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07:18
Any extensions in Visual Studio Code that can take care of indentation while writing Python code? Stuck on a silly indentation error, and my PR reviewer is really pushing on resolving it. Thanks in advance!
basic formatter Shift+Alt+F doesn't do?
@mats
@matszwecja so for this, should we select the entire content of the file and then apply this command or just the text that we need to format/indent?
I think it will apply to the entire file either way
07:33
got it done, thanks
08:10
@Ankit Use python indent. I cannot live without it
It's not available for the server version of VSCode for some reason (it is connected to a different marketplace for ... reasons)
Of course, it's only a helper plugin so you also need to set tabs to be 4 spaces too in the bottom right hand corner. And if you still have an issue on the PR then you can use the formatter suggestion
08:47
@Ankit I recommend using black (and its VSCode integration) to format the entire file automatically. That's mostly whitespace (including indentation) but also covers a few more things.
09:25
Does anyone know how Python handles x = float("nan") so that x is x is True but x == x is False? I thought identity always takes precedence over __eq__.
Eh, turns out I thought wrong.
@MisterMiyagi Dictionaries would probably have some interesting quirks if id(x) == id(y) was ever part of __eq__.
By part I mean in addition to __eq__.
@MisterMiyagi how do you know you were wrong? I was poking about in the math module and Py_IS_NAN is special-cased everywhere but I wasn't sure where to look for this more fundamental behaviour
09:46
Password hashing is great until you lock yourself out of your own app :/
10:45
Of course the password was "test" and not "password" or "1234", silly me. Note to self: don't abandon a project for a month in the middle of actively developing an intricate auth system
11:08
When the going gets tough, the programmers get going... and going... until they return a month later
I was looking at the DB and thinking "but that's like 10 tables of indexes I need to update to reset this now. That's a faff. Nah, better just brute-force it for 10 mins"
I guess "forgot password" will have to be the next feature
Quick-n-dirty solution: Just redirect the user to the "create new account" page ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
11:25
The project was in a weird limbo state because I'd only half-implemented the restrictions. I could just have ripped them out of the code but that'd be undoing the work, or I could have manually recreated the primary test account. The project is very much experimental for now
I suppose I could have re-hashed a new password and updated it in the DB but that's hindsight for you
@roganjosh I've tried it with a custom class that has __eq__ always return False. That also achieves the x == x as False behaviour.
 
2 hours later…
Anonymous
13:34
Does it make sense to have a Python package with a "tests" directory like this:

-- package
   | -- tests
         | -- unittests
         | -- integrationtests
         `-- ...
Anonymous
... or should the "tests" folder only used for unittests?
I usually keep all the tests together. If you have a proper test framework, it should allow you to mark and select the tests you want to run even when they are all stored together.
Anonymous
Oh, you mean that you don't group them into different directories?
I do but that's more based on organisation for humans than for test selection. Deciding where the scope of unittesting ends can be hard, but people generally agree on what's "small" or "fast" rather well.
What does integrationtests target here?
I think the question is more about the distinction between the two types of tests vs. the organisation of unittests?
 
3 hours later…
16:42
Lol, just replied to a recruiter with "I've attached my CSV" rather than "CV". #DataBrain
16:59
classic
 
2 hours later…
18:33
@roganjosh Hope you get,the,job
I heard a story of someone who uploaded their CV with the file name of we_should_hire_this_guy.pdf
Nothing like a little power of suggestion...

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