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00:21
You know how you can make a simple color animation with a Necker cube, so you can get people to flip back and forth easily between the two views? There’s a music video (I think seek200 by Information Society) that syncs that to a beat, and after watching the video, any Necker cubes and even some other optical illusions that you look at for the next few minutes will flip back and forth every second automatically. I wonder if you could do something similar with Laurel/Yanny with a visual strobe?
Repeat it once/second for about 30 seconds with the eq on the audio alternating each time, and flash a strobe in sync with it. Then see if they flip back and forth for you for a while even without the eq.
Actually, maybe you don’t even need the strobe; it’s probably more about hearing being tied to rhythm than connections between hearing and vision being tied to rhythm?
I'd be very interested in that if you can find it
 
1 hour later…
01:33
cbg
01:53
@abarnert Two pee pees when there should only be one pee really grinds my gears
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Actually, “scrap” for “scrape” seems to carry a lot more semantic meaning than most typos. There’s a pretty high correlation between “I want to scrap a website” and “Why does this random BS3/Python2.5 code I copied and pasted without understanding it give me some parser error when I run it with BS4 and Python 3.6 against a different site that has a similar name?”
I'd be all for "scrap"ping that code
02:10
Bur often, if they give you a link and you click on it, scrapping the website seems like a pretty good idea. I’m tempted to link them to a root kit and tell them how to make it rm the httpd directory.
savage
02:46
recbg
@wim Wow, two downvotes even after I "fixed" ajax' solution for him... poor kid
03:09
Does this question fall under "Off-topic"?
It seems that he is asking for a recommended library.
Flagging it though.
DSM
DSM
Yep, I think it's OT, but that's a cause for a close vote, not a flag.
wim
wim
03:26
shame the accepted answer on the "key with max value" isn't the good (top-voted) one.
@DSM or we can edit it from "need a lib" to "how do i?"
DSM
DSM
s/we can/one could/g
(I still don't think it's a great Q, but I also don't care overmuch.)
wim
wim
@DSM did you enjoy PyCon this year
DSM
DSM
@wim: yep, quite a bit (weather excepted), although I'm not sure it was worth the expense. Compared against going to something either more numerically-focused or something equally broad but more local, I mean.
wim
wim
I thought the talks were below average this year
below average doesn't mean bad, mind you.
03:35
Anyone planning on coming to PyTexas this year?
wim
wim
which city is that in
I believe it's at A&M this year, but if not it'll probably be in Austin again
wim
wim
never been to Texas but heard good things about Austin
Cleveland was a bit weird, some beautiful old architecture but the streets and buildings seems empty
DSM
DSM
Downtown was astonishingly clean. Which is probably easier to maintain given it's a ghost town..
Never liked Cleveland much when I lived up north. I really like Houston and Austin down here, if I relocated somewhere in Texas it would be to Austin.
DSM
DSM
03:42
Okay, time to watch the end of this game and get to sleep. Rhubarb for all!
03:58
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais I'm not sure if the question is invalid or not. The OP is asking for a workaround for a requests problem that was fixed in 2013, because of reading a blog post from 2013 instead of reading the docs, or just trying it.
@abarnert I see. Didn't check the link.
04:13
I was pleasantly surprised by Austin when I spent two weeks there a year or two ago. It really doesn't feel like you're in Texas. And more than just "still the South, but at least it's a college town" way like Athens or RTP; it was actually a pretty fun place.
I've been to Houston once. It was hot, and humid. I didn't like it
Austin feels very different than the other major cities in Texas, feels a lot like Asheville, NC. Lots of hippies.
Can't relate... Like Woodstock maybe?
Do lots of people at Woodstock have "Keep Woodstock Weird" bumper stickers?
I... don't remember, it was a long time ago. But I remember the crowd there was kinda different in a certain way :)
04:21
I didn't like Houston at all. Dallas even less. I was born in San Antonio, but I left when I was 4. It wasn't too terrible when I revisited. Everything else I've visited is a dump, except maybe Amarillo, which has a weird New Mexico-ish feel to it instead of Texas. (Which you'd expect more from El Paso.)
