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01:42
cbg
01:55
evening cbg
02:11
Did you solve that sql problem?
Wow, way to remember 24 hours ago! @ChuckIvan thank you for asking
I went to the SQL chatroom and asked and got ran around quite a bit. It wasn't a pleasant experience and I think my fear of SQL people has been confirmed. lol
I got an answer, but I'm not sure about it re: complexity, and it seems from talking to SQL people that it's hard to be a generalist about this stuff since these systems all work differently from each other. With the naive strategy, my problem is O(N^2) in the rows, but certainly could be an O(N) operation though I don't know how to plan it. Just using Python to run it is O(N^2) and since that's the only thing that I actually understand it's what's getting deployed...
02:30
@AlexanderReynolds It sounds interesting. I also get the feeling one could spend a lifetime mastering SQL. I'm certainly not an expert. Of course the canonical performance increasers are things like column vs row-based operations, indexing and making sure things are properly normalized. Django ORM has helped me so far with python and rdbms together. Do good!
Yeah. I'm using Redshift which has some pretty particular oddities compared to other databases, in particular, indexes aren't a thing. Which is like, what???
 
2 hours later…
04:41
TIL: using MANIFEST.in to recursively include data files is supposed to not work but in fact that it does and people will tell you off (and downvote you) if you use that file to achieve what needs to be done, rather than the new and more convoluted ways to specify data files.
04:59
do i need to use google recaptcha on my login form if i'm already using cloudflare?
05:54
Morning cbg
06:09
@metatoaster perhaps their point (if they believe you) is that it works by accident and can break any minute
06:45
kiitos
@AndrasDeak except for the fact that this is actually a feature supported by setuptools, and has been maintained to avoid implicit wildcards (see issue and also the MANIFEST.in for setuptools itself). Clearly this feature is supported.
In the context of the question when package creator is already using MANIFEST.in one might figure that they might want to know that is an actual option.
and specifically, MANIFEST.in is used to specify what files to embed in the archive (yes this includes wheels), which is what the questioner wanted.
07:33
@metatoaster then it's a docbug
07:53
@metatoaster an explicit note in the docs telling you it doesn't work is still a strong indication that the fact that it works is an implementation detail. Have you considered asking about it on the issue tracker to clarify?
Yeah, essentially, and the pypa documentation is actually in conflict with the MANIFEST.in part on on distutils module documentation, a core part of Python that setuptools actually builds on top of
Also it can't simply be "an implementation detail" when literally the core Python part explicitly documented their support for it.
Also, all the other threads (some of which I linked) simply also state the usage of MANIFEST.in because all the other solutions don't seem to work correctly or in a way the user expects, which is to package the files they want into the archive they want to ship to their users.
 
1 hour later…
09:25
The docu around MANIFEST.in is horrible and confusing. I try to use setuptools.setup(package_data={'': []) instead whenever it's possible.
well, the documentation in general for Python has conflicts in various places as noted (like the packaging on pypa vs. official documentation). Anyway, at least passing package_data={'': ['*']} does appear to work, if include_package_data=True is also specified. Again, I only suggested MANIFEST.in as the questioner listed that in their project structure.
and the implementation to be frank is a fairly convoluted mess with a lot of legacy cruft that wasn't really cleaned up when Python 3 came about
to be frank though, I've had issues with those arguments introduced in some versions of setuptools in the past, while using MANIFEST.in has worked fairly consistently (as it is supported by core Python).
09:40
mid week cbg!
09:51
cbg =)
10:04
cbg
 
