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01:46
cbg
 
4 hours later…
05:23
ive got a little puzzle for you guys.
I just went on a website I've never been on before, and when I clicked on the search field it wanted to autocomplete to one of my user passwords, completely unencrypted and showing the PW as the autocomplete. How could that happen?
user10984358
05:50
Random guess, maybe the text field had an id similar to one of the password fields id and your browser interpreted that as the password field for some saved password?
aren't password fields treated as their own thing though, so even when it autocompletes it aliases the pw to the dotted values
user10984358
06:26
if the id is how it matched in the first place, then that field might have type=text and not type=password, again I am just guessing
07:25
I need some help with dateutil.parser.parse
print (parser.parse('9 / 25 / 2010'))
print (parser.parse('25 / 9 / 2010'))
Both these output: 2010-09-25 00:00:00
Does it guess the dd and mm part? Would'nt this lead to misinterpretation of data?
You can take a look at the default parameters for clues. The docs can help too.
But honestly, the second you take a look at the default parameters, you'll know the answer, so I'm leaving it as an exercise for you to discover
thanks
07:42
I read that unless dayfirst is set to TRUE, it checks month to be the first value. So how did the 2nd example not fail? Since 25 is not a month. What am I missing?
You missed the word "ambiguous"
The second example is not ambiguous because 25 is not a month, as you said.
It's probably implemented as a simple If-else in code, but in an attempt to accept more dates, you can see the potential downsides too. So, ideally, if you know exactly how your datetime will look, and if they always follow a fixed pattern, the parser from dateutil might be overkill.
@Skyler my guess: A site that you have used previously hadn't declared its password field correctly, and your browser for some reason still managed to deduce that what you later entered was a good fit for a password field. You could fetch your form cookies, search them for your password, and maybe find out which site was the bad one.
@variable if you know the format, use datetime.strptime and not a parser. A parser is allowed to guess, a formatter is not.
.. which is essentially what Paritosh said as well
07:58
:) I didn't phrase it as clearly as you though to be honest. But yes, essentially what Arne said. Make sure you actually need a parser before going for it.
Thanks
08:19
Hi Guys, I have two columns called A and B. Both the columns have 100,000 email id's. many email id's are same in both the columns. My task is to find the matching email id and create a new column with True or False. If same email id is presented then it is true or false. Also, I need to take out the matching email ids in the separate columns.
I tried to use this code : df1['AB'] = np.where(df1.Product1 == df1.Price1, 'True', 'False') But it returns all False.
can you please advise? This is very big dataset and needs to create a user based function as I have many datasets are coming from the clients.
@Jason firstly, you should add at the start that you have a pandas dataframe. Secondly, do you really need a string rather than True/False bool values in the new column? You could skip using np.where with bools. Finally, from your description I'd expect you to check df1.A == df1.B, don't know why you're checking Product1 and Price1 when you want to find matching email addresses.
@ParitoshSingh, @Arne - If I may ask - why does it still not give an error when I specify dayfirst to true. Example: >>parse('09/25/2019', dayfirst=True) -> Assuming 9 is day, it should have failed at 25 (which is not a month?). But it returns datetime.datetime(2019, 9, 25, 0, 0). Bit confused.
tangentially, checking for simple identity is too simplistic for email addresses, you have to normalize e.g. to lowercase the RHS after the @ sign and perhaps also look for subdomains within a domain and etc
and maybe plussed addresses like [email protected] vs [email protected]
Aren't plussed addresses only a gmail thing?
Hi @AndrasDeak Thanks. I need a string as well as true/false. One column returns string (same email id) and other column return true/false. Sorry will check df.A == df.B
08:27
absolutely not, it's a standard Postfix feature and supported in many other MTAs too, even Sendmail
huh
all the more annoying that some websites reject them
@AndrasDeak@tripleee plussed as well as mixed gmail
all email address mixed. it has 100000 records
what's specific to Gmail is they let you put in optional dots, [email protected] is the same inbox as [email protected]
yeah, that I was more sure of
That's not a real email address, is it? If it is, delete it.
you probably don't want to spill someone's email address in a public place where it will be scraped by spammers
08:29
no i just used dummy email id
I can't delete the email id
you can delete the message from chat...
only task is to match and show
record is very high, any suggestions?
cut it down to a 20-row dataframe for testing to figure out the logic you need
See why the columns don't match when you think they should. Think of the things tripleee said: upper/lowercase, plusses, whitespace, anything
the first step is "find exact matches", the second step is "find inexact matches"
08:32
and [email protected] vs [email protected] which might be the same address, or might not
I think Jason's problems aren't on that level yet
yeah true
@variable I'm mostly guessing here, but the parameter list is called something vague like parserinfo and not something strict like parseformat. It uses the info if it applies but still falls back to parse the date string as good as it can if the parse info does not make sense.
what music are folks listening to atm?