Are people actually legitimately upvoting this question, or is this sockpuppets or classmates or something and I'm not just crazy?
The OP has clearly copied someone else's code that does 80% of his homework. And then, instead of asking how to do the last 20%, he's asking how to do the part he already did (or copied). When asked for clarification, he says that he doesn't know how to do the part he already did. And he has 5 upvotes in well under an hour.
Short, non-descriptive variable names: check, completely unclear what the issue is with the code: check, First paragraph sounds like it came right from a homework assignment: check
04:53
Is it just me or are menu-driven programs written in python (with loads of while loops and if statements) totally ick?
actually, menu-driven programs written in general
05:05
Not sure if it applies to what you're talking about, but menu design is something that is often shunted off to developers when it really is one of the most important aspects of UX
@piRSquared the verdict is in
hmmm, this style is a not nice for me... like you scream to me. only my opinion — jezrael 6 mins ago
so I'm going to tone it down a bit... from # to ###
I wrote lots of programs like that in TRS-80 and Apple BASIC. Next step should be a Hammurabi-type game, but nobody seems to do that anymore.
@chrisz I'm talking about menu driven programs for things like rock paper scissors or silly rpg simulations
choice = input("enter y to continue, n to start a new game, and q to quit: ")
while choice != 'q': ...
Having flashbacks to COMP 101 freshman year of uni :S
jezreal's comments crack me up
I had a professor from belarus... as close as you'd get to slovakia probably. Oh wait, my roommate is russian. I can only imagine his spoken english. But they do try... gotta give em that... not the most eloquent wordsmiths but I'm sure their russian's good enough to compensate ;)
05:28
@chrisz Hold up... when did you get to 9k? I think the first time we interacted was here, earlier this year
and you were hardly a few hundred something then.
I started learning Python at the beginning of 2018, decided to learn by answering questions here
I think I was at like ~300 or something when I started answering regularly
noice... it's not the fastest way but the most reliable
@chrisz : that's very inspiring! Don't mind me. I'm just here, readying to spam you guys with noob questions later. Just kidding! Just stopping by to say that this chat system is awesome :D
05:43
@chrisz Commended!
Wasn't exactly my own choice, all my projects are work were migrated from the tensorflow c++ api to python :)
Oh. @chrisz, I should try your technique when I decide to finally teach myself Elixir. Anyways, that's a brilliant way of learning!
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais Hey, Elixir has tutorials and books and stuff now? Nice. When I taught myself, it was just a 2-page "getting started", a terse syntax reference, and a bunch of links to Erlang. Kind of like learning Tkinter via the Tcl/Tk docs.
@abarnert, yep. Got caught up with academic work so I am not able to learn Elixir as much as I would like.
Woah, the Erlang/OTP room is eerily quiet.
05:55
Erlang is the only language from after 1980 where the syntax actively hurts me to read. I tried pretty hard, but couldn't get past it. Elixir seems like a great solution to that problem, but by the time it was ready for prime time, the project I wanted to use it for was over, and I never came back.
Got me wondering. In what cases would Python be a better choice than Elixir?
@davedwards I'm not sure what to do with that input question
Since the whole issue has been changed from the original question. I have a mind to roll-back but not sure if we do that with closed questions.
@roganjosh I was at a loss too, see the updated question (we've seen it all)
I managed to piece the original misunderstanding together and answered the first question because the other 3 answers didn't cover the actual traceback properly
Most cases. Python is still much more readable than Elixir. There are a ton of libraries and frameworks for the Python ecosystem that don't exist for the Erlang one. C FFI is a little easier, and custom C extensions are much easier. There's a much bigger community of developers in Python, whether you're looking to attract open source contributors or hire for a corporate project. And so on.
06:05
@roganjosh yes, indeed, the lack critical info in the question led to confusion and wasted good answers. OP updated question with clear problem, and is currently asking more guidance in the comments.
very well stated response roganjosh 👍
Thanks. I'm still debating the rollback to 4 :)
06:21
@abarnert I see
06:58
Ramadan Kareem to all Muslim friends!
cbg
cbg
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais Of course there are also cases where Elixir is better. There are some libraries and frameworks for the Erlang ecosystem that don't exist for the Python one. I wouldn't want to try to write telecom switches with CPython (even if it were possible to handle enough concurrency through coroutines, which it probably isn't).
