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00:05
@jigglypuff other alternatives are, as you say, some time of settings or conf file that you load in script2. Or you can accept a command-line argument that gives the path to the JSON file.
@Code-Apprentice script2 takes the output directory of where script1 has put the files, but it's the names of those individual files which I don't want to hardcode. And I'd rather not have to pass each files name individually to script2.
but yeh I'll consider that settings file, perhaps it'd be useful elsewhere in my package.
Will script2 process all files in the directory? Or just certain ones?
@jigglypuff If you want to process all files in a directory, look at os.walk().
Then os.walk() is almost certainly what you need
hmm, interesting
00:12
The pathlib module has modern alternatives to .walk()
PM probably knows better than me...I just found some stuff that might be helpful by googling, not first-hand knowledge
Since these scripts are already capable of handling JSON, consider storing the file path config data as JSON.
rbrb...time to go home
@PM2Ring file path config data? so in like in a settings file as mentioned?
00:35
I think the walk solution will work, the contents of the JSON files are used to populate a jinja template, so it doesn't really matter what files the JSON data comes from
thanks @Code-Apprentice
wim
wim
@PM2Ring What is that?
I looked for an os.walk in pathlib once and never found any replacement, so just kept on using os.walk
 
1 hour later…
01:41
@wim Ok, there's no drop-in replacement for .walk, but there's .glob, .rglob, and .iterdir
@jigglypuff Yes. I'm suggesting that you might as well use JSON to store those file names, rather than some other config file format. But if you just need a bunch of file names, there's no harm in just writing them to a plain text file, one file name per line. Of course, that scheme doesn't handle file names that contain newlines (unless you store quoted file names), but only crazy people put newlines in file names. ;)
wim
wim
The countdown has begun adventofcode.com/2019
01:56
Is there a private leaderboard for room 6 yet? RE: Advent of Code
wim
wim
Path.glob is a replacement for glob.glob, Path.rglob is replacement for glob.glob(recursive=True), Path.iterdir is a replacement for os.listdir. As far as I know there is nothing powerful enough for a replacement of os.walk in there.
@Dodge the same one as previous years. join code is on sopython.com/wiki/Advent_of_Code
Cool I was wondering if we should do a new one to clean up the dead accounts but the good thing about dead accounts is that even I won't be in last place :)
wim
wim
I can't make a new one without obliterating my old one (which I won't)
But if someone else want to make a new one, go ahead
Oh it only shows the active users on the SO python link so that is fine.
02:16
@Dodge Technically, each user may have zero or one private leader boards, which something like 200 people can join. Someone just happened to donate their board to the cause here.
@JoelHarmon gotcha, didn't know that
Also, the creator gave some talks, which are linked to over on reddit
 
3 hours later…
05:57
Hello! Can anybody please look at my question: stackoverflow.com/questions/58951334/…. It already has a bounty, but no responses.
recbg guys o/
@AnttiHaapala lmao
06:42
cbg
07:25
cbg
 
1 hour later…
08:59
@AndrasDeak I'm sorry you took it in this way, my message had more the goal to thank the person who helped me. And ofc, I don't expect anyone, you including, to write code for me. I hope we'll be able to help each other in the future! Have a nice day
you too
user10984358
how can I convert hex with decimals like D.3 to base 10 13.1875, any built in?
float.fromhex
user10984358
thanks!
@AndrasDeak Closed. I guess we'll need to delete it manually.
09:13
yup
09:53
CBg
 
1 hour later…
11:15
recbg
11:56
opinions please on monkey patching vs inheritance for modifying base class functionality a little, with this example here of extending an sqlalchemy model base class with a nicer __repr__:
Base = declarative_base()
Base.__repr__ = (lambda s: f"{s.__class__.__module__}.{s.__class__.__name__}({s.id})")

class Customer(Base):
    ...
# vs
Base = declarative_base()
class ExtendedBase(Base):
    def __repr__(self):
        return f"{self.__class__.__module__}.{self.__class__.__name__}({self.id})")

class Customer(ExtendedBase):
    ...
Generally I'd prefer the inheritance approach, but if you're only patching something irrelevant like __repr__ either one is fine IMO
I think I was thinking along the same lines, writing a new child for something that doesn't really affect behavior seemed a bit too much to me.