@tripleee do other mail services also have googles [email protected] capability?
@Skyler like I said, it's a standard feature in many MTAs
I think (predictably) Microsoft's is the only popular one which lacks this
Qmail weirdly prefers a dash over a plus by default, and Exim lets you configure everything but defaults to a plus IIRC
if you mean webmail, I think neither Hotmail nor Yahoo expose this functionality, but I'm not a user of either
08:40
thanks will check now
i actually didnt really no about postfix before, I knew about PGP, as well as routing communications through networks and how email clients before use to require specific routing instructions until some advances in email domains happened
what is the full stack that it takes for sending an email between two parties?
a network connection and an SMTP server which listens on a standard port
granted, most places now block outbound port 25 so you will probably need to have a trusted relay between yourself and the listening server if you are on a consumer IP address
but whats the SMTP server doing then, like where does postfix fit in the "algorithm" to encrypt, serialize, and send the email
Postfix is an SMTP server, you set it up to listen for incoming connections
SMTP does not by itself support encryption, though of course modern SMTP allows you to use SSL by pivoting with STARTTLS or listening on an alternate port like 465 or 587
SMTP on the protocol level has no idea what data you are transmitting (RFC5321), the semantics are separate (RFC5322)
in simple terms, the MUA on both ends is entirely responsible for serialization and rendering, and SMTP (MSA / MTA / MDA) just takes care of the transport
sorry if I'm mixing terminologies here, MUA / MSA / MTA / MDA is from the FIPS model and (I think) not spelled out in the RFCs
and also if you want to discuss this in more detail maybe move the discussion to a separate room ...?
08:48
by MUA you mean outlook/thunderbird/ any webmail
I think I got the picture
RFC5322 (née 822) really just says "use MIME" and then you have a twisty maze of MIME specs to also take into account to get the full picture
yeah Mail User Agent is whatever the user is interacting with
Hi. Presuming I have tree data like [(a, b), (a,c), (b,c) etc.]. How can I parse it with MPI ? as for example using comm.Gather would mess the depth of the tree
And the Mail Transport Agent is why we now dont have to specify the exact route through servers on the internet our message has to take in order to reach another user
well the MTA just takes care of receiving incoming communications, the routing is done on the DNS side mostly
@MikaelKen MPI is not a parser, just a protocol for interprocess communication, so you can't.
08:52
you look up the receiving domain's MX record in the DNS and then try the resulting servers in priority order
You need to come up with an algorithm for whatever "parsing" means, and try to leverage MPI with it, which might not be possible.
thats cool, didnt know about mx records before this
I'd expect that constructing a tree is best done in serial, and then once you have a tree you might try operating on independent branches in parallel.
@MikaelKen although I'd love to know what kind of tree has a->b, a->c, b->c nodes
that is just labeling for a tree with v1, v2, v3 and v4 node
08:57
I do some operations on the children of each node
maybe I can run those in parallel for each piece of children?
I see only three nodes, and wonder what you mean by v1, v2, v3, v4; but really, something big is missing from this picture before we can understand what you are trying to ask
@MikaelKen if you don't mutate their state or the branches are independent, then probably yes
@variable you missed the same word again. The word is "ambiguous".
if a and b and c are nodes and a->b, b->c etc are vertices, it seems you are simply asking "how can I process a, b. and c" and of course we still have no idea what those are or what processing them means
The parameter only "steps in" for ambiguous dates
Parsers are more willing to accept whatever is thrown at them
(until the point that you throw something that they can't deal with. funny how that works)
09:00
^ also not funny how DWIM seems like a good idea until it actually doesn't
Heh, aye, pretty much
09:46
Hi everyone, very simple question in appearance. If I have a list like this a=list['bb',['cc','dd']]. I want a function f in this way f(a,'dd')=2. Meaning 'dd' belongs to the second list in the main list a. Do you get it?
that list is redundant and an error
And I have no idea what you're asking, no.
and you can't assign to function calls
@AndrasDeak Are you addressing me?
