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00:32
Hey does anybody know if numpy, scipy, and opencv are compatible with pypy? I am fine with both python 2.7 and python 3.6, and even slightly older versions of opencv, numpy, and scipy
does pypy not say anything about that?
numpy is "known to work" pypy.org/compat.html
scipy is red, opencv not listed packages.pypy.org
@AndrasDeak well it says about numpy being compatible and has some documentation on that.. opencv they had one example, but nothing on how to install... similarly recent scipy releases says they are compatible but say nothing on how to install
but let's be honest, opencv is always a pain
@AndrasDeak lol not so much if using something like conda...
@AndrasDeak i think it has something to do with the whl files not being compatible maybe?
I tried numpy, and I think I had to install manually but then the tests were messed up
you see, they have this for opencv:
but nothing on how to get opencv on your system
Oh my goodness that += question was a minefield
00:41
btw I had a question on scipy with pypy but no activity:
0
Q: installing SciPy with PyPy on Windows

TanMathI am trying to install SciPy with PyPy on Windows. I installed PyPy with the windows 32-bit zip on the website. I installed numpy using python setup.py install. I tried to install scipy with pip install scipy or related commands, I always get a "NotFoundError: no lapack/blas resources found" erro...

Actually, looks like it used to not be possible, it is now
What version of scipy pypy?
@chrisz yes, except I tried and it didn't work...
What versions?
@chrisz scipy was the latest (1.1.0 IIRC?) and also the pypy (6.0)
I assume you need to install lapack
00:45
@chrisz lol and how would that be done? though I assumed that was part of numpy?
scipy release on github says: "This release has improved but not necessarily 100% compatibility with the PyPy Python implementation. For running on PyPy, PyPy 6.0+ and Numpy 1.15.0+ are required."
Nope, it's not. I've never installed it on windows, but I'm sure if you google it you could find it
@chrisz I couldn't find anything useful or anything I understood most of them with regards to scipy and lapack said just use the whls...
28
Q: What is the easiest way to install BLAS and LAPACK for scipy?

MarkoI would like to run a programme that someone else has prepared and it includes scipy. I have tried to install scipy with pip install scipy but it gives me a long error. I know there are ways with Anaconda and Canopy but I think these are long ways. I would like to have a short way. I have als...

mostly referring to this question
numpy 1.15.0+, talk about bleeding-edge
@AndrasDeak lol hmm could that be the problem? like maybe it requires some developer's version?
yup, newest stable on pypi is 1.14.3
01:03
@AndrasDeak hmmm but what about this answer:
3
A: Is it possible to install scipy under pypy?

pv.Yes, it is possible, starting from Scipy 1.1.0. New enough PyPy (>= 6.0.0) and Numpy are however required, numpy>= 1.14.3, and preferably numpy>=1.15.0 when it's released. Installation can be done via the usual pypy3 -mpip install numpy pypy3 -mpip install scipy assuming you have BLAS/LAPACK i...

"required <=1.14.3, preferably >=1.15.0", which is to say it will never work with stable, and might work with 1.15.0, as I read it
but anyway I've never used pypy so your googling is as good as mine :)
@AndrasDeak oh lol ok...
do you know anything about installing LAPACK/BLAS though?
Only via package managers. I imagine it shouldn't be deadly to compile them from source
@AndrasDeak which package managers?
01:06
@AndrasDeak oh so on windows probably have to compile from source then?
I haven't really used windows in 10+ years, so... :P
@AndrasDeak :(
these might help assuming it's still relevant stackoverflow.com/a/29860484/5067311
anyway, bedtime for me
rhubarb
bye...
@AndrasDeak i saw that but those instructions were too complicated for me lol... or i guess i just didn't understand it...
see also this answer stackoverflow.com/a/34949400/5067311, someone commented near the top that this worked
gohlke has been mentioned here as a go-to source of packages compiled for windows, I believe
that's it from me :P
01:14
@AndrasDeak but they supposedly are unsupported for pypy..
ah, I see
@AndrasDeak there are some packages built for pypy in there like there is a numpy whl there for pypy, but scipy doesn't have one..
OK, but the numpy+MKL wheels should contain lapack/blas I think
@AndrasDeak hmm really? then maybe it didn't install properly... the numpy tests didn't fully work so that might explain that...
