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01:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

01:04
@Mikhail my answer to this will be "assignment expressions" just to piss people off
01:27
@PaulMcG @toonarmycaptain Pleasure getting to meet and talk with you both. The conference was really quite good. I definitely plan to be back next year.
01:56
cbg
@wim Texas regional Python conference in Austin... about 160 attendees this year... a dozen or so talks over two days
@PaulMcG Are the names ordered by where the people stand? :-) ...
Got it, you three all live in Texas...
It's late, night
02:19
stackoverflow.com/q/55681413 unclear/no mcve/typo... pick your poison
I voted to close too :-), @coldspeed
Lol, 👍
@coldspeed You're so good in pandas, why not post an answer here: stackoverflow.com/questions/55681891/…
Why comment?
lol :-), i am not going to steel it
it is a duplicate. I would rather post a comment and close the question than answer it and get rep for something I/others have already answered before
Oh... didn't see you duplicate it, i was ready to do that too :-)'
@coldspeed So many of these now
I can't seem to get the logic of this question...
Made this a dupe
02:36
is there a point to posting these...?
dupes are not bad on their own. People posting dupes that they could've found just by searching the very title they used in the question on google is.
@coldspeed Yeah, i think they should be deleted
Look at this whole bunch of consencutive cbgs: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/45933560#45933560
 
1 hour later…
04:06
Hi guys
Can anyone check the link for this problem? codeforces.com/problemset/problem/580/A
I have written a code for the same and it works perfectly but its taking a lot of memory
In other words its not optimal
Also, I checked this link but I am not able to understand how that is the best algorithm
30
Q: Longest increasing subsequence

Jungle HunterGiven an input sequence, what is the best way to find the longest (not necessarily continuous) non-decreasing subsequence. 0, 8, 4, 12, 2, 10, 6, 14, 1, 9, 5, 13, 3, 11, 7, 15 # sequence 1, 9, 13, 15 # non-decreasing subsequence 0, 2, 6, 9, 13, 15 # longest non-deceasing subsequence (not uniqu...

Its probably longer than the code I have written as well
 
1 hour later…
05:57
@RaphX The link you have given of another post is a different problem. The codeforces problem, by subsequence they mean continuous, i.e; easier problem.
06:09
Hi Guys, familiar with python basics. Just wanna write RESTFul Services in python. For beginners please suggest which framework should we pick?
pick one of flask or django
django if you prefer following a laid out structure to work within
flask if you're more comfortable with your current tools/libraries for things like database connection, and prefer just free flow-integration of your existing work.
but honestly, either is fine.
(and i personally prefer flask*, but they're both solid)
@ParitoshSingh Thanks for clear explanation. Without using any of these framework are we able to write pure python code for RESTFul web serviecs?
Sorry Lack of deep understanding about python.
06:29
Both are pure python
You can always reinvent the wheel but we have pretty good wheels by now
@AndrasDeak Actually i am hard-core Javascript developer(full stack). Just wanna explore python. But i am getting very excited everyday. I don't know much about python that's why i am asking these dumb queries. Thank you guys for your patience and replying to my queries.
 
2 hours later…
08:21
@shaan26 you might want to learn the basics of the language before learning an advanced framework on top. The official tutorial is not a bad place to start if you already know how to program.
08:59
I'm running Flask Admin and I'm getting an inconsistent amount of rows on each page, pages with only one row, some pages with a couple, but no full pages. Is this a common issue?
 
2 hours later…
11:24
Yeah @taritgoswami the link I posted was different
I will just post the code for that problem
n = int(input())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
counter = 1
e = []
if len(a) == 1:
    e.append('1')
else:
    for i in range(n-1):
        c = a[i]
        d = a[i+1]
        if d >= c:
            counter += 1
        else:
            counter = 1
        e.append(counter)
print(max(e))
That is the code I wrote to get the longest non-increasing subsequence in the array that will be taken as input
Please suggest how can I improve it
better variable names for readibility helps.
Ok and any other improvement regarding how I am trying to solve the problem? @ParitoshSingh
i mean, looks okay to me. are you facing issues with the constraints of the site?
time or something?
No it got accepted but the memory was huge for the codes I have written till now
Till now memory usage was around 100 -200 KB but for this code it jumped to around 9000 KB in some cases
so, memory wise? well, in that case, you don't actually need to know all values for lengths of long sequences, but just the max
given that, look at your e list. do you actually need to store all values before figuring out the max?
