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00:31
@paul23 Ok. Do you have a reference for that terminology?
 
3 hours later…
Hmm. Looking at that, and titles on linked/related, I wonder if maybe this area needs discussion in PCD too
 
5 hours later…
09:44
@PM2Ring made me research (good luck we have chatgpt) but I was mistaken, it's called "debouncing"
btw I have the biggest trouble of getting chatgpt give the truth table for "A or (B and A === undefined)" given that A can be true, false or undefined, and B can be "true or false".
it just refused to update the table, even when I said which cell was wrong
"yes you're right here is the updated table" ... Nothing changed
ChatGPT doesn't understand jack shit about code it prints, nothing new
Well, that's because it's ChatGPT.
It doesn't even understand that it "said which cell was wrong".
Hmm there is some understanding though, as it will print in "table" format and not write down a table.
Remember even for humans understanding is just a matter of neurons firing and recognizing patterns, we just have way way more data stored and even higher amount of unconscious inputs.
@paul23 That's just a sign that programmers implemented markdown rendering or whatever similiar stuff, not that it understands anything.
It "understands" that it needs to trigger down to markdown rendering and not describing the table.
Again it all boils down to when you call something understanding
Do you actually understand things or are you just repeating what some teacher or information has brought into your mind?
10:07
I certainly understand myself acknowledging that something was wrong.
 
1 hour later…
11:36
it turns out that ctrl+o splits a line in ipython notebook. Does anyone know where that is document?
but alt+enter doesn't seem to be there
where would alt+enter be documented?
12:09
print("howdy")
12:28
I have a question regarding 2to3, if I may?
13:11
@ABcDexter The above link was not me saying you cannot ask. It was me saying "just ask what you want to know".
I'm starting to think that a lot of the problems in software engineering stem from the over-application of "bottom-up" coding. Recently I wanted to write a program that starts a web server and then opens that website in a browser. What I should have written is something like
web_server = start_web_server()
when(web_server.is_ready, lambda: webbrowser.open())
when(web_server.crashed, lambda: exit())
and then implement start_web_server and all the other stuff as required. But what I wrote instead was more like
server_is_ready_or_crashed_event = threading.Event()

server_thread = threading.Thread(
    target=start_web_server,
    args=[server_is_ready_or_crashed_event],
)
server_thread.start()

server_is_ready_or_crashed_event.wait()
if server_crashed:
    exit()
else:
    webbrowser.open()
The moral of the story is: Don't work with the tools you have, work with the tools you want to have, and then implement those tools.
In completely unrelated news, I'm adding "create a programming language" to my todo list
13:29
@matszwecja While converting my Python 2 code to Python 3, is there a way to convert only the print statements?
You want to run just the print fixer
13:44
Aah, let me chcek this out
13:58
Awesome.worked like charm :)
14:15
@paul23 it does not understand anything. If I had a cent every time someone said that, I would probably be well off right now...
@paul23 that's the thing though. We understand context and meaning, and act upon it. But statistical learning algorithms does not, in any capacity, "understand". We can infer it is similar solely based on the end result, but when you use it enough time, anyone can notice it is very far from this.
This whole discussion is pointless unless someone can define what "understand" means
Doing halfway through bruteforcing (gradient descent, etc) and then calling the end result intelligent/understanding is a bit exaggerated to be honest.
@Aran-Fey Sure, I agree. I guess I'll stop since it's useless...my bad
 
