@MisterMiyagi Yeah, exactly that. It makes me feel better that I'm not alone on that one, then :) We launched a new API service on K8s and within hours had massively exceeded the 500 concurrent redshift connections, so everything just ground to a halt
In fact, I think it's worth showing what we're referring to in my panicked code message on Slack because I really don't think it's well-known
with psycopg2.connect(user=os.environ['REDSHIFT_USERNAME'],
password=os.environ['REDSHIFT_PASSWORD'],
host=os.environ['REDSHIFT_HOST'],
port=os.environ['REDSHIFT_PORT'],
dbname=os.environ['TENANT']) as conn:
c = conn.cursor()
c.execute("SELECT * FROM transform.parcel_scans LIMIT 1")
c.close()
# None of this should be possible!
c = conn.cursor()
c.execute("SELECT * FROM transform.parcel_scans LIMIT 1")
Could you both explain a bit more? I mean I get they could use a context manager and just leave the exit method empty, but why would you? Also how does that pep mandate this behaviour? Can you point out the section, I searched for context manager but no hits on that page
Too late. %s as a binding parameter is just an endless source of confusion and I think it's the dumbest problem I encounter at least weekly, if not daily
And I can't be angry with people that can't see the difference between string formatting and parameterization, but I have to keep making example after example to show it's different. It's just begging to be mixed up with string formatting, while we continually preach about SQL injection. And it really didn't need to be like that
Unfortunately the people designing those APIs couldn't imagine people being confused, because obviously string formatting and parametrisation are very different things.
@AndrasDeak They probably thought it was helpful to make the parameterisation syntax parallel to printf formatting, because every C coder already knows how to do that.
> There is a race between mankind and the universe. Mankind is trying to build bigger, better, faster, and more noobproof code. The universe is trying to build bigger, better, and faster noobs. So far the universe is winning.
I found this answer here: stackoverflow.com/a/69671543/4001592 is an exact copy of the one linked. What is the procedure here? As I don't see a flag for plagiarism
@DaniMesejo Wow. I suspect that guy doesn't even realise that he's doing something wrong. It's not like he tried to hide his source.
You have to use a custom flag for plagiarism because it always needs at least a brief explanation, and a link to the plagiarised source.
Plagiarism is a bit of a hot topic at the moment...
I think there's a bit of a cultural aspect to it. If you come from a country where the education system has a very heavy emphasis on memorising things parrot-fashion, and regurgitating definitions verbatim, it may be a bit hard to understand that you're not actually supposed to copy stuff.
@PM2Ring True, btw I did not that SO was so heavy on plagiarism until the recent developments. I've seen plagiarised all over the place (even in the same question)
@DaniMesejo See meta.stackexchange.com/questions/160071/… Sometimes, the author genuinely doesn't understand they're doing a bad thing. If you suspect that's the case, a simple comment like "you need to put quoted material into a quote block, and mention the name of the original author, preferably with a link to your source" may be sufficient. But if they don't respond, please flag!
@DaniMesejo A better link is stackoverflow.com/help/referencing. You can use this link in the comments that @PM2Ring was describing, too. It lays out very clearly what our policies are with respect to plagiarism, and it also explains the very simple solution: attribution. Attribution requires 3 things: (1) the name of the original author (if available), (2) a link to the original source, and (3) proper use of blockquote formatting to indicate all copied portions.
One time in high school I got an F on an English paper because I attributed an author in the works cited, but not in the actual paragraph where I quoted them. Oops.
I think it was a mandate from the administrators, because my teacher seemed quite apologetic about it. Pretty sure I still got an A that semester :>
I like using quote blocks and attribution links on here, because the fewer statements of fact I personally make, the better. If I speak a falsity, the reader calls me a fool. If I quote a falsity, the reader and I can laugh together about what fool wrote it.
Here's a scary case I saw a few days ago on the HNQ: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/176558/… While working on a paper, my PhD advisor (at a prestigious school, if that matters) sent revisions that included three pages plagiarized from a book. Thankfully I caught this before the paper was submitted, but otherwise it could have had terrible consequences.
I am constantly honing my insincerity so that nobody can be really sure what I actually believe
Although as an enthusiast of philosophical materialism, perhaps I should believe that there's no such thing as believing, only in behaving as though you believe
I try to be diplomatic when I post a "please make it clear when you are quoting other people's work" comment. Most of the time, the author is happy to comply, and they honestly didn't realise they were doing anything wrong. But I have had a few hostile reactions.
I fully support advising people on the first infraction.
I would prefer that you advise, rather than just fix it for them, though. And I would say that repeat offenders need to be brought to a moderator's attention.
One guy responded "I don't need to do that, it's only from blah-blah". I said, "Yes, you do. Otherwise, it's plagiarism". He replied "How dare you insult me! I come from a respectable family!"
At that point, I backed off, and flagged it. That was on Physics.SE.
@CodyGray I was very tempted, but I didn't want things to escalate. In the mean time, my comments gathered several upvotes, so it was pretty clear that the community agreed with what I was saying.
