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13:00
Oh no, I mean. As this is an open-source project, and you're finding it awesome. If you have the skills to implement something missing out of it, I invite you to do it. :)
the dev is a countryman of mine, interesting
Ah xD - I may indeed contribute to the project but it would be quite different to the research I'm considering
Get inspired then I believe. :P
And thank you very much for the link!
Anyway I have to attempt to install this frankenstein adsl/vdsl modem and take a shower. I'll be back
I wonder why there is almost no new people asking in this chat
13:12
you missed them
18 hours ago, by Andras Deak
I should probably call it a day here
nice
in the JS chat it's a constant thing
I know it's not comparable, but still...
this is still not the JS room
@AndrasDeak you told me that 48752345 times
oh, just realized about the "still"
13:15
Andras not in comparisons
I tried some pythonic humor. I think I failed. :(
Any reason why nobody's hammered this question as a dupe of that question that's linked in the comments and the accepted answer?
Guess not.
\o cbg
13:22
user image
6
my feeling
Recbg
^^ I'm going to reuse that graphic for my own purposes
How odd. According to the OP my plain csv code was faster than the Pandas answer on a large dataset. OTOH, I don't sort the input data. stackoverflow.com/questions/50619573/…
@AnttiHaapala I'd like to request an overview of all my information you may have in docx format please
I think you may have misheard. Antti doesn't store information in docx, he stores it in ducks.
3
13:28
You can probably find templates online piRSquared
Apr 18 '15 at 6:03, by Antti Haapala
(ducks)
you're right
🦆 typing, 🦆 files, 🦆 movement, 🦆 wandering snake
@piRSquared go ahead, I got it second hand from Facebook. I.e. "all rights appropriated (TM)"
13:37
Hey @Aran-Fey I just had an idea for a browser script: hover over an emoji and it displays the emoji's name. I assume JavaScript has an equivalent to unicodedata.name.
Hmm. Sounds difficult (how do I detect a mouse hover over a specific character?), but I'll see what I can do
I think I detected a dupe, but I'm unsure... in this question : https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50625354/apply-function-on-series/50625438#50625354
The OP says in the comment : "it's a big function, but basically it compares value passed as parameter with other values and based on this comparison returns string"
So I think this is a dupe of this : https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50605498/pandas-selecting-and-modifying-dataframe-based-on-even-more-complex-criteria
Oh, that wacky JS
For detecting mouse hover, I'm thinking: replace all instances of plaintext emoji characters with <span>s that have title text equal to their names
If I replace the text with something else then I have the problem of detecting when new text is added to the page
I've already learned my lesson about hooking a MutationObserver onto the entire webpage
There's an event hook for that, IIRC
Oh, you know about it. I didn't know there was any drawback to hooking it around the whole page. Tell me about your experience.
13:44
@Aran-Fey Ok. Maybe you need to select the emoji. I guess I could do that with a bookmarklet... if they still work in modern browsers. :) I'm still on an ancient Firefox, and I haven't done any JavaScript for a couple of years, so my JS knowledge is hopelessly out of date.
Does rlemon's back theme not do something similar by any chance?
@Kevin It's a problem on websites like SO that use a lot of JS. Opening a question with a bunch of long answers completely froze my browser tab for a few seconds
hello
I wonder if there's any straightforward way to wait until the first salvo of JS has completed running before you register your event listener? I'm guessing not.
document.afterEveryOtherScriptExecutes(func) would run into a walls-and-ladders situation. What if two scripts want to run most lastest?
13:48
Just sleep 10 ;)
Those who recommend sleep will sleep with the fishes
(that's setTimeout in JS :P )
What if there's only a single species of fish around?
Use setTimeout and I'll knockYouOut
@Kevin I just wonder if the unicode data takes 20 or 30 % of the usual disk foot print of a Python 3 distribution..
13:50
For those who like hard rock with a bluesy feel, check out The Danielle Nicole Band with Save Me. Danielle comes from Kansas City, Missouri, like her old buddy, Samantha Fish. @idjaw I'm pretty sure you'll love this one, it might be too rocky for @JohanLarsson.
guys do you know some node or passport js
@AnttiHaapala Yeah, size is a concern. Maybe you can trim it down just to icons that looks especially emoji-like.
