Pylint's source code.
14:57
recbg
cbg (thinks about teasing @AndrasDeak...) Endrus
fair warning: I'm still affected by yesterday's wisdom tooth extractions :P
As in grumpy or can only drink through a straw?
@PM2Ring Funny, I always get it working it eventually (well there is once case that is still unsolved), thought you certainly need to know the Python file system very well.
Andras... you know those teeth will be missing for the rest of your life, right? :p
5
15:06
^ True wisdom
@holdenweb Nope none of them can without hacks. If there was everyone would use the same tool :)
@Aran-Fey not unless he puts them in a container to keep. :D
*gestures at glass jar containing teeth* "This is where I keep my spare intelligence"
@Simon Where "everyone" == people who want to turn their Python package into an executable. It seems to be very popular with stuff targeted at Windows users, and to a lesser extent Mac users. But it's rather rare for *nix people. I'm not implying that Windows is hard to use, but I guess Microsoft don't have much incentive making it easier to run Python on their OS, since they don't control Python, and it kind of competes with their proprietary scripting solutions.
@Aran-Fey say it isn't so!
DSM
DSM
15:13
Midweek cabbage for all.
@piRSquared straws are expressly forbidden, the suction could mess with the healing process
cbg @DSM
cabbage, DSM
DSM
DSM
@PM2Ring: it'll be interesting to see if anything comes of the "raising Python to VBA-level" talk.
cbg guys. I was wondering - is this question of mine possibly off topic for SO? I can't tell:
0
Q: rsync hanging indefinitely while sending list of files

OneRaynyDayTo be clear, I am running this exact command(variables changed) in a gnu parallel setting: /usr/bin/parallel -q -j20 rsync --recursive -av -e ssh -oCompression=no -x -T -oUserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -oConnectTimeout=15 -i ssh_key -l some_username --chmod=Dugo+rwx,Fugo+rw --f...