And some problems just scream out for a CSP-style solution and would be clunky to translate to a await-style solution. In which case, even if there isn't a library issue, Elixir (or maybe Crystal, Go, Zig, etc.) will be better than Python (or F#, C#, etc.).
While searching for a good python logging setup (again..) I saw that python boilerplate recommends logzero. On the surface, it looks like what pytest is in comparison to unittest, but I never heard about it before. Can anyone here vouch for it?
@abarnert it looks like you're locking horns with jezrael... for your own sanity, I recommend staying away.
Full disclosure, I've upvoted both your answers because they are genuinely good and solve OP's problems. That user's a tag bully, and I've had a lot of issues with him in the past by doing exactly as you've done here... it's not worth it, and I learned that after a long painful process.
07:17
cbg
to the flask and bokeh experts here: I started a bounty for this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/50297490/… and would appreciate if you could take a look. There are two answers that solve the problem but I think the quality could be improved (that's why I started the bounty). Thanks!
07:28
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Yeah, I deleted most of my comments and gave up. At first it seemed like maybe there was just a minor language barrier, then maybe a minor language barrier badly exacerbated by someone who refuses to admit they have a language barrier (OK, hot dog!), but it's clearly something more than that, and not worth diving into.
@abarnert: But great that you added those answers. As a pandas amateur I usually treat his answers as law, so it is good to know that one sometimes has to be careful...
@Cleb psst, he's not the only answerer on the tag ya know (cue indignation)
@abarnert yeah... on behalf of every other good natured user from the pandas tag, I'm sorry you had to go through that
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ: I know, I like your answers too (you answered quite a few of my questions actually)
@Cleb I seem to notice a trend wherein if I and jez answer the same question at the same time, it's usually his that's accepted just cuz, even if it isn't better and even if his answer is more a butchery of the English language than anything else... but ofc you don't need to know English to be a good programmer.
anyway, thanks for the complement! And welcome to room 6 :)
What you see is actually an improvement now. It was so bad last year. He used repwfarm like nothing you ever seen, answer dupes and typos, and bully anyone else who dared take a stab at a question.
cabbage..
07:40
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ: I guess that's just a general thing that people go with the answer provided by the user with the highest reputation
Yes, and I used to dislike that as long as I was on the receiving end >:| ... it's better now though :)
at least I noticed that several times that I though "This answer does not explain anything just gives the solution while the 100 rep user explains each step"
I have a fundamental question.. Why do we need object-oriented programming in python? I am building a small project , why would I need OOP based design? i am not going to have reuseable functions and all , just plain functions which will have onejob to do.
Yeah my English is literally my only weapon against the guy lmao ... and it sometimes wins out. He's started trying harder after he figured out why he wasn't getting accepted as much :p
I dont get this whole OOP concept of class and objects and stuff.. If i need something from a function I can simply call it right?
Can someone give me a scenario where it would be wise to use OOP instead of default non OOP approach?
@shad0w_wa1k3r Yes, I understand those advantages but those mostly apply if you are building a huge enterprise level application with a large number of developers .
C is not an OOP lang, but it can be used just fine, and is (of course) Turing complete. Basically, you can still do everything with it. OOP comes into play because C++ (C with OOP?) is so much better to work with, specially if you are used to it.
But , what If i am building a simple application for myself. and probabaly one more guy. Does OOP make sense there?
....shad0w_wa1k3r....? ..........
OH, HI ASHISH!
@Anarach no, simple projects also need most of things listed in that link
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ :D
07:47
@shad0w_wa1k3r Hmm.. I dont understand that part..
It's like, once you are used to working with Android Oreo, Symbian 6 feels like PITA to work with.
I know what all functions do , why do I need to encapsulate them in a convoluted wrapper ?
i keep forgetting name changes are a thing here. Fun fact, I haven't changed my username since I was rep 500. If you go to my earliest questions you'll see users pinging me with my first username, my actual name.