Ok, pushing to prod with a # sanctioned by Aran-Fey, thanks =)
haha
I'd also opt for the quick and dirty here
Because in this case, it's not really all that dirty
Just, if you ever start patching anything more than just that repr, it's time to switch
@Arne yay, my first contribution to a real program 🎉 :P
by tomorrow, this code will have generated millions in shareholder value
you are now part of the big bad capitalistic machinery =D
12:09
Wow!
When are we celebrating?! :P
Tomorrow's news: "Millions buy shares of Arne Recknagel's software because they want to fire 'this Aran-Fey guy'"
@Aran-Fey is this Cunningham's law again? Get people to invest into you because they can't stand seeing you do a bad job?
@IljaEverilä but that decorator is only needed when accessing attributes that are specific to the sqlalchemy (meta?)class, right? Or is it good style / sane to always use it?
@Arne The point was to use the cls argument of declarative_base() to provide a class with additional behaviour, such as your __repr__(), to base the Base on :)
Iow no need for monkey patching.
There's also the as_declarative() class decorator, which achieves the same a bit differently.
In addition, the ExtendedBase approach would fail with InvalidRequestError due to missing __table__ or __tablename__ attribute, since the declarative meta tries to construct a model out of the class.
12:24
wouldn't it inherit it?
It would, but that's how you create models. You could define __abstract__ = True, but that's best left for abstract concrete table inheritance cases.
ok, it's starting to go a bit over my head, I'm just going to stick to the tools that are in the box for now =D
thanks!
Though it seems its documentation still refers to using it as abstract base as well: docs.sqlalchemy.org/en/13/orm/extensions/declarative/…
@Arne Consider this approach: how would you name the subclass? If you have a hard time coming up with a name, or they're all awkward, then inheritance is less likely to be a good solution.
@Arne I'd recommend the Base = declarative_base(cls=MyBaseBehaviour) approach for adding __repr__() and such.
12:32
Could anyone help me to understand the return type here: github.com/python/cpython/blob/master/Lib/argparse.py#L1862 ?
When I am printing the output of return statement; it is printing this: Namespace(key_1=None, key_2=['123'], key_3=None)
How would I access these keys value?
@TheLittleNaruto You may find it interesting to explore the builtin function dir, which you can call with your variable dir(some_variable)
@JoelHarmon Interesting!
Found how to access the keys: stackoverflow.com/a/17934423/1944896
But I am still interested to know the return type.
12:51
save the return, and run a type on it
Sometimes, the truth is simple, and disappointing. :P
13:04
Hello. I can do with some help on packaging. My goal is to exclude the tests package from being shipped. In setup.py I am using -> packages=setuptools.find_packages(exclude=["tests"]). Yet, when I create the sdist using -> python setup.py sdist, the tar.gz file contains the tests file. Is that normal?
@ParitoshSingh Daymn!!!
@ParitoshSingh melon so much :)
Anytime :)
Thinks I should add that as an answer.
Now I can relate why the keys are accessible as args.key
13:42
is it misleading to describe an operation such as del my_dict[my_key] as O(1), since garbage collection can add overhead based on the size of the discarded value?
are there an online platform which i can put my code and allow the users to use it without viewing the source code ?
repl.it did not have an option to lock the code ?
14:24
@MisterMiyagi Now I am wondering what is the complexity of dealloc (probably impl specific)? I actually don't know how dealloc works... I should probably figure that out.
I would assume that deallocation of contiguous memory smaller than a page is O(1)
Let just say O(log(n)) to play it safe :P
what I'd worry about is that even with an arena GC, objects may be spread over multiple generations and regions
so GC performance should depend on whether the GC can wait until an entire page is unneeded, i.e. it depends on how much memory is free
@MisterMiyagi I'm just trying to find a lower bound. As in, what's the worst case you can do by turning off the GC and I'm hoping that it's worse than O(1) so I can show your statement is misleading :P
CPython's refcounting is probably O(n) where n is the number of objects collected
@Dair I'm quite certain that GC isn't O(1). Just not sure if anyone cares. ^^
14:33
I'll have to get back to this problem during Winter break. I am actually curious, I need to get better at understanding memory things. I could probably write some scripts to give empirical evidence of this, but I'm too tired now.