MKL is the Math Kernel Library, Intel's optimized lapack/blas/etc library
01:16
ah ok...
well I guess i will look into that and worst case scenario I will have to build from source... but what to do with opencv? also build from source?
don't know if and how that would be available to other packages, but there's that :)
@TanMath I guess so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
good night
@AndrasDeak good night! thanks for the help, sorry for keeping you up! :)
01:29
@AndrasDeak Hey, do you know what's the best way to go about this? In Tkinter, I want to resize the window after pressing a button. I was thinking about starting a new window completely and then destroying the last one, but I can't keep the program running after I destroy it
01:54
Tkinker
user8975033
02:09
@Chenny. One thing you could do is create a normal main canvas in tkinter along and when the button is pressed destroy() or withdraw() the object and create a new window.
@Jdw136 Oh I just decided to destroy all the widgets and then use tk.geometry to resize it, hopefully I dont run into any big problems doing it this way
user8975033
@Chenny or perhaps instead of destroying everything and starting over you could just call withdraw() on something to make it disappear and then deiconify() on it to make it appear again.
02:51
Can someone explain to me what just happened in this question? I suggested a duplicate and the Community account just closed it?
Nevermind, I just hovered Community and it explained that it's because the user accepted the duplicate
03:09
Heads up: I'm retroactively adding to questions with and
you linked to an answer
You can link to deleted answers and it works?
yes, for 10k+ers
deletes on stack overflow are always soft, everyone can see your dirty laundry
at least, every 10k+ user
03:56
/gasp waat!
/scurries away to do super deletes
04:13
you wish :D
and so do I. I have some really sad deleted answers
/-:
I do indeed
04:37
Lol, I at least fill it with digits of pi (-:
sometimes that only serves to draw more attention to the mess behind the edits :P
conda questions... yay! q1) I can't seem to use source activate myenv with tcsh.
user image
3
seems legit
04:52
q2) will go on main
@piRSquared source `which activate` [ENVNAME]
that's clever. I get BASH_VERSION: Undefined variable.
With the above command?
that very much looks like which is a Bash script ... there is no single well-defined which so YMMV
(or you are not using tcsh in the first place ... good for you)
Yeah, I think there is a tcsh version of activate I have to find
Oh now I'm seeing recommendations to escape the ticks
Or use quotes, so like source "which activate" [ENVNAME]
it's been a long time since I had to use tcsh but that ... doesn't make sense
source "`which activate`" [ENVNAME]
Cabbage
backticks make sense... just didn't work because it's trying to execute a bash script in tcsh
would exec sh; activate envname; exec tcsh be acceptable? not sure whether it actually works though
github.com/conda/conda/pull/3175 has the backslashes before the backticks but I think it's probably a mistake, the surrounding text certainly makes more sense if you take them out
Backticks are a PITA. In Bash you should use the $(command) syntax instead. It's more readable and less prone to typos. And it's easier to nest.
yeah but this is tcsh, you chose hurt when you entered
Yeah, I'm going to have words in my morning!
Which version of conda are you using?
05:09
no justice. I wrote a Divakar answer to this question but didn't get the Divakar upvotes
by the way, Kasram was arguing about the closure of that question... I don't agree with the duplicates he used
if any numpyista would be so kind as to give it the quick once over
conda version 4.3.29
@PM2Ring all of this is beside the point; tcsh is a completely different shell with only superficial syntactic similarities
@tripleee Oh, ok.
05:15
Hi there
I have some LineEdit in my GUI application designer bye QT-Designer and I used another thread to update the text of these LineEdit boxes,
normally it works correctly but sometimes the texts of the LineEdit boxes doesn't update correctly, I couldn't understand what happened.
there is a problem in displaying the content of lineEdit textbox
I have the video show that. If needed I can share it
I don't know QT, but I'd be surprised if it were thread safe
In most GUI toolkits you can only make changes to the GUI from the main thread
Where's our resident Strong Opinion RO today?
Who would that be? If you mean Andras, he said good night 4 hours ago, so perhaps he's still sleeping.
he knows who he is... :D
He's clearly referring to Kevin
05:22
okay, so we have more than one of them
y'all fussing over pyQT but I personally prefer QTpy
4
All the room regulars have strong opinions, but some express those opinions more diplomatically than others. ;)
I unequivocally and under no circumstances have strong opinions!!!
@coldspeed I used PyQt
you're using it WRONG
I just use adorable
05:27
this one?