@elizabeth this is the python room
Hit all the classics: crying face, :100:, snake
@PM2Ring If selecting the character isn't enough, I can at least write a script that tells you the character's name if you 1) select it 2) copy it 3) paste it into the search box of www.fileformat.info :^)
13:51
yes but js guys not responding
Wait more
and I need some help
We can't help you with JS
Alas, there's not too much JS expertise to go around, here in the Python room :-)
We can't even solve our own JS problems, as evident from our prior conversation
can review my question atleast
lol
13:52
No.
oh okay
:(
no problem
I'm sure the JS room will become active in a few hours :D
Have you tried pinging anyone?
13:55
@3141 don't!
That's very rude
@Aran-Fey I was hoping for something a little more convenient than that. :) On a vaguely related note I have 2 rot-13 scripts here: one transforms the selected text to its rot-13 equivalent, the other displays the translated text in an alert window.
Asking and waiting (and maybe asking once again much later) is common courtesy
I meant that they should ping if they were continuing a conversation.
Harrassing users is never OK
@3141 that's clearly not the case from context
And if you mean that, say that.
Sorry, I was only half paying attention
so I probably misread the situation.
Never a great idea.
13:59
Yup
Seriously entertaining the idea of a script that makes an HTTP request to fileformat.info in order to extract the name of whatever character out of its title
@AndrasDeak tbh, there are some users who are pinging me in the SQL room and I'm so busy that I don't even care answering
That's fine, nobody is obliged to respond
but true, it is not really the way things should be done
Strange, fileformat.info/info/emoji/list.htm lists snake but not duck.
I guess they're using a stricter definition of "emoji" than "a character that looks like a picture".
14:05
I don't think a snake as any emojier than a duck
those doom ones though...I didn't know they were official
oh they aren't
perhaps the list isn't comprehensive
The list is generated from unicode.org/Public/9.0.0/ucd/EmojiSources.txt, which says it maps unicode to "Shift-JIS codes for cell phone carrier symbols"
I expect this means that the 4ish Japanese cell phone service providers that kicked off the trend must not have had a duck in their original character set
you know something's wrong when you need to say EOF and the end of the file
Can a JavaScript in the browser talk to a Python script running on a localhost server, or does that break cross-site security rules?
@PM2Ring yes, if the server chooses so
and yes, if the server is stupid :D
The server hosting the web page, or the server hosting the Python script?
14:09
@PM2Ring a GET request on page, like fetch an image, is always allowed...
and POST too, under constraints...
JS chat is dead :(
IIRC greasemonkey can make requests to arbitrary urls, if you enable it in the script's configuration options.
I'm sad
I was thinking using a Python script would be a simple way to look up the emoji name.
there are many servers like Redis that accepts plain-socket connections and receive plain text commands :D
@PM2Ring just do the request against unicode.org :D
14:11
I know it's easy to do from a page that's being served by that server. I just can't remember trying to do it on a page being served from the Internet.
My google search has led me to DocumentOrShadowRoot.caretPositionFromPoint()... if anyone can deduce what that thing does just from its name, I'll be impressed
you lost me at OrShadowRoot
almost sounds like I've entered the dark web
"Shadow" I expect refers to the shadow dom, which doesn't get rendered to the page, but which scripts can still interact with.
Is there a simple way to redact sensitive data like passwords from Python logs?
Scenario: I have a module which logs API requests sent to a server. However, the logon request includes the password.
14:15
Document's evil alternate personality, ShadowRoot. Perfect material for the inevitable sequel.
@Aran-Fey the dank web*
@StevenVascellaro ask Github
they've been storing passwords in logs for a while
Mind blown:
3.2 Absolute Pathname
A pathname beginning with a single or more than two <slash> characters; see also Pathname.
@Neoares ...Isn't that what I want to avoid?
@StevenVascellaro I don't suppose you could alter the API so that it only requires the sending of non-sensitive information?
@Kevin Sadly, this is a proprietary API I have no control over
14:17
POSIX says there ^ that //usr/bin/python is not an absolute pathname
You don't want to store passwords. You want to store hashed passwords, and compare the hashed values when verifying the password. So that you know it equals, but you don't know what the password is.