You can get by writing answers on SO with mediocre English skills, if you can troubleshoot & write half-decent code. On Physics, you need to be a bit more articulate. So when a regular with sub-par English suddenly posts a big chunk of clear grammatical text, it immediately sets off my alarm bells. ;)
@CodyGray Sure, it's just harder to notice if the answer is mostly code.
OTOH, when you see high quality code from someone who doesn't seem to have the necessary skills, there's a good chance that the code was lifted from elsewhere.
Did ya'll hear the hubbub about Github Copilot, an AI tool that suggests autocompletions for your functions, using github as a training set?
I recall a tweet from a detractor showing how easy it is to get it to suggest the fast inverse square root function from Doom
> GitHub states that "training machine learning models on publicly available data is considered fair use across the machine learning community"
Ah, much in the same way that posting "no copyright infringement detected :-)" in the description of your video is considered fair use across the Youtube community
@Kevin Well, that is a nice algorithm for inverse square roots. :) It's a bit opaque, due to the bit-twiddling of the float representation, though. Of course, it's still usable without the bit twiddling, though. It's main advantage over the usual square root algorithm is that it (mostly) avoids divisions (apart from bit shifts). It's a bit unstable though, so you need a good initial approximation, otherwise it diverges.
I'd be interested in trying that Github Copilot thing. It could be annoying, but it might be very handy. Even my phone's completion suggestions are getting pretty good.
I write a lot of Python on my Android phone. It took a while, but the suggestions I get while typing are now often quite useful. Eg, if I start typing a for loop, enumerate pops up as a suggestion at the appropriate time. Or if I type from itertools then import pops up, followed by the functions I'm most likely to import.
I tried a handful of AI-based autocompletion tools in the past and none of them lasted longer than 5 minutes. So I don't have high hopes, even if it's made by Github
The GPT algorithms were trained using a huge number of Wikipedia pages (as well as other data). They do pretty well. However, the quality of grammar on Wikipedia is deteriorating (IMHO). Lots of the science, maths, and coding articles I read have a high frequency of "the" being absent in places where a native speaker wouldn't omit it.
@Aran-Fey Sure! My Samsung phone does a pretty good job now. It was just annoying when I first got it. It still offers dumb completions, but nowhere near as often as it used to. And it can handle when I switch to coding JavaScript or SVG. I suppose it does get a little confused when I write Python that outputs SVG, though.
One construction I've begun noticing is, "Dogs love bones, however I am not a dog". It always scans weirdly to me. However, I'm not entirely sure it's wrong. "Dogs love bones, but I am not a dog" is certainly valid. Why shouldn't "however" have clause-joining powers too?
"But" is a coordinating conjunction, along with "and", "or", "for", "yet", and "nor". Coordinating conjunctions join two independent clauses, and they are used with a comma.
"However" is a complex conjunction (too many of these to list). If a complex conjunction comes at the beginning of the sentence (first clause), then you use a semicolon to separate the clauses. Otherwise, if the complex conjunction comes between the two clauses, then you use a comma.
@Aran-Fey Incorrect. First comma must be a semicolon.
@CodyGray Pretty sure I can come up with a counter-example for this... like "no, that's alright". Aren't those two complete sentences joined by a comma?
@Aran-Fey I always find it funny when people say that, it's not like there are language drafts which make certain syntax correct and others wrong. Some phrase might be more grammatically common or less, but since there is no formal standard natural language can not be right or wrong. You might have less communication success using less common grammar though
Except for French, as I've heard they are crazy about their language and I would not be surprised if they actually have a document describing French grammar, like there is one for valid Python programs :D
I'd call them conventions, rules sounds too technical. It's not like something is gonna happen if I break the rule, whereas if I break a rule of a programming language I get SyntaxError :D
If it's really true that the english language has no formal specification, shouldn't it be a lot messier and inconsistent? I have a hard time believing that
Wait wait wait, I just realized the implications of this. This means that if I see someone say "should of" instead of "should have", I can't tell them they're wrong and making a mockery of themselves?!
Back when I only knew english from school books, it blew my mind that "your" and "you're" sound alike. I never understood how people got those mixed up
@CodyGray slightly, there is just a faint e you can hear. But that might be just in my head and I couldn't tell the difference hearing recordings of myself saying these two words :D
@CodyGray Yeah. Since "you're" is supposed to be a contraction of "you" and "are", I assumed you should be able to hear that "you". Like "yu". But no, it's a "yo"
After trying to read up if there are evolutionary benefits to different hair and eye color. I followed the citation links a few levels deep and ended up at this: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2626753 What a ridicolous amount of bs pseudoscience. It's odd we don't know why there are different hair and eye colors, even odder is trying to find a signal in random noise.
I'm imagining it as a graph problem. The inputs are the Y values for five points. the X values can be [0,1,2,3,4]. Now draw a line passing through the points. You can use that line to predict future values.
A == X or Y or Z is equivalent to (A == X) or bool(Y) or bool(Z), and since bool(any_non_empty_string) evaluates to True, doing A == X or Y or Z with strings will probably give you an if block that always executes no matter what
I'm genuinely curious if it changes the roadmap for future python versions, considering 3.11 and higher were already planning on performance improvements