@Aran-Fey Mostly it works correctly as I expected, but in the rare situation, it couldn't be show the numbers in LineEdit TextBox
The "you're" at the top of the picture makes the pun more obvious, but not much better
A Dora bowl?
10 mins ago, by Aran-Fey
In most GUI toolkits you can only make changes to the GUI from the main thread
A dora bowl... adorabowl... adorable...
^ it's funny but I refuse to star it!
05:31
@PM2Ring let me check it again
how much of a bribe do you need to star my comments?
3
@Ahadaghapour Just because it works 90% of the time doesn't mean you aren't doing it wrong
@coldspeed none!
@Aran-Fey Yes, I think so
oh wow now I know what it feels like to be Kevin on a daily basis
05:32
Its so interesting error
@coldspeed do you?! I have a feeling that no one ever will.
@Ahadaghapour So one way to deal with that is to use a thread-safe Queue. The other thread pushes objects containing the necessary info onto the queue, the main thread watches the queue and does the actual updating. I don't know pyQT, I'm just speaking about the general situation.
In tkinter you can delegate to the main thread with root.after(0, some_function). Gtk has something similar. Maybe QT does, as well
@Aran-Fey Interesting concept, if you don't care about order. If you do care about the order in which the updates happen, a queue is better.
05:38
I don't know about tkinter, but I'm 99.9% sure GTK maintains the order
Ok. I don't know if I've ever used root.after(0, some_function), so I don't know how it behaves. And of course if it's being called from a couple of different threads there's no way to know what order the calls will happen in.
I checked again, from another thread my textboxes value is change, and normally I don't have a problem, but in some situation(I don't know when), the display doesn't work as well. like this video:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=11WloVHcyiSgA8U6_O99m8E_yPLlZZxw1
I'm completely confused, if there is a problem, it should never work at all
but there is no logic error in my code
I also used
app.processEvents()
"if there is a problem, it should never work at all" <- that's not how it works.
A bug is a bug even if it manifests only 1% of the time.
05:57
@coldspeed it's a trap! You are being hoodwinked into Kevinism.
cbg
@Aran-Fey Yes, I should find this small bug
@Ahadaghapour But Aran-Fey has already identified your bug: you're performing an operation across threads that isn't guaranteed to be thread-safe.
@PM2Ring I have used Queue in my code, but let me try again
06:18
@Aran-Fey Let me try to use delegate
@shad0w_wa1k3r don't tell me you've never walked into a trap on purpose!
wink wink
06:55
hey guys
how's your days goin?
It's Wednesday my dudes...
I still consider it tuesday night even though it is technically wednesday, 3:06 am in my zone
07:11
> [ a personal question ] What has made you switch from such a nice and trully iconic nick ( the typesetting you used to use was the second best piece of art, right after your smart posts on vectorising, performance et al ) ??? Will indeed miss that, Sir
yes, me too kind stranger... me too.
@AnttiHaapala there is a python solution and it looks very much like the most upvoted one here: stackoverflow.com/a/1851138/6451573. Sounds like a duplicate to me. — Jean-François Fabre 1 hour ago
bleh
cbg
@coldspeed how experienced are you at dupehammering? Nowdays, is it hard to ask a question that isn't vulnerable to dupehammers
I edited the tags so I can't hammer that shut
07:24
@Mulliganaceous "vulnerable to dupehammers"
that's the wrong attitude. Dupehammering is the best thing that can happen
you can run this query to see the top dupe hammer users
9 mins ago, by coldspeed
https://stackoverflow.com/q/44959020/4909087 dupe in comments
oops I posted the wrong link
@coldspeed hammered
07:39
Does this look suspicious to anyone else? This person posted 2 rather basic xml questions without even mentioning which xml parser they're using, and both of them got quite a few upvotes within a short time (exhibit A‌​, exhibit B)
is that a voting ring?
Plus they didn't use the python tag, so the views should've been comparatively low (at least until someone added it in)
@Mulliganaceous I suspect they got some friends to upvote their questions because they've been downvoted in the past, yeah. I've seen people on reddit admit to doing that.
A ring of votes. Votes and rings don't go together.
oh, "ring" is one character away from "rig"
Hello, what is the best way of achieving subprocess.PIPE in file descriptors other than stdio?
@Thiner I have no idea what that means. You can rephrase that, or maybe show an example?
