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02:10
cbg
03:07
hey
 
2 hours later…
05:30
cbg guys o/
user10984358
06:02
If myOwnDict is some dictionary, are the following the same in terms of performance?
user10984358
myOwnDict.get(someKey) and then use it in an if condition
user10984358
If (someKey in myOwnDict):
Performance? Pretty much the same. Behavior? Very different.
user10984358
How so?
>>> 'x' in {'x': False}
True
>>> bool({'x': False}.get('x'))
False
user10984358
06:05
Shouldnt it rerun None?
in checks if a key exists. The other one checks the truthiness of the value associated with the key.
user10984358
Got It
user10984358
If all I want to do is see if this is in the dictionary what should I go with?
user10984358
This=someKey
I'll let you figure that out
user10984358
06:07
Lol. Alright I’ll work my brain out
06:24
@Aran-Fey eeek bool is useless there :P
in that particular case yeah
Whenever I say "cbg guys" I feel like I am offering a big cabbage to each of you in person.
eeek stackoverflow.com/questions/57668739/… same title as question (i don't think i am doing illegal stuff in the room since it is not a cv-pls)
That question is closed now.
Flagged for deletion.
@TheLittleNaruto not surprisingly
@TheLittleNaruto Me: Voted for deletion.
06:31
@U10-Forward How many votes are needed to delete ? 10 right ?
@TheLittleNaruto No! 3
depends on the number of (up-/down-)votes the question has. For garbage like that, 3 is enough
It's a spam seed, flag it as such
@Aran-Fey Yeah, like some 500 up-vote needs 7 or 9
06:33
@TheLittleNaruto @U10-Forward your chatter in the comments is needless and noisy
Sorry about that! But couldn't resist!
Try harder?
@AndrasDeak Wow right after i flagged as spam it got deleted right after
Okay from next time sure
@AndrasDeak I can't delete the comments because it's locked
Can you move the chat messages to the chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/71097/…
06:37
No, it's just spam and it's locked. Just try to act as if SO wasn't a playground.
Okay, sorry for that
07:13
Cbg, whoever posted this yesterday it's quite interesting thanks for that: norvig.com/lispy.html
 
1 hour later…
08:26
nice repcapped again :P
 
1 hour later…
09:31
A question - How do I avoid opening up of python shell, when I run my python script. I tried saving as .pyw extension but it didnot work.
I get a warning often "Access to a protected member abc of a class" but when run, it executes without any error.
@TheLittleNaruto the member names starting with _ are private parts of the class, don't go play with them unless the other party consents to that.
09:47
@AnttiHaapala Thank you.
So we shouldn't name a method/variable starting with an "_" which will be used outside the class
why would you?
That was a method written by one of my colleague, we both are beginner.
10:19
I'm writing a custom exception and SO says to print a default message I need to use super().__init__ but no one says what exactly is super()
It's super!
Also, missing context here.
Are you working within a class? can you make an mcve of what you want to do?
stackoverflow.com/questions/576169/… was looking for this basically
but I didn't really get it. So, super() returns an object of the Base class from inside the derived class?
Super returns the current thing's parent essentially
(probably very layman way of saying it, but it's the nice way to understand it)
ah, so super as in superclass
The main thing being, since you don't have to explicitly write the parent, you can avoid hardcoding things in case of multiple inheritance, and let python figure out what is the correct priority of methods to be called.
yep, pretty much. Essentially, if you want to access a parent's attributes, use super. That post you linked explains it a lot better than I can though, make sure you read not just the first answer, but the second as well.
C4d
C4d
10:27
Hello everyone :)
def current():
    if platform.system() == "Windows":
        try:
            return get_info_windows()
        except:
            raise SpotifyNotRunning
    elif platform.system() == "Darwin":
        try:
            return get_info_mac()
        except:
            raise SpotifyNotRunning
    else:
        try:
            return get_info_linux()
        except:
            raise SpotifyNotRunning
is there a way to simplify the Exception raising?
