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01:20
cbg
01:35
@JonClements Getting closer to python 3.x gold... three answers to go
And I've just got 184 answers and 985 tag score to go. Almost as close as you!
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Haha, lol, that's a lot, little closer with python tag... but not much
:-)
I am yet to answer!!
Only... 947 tag score and 111 more answers to go!
@ksalf need 1000 tag score more and 200 answers to go
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Questions don't count :-)
I got mine already
01:45
I got mine in the future.
@U9-Forward: Seems a daunting task to me
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Lol, i got enough answers for 3.x... but 755 up-votes to go
If only tag score didn't matter...
@ksalf I am happy to get it :-)
There is something you can do with it, close questions as duplicate by yourself when the question has a tag that you have a gold badge of...
Me answering 200 questions :P, I get downvoted even for askng questions lol
01:48
@ksalf You can't even vote yet...
@ksalf Well, yeah :-)
Upvoting only requires 15 rep
And my favorite privilege, flagging stuff, also only requires 15 rep
@U9-Forward: Nice tip, did not know that
@PikachuthePurpleWizard I mean he can't vote to close yet.
Only can flag
@ksalf Lol :-)
Sadly, I can't vote to close either. Well, except on waffles stack exchange...
My favorite privilege, upvoting rights and chat rooms, happy to have those 2
01:51
The good thing about flagging is that you get credit for it, but you don't actually have to do any work except clicking a couple buttons :)
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Lol, haha, oh yeah, that's right, i can tho, and can close by myself...
On waffles SE, I can close stuff myself when there are 4 pending close votes
It's vice versa for me, i can't close on WSE (MSE), but can on SO
@PikachuthePurpleWizard: So that's why my question gets flagged as a duplicate one :P
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Yeah
@ksalf Aha.
01:52
Exactly, @ksalf. U9-Forward used his magical wizard gold-tag-badge powers to close your question.
And downvoted too, I was about to be suspended :)
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Haha, lol, yeah, i was delighted to get it, i was the 464th user to get it
Not anymore...thanks goodness
I SHALL BE THE 500th USER TO GET IT!
maybe...
If you get it now, you would be 475th...
01:54
Sorry to interrupt but anyone has idea about how soon we can expect v2.7 release to include bpo-36216 patch? Say within the next few weeks or it probably will take months at the very least?
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Well, depends on your performance...
I earned it on the 25th of February...
I only do the 3.x not the 2.7
@U9-Forward at the rate I'm going, I'll have the gold python badge in approximately 10 years.
So, yeah, I'm sure I'll be the next one to get it
Haha, lol :-) the first to get it was S.Lott at 2009/01/04
Really S.Lott??? REALLY???
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Yup
01:58
I just realized something very important... I have more gold badges than you, @U9-Forward!
They you got nosklo on June
@PikachuthePurpleWizard WHAT!!! How?
I only got it on Suggested edits, but you don't have that :-)
But still, i have more silver and bronze..
I've done 833 reviews in SE so far...
Silver is a very close call.
@PikachuthePurpleWizard I have to go, can you talk in 45 mins?
02:02
Maybe. I'll try to come back around then.
See ya later!
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Sure!
02:49
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Here?
Yep.
I'll be able to chat in a sec, just need to edit my most recent answer...
Done.
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Strange, why is it down-voted?
I originally only had the first half of the answer, but made a grace period edit to add the second half.
Admittedly using global wasn't the best solution in the world, but still...
@PikachuthePurpleWizard You can't get undown-voted...
If the downvote was cast less than 5 minutes ago, I could. But unfortunately that's probably not going to happen :(
02:55
Yeah, but he can edit it then down-vote
+1 for you
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Np :-) i answered too, maybe worth a look
Another good answer. +1 for you.
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Haha, you deeply think, you still got more rep from it than me :-) lol
Ahh, yes... I got 8 more reputation than you. Cackles evilly
03:01
@PikachuthePurpleWizard How do you get đź‘ľ for tag badge?
