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01:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

wim
wim
just browse a local CPython clone in clion or whatever IDE you like
they (github) needn't waste development effort trying to turn the web UI into a fully functional IDE
not much market value to be found there, as opposed to useful API features like github actions
18:22
@Kevin GitHub has this feature. It is gradually rolling out for a lot of projects.
wim
wim
can mods change accepted answer? in the case that the accept was an obviously bad choice, and the O.P. has not been seen for years so is unable to change it themselves. I refer to Is there a ceiling equivalent of // operator in Python? but have seen this occurrence many other times...
@wim nope
There should be a badge mods can put on answers like that saying something like "although this answer has been accepted by the user, the community as a whole has found other answers to be more helpful" There are many accepts that have been highly outvoted by other answers
wim
wim
Well, that sucks. So they just remain stuck forever?
Yeah, unless the accepted answer is bad enough that we can delete it, which is rare
@Dodge we already have that, it's called votes
wim
wim
18:30
Do mods have this power, and just decline to use it? Or it's not a feature at all.
not a feature as far as I know
Not even sure about community managers. It's possible a dev would have to mess with the db directly.
wim
wim
+515 and . sad
@AndrasDeak The green checkmark throws me off and I often miss the ones below because I don't scroll down. Votes don't say "hey scroll down because you are missing something below"
@Dodge that's a bug in your head. If you want "best" answer, votes are the go-to signal (even if that's also unreliable at times)
wim
wim
@AndrasDeak no, that's a bug in the UI.
even if you want to sort by votes, by clicking the "order by votes" tab, you can't.
maybe there should be another tab there for their stupid "stackrank" default, or whatever they want to call it (it's clearly not an ordering by votes).
18:36
@wim accepted being pinned is a feature... it's documented and you should expect it
it's a crappy feature but the request to change it got declined 3 years ago
wim
wim
why was the request to change declined?
only self-accepts are exempt from pinning
@wim I dont know :/ Can't see a Shog answer on the question, but he declined it. I can ask around with more moderationny people
If my patreon reaches $5,000 a month I'll write a userscript that unpins accepted answers. Tell your friends.
wim
wim
the only thing I could find was that it's "part of what makes our sites different from others", which is an extremely weak argument
Chances of coming to a workable consensus on this in... At least the next year... Are slim, @Suragch. — Shog9 Jan 19 '17 at 3:28
wim
wim
18:39
from bluefeet here
response to "why was this declined"
wim
wim
I suspect the real reason is too lazy to change :-\
Maybe. 2017 was well before this welcoming thing, back then it was okay to say people are sometimes wrong.
wim
wim
since it is complicated (a good solution will need to take into account age of post and if/when O.P. changed accept - so that late-arriving answers which make use of some new language feature don't stay buried.)
the simplest solution is unpinning the accepted one...then people would have to look for the green tick when defaulting to votes, which might be easier (cognitively speaking) than looking for top votes when defaulting to the green tick
wim
wim
18:51
their (SE) fundamental mistake seems to be assuming that other readers care what answer helped the OP at one time.
but I think users don't really care what answer most helped the OP (or long ago helped an OP who has since lost interest). We got here thru search and we care what is the best answer at this time
For $10,000 I will develop Shadow Stack Overflow, a series of user scripts that will allow you to give answers, comments, and votes that are visible only to other Shadow Stack Overflow users. Each SSO vote is worth ten SO votes.
It's invite-only and you have to pledge to only give invites to the truly worthy
wim
wim
not bad price actually
will shadow stack overflow have single sign on? what will you call that?
SSO will have SSO. The conflicting acronyms serve as a barrier to keep out the weak-willed.
@roganjosh lol
19:07
Once enough people defect on the pledge and SSO is full of bozos, I will launch Shadow Shadow Stack Overflow
wim
wim
19:23
each SSSO vote worth ten SSO votes?
Exactly.
wim
wim
it sounds like a pyramid scheme, except more profitable. I'm in.
@PaulMcG nice use case for assignment expressions.
I thought it was Pascal for a minute
ah, the whole concept of the repo is "python without statements"
You'll have my attention if you can expressionify try-except
incidentally that's a known shortcoming at the bottom of github.com/christianscott/express-your-self
20:00
@AndrasDeak But then you're stuck with "how do display a float with 2 decimal places" having a % operator accepted with 136 votes, a "the python 3 syntax" str.format with 250ish, and the f-string answer on 52 votes. <- yes that's my own answer, but since I've used the answer myself more than once, I'm struck by how I have to scroll for it.
@toonarmycaptain and who would have the authority to say that yours is the one that should be community-chosen?
and I guess a bunch of others after, nevermind
@AndrasDeak Oh I don't have a solution. It just strikes me that a new user would go to that question and not see f-strings probably isn't the ideal. It's the same for a number of questions I've seen, where it's the 3rd or 4th most voted solution is the one that's actually current/correct.
Maybe better tagging of answers with more specific python versions for python stuff, in addition to questions.
@toonarmycaptain well yeah, but that's a chronic problem of SO that they "promised" to try and fix, and won't
with the tooling we have "300 people thought this was OK" is still better than "one random person thought this was best"
@AndrasDeak That's why I didn't link, and why I noted that it was my answer - I'm not seeking upvotes, it just strikes me that for that question objectively either a more comprehensive answer, or the more recent preferreed syntax should be highlighted, just based on my own usage.
I'm sure that varies though - C probably hasn't had many dramatic syntax changes in the past decade, HTML methods don't change to often, whereas presumably young evolving languages have a lot more churn.
Hmm what if answers could be highlighted based on votes by those with gold badges in the tag, expiring every....3 years? Maybe a separate review queue, maybe room for an explanation by one of those voters as to why it's highlighted? Letting the community curate it's legacy content.
20:17
Shadow Stack Overflow will have all that, plus hats year round and a pony
Relies on caring moderators/high rep folks who'll care to serve, and also not just select what they like/are used to, but that's what it is I guess.
(Act 3 twist: it's Tony the Pony, herald of Zalgo)
@Kevin Downvotes on questions make a pixel on your screen burn out? I like this place.
[I also need a new monitor.]
assignment expressions is pretty neat. Can't wait for Python 4 :D
20:33
Will we start seeing more rubyesque styles, like 10.times.do ([... some stuff ...])? (Actually, ruby does not require the trailing ".do", I was just merging it with the express-your-self style.)
str.whatdyamacallit() -> python uses AI to discover the intended method. I want this feature.
afternoon cabbage
wim
wim
20:50
any easy way to make functools partial proxy on attribute access?
i.e. you have an attribute 'bar' in foo.__dict__ and foo.bar works on that original function but not on curried
Perhaps I should just use partial_foo.func.bar and quit whining
 
2 hours later…
22:36
22:50
it's not non-pythonic to use lambda functions in functions which require a callable argument, right?
wim
wim
well, not in principle.. as long as you aren't doing a goofass lambda such as sorted(..., key=lambda x: len(x))
[
    'that',
    'could',
    'actually',
    'function',
    'excellently'
]
;)
23:32
@wim why is that a problem?
Not sure if kidding but they mean because sorted(..., key=len)
oic, yah, that would be better and probably more efficient
user7308818
23:55
anyone here?
user7308818
im trying to make a flask app
user7308818
but i dont know how to have infinite url paremiters
user7308818
sort of like app.com/url/stuff/here/
user7308818
so i can have something sort of like jsonstore.io if you know what that is
01:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

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