I wonder if there's a better way than writing it thrice
Hi C4d
@aadibajpai If you want to, you can wrap the whole if/elif/else inside a single try. However, If there's any code lines other than the steps that you wanted to catch inside any if elif else blocks, those may accidentally be caught as well. So, If you go that route, it might be better to catch a specific error and not use a bare except. In fact, you should never need to use a bare except. Catch specific errors that you're prepared to handle, and nothing else.
If you want to blanket catch an error, and raise an error of your own, the least you can do is atleast have the traceback of the original error, and not just hide it silently.
@ParitoshSingh yeah, I know bare except shouldn't be utilized, it's just I don't know what the error to catch is, on Mac
Hm, I'd say find out if you can. And if you can't, atleast avoid catching the base exceptions by using except Exception. And do keep the traceback or log them somewhere
> avoid catching the base exceptions
what do you mean?
Ah got it
You mean if there's a ValueError for instance on windows, then first ValueError would be printed and then in handling that, SpotifyNotRunning will be returned
(I think)
10:48
No, it means that if your get_info_mac functions has a syntax error becasue you forgot to write a colon after an if-block, it will be caught all the same. You don't want to catch a syntax error there, you want your program to crash so that you notice and fix it, instead of thinking that you never encounter a mac.
so, only except the error that the following block actually handles properly
let me find someone with a mac then
just so I know, what would be the way to ignore the base error and only raise my own?
which error do you raise in get_info_max when something goes wrong?
I don't know yet, I'm asking someone with a mac to test out. I expect ValueError from Windows at least, when Spotify isn't running
but even if I test with except ValueError, it still prints out the Value Error before my custom exception
then there is no short version, you'll have to read docs.python.org/3/tutorial/errors.html
I think what happens is that the error arises base function (get_info_*) so it is raised already and then in handling it, it checks out the except block in current()
@Arne yes, I've been following that
11:01
recbg
what I'm trying to avoid is redundant error handling but I think it would now be smarter to do it in the functions itself
Cabbage
raise SpotifyNotRunning from None this works but I don't know how good of a choice this is
@Arne You should use a different error in your explanation. SyntaxError happens at compile time, so you don't normally catch them in a try ... except.
@aadibajpai well you use from None when you're sure it is the proper error you're raising :D
i.e. you weren't handling another exception, say NameError: name 'soptify_rnuginn' is not defined
11:12
makes sense, I'll explicitly specify those then
but yes, the raise from None explicitly will clear the unnecessary details from the exception
And the room6 regular Poke invented the syntax for that case;)
Well, Poke's not so regular these days, although he did pop by a few days ago. But he's still a room owner.
@AnttiHaapala wow, nice
they should document it here though docs.python.org/3/tutorial/errors.html
@AnttiHaapala A few days ago you said that the stdlib decimal module doesn't work. What do you mean? I don't use it often, I prefer mpmath, but I've written decimal versions of some of my mpmath scripts, and it seems to work properly.
@PM2Ring shhh :P
of course it works
11:21
Oh, ok...
it was just another case of "you've got an XYZWFASDASD problem"
Fair call.
I suppose he ought to have known better than to use the float sqrt on an int that large.
also, sqrt(decimal) is not going to get you very far :P
@AnttiHaapala Decimal has it's own sqrt method.
>>> import math
>>> math.sqrt(_)
11096089.992565991
decimal.Decimal('123123213123123.12312312321423514521341234123443215432521451234125456403298450932485092348510932481234').sqrt()
Decimal('11096089.99256599050061141884')
I'm not impressed :D
need to learn to use contexts and whatnot
11:30
And in Python 3 decimal even has some transcendental functions.
@AnttiHaapala Well yeah. :) But that's true for any fixed point library.
s/fixed/floating point/
decimal.Decimal are floats
11:44
Ok. The docs say "Decimal fixed point and floating point arithmetic"
cbg, @OldTinfoil
How's everyone's Tuesday treating them?
@AnttiHaapala I tend to think of arbitrary precision arithmetic as fixed point. But that's incorrect. The context fixes the number of digits, but the position of the decimal point can float.
