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6 hours later…
07:15
@smci stop the Earth, I want to get off
When I went away to Japan, my boss re-wrote my entire package into notebooks because he said it would be easier to deploy in databricks, and threw all my code away. I couldn't exactly do anything about it at that point on account of not being in the country. I've since hobbled along with this dumpster fire for a few months where the notebook is just an endless stream of statements. Literally thousands of statements.
Now he's quit (or, actually, possibly pushed) and his final task is that he has decided that we should be programming it up as a package so he's going to re-write it all into a package. All I had as a response was a stern "o rly?" face in the meeting.
 
1 hour later…
08:30
@KarlKnechtel 2.7 is often faster for simple, single threaded code because of gil/threading differences and lighter feature set. The various tools that produce lists instead of iterators are also a walltime advantage.
 
3 hours later…
11:42
So after rewriting my download manager to make use of my new units, starting more than 2-3 downloads simultaneously causes them to hang. I'm dying to know what kind of spaghetti is responsible for that
 
2 hours later…
13:40
good morning cabbages, folks!
 
1 hour later…
15:01
@Aran-Fey Sorry, why is that wrong? What does type-checking do with it?
15:22
@KarlKnechtel "Does it matter if I am also using Matplotlib directly in the code?" I don't understand. Where in the question is it using matplotlib? It's not even imported
I understand that plot.title('lalala') might reach down into the matplotlib object being wrapped (I don't know enough about seaborn) but it does sound kinda odd as the finishing statement
 
2 hours later…
17:51
@smci You can't compare a quantity to a float, so default values of 0 and inf won't work anymore
 
