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12:00
Another explicit word, I assume?
yeah
olive can be how and olives can be how are, how is, (deviations of how based on the following context)
olive does this work?
example
'I created an AI that puts on a dirty movie in relation to how I am typing'
"olive did you do that"
"olives your mother"
Hmm, "Olive I met your mother"
sounds awkward
we need a word for gentlemen and for ladies
12:05
"peach" for "lady" and "pear" for "gentleman"?
Welcome, peaches and pears!
Of course now we need a word for "Welcome"
potato
and potatoes would be your welcome
actually cabbage is hello
true, true
Cabbage, peaches and pears!
use your potatoes @Volatility
"potato?" means "how are you?"
"potato" without the question mark might just mean "OK"
kinda like "ca va" in French
whats potatoes than
we should all go yam some tomatoes in Malaysia since they love our language so much.
12:14
A: Cabbage peaches and pears! Potato?
B: Banana, melon.
C: Potato.
D: Beans.
A: Oh. Sprouts to hear that, D.
D: Yam it. Those tomatoes are off beans.
*awkward silence*
B: Well, er, rhubarb everybody.
C: Rhubarb.
A: Rhubarb everybody.
D: Rhubarb. Melon for the support, A.
A: Watermelon.
I think that uses all the vocab we've come up with ;)
cabbage, @Jon, potato?
Just wondering if I should aim to get that accepted answer 4 upvotes... and get a gold badge evil thoughts
Cabbage for the win!?
:D
It's slowly developing
Indeed.
I like peaches and pears.
looking good so far:
http://pastebin.com/z7zQqzCw
can I get a quick vote for a second? Linux mint or Ubuntu?
for an older dell laptop
There needs to be a word for "I don't know"
and a word for "I agree"
Avocado = I agree
?
12:26
mushrooms for i dont know
or bok choy
I like that!
A: I like cabbages
B: Avocado
I like mushrooms better
how did you do that
bok choy
12:28
maybe just the singular
Mushrooms I Like Mushrooms better
mushroom
and mushrooms is for "we don't know"
we need a meaning for asparagus and artichoke
artichoke = "you must be joking?"
:P
I came to say one thing
I'm sure you all know what it is
12:29
goodnight.
@Volatility GO TO SLEEP
Yes, and goodnight everyone :)
rhubarb
Oh, is that the goodbye message...
avacado for I agree sounds amazing
rhubarb everyone
12:30
rhubarb
melon @Inhale.Py
stackoverflow.com/questions/16812980/… I wonder what jamylak is thinking, btw
Hi there!
New new here
cabbage @Ali_Sce
pumpkin
?
12:31
no.
cabbage.
we do need a meaning for pumpkin
cabbage = hi
pumpkin could be "i disagree"
oK - cabbage
language reference.
avocado = I agree, pumpkin = I disagree, cabbage = hello, rhubarb = good bye
12:32
rhubarb
I am not sure about pumpkin
it seems like a much nicer word than to be used for I disagree
me either
@InbarRose you mean "mushroom about pumpkin"? ;)
Carrots. that can be good for I disagree.
ahahah well I lovevegetables
12:33
So do we.
yum yum
for the love of pumpkins
I Yammin Love veggies.
@Inhale.Py pumpkin is god now?
I yammin pumpkin veggies
idk just trying it out
should be "For the love of brassica Prime"
mmm... can I find some help with python here or is a veggie lover chat?
just wondering...
12:34
Of course
We are just passing time
What is up? @Ali_Sce ?
I have to do something on a 2G file
Im suffering from black-eyed-peas this morning(brain block, writers block, coders block)
and it's taking like 2 days
and I need to do this for 24 times and I have only like one day now
so I am in troubles!
total block
how can we be of asparagus to you
Asparagus = help?
12:36
hes suffering from black eyed peas
and assistance, help, that sort of thing
MUshrooms
do anyone know how to deal with operations on 2G files'
?
do you have a source we could view?
Funny, in RuneScape, there was a random bug where when someone would talk, instead of their message appearing, the word "asparagus" would appear.
The reason this was so is because if the chat system ever stuffed up or something, it would default back to sending the word "asparagus"
nrs = 557240
dt = 'int,'*6+'S10,'*nrs
file = "file.txt"

PseudoPed = np.genfromtxt(file, delimiter='\t', names=True, dtype=dt) #delimiter="TAB"