My day's been ok. It's been raining here for the last few days, but we're supposed to get some sunshine tomorrow, then it's back to the rain.
12:01
Just in time for you to be bang-smack in the office and unable to enjoy it - no doubt
12:48
@PM2Ring you're going towards summer,
we're descending into darkness here
I'll be in Finland close to winter solstice, looking forward to enjoy your extra-short days!
Which part of Finland?
way up in the north
couldn't remember the name
Nice. Lappi (Lapland)?
most probably :P
if it is way up in the north
12:53
yep, lapland
say hello to the reindeer for me
let's hope you'll have snow
@AndrasDeak I'll do, but it will probably be on a plate and unresponsive
nooooo
no, the whole experience is first go petting them and then you eat them.
@AndrasDeak whispering to plate hello from Andras
it's like chicken
super expensive chicken
Super expensive chicken called Donner
12:57
is that what you eat on Donnerstag?
@Arne if you're into sending postcards, then buy one with this pic:
my aunt has the copyright :D who knows if I am going to inherit the proceeds :D
so fluffy!
:')
12:59
@AnttiHaapala capitalist pig
@AndrasDeak Nah, confusingly you have kebab
Is that an AOC premiere?
cabbage
cbg
@Arne how are you goin' there then?
fly directly or
is it possible to make an iterator such that it returns its last value perpetually?
@aadibajpai yes
for example
13:13
How is it the last value then?
eg. a = iter([1, 2]) such that the 3rd and onward calls of next(a) return 2.
def repeat_last(i):
      for j in i:
           yield j
      while True:
           yield j
like that?:P
yep, works!
13:15
@AnttiHaapala first to helsinki, then kittilä
had to check my mails
You're not Deutsch enough then :D
hm, although I'm using it as a severe workaround to make a test pass :P
need to have a BMW with (D) sign and drive all the way there.
ha
audi or bust
13:20
or trabant
o_o
do you know why the top speed of Trabant is 60 kph?
because a woodpecker can fly 50 kph
trabbi jokes ^^
this takes me back to the time we had a ex-GDR guy in our friend circle who would get hilariously annoyed by these
the only trabant joke I know is a lame pun which doesn't work at all in English
but yeah, no way you can get one through TÜV, so BMW it is
13:22
:D it is like if you tell me Oracle jokes now
@Arne are there any GDR guys who are not ex-GDR btw :P
ohhh, a Trabant... can we still find some on the 2nd hand market?
@AnttiHaapala there is a brand of nostalgia in germany called "ostalgie", those guys might just insist that the GDR never died, lives on in their hearts, etc pp.
ost=east, in case the pun carries badly
(I got that)
13:38
@ReblochonMasque ebay is telling me that if you have 2k to 5k to spare, a brand new 30 year old trabbi can be yours!
A bilingual pun that I've seen floating around the Internet:
Where do cats go when they die? _Purr_gatory.
¿De dónde van los gatos cuando mueren? Pur_gato_rio.
Thanks @Arne :)
The joke also apparently works in many other languages since it's fairly common for a language to have a transliteration of at least one of "purr" or "gato"
Wo gehn die toten Katzen hin? Ins Fegefeuer
German staying true to its nature, skipping out on this joke
we need feuer German jokes
13:54
TIL the German work for purgatory.
14:27
Is there a way to force unicode chars that can be represented as emojis or text, to be represented as text?
I found this, but I don't find a way to use the escaped post-sequence
9
Q: Inconsistent Unicode Emoji Glyphs/Symbols

Apollo GraceI've been trying to make use of the Unicode symbols for astrology in products for both Apple and iOS. I'm getting inconsistent results, as shown here: Most of these are coming out as I like, but for some reason the Taurus symbol is appearing one way on the first line, following the Moon, and ...