Whom else do you think I'd be addressing?
@AndrasDeak Can be anyone, I didn't read the messages before I came. Anyway, which parts don't you understand?
none of it
09:57
@AndrasDeak Ok, let me rephrase, step by step. You have a list called a, a=['bb',['cc','dd']]. I'm interested in the element "dd" of this list. I want a function which would return me 2 if I give as parameters a and '"dd". Indeed, you notice that "dd"` belongs to the second nested list of the list a
@Mez13 Let me go step by step too. list[...] is a TypeError whether or not list is the built-in type or a specific instance shadowing the same name.
Why would such a function return 2 to you and not 42 or -1 or 'potato'?
And can your list be arbitrarily nested, or is it a simple list of lists?
@AndrasDeak Ok, I removed the word list. And I want 2 because "dd" belongs to the second nested list as I said
@AndrasDeak Good that you see :) Thanks. Do have an idea?
I'm still waiting for one more answer
10:00
@AndrasDeak Sure. To which question?
10:44
x='test'
'' in x
Output: True
Can anyone tell me what is the reason python finds '' in x?
'' is right there at the beginning in 'test'
>>> '' == 'test'[:0]
True
Ok I was confused because my understanding of how slicing works was -> 'test'[:0] means show value from index 0 to one minus end value - so 0 to (0-1)=-1. So 0 to -1.
Empty slices produce empty sequences
11:21
@Mez13 are you looking for anything more complicated than [x+1 for x in range(len(a)) if 'dd' in a[x]]?
I see two unanswered questions from Andras to you, "why 2" and "what kind of list"
I guess 2 instead of 1 makes sense if you number from 1 instead of 0 but the kind of list will very much affect what sort of answer you need
could the list elements be arbitrarily nested lists? do you always need to find only the first occurrence if there are several? and probably a couple more corner cases
@variable the empty sequence is part of every sequence of the same type
@Mez13 can you please give another example of expected input and output? what would be the result of f([0, [1, 2], [3, 4]], 3)? Would it be 2, 3 or 1?
@MisterMiyagi I would expect that to only be true for strings
>>> [] in [1, 2, 3]
False
list.__contains__ checks elementwise membership, str.__contains__ checks for substrings
11:36
note the "is part of", not "is in" ;)
What does "is part of" mean then?
what I meant initially was "the empty sequence is a subsequence of every sequence of the same type"
OK, that would be true
I hope so. ^^ I vaguely remember sleeping through some lectures on set theory...
12:07
@variable you're doing that thing again and your question does not make sense
12:19
Hey does os.makedir ignore mode on windows?
docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.mkdir The doc just says on some systems. How do I know what is the case for my system?
regarding the empty list and empty element discussion, this might be pedantic but imo the rule should still be "the empty element is part of every set", and it's just impossible to represent the empty element for lists. It's surely not an empty list.
But it's not. An empty set is a subset of any set. The set of natural numbers doesn't contain an empty set as an element, only numbers.
ahh
and there's no "empty element", only empty sets
(unless elements in your sets are sets themselves etc.)
We were probably just taught a blurry definition of set theory in computational linguistics that served our needs well enough
or I misremembered, also quite likely
12:25
No, it's probably the other way around. I have a very practical concept of sets :P When they do set theory properly, there are no natural numbers, everything is built up from empty sets...
but that's not a view of sets that I'd find practical even if I learned it
my notion of sets pretty much comes from high school
@Hakaishin I don't know the answer, but how the heck can mode=0o777 be the default?
@AndrasDeak That's what I was wondering too...
I get a strange access denied error, even though the folder got somehow created and the files are in the right place. I doesn't even make sense
I just checked and it uses 755 for me. But that might be a side-effect of "umask is masked first"?
Do you use windows?
I expect they know what they're doing
@Hakaishin never :P
:p I wish I weren't either
12:33
my umask seems to be 0022 which stands for w for group and other, so it's possible this is exactly what's happening
yup, that's it
   The umask is used by open(2), mkdir(2), and other system calls that create files to modify the permissions placed on newly created files or directories.  Specifically, permissions in the umask are turned off from the mode argument to open(2) and mkdir(2).
so the idea is that the OS has a mechanism for setting default permissions and python doesn't want to be more restrictive
Hmm
Link? Cant find that passage in the os doc
how that works with windows is another issue of course
@Hakaishin man umask :P
:D
man unix is so good. It's insane windows has no man pages
Why would you ever read those? Windows Just Works.