14:44
I am now going down a rabbit hole looking at the GNU docs for malloc
should we call the cops if you aren't back in one hour?
that rabbit hole might be deep
15:01
@Dair avoid the Queen of Hearts... and make sure you remember the difference between "eat me" and "drink me" etc...
15:15
oh boy there is also cudaMalloc et al.
@JoelHarmon That was my initial problem, I could only come up with meaningless extensions like ExtendedBase and such.
@IljaEverilä Yeah, that's what I think I'm going to do. Something akin to a Mixin for the base behavior.
@variable Having the tests in a different folder tan your source code is usually the safest solution, no need to exclude anything then.
From GNU malloc statistics: "int smblks: This field is unused." lol.
15:30
well, there's also "int usmblks This field is unused and always 0."
This page says it is used for "fastbins"
cbg all
ahoy :)
Now to crack on with some actual coding.
The older I get, the harder it is to escape meetings. What's with that?
15:47
I prefer to think about meetings as zombies. You start with the slow and shambling ones but as you survive them, the faster and cunning ones randomly appear on your calendar.
@OldTinfoil Meetings are designed by the bourgeoisie to prevent the proletariat from seizing the means of production.
@MisterMiyagi I can't work out if I've been too slow once, and have become a meeting zombie that drags people down into meetings to chow down on their brains....
@Dair There's probably a smidgen of truth in that
@Dair Strange that they purposely made that comment into Times New Roman... '<span class="roman">The preorder action incremented the depth.</span>'
16:02
THE PREORDER ACTION INCREMENTED THE DEPTH!!!
16:14
I'm on track to finish AOC '18 before AOC '19 begins, as long as there aren't any more problems that take me 350 days to solve
The super hard ones are usually in the middle because nobody wants to spend Christmas Eve yelling at their compiler, so I'm cautiously optimistic
huh... Never thought about it that way.....
I havent finished AoC18, barely even got into the double digits. hoping I can finish this year.
user10984358
I did AOC 2015 till day 11 (started a month or two ago), then gave up due to my schedule, but does it require any "advanced math" at the later days?
Every year I try to solve it with a math base solution as much as possible, but maybe I will change it up this year
Looks like a good time to start 2018
I haven't encountered any college-level math in days 16 through 22 of '18, and I don't specifically recall any from previous years
16:28
I'm stuck on 13 (2018). aocd gives the input data as a list of lists that describe cart movement on tracks an the idea is to predict collisions. I could hack away and scan every list for the character that represents a cart and iteratively update but I was holding out for finding a better data structure to manage the analysis... still waiting for an epiphany :)
user10984358
guess its time I went back, I want to see a fully lit tree :)
I guess I should dust of that directory and prepare for 2019
The cart problem is probably the worst one in terms of required lines of code, since you have to track(heh) a bunch of state. On the bright side, it doesn't require cutting-edge optimizations or anything in order to complete in a reasonable amount of time
was that the one you let run for 5 minutes or something?
That describes like half of the problems :>
16:33
Also, AOC sounds like some kind of cult of pro programmers, and im really not sure if im ready for it or not haha
I was thinking of going back and redoing days 1 through 15, since I lost my source code for them, but now that I remember the cart problem, maybe half a repository is fine...
Good info, I may get inspired later to try again
@ParitoshSingh I brute forced one answer that took over a day to run. I uploaded the input data and code to a virtual server and let it run while I tried to invent an optimization and, sadly, the brute force approach finished first.
oh dang haha
I was right!
Last year wim suggested that I bang my head against a wall and not look at other answers until I had derived a solution of my own (no matter how terrible). This year I am abandoning that approach and simply going to admit that I have no idea after about a day so that I can internalize a proper approach while the problem is still fresh in my mind
You summoned him
16:41
Is there any pythin certification available. I found one here pythoninstitute.org/certification anyone knows about any other?
My 2018.18.2 solution kept giving the wrong answer for an hour and couldn't identify the problem until I copy-pasted @AndrasDeak's solution and compared outputs. Put an asterisk next to my name in the record books.