morninng cabbages, all
ok, I figured it out - it was chrome (jupyter nb) not respecting the coding; this works in pycharm.
print('\u2650\uFE0E')   # text
print('\u2650\uFE0F')   # emoji
14:49
I have two lists, ops = ['+','-'] and nums = ['100,'20','3'], how I can join it so that I have a list ['100','+','20','-','3']?
Is there any Pythonic way?
In [194]: [i for i in itertools.chain.from_iterable(list(itertools.zip_longest(nums, ops, fillvalue=None))) if i is not None]
Out[194]: ['100', '+', '20', '-', '3']
ops = ['+', '-']
nums = ['100', '20', '3']

res = []
for idx in range(max(len(ops), len(nums))):
    try:
        res.append(nums[idx])
    except IndexError:
        pass
    try:
        res.append(ops[idx])
    except IndexError:
        pass
print(res)
['100', '+', '20', '-', '3']
Thanks :)
15:12
given a function object, how can I use inspect to figure out which line of the file the function is defined on?
inspect.getsourcelines?
IFL you, mate! many thanks :)
You are very welcome
15:35
@AndrasDeak Although I haven't proven the relationship is causal, you haven't proven that the relation isn't casual. :P
wim
wim
builtin zip should just accept a keyword-only argument for fillvalue. Then itertools.zip_longest could quietly disappear.
I so agree with ^
15:50
'morning cabbage
Hi everyone
What would be the best way to get really comfortable with classes? Any suggestions?
I've implemented 80% of a turing tarpit that has no variables. You have one stack of integers, and you can only directly interact with the top two items. I'm not sure whether it's turing complete or not.
It can run "9 bottles of beer". It can't do 99 yet because I don't know how to print more than one digit in a row.
@wim you use to be able to use map in 2.x to emulate zip_longest as long as you were just happy with None as a fill value
something like:
>>> map(None, [1, 2], [1], [3, 4, 5, 6])
[(1, 1, 3), (2, None, 4), (None, None, 5), (None, None, 6)]
@RaphX I mean, you can do it if you want - if you're just out for education & whatnot
but you don't need to use classes for things
The thing is I would want to go into ML in the future and I have seen most ML engineers/Data Scientists use classes for their models. That is why I wanted to have a more thorough understanding of them. I have gone through the official python documentation for classes but I still think I am not that clear about them.
16:05
The best way to get comfortable is to just build a class for some kind of task where a class actually makes sense!!!
It's honestly really simple with python, in my personal experience at least.
@wim I'm going to take a wild stab that it's the difference between itertools.chain and itertools.chain.fromiterable kind of thing - if a builtin has a well defined purpose, then changing what it does based on arguments to it lends itself to the ground of "it might or might not" kind of thing
Just, make sure you use classes only where they make sense.
Ok @ParitoshSingh
How do you make sure of that @ParitoshSingh ?
@ReblochonMasque Just sanity check. a Class and class based programming essentially boils down to a simple abstraction so to speak. If you have a dog, and if you have a method wag tail, then sure, it makes sense to build a dog class and make a wag tail method. But if you have a dog, and you need to access the last transaction in the sqlite database, then why the HECK are you making a dog class?! cough ahem
Contrived example, but i hope it helps get the point across. Classes should not be the "first thing" on your mind. But some things "belong together" so to speak. And if you encounter such things in your program, then sure, make a Class.
16:17
ah, ok, thank you, noted.
For a practical example where I've recently used Classes, I needed to create a preprocessing pipeline, that is able to run for every email provided. The steps in the pipeline were logically tied together, and producing outputs that were associated with "each" email. This imo was a great candidate for turning into Classes, So that people did not have to struggle with the back and forth of what functions belonged together, which ones were written for the email processing, and so on.
effectively: functionality that are in a class of their own belong well... in a class of their own
So, just creating an email class with objects for each email "made sense".
Since the bottom line really is that anything you can write as classes, you could also write just with functions and variables holding states. So, The choice boils down to what makes more sense.
Thank you , the discussion helped me clear up things a bit. @ParitoshSingh@ReblochonMasque
16:43
The dark secret is that classes don't have any powers greater than non-class based code. This is provably true, because Python is written in C, and C doesn't have classes.