2 hours later…
16:20
@Aran-Fey Welcome to the club!
16:39
Crucial question - will the docstrings be before or inside the function declaration?
I've started my seasonal trend of playing about with rust again and I just can't get used to the documentation style; no block quotes and it floats above the function. Madness, I say...
17:07
I quite like docstrings after/inside the declaration. Makes the scope clearer and better works with collapsing inside IDEs.
17:20
I'm really surprised they didn't take the Python approach on this one because I find it so noisy when every line has /// and it's describing a function before it's even been defined (e.g. this if people aren't familiar). I know Java does something similar but I think you can still block-string documentation?
17:50
@roganjosh see here: web.mit.edu/rust-lang_v1.25/arch/amd64_ubuntu1404/share/doc/… you can use block style comment like the one used in C++ /* ... */
I wonder why nobody seems to use them
there might be someone that use them on github. Just need to use the right search terms hmm, let's see
there is a bunch there: github.com/search?q=%2F*+language%3ARust+&type=code seems like some repo from microsoft use it too? (doesn't paste well, so here is a better example: github.com/microsoft/vscode/blob/…)
They're not docstrings, though. Even with the examples of blocks, they still use /// in the actual docstrings
Docstrings are also a bit more nuanced in rust in that they will actually run code if you want them to - as in, your documented use case can actually be a test for the function itself. That's a really neat feature
right, I guess this explain it better: Line doc comments beginning with exactly three slashes (///), and block doc comments (/** ... */)
I thought you meant normal comments earlier ^^' but yeah, this seems to be it: github.com/krahets/hello-algo/blob/…
most of the first few result on github seems to be for author and licenses information...I'm guessing most people just use /*...*/ as doc comment either because they don't know there is another syntax for it that's correct, or that they're used to it from other lang (e.g.: C++, etc)
I'm pretty sure the people writing the standard library would know about how the docstrings worked...
18:03
I mean, I did mention two possibility, but I agree yeah
If it's not because of knowledge, it is preference
They're a lot more powerful in rust than python. It's basically a test suite and sphinx (equivalent) baked in, and I suspect that /// is needed to get the full output of that
ah, you mean with rustdoc, yeah
@roganjosh I never thought about that, to be honest. I guess it makes more sense inside the function?
Definitely to me it does. I find it back to front to have it outside of the function "scope"
In any case, hopefully it'll be a consideration in MiyagiLang or FeyLang :)
18:55
@roganjosh Technically, Python ships with doctest as well.
hmm I have written updated code where a certain column in a table is no longer "unique" in django (and all the gets have become filters). It also made sure another column is set.
Should the down operation then remove all the "duplicates"? There is no up to generate duplicates but someone wishes to use an older version/rolls back git changes the duplicates need to be removed.
@MisterMiyagi I guess I'm never going to get to the point I don't know major blind spots. I had no idea about this, thanks!
@paul23 I'm a staunch believer in never deleting data so dropping the table also deleting duplicates in the master table is a bad idea IMO
hmm but how to handle the fact that the code needs to rolledback then?
Especially since it's a one-off event. Downgrading would remove the duplicates at that point but you'll still get future dupes?
no, the module we now enabled uses a primitive versioning on a table, so lots of entries
downgrading would remove that module and hence no duplicates are created anymore
19:07
I feel like I've missed the point, sorry. You removed a restriction of uniqueness because a new module generates dupes and then you have to retro-actively handle those dupes?
(prior to the downgrade of the schema)
no other code was using get(usedtobuniquecolumn="blah") - so I updated those to filter(active_version=True, usedtobeuniquecolumn="blah")
however downgrading would now just remove the "active_version" column and the code would go back to using "get"
yet it doesn't remove all the "inactive" entries, so suddenly there are a lot of actual duplicates
Well this is grizzly. I would still stick to my principle of not deleting data first, so I'm going to use that as an anchor point
It seems like this should be two tables from the start (if it's possible to roll back). So I'd probably migrate inactive to a new table. I don't know if creating a table is a faux pas on db versioning, though
leaving me scrambling without knowing which was the last update
yeah but the auto migration will delete which version was active
"Duplicate" here is some entry that has gone "active" -> "inactive" -> "active" etc. etc.? That would be better stored as a "_history" table and just keep a table of active rows
sure - better yet use a view for that
19:14
Which does not lend itself to an automatic migration at all, but it seems like the right approach
but a) there's no django native support for views. and b) that's out of scope of my current work, the versioning system is old at this company and I'm just tasked to add it to some table
I don't feel confident to advise on this specific move, sorry. I see the problem but I don't think I know the proper migration approach in this case
if I had infinite time I sure would do so, or possible use a single column _history which has just a json with all the versioned copies.
Personally, I would go down a refactoring route to separate those tables across the board into "active" and "historical" because it separates the concerns
btw if django finally did have support for views I would be so happy
I really wonder why after 20 something years of suggesting them they still don't see value in those
19:18
With proper normalisation, you shouldn't need it in this case?
@roganjosh this then gives troubles that you can't just "tag on" the versioning module: you now have to take care when you update the original table, if that table is versioned the history also needs to be updated etc.
with views you could just have it working
But views would also speed up django in larger databases, or at least make things easier: users (view of) "all_users" which also contains old no longer active users is a good example.
Of course archive tables an work, but that is more maintenance and you need to copy data over instead of setting a flag.
filters also won't work as username obviously only should be unique in still active users, and with archive tables what about foreign keys that will get messy quickly, something that refers to a user that is moved to a different table; complexities arrive
"only should be unique in still active users" really?
yes otherwise someone could just spite create "good" names and you cannot remove them by inactivating
I don't understand that as a defence mechanism. What stops this mysterious threat actor from just taking the same name again after you inactivate them? If they had the intent to do it once (I don't know your site) then what means they don't have the motivation to do it a second/third time?
But the foreign key problem is a bigger issue, it's actually now that I think about it also a reason why 2 tables wouldn't work
19:48
Putting that practical concern to one side, it should be simple enough to fix with a JOIN and a CASE if the JOIN is NULL between the two tables
I still don't know about how to preserve data across the migration; hopefully someone else can give input on that
Foreign keys have no need to be unique, you can just index them and store them with a timestamp to get the latest status
@roganjosh that is highly inefficient like magnitudes more time than normal related fetching
Well, it's you that wants to release names back into the pool?
If you just go off email addresses and ensure they are unique, you'd never have multiple entries in the first place? Either the email-address-account is active or it isn't?

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