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05:57
I wish to draw attention to an existing feature request on meta to support special syntax colouring for REPL sessions: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/355221
 
3 hours later…
08:32
@Arne I can already see my expression as an out of body experience if I were to inherit this :D
09:23
A Python in a Nutshell question in the wild :)
@Arne what's the closest translation in English? I got a rough translation from different dictionaries such as "detour expand your knowledge", but mu hunch tells me it's a bit more profound than that.
I vaguely recall saying something similar once on another room. Yours feel more sophisticated though :D
*my
@roganjosh I suppose this would be obvious to a regular in here, but why is that exciting to you in particular? You're not the author (right?).
Because I don't understand why someone can arbitrarily decide that we shouldn't have something because it doesn't conform to standards that didn't even exist back then. If people find it useful, what do we gain from deleting it?
Oh, I absolutely agree on the deletion thing. I was referring to the Python in a Nutshell question. Was there a suggestion to delete a question about Python in a Nutshell?
@CodyGray ahh, sorry. Two of the authors are regulars here
It would have helped had I followed the reply link to see you were talking about that. I kinda just put two and two together when I did something slightly controversial and a wild Cody suddenly appeared :P
Haha, somehow, I knew you did something controversial, but when I got here, I agreed with it, so decided it didn't merit a comment. :-)
I recognize the name Alex Martelli, but not the name of another author...
09:54
Steve Holden is holdenweb and Paul McGuire is PaulMcG, also the author of pyparsing
@NordineLotfi The standard English translation of that German proverb really is just "detours increase local knowledge". I have no idea what a more idiomatic version would be, off the top of my head.
@roganjosh Ah, okay. I do recognize the first username, but not the second. I guess I've failed the "Do you have encyclopedic knowledge of all users on SO?" portion of the moderator quiz.
I mean, if you didn't get Alex Martelli then you'd be handing in your badge and gun at this point. I can forgive the other two I guess :P
Actually... isn't it bad when a moderator knows your name? :-p
Infamy has perks. I think. Maybe.
For better or for worse, I suppose
10:00
sorry, wrong room. I started out the search in a non-python-specific way
but somehow it got stuck in my python search results?
@CodyGray I see, I guess the standard translation is pretty close to what I came up with. Thanks for the heads up
@KarlKnechtel No idea, but even if it's the wrong room (which I just used for my convenience to remove it) I still don't agree with the principle. Please reconsider this crusade
@KarlKnechtel tags intertwin. It's easy to find C answers when looking at python-only posts.
in any case, please don't delete old post, especially if they help as a canonical or even as a goal post for other better answers/post.
There is especially no need to delete old closed questions, as closure already prevents them from accumulating any answers or suggesting that new questions of a similar vein might be on-topic here.
I don't often find C answers when looking for Python questions, or vice versa. I'm not sure what you're doing wrong in your searches.
I think in principle everything can be worth deleting, if it clutters the google search results
10:06
Delete everything and start over?
Wouldn't be the worst idea at this point :P
@KarlKnechtel also, you mentioned this was offtopic for SO (I think, maybe I misinterpreted that part), but I feel like anything that could be posted on a better less generalized part of SE (eg: unix.SE is a better place for that post) can still be posted on SO just fine. They don't always need to be merged or exported.
I don't really have a gut feel about the quality of Python-related Q&A on this site. The C and C++ content that I primarily peruse is, overall, outstanding, so deleting it and starting over would be really foolish. The JavaScript-related content that I occasionally look up while trying to write userscripts to make this site slightly less broken are, overall, total garbage.
We could get ChatGPT to write it all back, better than ever
better as in, it's so bad it goes outside the spectrum of bad.
10:08
So does that mean it wraps back around to good?
I think it does worse: it creates a need for a new definition of bad.
I'm trying to think about an analogy of sewage pipes and overflows. Somewhere that must come good, I just don't know where
that reminds me of the reference in star trek on some pipe: Goes Nowhere, Does Nothing, or GNDN.
Golden dupe hammer is old news, get ready for the new golden dupe plunger
That's called the "edit" button
10:13
I wonder, how come we don't have a flag for "needs editing"?
Because who would handle that flag?
possibly because the edit queue is full all the time anyway, and we especially don't want to bother the very few diamond mods with that situation
Because if you know it needs editing, you are in a position to do it yourself? We don't have umpalumpas
I guess it might bring confusion, yeah
10:14
Yeah, it's not even about scaling issues with respect to curators or diamond mods (although that would likely be a problem). It's really about the fact that there's no one who is able to do the job that is handling flags.
If it's something that a mod could edit, it's something that you could edit. Otherwise, the edit requires subject-matter expertise, and there are no flags to escalate things to experts.
Even NAA flags don't mean "this is a wrong answer to the question".
anyway, I did a thing: stackoverflow.com/…..
And... that thing is? (I see no results.)
down to a score of 50 is only a few dozen more for later.
 