@IMCoins I'm not storing passwords at any point. I take the password from user input, use it to generate an XML request, then delete the password variable
@StevenVascellaro well they had to fix it
Once the XML request is sent to the server, I don't have it saved anywhere
Well, what's the problem then ? Sorry if it seems redundant, I'm re-reading your messages and I don't get what you want.
14:20
Let me elaborate:
I don't suppose you could make your module check for requests with the key "password", and replace the text with stars
I have this function to post XML
def post_xml(self, data):
     """Sends XML data to the server."""
     logger.debug(f"Client request:\n{data}")
     headers = {'Content-Type': 'text/xml'}
     response = self.session.post(self.url, data=data, headers=headers)
     response.raise_for_status()
     logger.debug(f"Server response:\n{response.text}")
     return response
In the log, this appears as
Client Request:
<Kronos_WFC version="1.0">
	<Request
	Object="System"
        Action="Logon"
        UserName="My_Username"
        Password="My_Password">
	</Request>
</Kronos_WFC>
logger.debug(f"Client request:\n{k:('[REDACTED]' if k == 'password' else v) for k,v in data.items()}")
... Assuming data is a dict
Data is a raw string
if k in ['password', 'hunter2']
14:22
The post_xml method has no idea what the password is
I was about to say to pass an updated version of data into your logger, but it's the same as @Kevin gave you.
My current workaround:
Ok, so parse the string into an xml object, scan the object for a Password key, replace the value with REDACTED, convert it back to string, and log that
You can still use a regex or .find() string method.
   def logon(self, username, password):
        """Sends a logon request to the server."""

        xml_request = tags.Request(Object='System',
                                   Action='Logon',
                                   UserName=username.lower(),
                                   Password=password)

        # temporarily disable root logger to hide password
        # TODO: Enable debug logging with a redacted password
        try:
            logger.disabled = True
            xml_response = self.post_request(xml_request)
14:23
@IMCoins unsafe
@AndrasDeak What would be, then ?
you can't be sure that something "Password"-like isn't in the string elsewhere, right?
xml is a regular language, so ordinary regex can't parse it fully, and regex-with-bells-and-whistles can only parse it if you implement the entire grammar, which is a pain in the butt
morning cabbage
@IMCoins Using pre-existing xml parsing libraries
14:24
@Kevin ...Actually, that might work, if not inefficiently
Perhaps "unsafe" isn't the best word. Fragile?
@AndrasDeak You're right. But then, yes. I guess Fragile would be best. :p
@Kevin is a regular language?
@IMCoins a kind of fragile that when breaks becomes unsafe ;) Glassy.
Is that not the right term? Whatever the term is for languages that have nesty bits
Isn't the point of a REGex that it can parse REGular languages, xml not being one?
14:25
Let me look up the Zalgo post...
I suppose I could parse it back to XML with ElementTree.fromstring() and search for the password before logging?
> HTML is not a regular language and hence cannot be parsed by regular expressions.
Ah, yep, forgot the "not"
phew
@StevenVascellaro is there no way to handle it before it becomes a string? This sounds a lot like an XY problem
14:27
@AndrasDeak I could probably add a filter to the log at one of two points.
It does kind of seem like an encapsulation problem that a function named "post_xml" does not accept xml objects, and instead expects you to convert your xml object to a string before calling it
Hey andras, thanks for all the help with my C-APi escapades
I eventually found out in a 20 hour flight (give or take 5 more hours for layover)
@Kevin The function is a bit simplified for this example. It's named post_raw in my main code, but you are probably correct
python comes with all docs 😃 (offline <3)
Thanks for the advice. I may need to rethink my code structure a bit
14:30
My design philosophy is: if you need to convert an object into a type with less introspective ability, do so at the last possible moment. In other words, your xml data should remain xml until you're inside the function that needs an xml-looking string that it can send to the server
@Kevin My current code has a function inbetween. logon(username, password) -> post_request(ElementTree.Element) -> post_raw(str)
Ok, that's reasonable. Might make sense to put the logging code inside post_request, in that case.