Unfortunately it was fixed and the trick no longer works :'(
@PikachuthePurpleWizard I got more rep now from the answer :-)
Oooh... such a pretty 2...
I have my own 2 too.
Except there's a negative two divided by two too.
Haha, lol
I don't have any negtives
That must be... sniff... so wonderful...
03:08
Haha, :-)
gasp you do have a negative number somewhere! stackoverflow.com/questions/54416396
Well, not on that tho, let's just look at the new one.
NO! i got the trigger to do the funny icon tag badge recording thing, but no longer works...
Here's a really negative one: stackoverflow.com/questions/51000035/…
Yeah... I wish they didn't fix it.
I just learned what ast.literal_eval is! I mean, umm, I already knew what it was...
Here is your really really negative one: stackoverflow.com/questions/53195935/…
You know json.loads?
But... it's green and negative!
03:13
Well, but no up-votes tho, unlike some of mine with up-votes..
Well, your code:
elif CelsiusorFarenheit == "farenheit" or "Farenheit":
Could be:
elif CelsiusorFarenheit.lower() == "farenheit":
I honestly forgot about that answer... But thanks, @U9-Forward, I've made the answer better.
Actually, just realized it doesn't work... "Farenheit" won't work
Better now.
It's working for me now...
Yeah
I realized that you're actually pretty new here...
newer than me, i thought i was the newest one :-)
Still, you've gained rep quite a bit faster than me.
03:22
Lol :-)
NO! you got more rep from the answer now!
@PikachuthePurpleWizard See this: stackoverflow.com/questions/55510485/…
I was not aware of float.is_integer(). That's gonna make my life quite a bit easier...
Lol :-)
Thanks for +1
NP. You deserve it.
Thanks
Have you heard of difflib.SequenceMatcher, @U9-Forward?
03:28
Yeah
What about imp.get_suffixes()?
@PikachuthePurpleWizard One of my oldest answers: stackoverflow.com/questions/51057443/…
Wow... I didn't know about that until I looked it up 5 seconds ago.
See above link
It's 8:30 PM for me
definitely not the start of the day
Ooh... another random upvote.
03:35
Yeah that's right, probably different timezone, and also it is not really a start.
I just +1 for you and make a end to these votings.
Woohoo, 100 rep
Sorry, I gotta go now. Cya later!
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Bye, was fun to talk to ya, gonna try ta beat ya on gold-badges :-)
Back @U9-Forward, sorry about that.
03:40
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Haha, magically finished what you were doing 100x faster, and got back :-)
Must... get... magic... python... badge...
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Of course, i am not really focusing one MSE
I'm the opposite, I'm not really focusing on earning reputation on SO that much.
03:46
I was only focusing on it when there was Waffles Bash (Winter Bash)
So discussion is my second tag, and winter-bash is my first tag
To be quite honest, I think you might be the first person on Waffles SE I've seen to have as their top tag.
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Haha, lol
I just realized that's my fourth best tag. Kinda strange...
Lol, i just recently answered one to get 1k, because i was get 960, so answered and got 1k
But now i will wait until next WB and focus on it again
03:52
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Btw, i am a newer user there than you :-)
Once I finally bother to finish learning numpy, I'll probably start focusing on SO more
Oh, yes, technically you are.
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Yeah
OH DAMN... i missed out on this one: stackoverflow.com/questions/55684960/…
Geez... I don't understand how that got so many upvotes...
It doesn't appear to show research effort to me.
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Well, the one i showed you was the same.
Exactly.
Wow, and the answer author's only had an account for 21 days...
03:56
Haha, this is always some strange stuff, i have a feeling some votes are fake, maybe bots.
actually I don't know, either, I have answered many question better than this, but only 1 upvote or not.
@recnac Wow, i would love to be you..
I didn't do this, this is the only high answer I got, and I don't know why
Having that...
@recnac But still, i got more rep and python gold
But... you've also been a member for 1.5 years.
@recnac joined 21 days ago and managed to get almost 2k reputation since then...