Sure, your Symbian 6 might still get your work done, but why'd you use it when you can do everything faster, easier & maintainable in Android Oreo.
@shad0w_wa1k3r So OOP is faster?
07:48
Doesn't mean non-OOP langs don't have their place.
@Anarach do everything faster translates to programming efficiency rather than computational.
Haha didn't know l33t sp34k was still in fashion
How is OOP faster than non OOP.. in python?
@Anarach code reuse, inheritance, etc
ALso.. Apologies if these are moronic questions.. I am not a developer , just started learning it.
Faster dev time, maybe?
Not moronic at all. Actually my autocorrect is mornonic.
And there's a prime example ^
07:53
@Anarach The idea that OOP magically gives you reuse is silly. That only really works if you make your language as dynamic as Smalltalk/Python/Ruby… and once you do that, you don't need it. But there are some kinds of problems that mentally model well with inheritance. Especially simulations, and GUI interfaces.
@shad0w_wa1k3r Hey .. I have a piece of python code which works absolutely fine.. Would you take some time to change it into Object oriented format? I promise its very basic and for someone like you should be a piece of cake.. I just want to know how to do it.. like where can i should opt to use OOP.
@Anarach Also, even forgetting inheritance: if you need to capture and isolate some state to use across multiple calls of multiple functions, an instance of a class and a collection of closures over a scope do nearly the exact same thing—but there are usually huge conceptual differences. Trying to read or debug code that's using nonlocals as attributes, or attributes as nonlocals, means constantly translating back and forth in your head. And it's even worse if you need to introspect or debug it.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ It'll forever be in fashion :D I have it because that's what I started with early in the day, and it's easier to get the username everywhere.
back in the day*
This is my code I would be eternally grateful if someone could tell me how to and where to or even if I should think about OOP.
07:56
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I ended up with both abarnert and andrewbarnert on separate email addresses and got them merged back when I was <100 rep.
if you are on windows
@Anarach If you call that short code, you're in for surprises when it comes to OOPs :D
@shad0w_wa1k3r Its only 300 lines and there are plenty of blank spaces and comments in between..
@abarnert I absolutely do not follow your statement :-(
@Anarach Some pointers - Have the functions separated out, as much as you can. You should define functions independently (not under a flow logic), or group them under a class (if that'd help / makes sense, design-wise)
08:00
@shad0w_wa1k3r Oh.. Got it! thanks.
I'd suggest you take a couple more tutorials for OOPs or program design.
"group them under a class" What is the use of that?
And look at some sample code (and work on smaller things)
Okay..
@Anarach you'll understand after you've learnt a bit of OOPs
08:01
Most programs are not just a linear chain of steps. Your pretty much is. It's a long chain of steps, but it's just "do this messy thing, then do that other messy thing, then do that completely different messy thing". There's not much opportunity for reuse or refactoring in code like that. But, again, most code isn't like that.
@abarnert Omgg Exactly!!
Ohhh so I am doing it in a way (which is wrong) Thus I do not find use of OOP
Best way to go is, how they do it in regular academia, try and solve (after learning) small problems like Fibonacci sequence generator, etc.
Thank you!
I don't think you're necessarily doing it wrong. Some problems, it really is just a whole bunch of messy things one after another, with no way to abstract it out or clean it up. When you run into one of those problems, you write a big long linear program.
Then once you are comfortable writing small functions and using them nicely, go with a little bigger problems / tasks.
08:04
@abarnert Hmmmmm..
:42572421 I'd recommend Python (OOP), after you've learnt C (non-OOP).
Definitely not C++ or Java! The only language that might be better than Python for OOP is Smalltalk. Basically the same model, but it forces you to think about the fact that you're doing OOP, and its IDEs are all about showing you your object relationships graphically.
@shad0w_wa1k3r The problem Is I do not know how and where to USE OOP in python and after a lot of head scratching for the benefit of time end up using non OOP.
@abarnert Smalltalk.. Never heard of it but I shall give it a try.
