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04:36
(If they genuinely want to get a better handle on shrinkage, why don't they audit it quarterly? or figure out how to reduce error? Don't get set up to be the fall guy)
Sounds like a new arbitrary name for cargo culting
04:52
That was from 2011. Yes the terms sounds equivalent.
Have I missed mentions of discussion of the latest OpenAI partnership announcement, or have people given up?
 
2 hours later…
07:05
@smci I'm not going to. I gave my boss advance warning out of courtesy. I'm at the airport waiting to go off to japan again for a few weeks but I'll just resign formally when I do. It's only 4 week notice though (I would have formalised it on Tues if he wanted so I don't eek out the extra weeks, but he didn't accept it)
When I get back*
As to why the inventory cycle is what it is - no idea. It's an outside company so I guess it costs a boatload in itself
@roganjosh Ok well good luck finding a nicer gig
^^^ my stomach wants my brain to read as "Vindaloo Chicken Cooking"
Thank you kindly :) I might just stay in japan and become a geisha or something. Can't be any less bizarre than the current gig :P
07:24
You definitely need a holiday... Namco Akihabara sounds like a fun place to visit. The legendary Sega Akihabara arcade closed in 2020. Still shocked.
@KarlKnechtel Why isn't Software.Codidact gaining more traction and people migrating from here? Their python tag + subtags only have 89 posts, total. What do they need to implement before people will migrate?
@roganjosh just fyi, there are some new recent rules for tourist in Japan. Some of them prevent them from coming near or at specific places.
they made those because of the many tourist that do not respect local rules (e.g.: traffic, etc) or even just spamming their Canon Camera at everything
07:48
@roganjosh If you get a quiet moment on your travels, useful to gather your thoughts on the top flaws with notebook-based flows for DS. PyCons are coming.
08:03
@smci network effects
there are a lot of things I'd like to do with my time; there's only so much left for seeding codidact with high quality content. but hopefully I can make a renewed effort in the coming months
IOW: if you haven't migrated, and "there are only 89 posts" is your reason for not doing so, then I heartily encourage you to ignore that and help with bootstrapping.
well, I've signed up there and will see what happens
08:24
appreciated
08:39
@KarlKnechtel My random reactions off the top of my head looking at Software.Codidact in 5/2024: a) it's a non-profit presumably forced licensing to train AIs cannot happen, but given the volunteer labor, there are no roadmaps or timelines. b) The page layout is very flabby, fonts too large, comment discussions are threaded but slow to uncollapse and flabby to view c) The tag hierarchy is only a skeleton of SO's ...
the tags have a hierarchy. Of course there are hardly any tags; more tags requires more questions to apply them to.
if you have concrete ideas about the web design I'm sure they'd be happy to hear them
... d) Lack of incentive: for the subset of people who like such things, an optionally-displayable leaderboard of trending answers for your favorite tags could be motivating. But mostly e) severe lack of traction ⇔ network effect . Why do you think that is?
Oh, there's software codidact now? Neat.
there has been since the beginning of codidact, afaik.
08:43
@KarlKnechtel I know the Codidact tags have a hierarchy, I referenced that above, I said it's nearly an empty skeleton. Here are the 20 child tags of Python
@KarlKnechtel right, oldest question is 4 years old
I probably confused it with topanswers
topanswers was always specifically about software and its components were specific aspects of that. including, for some reason, an unusual fixation on TeX.
including a localization of the TeX site to some Indian language (I think perhaps Gujarati?)
08:55
KarlKnechtel: is there a prioritized enhance list (not roadmap) specifically for Software.Codidact? I want to get a feel for whether there's much work-in-progress or not. What will it look like in a year? etc.
Here's a general roadmap from sometime in 2022 (can't see month) for the entire Codidact project, not Software.Codidact. Nothing more recent, and I can't see how much of that roadmap was implemented, or when. That roadmap links to a github for 'qpixel', which has been closed. Looks like its issues are 271 Open 514 Closed.
 
9 hours later…
Parameters after the asterisk are keyword-only. Meaning you can't call it like shutil.copyfile(src, dst, False), you have to call it like shutil.copyfile(src, dst, follow_symlinks=False)
Come to think of it, why the heck is this called "keyword"-only? Since when are parameters keywords?
19:13
I think it comes from *args and **kwargs. But that doesn't really answer the question. A more accurate answer might be "unnecessarily homonymous convention"
19:26
@smci there's a server for dev and a server for users (which covers all "communities", what we would call sites)
any roadmaps you see like that are dev-related, so they'll apply site-wide because they're about infrastructure, not policy or content
but yes, qpixel is the software that powers Codidact.
@Aran-Fey "keyword" describes the parameter metonymically, because it describes how the parameter is passed. "keyword" here contrasts "positional". When you call foo(bar, baz=quux), baz is the keyword for the quux argument being passed by keyword, while bar is passed positionally.
"keyword-only parameter" thus means "parameter which can only be passed an argument by keyword".
That doesn't make sense to me. "Positional" makes sense because the arguments are matched to the parameters based on position (argument 1 -> parameter 1, etc), but "keyword" doesn't make sense because neither arguments nor parameters have a "keyword". "named" would make sense because parameters do have a name
2
I mean, I don't know what you think a "keyword" is, if not that
Well, usually it refers to things like if, while, import, etc
19:43
see, this is why I was once confused with "keyword". It can represent either if, while, etc or arg=option
... ah
the term is overloaded, fair point.
and they are, really, just as much "names" as variable names are.
yeah, but what make it confusing, especially for people starting out, is all the things they can represent within the language ecosystem/specification
by that, I do mean that for every possible terms in the language, not necessarily for "keyword"...

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