So, thats one area of improvement. Other than that, you could reduce the i variable, by directly iterating through the list a, but those things should not matter much at all, its just 1 integer.
11:50
When you mean directly iterating , you mean to use '_
* '_' right?
However, in that case I won't be able to compare the previous and the next indices without zip function will I?
12:09
indeed
12:20
cabbage :)
Even if you decide that you really want to keep your e list, you can cut down on its size by only appending to it when you reach the end of a sequence. On average, O(number of subsequences) is better than O(len(a)).
12:47
cbg
cabbage
How is your project going? Doesn't seem very active lately
I have never actively worked on a project. They just manifest in my github, half completed and pre-neglected.
Yes, my github sprang back to life by itself yesterday as well.
13:07
hello everyone
Becoming a programmer so you can create useful applications is like becoming a martial arts master so you can beat the hell out of street thugs.
I am having an issue with regex. It would be great if anyone of you people can help me
It's like, yes, you can do those things, but you were supposed to experience a spriritual awakening along the way that makes you predisposed not to
re.search(r'\b(?=\w)' + re.escape(searchtext) + r'\b(?!\w)', query)
if the value of searchtext is c++ and value of query is also c++ the search simply fails
can anyone please point me towards the right direction
Hmm
13:11
+ has meaning in regex
@Simon Were you talking to me? I've been restructuring it to use some classes instead of a purely functional implementation, exploring Pytest and Flask (although not in conjunction, yet).
then how can I handle this?
Indeed it does but if escape is doing its job then the resulting regex won't have an unescaped plus in it
Don't you want to also escape the query? At least part of it.
@Kevin ...or instilling obedience in children through fear.
13:12
@Kevin oh I had the args mixed up I think
Then the lookahead/behinds might be to blame
I'm suspicious of that second \b. I don't think the boundary between "+" and the end of string counts as a word boundary.
re.search(r'\b(?=\w)' + re.escape("c++") + r'(?!\w)', "c++") gives me a successful match.
@Dodge Indeed, you too :) By the by, if you'd stayed for the whole thing, you'd've won something ;)
@Kevin And the preceding one matches? Huh
The preceding \b? Yeah, there's a word boundary between start of string and "c"
Weird that ^ and $ behave differently
Or is it because of the non-word +?
13:20
I almost never use \b in my own regexen, personally. I fear it.
Yeah, it's magic even by regex standards
An element that matches zero characters is 2spooky4me
@PaulMcG :p Where'd you find the image?
Except for the kleene star; it's grandfathered in.
@AndrasDeak Yeah, it's because "+" isn't a word character.
@U9-Forward Yes, names left-to-right
@toonarmycaptain Photographer emailed it to me
13:24
@Dodge 247 was the number I saw this year. I believe they made capacity, which is promising for next year.
@PaulMcG Oh, nice :)
Swag from the Google Cloud table
@toonarmycaptain Seriously? Whatever I would've won probably does not offset all of the potential pitfalls of driving late into the night with toddlers so I probably made the right choice, unless they were giving away giant bags of money :)
@Dodge Yours don't sleep in the car?
Yes but if they don't you're screwed and stopping on the roadside for bathroom breaks (or the thousands of other reasons) is one million times riskier in the dark
13:40
\o cbg
@PaulMcG Still one of the best swag ideas I've seen. Although I'm totally onboard with Google jeans.
I hope you know that google socks are surely tracking you everywhere :)
4
Thanks@Kevin
@PaulMcG They gave out used loafers? Sweet!
@piRSquared darn it... I was looking at that and thinking the same thing... you Kevin'd me though :p
14:12
Bah, regex lookbehinds can't have unlimited length. Maybe I want catastrophic backtracking!
@JonClements The spectre of Room6Con was raised at PyTexas this year. I posit that Keven must give his talk last, for obvious reasons.
Room6Con has a ring to it :)
(but so does CabbageCon :p)
Trying to decide how I should protect my anonymity while giving this hypothetical talk. Either of the Daft Punk helmets are on-theme, but I hear they are uncomfortably snug unless professionally fitted. DeadMau5' head is roomy, but looks unwieldy. Yoko Taro's mask could be a good compromise...