Although in hindsight, I think post_raw() is only used directly in my unit tests
@ShrekOverflow ah, no worries, I probably wasn't too much help anyway considering my C API skills :D
It might be worth getting rid of the function entirely
The issue is that my logging happens in post_raw(), after it's been converted to a string
14:34
You may want to make a decorator that will look into your datastring, and if a password is found, prints the abstracted log, and if not, print the raw logs.
You could then use it anywhere !
@IMCoins Right, something like if xml.find('.//password'): redact_password()
@AndrasDeak but you were able to convince me that there is order in chaos (in the python ecosystem in general, there is a standard way of doing things, down to the friggin C-API that is beautiful), which after reading almost half the C-API docs is clear to me.
I don't know xml, so I can't help you with this. :D
But in essence, yeah.
And Cabbage For All
@ShrekOverflow glad to hear that :)
14:37
Every logon request passes through post_request() while it's still searchable XML data, so I could just move logging there I suppose
cbg, Félix
Hey Andras
I see your keyboard has the right kind of accents on it
I don't think I can help you with architecture. I only have a year experience in programming after all.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier latin1 is the subset of latin2 which includes Hungarian ;) Though my default layout is US
I see ;)
yeah, US layout is quite nice for programming. I kept a keyboard as old as me for a long time just for the nice localization of ' and {
14:40
a few months ago I switched to dead keys so I can easily write umlauts when I need to (I usually don't)
Why don't you just switch of keyboard layout while writting ? I assume it would take time to learn, ikr. But just asking.
which one of us is that directed at?
I personally use a qwerty keyboard, that I alter to azerty to write french accents.
yeah, my laptop keyboard is Hungarian qwertz but I use US qwerty
(It was directed at Félix, but I guess anyone can answer right :p )
14:42
practically impossible to buy a laptop here with a qwerty keyboard
yeah, I mostly switched from US layout to multilingual CAN, and typed the accents from memory (since the keyboard was engraved in US layout)
I use ES layout
@Kevin It seems they rely on the c++ ish doc directly for that doc.qt.io/qt-5/qvboxlayout.html
cause ñ
and because it's printed with the ES layout
the api is the same, the code samples need some -> to . adaptations
14:49
Hmm, don't think I've ever seen a feature that is simultaneously experimental and obsolete before.
hah
well, one could snarkly say that Javascript is wholly experimental and obsolete at the same time
uuuh it's contextMenu vs contextmenu?
does that not matter?
are those two things the same? I can't even tell
One is an attribute and the other is an element, but the element is only useful in conjunction with the attribute
(AFACIT)
html elements attributes are non case sensitive
ah, OK
14:53
but yeah, they're not exactly the same thing
I'd need minimal JS knowledge to appreciate its weirdnesses I guess
If sitepoint.com/… is to be believed, the right way to do context menus is to register an event listener for the contextmenu event, then manually construct a collection of HTML elements that look like a context menu
Complete with manually constructed events for clicking on menu items, or clicking away from the menu, or drilling into submenus...
is there a meta chat room for SO to ask for verification if I am wrong on one of my comments ? (google doesnt come up with anything when I search "meta StackOverflow chatroom")
hey guys, do you know of a comprehensive "how to set up mutual TLS given certificates" tutorial in python?
I'm not really familiar with the hairy parts of security at all, and it'd be great if you guys know of any places I can read from
@MooingRawr no
14:56
@MooingRawr I'd say that people on main will tell you with various degrees of meanness if you're wrong
a lot of the guides out there are more catered to different languages; looking for specifically python, maybe urllib but preferrably requests
my general take on everything security is "use a tool someone that knows about it made"
@FélixGagnon-Grenier exactly; but the issue is I'm not sure who I should be listening to, since I don't know much about the field and the reputation of specific libraries
@FélixGagnon-Grenier Not being able to rely on pre-existing tools has been the worst part about working with an obscure commercial API.
sounds exciting though
15:00
as in Russian roulette, right?
exactly so ;)
@FélixGagnon-Grenier When I started working with WFC a year ago, there were 5 questions total on SO. There are now 15 of them, 10 of which are from me
congratulations on asking 10 questions that were not closed.
