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01:01
Great
01:12
@Marco Reminds me I got an AttributeError the other day. Turns out in Python 3.10 super().__init__ doesn't work with Protocol subclasses so my attributes weren't being bound.
oh :(
I found this page interesting, so I'll share it: python.org/community
 
3 hours later…
04:21
What's worse than ChatGPT? Mission Impossible - Dead Reckoning. That's what. It's honestly one of the most stupid films I could possibly conceive of. A super-powerful AI that literally torpedos itself to sink on a Russian sub. But then hordes of random factions fight for an entire movie to get two pieces of a physical key because apparently there's no other way to get the souce code... out of a giant nuclear-looking dome
People are paid to write this stuff. Who did they consult for this garbage? I'm in the wrong profession
"We're also going to add the stereotypical badass Japanese woman that can batter everyone whilst remaining expressionless. But, here's the twist... she speaks French! Why? We'll leave that one a mystery for the viewer because her comrades don't and she has no backstory. Also, she'll haul a grown man off a perpetually crashing train that defies all physics, whilst stabbed literally in the heart" <- half a billion dollars
Actually, come to think of it, maybe ChatGPT wrote the script
 
2 hours later…
06:27
@roganjosh gestures at the couch "So, Mr. Chad Cheepeetee, tell me about these dreams you have on torpedoing yourself."
Perhaps it’s just a silent call for help to make the constant, stupid questions stop.
@MisterMiyagi hahaha
Honestly, I felt like claiming back the price of my flight for that "entertainment". I can suspend disbelief for action movies to an extent but I honestly couldn't even begin to explain what was going on in this film. It doesn't help that the "key" was pickpocketed about 50 times (off-screen every time)
The perpetually-crashing-train might be a good source of energy, though. We nearly cracked it with the grandfather clock when you set the weight going. We just needed it to be bigger, it seems. Once that one carriage goes off the bridge, hook the rest up to a generator and.... profit???
06:59
@roganjosh In future comrade, patriotic AIs will write this stuff... and maybe the future will arrive sooner than we wish
A chilling insight into an uncertain future
@MisterMiyagi Awesome. These experimenters on World of Warships tried by picking up enough speed buffs that their ship moved faster than the torpedoes, at 60.7 kts...
Err, I think you'll find that torpedos can turn 180 degrees and come back at you once AI removes the fake target. And the results are very predictable - everyone will die but the computer knows it will survive to proliferate.
Then you're really not going to like the confused frenetic mess that is [Subway (1985)](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090095/) - Christopher Lambert, Isabelle Adjani, dir. Luc Besson: Featured reviewer: 'pointless, plotless, putrid
I love French cinema, just so you know. However... This movie has no plot, no character development, no vision, and no coherence. It starts nowhere and goes nowhere. It doesn't so much "end" as much as it just "stops". I own this film on DVD, and I can't even give it away because I'd feel responsible for whoever else would watch it.'
^ that reiewer's words, not mine. But they're right
07:15
I actually don't mind confused mess if it's not taking itself seriously :) Then I feel like I should be understanding what's going on
Lambert battles wave of sword-wielding ninjas in subway cars with his longbow... it's like a francophone 80s lower-budget precursor to 'The Matrix'
If you ever do Bad Movie Night, drink to this one...
@roganjosh But what if the warhead contained flower petals and love...?
Anyway, it's only a matter of time before all humanity is diagnosed with "GenAI adjustment disorder"... so stop resisting and embrace it... just like at the end of Body Snatchers (1978) "There's nothing to be afraid of. They were right. It's painless. It's good. ..."
@roganjosh like John Woo's laws of physics from his 70s/80s HK stuff
@Marco That's quite useful, but would need lots more cases added (for example, imports failing, paths, etc.), then it stops beign so simple...
07:35
@Marco No. For me, if it's in plain Python, profile and make the inner loop faster; if it's numeric, use numpy/pandas. If neither of those consistently solves your problem, use a different language. What is a tangible example of the type of thing you're trying to solve?
.. is your code IO-bound? (wait for no-GIL 3.13) compute? algorithmic? Show us a snippet.
@Marco I meant to respond to this, sorry. Because it feels like you're throwing spaghetti for the last week rather than really considering what you should be using by understanding some fundamental principles
Normalising an array in halves and dumping the results doesn't seem like a very considered approach
I wish I could give recommendations here but your questions are always very abstract. At some point you're just going to need to go deeper into memory layout and how libraries build on top of that. Even now, smci isn't sure whether you're concerned about I/O and earlier it was about memory. You'll learn nothing from throwing abstract questions at us
not reproducible/typo: old 2018 pandas version issue, long since fixed stackoverflow.com/questions/49763779/…
I don't see the problem with it being open. It's not attracting garbage answers?
07:52
@roganjosh In SO's search engine, it's the #1 hit for pandas replace categorical. It has almost no relevance to the general case, it's like reading 8-year-old errata on pandas 0.23.0. It's just polluting the search results.
Fair :)
How was/is your holiday? Restful?
At times it was, but I was shepherding my mum around a lot to places I'd been only last year. I can forgive her that; I'm sure I was a pain during the pandemic :) Thanks for asking
@roganjosh Did you encounter any mysterious Frenchmen wielding longbows?
Next time I'm in Japan I'm just doing rural stuff
@smci No. I did get to meet an actual geisha, though, which was cool. And in Shogun Total War they're probably better than using longbows
07:58
I had an ex-coworker, after he got laid off he went to Edo to practise kusarigama (chain-sickle martial arts). Seemed like a good change of pace.
@roganjosh What will Mr. Chad Cheepeetee do with that paragraph for its next script...
Honestly, I'm considering something similar. I haven't opened my work laptop yet but I know what will be waiting for me on this ridiculous shrink project
Find the secret respawn spot on the subway car where the ninjas appear and stand behind it with the kusarigama, I guess.
My friend highly recommends the onsen experience in traditional inn in the country.
^^^^ (I mean it's called Kyoto these days)
@metatoaster e.g. prototype-based inheritance (like Lua) vs class-based inheritance (Python)
^^ (Dangit. Edo is not current-day Kyoto. The city with the old imperial castle.)
08:18
They moved the capital a lot :) I have spent time in Kyoto on both visits. Onsen are not my thing, though. I haven't been swimming for over a decade, so I'm definitely not losing my clothes to get in an onsen :)
08:38
Yeah, my whole point was that Python's class inheritance is not conducive to composition, and if Lua prototypes can be composed together without strict inheritance then it's basically composition

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