I didn't actually read his code, since I can't speak numpy, but it was still a less than stellar move by me
IIRC Martijn did notebooks for every problem with detailed explanations, I should probably take a look at those now that I think about it.
@variable I can't think of a single reputable one.
My default assumption is that any language certification is worth the paper it's printed on and not much else
@Kevin I'm pretty sure I've done that before. And I remember having terrible off-by-few errors on that one.
My problem wasn't a fencepost error, mercifully. I forgot to account for a corner case that didn't occur in the sample input.
wim
wim
16:59
@MisterMiyagi no, because that only decreases the refcount of the value.
2018.23.2 is defying my brainstorming efforts... I guess the admin is fine with people cursing at their compiler on Christmas Eve Eve.
@wim doesn't a refcount of 0 trigger immediate collection on CPython?
@MisterMiyagi doesn't mean the GC has to done it immediately though
AFAIK on CPython it does do it immediately, though
wim
wim
@MisterMiyagi yes, but that is an independent process from deleting from a dict
17:02
@Kevin I think I reached that with a combination of trial and error and sheer luck with a crappy heuristic that only worked on some inputs
that was the worst for me last year
I have an idea or two that can be either very efficient or catastrophically inefficient, depending on how dense the input data is
yup, commit message: "Day 23, accidentally correct for part 2... "
wim
wim
An implementation of Python could do that in a background task or something, I don't think it's fair to lump that in with dict's big O complexity
For all my answers, I've made sure the code gets the correct answer with 5 different tokens
@MisterMiyagi ahh sorry, I glanced over the CPython specific part... maybe it does - it's not something I've ever really looked at to test...the GC spec as well as what id does are implementation specific, so, stuff could be delayed or stuff could happen immediately etc...
*looks for the "don't show this message again" on the popup* :P
I'm happy when my solution is correct but the goal is for me to get the right answer for my input in finite time
17:06
@JonClements @wim thanks for your opinions, they answer my question well
wim
wim
apologies, didn't know you'd already seen it.
I'm just kidding, but it sounded a bit like telemarketing
You can always get the right answer in finite time, if you just submit random guesses and narrow your search space based on the "too high" or "too low" response :-P
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak you must not be a perfectionist. For me, when the answer was correct but the code is incorrect I am quite unhappy about that.
It's O(log(N,2)) time, that's not bad, especially since N is usually lower than 10*20 or so
17:08
@wim I usually am, but these late challenges when become a struggle just make me want to get them over with
when I have absolutely no idea what else to do without having to read up on niche and advances number theory I lose interest in perfection
@MisterMiyagi what I believe that also happens is that depending on various bits, the interpreter might not tend to dealloc actually memory used and return it to the OS, it might hold it for a bit longer so it can just re-use it for something rather than giving it back and then request it again kind of thing.
I abandon perfection on day 1. The first solution that works is the best solution, regardless of how ugly it is.
Good design practices are for January through November.
wim
wim
I guess different people play for different reasons. I actually enjoy the learning about new things part the most...
I like it best when I don't have to google a thing
wim
wim
day 23 doesn't need the linear programming stuff btw
you can solve it correctly with the space bisection priority queue thing (not sure if this pattern has a real name)
17:13
Is there a concept of class variable in python dataclass?
I see they are instance variables.
wim
wim
I don't know if that's what you were doing with your scipy binary_dilation thing but it looks similar
In some of the assembly-based problems in '18, my code works for my input, but would fail spectacularly for maliciously crafted input. I'm pretty sure 100% of actual inputs are non-malicious, though.
Basically I assume that the "a = 1 if b > c else 0" instruction is always immediately followed by a jump, and a's value ceases to matter after that instruction
also, depending on the OS, it might also not necessarily dissociate that memory from the process (even if said process said it didn't want it) but might just keep it around for a bit until other stuff turns up where it really needs to be reallocated to another process... just to keep memory allocations/de-allocations - so if that process asks again for memory, you can just re-use the same block(s)
wim
wim
assembly problems were pretty hard for me to solve generic. I had to construct a "patcher" which worked regardless of which registers needed the patching in user input
the ones that print an ascii art message to screen that you read off were hard too. I had to do OCR.