1 hour later…
11:14
recbg
 
2 hours later…
13:35
Cbg
can anyone explain me how MultinomialNB().fit() works, i know it takes two dataset, one is sparse matrix and other is the label varible, i just can't get my head around how it utilises the sparse matrix to train, (assume countVect was used to generate sparse mat)
@wim So I've been using dictionaries as switches, and have come to agree that switches would be a needless pollution of the language. My argument is now conceded from last week.
Dictionary switches are cleaner, and the 1 in a million chance that you need fall through would be better served by an explicit case.
14:27
d = {'case1': 1, 'case2': 2, 'case3': 3}
def switch(d, case, default): return d.get(case, default)
switch = d.get
Only major downside to dictionary switches and old pre-ternary operator ternary statements (construct a temporary tuple, index element from that) is that all values are eagerly evaluated prior to selection.
Whereas real ternary use only evaluates the "winner".
\o cbg
14:47
I've even been using lambdas as the content of the cases. Pretty effective.
Ah, my brain just reminded me. There was entry_points and extras_require discussion earlier/yesterday; is use of extras for feature detection reasonable? E.g. {'logger': ['tzlocal']} — verifying the dependencies of the 'logger' extra within the library to see if local timezone support is available? (Overly simplistic example, but the idea is there; more useful where a single failing import / ImportError can't be used for determination, say, with Python version-conditional dependencies.)
^ is in addition to use of entry point extras declaration for conditional registration of plugins.
@amcgregor Before Python got the ternary conditional expression we used to do x = cond and then_expr or else_expr, which short-circuits. But it can bite you if the then_expr can be false-ish.
That approach, of "abuse" of boolean binary operators, has many edge cases that can lead to very difficult to diagnose problems; it's something I've historically avoided like the plague. More readable to just write out the full if/else blocks, to me.
I purposely avoid expensive evaluations in the conditions inside the dictionary switches I've been constructing, btw. So I get what you're saying, but if you're conscious of that fact, then it seems more effective than a classic switch.
It's a sort-case for a flask route.
I build the base queries, and only call paginate on the case when I make the selection.
15:03
@malan Ah; but you can't implement a Duff's Device with a dictionary. >:3 Because mixing while loops around your switches with go-tos mixed in for spicy zest is… occasionally useful, and hilarious to spring on your coworkers. (I asked one coworker to add a comment above the block I had shoulder-written for him, he wrote: # Satan code. Do not read backwards.)
Sorry, missing the final call dpaste.de/25uf
@amcgregor And that's a major reason we got the ternary. OTOH, and & or are not binary operators, and IMHO it's not helpful to try to pretend that they are. ;)
@amcgregor lmao
@amcgregor You remind me of this video on how to destroy a code base.
Duff's device seems to get a lot of flak, but from my understanding it was incredibly powerful when performance was demanded.
Still, it is easy to write code that's hard to read by using multiple ands & ors, especially if you aren't aware of their relative precedence, as I saw in a SO question a day or 2 ago.
Well, Duff's Device was a construct for pre-DMA efficient memory copies with reduced requirement for counting progress. Performance critical stuff, and a prelude to SIMD.
I <3 the construct, and even use it as my band name. XP
That bites me regularly. My DAO layer allows for query construction through comparison of the class attribute fields, e.g. User.name == "amcgregor". That runs into hideous order of operations issues when you start combining them.

query = User.name == 'amcgregor' # this is OK
query = User.name == 'amcgregor' & User.password = 'xyzzy' # not so much!
query = (User.name == 'amcgregor') & (User.password = 'xyzzy') # fml
15:15
As I said here a few days ago, the scary thing about Duff's Device is how it lets you jump into the middle of the while loop. But it's really a fairly obvious way to partly unroll a loop, especially if you're coming from assembler, like all early C coders did.
@amcgregor I can't even evaluate those in my head very well.
How does an assignment expression inside a logical expression get evaluated? Isn't that illegal?
I thought that was what := was for when 3.8 comes out.
@malan User.name == 'amcgregor' ⇒ User.__dict__['name'].__get__(User, …) returning a Queryable instance bound to that field. Queryable.__eq__ returns a "Query fragment" MutableMapping. Query implements or and and to combine the underlying dictionaries.
There's also the concept of a QueryableQueryableQueryable.
FWIW, in early versions of C there was a reserved word entry, which was never implemented, and eventually dropped as a reserved word. But the intention was to allow a function to have internal entry points. That's easy to do in asm, or in a language like old Basic and its gosub. But that sort of coding was made extremely unfashionable by the structured programming movement. And rightly so! :)
Have a gander at the generated C output of RPython (Pypy project). It is the most amazing line noise I have ever seen, with ~30% of the generated lines being labels or gotos jumping to those labels. Utterly, fantastically, incomprehensible.
gist.github.com/amcgregor/4529cd8e005bb5d39c24 is a hello world example w/ input and generated C implementation.
@amcgregor I think @malan was referring to the User.password = 'xyzzy' part
15:24
@PaulMcG Ah, typos happen. Short edit duration allowance, huh.
I was, but I am now confused as heck by his response anyway, such that the first line is causing me headaches as well. I just read it as a Boolean assignment.
@malan Turns out the boolean binary operators don't need to return booleans. :3
@amcgregor Laurel. :)
@amcgregor Because you wrote a __eq__ dunder?
that's the same syntax as (arr1 == val1) & (arr2 == val2) in numpy, but at least in that case the operands are bool-valued arrays
15:27
Well, I wrote a bunch of dunder methods. Queryable field object as combined by one of the operation mappings.
(With dunder methods on both, for almost every type of comparison. ~Document.field becomes the underlying DB-side field name for that Python field reference, for example.)
I'm trying to decide, now, how dirty this is: >:D

