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01:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

20:00
@Code-Apprentice I've found a few issues with that, but it's dead useful.
@AaronHall Where will you be doing this?
@Dodge did you ever come to a decision about PyTexas?
@toonarmycaptain I want to go but I'm not sure if my schedule will allow for that. What are the dates again?
@Dodge May 16-17.
@OakDev please try to focus on being on topic. I'm telling you that since you have a non-trivial track record here.
user11867329
Yes, sorry, remove.
20:17
@OakDev I'm curious, why do you keep posting stuff that you ask to be removed. I don't get it. Are you a bot? If not, just type your message into the chat box and then ctrl-a, delete. If you are a bot what is 1.1 + 2.2?
user11867329
What kind of both can't do additions...
user11867329
and is as satyrical
@Dodge please don't
wim
wim
oh, I know this one. it's 3.3000000000000003.
Bot!
20:22
do the typing hints provide any benefit outside of like... linting?
like, does a function go any faster at runtime if it knows what types it's getting
or, for python, is it purely for the coder
python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/#non-goals more or less says that that kind of thing is the responsibility of third party tools
"Using type hints for performance optimizations is left as an exercise for the reader."
thank you :)
Full disclosure, I think "the reader" here means "anybody who maintains a Python implementation", which in principle also includes the CPython devs. So I can't use that specific sentence to claim that CPython has no type-hint-based performance improvements
I'm still pretty sure it doesn't though
cpython is just writing code in C using the standard python c headers and libraries - i thought
CPython is the reference implementation of Python. If you downloaded Python from python.org, you're using CPython.
There's also the Python/C API, which lets you embed/extend CPython by writing C code that interfaces with Python types
20:35
that fits my understanding
And there's Cython, a language that contains both Python and C-like syntax. Not an official PSF project or anything, but the name is often confused with CPython
i've played around with cython a bit. it's pretty nice.
and pypy
so, pypy and CPython would be similar. implementations of python
no.. they're very dissimilar
pypy is a runtime that has a jit that can convert to native code.. and it's associated with a language that's like cython called rpython
They're both listed under "implementations" in Wikipedia's Python template, so they're similar in the sense that they occupy the same category
20:38
okay, and what's CPython?
You can do print("Hello, World!") in both
cpython would be what you get when you download the official python runtime
but "what" is it?
and if you do dev in C using its C headers and libs
it is a piece of software..
=)
20:39
too vague :P
So I was wondering I've seen some packages that don't look very maintained or popular but I was curious to see if there's anyway to use dynamic models in Django
Basically in SQL when you create a Table your rows must adhere to the columns per that Table
But what I'm wondering is if there's a way to add a column during run time
It's an implementation of python. Just like pypy is another. essentially you can think of them as competitors, or allies depending on how you want to think of it i suppose. But they're both meant for the same task: allowing us to actually run python by doing all the hard work. That's all i meant by it when i said they're similar
The problem is I have a UI table on my frontend for which users should be able to add/remove both columns and rows
But you're right in that they take very different approaches to getting the same job done
you're correct in that sense.. pypy and cpython are similar
20:41
I've never understood the phrase "comparing apples and oranges". It's quite easy to compare them. They're both fruits, they're brightly colored, they can be processed into a tasty juice...
And i would be happy with either of them right about now.. :)
cpython and pypy are similar in regard to being runtimes - and cython and rpython are similar in being offshoots of the python language that can be compiled to native code
i tried out cython the other day and was able to very easily compile one of my modules to native code
i'd say even "python" itself falls under that latter list, wouldn't you reckon.
@Kevin Comparing apples to apples does not make sense either given the massively different types of apples that exist
@Kevin You've got a point, but let's be honest: Has anyone ever compared apples and oranges in real life?
20:44
yeah.. if you consider python bytecode, each compiles to another more compact format
There are two camps, the camp that says you can compare anything to anything and everyone else
heh
the question "should I choose an apple or an orange" just doesn't come up
i'm sure botanists have written their doctoral papers on apples vs. oranges
somewhere
@AmagicalFishy type hints are accepted by a number of Python'like compilers, namely Cython and MyPyC. So if you have a type hinted program, going to full compilation becomes easier.
20:45
If the intent is "they can be compared, but there's never a practical reason to do so", that feels like a failure of imagination to me. Maybe you're trying to decide what to have for breakfast. Maybe you want to plant the most profitable fruit orchard.