@JonClements Even if it doesn't release it to the OS, the process still needs to internally track which memory it uses, though. That means at least doing something on each malloc/dealloc.
17:21
@wim I don't remember what I exactly did, but it was desperate
@MisterMiyagi indeed... I haven't checked recently, but I know a lot of stuff as complicated as Python tend to keep their own free memory, with some form of memory management, so that releasing something like a 2mb string will just end up being "meh.... might as well keep that - can use that later" vs... "alloc/dealloc frequently"
yeah, most language VMs tend to keep memory around
think there's only been a rare occasion when I've had to get really specific about memory stuff - and that was I need to make a request to memory but it can't be paged/swapped to disk
rest of the time - it ultimately doesn't really matter
17:46
random question: if a recursive algorithm isn't "tail recursive" what do we call it? Is there a name for this?
I usually go with non-tail recursive
Hm, i think it's just recursive calls. and then tail recursive is a specific type of recursive calls. Im not aware of any term for it.
A term which appears once in en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tail_call, so it's not completely out there
Apparently, google says there's even a thing called head recursive.
This reminds me of my annoyance yesterday that I couldn't find a term for "not coprime". Cocomposite, perhaps?
17:51
A term doesn't exist apparently, but cocomposite sounds weird if we're coming up with new ones
wikipedia doesn't meantion "head" recursion so until I'm shown conclusive evidence to the contrary I will assume it doesn't exist
I would think that the opposite of an ankle bracelet is not a necklace
this and this mention head recursion. Would you consider the first good enough as proof?
> If the recursive call occurs at the beginning of a method, it is called a head recursion.
I endorse that. But that's not an antonym to tail recursion.
Oh, i didn't mean it that way. Just mentioned it in passing as something that was interesting to me
Agreed there, it's not the opposite of tail recursion at all.
Or if we want to be very specific over it, head recursive and tail recursive together do not define all possible recursive calls, So the two aren't explaining all possible scenarios. Hence head recursive cannot be the negation of all tail recursive calls. (It misses out on all the calls that recurse in the middle)
I don't really know if recurse is a word though, hmm
I curse you again.
I recurse you.
17:57
Oof, that hurt me all over..and over
If tail recursion defines the recursive call as being at the end of the function, and head recursion defines the recursive call as being at the beginning of the function, I'm not sure how much more opposite you can get...
Aye, but In the context of asking for "what covers calls that are not tail recursive"
That doesn't change whether they're opposites...?
Alright, conceded
Which would also, by definition, mean that if it is the opposite, it is also the antonym.
18:02
@ParitoshSingh (it is)
Oh nifty
wim
wim
tail recursion is only interesting because of TCO
it probably wouldn't even have a special name if not for that
Aye, in languages that support that in any case. It's my understanding that cpython does not.
I wonder if there's any implementations of python that bothered to try adding it in
wim
wim
so "head recursion" is probably a made up term which has even less of a reason to exist
doubt it, because not much point to use recursion in Python in the first place. there's almost always a better way to write it, for all but the simplest jobs.
Tail call optimization is halting-problem-hard if function names can be reassigned
wim
wim
18:17
ah yeah, good point. didn't think of that.
Why can't you do it on the fly? You'd only have to have at most two stacks at the same time
Or do you mean having to make sure that foo is the same foo? Hmm...
I guess with the ability to mutate globals this is indeed a problem
It could be possible if the programmer promises not to do anything tricky. I'm imagining some kind of "do TCO on this please" parser directive. Not really in line with pythons philosophy, but technically feasible
wim
wim
possible does not mean useful
public static void...
Yeah, not too useful. If you're dying for TCO you can do the equivalent source code transformation by hand.