07:43
never mind, it is just a pun that came on top of my head (It is time for me to sleep now, see ya tomorrow)
For example I want to subprocess.Popen a process with fd 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 to be 6 pipes that I can do read/write in python, so I can have 3 non-std stdin's and 3 non-std stdout's
Just like what I can do when stdin=subprocess.PIPE,stdout=subprocess.PIPE are set, but with non standard file descriptors
FWIW Popen has a pass_fds argument on POSIX systems, but I'm not sure how to use it
pass_fds should be a part.. I am not sure how to create 6 pairs of pipes in a controlled manner...
08:01
No, looks like a one-off freak of nature incident
0/
my cat seems to have mistaken my arm for furniture
08:18
cbg
os.pipe() lets you get a pipe with a read and a write handle, just like in the Unix standard library
there's also os.pipe2() if you need to set flags
the input and output handles are not "std", there is only one standard input (file handle 0), one standard output (file handle 1) and standard error (2) but you can have many more open file descriptors, they're just not standard
08:41
cbg all
@Thiner ^
Say I have a bunch of classes that represent a tree-like structure. For example, to represent an AST, I'd have a ClassDef class and a FunctionDef class and Assignment and Variable and If and While and whatnot. Each of these classes would have a from_code classmethod that takes a string as input as parses it into an instance of that class.
Now the problem is that someone might want to subclass some of my classes, but the from_code constructor wouldn't return those subclasses. What's the correct way to support subclassing with this type of recursive constructor?
09:06
hi allllllllll
@Aran-Fey I worked around something like that at some point by essentially making cls a method, too
Not sure how that would work. Have an example?
09:22
not straightforwardly, I think what I did was I required every subclass to have a class attribute and then the superclass did self.something(self.that_attribute) but yours is different enough that I'm not sure how to apply that here
I'm curious as to why you'd try to do this.
Basically I have such a tree-like structure defined in a module, and my newest project is building an optimizer on top of it. I'm subclassing all of those classes to add an optimize method
This is an interesting problem, I'm printing debug everywhere to understand this process correctly
I guess there's no way around adding a callback function as a parameter to the from_code method, like that
I don't understand how my print appears on the console in your MySubclassedValue
It isn't called anywhere.
09:38
Did you put the print directly into the class body?
class MySubclassedValue:
    print('debug')
like ^ that?
Yep. I just realize that when I build the script, it reads the print, and displays it my bad.
But I don't understand how it could be possible that .left would be a MySubclassedValue instance...

Since, correct me if I'm wrong, but MySubclassedValue inherits from Value, meaning it is a one way bridge *from* MySubclassedValue *to* Value. You shouldn't be able to access this MySubclassedValue from Value, right ?
Well...
>>> Value.__subclasses__()[0]
<class '__main__.MySubclassedValue'>
But no, I don't expect this to happen automatically, of course. The user needs some way of communicating that all Value instances should be replaced by MySubclassedValue instances
09:57
I have hard time grasping the concept of what you're trying to do, but if you succeed, I'd love to know the answer.
(or if you want to go into deeper explanation, we can make a room)
tl;dr: I have a bunch of constructors that call each other (like Addition.from_code calls Value.from_code), and I need a way to change all calls of Value.from_code to MySubclassedValue.from_code. Here the Value.from_code is hard-coded, so that doesn't do what I want. Here it's not hard-coded, so that's a possible solution.
10:21
I would never have thought to redirect like this. :o
@Aran-Fey if you haven't already solved it what code snippets do I need in order to test/address the problem
I'd be surprised if there wasn't a way to bake the solution with some syntactic sugar
Start with this code and make it possible to do this
mapping = {Value: MySubclassedValue}
assert isinstance(Addition.from_code('1 + 3', mapping).left, MySubclassedValue)
Or something similar
Alrighty
@OlivierMelançon In your Alternative, you use a long-winded way to convert an integer to a bit string. A quicker way is to use binary formatting. If you have a fixed size, you can do '{:04b}'.format(n). If the size can't be hard-coded you can use nested formatting: '{:0{}b}'.format(n, size). It's even shorter (and faster) using an f-string: f'{n:0{size}b}'. FWIW, here's a generator version of your solution.
def bit_patterns(size, ones):
    for t in combinations([1<<i for i in range(size)], ones):
        yield [int(n) for n in f'{sum(t):0{size}b}']
For a generator that can handle permutations with repetitions, with output in lexicographic order see my answer to Finding all possible permutations of a given string in python, which uses an algorithm from the 14th century by Narayana Pandita.