03:59
@PikachuthePurpleWizard That's true
I indeed need reputation to 2k or 3k to unlock more priviledge, but I didn't to dirty work
I would love so much to have 3k...
you can see my answers, I spend a lot of time in SO recently, many answer is zero upvote and no accepted.
You're not the only one...
04:01
but maybe I will get unsung hero badge for that, hah
@recnac You see, my best answers are all 15 and 14
My best answer is at +8 and took me about 10 seconds to write.
except this, I only got 5 upvote : )
maybe the upvote number is do nothing with quality and effort
Besides my highest scoring answer, my best one is at +4
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Mine, where maybe 3 min
04:03
sometimes a common trick, or basic question will be more popular.
Exactly. It's really weird.
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Yeah, i got 15, 14, 11, 9, 9, 8, 7, 7, 7, 7, 6, 6, 6, 6 ...
@PikachuthePurpleWizard Yeah
Let's see... I've got 8,4,4,3,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2...
Ahh... nice answer @recnac.
hah, enjoy this kind of question
@PikachuthePurpleWizard I got to go, i think i can't talk to you today, maybe tommorrow, i will come back probaby in 2 hours
04:05
bye bye @U9-Forward
I'll probably be asleep in 2 hrs, @U9-Forward :( But I'll be able to get on for a few minutes in ~10 hours. Bye!
upvote for you : )
And +1 for your favorite answer as well :)
thanks, I think they deserve this : )
Yeah... you deserve a lot of reputation for writing that answer.
That is... complicated.
04:08
but still silence under a ~ trick : )
I never even knew there was a ~ operator in python... That's good to know.
@recnac my last message, saw my two best answers, worth a look.
I think we should care less about reputation, just learn and teach
certainly @U9-Forward
I've gotta leave now. See ya later, @recnac!
bye~~nice to meet you~@PikachuthePurpleWizard
04:47
cbg
04:57
cbg
 
2 hours later…
06:29
cbg
cbg
I have this piece of code, and I'm getting a "UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character" error:

for sub_category in category["subcategories"]:
child_parents = parents.copy()
child_parents.append(category["name"])
get_category_products(sub_category, child_parents)
Wait, that's the wrong loop. This one:
for image in product["images"]:
filename = os.path.basename(image)
filepath = product_path + "/" + filename
urllib.request.urlretrieve(image, filepath)
Specifically this line "urllib.request.urlretrieve(image, filepath)"
Hey guys, I'm trying to run a while loop in python which grabs some data and appends it to a list with list.append(), but I need my code to run faster than it is currently. Are there any alternatives to lists or append() that you recommend? or ways to speed this up? Even names of things to look into is enough, I just need some leads so I can google efficiently.
Obviously image url contains non-ascii characters. Is there a way to make python work with non-ascii characters?
06:49
python3 works with unicode internally, so in principle there should be no problem
it's kinda hard to give an actual answer unless I have a piece of code that reproduces the exact error you get
but I also have never worked with urllib, maybe someone else can just guess what went wrong
@AbdurRehmanKhan if the data you speak of is a file you can use mmap
@akinuri: As @Arne mentioned, this is really hard to debug without a more detailed code example. Note that - as far as I can remember - the internal encoding for HTTP messages is latin-1. But I think that has changed with the latest RFC. I'm still scrolling through some RFCs.
@akinuri while I'm doing that, can you tell me if it is feasible for you to use either requests or Python3?
requests makes HTTP way easier and might be able to solve the problem transparently for you. In case you are using Python2, make sure to use "unicode" strings when dealing with special characters
I've checked answer on this questions, and url.encode('utf-8') is suggested. But that didn't work.
That kinda makes sense. If the URL contains non-ASCII characters they need to use a special encoding.
Someone else suggested urllib.parse.quote(url). This seemed to work, but it encodes the whole url. So : in http:// gets encoded as well
It's actually fairly recent that it works transparently in the browsers
If I remember correctly, the encoding used is called "punycode".