If my talk is about cybersecurity I could don a simple balaclava in the style of black hat hackers as depicted by poorly-researched stock images
Are Guy Fawkes masks too last year?
@Kevin In all the pageantry and caricatures pf Room6Con/Cabbage Con, I imagine Kevin as a Master Miyagi, except with a longer beard, meditating while floating in midair, speaking to the room as a disembodied voice.
@AndrasDeak That's a bit of a straw man, eh?
14:23
hmm?
@Kevin If the balaclava had your identicon printed on it you would protect your identity while still distinguishing you as a Kevin
Guy Fawkes is a bit too laden with ideological affiliations for my tastes
Just pretend your name is Nivek - no one will work out your true identity! :)
My presentation is on cognitive basilisks. The introductory slide disables your facial recognition ability for the next fifteen minutes.
For good measure the final slide erases your memory of the last fifteen minutes and instills the same euphoria you feel when you watch a really good TED talk
@Kevin I looked into this last year when adding PrecededBy to pyparsing. I tried to keep the overhead low on the caller, by checking if the expression we were lookbehinding for was of a known or max length, and using that as a max lookbehind boundary. Not sure I got it completely right tho (for instance, if you lookbehind for \d+ and you are preceded by '123', do you report '3' - which is sufficient to satisfy the lookbehind - or '123'?)
14:29
@PaulMcG the default for quantifiers should be greedy, shouldn't it?
In that case I would expect it to be "123". But I bet you could come up with a different scenario where no good intuitive solution exists.
Umm... thought we had a dupe for this?
@Kevin You're ideologically opposed to fireworks and fire?
Looking at the code just now, it looks like I jump out as soon as I get a match - probably erring on the side of speed, since pp is so dang slow. But this may end up having to be an option in the constructor, and probably defaulting to greedy.
14:45
@PaulMcG didn't think at this stage they'd be much left to add to PP :)
If it's not a fully functional lisp dialect, you can add more to it.
I have written this solution in Python 3, but saying wrong answer. I'm not able to find my mistake.. I have checked end cases and possible mistakes regarding list index etc. Can anyone help me?
# cook your dish here
n,q=map(int,input().split())
f=[int(fi) for fi in input().split()]
s=[]
sk=0
for k in range(n):
    sk = sk^f[k]
    s.append(sk)

for _ in range(q):
    k=int(input())
    if(k<n+1):
        print(s[k-1])
    elif(k==(n+1)):
        print(0)
    else:
        print(s[k%(n+2)])
Running test cases gives correct results
elif(k==(n+1)): print(0) doesn't look right to me.
I think you are assuming that S_k is periodic and its period is equal to N, but I don't think this is true for all possible inputs
Because, S_(n+1) = S_n XOR F_(n+1), and F_(n+1)=S_n .. so S_(n+1)=S_n XOR S_n =0
@Kevin Actually, S_(n+1)=0 and S_(n+2)=S_1, S_(n+3)=S_2 and so on
I'm not convinced. I'll see if I can construct a counterexample...
15:02
@Kevin Ok, thanks:)
They just had to use one-indexed sequences, didn't they :-I
becuz le Glory of Satan
cabbages
15:20
@taritgoswami, I'm getting an IndexError when I try running your code with the input:
9 1
97 53 5 33 65 62 51 100 38
20
More generally I expect print(s[k%(n+2)]) to fail if k > n+1 and k%n+2 >= n... Here's a smaller one.
3 1
0 1 2
8
Unlucky that none of the test cases trigger this behavior
Perhaps you are correct about the periodicity of S. If so, the overall structure of the code may be fine and you only need to fiddle with the indexing arithmetic.
15:54
good day
I'm having a NoReverseError Django
It's frustrating enough
Today my highly specific annoyance is when I look up character build guides for RPGs and have to wade through 99 posts of "just do whatever you feel like, all builds are equally viable" before I find the one player who actually did the math and determined that the Vorpal +5 Excalibur has a 0.5% higher DPS than the Poisoning Raging Flaming Sword of Doom
I don't want positive affirmation, I want excel spreadsheets
Saying "there is no wrong way to play the game" is obstructing me from playing the game the way I want to play it -- namely, by using the provably most optimal build so I can trivialize all challenges before me
in Path of Exile, "all builds are equally viable" will never be uttered, because most ways to build a character will actually be very bad
@Kevin ooh, thats a blast from the past/future. What RPGs do you play?