And, instead of learning on your own, I'd recommend taking a MOOC from Coursera or Udacity.
08:07
1969 ??? Woahhhhhhhhhh.. Holy..
Think of the objects that you're using in you code—you didn't write them, but someone had to. A Workbook object owns zero or more Sheet objects, etc. How does usheet keep track of all of its different cells, and let you access them and modify them, and then remember that it's been modified so it needs to recalc stuff later when you save? That's what I mean by "state". You don't pass all that information into every method you call on a Sheet; the Sheet remembers it all.
smalltalk is older than my parents.
I'm not much of an OOP guy. Anyone reading OOP code written by me will likely go "oops".
@abarnert Oooo Right Right..
If you're actually interested in Smalltalk, you probably want to look at one of its modern dialects, like Pharo. Unless you've got an old Xerox minicomputer and display terminal lying around, Pharo will be a lot easier to run, and it'll look more familiar.
08:11
Well, nah. I managed just fine when I was working on Salesforce SFDC. But that doesn't mean I enjoyed it
@abarnert Okay.. In this example. the dude who made that library wanted many people to use it so he used OOP to do it but in my case, I am the only guy who is going to ever use it.
If I had enjoyed all that mind numbing OOP code crunching, I wouldn't be here in LA attending grad school
@abarnert I am going to give pharo a shot. Thanks..
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I second the "Mind numbing part"
It's not just about making it reusable, it's about making it simpler. Would you want to pass in all the relevant variables (list of cells, 2D shape, etc.) to very function you call with a workbook, and get back a bunch of results that you have to store? It would get messy pretty fast.
@abarnert Ahh... Makes sense.
08:15
I wish Andrew had been my teacher in school ;-)
Also, you don't necessarily have to always write OOP code, but it helps if you know it and understand it if you see one.
Design concepts are useful when you know when & where to use them. They make your life easy.
Design Concepts! Noted!
Are they and Design Patterns same?
yeah, paterns
I saw a course in my office training videos about design patterns
Well .. I am going to enroll myself.
Thank you :-D
newbies_helped_count += 1
08:26
Just finished my morning check of all my systems and... they're all working as expected. No pallet trucks slammed into the display systems, no power breakers tripped, no virus scan crashing my VM, and a Raspberry Pi 3 B+ running without a complete crash for 24 hours. What sorcery is this?
"Design patterns" is mostly just a collection of tricks for doing things that would be trivial in a powerful-enough language, but are complicated in Java because of its limitations. For example, Python doesn't have "the factory pattern"—classes are first-class values, so the factory for MyClass is just MyClass itself. And "the singleton pattern" is just a module global. And so on.
08:47
where can I paste python code to share with people? like jsfiddle for JS
If you just want it to be readable with nice formatting, gist. If you want it to be runnable directly in the browser, I think repl.it is the most popular place, if you don’t need most third-party modules, or anything with graphics.
I like the collaborative code editors.
If you also do, you can try some sites like Stipy, or collabedit.com :)
I'll take a look
for the moment, I'm trying to override the iter method of a class, with negative results
worked with __len__ and __getitem__
but not with __iter__
oh wait, the first 2 are @abstractmethod
the iter is implemented :P
Look, you can for instance, past your code there. http://collabedit.com/7r8nj (This is a new blank page where I wrote a comment)
And you can interact with people, on the same code.
jpp
jpp
09:02
Mrng, cbg
has anyone noticed that bounties are often answered by green beans? not a problem in itself if the answers are good / correct.. but I would have thought they'd start with non-bounties.
(and, no, this isn't just about my bounty :p)
Has anyone tried the “live help” feature on PythonTutor? Being able to share not just code, but an interactive visualizer seems like it would be great. But I’ve never found anyone looking for help with an interesting question there.
jpp
jpp
@abarnert, No, this is the first time I've heard of PythonTutor
It’s an interactive visualizer, kind of like a debugger plus graphical object browser, except that you can step backward as well as forward. Very coll
for figuring ouf where things went wrong in a simple program, or showing someone how a linked list splice works
it's normal that I overrided the __iter__ method, added a bunch of prints, removed the "yield" and I see no changes?