`for record in User.name == 'amcgregor': …`
you mean a __bunch__ of dunder methods
I don't like weird operator overloads. I've seen a physics library that used obj << something_that_sets_up_part_of_something() to configure a calculation
A couple of years ago, I answered an SO question about code that created a state machine by writing code, but the generated code was in Python. It wouldn't have been so bad if the OP knew more Python... the generated code was littered with global directives, and just about every line that performed any action was wrapped in a bare try... except: pass, so all the errors were silently eaten. I managed to get it working, but it was a lot of work.
Well, that one is confusingly similar to C++ cout/cin piping…
Lol, beat me to the punch. I was going to say Holy C++ in my Python, batman.
@amcgregor yup, ew
15:32
At work, I have extended the '/' operator idiom from pathlib.Path to use '>>' to mean "soft-link to"
at least with pathlib weird overloads are a given
__rshift__ ftw
@PM2Ring I would love to have your opinion on my approach to templating which distinctly avoids what most others do, that is full lexers/parsers/interpreters. :3 The crazily obfuscated entry point is over here, iterating this generator‌​.
@PaulMcG I was so happy when I added / and // support to URI. E.g. URI("https://www.example.com") // "cdn.example.com" / "resource.js"
is writing weird APIs your hobby?
I'd argue that / notation in relation to Path-like datatypes is natural, not weird. At least for UNIX developers, where that's the standard path separator.
E.g. how // is interpreted in the above is the same as browser interpretation of the string form of the above: <a href="//cdn.example.com/resource.js">
15:40
that's also a weird string :P
@amcgregor How about slice notation for "user:password", as in url = URI['amcgregor':'xyzzy']?
heh
pandas actually lets you slice with strings
at least I think it does
>>> df
   a  b
x  2  5
y  3  6
z  4  7