16:05
@FélixGagnon-Grenier Umm... sounds like a MTG card :)
hah, that is indeed comparable :)
Technically in SW:CCG you can give an ewok a lightsaber, and take down Darth Vader. I'm not saying it's the best strategy, but it has been done ;)
@ParitoshSingh Right now, Dark Souls 1
Especially surprised at the hippy Universal Acceptance vibe I get from the first 99 posters given the "Get Good" philosophy of the game
Perhaps there is no contradiction here. "All builds are equally viable... If you have already gotten good"
16:19
just go for the build which* has no armour :P
The DS1 master can beat the game at level 1 while naked and wielding a broken sword hilt. The only reason he would use the Vorpal +5 Excalibur is if he thinks the beheading animation is aesthetically pleasing.
"Don't need armor if you never get hit" is a viable build... There's a speed runner who got through the entire series without ever taking damage.
morning cabbage
> “Gaming history!” The_Happy_Hob shouted at the end of the run. “It’s easy,” he added almost in a whisper, before laughing like a man whose sanity abandoned him so long ago that he barely remembers ever having it—which makes sense, given that he ever decided to tackle this challenge in the first place.
@JonClements That is true, the API has been pretty stable in recent years. Rehosting the code to GitHub has opened up input to a lot of new people though, and PrecededBy was an interesting suggestion from one of them. The latest issue is that I've fixed some bugs which end up breaking existing code that depended on the buggy behavior. I'd really like to get that sorted out, but its going to take a couple of releases. Also, I want to sunset Py2, and adopt some Py3 features I've had to defer.
Ahh.... that makes sense I guess... :)
16:27
its not a bug, its a feature
16:53
@Kevin with a keyboard or controller? I'm having an incredibly hard time with the keyboard, and some people say it's harder with it rather than a controller.
Controller. I'm playing on Nintendo Switch.
heh. didn't know switch did that :)
They delayed it for like a year so it must have been a feat to port it
There's no lag in BlightTown which is all that matters
(not that this impacted my current run, because I cunningly sequence-breaked my way around B.T. by cunningly using the sequence-breaking key that you can choose as a starting item. So very cunning.)
such cunning
very breaking
I imagine that playing with a keyboard is more difficult, if you use (arrow keys | WASD | HJKL) to move. That only gives you eight degrees of freedom, which isn't much in comparison to a joystick
Maybe you should choose a build that doesn't need to dodge much... I'm thinking heavy armor and a nice stable shield
17:03
so far, I am so very bad I need to muster up courage to play like three hours
The Havel armor set is good for maximum chonk
Luckily it's accessible before the hardest boss in the game
Perhaps it will console you to learn that I died literally ten times in a row to Boss #2 despite having 360 glorious degrees of movement
You might in fact be getting the Authentic Dark Souls Experience and your choice of control input peripheral doesn't affect that
@Kevin but... how is it possible The Kevin can die at all... it's not what the scriptures said...
You don't die in Dark Souls so much as you disintegrate and rematerialize in a safe location with all of your money missing
17:13
along with all that hard-earned experience...
NPCs occasionally express surprise at the perseverance of the player character. Everyone else can only get savagely de-atomized a half dozen times or so before their spirit is like "nope, I'm out".
The enemies you see at the beginning of the game just staring blankly at walls have basically rage-quit their lives
@JonClements Every Kevin() you interact with is but an instance of The Kevin, The real Kevin cannot die.
...but can he truly live?
@Kevin: Long live Sir Kevin, you'll never die...
17:21
Y'all are going to be real disappointed in 50 years when I die despite all of the Room 6 Lore indicating that this is impossible
I bet you'll incarnate yourself as Python 4.0
17:32
@Kevin Thanks it's working now
Oh good. I was worried you'd ask "so how should I do modular indexing on one-indexed sequences?" and then I'd have to admit that I don't know.
How can I change/replace a json file on github by dumping back a new json file from a server? Access is currently forbidden if I want to store new information there.
@Kevin Actually the length of the list was n, and I was taking modulo n+2. This time appended 0 to s, and to print s[k], used s[k%(n+1)-1] when k>n
17:55
@ksalf Python 4.0 will be obsolete... @Kevin will reincarnate as KevinScript - the One True programming language :)
3
@petruz are you trying to store content and load it from github?