2 hours later…
12:17
@CodyGray Hi @CodyGray - I was a bit more active in this room before I changed jobs, the current position keeps me pretty busy, and Python in a Nutshell was a bit more involved than I expected (especially these past few months). I'm trying to get back here a little more often now that the book is done.
@PaulMcG Oh, no worries! I'm not even in this room very often myself. I just pop in once in a while because Andras's sense of humor amuses me.
@roganjosh Thanks for posting this, I forwarded it to our authors' Google chat. (I don't think this particular example is new, I'm pretty sure it was the same in Ed 3. But I like the answers that propose some cleaner-looking solutions to the posed issue. Not exactly an errata, but still errata-submission-worthy in my opinion.)
12:52
stackoverflow.com/questions/75117978 I don't even know any more. Who is making the tutorials that produce students like this?
That started out pretty well, but then the last two lines... hoo boy
13:06
wait till you see the comments.
13:17
We are working with a library at work that does not have a min() function, but does have abs(). My boss came up with this arithmetic expression for min(a,b): ((a+b-abs(a-b))/2) Anyone else seen/used this before?
Never seen that before, but that's clever
14:01
randomly wondering, doesn't seem worth a question at the moment: is there an option I can use with pip, to tell it to refuse to install from setup.py and insist on a pyproject.toml?
@PaulMcG I've probably come up with it a couple of times at random and thought it unremarkable :/
it's easier to understand if you distribute the division: ((a+b) / 2) - (abs(a-b) / 2). The average, less half the absolute difference.
which is then easy to justify mentally if you, like, visualize the number line
it's beautiful in that it's more geometric than algebraic.
to find the leftmost of two points on a horizontal line, you go to the midpoint, then you make a line segment connecting the two of them, then you bisect that, then you go that far to the left. It's trivial to see why that's the right length, by constructing the segment in-place, which you do automatically anyway by the process of finding the midpoint (with compass and straightedge for example)
... maybe I should have thought it more remarkable.
14:23
stackoverflow.com/questions/75115767 Any idea what this person is trying to say in the last comment?
> @KarlKnechtel Hi, the problem is not the graph itself but the legend, as the different disasters are all diff variables, they used be all different colour key right, but somehow the code gave a circle mark which is not supposed to even happen, the legend should be clean and simple with all colour lines for diffferent disaster, and even worse is that the circle refers to the same one as the other variable, and some of the variables do niot even have the legend colour itself in the legend box.
14:39
@PaulMcG closest I saw for that was on math.SE: math.stackexchange.com/questions/457177/… but that one is for max, not min
@KarlKnechtel I feel like it's easier to think of something as unsurprising or unremarkable if you thought about it yourself or even understand it thoroughly. I guess there may be other reasons, but those two comes to mind at least
@KarlKnechtel I'm not sure either, but my guess is that they meant that the legend between the two images isn't the same: one has dot + lines while the other ones (that look close to their expectations) use lines only.
they mentioned the colors being different between the two legends for each different label, so I'm guessing this is also what they meant by "circle refers to the same one as the other variable"
15:17
Here's something wild: If you debug this code in VScode with python 3.10, it crashes. Never even reaches the breakpoint
def a():
    foo = 1
    print('hello')  # Set breakpoint here

    if False:
        bar = foo
    lambda: foo

a()
15:49
@Aran-Fey can reproduce on my end. My initial guess is pylance being the culprit, but still trying to see the exact trace of the debug session (there is usually one when pylance is crashing, at least based on similar github issues)
removing everything and only keeping the print line seems to give the same result. It doesn't even print anything to stdout for 3.10, but it does for an older version. Weird
Wait, really? I'll have to try that when I'm back home
I tried with an int too, but no dice.
it's really weird
btw, as you guessed, this works fine when running outside vscode with 3.10. (both your example above + printing normally)
it only crash when debugging or don't output anything when done in vscode
16:14
It was more of a painstakingly debugged conclusion than a guess though :P
I should have said "noticed" instead :o
@KarlKnechtel don't think there is one at the moment, but seems like pip-tools does: stackoverflow.com/questions/74354009/…
I think it's gonna create a setup.py file from your toml file though, so maybe not what you want. The best would be to create a small tool using pip's as a module, then using the toml module, parse your configuration and install each package or do whatever you want on them
you could also use pip through subprocess but that's less clean, since you'd have to create a temp setup.py or requirements.txt somewhere, etc
I vaguely recall there was a PEP for the above though but didn't find the exact one yet. Unless I'm mistaken hmm
16:52
I think you misunderstand.
all I'm looking for is that I do pip install foo --some-flag and it reports back an error that the foo package is setup.py based rather than pyproject.toml based, so it won't install that for security reasons
oh, got you
the idea being, then I can at least inspect the installed code before permitting someone else's python code to run on my system.
because the setup.py approach has a problem analogous to npm in that regard
people accepted this for a long time because "oh you're going to run the code anyway", but.
oh geez, another news story about the problem just the other day. thehackernews.com/2023/01/malicious-pypi-packages-using.html
I feel like what you described could still happen for setup.py, but I now understand what you meant earlier
 
1 hour later…
18:22
stackoverflow.com/questions/75120194 This question is 5 screen heights for me, posted by a 12-year user of the site who clearly knows how to try some things and do some research, and is willing... and it still utterly fails to present a MRE :/
this read like an unfiltered stream of consciousness
15 gold badges... run
If the OP has more than 10 gold badges and less than 100k rep, you press Ctrl+W and GTFO
like, I get what they're doing here; they're basically explaining their different attempts. This isn't done in a good way, however, because this feels unfiltered. If it was me, I would have removed a large portion of unwanted explanation and left a bullet point detailing briefly what was tried, and what worked or not (with link to relevant and larger explanation instead)
this would make the post both shorter and coherent
@Aran-Fey I mean, It's easy to get more badges than rep. Granted, if you get that many gold badges, you're either lucky or use the sites enough times that you manage to get some of the existing "easy" gold badges multiple times (which I think get added toward the total amount of gold badge instead of being the count of unique ones?)
I saw a lot of users who answer or ask decently but they barely get 1 or zero upvotes. If you do that and only have half of your pool of question/answer upvoted for 5+ years, you could easily get less than 50k rep and more than 5 gold badges.
@Aran-Fey but... that includes me....
18:39
Sometimes you may get a false positive, but it's not worth the risk of brain damage :P

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