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09:04
@inspectorG4dget I meant to ask here - did you get totality where you are?
Once you go raincloud you can never go back :O <3
 
5 hours later…
13:52
@roganjosh I'm in Ottawa, Canada. We had 98.7% totality. A bunch of us climbed onto the roof of our office to see it. Some of the pictures online are phenomenal and I wish I had the time, equipment, and skill to go take such pictures
Nice, that's pretty damn close!
it really is. What was (but arguably shouldn't have been) surprising is that that 1.3% was still enough light to not be "dark". I was hoping for twilight levels of ambient light, but it was definitely more pre-sunset levels of light. Really gives you perspective on the sun's size/brightness
Hmm, it's weird I cannot plot a simple fit line:
plt.plot(fit_x, fit_y, label='Least Squares Fit Line', color='red')
It works if I try to plot it in another scratch file, but in my actual file it doesn't work. That is because there I use raincloud plots as you can see above, where the y axis becomes categorical I think, even though it is not categorical. I wonder if that then confuses plt.plot and it can't generate the fit line
Ugh ok confirmed, if I just not plot the raincloud I can plot the fit line.. back to the docs
@Hakaishin These are some beautiful graphs. Is this matplotlib?
github.com/pog87/PtitPrince/blob/master/tutorial_python/… rainclouds, they should be 100% standard everywhere, unfortunately social change takes a long time. Also chatgpt is infuriatingly smart/stupid and it's a coinflip which you get. But it doesn't get my problem at all...
is there such a thing in matplotlib as the axis being a categorical or numerical axis?
14:15
@Hakaishin I doubt that matplot lib axes have a categorical/numeric property. I think they end up being axes that you can put whatever you want onto... does that make sense?
@Hakaishin I doubt that matplot lib axes have a categorical/numeric property. I think they end up being axes that you can put whatever you want onto... does that make sense?
14:27
@inspectorG4dget I mean yeah, but it doesn't plot... :P And the only difference is that when it can't plot I plot a raincloud first. It must be changing how the plot works in some way I don't know
14:45
@Hakaishin probably does some monkeypatching or injection and thus overwrite what matplotlib would normally do/support. would need to dig through the code to find the real line number where this is happening though, as this is just my own conjecture.
Hello world. What does subclassing object do in python?
What does it enable?
Every class is a subclass of object. You can't create a new class without subclassing object.
I'm pretty sure this is a python2/python3 difference. IIRC there was a difference in python2
Do we still talk about python2 in here? I thought someone took that out the back door already...
That's how you get ants!
14:54
Python2 is only spoken of in hushed tones and whispers, as an artifact of a time gone past. Those who were when it happened still remember, but know not to speak its name... coz THAT'S HOW YOU GET ANTS!
2
Ok. I guess it doesn't enable much, its just new-style and old-style classes. python 3 is all new-style I guess.
Python: "Explicit is better than implicit"
Also python: *implicitly inherits from `object`*
15:10
Even type is an object. But object is also a type... :)
print(isinstance(type, object))
print(isinstance(object, type))
Like a wheel within a wheel
@inspectorG4dget We had some threads about that. From physics.stackexchange.com/q/806950/123208
> The difference between a deep partial eclipse and a total eclipse is sort of like the difference between a really excellent dinner, the kind of dinner that you'll remember with fondness later, versus your first kiss with your future spouse. Travel to see the totality.
Why does the whole world repeatedly fail at the most fundamental stuff? How can typing add_route into the search bar of the fastapi docs return 0 results? Maybe we can figure out documentation within my lifetime? Please?
how do you say if a string is "fixed" to be at most N character long, and otherwise it would add ellipses to the string and ignore the rest?
@Aran-Fey I guess it comes from starlette?
15:26
It does, but that documentation also returns 0 results (:
Yeah, as I found out to my own elation
It's self-documenting, anyway, duh. It does what it says on the tin! (opener not included)
I wanted to know what the difference between add_route and add_api_route is. But it's alright, I asked Gemini. I welcome our new AI overlords
Oh no, it got to you too? :O
gemini, it's the worse one so far
A guy's gotta get his documentation from somewhere
15:38
randomly generated docs > manual docs?
Now I'm curious to know the difference, but I don't want to turn to the AI Overlords :'( I'm guessing some expected headers?
@NordineLotfi > docs that don't seem to exist
@roganjosh touche
add_api_route is the fastapi version of the function. It does all of that fastapi stuff like automatic documentation, dependency injection, and all that jazz
🎷
Makes sense, thanks :)
btw, I noticed gemini deny your request less if you use german vs english
funny that
they used so many guardrails, even C or Assembly is labelled as dangerous :D
 
3 hours later…
18:56
@Hakaishin I guess you've not done contracting with this? In my last contracting role of 3 months, there were 6 of us and 4 were ditched before the project ended because the boss didn't like them. Call to HR -> They vanish from Slack
The only farewell card we could give would be an emoji they wouldn't see, and it'd make us sympathisers. The boss was extra-vindictive and made accusations up the chain to their contracting agent that weren't true, which then affects their future opportunities. I know this because I had other ways of talking to the people affected
Also, I had the same agent and after my contract ended, I never heard from the agency again and my boss just ignored my request for a reference, which was needed for my next role. Contracting is inherently rough
 
2 hours later…
21:13
@roganjosh I have not, but this sounds insane. I'm so glad to live in a place with decent workers rights

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