@roganjosh yes and load it back to the server
Ok. I've never actually done that, but was just trying to make sure I understand what you're asking. Why do you want to load the JSON from github?
I use it for triviant/trivia I run at discord. I want to use a ranking system.
@JonClements: I hope that I master KevinScript, and get a rep over 100K like you do :P
18:02
I feel like using Github as a storage medium for arbitrary data is kind of a square peg / round hole situation
it works when I run the system from my own computer and store the json there
I just need to access the github account from the heroku server. Use login credentials to the github as a token?
I have at least heard of people loading content from github but I thought it was like a poor man's host for static content. And not a great idea IIRC.
What problem would this solve over local storage?
I am hosting the trivia game 24/7
Hosting where?
at discord
not going to use my own computer 24/7
anyway. I just need to store a tiny dictionary somewhere
18:07
Perhaps you could use subprocess (or similar) to execute the various git push/commit/whatever commands necessary to update the file on github.
must be possible with github but what are alternatives to storing data somewhere?
You could buy a web server.
(Rent? Lease? whatever)
I'm not getting this. Discord is VOIP?
I am using Heroku to host a game at discord
18:09
Discord can do voice chat but it also has text chat.
heroku does access the files at github
Bot-driven games are fairly common in the latter.
Now, I don't know much about The Cloud, but wouldn't it be possible to store the JSON on the same machine that is running your Heroku instance?
I'm probably not going to be able to help. It seems a bit of a hodgepodge setup. Perhaps you can host the data as a googlesheet on Google Drive and use gspread to read the data
maybe I can find the solution here: stackoverflow.com/questions/38594717/…
Depends on how well the JSON can be flattened out I guess
18:10
I believe you can get free hosting at sdf.org
I never tried it myself
Using github as a filehost is kind of normal though, I don't see what's wrong with it.
The ability to change the file dynamically
@QuestionC "normal". Er wait what? How is using a source control endpoint as storage that is decorrelated to versioning in any way normal, or even logical?
All the cool kids are doing it.
Certainly I believe that Github users will use Github for purposes other than as a version control system. Sometimes this is even officially sanctioned, e.g. pages.github.com
Still, static content
18:18
I don't see anything in the terms of use that say "please don't use us as a free file storage system" which surprised me. I guess the "we reserve the right to nuke your stuff if you use too much bandwidth" clause is good enough for weeding out the truly naughty users
The hoops through which one needs to jump to do it, eg using a source control flow of committing, branching and pushing stuff around, sounds like a strange choice over using a database
Agreed. Still, I see the appeal if it saves you from spending a dollar a month on hosting elsewhere
TODO: Find way to use youtube for arbitrary file hosting.
Store as a series of beeps. Play at 2x speed. Decipher beeps. Hope your customers have patience. Save $1/month.
18:24
I am informing about the possibility to change the content of a tiny json file stored at github, not to find a way to save money. You are saying that github cannot be used to change a json file contained there dynamically and I should look for another way to store the file?
Oh, I think github can be used to change a json file etc. I just don't know exactly how you would do it beyond "subprocess and git"
If the JSON is tiny and, for reasons I'm not clear on, can't be stored in a file, then you could always look at keeping this in memory?
Ah yes the Commodore 64 cassette tape method. Arbitrary storage on so many platforms.
Usually the workflow for writing a subprocess program is: open a command prompt and try to manually do the thing you want to automate. then copy all of those commands and stick them in some subprocess calls. Remember to use a tuple of strings and not one long string.
I can access heap memory at Heroku itself?
18:26
Heroku can't be this complex, surely. To Google!
One poorly worded google search led me to devcenter.heroku.com/articles/active-storage-on-heroku, which appears to say that Heroku can do file storage, but things tend to vanish after 24 hours
oh my goodness Notre Dame
yes terrible
18:30
:-(
Why notre dam both in python and js room?
We're not so different, them and us.
> Instead of storing uploaded files to disk, the best practice is to leverage a cloud file storage service such as Amazon’s S3.
@ksalf Have you not seen the news? Or just wondering why we're talking about it?
Hmm, how much does an S3 cost?
S3 is very cheap
Can't tell if I wooshed or not
@AlexanderReynolds: I just googled after posting, and found the news
aws.amazon.com/free smells like one of those "free" products where they ask you to enter your credit card information, for reasons.
