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00:10
@roganjosh It's not at all rude; clearly that question statement continues to be so longwinded and vague that it's unreasonable to expect users to wade through it to determine if it's a dupe or not. Hence its first sentence needed chainsaw rewording. Like the rewording I posted here that got starred. (Why did noone else do that in 4.5 years?) I'm unlikely to post much in python-canon-discussion, ...
...my experience in python-canon-discussion is I take time to give detailed responses and get ignored or not even acknowledged.
So the last thing that question needed was another 4.5 years of discussion. Sometimes there's a time for action (i.e. editing the first sentence), not further discussion. People who disagree can revert.
Second, and specific to jupyter users blaming jupyter and not posting reproducible (MCRE) issues and diagnoses, it seems we have a problem with the growth in the category of user using layered stacks with proprietary stuff, e.g. jupyter on Copilot. For troubleshooting imports, why should we not expect they would test it by running plain Python without jupyter? in various run-directories? or test with os.chdir()? I fear we will become an unpaid helpdesk for people stuck in Copilot etc. flow
Basically, AI-coding-platform help vampires.
It's enough to make you train a bot.
But seriously, if SO is to entertain servicing irreproducible complaints about jupyter on layered stacks, Meta.SO could use an article "How to make a good reproducible example if your issue involves jupyter+Python". (Although really the tone IMO needs to be closer to "How to avoid your jupyter+Python question getting closed for not being reproducible", although that wouldn't fly for being "too unwelcoming").
00:40
("A free helpdesk for AI coding stacks, staffed by human volunteers...!")
 
4 hours later…
04:56
@PM2Ring Thank you for satisfying my curiosity :)
 
1 hour later…
06:10
@Peilonrayz sorry to ping you but I could just use a quick pointer for CR. The rules state that the code must produce the correct output. In my dabbling with rust, I feel like I've backed myself into a corner and I'm just one line away from the solution. I can see the fields I want to access, but can't. Would this be acceptable?
Basically, the fact that I'm being taunted by attributes being printed but can't actually easily get at tells me I've gone horribly off-course with the setup :(
07:00
@roganjosh: you saw my response? My one-liner is that answering jupyter questions is a timesink for the reasons I listed. Certainly, it should not take 4.5 years to improve a question to a basic level of coherence that makes it clear why it isn't a dupe. At some point discussions without actions cease to be productive.
I did see your response. What I wasn't really happy about is the use of "dude" and ". Ok?" in your response to Karl for his suggestion, given in brackets, which could easily have just been ignored if you weren't interested in participating in the suggested discussion. In a purely text-based dialogue, it comes across as quite standoff-ish
I also don't think it really takes a whole lot more discussion on how to reword the question as I think it serves its purpose, but I've already made that argument and Karl had already removed their hammer. Hopefully the issue of that question is settled
As a final clarification, the reason the statement rubbed me up the wrong way is that you used "we were just telling you" and it's not the way that I would have made my point in this circumstance (indeed, I'd already made it and got the change I wanted)
 
2 hours later…
09:35
But it isn't in this case. Other companies take notebooks and create abominable systems with them, further distorting any real sense you might have
All of the answers given in that question thread could be valid in their own way. Indeed, there'd be no way to test unless you paid for the crappy environment that they live in. Anyone trying to make something that even vaguely looks like a real python project will have to battle the mess that the platform throws at them; in this case, fudging the path for imports. As I said before, there's no one-size-fits-all presentation of the question or the answers. It's best left just free-wheeling
We could collectively realise that notebooks are just a terrible idea and get rid of them altogether. That's the solution that I propose
10:43
@roganjosh Realized this after working 5min with them years ago, never touched them again
Just be glad you don't have to live with them. Small mercies
@roganjosh I'm thankful for it
 
2 hours later…
12:56
@roganjosh Sorry for the delayed response. Our 'broken'/CNIONWAI rules are if the code works as intended you're fine. So if you're fine with the line being broken and don't want us to fix the code you're fine. I'd be fine with what you said here, but some may be... less than pleasant. So just put a massive bold I DO NOT WANT YOU TO FIX THE CODE. If you have a draft (Gist/pastebin) of the question I can double check to (hopefully) reduce the likelihood of conflict on the question.
@Peilonrayz no worries on the delay. I posted it. Got a very rapid downvote but it's upvoted (for now)
Thanks yeah just loaded up the 2nd and saw your post at -1 (at the time of posting) :( I'll have a read over now.
Teething problems for me getting used to the site tbh. I should have added the description
13:20
morning cabbages folks
@roganjosh The CNIONWAI rules say if you're fine with the code not working you can get a review. But explicitly asking how to get non-working code to work isn't allowed. We can go through two arguments: the Code's Not Working As Intended (CNWAI) as you are not getting the value(s) from the `Card` enum. And you are explicitly asking about Code Not Implemented (CNI) with "it looks like I can use `if let` ...".
Code Review only wants to review 'working' code as we don't want to be SO+ where all the bad SO questions get dumped on our site. I'm not going to hammer, but please don't take the lack
@Hakaishin Do you have a specific (non-jokey) comment on this particular matter? I can't tell from the meme.
@Peilonrayz I can delete it if that's what you think is best
@smci Not really, except for the text in the meme
@roganjosh If your sole objective is to fix the line then deleting is the action I'd take in your shoes. If you would like a review of the rest ("My implementation of PartialOrd also feels cumbersome.") an edit could work.
13:29
I'm not trying to fix one line.... I have realised that my setup has forced me to do something dumb to fix it
I'm not describing it very well
@Peilonrayz the code works exactly, and the link I provided would be the next logical step if I keep going
What I am concerned about is that the path that I set is incorrect from the start. There are many ways to reach a destination but not all of them are very efficient
If I find 30 mins, I'll fight some more to fill that last line of code. It'll give the right answer. It's also obviously the wrong approach. I can see the numbers that I want to multiply but I've clearly set the stage wrong because I can't easily access them
13:50
Yeah, sounds like you have a reasonable solution.
14:17
@roganjosh Must be karma, I'm just starting a project which has jupyter notebooks as it's documentation :( Whyyyy
 
3 hours later…
16:59
The summoning is complete...
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні The feeling is mutual. I've gone cold turkey from SO and sadly chat is on the same login. So I'll be gone for a while but I'll sorely miss y'all, folks.
2
Wax on, Wax off, while I'm gone... ;)
We'll keep the salad warm whilst you're gone
I think that's how hospitality is done, right?
17:17
@VLAZ "Guido van Rossum began working on Python in the late 1980s as a successor to the ABC programming language and first released it in 1991 as Python 0.9.0." But I've looked at ABC and I don't really see the similarity.
ABC, in turn, follows from SETL.
well, ABC does have the block-indentation syntax and some similar ideas about how to use keywords to create syntax (but taking it even further, perhaps)
and I guess all-caps keywords weren't a big distinguishing factor at the time
... come to think of it, some of what I want to do in Fawlty represents a return to these roots.
(but from a different approach angle)
 
2 hours later…
19:11
Hello, any suggestions on how to use a Python environment other than conda so that I can install a specific version of Python, and without having to have administrator permissions?
 
2 hours later…
21:08
@user5349916 take care

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