It might be a fun project to scan an AST for tail recursive functions and transform them into their optimized iterative form. Too bad there's no good ast-to-source decompiler, though, so you won't be able to admire your handiwork in plaintext
wim
wim
18:34
I saw some prettty ast decompilers that kinda worked actually
I mean they obviously can't do a 100% bang on job because information was already lost
I don't mind the whitespace getting mangled or whatever, as long as the decompiled text compiles to the same ast as the original text
19:20
The real test is whether 0xFF gets decompiled back to 0xFF or 255, since literal value styling doesn't get preserved in the ast
>>> ast.dump(ast.parse("0xff"))
'Module(body=[Expr(value=Constant(value=255, kind=None))], type_ignores=[])'
>>> ast.dump(ast.parse("255"))
'Module(body=[Expr(value=Constant(value=255, kind=None))], type_ignores=[])'
20:00
Hii, is anyone online for a pymongo query?
Hello. There will be people online but I'm not sure there's a huge amount of pymongo experience here. You'd be better just asking the question and people will pitch in if they can help. Please make note of the room rules beforehand, though.
Oh, thanks roganjosh. Actually I did search mongodb room, but its not as active as this one. So..
Plus its more of a data structure query
Without seeing the question, it doesn't seem inappropriate question here, I just mean that I don't think many of the regulars use it so much, that's all. So, depending on the question, it might take a while to get a reply is all - it doesn't mean people haven't paid attention :)
Suppose a table T has tens and thousand of rows based on days. In laymen terms, my code has to first filter the table based on date, then add a specific variable V in column C. That's it. This is taking around 2 mins to show on angular frontend. Hence I am trying to reduce this to few seconds...
One minute I was like "how the heck does that work?!" and the next minute I was like "*facepalm* of course that works"
20:15
I'm more surprised by the Ellipsis one
I shouldn't be too surprised because I know how that works in numpy, but still
it's the same concept, really. As long as it's a valid expression (and hashable) you can put anything between the square brackets
20:31
What is {}[()] = '1'? In the console, a dict literal like {'2': '3'} will repeat it back, x = 2 would give you access to a name. {} just repeats back an empty dict in this case. Looking in globals I can't find it. But surely an assignment has taken place in the for loop; it's just discarded with no trace?
@ParitoshSingh Python gives some pretty strong guarantees about the stack. That apparently rules out TCO for compliant implementations.
@roganjosh the latter, yes
not bound to any name, so it gets destroyed
so it's even better than _
{'2': '3'} is also a literal with no name, but the console actually repeats it back though
I've been using commas as what defines tuples. So this was unexpected for me for different reasons
@roganjosh because in a REPL the last non-None-valued expression is printed and bound to _
{}[()] = '1' is not an expression so this isn't triggered
@ParitoshSingh except empty tuples
20:34
Aha, ok, thanks
Aye, i guess i've never had to make or think about empty tuples. This caught me by surprise
@ParitoshSingh incidentally, I found this while searching for the background on why {} is an empty dict and not a set (which I 99% expect was just a point of convenience due to their relative prevalence). Not directly related, but interesting you can unpack the empty tuple to create a set. I'd never really thought about it.
We've had a thematically relevant riddle btw: sopython.com/wiki/Riddles#1-16
@roganjosh don't let piR see that
Haha, sorry
20:45
Nifty, time to use it everywhere!
^ Amaze and astound your colleagues, they'll love it
Didn't sets or set literals come later?
That would be the 1% doubt; backwards compatibility. It seems strange to me that a dict would be a precursor to sets (which I would imagine are less complex) but I don't know C and the evolution of Python I guess was mostly along practical purposes rather than what could be implemented
AFAIK sets started as dicts without values
dict is very prevalent in Python since basically every object is a dict, or at least pretends to be
21:08
Ugh. Do a full copy and then drop columns and it gets 3 upvotes in 4 minutes :/
Another one of those object duplication duplicates
that question is wrong in so many ways...
Jun 30 '14 at 11:30, by Martijn Pieters
Before Python had sets, we used dict with all values set to None.
I'm not terribly surprised because in python "everything is a dict"
a lot of languages have hashmaps, associative arrays or equivalent, so a dict might be more fundamental than a set
1/5 through aoc 2018
Yeah, I'm just starting to look into the source code to try determine which is more complex to implement. Wish me luck
21:22
today's dict is very different from old dicts, so I'm not sure that's representative in any way
(also different from today's sets)
That's a good point. I guess even if the implementation is simpler today between set and dict in CPython, that neglects the evolution of thought in what the language should do
the implementation of dicts has gotten more complex

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