If you couldn't emulate class-like behavior without classes, then Python would vanish in a puff of logic
So if you ever find yourself thinking, "do I really need a class here, when instead I could store my data in a dict and/or list and/or tuple, and write regular functions that manipulate that data?", your instinct is correct -- you really could do that.
... But you may discover that forging your own path leads to wordier, buggier, harder to maintain code
Hmm I think Paritosh covered like 90% of the points in my rant already. Oh well. Saying something twice makes it even more true.
17:09
@Kevin This made me laugh (from the Turing tarpit link): "Using such languages is a form of mathematical recreation: programmers can work out how to achieve basic programming constructs in an extremely difficult but mathematically Turing-equivalent language." It's like cross-fit for math/coding... although I've never done cross-fit so I'm not sure if that is actually true
it's like that summer camp game where you spin around in circles and try to run thirty yards, usually not hard but let's just make this darn near impossible, ya know... for fun
All of my favorite personal projects involve making things way too difficult for myself
Oh that must be nice, I get the high degree of difficulty naturally without need to impose it on myself
don't feel too bad. I just wasted the morning debugging something because I forgot how __iter__ works
Although working at the edge of one's ability probably feels the same regardless of actual skill
17:19
Normal projects are also difficult, but not in a fun way
@inspectorG4dget That sounds both frustrating and relieving (assuming you are done debugging)
yeah, I was kicking myself when I figured out what it was. I really should have known better. I blame by bad sleep last night
I wanted this language to be something that can do basic arithmetic and string manipulation, while still being simple enough to compile to brainf---. But I think that goal is slipping away from me now that I've implemented a gt command
It's hard to tell which of two numbers is greater in BF, considering there isn't even a way to determine whether a number is negative or not
Well, not natively. You could probably write a check that runs in a mere O(N^2) time
Like all integers are unsigned or the negative number exists but it is nearly impossible to actually evaluate its magnitude? (if that makes sense)
wim
wim
Is there not a stdlib HTML encoder for Python?!
I could only find decoder
If you know one, add an answer to Python String Encoding that uses &#x**;
17:29
does urllib.request have nothing useful to this?
@ParitoshSingh +1
@ParitoshSingh which method will turn " into "?
I just ran it though, and it changed nothing for me on that string
@AndrasDeak Uh.. i have absolutely no idea :D
In [213]: html.escape('"')
Out[213]: '"'
17:37
Ah
wim
wim
html escape is extremely dumb
read the source
was looking for something similar, but which makes html ascii-safe
Aye, this one fails the ascii criteria best i can tell.
hey @thefourtheye! long time!
anyone here that thinks adding the python tag to this question will help getting it answered?
17:47
The addition of the tag makes sense for the question regardless.
Yeah, I think it could help
Okay, if that blows up I know who to blame ;)
It's a Python related question, so... yeah
Alright wim, for what it's worth, i scoured through a few posts, and no, it looks like data.encode('ascii', 'xmlcharrefreplace') really is the only builtin way to escape unicode characters. The only thing being, you can combine that with html.escape rather than having to use your own convert function
But yeah, apparently nothing to encode a string to ascii based html directly in the stdlib.
I'm frankly surprised. Perhaps a suggestion to add a flag in html.escape for the same makes sense.
I wouldn't even mind if internally it utilizes this encode trick so to speak.
17:52
Huh! That's surprising.
already done (6 minutes ago)
is it okay to define a bs Exception just so I can use try except in conjunction?
class SameSongPlaying(Exception):
	pass
yes, you can define your own exceptions exactly that way
try:
	if spotify.current() == (song, artist):
		raise SameSongPlaying
except (SpotifyNotRunning, SameSongPlaying):
I see, it looks weird though, it would be nice if we could just except False: or similar
... refresh, refresh -
18:53
@aadibajpai and what would that do?
@AndrasDeak then I wouldn't need if, so if that expression evaluates to False, it is handled by the except.