@variable nltk is primarily a learning tool, not something that can safely be deployed. If you have the option, try to use something like scrapy instead.
12:36
@Hakaishin perhaps there's an implied chmod call that threw the error, after the directory was created?
Nov 20 at 11:45, by variable
Anyone used nltk with flask?
Nov 20 at 11:59, by Arne
using nltk in production is never a good idea
glad we figured that out 5 days ago
@AndrasDeak lol
I thought that question looked familiar.. you can trash my posts too, then
@Arne your experience or official doc somewhere?
@AndrasDeak maybe, I'm looking at the source of makedirs and I dont see anything special
@Hakaishin see also some of that discussion I liked
@Hakaishin I tried to deploy something that depended on nltk exactly once.
12:40
@Arne it's alright
@Hakaishin "tried", not "succeeded", and some of my coworkers use it too. And I have python-packaging in my SO filter, and there is an nltk post every now and then that I try to answer out of sympathy for the poor soul that has to work with it. It's never easy to fix, and involves some kind of ugly hack to make it work.
oh no. I mistyped spacy as scrapy in both recommendations I gave ._.
yeah, I was going to ask about that, but forgot
It would've been "huh, I thought scrapy was a web scraping library" :P
well, better late than never I guess
12:56
lol, I was also confused by that
to wrap me trying to be helpful up, you can use spacy instead of nltk, which apparently is parsed as the same word as "scrapy" in my brain, given re.parse(r"s\w*y"). And here is the nltk rant I mentioned before that i couldn't find for some reason (might have had to do with googling the wrong packages, but who knows).
parse -> compile ... I should just stop writing for today and go to bed early
How do I get with what access rights my python program is running?
Something like running as user x or as admin or so
I want to log that
@ParitoshSingh ping regarding chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/47897782#47897782, you were right to be confused, I just corrected some info on that.
@Hakaishin If you're on Windows, and know which process your program is running in, this looks relevant: stackoverflow.com/questions/2686096/c-get-username-from-process
@Hakaishin This may be relevant (cross platform I suppose) docs.python.org/3.8/library/os.html#os.getlogin
13:03
The question is in C++ but all of the relevant api calls should be accessible in Python via pywin32 or ctypes
Unrelated problem. Is it possible to clone a generator? I can't use itertools.tee because the generator has side effects that I need to replicate.
In general? I'd be surprised
I'd think that itertools.tee is cloning a generator, as good as it gets
(but I'm also naive)
I imagine that tee stores a list of elements that have been yielded by generator A but not by generator B (or vice versa) and only touches the original generator when you call next on whichever generator is farther ahead. In other words, side effects only happen once.
import itertools
def noisy_range(x):
    for i in range(x):
        print(i)
        yield i

g = noisy_range(10)
a,b = itertools.tee(g)
next(a) #prints `0`
next(a) #prints `1`
next(b) #no output
next(b) #no output
next(b) #prints `2`
No good, for my purposes. My desired output is 0 1 0 1 2
@Kevin Pretty much. There's an equivalent code example in the docs: docs.python.org/3/library/itertools.html#itertools.tee
A generator cloner that does what you want is halting oracle level magic.
@shad0w_wa1k3r Thanks, i ended up using: docs.python.org/3.6/library/getpass.html
I think it's possible using fork(). Or rather it would be possible if fork() was supported on my OS, which it isn't
13:17
"halting oracle level magic" I'm stealing that one :D
@Kevin Ok. But in that case, why can't you just make 2 generators, eg a = noisy_range(10); b = noisy_range(10) ?
huh
>>> gt = type(_ for _ in '')
>>> gt.__new__(gt)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: object.__new__(generator) is not safe, use generator.__new__()
Isn't that exactly what I'm using though?!
@Kevin I see
@Aran-Fey How about gt = (_ for _ in ''); gt.__new__(type(gt)) ?
@PM2Ring I'd like to clone the generator after it has already yielded some values. So a = noisy_range(10); next(a); b = clone(a); next(a); next(b) should output 0 1 1. If I create independent generators, then the output will contain two zeroes.
13:24
Cue argument whether they are really clones if they generate different random numbers when consumed ;)
Even clones have different fingerprints
I was expecting that...
@PM2Ring same output :(
@Kevin use a class that can handle state more subtly?
@AndrasDeak Dang I was baited.
