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10:23 PM
Recently I learned tkinter in python. Are there any real-world applications (in a job for example) that use tkinter?
 
I suspect there are plenty that are still in use. I am, however, struggling to find a good source of examples
I think things like PyQt might have started to overtake it. That is used to build Spyder which, while it might have some criticism in the way it works with Python, is still pretty decent in its GUI. But, this isn't really my area; I hedged my bets totally on web
 
let's hope nobody scraps it
 
I'm a fan of wxPython, personally.
 
<-- scrap-proof. You can't get rid of me
 
tkinter is terrible.
Not so much because of tkinter, but because of Tcl/Tk.
@roganjosh Probably don't want to lay down those challenges with mods around :-p
 
10:35 PM
Well, it was a calculated decision. If I didn't add the hyphen, I was basically saying I was proof of there being scrap. Rock/hard place 'n' all that
 
Haha, well, at least you thought it out.
 
But, please don't get rid of me :P
 
"The risk I took was calculated, but boy am I bad at math"
 
That's enough agony to warm the cockles of my heart.
@AndrasDeak :-)
 
@AndrasDeak ouch :'(
It's fine. I've set aside an hour tomorrow to review all of statistics. I'll do better
 
10:54 PM
Ok, well that's the presentation done anyway. The last few slides are just screenshots. Last task of the day and I have 7 minutes spare, woohoo! I'll figure out what I'll actually say when the slides appear
 
I suggest "Umm... uuuh... so..."
 
Nah, that's overdone.
You want something original.
 
"sorry, I'm going through a tunnel"
 
Ah, the old crinkle-crisp-packet-whilst-mumbling, then move on to next slide
"As was clearly shown in the previous slide..."
 
it always takes me by surprise that Brits call them crisps :)
(even though I may have even been taught that in school)
 
11:03 PM
:) No worries. I can't understand why they don't sell gravy in a chip shop down south in my own country, let alone the intercontinental chip/crisp confusion. I ended up having to take my chippy tea home and making instant gravy to make it palatable
 
Wait, what? Gravy is that stuff you put on bangers. That name is the same on both sides of the pond.
Why would you put gravy on chips/crisps? Why would you turn tea into gravy?
 
tea == evening meal. Chips == chunky fried bits of potato. Gravy == necessity
 
I'm sure it makes sense in a Cockney rhyming slang kind of way
 
Gah!
That's not even English (pun intended).
Tea means evening meal?
 
I wouldn't put gravy on crisps, but I probably wouldn't be disgusted by it... until they went soggy, which probably is a minute tops
@CodyGray it is in the north of England
 
11:13 PM
And don't get idjaw started on poutine
 
Dare I ask what you call the drink you make by brewing leaves?
 
tea
 
Is that perchance called "dinner"?
Erm.
 
No, dinner comes before tea
:P
There is no consistent name for meals in England (there's memes about this all the time. We can't even agree on a name for a bread roll)
It depends which region you're from
In the North, "tea" is both a drink and an evening meal
 
You do realize that's objectively awful, right?
The point of language is to clearly communicate.
 
11:18 PM
Blue is my favourite colour. I would be devastated if I found out it had negative connotations about someone's general feeling
 
That's like showing me printouts from The Daily WTF as a justification for what you've written during a code review.
 
If, instead, you're referring to how our dialect is so different in such a small country... I think you studied history to know that one :P
 
No, no, not dialect differences.
It's using the exact same word to refer to both a drink and a meal. That's nuts.
 
Context clues
 
I'm going to go and have tea now.
What did I mean?
 
11:21 PM
@CodyGray it also means a letter and one of those little golfball stands
 
"tea" is a recognised word for the drink, but (ahahaha) we'd colloquially call that a "brew", which then generally means some kind of alcohol elsewhere :P
 
This is a pathological case where you can't tell from context, since you often do both at the same time.
 
@CodyGray tea for tea? Don't be silly
 
@CodyGray a meal
If you sounded "posh" then people might assume you meant the drink. But if you said it as one of the general folk in Manchester, that is the phrase you'd say if you were going back home for a meal
If you meant the drink you might say "cup of tea". If you meant something like some communal tea-drinking party, it wouldn't make any sense. We'd generally ask "do you want a brew?" if you were putting the kettle on
Specifically 1:35
Eh, I should say the vid is NSFW as it contains some swearing, sorry
 
11:41 PM
I'm pretty sure I sound hella posh.
I never drink just a single cup of tea.
 
I drink cups of tea all day long. I can go through 10 a day if I'm stuck in an office. There's a reasonable test for poshness that I can only anecdotally support. How many teaspoons of sugar do you take?
0 sugars is the "posh" side of the scale. Somewhat frighteningly, I've not yet been convinced of the other end of the scale. I've seen someone put 5 spoonfulls of sugar in a single cup of tea and I suspect it can go further
 
If it's hot tea, I use honey, never sugar.
If it's iced tea (hush, I'm from the southern US), then either a small amount of sugar or more commonly sodium saccharin.
 
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