albeit mostly ignored
@FélixGagnon-Grenier That's why I self-answered most of these. I want to make sure somebody else doesn't have to face the same problems
also congratulations on not getting the tag burninated ;)
@AndrasDeak I actually wrote the current tag wiki and excerpt :P
good, good
15:18
Did a little impromptu code golf on stackoverflow.com/questions/50627435/… and got (lambda g: {(a,b) for a,b in g if a<b and (b,a) in g})({(row[0], x) for row in [line.strip().split(",") for line in s.split("\n")] for x in row[1:]}). I have a creeping suspicion that there's a shorter approach.
that's ugly
well at least it ain't feature emojis
@Neoares Code golf isn't meant to be pretty :P
@FélixGagnon-Grenier that'd be an enhancement
@Kevin Well played on the 148 character line.
15:20
hmmmmmmmmm
superfluous space after lambda g:
I thought maybe storing the intermediate data in a dict instead of a list would make it easier to do membership checking, but you lose more than you gain during dict construction: (lambda d: {(k,val) for k, vals in d.items() for val in vals if k<val and k in d.get(val,[])})({row[0]: row[1:] for row in [line.strip().split(",") for line in s.split("\n")]})
There's a lot of superflous space
often multiline is actually shoter, btw
DSM
DSM
Morning cabbage for all.
but I haven't read the q/am watching a show so
15:24
Yeah yeah, there are a lot of bits where you could reduce the character count with shorter names or whatever. I'm primarily interested in whether there's an entirely different algorithm that requires fewer hoops to jump through
DSM
DSM
Kevin's calling variables line and vals. I think we can assume he's more interested.. aaargh Kevin'd already!
if you want to make it the longest possible, you can do tuple(k, val) instead of (k, val)
tuple(((((((((((k, val)))))))))))
would be fun actually
@DSM lol
15:26
@IMCoins you'd need to add some serious constraints for longest
exactly n characters would be more interesting
non-redundant longest ?
@IMCoins nope. Not enough.
you'd have define redundancy well
cabbage for DSM
you can make some pretty lengthy structures that are interwoven well enough that you can't just cut them out as plain text
in fact, an infinity of such structures
e.g. you could implement it in a turing machine; that'd add a lot of length
then implement that turing machine in brainfuck or vice versa
If the definition of redundancy somehow involves the ability to reduce one program into another smaller program, I think actually detecting it runs up against the halting problem and/or NP hardness
15:30
^
that's basically my point
but yeah you could implement a long chain of reductions through np-complete problems etc
I'm at 11,111 reputation, time to quit
https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/307/obfuscated-hello-world/3695
That's an interesting concept with interesting rules.
I've got a basic question about urls and views in Django...in my project urls.py I have a url pattern path('question/', include(question.urls)) and in question.urls.py I have path('edit.html', Edit.as_view(), name='edit') which works but from the docs it looks like I shouldn't include the .html part in my path. If I get rid of it and put path('edit/', Edit.as_view(), name='edit') instead it says it can't match the pattern
Any ideas?
Ha, I decided to try a quadruple loop like the OP has, and it's exactly as many characters as the dict approach: (lambda m:[(a,b) for row1 in m for a in row1[1:] for row2 in m for b in row2[1:] if a<b and row1[0] == b and row2[0] == a])([line.strip().split(",") for line in s.split("\n")])
Probably golfing them down to minimum size would give different lengths, but it's funny that my first drafts are equal
15:57
@kanderson8 Try it without the /
by the gods, I am utterly confused by qt procedural code having effects in the background.
why is it that app = Qapplication() initiates something elsewhere than in app?
@OneRaynyDay no luck when I get rid of the / either
It works totally fine with edit.html so it's not a huge problem, I'm mostly just concerned because I don't understand why it isn't working the other way
... so confused actually, that I can't seem to reproduce the error that said something like "you can't instantiate a layout before an app"
ah, there it is. QWidget: Must construct a QApplication before a QWidget
widget = QListWidget()
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
the amount of global scope black magic happening behind the scenes frightens me
python is fairly often used in this way
e.g. tensorflow
honestly it's conveniant once you can predict it
yeah, I guess so... in the meantime it's just like... fragile? moving lines around should be safe, hopefully :)
16:09
I mean
you should really learn it first but
I agree that it lacks transparency
TF is fairly transparent about it at least
in your case it sound like your widge implicitly belongs to the most recent app in the scope
it's probably implemented with decorators and some structure like a shared pointer almost rather than global scope, if I had to guess
but take it a grain of salt since I'm only going off those 2 lines and the error
well, a singleton strictly
16:26
rb folks
16:53
My script has reached the point where it kinda works, but only if you hover over the left side of the duck...
because it's encoded as 2 bytes, and if you hover over the 2nd one then it's truncated....