10:37
I remember doing some syntactic magic over a self synchronising (a "monitor" as in threading) class in python a few years back. I feel, with the right magic, this can be done without the second parameter even @Aran-Fey. I'll start with getting the call to work, though;
@coldspeed those are sometimes challenged on meta.
10:52
cbg
which was the python latest stable release? is it 3.6.5?
Mass retags are never a good idea, only retag what you run into
@SaravananN Yes python.org/downloads
TIL bottlenecks in tensorflow (or in neural networks in general I guess)
@AndrasDeak Thank you. So i can go with this version for develop and later in production? (django 2)
11:13
@Aran-Fey are you still here? I've done it
Still here. Let's see it
Alrighty uh. let me just do a pastebin or whatever. I should probably set something up for doing it quickly but 2 secs
oops I was printing instead of asserting at the end there but, you get the idea/the assertion will hold with that design
Bonus you can do it for all your operators for free pretty much
What is this a part of anyway?
you can if fact leave from_code "hard coded" and retrospectively apply the mapping, works either way
Nice idea. You could even get rid of the assign method and move everything into a decorator
My use case is this:
2 hours ago, by Aran-Fey
Basically I have such a tree-like structure defined in a module, and my newest project is building an optimizer on top of it. I'm subclassing all of those classes to add an optimize method
Yes, decorator! That's the term I was looking for! xD (I've forgotten how to implement them in python so I was trying to google)
or wait
There's a way to decorate entire classes anyway
(i.e. intercept all calls to any method on that class and then decorate it)
So, subclass could decorate in that fashion
Ah I see!
What's your AST /do/ though. Is it a domain-specific language or such? If you don't mind my asking
It's actually not an AST; it's a tree of HTML elements in my case. It's supposed to parse answers/questions on StackOverflow and automatically fix typos and such
11:27
Ahhh okay I see
Hmm... Getting a weird error when I try to put your code into a decorator...
oh?
What is it?
Also brb I'm starving
Here's the decorator-only version. Pretty neat.
oh yeah, neat!
I'm surprised vars worked though
I thought that only worked on types that were fully fledged dictionaries (as opposed to having a dict
You have that backwards :P
>>> vars({})
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: vars() argument must have __dict__ attribute
11:37
but tbh I only just learned that __dict__ existed (I always /assumed/ it did, because it's pythonic) so what do I know xD
Ahh I see
Any suggestions for this guy over on U & L? unix.stackexchange.com/q/446863/88378
It looks like he borked his Python installation. But I don't want to tell him that he needs to re-install if there's another way. Besides, re-installing the system Python installation can be a bit hairy.
pypi seems to have lost the ability to render rst, is this a known bug?
e.g. pypi.org/project/textstat has all the verbatim blocks messed up, but I think I've seen this on all the pypi project pages I have looked at recently
Well, you said sysconfig doesn't exist validly in 2.6 right, @PM2Ring? It sounds like setuptools is fundementally broken but. If I wanted to avoid reinstalling (which is more often my goto); I'd probably try manually manually monkey patch sysconfig into 2.6, edit env vars and stuff.
I'd assume it wouldn't work but I'd probably try
xD
@tripleee that looks like a MD file to me
hmmm, true
still, is there a problem with the rendering of any particular format, or MD in particular?
11:48
PyPi doesn't render MD if I recall correctly
where does it take the project description from?
I was assuming README.md but this does not seem to be the case
Also I have no rep on U&L so I can't enquire via comments, @PM2Ring
pypi.org/project/mem_top <- this one looks fine
and has a README.md
I think it defaults to reading README.rst
oh looks like it might support markdown now after all :)
github.com/shivam5992/textstat/blob/master/setup.cfg has a literal override which points to README.md
11:51
ahhhhh got it
@SaravananN I guess so
but github.com/denis-ryzhkov/mem_top/blob/master/setup.py also has a long literal description
github.com/shivam5992/textstat/blob/master/setup.py#L11 reads in the README.md verbatim in a similar fashion
github.com/pypa/warehouse/issues/2170 seems reasonably recent and describes the process
@Cosmo That sounds pretty scary, so I won't suggest that to the OP. He'd probably just end up making the problem worse.
@Cosmo Rightio. You need to earn a bit more rep. That way, when you join other Stack Exchange sites you'll start with 101 points instead of 1.