>>> df['x':'y']
   a  b
x  2  5
y  3  6
it also breaks convention by using a closed interval
@PaulMcG That's… a very interesting idea. Care to submit an issue for that so you get the credit? :3
I wrote a Trie class once that used slicing to navigate the trie to a particular depth or value, and return all the matching strings, I think?
that doesn't sound too bad
15:47
@amcgregor I try to limit my personal GH work to off-hours, but I will post it this afternoon
@PaulMcG Awesome, thank you!
@amcgregor Sorry, I don't have much experience with template engines.
but you should not include amcgregor's real password like that for everyone to see
I saw someone use the term 'trie-flipper' in a highly pejorative manner on Hacker News. I'm still unsure why that is the term he used, though it was clear he meant rigorously CS-educated people.
savage burn
15:51
hello, I was trying to follow this tutorial about py2exe and was getting a problem with Disutils. It complains there is no such module available. when I do from disutils.core import setup ...from what I read online it's supposed to come with python and I'm using python 3.7.1
@malan when you want to call someone a neckbeard but you can't because you're also a neckbeard
@erotavlas disTutils perhaps...?
uh oh :/
going to upload a "disutils" module as soon as I get home
@AndrasDeak Nice back burn.
@PaulMcG from disutils import savage_burn
15:53
@AndrasDeak ok yeah typo, thanks lol
@PaulMcG All the bonus points if it berates you or mocks you for the typo during installation.
from dysutils import read_it_twice_for_tyops
from stackoverflow import autocorrect — This might sound like a joke, but it's not.
4
wasn't that on xkcd?
oh yeah, from the bogosort one
(see alt text)
and there was a webpage that let you play russian roulette by implementing stack sort
@amcgregor That code is cute, though. I think you'd enjoy taking a look at the Python source of heapq.merge.
15:59
@PM2Ring That code wins. yield from next.__self__ ← LOVE it. XD
@amcgregor Yep. That's a killer punch line. :)
There are a few weird cases in Python's standard library that have rubbed me wrong, e.g. the default ThreadPoolExecutor suffers from inherent design problems. (E.g. each task submitted spawns a new thread even if there are idle threads until the maximum thread count is reached; fixing that one bug nets ~15% performance gain.)
In terms of warts, though, there's nothing quite like parse_str (PHP).
PHP for warts sounds like cheating
I have PHP codebases old enough to drink, drive, and vote, that have required the sum total of a single project-wide search and replace in their lifetime. (mysql→mysqli) PHP gets a lot of hate, and I personally loathe the idea of using it for anything new, but I can't argue with success. (Made easier by using your brain and not using anti-features of the language, such as register_globals.)
Shooting fish in a barrel.
16:05
parse_str just exhibits so many problems in one place. Magical variable construction and population in the calling scope? Check! Contamination of the calling scope in the exact same way as register_globals? Can do! …
You can't criticise the design of PHP, because that implies that PHP was designed.
To be fair though, Poke assures us that PHP has improved a lot in recent years.
@amcgregor doesn't the "recommended way" avoid that?
@AndrasDeak parse_str($foo, &$bar) continues to behave as per Register Globals (contamination of calling scope) despite passing in the recommended second parameter, that is, a label to fill with an array. At least, up to PHP 7.2.
I had to patch that by replacing parse_str with my own wrapper for parse_str, since the contamination of calling scope can be contained to a functional encapsulation. (E.g. just don't pass the brain damage along.)
what you linked says parse_str($str, $output);, does that make a difference? (lack of ampersand)
Nope. I'm not even sure the & was needed or not, I just noticed it in the argspec for the function. XP
16:10
and if not, does that mean that besides $output being set you also get $first and whatnot?
I see! Blech.
But not globally, only in the literal calling scope, thus functional encapsulation to armour against that.
yeah, that part I understood, thanks
Speaking of PHP, this was posted a couple of days ago in the Physics chat room: phpsadness.com/static/pages/sad/52/order-full-eq.png
16:13
I… what? :|
what is that, some ordering?
Looks like an operator precedence, comparability, or casting chart, maybe?
two whats; a directed and an undirected graph
"where is that obligatory PHP flow chart that shows how [] != () != {} != empty set != and so on"
ah
but if it's a directed graph...does that mean != is asymmetric?
16:16
Not sure.
At least it's not Django. The data model is bad enough, but the code running across that model is patently insane. (Mostly because someone thought it was a good idea to make the "unit of work" one person vs. all jobs, or one job vs. all people, instead of one job vs. one person…)
it's a bad sign when I need to change pdf readers to read something
Apologies; those do have a ton of nodes.
Sam
Sam
I've finally set up my Python and AWS. F**k that was hard
@amcgregor nah, it's the max zoom level on evince
@AndrasDeak As you can probably guess, that project didn't survive getting Hackernews'd and Lifehacker'd (in the same week). We had redis nodes we couldn't SSH into, but were still supplying distributed RPC… with >1000 LA… always a good sign!
you vastly overestimate my knowledge of hosting and web things in general ;)
We learned to roll our own DRPC instead of using Celery, the hard way. ;)
gist.github.com/amcgregor/4207375 — heh, we even gave a presentation on our R&D work (other team members covered things like the game state machine, CORS, etc.) 1.9 million distributed print calls per second on one laptop ~7 years ago. (Two consumers/workers, four task producers.) :D
16:38
do people here still say cabbage as a greeting? laurel I'm just wondering.
@Eleeza Certainly! But we don't use very many of the other salad language terms.
Rhubarb.
I've seen laurel twice today and had to look it up now.
I use laurel occasionally, and yam fairly often.
I missed the discussion the other day about functions & methods like str.startswith that can take a tuple arg, but not lists or sets, despite duck-typing and Guido's pronouncement that a tuple isn't an immutable list. A couple of reasons that weren't mentioned: tuples use slightly less RAM; if lists were permitted it'd allow listcomps, and that could turn into an unreadable mess.
Rutabaga.