13:25
@Dair I've got no good comeback though :P
@AndrasDeak Yeah, that's my backup plan.
I guess b = noisy_range(10, skip=1) might not cut it in your actual use case
It would be complicated, but perhaps less complicated than a class-based approach
Generators don't keep track of the number of times they've been nexted, right? That would make things easier
Not generally, but I can effectively calculate it from the state I'm already tracking
13:31
@AndrasDeak You could probably do this with a function/method property.
@AndrasDeak Correct. But an iterable class can easily do that.
@Dair but you can't do that from the inside of a generator function
@PM2Ring yeah, but I'm trying to avoid that on Kevin's behalf
@AndrasDeak Wait, why not?
I'm traversing over a tree, and yield one item per node, so each generator must have nexted N times, where N is the distance between the current node and the root
I want to fork so each generator can go to each child node
@Dair I thought you meant assigning to an attribute of the generator, which I don't think you can do from inside the function definition itself
@Kevin is spawning new generators for each child not possible?
or is that what you want to do, but by keeping existing state
13:35
>>> def foo():
...     setattr(foo, 'n', 0)
...
>>> foo.n
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'function' object has no attribute 'n'
>>> foo()
>>> foo.n
0
But foo is a function, not a generator
It may be possible, but then I need to store more state explicitly. There are 100 valid designs here but 99 of them converge to "create your own miniature language whose state you can fork"
@Aran-Fey Yeah, but you just do the same for __next__(self)
My "you are about to badly reinvent an algorithm that was originially created in 1970" sense is tingling
What algorithm from the 1970s are you trying to reinvent?
13:39
Some flavor of parser with O(N!) memory requirements, I expect
How did we go from "write an iterator that can be copied" to "write your own mini-language"?
@Aran-Fey The Kevin morphism
I often use recursive generators to traverse tree structures (like JSON), but I get the feeling that @Kevin is somehow over-complicating things...
I honestly thought I knew what was going on, but now I don't.
I'm feeling an XY problem here :P
Particularly observant readers may notice that I'm up to AOC.2018.20.1, which requires a custom regex engine
13:43
@Aran-Fey it seems there is no generator.__new__
One might imagine how "generate all possible strings that this regex can match" might be represented using a tree, and/or a generator that forks itself whenever it encounters a pipe token
it just defaults to object.__new__ because Python pretends we have one nice object hierarchy
@PM2Ring Almost certainly. 'Tis the season of overcomplication.
@MisterMiyagi Hrmmm, but then how can generator() throw TypeError: cannot create 'generator' instances if there's no __new__ method?
And type(generator) is type
But Kevin's thing vaguely reminds me of a crazy prime generator I wrote a year or so ago that recursively builds a chain of filters. It's ok for primes upto a few thousand, but it gets really slow when there are more than 30 or so filters in the chain.
13:45
@Dair OK, but I thought we were talking about "instance"-level attributes. Hence "assigning to an attribute of the generator". foo is not the generator, foo() is.
@Aran-Fey generator() uses type.__call__ which may veritably just check whether generator.__new__ exists. I don't see the problem about type(generator) == type).
that's possible, but weird
let me just dust off my C knowledge...
brb
> /* If staticbase is NULL now, it is a really weird type.
In the spirit of backwards compatibility (?), just shut up. */
Do I want to know what staticbase is? Probably not
13:55
> something silly and unsafe like object.__new__(dict)
excuse me, why the heck is that silly and unsafe
dict does not actually derive from object, even though dict.__mro__ pretends it does
It always amazes me to see how much goto is used in Python source...
goto for error cleanup is acceptable
which means object.__new__ has no idea how to allocated a dict
Oh so it's silly and unsafe because the CPython implementation is silly. Great.
13:57
yeah, same for generator.
the bummer is that PyPy replicates such warts as well :/
@AndrasDeak Not saying it isn't. I just don't normally see it, but bam it's all over the place. I should keep note of this though and remember that if I ever implement my own language...
that explains why I had relatively little trouble making my serializer work with pypy
...well, that or I just wrote good code. But I think the former is more likely
is it possible to have a Union be Generic? like this:
AnyIterable = Union[Iterable, AsyncIterable]
bar: AnyIterable[T]
or better to say: what do I have to do to make this work?
Would AnyIterable = Union[Iterable[T], AsyncIterable[T]] work?