2 hours later…
19:58
@Aran-Fey you can't compare a quantity to a float? How does that make sense?
What's larger, 7 meters or 5 unknowns?
If I go back to my sweet- making days, 1000g of sugar (plus other things) might make 2750 sweets. I've made these figure up, but you buy sugar by the tonne, and yet each individual sweet has an ingredient list
The BOM has to go into decimals. Whether you want that as a float or a Decimal is your choice, but it's gonna need decimal places
@Aran-Fey this question really raises my eyebrows. Have you worked with BOMs or in production before?
@roganjosh Aren't you talking about scale factors?
@roganjosh Nope
It gets scaled and I have code to do that. I'm now questioning the utility of this library. I already solved the problem
20:15
@roganjosh is "1 hour" large or small?
I don't follow how this is relevant
the issue is not "float as in not Decimal", the issue is 'float as in dimensionless quantity"
you can only tell if a dimensioned quantity is large or small if you compare it to another dimensioned quantity of the same dimensions (maybe different units)
1 hour is a lot compared to 1 nanoseconds, and not a lot compared to lifetime of the universe
and 1 hours compared to "10", just "10", is meaningless
I don't care about "large" or "small". I just need the units to be consistent.
This will be fun...
20:17
a typing library whose point is to type dimensioned quantities has to care about the types of units, otherwise it's not doing its one job
it's your BOM and candy factory that's not relevant
OK, so a practical example is irrelevant because we have a typed library in its place?
your 2750 [dimensionless pieces] of candy implicitly carry a sugar content in grams defined through a recipe
so the only reason you can put 2750 [-] and 1000 [g] in the same sentence is that there's an implicit relation that tells you what the former has to do with the latter in terms of units
if it's easier to understand if I put it this way: it doesn't make any more sense to say "the weight of this pile of sugar is 10" than to say "the weight of this pile of sugar is 10 miles"
Note that literally no other practical example is given and we're talking about the intricacies of python types rather than what the code does
I thought "what the code did" was clear from the code we're currently talking about
yesterday, by Aran-Fey
def clamp(value: u.Quantity[Q], min = 0, max = math.inf) -> u.Quantity[Q]:
    ...
"return the weight in kilograms, unless the weight is less than 10 miles, because then return 10 miles"
Ugh, I can't be bothered. Honestly.
20:29
then I won't go on explaining how it's very much related why you can't put dimensioned quantities in analytical functions such as exponentials or trigonometric ones :P
On one hand I'm curious why you can't do that, and on the other hand I'm pretty sure "analytic function" has some kind of weird definition that disallows it
That's not the point. A float inherently doesn't carry its own context but I know what it represents. I don't need typing breathing down my neck on this.
Or maybe I should just say "I have no clue what an analytical function is"
Static typing or no, comparing a dimensional quantity to a plain number conceptually makes no sense
@roganjosh If you know what the float is then you can just give the float a unit.
@Aran-Fey it's just the fact that if the function is defined by a Taylor series or another series involving different polynomial orders. E.g. in exp(x) = 1 + x + x^2/2 + x^3/3! + ... the first term is dimensionless, the second would have the dimensions of x, the third term the square and so on. So you get exp(1 m) = 1 + 1 m + 0.5 m^2 + ... which is of course nonsense.
20:33
@Peilonrayz why?
@roganjosh actually, "I know what it represents" is where subtle bugs come from (when you knew it to mean one thing in one context and something else in another context), and typing is exactly there to help you avoid such subtle bugs.
What subtle bugs?
I'm gonna play devil's advocate here btw
@Aran-Fey (I was using sloppy wording, because f(x) = x^3 is also analytical, and yet you can put dimensioned quantities in it. Analyticality means that the function has a well-behaved Taylor series, and the limit of the Taylor series is equal to the actual function. I could also talk about fun functions which have Taylor series expansions yet the expansion doesn't converge to the actual function... but I'll spare the audience this time :D)
@roganjosh e.g. on the caller side you know the minimum_value=10 is in astronomical units, but then you forget that you're calling clamp(molecule_cross_section, min=minimum_value)
it's subtle in the sense that it takes a lot of time to realise there's a bug, and where exactly it is, when something blows up (good case) or results silently become completely wrong (bad case)
To be clear I also choose to write bug-free code instead, but there are inferior coders who need the help of static code analysis tools to help them avoid certain kinds of bugs.
Does this mistake not make the issue obvious?
@roganjosh You've said "A float ... but I know what it represents." so what your doing is removing the unit from the quantity, removing information for the unit library to make sense of the operations you are performing. Leading to situations where you can make invalid comparisons, say, between g and m.
20:39
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I have a lot of questions, which I won't ask because otherwise we'd just enter an endless spiral...
@roganjosh depends on what happens to the clamped value, I guess. And it's always obvious in retrospect.
@Aran-Fey well I'm open if you're curious enough ;)
There are different levels of "obvious", and my favorite kind of obvious is a squiggly red line in my IDE
Not sure how we started at units and ended up at static typing btw
Most bugs are obvious in retrospect. But I few days ago I kept scratching my head for 15 minutes to figure out why a function was being called twice when it had no right to be. The answer was "callbacks"... and it wasn't obvious in retrospect either.
@Aran-Fey I thought it was your static type checker that slapped your hand at the unit vs unitless comparison
@Peilonrayz sorry, I'm not following this at all. How is this issue being rectified here?
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I think that's unrelated, this started when I said "You can't compare a quantity to a float"
20:45
@roganjosh What do you not understand? Do you understand comparing 1g and 1m doesn't make sense?
I still have that question and it did indeed spark this
@Aran-Fey you even said "statically typed units" so either I missed your issue back then, or I'm missing your point right now :D
@Peilonrayz I don't know, maybe I just used numbers without them being specifically typed. Silly me for thinking one of the most popular languages could survive without it
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні As far as I know, the topic of the conversation is "comparing quantities to floats". Sure, that came up in the context of my statically typed library, but doesn't mean the library or the static typing is relevant to the topic
ah, thanks for clarifying
I don't entirely agree they are unrelated, because as a dev it's easy to handwave yourself into a buggy situation, but having to explain to a type checker acts as checks and balances. "I know I shouldn't put 10 meters into exp(length) but it should work just this time."
appeal to type checker as authority, if you will
20:58
Appeal to authority? Believe it or not, straight to jail
But it's the good kind of authority! Like a ML system deciding the trolley problem for you!
New solution to the trolley problem just dropped: # people: ignore
I'm simultaneously relieved and disappointed that nobody responded with "holy hell". It may be too late for me, but you guys are still safe
(If you don't know what I'm talking about... that's a good sign)
I'm halfway through to understanding the remark
Turn back while you can!
21:20
if I go far enough perhaps I can become a queen
@roganjosh Ofc you are correct. Python can survive without static "numbers ... being specifically typed". However, if you truly want to get your point across you have communicate better, being snarky isn't very constructive.
22:04
https://discuss.python.org/t/three-month-suspension-for-a-core-developer/60250
Sigh.
Points for having paid attention when I predicted this, but no additional points for knowing who it's about.
22:39
@KarlKnechtel there's many potential things to say about this, with not much constructivity to hope for, so if anyone wants to discuss that in detail please do it in MetaPython. Thank you.
I appreciate the link, and it's fine to have here, I just don't want to have a potential meta-argument here if people get riled up.
 
1 hour later…
23:53
@roganjosh I tried to preserve something that OP seemed to be wondering in the original version of the question, but maybe it would be better omitted

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