@PM2Ring "use slightly less RAM", but at what cost? Preferring tuples for that particular reason seems, to me, like preemptively forgoing all use of str.split() because str.partition() happens to be 10x faster… (but only for the str.split(..., 2) case… hope that's not too limiting! ;)
16:53
@PM2Ring I'm not sure I see the listcomp reasoning.
And "tuples use slightly less RAM" applies when you have a literal. It could be encouraged to use a tuple in that case. But if you happen to have a list already, creating a tuple in order to pass it to startswith is the tuple's worth of net increase in memory
@amcgregor I noticed you mentioned Lojban in your template engine thingy. I never learned Lojban, but a few decades ago I had a couple of goes at learning its predecessor, Loglan. I learned most of the grammar, and a reasonable chunk of vocab, but it's pretty hard to learn a language in isolation. I don't even have any of the books or tapes anymore.
TAPES!
wow
@PM2Ring .ui coi :D
Many of my non-Marrow-branded projects are Lojban gismu. Cinje being the gismu (root word) for "X is a wrinkle/crease/fold (shape in) Y". Gismu are short, double voweled, and generally easy to pronounce unless you're French. (Cinje turns into Cinge-y. ;)
OTOH, I probably do have a short hand-written note from James Cooke Brown himself. ;)
@amcgregor In early Loglan, all primitive predicates had either CVCCV or CCVCV form, but that was relaxed in later versions, especially for loan words.
@AndrasDeak Some people think it's Pythonic to write dense one-liners, and it's not good to encourage them. ;)
@AndrasDeak Fair point, especially if you need to keep the original list as a list. Otherwise, you can just recycle it. But there's still the time spent in building the tuple from the list, although that's pretty fast.
@AndrasDeak I finally tossed the last of my casette tapes 18 months ago, when I moved back to Sydney. I hadn't listened to any of them in over 10 years, and they weren't in good condition.
17:12
@PM2Ring github.com/marrow/util/blob/develop/marrow/util/… is the "exploded one-liner" I am most ashamed of. You know your pattern matching needs are hardcore when you have dynamic regex construction like this. ;^P
OTOH, a few years ago I digitized a bunch of casettes of my sister's music that Mum had in safe-keeping. (My sister is a singer / songwriter / guitarist. Some of the songs are acoustic, but most are electric). Some of the songs go back to the very early 1980s. Most of them were in good condition, although a couple of the songs were a little wonky.
@PM2Ring Old Dolby encoding was the bane of digitizing my reel-to-reels. ¬_¬
@amcgregor Yikes! You know, you could do that ''.join(separators) once, before that statement. ;)
@PM2Ring Indeed; however this only happens on runtime startup (instances aren't constructed during runtime, generally) so efficiency of construction was not a critical issue. (Efficiency of use was.)
I was more worried about readability, and the DRY principle. It's not just that it bloats the line size, I have to slow down when I see repeated code, to check if it repeats exactly, and if it's supposed to.
17:28
Se so. marrow.util is deprecated and old, and I'm not sure exactly where I'll end up putting this utility. (Probably in marrow.schema as part of the typecasting marrow.schema.transform submodule, since this is predominantly useful for web-based form processing.)
@amcgregor I guess so, if you don't have the proper Dolby decompressor. FWIW, I was reading about motion picture sound tech a couple of days ago. Before Dolby came to prominance, there were various odd things like Perspecta, " a directional motion picture sound system".
@PM2Ring ^_^ I regularly dive into old tech like that. Film colour processes are similarly fascinating, as were the multiple approaches to even just synchronizing sound to the picture. Then weird things, like anamorphic projection…
I regularly annoy my family when someone mentions 4K without reference to the particular standard (e.g. UHD). Resolution: that's easy, though not terribly consistent from manufacturer to manufacturer. Color space: not so much.
Ugh colors: xkcd.com/1882
^^
That's how I got onto Perpecta. I started reading about Technicolor, and kept following links. I had a rough idea how Technicolor worked, but decided to get some more in-depth info about the different versions.
What do you people think of starting to change a codebase to adhere to pep8? Right now I'm just following the style of the files I'm editing, but this is just too much and I kinda wanna change it, but I'm wondering what you folks think?
{'image' : self.roidb[i]['image'],
                     'depth' : self.roidb[i]['depth'],
                     'label' : self.roidb[i]['label'],
                     'mask' : self.roidb[i]['mask'],
                     'meta_data' : self.roidb[i]['meta_data'],
                     'class_colors' : self.roidb[i]['class_colors'],
                     'class_weights' : self.roidb[i]['class_weights'],
                     'cls_index' : self.roidb[i]['cls_index'],
                     'flipped' : True}
the annoyance being the whitespace
17:39
Hell, I'm still enamoured with the engineering tuned for biology that goes into these things. The signal isn't RGB, it's YPbPr, and more "bits" (bandwidth) are given to the luminosity channel than the colour ones a) as a byproduct of black and white backwards-compatible legacy (limited room for compatible expansion), and b) because our psychovisual processing pays more attention to brightness ("high frequency") details.
@Hakaishin I'm a fan of having a standard, but very much not a fan of picking one that just happens to be there. PEP8 serves a purpose: to be applied to code entering the standard library. My inflammatorily-titled post Your code style guide is crap, but still better than nothing. goes into some of the nitty gritty.
Run it though github.com/ambv/black and just take whatever it gives you.
@PM2Ring yeah, I imagine they don't preserve very well on that time scale...
@Hakaishin Pyparsing is woefully not PEP-8, and this is an obstacle for new people. I'm laying out a migration roadmap to PEP8-ify it, which is going to have to span multiple releases for compatibility, with an eventual x.0 release that uses all new PEP8 api.
But I'm focused on PEP8 in the API, less so on the actual codebase
@PaulMcG I don't get what you want to say
I was responding to your question above
17:53
I mostly stick to PEP-8, although I generally extend the line length to 100, or maybe 120. I don't see the point of wider lines, unless they just have literals that I'm going to skim over anyway.
18:10
Some of my notes on PEP8-ifying here: github.com/pyparsing/pyparsing/wiki/PEP-8-planning
18:26
:45279184 for my own curiosity ... any advantage to doing ...