I don't know what you're doing, but my gut says "no"
09:15
I suppose that would be normal if you never iterate the object…
@jpp yes, that's a thing. Add high visibility and enticing rep and all sorts of crap will start coming in. Don't forget to downvote otherwise these posts might get 50% of the bounty automatically
@Aran-Fey monkeypatching Keras or something
no, they tell you you can override it :P
Ah
Perhaps you're doing it wrong ;)
it's like Keras is not using the iter method
You can come on the above collabedit if you want to contribute. I'm curious to know the solution. :p
09:31
recbg
it's like keras is not iterating using __iter__ lol
uh, I already said that
If anyone has spare wisdom teeth, please donate them here. Thanks.
Yo guys, we're planning to provide recommendations on the CS curriculum of my high school, and we're planning to let Python be the first language they get to know. What do you think?

We're aiming to make the students think of CS as not just programming, which the current curriculum does, but as a way to help them with their decisions in life, ala "as a way of life" but not really.
For context, high school in my country takes 6 years. It is divided into 2: first four years called the junior years (junior high, or commonly just high school), and the last two years called the senior years (senior high).
cabbage all
09:42
cabbage to you too
I don't know if learning programming with python first is a good idea.
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais I'm always split between python and assembler as a good first choice. Depends on the person, really.
@Arne I have bad memories with Assembler. #NoToAssemblerAgain
I personally have learned programming in School42, Paris. And we were only allowed to use C at the beginning.
In my experience, people who have absolutely no clue about programming have an easier time with really low level stuff
09:45
Unless, of course, I have to work on low-level.
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais scratch.mit.edu/educators is IMO better than Python, for high school kids.
IMO, it gave me a great insight at what is going on under the hood when I got interested in python.
I know exactly 1 person who was taught programming with python as their first language, and they ended up disliking it. So I'm not sure if I like python as an introductory language
(particularly because of the purpose of the course)
We're still deciding between:

* C
* C++ <- prolly not since it's quite... big?
* Python
* Scratch
09:47
I know kids that are learning Python here in France in programming school.
@Aran-Fey Wouldn't that be different per person?
Unfortunately, all I can see is kids that are learning the answers by heart, and they don't try to understand the logic behind.
My recommendation is always C
@IMCoins I got into Assembler and ended up having a frienemy relationship with it.
But C is hardly the sexiest language, and not sure how easy it is to keep kids invested in it.
09:48
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais C++ is easily the worst choice in that list
@Arne, obviously.
Should I throw in Brainfuck into the mix for the lols?
@IMCoins, sad.
You got to keep your student interested. I think giving a glimpse at what programming can do is always interesting. Showing a brainfuck program will make them laugh, and it might give them some interest. :)
If I had unlimited resources, I'd go for either scratch or C in a practical course coupled with a theoretics course in which simple logic gates, bitshifting is explained
I was thinking of suggesting thay they don't start with some language itself. I won't even suggest flowcharts! I was thinking of letting them start by "How to Make A Sandwich".
That's how I actually learned programming after wasting one semester with Java
09:51
@IMCoins, that could be funny. :) Haha!
@Arne, wouldn't that be a bit overkill for newbies to CS? Though I could think of teaching that during the 8th grade.
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais 'what is an algorithm' seems like a good point to start.
Their 7th grade is dedicated to "how to use a computer and the apps in it"
I don't know. This seems to be fun. But how would you make the sandwich, you'd use a func like `def make_sandwich(*toppings):` ? You would have to explain the `*toppings` syntax, but they need (IMO) to learn loooooooots of other things before this notion.
So starting with this one might not be the best idea.
@Arne, are you referring to Prof. Malan's Ted Ed video?
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais logic gates are nice and simple.. aren't they?
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais no, I don't know him. I just thought that's what you mean by 'how to make a sandwhich', and how programs are really just elaborate recipes
09:53
@IMCoins, I mean, an actual sandwich. Like they'll list the steps to making a sandwich. And if they decide to tomato it, it's gonna be their loss since they have to eat the sandwich.