@ksalf Yeah. The spire has even collapsed. Absolutely terrible for France, and Europe, really.
"Or just wondering why we're talking about it?" - Noooooooo, love Notre dame...actually thanks for the news
18:32
oh wow, yikes
S3 seems too cheap
i didnt know about it, just googled notre dame
It's Amazon, so they probably won't steal your identity and flee to Portugal. But they might wait 12 months and upgrade you to Ultra Premium Plus
Just heartsick - loss for the whole world
Yeah.... it's not looking good :( Seems the entire roof has collapsed now or something :(
18:33
Again, if you just need free hosting I suggest checking out sdf.org
Might be a relief, that some of the statues were removed as it was undergoing renovation...
I have no issues with the hosting at heroku. think the file can be replaced at github and everything will work fine
@roganjosh oh... goody... nice of Trump to tweet an idea :p
Yeah, it's now all under control. Apparently they need to dump water on the fire and fast
18:38
Yeah, actually trump suggested a nice thing
but the roof has collapsed
Nevermind, just dump the tonnes of water on it anyway
Scary how susceptible these things are to fire. I've visited twice and honestly wouldn't have thought how much damage a fire can do to something that is, ostensibly, brickwork. A great shame :/
Lots of wood though apparently...
@roganjosh: Though the woodwork looks nice, for ancient buildings they wreak havoc
Yeah, you can see it in the pics inside
Interestingly, Fred Bibnah (who you almost certainly won't know outside of the UK, if outside of the North) used to bring old factory chimneys down with wood
Put braces of wood up spanning the chimney on the inside and light a fire. The expansion could blow the chimney apart
Umm... maybe Quasimodo finally lost his temper with the bells and all that...
18:48
Fred D*ibnah
I searched about the guy who brought down chimney stack using wood---Fred Dibnah
Ohhh, I hadn't even seen my typo :P
:P
Ugh, that's a bad one too. Thanks for correcting me; he's a fascinating guy. As a kid he used to drive past our house in one of the old steam engines
"fearless" doesn't come close to describing him. I don't suppose there will be more like him
Someone else has bought one of his engines since and it was parked outside my local pub. Made my evening.
18:54
Not spamming - The most cruel and yet quite impressive way of creating a blast, just beneath the fort-base to force its collapse, was exihibited by using pigs...as depicted in Iron-clad movie
Hi, so i'm trying to figure out a way to check how many "matches" i get while using pandas.merge(), my goal is to make sure every foreign key on the left dataframe has a match on the right one, and if not to register it.
They let a herd of pigs into a tunnel, made them run to the point they wanted to, and then burnt them all, it resulted in a massive blast due to pig-fat
@user3207377 Can you do a how='left' and indicator=True as arguments to the .merge(...) - then check that the _merge column that gets included is always both ?
@roganjosh: You are lucky to see him.
@ksalf I'm not sure I believe that
Many years ago there was a documentary on TV one night about spontaneous human combustion. They actually used a pig as a demo on how the skin acts like a wick and it will burn for hours. The fats are not volatile
18:58
@JonClements i could but that requires prior knowledge of column names, no?
Well... @user3207377 not sure I'm following... just change to add those arguments... indicator=True always creates a new column called _merge.... if you're already doing the merge then knowledge of names is already known, no?
oh im sorry
youre right, i didn't understand indicator=True correctly
ill try it
it works! thanks!
@roganjosh: You may be right, but chrinicles say that the king did order fat bacon pigs
@user3207377 You might also want to see if validate=... is something worth using as well to check for duplicates keys and such...
They might not hav burnt them alive, but they do used their fat
19:02
It wouldn't matter if they were alive or not, you'd need pretty massive amounts of pig fat volatilising to make an explosive mixture. I can't personally see it happening outside of a really controlled environment
@roganjosh besides... according to the Worms games... it's those sheep that cause some quite nasty explosions :)
baaaaah
totoo-totoooooo *super sheep*
Ha, I was literally just about to say "we wouldn't have put napalm jackets on bats if this was viable"
@roganjosh: see the 4th section "warfare" - theguardian.com/film/2012/apr/12/ironclad-credentials-mulch
@Kevin He recently managed to play all 5 soulsborne games in a row without getting hit: polygon.com/2019/3/21/18275978/…
poor guy barely looked sane against the end
19:04
Of all the lies only this fat thing is true in that movie
Ah, I thought he had done more than just DS1-3, but I couldn't find a more recent article (with fifteen seconds of googling)
@Arne maybe he's got nice a nice close fitting jacket and regular room service giving him little sweets as a treat? :p
@ksalf Mmm, but you suggested there was an explosion from the pigs
I also said they would burn for hours. I certainly won't dispute the burning, but no dramatic explosion
yeah, as depicted in the movie...not in reality
I never ever thought of anything like that before , so it was quite impressive yet cruel
Does anyone else here watch QI/listen to No Such Thing as a Fish?