roi = self.roidb[i]

{   'image' : roi['image'],
    'depth' : roi['depth'],
    'label' : roi['label'],
    'mask' : roi['mask'],
    'meta_data' : roi['meta_data'],
    'class_colors' : roi['class_colors'],
    'class_weights' : roi['class_weights'],
    'cls_index' : roi['cls_index'],
    'flipped' : True}
deadlink do to the formatting cntrl+k ... doh
@PM2Ring I find 80-column lines are great for split pane editing.
and especially for resolving merges in GUI tools, such as IntelliJ/PyCharm
my one beef with PEP8 is that it contributes to deep indents for continuation lines
some_very_long_function_name(foo,
                             bar)
@Mirv-Matt don't even get me started.... This code base is so infested, I just want to get it to work and then I'm done with it. Whoever wrote it had no clue about things
My favourite pathological wrapping example:

> This is some really long text that won't fit on a single line
> and
> must therefore be hard wrapped by your e-mail client.
18:36
do you mean soft wrapped?
who puts hard line endings in an email anyway?
@Hakaishin doh - hugs
When you reply to an e-mail hard formatted for 72 columns and the indentation ("quote") marker (> ) forces it to re-wrap. Dumbly.
at least in the middle of a paragraph
(Without indentation, that example is two hard-wrapped lines far less likely to induce indigestion.)
oic what you mean
18:43
Also, as to "who" (puts hard line endings in e-mail anyway): everyone, period, given it's mandated by the RFC.
(998 character hard line length limit.)
I regularly 80 char hard wraps regularly in mailing list histories.
Bram Moolenar commenting on Neovim^
Are you guys talking messing with data by inserting newlines into the stream??
yah, the email client might hardwrap but I don't do it manually
A lot of old techies write emails in clients like vim and mutt where they specify a hard wrap.
I don't think very many people ever hit enter to hard wrap.
doesn't that kind of break the core tenant of programming - data should be separate from presentation?
@malan oh yea - that part - totes agree - client should handle presenation
18:55
@Mirv-Matt Yes, yes it does. See also Elastic tabstops. People who re-hardwrap (or re-indent) whole codebases as a commit will be first against the wall when the revolution comes.
I guess acmcgregor was talking about the receiving program?
@amcgregor I have heard of that. Wasn't it on HN a while back?
@malan The pathological example was that of an e-mail client receiving hard-wrapped messages (such as those from the mailing list link), "quoting" the wrapped original, which then triggers further wrapping of individual words that got pushed beyond the wrapping boundary.
@malan It's been on there a few times. Elastic tabletops are really, really not new. (2006)
OOoooh. So you receive an email in your client, that has a hard wrap set to, say 80 chars, you reply, which then prepends the > to all the lines, which causes it to go over, and hard wrap really badly.
Precisely. Pathological. >:P
There's a question on security.SE right now about Ken Thompson's back door compiler hack: "I don't see the point. Why can't we just look at the source code and see the back door?"
:woosh:
19:15
@Code-Apprentice Yeah, I hate those deep indents, and I never do them. Stuff like that just gets a single extra level of indentation. I tend to put all the args on 1 line if there's room. I think the single foo after the ( looks orphaned.
19:35
cbg all
I just came across the weirdest git behavior I've ever seen: stackoverflow.com/questions/54561272/…
What would be the use of making something 4 dims but making the 4dim lenght 1? Talking about tensors and something like this:
hdims[0] = count;
hdims[1] = height;
hdims[2] = width;
hdims[3] = 1;
Isn't it then just better to make it 3dims?
@Hakaishin From what I recall of my early days working on 3D engines, matrix multiplications for transformations of 3D points requires a 4D matrix whose final component is 1 (for most transformations). This might be something similar?
Hmmm I guess but why? That just seems odd. Like making all lists np 2d arrays but leaving the second dim always 1
Yeah, possibly because it's meant to multiply with something 4d? and reduce along that dimension? Just depends on the broadcasting that is happening
@WayneWerner O'reilly What The F* Series: Git, What Are You Doing — alas, that behaviour is wild and new to me. :|
19:40
Homogeneous coordinates/perspective transforms would be totally unrelated to this imo @amcgregor
The context is hough space, but maybe I will find out later
@amcgregor That is how I feel right now
20:12
@PM2Ring I break the line after the open paren then indent a single level
And I do the same thing...put all the args on one line, or break them up each param on its own line. I'm still undecided which I prefer.
cbg
@Hakaishin If you are doing tranformations with matrix multiplication, that last dimension might not remain at 1.
I'm starting to think there's something about the phrase "Ok, you need to do a demo tomorrow" that immediately launches some mega ray of entropy to make sure everything breaks the evening before .
Last time it was someone deciding that adding a date in cell A1 of a spreadsheet but putting it in white text wouldn't be an issue. I hope it's that simple this time... :)
white text on a white background is the best UX
20:26
I was really surprised by how much damage it did to my parser. For whatever reason, it caused pandas to ignore the whole A column.
Yeah, I think it was a combination of that and the next row being blank that it takes some best-guess at the structure
It'd take a long time (like a year) to be able to move the company away from the 10's of spreadsheets I need though so I have to keep plugging the jenga tower
@roganjosh There's a reason I sit down with the people doing demos before they do a demo, to walk their "golden path" to make sure everything works. Or works enough along that path that on that path, issues aren't noticeable. The original iPhone introduction was an effective drinking game for the engineers involved, and a few hours of, basically, pure terror.
@amcgregor I have to take sales forecasts from 10 different spreadsheets to feed the model. My code was working fine with the forecast from last month but I just received a new batch and they're expecting to see real figures this time for the sales team. I do everything the same but something somewhere is different about the spreadsheets. The fun now is tracing it down.
I'm comforted by the fact that I know it's that minor since everything subsequent works fine. At the same time, if they're hiding values in white text... it's less fun
@roganjosh Speaking of traceability… ##webdev on Freenode has been discussing "justified programming" recently. (Stack traces for how you got there, reasoning arguments passed in from outer scopes to explain why.)
20:32
Hi guys, I'm trying to make a console app that is in an infinite loop like this