@Arne, oh. Well, yeah. "What's an algorithm" is what I am thinking too. But indeed, logic gates are fun! Maybe before we get into the actual coding part?
ha, that could be hilarious
have them work in pairs, one has a set of instructions they can do, like cut and spread and the other one instructs, and the instructing one has to eat the sandwich
the instructed one would of course try to misinterpret as much as they can, and doing that they understand how computers work
Hey, good idea! Haha! That'd be fun!
Hold up, you guys alright with me screenshotting this? We'll include it in the document for the proposal.
I donate my royalties to the international sandwich society
Include this in the screenshot please 🎉✨🌟 ✨🎉
09:58
But I don't know about your school, but to me, the most important thing is to understand what you are doing.
Indeed.
@Arne, here you go!
In my school, we could copy an entire answer on the internet. I mean. If I was asked to make a program that would sort any kind of list in C, and I'd just c/c an internet answer, I'd still have the best grade !
But I was also asked to explain my code, and If I couldn't, it meant I didn't understand it, meaning I failed, and got the worst grade.
10:19
Morning cbg
Closed
11:20
Really, this was so bad it needed deleting? stackoverflow.com/questions/12125412/…
I don't necessarily want to mod-wrangle it with a veto undelete (not when I have an answer on it, conflict of interest), but I'd like to see if it can't be undeleted anyway because the Perl functionality isn't otherwise directly reflected in Python.
I'm not a fan of "does language X feature exist in language Y?" questions because they're completely worthless for people who don't know language X, but it's not so bad that it should've been deleted, no
jpp
jpp
11:34
Advice: this answer looks wrong, but accepted. Can someone see if I'm right or wrong?
@IMCoins, interesting but isn't in some cases, learning is more about the journey than the destination?
@jpp got your back. Checking it now.
Haven't done pandas-related but will try
jpp
jpp
ah but this particular issue isn't pandas specific (too much anyway)
jpp
jpp
I just don't want it to get lost in the ether after a few weeks and be the only accepted / upvoted solution. if it's wrong.
What does the ~ operator do? Just saw it in the answer.
jpp
jpp
11:40
it means negate / negative vectorised
e.g. ~[True, False] will become [FAlse, True] in pseudo-code
I thought ~ was inverting the bits. Or maybe that's what you meant with "negative vectorised".
If I remember correctly with my logic gates class (I forgot the exact name), ~ is used for NOT.
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais I appreciate =)
NOT is '!' , right ?
11:44
Yeah ~ is inverting bits so technically ~x+1 is used for negating a number
at least in 2's complement
I think ! is for logical NOT. And ~ is for bitwise NOT.
Yes, that I agree.
But some languages do also use ~ for logical NOT
looking at you MATLAB
11:46
It must be confusing to translate some matlab to python matplotlib if the syntax isn't the same.
@jpp, the answer seems but maybe a little inefficient
jpp
jpp
@SeanFrancisN. so set(x) will always give the same order for a given x ?
since sets are implemented as dicts, yes
jpp
jpp
but surely this should not be relied upon?
in Python 3.6 maybe
But that's a precondition, no?
only 3.6 forward, before that it was a cpyhton implementation detail
11:58
3
Q: Why python set displays in "same" order if sets are unordered?

palerdotI'm taking a first look at the python language from Python wikibook. For sets the following is mentioned - We can also have a loop move over each of the items in a set. However, since sets are unordered, it is undefined which order the iteration will follow. and the code example given is s = ...

it happens to be that way but shouldn't be relied on
jpp
jpp
I think assuming 3.6+ makes the answer wrong. It needs to be spelled out.
At a minimum, it's bad practice. Yes.
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais ! is not logical not in python
It would help if you could supply an example where it is wrong
@jpp it doesn't mean that. ~ in general is bitwise not, but numpy and friends overload binary operators on arrays for elementwise operations
not is logical not. ! is not logical not
jpp
jpp
12:00
I said pseudo-code for a reason
in the context of a specific question.
@Arne, so in Python 3.6+, sets are no longer ordered?