07:00
So, I found a workaround:

image_url = urlparse(image)
image_url = image_url.scheme + "://" + image_url.netloc + urllib.parse.quote(image_url.path)
But I haven't dealt with it recently so I need to brush up on things
I can download the images with unicode url now.
Ok. Makes sense
urllib.parse.quote replaces any non-ascii characters with % replacements.
Glad you have something working :)
I strongly suggest to have a look at the "requests" library I linked above
Yea. Otherwise I'd (probably would skip it to someone else) have to rename all the image files on the server. So this was a save :)
ok... forget what I said about punycode. I got that mixed up with IDNA.
Are those filenames on a server?
In that case, listen carefully: never ever change the filesystem-encoding :)
If you change the filesystem encoding, the existing filenames will remain stored in the old encoding, while any new filenames will be encoded in the new encoding.
And that's going to be a major PITA to fix.
I've had to deal with a filesystem where the sysadmin decided it would be a good idea to do that during the lifetime of the server. This was not fun.
07:09
cbg
No, not the database. Some users upload images with unicode characters. I have a script to download these images. Python was troubling me with the non-ascii characters. If I couldn't find a fix, I'd have to rename the files on the server.
Does anyone know if there's a comlete list of Python releases somewhere? I can't find any. There is for instance a 2.0 version, but the version lists I find only include the patch release 2.0.1. The list doesn't show the releases 2.1.1 and 2.1.1 either, only 2.1.3.
@StewieGriffin I remember abarnert gave it to me somewhere..
07:27
@akuri: So if I understand correctly, your filenames on disk will contain those special characters. If that's the case, you should be careful about filenames which are incompatible with the filesystem encoding.
@U9-Forward Strange that there's not an easily found list somewhere.
For example, if your filesystem is in UTF-8 and a user sends a filename in Shift-JIS I am not sure it will work. And you will run into another encoding issue.
I realize that somewhere on this wide web of ours there's a list, but I think it's strange that it's not easier to find.
@akinuri You should make sure to properly decode the filename that the end-user sends. The encoding should be somewhere in the HTTP headers and then encode it to the filesystem encoding when creating the filename. Again, if you have the opportunity to look into Python 3 it is worthwhile as it will protect you against those issues.
08:06
Well, the CMS is WordPress. So I have very little say in the matter :)
08:31
@StewieGriffin python-history.blogspot.com/2009/01/… looks almost complete, and has information at the bottom for finding the missing pieces
08:53
@StewieGriffin ancient history
@U9-Forward heh... yeah... should be achievable getting the py3 badge this year at least :p
@U9-Forward @PikachuthePurpleWizard @recnac one more "ooh upvote my answers" session and you're all getting kicked. Especially @U9-Forward.
09:20
sry..didn't mean that. @AndrasDeak
I know, you were just following suit. I'm particularly wroth with U9-Forward because I've already told them not to fish for upvotes here.
09:41
@Aran-Fey I ended up returning George before Easter shutdown and remembered this comment and the fact I had Pipettito the Electronic Pipette and Professor Mori-artemisinin when I worked in the labs. Yes, I probably have a problem :P
Have we got a decent dupe for getattr & co? re: this Q
10:07
@JonClements huh, I guess I shelved my Python 2 memories
@roganjosh not necessarily a bad thing :)
Wonder if that one's a candidate for Kevin's "asking a user for input until..." - it's certainly going to cover all the bases they're no doubt wanting to do but quite whether it's a proper dupe...
Ah, they edited now to show the int() call. And no, probably not :)
@JonClements reading the question, I suspect that they don't want a newline and are mistaking pressing enter to submit the input as it adding a newline and causing the error. I think the dupe would be appropriate
Yeah... gone for it... as it covers exception handling and checks and whatever... so it seems they've clicked as to they've got things in the wrong order - but doesn't hurt to lead 'em to best practice and alternate options...
10:31
cbg
anyone knows how to represent a very small value like "1.848302998713996e-07" in actual decimal notation? i.e. 0.000000185
What is the context? Numpy?