... what expression?
The point of using dedicated exception types is to handle only what you know how to handle, and let everything else bubble up.
You can use exception handling extensively, but it's bad form to use exceptions for non-exceptional things, especially since there's some overhead from exception handling if it's tripped very often.
try:
    spotify.current() == (song, artist)
except (SpotifyNotRunning, False):
    time.sleep(5)
it would be nice if this was supported is what I'm saying
the reason being, I want to do the same thing if the SpotifyNotRunning exception is raised and the same thing if that expression is False
18:58
is this inside a while True?
oops, hold on, that's not right
hmm, yeah, this is clunkier than I thought
Is the "do the same thing" something big?
@ParitoshSingh nope, it's just sleep for 5s
gotcha. This might be the first time im seeing a sleep where the sleep was not a placeholder for something else in an mcve :D
19:02
Side note: is there any chance that Spotify starts running 5 seconds later?
while True:
    try:
        if spotify.current() == (song, artist):
            break
    except SpotifyNotRunning:
        pass
    time.sleep(5)
!=, but yeah
specs say ==, I thought this was about "keep sleeping if it's the same song" but instead it's probably "stop doing this if the song is over"
No it's actually keep sleeping if it's the same song, I used False instead of True in that wrong except example
Having seen that, i am not entirely convinced I'd prefer that form though, weird enough as it is. It feels clunkier to read to me.
Is that just me?
there's actually an else too so that would make it more clunky
eh let me just paste the whole thing so it's clearer
19:07
4 mins ago, by Andras Deak
Side note: is there any chance that Spotify starts running 5 seconds later?
while True:
    # refresh every 5s to check whether song changed
    # if changed, display the new lyrics
    try:
        try:
            if spotify.current() == (song, artist):
                raise SameSongPlaying
            else:
                song, artist = spotify.current()
                if (song, artist) != (prev_song, prev_artist):
                    prev_song, prev_artist = song, artist
                    clear()
                    print(lyrics(song, artist, make_issue))
                    print('\n(Press Ctrl+C to quit)')
@AndrasDeak yes, if it's merely paused
OK
semantically speaking "the same song is playing as 5 seconds ago" is not an exception
@AndrasDeak yeah, which is why I was hesitant to do that.
Hello World down, 99 bottles of beer down. now I just need to write a quine to achieve peak esolang.
Also, i presume SpotifyNotRunning explicitly gets raised because of spotify.current() right?
19:08
@ParitoshSingh yes
In that case, i think there should be a cleaner way to express this, probably using continue
previously it was a bare except that returned (None, None) but I added an exception so actual exceptions don't get suppressed
@ParitoshSingh I hope there is one, I'm not very sure about it though.
Im confused by something now that im looking through the code.
The previous_song, previous_artist variables confuse me. Why was that explicit check necessary?
wim
wim
@aadibajpai yes, some would say best practice
@AndrasDeak you mean like the end of a for-loop?
@ParitoshSingh since previously song and artist were None when spotify was paused, they were necessary so that lyrics aren't refreshed if you pause → play a song. Now with the exception, I have to reevaluate the need for it
19:20
I've raised exceptions that weren't semantically very exception-like just so I could jump from one section of my code to another. I think this is acceptable, provided that you've exhausted all conventional means of control flow, including continue/break
wim
wim
exceptions as GOTO, nice
(other common way is to refactor into a function, and return out of the function, fwiw)
lol :D
funny... someone wrote an answer that has 178 upvotes, 25 downvotes...
the question has now 2 close votes, destined for another closure with Too broad and Unclear and what not...
and then ... the answer with 178 upvotes and 25 downvotes that answers the question even got a flag according to JFF :D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D
it would be really nice if enumerate could implement __contains__, __getitem__, and __len__, like range does
@inspectorG4dget and what good would it do?