I just saw too many dubious claims in the transcript
@jpp correction, it is also a detail in python 3.6+ docs.python.org/3.6/whatsnew/3.6.html#new-dict-implementation
Sets aren't ordered, dicts are
12:01
but aren't sets just value-less dicts?
apparently not
May 8 at 14:53, by Andras Deak
Dec 6 '17 at 19:52, by Andras Deak
that was 3.6 where sets happen to be ordered, probably
see the linked transcript
jpp
jpp
@Arne, For your counterexample, consider: Note that as of Python 3.3, a random hash seed is used as well...This means that the order of a given dictionary is then also dependent on the random hash seed for the current Python invocation.
I guess that means for a given Python script, it'll work.
But it's just a bad answer, not wrong. Fair enough.
@IMCoins see my clarification above
jpp
jpp
At least the guy admitted it: Thanks for the hint of sets not being ordered as I had the exact opposite in my mind.
it's an easy mistake to make
12:08
To conclude, sets in Python are arbitrarily ordered.
I believe so
jpp
jpp
In addition, OrderedSet is not implemented (but IMHO should be)
I'm pretty sure the very same discussion came up around my linked message
yeah, including us both
jpp
jpp
@AndrasDeak, Memory of a goldfish :S
you don't need memory if you have a persistent transcript
jpp
jpp
12:12
Yes, you do. You have to remember you have a persistent transcript.
there's no pleasing you :P
So guys, prior to 3.6, there is no order in a dict?
And the order would be random?
"random" I think
and in 3.6 it's a cpython implementation detail, it's a language feature from 3.7
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Fair enough. Explains my troubles before with 3.5.
@AndrasDeak, 3.7 is in the works?
12:15
I moved on from 3.5 to never look back to a time before fstrings
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais beta already
RC should come out.. next week i think
Oh what? So ordered dicts are to be expected?
yup, to be relied on
@AndrasDeak Thanks for clarification. I'm curious as to how do "numpy and friends" implemented their ~ though. :)
12:17
So it's in the final specs already?
@IMCoins as simple as overloading the corresponding magic methods
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais After RC only bugfixes
@Arne, just read the PEP on fstrings. WE NEED THEM FSTRINGS!
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais 3.6 has f-strings
Ohhh cool!
I am stuck with 3.5.2
Still gonna upgrade to 3.6
12:18
you should, it's fun :)
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais I'm still fond of <string>.format() method. :D
@IMCoins, who wouldn't love that kind of formatting? It's just so simple.
f-strings are fast
Got some benchmark?
@AndrasDeak idk If I made myself clear with this message, but I meant the behaviour. How does numpy ~ differ from python ~, when used on list, as you explained. :)
12:23
if used on a list it will give you an error
jpp
jpp
@IMCoins, your question is a dup: stackoverflow.com/questions/13600988/…
otherwise I'm pretty sure ~ and the others when applied to numpy arrays eventually end up on logical_not, logical_and etc, which are ufuncs and have very func implementations github.com/numpy/numpy/blob/…
@jpp ouch. That's indeed wrong.
Give them [True, 1, 1.0] and [1, True, 1.0] and [1.0, True, 1] and see if that produces output they can live with ;-)
to the flask and bokeh experts here: I started a bounty for this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/50297490/… and would appreciate if you could take a look. There are two answers that solve the problem but I think the quality could be improved (that's why I started the bounty). Thanks! (I posted that earlier already but now there are a few other people in the chat room that might be able to help)
@IMCoins OK, so apparently the logical operators aren't defined on the array level, but they are delegated to the scalars inside the arrays. So it's not np.array() that does the magic, but rather np.bool_
>>> ~True
-2
>>> ~np.bool_(True)
False
>>> ~np.array(True)
False
>>> ~np.array(True, dtype=object)
-2
I think this means that unary operators such as invert (<-> logical not I think) are just done elementwise, so whatever ~elem does for each elem in array
but don't quote me on this one, half guessing here
12:53
Morning cbg
user image
10
Well I won't see that type of sequence again for quite some time
cbg

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