..duck?
🦆
Oh you mean the lighthouse emoji?
yeah, that one
my bad
17:13
@PM2Ring It's a bit janky, but I got it working for the most part: gist.github.com/Aran-Fey/ee112b88e2f5921df4161071492b97c8 Let me know if it doesn't work in your old firefox
cbg all
17:25
@Aran-Fey I just tried dropping the link onto the Addons tab, but it says "the add-on downloaded from gist could not be installed because it appears to be corrupt". OTOH, for the last month or so Gist has been telling me that this version of Firefox is no longer supported. :( But I'll see what happens if I download it & try to install it from my HD.
import pandas as pd
import sys
df=pd.read_csv(sys.argv[1],header=None)
print(df.describe())
@PM2Ring if you just click the "raw" button should automatically ask you if you want to install it, no need to copy/paste: clicky
I want to make this code run on machines without pandas aswell
i used pyinstaller.org but it gives me a 70 MB standalone binary, is there a way to get a binary / python file with lower size .
wim
wim
callback on every mouse move event? no thanks.
@Cosmo yes, absolutely :) I was just being all "ermahgerd" over PyQt
17:29
@wim know a better way to do it?
pyinstaller.org makes it runnable on system without python aswell , but i will run it on system having python installed
@Aran-Fey I DL'ed it as a .zip, and extracted the files from the .zip. It's installed, but it does nothing when I hover over the duck.
Hello. I have a simple API with Django "example.com/api/hello" and returns "Hello World". Something super simple. With an Ngnix + Gunicorn.

I have it hosted on a 5$ digitalocean droplet. Is it normal that can only handle 50 requests per second?
@Aran-Fey not sure about python, but in JS I'd at least throttle the events
@PM2Ring there'll probably be some error messages in your JS console I guess :/
Oh, don't forget to refresh the page after installing the script
@FélixGagnon-Grenier How would I do that?
17:37
there's a few general approaches, two of which are having a callback each period of time verifying mouse position and acting if there was a change in coordinates, or registering a handler on the move event that will execute on each move but only delegate to the real handler every period of time
I generally use the latter, and have yet to see any noticeable performance hit
delegating to the real handler is what my handler does :P
AFAIK the mouse move event is only fired like 10-20 times per second, so I don't think it should be a problem
@Aran-Fey I refreshed the page. And I could never get the JS console to work on this version, although I used it on earlier versions. That's one reason I stopped doing JS.
generally, it's more of an ux consideration. I don't really want to see something on my screen acting upon my mouse moving 15 times per second.
wim
wim
17:40
And the more crappy scripts you have hooking into that event, that don't really need it, the more sluggish your browser gets
I guess there's no point re-starting Firefox.
wim
wim
you should be looking for an enter hover and exit hover event of some sort
@PM2Ring Ok, my last idea is to hover over the left side of the duck :/
AFAIK there's no enter-unicode-character event in JS
there's the key press event
wim
wim
Wow, 18 answers on Convert bytes to a string? and not one of them told the OP that subprocess.Popen accepts an encoding kwarg ... sadbadger.jpg
17:43
There isn't much room on the left side of that duck. So I'll paste in a fresh one. 🦆 Let's see...
If you write individual hook events for each text node containing a duck, then you first have to scan the entire page for text nodes containing ducks on page load, and then scan subsets of the page during every mutation event. Not sure if that's practical.
Also you can't get text nodes using document.querySelector, so you have to walk uphill both ways to find them
I thought there were new shiny hipster content selectors in js?
^ what it should look like
except the cursor is missing in the screenshot
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I don't think you can select ducks with them, specifically.
that's unfortunate
it would be so elegant document.querySelector('p[content=🦆]');

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