I've tried Decimal(), round(), and tried to fiddle with the actual number, but because 10^(-7) is such a small number it always just returns e-07
haven't tried numpy, don't really have much experience with it. On it now
No no, I wasn't suggesting you needed it. I was asking what the context of your question is
10:36
the program I've written, when given a very large input, returns a really tiny number, and the output of the program is: "1.848302998713996e-07"
the specification example states it should be: "0.000000185"
so I basically need to a) convert the number and print it, or b) just print the number
it doesn't say specifically it should output in exactly "0.000000185" form, but I'd rather to meet the example output fully
looking into mpmath now
You can use fstrings
>>> x = 0.00000000000000015
>>> x
1.5e-16
>>> f'{x:.17f}'
'0.00000000000000015'
Or, print('{:.20f}'.format(float("1.848302998713996e-07"))) if you use a lower version of Python
s/lower/lesser/
@roganjosh or format(x, '.17f')...
I never want to go back to pre-fstring python =D
10:44
>>> import mpmath
>>> mpmath.mp.dps = 40
>>> mpmath.mpc("1.848302998714e-07")
mpc(real='0.0000001848302998713999999999999999999999999999987', imag='0.0')
>>>
thanks guys :))
Umm... I don't know... I like f-strings but sometimes I've seen so much packed into 'em it's a little painful to look at...
@JonClements absolutely
@JonClements Well that was an embarrassing hole in my knowledge over format
I have a pandas column. The column consists of a list of dictionaries

[{'_id': ObjectId('5b14edb51fd7dd001ffe3354'),
'startTime': datetime.datetime(2018, 6, 4, 4, 30, 53, 304000),
'prompt': ObjectId('5b144fe36b8d59001f4d8927')},
{'_id': ObjectId('5b14edc41fd7dd001ffe3355'),
'startTime': datetime.datetime(2018, 6, 4, 4, 50, 53, 304000),
'prompt': ObjectId('5b1450bf6b8d59001f4d8928')},
{'_id': ObjectId('5b14edd21fd7dd001ffe3356'),
'startTime': datetime.datetime(2018, 6, 4, 5, 30, 53, 304000),
'prompt': ObjectId('5b14eb441fd7dd001ffe334f')},
I want to collect all _ids in one list and create a separate column for it
Looks very Mongo-ish :)
10:47
yes. It's MongoDB
dump
But how did you load it into Pandas?
I have done that. Now I have dataframe with a column
Probably a style rule similar to list comps should be applied to fstrings, where if it's more than 80 characters, just use a loop
timeline that column contains this
array of dictionaries
I was asking "how" you did it
You have a list of dictionaries in a single pandas column. Pandas will not help with that at all, it will only make things harder
10:49
I was thinking for writting a pyton function and use apply
in pandas
to apply same operation over and over
That still doesn't tell us how you created the dataframe.
gotta rbrb for a little bit folks... back shortly...
rbrb Jon
I converted bson to python dictionary

and them enumerated

and used pd.DataFrame.from_dict
to convert dictionary into dataframe
Ok, but it's not a dictionary, it's a list of dictionaries
You would be better doing this probably
10:54
nope. One of series has this data
rest of the data is ok
that I can deal with
so only one column has this complex python list of dictionaries
I'm not sure what we're supposed to be suggesting. I linked you to a post that has an answer from coldspeed that shows how you might use json_normalize but instead you just say "nope" and want to cope with a structure that is inherently not suited to pandas.
why do you say "structure not suited to pandas". What's the problem here?
is it json?
or something else?
You don't have scalar data in a single column. Pandas does not optimise anything with an object datatype
It does nothing but get in your way. You may as well have kept that data as a list and never touched pandas
but after cleaning I can turn it into scalar data?
Not cleaning, expansion into individual columns
11:04
convert into booleans, categories, etc?
cleaning because I also droping rows here
contains junk or nothing
I guess ...correct me if I'm wrong
You'd probably drop rows after you've done the expansion. I cannot see your data but your first attempt should really be to flatten the nested structure into a DF before working with it
yes true
that's a later step
Thanks
for help
11:35
Can JS reliably open pickles?