import io
import sys

while True:
	a = sys.stdin.readline();
	if a == 'q':
		break;
	else:
		sys.stdout.write('hello world');
but its not working when I type 'q' it doesn't exit
and when I type anything besides 'q' it doesn't print out hello world
you don't need semicolons, and make sure you're using sys.stdin.readline right (is it idiomatic? won't input/print work? does it include the newline at the end?)
@amcgregor problem here is that there's no traceback. Pyxl is pretty flexible in how it reads Excel files since they can be all over the place. The only time it becomes visible something is wrong is when my model spews out garbage at the end :/
But I know it's isolated to a 400 line module and less than half of that is doing anything with excel so I have it reasonably pinned down. Time to wear out the p r i n t keys :P
:rocks out to the printf school of debugging:
20:40
x = print -> wear out x, who needs that
@AndrasDeak the input is coming form a c# process so then maybe input() is more appropriate? Is readline more for reading lines from file?
It's much more copypasta friendly too if you do need it and it wears out
That's when the Shift key is worn out :P
hmm, nevermind, it's possible that input wouldn't work
ok changed to this and it works, thanks :)

import io
import sys

while True:
	a = input();
	if a == 'q':
		break;
	else:
		print('hello world');
Still no need for the semi-colons
20:43
OK, the issue may have been the newline in the read, and perhaps the call to sys.stdout.write didn't flush
I mean it works as a console app, still have to test it in my c# app
I'm just testing out using py2exe and calling the executable from a process in c#
21:01
Gotchya! One of the forecast files out of 10 incorrectly runs from the first Tuesday of the week, not Monday, meaning that grouping by (what should be) week start date on the parsed spreadsheets is giving more rows than working weeks. Problem solved :)
Those semicolons look like they are crying Python tears ("He's coding with me, but thinking of Javascript!")
11
wim
wim
21:12
@malan excellent
are those tab characters?
oh the huge manatee!
21:28
"but wait, it gets worse"
We need a from __future__ import semicolons in the same vein as from __future__ import braces.
@WayneWerner I have a userstyle.css that conforms all <pre>, <tt>, and <code> to 4-character tabs. It's glorious. (Plus GitHub allowing ?ts=N arguments on almost all pages; that's pretty good, too.)
21:43
elastic tabstops would be glorious if that's how we started out defining things lol
according to this stackoverflow.com/a/11279428/1462656 the alternative to converting string to Unicode by placing u in front of it is to use a method Unicode()?
but I tried that and it says 'unicode' is not defined
@erotavlas Are you using Python 3?
@erotavlas Check the version of Python you're using vs. the version that answer expects. unicode doesn't exist in 3, it's str. And str became bytes in 3.
Lastly, u"..." doesn't "convert" the string to Unicode, it attempts to apply the file encoding and decodes the bytes from the file into a Unicode (text) string. Similarly, unicode(b"some byte string") (or str(b"some byte string") on 3) does nothing to declare what encoding/decoding to use.
yes python 3, sorry I don't see anywhere it says the python version in that post
Right; so in your case, u"..." doesn't actually really do anything at all. All Python 3 quoted strings that aren't byte strings (b prefix) are assumed to be Unicode.
21:50
oh ok, they have example input with 'u' in all the examples posted on spacy.io so maybe they are just doing it for backward compatibility with python 2
That's one possibility, though it's easier to make Python 2 behave as per Python 3 on this particular issue: from __future__ import unicode_literals before all other imports, and Python 2 behaves as per Python 3.
(Notably, for earlier versions of Python 3, u was not an allowed prefix; it was added back later to allow compatibility on that syntax.)
@erotavlas True, but it is 6+ years old. And the answer uses a print statement. Back then Python 2 was pretty much the default.
wim
wim
bugs.python.org/issue34850 Python 3.8 has a SyntaxWarning when identity checks (is and is not) are used with strings / integers
as a feature, yes?
sounds good
I wonder if Python 4 will remove the u prefix...
21:59
Interesting! I see it's only on literals at this stage. I'm trying to think of scenarios where this could cause a problem (apart from old code that wrongly uses is to test values). But I'll keep reading.
"And for what its worth, I strongly disagree with making is a hybrid sometimes-check-identity-sometimes-check-equality operator." What maniac would even think of suggesting that?!
>>> x is 1000
<stdin>:1: SyntaxWarning: "is" with a literal. Did you mean "=="?
clippy to the rescue
@PM2Ring what is this, Java? /troll
@WayneWerner Java has something like that?
22:17
What's the right way to use the dataclasses plugin in mypy? I tried plugins = mypy.plugins.dataclasses in mypy.ini but it says "error: Plugin 'mypy.plugins.dataclasses' does not define entry point function "plugin"". Looking at the source file, I didn't see any obvious entry point.
Is there a better way to do this?
{k1: v1 for d in [{v: args[k]} for k, v in enumerate(aargs)] for k1, v1 in d.items()}
can you give an example args input? @에이바
@에이바 that that listcomp-of-dicts-inside-a-listcomp looks suspicious
from the way I read it it literally reads like it takes a list of values and makes a dictionary where the value is the key and the value of the dictionary
i.e. I think this is equivalent to {v: v for v in args}
which I assume is not what you're trying to do
Are args and aargs two separate variables? Suboptimal naming if so.
22:23
Oh I didn't even notice that. Yea now I'm confused
[{v: args[k]} for k, v in enumerate(aargs)] -> dict(zip(aargs, args)) probably
Yeah, was thinking the same
if they are different.
well even if they aren't as long as it's not an iterator :P
@AndrasDeak oops, no, that's wrong
True. Only...if aargs is longer than args, zip wouldn't throw an error, the previous code would raise a KeyError or IndexError
we need a lot of single-item dicts instead of one big dict
it's definitely needlessly convoluted
for d in [{v: args[k]} for k, v in enumerate(aargs)] for k1, v1 in d.items() -> for k1, v1 in zip(aargs, args)
assuming aargs and args are of the same length
22:27
hello here
and I'm done guessing, let's continue if we get an MCVE
@myckhel hello
yes, thats right, but then that's fed into a dict comp so then it just becomes the dict itself. lol
right
cabbage, @myckhel
this is my first time in chat