Can someone exlpain this to me? Why does overriding the function's globals throw an error when it tries to access a builtin?
import types

func = lambda: eval
func = types.FunctionType(func.__code__,
                          {},
                          func.__name__,
                          func.__defaults__,
                          func.__closure__)

print(func())  # NameError: name 'eval' is not defined
Ohh good to know, @PM2Ring and yeah I wouldn't suggest it either xD
But without knowing what the output is with setuptools removed, or when he tries, it's hard to give advice
11:59
Oh, I get it... I have to set __builtins__ in the dict...
@Cosmo BTW, I just checked your profile page (to see what your rep is) and noticed you're an Aussie too. G'day! There aren't many of us from Oz in the Python room. Wim's from Oz, but he defected to the US several years ago.
@Aran-Fey where was that emoji again? Oh yeah ✝_(º_º)
I was in canada when I first started visiting this room but am back in australia for a while
@PM2Ring G'day!
I'm tempted to go into the bash room and just badmouth bash xD
Which
@AndrasDeak I'm totally not doing this because I want to use it in actual code... yeah... I'm just poking around python's internals out of curiosity, I swear
12:02
Is IMO pretty bad
Was that convincing?
I should /learn/ it though
I've never bothered to approach it like other langs
or actually, use a different shell
@Cosmo don't
@Aran-Fey totes
I'm not actually going to do it xD
Hmmm... setting __builtins__ fixed the error in my MCVE... but in my real code, __builtins__ is already set and it still doesn't work...
12:03
"real code", eh?
D: Ok, you got me
@Cosmo Bash is ok, but you do need to spend time learning it. And don't try to do dumb things with it, like using read to process a text file. OTOH, there's some obscure stuff in Bash that I don't understand, no matter how many times I read the relevant section in the man pages. I guess I should try to find an advanced tutorial...
Honestly I avoid bash whenever I can because there's a ton of obscure edge cases I either can't remember or have never heard of
I honestly pretty much just use bash to string together scripts for my DE
(I have a heavily customised DE)
it's that obscure stuff I never understand bit that bothers me
I'm sure I could use it but
I never do
xD
could learn*
but I mean obviously it's "ok"
it's not like ipv4, it's replacable
so it's survival means a bit more
stuff like
-z string
is just bizzare syntax though
12:13
Hey, I recently read about GIL and python's inability to properly utilize multicores.. so is this problem limited to CPython or does this affect normal python as well?
@AlphaRomeo cpython is "normal python"
CPython is commonly seen as the "normal" reference implementation of python
but there are other python implementations with no GIL
@Cosmo it is unfamiliar coming from other languages, but the basics are very clearly documented in man bash
@AndrasDeak oh duely noted
I mean it's unfamiliar coming from
I know nothing like it
@Cosmo you might like to have a look at this mywiki.wooledge.org/BashPitfalls
12:15
the trick is not to try guessing the syntax and behaviour...
And I know a lot of languages
Oh.. I am such a noob lel. @AndrasDeak, can you name a few implementation without GIL?
@AndrasDeak yep xD
@AlphaRomeo ironpython and jython, for one (two)
Alright, thanks @AndrasDeak .
12:17
@Cosmo What Andras said. Some of the syntax is a bit weird, and I tend to forget the fine details when I haven't used it much in a while. A good resource is BashGuide.
@Cosmo BTW, please try to avoid posting a bunch of 1 line messages like that.
@PM2Ring Right. thanks for the reminder. and thank you both for the resources @AndrasDeak
No problem
Another good Bash resource is the Unix & Linux site. Some of the regulars there have incredible knowledge. And one U & L regular, Stéphane Chazelas found (and patched) the infamous Bash "Shell Shock" bug. Stéphane's the kind of guy who'll edit your answer so that it covers obscure edge cases, and then upvote it. :)
12:46
@PM2Ring Thanks, the solution with bit shift is really neat
stackoverflow.com/questions/50605186/… is surprising to me; I didn't think threaded programs ever used more than one core.
I think it is using one core
i also retroactively added for a few numpy questions that needed it (not every one).
It's like pandas and dataframe.... where appropriate, the two go together, usually
His PC has six cores and it's running at 50% load, so if Python is using only one core, then something else must be using two more. Right? Or is it possible for a single core to somehow reach 50% by itself? (Not a rhetorical question)
This also gives me the chance to go through old, crappy questions/answers and delete/cv-pls like anything.
...something I should've done then and there, but hey better late than never

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