Someone has just suggested it as an answer and I can find a node library for it, but Python can't always read pickles from other versions of Python so I can't see how that could be sustainable
wouldn't you need to have the Python code anyway for any nontrivial pickles?
The question is here. I cannot see the answer working, surely you'd serialize it as JSON if anything
Hello! Do you know if it possible to install and use catboost package inside the Microsoft Azure Predictive?
@PawelFlajszer wrong solution
you're changing your data for the sake of printing it, and putting an imprecise float into mp
11:59
@AndrasDeak thanks, I've used Arne's solution using fstrings in the end
Cabbage
@tripleee I'd say so. And for trivial pickles, just use JSON. Pickle is intended for Python use, it's not a general data interchange format. For that matter, I'd be nervous about using it to exchange data with another Python program. I've only ever used it to persist state between runs of the same program.
@PawelFlajszer mpmath is fantastic, when you need it. But you don't need it to control the output format of floats. ;) I used to use mpmath a lot, but lately I've been exploring the standard decimal module, since it now has a few high precision transcendental functions.
12:23
Unrelated JSON question: other than true, false, and null, are there any JSON objects that are not also valid Python literals?
Not that I'm aware of
@roganjosh To be fair, the format function is rare compared to the str.format method. It does come in handy from time to time, but I s'pose it doesn't see much use in new code now that we have f-strings.
@PM2Ring Still, I definitely think I should know about it :)
@Kevin I'm almost certain they're the only ones.
I should remember, with all the work I put into my JSON encoder subclass, and its test code...
Currently staring at the flowcharts for json numbers and strings to see if they have some tiny corner case, like "1e+9 is valid JSON but Python doesn't allow unary plus in exponents". (this is not actually true. You get what I mean.)
12:28
You mean, not in relation to the other scientific notation question that's being discussed from Pawal?
cabbage all
Separately, is there a high-level view of how tracebacks are generated in IPython? The traceback "knows" the line it gets thrown on but appears to default back to the module that threw it to grab the actual code text, which may very well have changed since starting the program, so it shows whatever text exists at the time of the traceback. Or, at least, that's what I think it does.
@Kevin While it's a valid Python string, "\/" will give you a different result as a Python string and as JSON.
@Kevin Numbers shouldn't be a problem, since both JS & Python use IEEE 754 64 bit double precision floats. But going in the other direction, I'm not sure what json.dump does to large Python ints.
...If you had not already listed that before.
12:35
@IljaEverilä Interesting! What does it do in JS?
"/" is escapable in JSON? Wacky. Well, I think I don't mind if a string evaluates to different objects, as long as "json.loads doesn't crash on s" implies "ast.literal_eval doesn't crash on s"
@PM2Ring json.org lists it as one of the valid escapes, so when decoded it produces just "/".
(...Unless s contains true or false or none, as previously established)
IIRC, Python plans to deprecate backslash escapes that aren't actually proper escape sequences. Which will force a lot of slack regexes to be re-written using r-strings, like they ought to have done in the first place.
...Oh which wasn't what you were asking, but yeah JS does the same thing as JSON.
12:41
I wonder why they bothered to make / escapable. Is there some environment where this would be necessary/useful?
I'm imagining a PR from someone trying to communicate via SMTP with their dual-boot Solaris/OS2_Warp toaster using TurboPascal and a comedy of errors has ensured that the data only arrives unmangled if the slashes are escaped
@Kevin Not sure. Code golf, or quines? :)
From docs.python.org/3/reference/… Unlike Standard C, all unrecognized escape sequences are left in the string unchanged, i.e., the backslash is left in the result.
Changed in version 3.6: Unrecognized escape sequences produce a DeprecationWarning. In some future version of Python they will be a SyntaxError.
Let's see... json.loads already rejects invalid escapes. That's good, I guess.
I don't have to worry about json.loads(s) working and literal_eval(s) crashing when s contains "\q", even in the far-flung future

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