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07:57
what is prefered, concatenate lists using list unpacking or concatenating using + operator?
08:14
+, it's much less arcane
 
8 hours later…
15:48
@Peilonrayz Well that UK DTI press release that the NYT cited. "These optional reforms from Government are thanks to our new Brexit freedoms via the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 and are wholeheartedly backed by industry wanting to reduce burdensome regulations.... (currently still wine cannot be sold in 200ml, and sparkling wine in 500ml)... will also enable 568ml ‘pint’ "
"We shall fight them in the cartons... we shall fight them in the cans..."
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Yes, there's the semantics (of its interface) versus the implementation. Also the time- and space-complexity, which are determined by the implementation.
A case in point is this question, whose premise is dodgy: Why is a list access O(1) in Python?
16:04
@smci The joke I was making was everything* in the UK is legally mandated to use metric units. However us British are stubborn and will continue to use imperial despite any laws. * IIRC road signs, milk cartons and gold are exception.
16:42
former british "territories" are also notorious for using both systems. However, it is still better than some EU countries that I've heard who use commas instead of decimal point What a nightmare to write such libraries.
 
2 hours later…
18:31
@smci dodgy premise that doesn't follow from the title, and also needs noise removal. don't really know how to fix it :/
@Peilonrayz so much so that I don't actually really know what a km is. If you tell me where to drive, I have a decent idea in miles but km is... not intuitive to me. The fact that beer isn't served in pints when I went to the US was doubly confusing
18:44
@roganjosh Totally agree. For some things I can change the reference object take: pint -> milk/beer, ml -> bottled drinks. But km is just too big and unfamiliar. No pints of beer in the US?! Confusing
 
1 hour later…
19:50
@smci is any of this answer even true?
I don't understand why python would need the indirection to look at another vector, using the same index, to get a pointer to the heap to find the value
That answer is a hodgepodge of semi-correct information twirled liberally with deflector shields of reversed polarity.
Proof that humanity didn't need ChatGPT.
In CPython, the list object has a pointer to a dynamically allocated array, which in turn holds the list content aka pointers to the elements. The initial pointer-to-array allows reallocating the backend array when the size changes.
@roganjosh Poorly worded but IMO yes. E.g. "Python stores the address of each node of a list into a separate array" -> "Python stores the address of each object within the boxed list into an underlying array". I haven't read the underlying code but given Python objects are boxed having the array be addresses/pointers would make sense to have homogenous arrays with various boxes.
20:07
Thanks both. In 2 minutes you've given a better explanation than the answer that got 10 upvotes :/
 
2 hours later…
21:40
Is there a way to express "immutable defaultdict" as a type hint?
Immutable Counter would also work
@Aran-Fey What mutability are you trying to say is immutable? Would Mapping rather than MutableMapping work?
My problem with Mapping is that it doesn't communicate "this never throws a KeyError"
I know that's outside of the scope of type annotations, but it would be nice if it was possible anyhow
Hmm, reminds me of the exception rabbit hole. I really think Python should communicate possible exceptions, but people were very not happy about the idea on Discorse.
Like Java's checked exceptions? Those also seem to be very unpopular, as far as I know
Optionally manifest exceptions are pretty neat, actually. It's forcing people to document and handle every exception that has problems.
21:48
Thank you, the words alluded me. All the haters were talking about Java's checked exceptions...
I think most people don't want Java's checked exceptions, which sounds like hell. Having exceptions somewhere in the type system I think would be good. Given Python uses exceptions for control flow.
I like the idea of statically typed exceptions, but I never thought about how to add that to python
*ponders something while staring at the rabbit hole with his hand on his chin*

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