Not gonna lie, quite surprised by the silence :)
19:08
Shall I ask a question in chemistry section - What would happen If 30-40 fatty things are burnt under an-aerobic conditions?Would there be a blast?
No, there wouldn't. Particularly because it's anaerobic
it would be a blast for sure, the question is whether there's also an explosion
There should be a blast given that you have those pigs all stuffed together in a little space
There cannot be a blast without oxygen
the energy, massive, so released in that pressure condition would force an explosion
19:11
Unless pigs also have fat that can produce oxygen at a very high rate
@roganjosh Normally watch QI yeah.... haven't heard of the later though...
@JonClements highly recommend. Better than the show and great while doing the cleaning on a Sat etc.
@roganjosh also really enjoy "The Unbelievable Truth" hosted by David Mitchell.... use to love (can't remember the name of it now) - the show the QI elves did themselves...
Oh, you mean No Such Thing as a Fish? :P
Apparently it was called: "No Such Thing As The News "
19:13
That was a spin-off long after they started Fish
Yeah... just seen: No Such Thing As The News has been inspired by the QI podcast No Such Thing As A Fish. The show will premiere next month.
And very short-lived. Fish continues weekly
Will have to look that up then :)
19:27
Now that OP has clarified his requirements somewhat, How do I iterate over all words up to permutations of the alphabet in Python? is a rather interesting question if you're a fan of itertools-y puzzles
I have a `class` named `team` in Python, I have created a list of objects of that `team` class, named `match`. The class has two field, one is `teamName` another `netGoal`.


Now, I want to sort the list according to the `netGoal`, how can I do it?
@taritgoswami sort(teams, key=lambda team: team.netGoal)
I interpret the question as: call a string "canonical" if there is no Caesar Cipher of that string that is lexicographically smaller. For a given set of characters, iterate through all canonical strings of size N composed of those characters.
altneratively, import operator; sort(teams, key=operator.attrgetter('netGoal'))
19:29
Ideally, do so with the least amount of memory possible. yielding the values in lexicographic order is a nice-to-have, but not a deal breaker
@AlexanderReynolds Can you please explain this line? I never used lambda
@taritgoswami it is equivalent to:
def get_net_goal(team):
    return team.netGoal
sort(teams, key=get_net_goal)
I would like to point out that there is no built-in sort function. There is list.sort, but that's a method. There's sorted, but that doesn't do much unless you assign the value to something.
lambda defines an "anonymous function" or an "inline-defined function" --- you can google around for more on it
whoops, thanks @Kevin
change my sort above to sorted, @taritgoswami. And yes, you need to assign it to something. So sorted_teams = sorted(teams, key=lambda team: team.netGoal) or sorted_teams = sorted(teams, key=operator.attrgetter('netGoal'))
hi if i want to have a video call feature in web app, how do i add it?
is it possible to keep that video file saved for future use?
Thanks
19:34
Ok, thanks :) @AlexanderReynolds and Kevin
wim
wim
19:46
>>> [].sort.__class__
<class 'builtin_function_or_method'>
looks pretty built-in! :)
19:57
well its a bultin function or method :P, but Kevin said built-in function specifically
wim
wim
20:32
show me a method that is not also a function
sorry for being needlessly argumentative
Rhythm and Stanislavski come to mind
rbrb
Is the "something like this" actually a construct I should be getting my head around or is it pulled from something like Java?
XY singleton/sentinel attempt?
Should just have object() probably
Possibly. I'm also curious as to whether my thoughts on external libraries for this kinda thing actually just boil down to that
It's hurting my brain a bit. I need to look up how caching is implemented
20:53
@PaulMcG That must be a rather popular Theatre class ;)
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