how would it work with enumerate(count(42))
I don't necessarily endorse this as the best solution, but maybe it will get you thinking in a more LBYL direction
def current_or_none():
    try:
        return spotify.current()
    except SpotifyNotRunning:
        return None

previous_result = ('','')
try:
    while True:
        current_result = current_or_none()
        if current_result is not None and current_result != previous_result:
            song, artist = current_result
            clear()
            print(lyrics(song, artist, make_issue))
            print('\n(Press Ctrl+C to quit)')
            previous_result = current_result
        time.sleep(5)
19:28
@inspectorG4dget i.e. are you sure you can solve the halting problem? :D
@Kevin time.sleep inside an else i presume.
wim
wim
@inspectorG4dget but it can't tell you the len (e.g. bytes coming in from a socket)
@ParitoshSingh I don't think it would make much of a difference except when the user is clicking faster than the loop can execute
wim
wim
surprisingly difficult problem: list the submodules of a package
>>> import html
>>> list_submods(html)
['entities', 'parser']
^ for example
could be None for indeterminate cases (I'm working with a progressbar library that needs __len__, for which this would be a great help)
19:35
If you put the sleep in an else, when the conditional successfully determines that the song has changed, it will immediately proceed to the next iteration and do another check
I think you could probably build your logic for that. Just a simple len check on the object passed should do. You can shadow the builtin enumerate if you really want to.
Which is fine, unless spotify is really strict about rate limiting
Aye Kevin, was just going off of what the original code suggested for fidelity
or the illusion of fidelity in any case
wim
wim
@inspectorG4dget there is no precedent for len returning None
only TypeError or a correct result
Solution to the len dilemma: make enumerate work only on sequence types. If you want to enumerate a generator, try itertools.ienumerate. Everyone's happy!
wim
wim
19:37
the progressbar library could be written smarter, to use __length_hint__ python.org/dev/peps/pep-0424
The kicker would be, what decides if something has an indeterminate length? Say, if i pass a generator, unless i exhaust it, i don't really know if its finite or infinite is it
And if i exhaust an infinite generator, we may introduce a tear in the space-time fabric.
@wim good point. I might have to rethink my hackarounds
That usually comes with undesirable side effects. And i hear side effects are frowned upon in programming.
wim
wim
iter(some_list) has a length hint
there is a remark in the CPython source code about why proxies such as enumerate, zip and friends don't pass it along, but I don't really understand it TBH
> It may return a value that is either larger or smaller than the actual size of the container.
Might not be very reliable if you want an exact value, according to the pep
But it's interesting none the less, i didn't know about it
wim
wim
19:43
earlier discussion about this topic if you're interested chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/44493226#44493226
That has to be the most crisp and probably shortest Rationale section i've seen in a PEP so far.
"It's faster this way and we have measurements to prove it" is hard to debate against
"If you don't accept this PEP, then Pypy will become faster than us and they'll be real smug about it at the yearly cookout"
Heh
technically, this PEP helps Pypy and honestly any implementation that wants to do the same optimization
And exposing avenues for optimization is imo a very good thing for any language.
"Since we suggested the PEP, when it helps other implementations we get to be smug at the yearly cookout"
Ha! Sounds about right :P
19:56
Despite not being a Python distribution, Numpy is allowed to come to the cookout, because they somehow hacked the grill to cook a thousand burgers in parallel
20:43
@Kevin one thing I see it does not do is to print Nothing playing at the moment or similar if when started, Spotify isn't running. The logic makes doing that hard unless you want to print it every 5s
@Kevin no internet is utilized in getting the info from Spotify
20:56
the code is working but I have no clue how to even get started with writing unittests 🤔
also, pushed to gh so you don't have to see SO's formatting github.com/SwagLyrics/SwagLyrics-For-Spotify/blob/…
21:33
@aadibajpai I suggest starting by breaking main() into smaller functions. Without units (i.e. functions and classes), you can't do unit testing.
21:53
@AnttiHaapala my daughter returned from her expedition in Sweden and brought home a bunch of stuff for me :-)
And Kanelbullar, and chocolate... my girl knows what I need :-D
02:00 - 22:0022:00 - 00:00

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