/*[clinic end generated code: output=eb5eb54485942819 input=5af66132436f9a7b]*/ interesting comment found here
14:09
@Aran-Fey it actually does. thanks a lot
as much as I dislike the implementation of typing, I have to admit that sometimes it just works as you'd expect
not the first time I made a guess that ended up working
Guys, i need some help, how could i match with regex a sentence that is split in two lines?
re.findall doesn't seem to work
write a regex for a sentence in a single line, then replace all spaces with \s
em sure, but how will i match the word on the next line?
I'm not sure I understand the question. AFAICT, findall doesn't stop searching when it hits a newline.
>>> import re
>>> s = "1 2 3 \n 4 5 6"
>>> re.findall(r"\d", s)
['1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6']
14:22
let's say i am trying to match this:
Very big sentece here
ok
it doesnt?
hm
Could you post a short ruprecht mcve?
SIU1: Parameter stress test 0x00050000 repetitions:
OK
i am trying to match that
(OK included
I know that newlines can behave in surprising ways, though. For example, . doesn't match a newline character unless you use the DOTALL flag.
And your regex is...?
r'SIU1: Parameter stress test 0x00050000 repetitions:\nOK'?
yes
it's that exactly
even though i tried the ""'SIU1: Parameter stress test 0x00050000 repetitions:
OK"""
as well, just in case
14:27
Hmm, I'm suspicious of that "\n", since it won't be interpreted as a newline, since it's in a raw string
regex knows how to interpret \n
>>> re.findall(r'SIU1: Parameter stress test 0x00050000 repetitions:\nOK', 'SIU1: Parameter stress test 0x00050000 repetitions:\nOK')
['SIU1: Parameter stress test 0x00050000 repetitions:\nOK']
And now I'll shut up until I see a MCVE
Ok then. I never know offhand how many layers of escaping is necessary in these kinds of situations.
had to google MCVE, hold on a second
I linked it, y'know
oh ty, haven't noticed
14:32
Even so, you're the first person this month that googled "MCVE" instead of asking us what it is. I applaud your self-sufficiency.
ah fck, you are right it was working
SIU1_stress_test = re.findall(r"SIU1: Parameter stress test 0x00050000 repetitions:\nOK", dummytext)
i was using re.M, that's why i was getting an error
Why are you using regex for that in the first place? str.find will do
@Kevin The worst realistic example I could come up with uses 4 backslashes, or 8 if you don't use a raw string.
Jun 9 '16 at 11:39, by PM 2Ring
Note that if we don't use a raw string for the regex we need 8 backslashes in a row: '\\\\\\\\(\d+),(\d+)' That's hard to read and too easy to mess up.
I don't think re.M matters unless your pattern uses $ or ^, but hey, if it works it works.
If this room was an auto repair shop, lots of people would come here with cars that don't start and later leave claiming they solved the problem by adjusting the rear view mirror
7
14:38
@Aran-Fey i started using regex because i was trying to match all the "OK's" at the beginning
haven't really thought str.find
(All the 'Ok's' and 'Pass')
i tested it now, it returns -1 for some reason
which means it didn't find anything from what i read
I'm guessing that's not what you want. Well, I'm happy to investigate further, as soon as I get an MCVE.
nah no need, i will use the regex @Aran-Fey wrote, it works so no problem
thank you for the help!
The regex that you said was exactly the same as the one you were already using? ... Hey, if it works it works.
user10984358
how "ethical" is using a code from a 3 year old answer to a question someone else asked in production code ?
I feel zero guilt when I copy-paste SO code straight into my codebase, with a #courtesy of <link to answer> comment if it's nontrivial.
14:50
@TheNamesAlc the "ethical" part hinges on whether you take credit for it or not.
I have no idea if this is allowed under the site's licensing terms, but "legal" and "ethical" are two different concerns
Let's see, answers are CC BY-SA 4.0, so yes, attribution is necessary... Unclear to me whether "share alike" requires you to publish your entire codebase under CC BY-SA 4.0 too.
user10984358
dont want to start a debate or anything but is it taking credit if its a part of your work? But I guess I will comment the link like Kevin does
user10984358
those are for libraries and such aren't they?
meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/350782/… asks what share-alike actually means, but the one answerer is unhelpful beyond "just to be sure, don't copy-paste". Useless.
Half of the Meta posts about this topic talk about the MIT license. I know there was some tumult about moving to a new licensing system, but I don't remember what the outcome was. Maybe I'm misreading the current legalese.
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