15:22
I may have gone overboard a little with that decorators-on-method-register-with-sets question..
@OneRaynyDay I'm not sure I'd have thought about it, but since you asked it doesn't look very programming-y to me
I'd look around on superuser to see if it's more on topic there
@AndrasDeak yeah, I'm browsing right now
@MartijnPieters you just like OP's name.
I don't know; I see superuser and unix both having the same kind of questions, and not as much SO. So now the question is superuser or unix...
@piRSquared nope. Martin is very much not equal to Martijn. Certainly not where I'm from!
15:28
@OneRaynyDay look at the top bash users on SO and see which other site they use :P
@MartijnPieters well then... seems as if I get to learn about culture today (-:
@MartijnPieters do both names exist?
@AndrasDeak yes.
Is there subtle difference in pronunciation?
15:30
probably not subtle
I suspect Martin is just Martin, whereas Martijn is forvo.com/word/martijn
mornin'... looks like a colourful day so far
cbg
@piRSquared There is a big difference in pronunciation between i and ij.
15:34
Half the time I get in here, I just stumble on people explaining how to pronounce their name
that's multiculturalism for you
I don't know why I assumed the 'j' was silent. I'm glad I made that ignorant comment. I came away more knowledgable.
cabbage
@MartijnPieters What is the difference?
Well actually, I'm confused again...
15:40
One source says 'Mar-tine' and another suggests the 'j' is pronounced with a soft 'j' sound as in 'just'.
I guess I'll just listen to these actual spoken sound samples by myself
Ummm, is there a good "how do I catch an exception" canonical?
IJ (lowercase ij; Dutch pronunciation: [ɛi] ( listen)) is a digraph of the letters i and j. Occurring in the Dutch language, it is sometimes considered a ligature, or even a letter in itself – although in most fonts that have a separate character for ij, the two composing parts are not connected but are separate glyphs, sometimes slightly kerned. An ij in written Dutch usually represents the diphthong [ɛi]. In standard Dutch and most Dutch dialects, there are two possible spellings for the diphthong [ɛi]: ij and ei. This causes confusion for schoolchildren, who need to learn which words to write...
ha, "ij" vs "ei"
DSM
DSM
I've heard MP say it and don't think I can make that sound.
15:43
@Aran-Fey the docs. because that's way basic :P
@piRSquared ij is pronounced as one digraph, not as separate sounds. So there's no soft j, perhaps you got this confused with Spanish or Portuguese.
DSM
DSM
(Speaking of vowel sounds, idjaw & davidism can both confirm now that for me, indeed "bag" does rhyme with "vague".)
we have the consonants "j" and "ly" where the latter is an archaic sound that used to sound differently but today they're both j, and children have to learn the spelling for words containing ly
Speaking of class decorator questions, I saw an odd one a few hours ago: stackoverflow.com/questions/50364173/…
15:48
it's normal that I can't call a self function from __getitem__?
"self function"?
from the same class
"self function"??
self.a(), for example
from the same class as the getitem one
nope, not normal at all
15:49
No, I don't think that should happen. What is self?
@Neoares __getitem__ is just another method, no restrictions on accessing stuff on self.
what
if self is what you think it is, it should have an .a method
Guys, just wanted to mention a little something here
Just got my grades for the sem, and I got a perfect 4.0 :D
5
yes yes, but for some reason it's making something to break...
15:50
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Congrats
@Neoares so perhaps something else is breaking, but we're out of crystal balls
Gratz @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ
so I wanted to ask that before I start lloking at the actual problem
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ what's the max? 4?
15:51
It's like 10
thank you! and yes it's a 4 point system at usc
cool, cool
dict(A=4, B=3, C=2, D=1)
@AndrasDeak I just wanted to know the getitem thing, I'll fix the problem now I know there sohuldn't be any problem
Ah, I see.
well, python is nothing like JS when it comes to this
15:52
I was confused for a second there... Our grades range from 1 to 5, where 5 means you failed. So saying "I got a perfect 4" is like saying "I perfectly almost failed"
and we have 1 to 5 where 5 is best
silly grading systems all around
Where I am half the universities have a system where 4 is the best and the other half has 4.3
It is confusing
well fwiw it's /10 in india
so when I told my dad I got 4 he thought I'd failed :|
You should've led with "Dad, I got 10/10"
You are from India?
15:56
@OlivierMelançon yes, bona fide
That's cool
@piRSquared I'm sure he already knows but just likes messing with me
In Rotterdam, I met a guy from South Africa who insists that ij has two completely different pronunciations in standard Dutch, as opposed to the one pronunciation in nice simple Afrikaans. But every example he came up with that was supposedly pronounced differently in standard Dutch, actual Dutch people pronounced the same way as him, and were confused by his supposed alternative version. After half an hour of this I became convinced that Dutch teachers in SA like to troll their students.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Oh, nice! He's that kind of dad. I like him already (-:
heheh, strikes a chord eh? :p
16:00
I'm reading Deep Learning with Python and there is a warning not to try Keras on Windows. Anyone here has a take on that?
I've read the same thing. Run's fine on os x
@OlivierMelançon In the US, almost every university uses the 4=A scale… but some of them use B as an average pass, some use C, and a few use halfway between, so a 2.5 means C+, pretty good at Johns Hopkins but C+, pretty bad at USC.
@abarnert that's weird
@abarnert have you been to the USC campus before?
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Yeah, that’s where I dropped out of grad school from. One stolen car and two stolen scooters over four semesters to prove it. :)
16:05
My wife went to USC and I've got the broken car windows to prove it.
what's with all the misdemeanors?
rough neighbourhood?
USC is in the middle of South Central LA
first I thought abarnert stole those vehicles himself
6
When the Rodney King riots happened you could see burning buildings all around the campus.
16:06
But the campus was left untouched. None the less, lots of theft occurs to students vehicles
and students
Yes. Plus, it’s (stereotypically) a school full of spoiled rich kids who got BMW convertibles from daddy for high school graduation, plus most of the parking lots are a block from campus and not well secured.
well not theft of students, but bad things happen to students
yeah you've to stay away from the lots and keep your belongings in your pocket at all times (yeah yeah hard to do when you're trying to shove a car in there but still)
I use a skateboard/kick scooter to get around.
baggy pants ftw
and here in the far east we just walk around campus like peasants
indeed
I also stay "on campus" (actually, a couple blocks from campus proper) and in light of the bad activity there, there's always security people standing on guard around the corners
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Congrats on the perfect GPA!
I got a 15-year-old Honda Elite 80 scooter missing half its body panels, because I couldn’t imagine anyone would want it. Got stolen from the motorcycle parking meters across the street from the LAPD substation.
@holdenweb thank you :)
16:10
So my wife through away my SO t-shirt for some unknown reason. And I have no way to replace it /-:
:( sorry for your divorce
lol (-:
Wait there are StackOverflow t-shirts!?
<-- 100k pride
16:11
@piRSquared Just create a new account and get to 100k again.
“Can you take the trash out?” “Sorry, dear, still need to made that last 94017 rep.”
@abarnert yes! and I can just bounty all my rep to new account. (mwahhaha)
"another outstanding answer from @piRR - @piRSquared - 1 min ago"
The danger is that you’ll issue a bounty, write a great answer… and then Martijn comes along and writes an answer so much better than you can’t in good conscience not give him the bounty.
True, that's happened to me before.
we're way past "good conscience" in this scenario
16:14
not a bounty but an attempted Q&A
if anyone watches Food Wars, that's precisely how Soma defended Polar Star.
Every time I wear my SO shirt, I seem to get a Lyft or Uber driver who not only knows what SO is, but knows that the shirt is for 100k and knows far more about the rep system than me.
sounds promising for programming as a career path
@abarnert what did you get for 200k?
I don’t remember. Is that the mug?
16:21
Out of curiosity, has anyone here used x86 assembly in a project along with Python?
Does writing a C extension module with a bit of inline assembly count?
@abarnert yes
@abarnert What was the extension for?
@abarnert I thought you get the mug AND tee at 100k
wait don't tell me you get another mug?
I don't think you get anything above 100k
what am I going to do with all those mugs, I don't drink that much coffee D:
@AndrasDeak so you would think... guess there's only one way to truly be sure
16:25
Mug + T + stickers @ 100k; Mug is safely at work (away from wife)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Yes, ask MP
if you can't ask em, join em :P
@Ajax1234 I was actually testing out different sync objects to be used in some C++ code, and wrapped it in a C API extension so I could drive it with Python. The assembly was just things like doing a 64-bit compare-and-swap when gcc didn’t have an intrinsic for that.
@abarnert Ah, interesting
@PM2Ring Undeniably true. :)
@Simon Sorry, this may seem odd, but can you reply in such a way that it's obvious what you're replying to? I'd like to follow your thread of conversation
16:51
Hey guys, if my python is in ~/pythons/anaconda2/envs/python36/bin/python, and I cp -R ~/pythons/anaconda2/envs/python36 into another place, and use the copy
will it 100% work or will there be caveats?
There are two options here:
1. Why not try it and find out?
2. Why not definitely not do that in the first place?
@KevinMGranger I am trying it and it looks like I can open an IDLE, I'm just not sure if there's anything sketchy that I'll figure out 2 years from now
2. I'm doing that because of some stupid rules
@PM2Ring nice, ty
@piRSquared I meant to reply earlier but got distracted: It'd be a longshot, but you could try emailing SO and asking for a replacement, offering to pay?
00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

« first day (2769 days earlier)      last day (2406 days later) »