trying to see the environment
welcome
there's a general help here and the local room rules here
@AndrasDeak thanks
22:36
@roganjosh yeah, int x = 3; int a = 1; int b = 2; int c = a+b; x==c is true
As it would be in Python?
String x = "hello"; String y = " world"; x + y == "hello world"; is probably false (don't remember if string concat works that way)
you have to do "hello world".equals(x+y)
because Java!
But the first example does make sense to me.
only if you assume that == is value equality
right ok, got it
So == is for object comparisons too?
I didn't do an awful lot in Java and perhaps this is why I found .equals() so confusing when I was trying to work with it on the job with no programming experience
22:40
@myckhel - Is this a social call, or did you want to talk about Python?
@roganjosh in Python, you can override __eq__ to use the equality operator so that you can do a == b on a generic object. You can do operator overloading in C/C++ as well to do the same thing. Java does not allow operator overloading IIRC, which is why you must use methods like .equals() instead of just using the operator directly.
I guess he thought he was in the wrong room...
In Python, a == b is the same as a.__eq__(b) because == calls the __eq__ method. In Java, no such thing happens, you have to call the equals method directly.
@AlexanderReynolds yep, but I thought the discussion was suggesting that == kinda makes its mind up what it wants to do, based on the comments from PM2Ring that started the discussion. I could imagine that for JavaScript doing implicit incantations but not Java
Thankfully, it's not a concern of mine re: Java. I think I've gone 6 whole months without having to look at any of it. Bliss.
23:00
@roganjosh == is for identity and primitive comparisons
@AlexanderReynolds Yeah, and the inconsistency in Java is... surprising
wim
wim
23:25
@AlexanderReynolds a == b is the same as a.__eq__(b) <-- bzzz wrong
@wim right, I guess the second part of that statement was the meat of what I meant; == calls __eq__()
wim
wim
>>> a = 'whatever'
>>> b = type("B", (type(a),), {"__eq__": lambda self, other: "potato"})()
>>> a.__eq__(b)
False
>>> a == b
'potato'
@wim how the artichoke do you just have that in your memory bank that subclass operators take precedence.
Is that what's going on?
23:47
@AlexanderReynolds I think it is similar to what is discussed in the text here w.r.t. method resolution order but it's a guess
Right. I guess it's still accurate to say == calls __eq__ but which __eq__ it calls is the contention.
Which will, according to those paragraphs, be the derived class first, and if there's multiple parents, then it goes left-to-right across the multiple classes. And then it gets more complicated, apparently :P

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