@toonarmycaptain My knowledge of it is only academic
Mostly, your app will be faster because it spends less time dying a gruesome death.
yes ... for instance rpython is the python language, but to have it compile into more efficient code, you avoid patterns that confuse the compiler's efforts to infer the types of variables
Ah, so implementation devs are the reader referred to in the PEP...
you are especially correct in that my programs spend a lot of time dying a gruesome death
20:48
That's agile development
heh
your programs lay on the ground talking about how everything is slowly going dark and feeling cold like one of those slow deaths in an old western?
@Todd era, rpython doesn't take type hints. I'm also decently sure it's a compile time error to have uniferrable types in rpython.
If my program does not crash with Exception - not implemented yet, then it must not be an active development cycle
you are probably right. i thought though that maybe rpython allowed ambiguous patterns where the compiler can't infer the type... it just didn't compile to efficient code
at least in the function signatures and other code that calls functions.. the type has to be clear, but inside functions you can do what you want with the variables
wim
wim
What's a pirate's favorite restricted sub-language of Python?
20:54
pyret?
ArrgghhPython
... flask? does flask count
i gave pypy a run the other day against cpython... wasn't impressed at all with its performance
@Todd Hm, I've only read about their inference for visible names, i.e. globals and attributes. For non-closure locals, SSA would allow assigning concrete types even if the variable itself uses several types, I guess.
rbrb
21:00
static single assignment is ssa for any who are curious
wim
wim
@Todd It be significantly faster if you understand what it's good at
Unfortunately you need to know a bit about how it works to get a feel for what situations it will actually give benefit
the problem though is it can be slower than cpython for the majority of typical use
i agree
wim
wim
Yep, and benchmarks that show pypy killing CPython are usually very contrived
I was hoping though, when I was running it that its JIT would work more to make any sort of task faster if run long enough, but no..
I think when python code calls modules through the cpython api, that can't be optimized and pypy takes a big performance hit
21:22
huh, just realised the PyPy homepage lost its 90's charm!
they even have a new logo
hah.. that's funny.. i just opened it - looks like it just changed this week
wonder why they only have a 32 bit version for windows
i love software that 'just works' like cython
it converted my modules to cpython code and compiled them. I didn't have to do anything.
21:41
Except run it of course? :)
i didn't even have to run it.. it got right up and ran itself then made me dinner and fed my cat
it's busy finishing writing all the code for my project right now
Wow... my version must be broken then :)
@Todd funny, I had the exact opposite experience with PyPy and Cython in the past. PyPy just worked, whereas Cython needed a lot of annotating and refactoring to get significant benefits.
@toonarmycaptain I'm thinking twitch
@MisterMiyagi see, we don't talk about having noticeable benefits, and just assume its Cython so it must be faster. Life's much easier if you do it that way :P
22:05
my usage of cython is pretty basic. I don't need to call any of my code from C, so I don't need to define the function signatures in cython code. I just load my module and call a function in it to run it.
hehe jon.. yes.. your version must be
I'm not sure if this is the right place to ask. But I'm just checking if someone would be able to lend me a hand trying to figure out why my decryption-program doesn't work properly
I'm new to Python and currently strugeling pretty bad with
it*
maybe focus on one error message at a time
Yes, that'd be what I'd normally be doing. At this point there are no error messages, it just doesn't generate the output I'm looking for
But I can't seem to figure out why
Nobody likes to sign up for an unknown amount of work. Ask your question, then someone will probably help
heh.. that's true. =)
22:19
Cabbage guys
I'd like to know if there's any way I could help somehow regarding this coronavirus outbreak. Please let me know if there's any way you know of that I can help as data analyst/scientist. Cheers!
you could model the probability of where it could spread like a heat map based on transportation routes in the US
I'm having a hard time getting reliable sources of information
If you could point me to a reliable data source, I'll also gladly work with that too
@CeliusStingher look for whatever the WHO posts
Cheers Andras, will do
Oh, you mean help with the outbreak. I don't think you can. Stay home when you're sick, wash your hands. There, you've done all you can to help everyone around you.
22:27
I googled lickign eyeballs and it's a thing
22:47
you can also spread awareness about the importance of keeping sanitizers and washing your hands properly to others
at this point, that will be a lot more impactful than any analysis of the disease spread or something along those lines.
unless you were to build a cure, that would be cool
Finance / credit-risk are my topics but yeah
23:54
Does anyone else spend time trying to write a really good answer, then put it down feeling like maybe people will think I'm preachy, didactic, arrogant, too wordy, condescending, etc?
or even obsessive =)
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