SnpToSelect = SnpReadyTot[:,1]
New_PseudoPed = PseudoPed[['Family', 'Individual', 'Father', 'Mother', 'Sex', 'Status'] + list(SnpToSelect)]
Coincidence? I THINK NOT!
12:38
That's what the creators set it to
the "file.txt" is the Yumming 2G file
It's also funny, because there's an item in game only available to the moderators called the "rotten potato"
and I have 24 of these scripts - each one is a different list(SnpToSelect) - and each of these has to be selected from the Yumming file
hmm, interesting
12:41
very. Must be something with the all()
father, mother, sex, weird combo
ahaahh yah
so your trying to generate code from a text file?
Well, @Ali_Sce Would you go to pastebin and paste all your code?
Reading from very large files is not beans it is just difficult.
I had a script that ran on a 50gb file
Why the file was 50gb I have no idea.. but that is life.
mmm what is pastebin?
12:47
pastebin.com
@InbarRose you need to add asparagus and black eyed peas to the dictionary
asparagus as assistance/help
I need asparagus?
and black eyed peas as writters block, brain fart, etc\
12:47
kind of like mushrooms
im suffering from some black eyed peas this morning
This code is black eyed peas.
And Mushroom if I can understand it.
A few modifications to msuhroom / bep so that they can be used properly.
cabbage
Cabbage.
Gnight everyone
12:50
potato?
rhubarb @Haidro
confused look lettuce?
ah, "lettuce?" could mean "what do you mean?"
or just "what?"
I like that.
12:52
not much more that what I pasted here though...
Well...
The idea to read large files is to read them line by line
and do things very efficiently
No looping over values, everything should be in one pass
and if possible, you could use threads
simple (most likely) question but I'm just slow today, if:
p = Popen('cp results/%s/%s.mgf results/output.mgf' % (self.user, deglyco_name),shell=True).wait()
works, but this:
one for reading lines and putting them into a queue - and then the rest of the threads are worker threads - working on each line.
p = Popen('cp results/%s/%s.mgf res/tandem/bin/output.mgf' % (self.user, deglyco_name),shell=True).wait()
does not, what are some obvious culprits to check (directory permissions are fine for both)
12:55
thats complete eggplant
os.getcwd() ya mean inbar?
touche, script might not be where i think it is
Exactly
cheers, lemme see what I get out of that
Or executed where you think :)
12:57
hmm, thinking about it now, I could call a script_root = getcwd at start and combine that with relative paths... but first things first, seeing what it says
The way I would do it....
source = results_dir + '/%s/%s.mgf' % (self.user, deglyco_name)
dest = output_dir + '/output.mgf'
p = Popen('cp %s %s' % (source, dest),shell=True).wait()

And the results_dir and output_dir would be constants, or variables... whatever.. that are ABSOLUTE paths.
hello all
we need definitions for garlic, onions, turnip, horsradish, spinach, broccoli, brussel sprouts, celery, chives, am I missing any?
Cabbage, potato?
cabbage
13:00
err... cabbage...
cabbage
@Inhale.Py... Let us slow down for now.
Use what we have, and slowly add more.
Too many at once and we won't remember/use them.
ok =( I'll just get back to work
but your right, languages develop over long periods of time
13:01
Avocado
well, I will be back after my first break
rhubarb for now
@Inhale.Py But at certain times, various inventions (cell phones/texting) facilitate the rapid evolution of languages -- Like the Cambrian Explosion.
All of a sudden, multiple words get condensed into acronyms increasing the information density (although, one could probably question how much information is actually transmitted via texting these days ...)
13:14
i'm just away for a few hours and you guys already are talking about parsing mushroom files
I'm concerned about the growth of the vegetable pseudo language. What if it alienates newcomers? What will the other chat rooms think of us?
mushroom
Is this just a very odd symptom of the "walled garden syndrome" that all online communities eventually develop, to repel the uninitiated?
We'll just make a "Cabbage Tutorial"
13:24
Cabbage Patch.
Newcommers will take a nice stroll though our Cabbage Gardens.
FWIW -- I still don't understand this vegetable language we've developed here
(and I've been around since the beginning)
less than 4 minutes
already 14 upvotes.
@InbarRose -- Yeah. It was a good answer though
Where are all those users when I give a good answer?
ha ha
13:26
I have given GREAT answers.
It is like they only follow Martijn :P
It doesn't hurt that Martijn has a fan club
Im one of martijns fans
:puts on grammar jerk hat: I'd hardly call it good, it uses the contraction "it's" when it should use the possessive "its"
13:27
although theres always a soft spot in my heart for inbar and kevin
Hmm, to perform a single character edit, or not...
shucks
At times, I've given almost exactly the same answer as Martijn (before him) and gotten fewer upvotes
But ... such is life. He gives good answers and lots of them
13:27
It is increasingly frustrating.
I think his authoritative use of italics is partially responsible.
As far as I'm concerned, he's earned his fan club :)
Not because I care about rep or anything... But because it makes no sense to me why when 2 answers are nearly identical, one will get many and the other few upvotes.
It is like.. "well, this is the answer, +1. oh, this is also the answer? +0 "
Answers from high rep users are inherently more valuable, because you can trust that their answer is more likely to be correct, all other things being equal.
It's a vicious and/or virtuous cycle.
Indeed.
13:29
Depending on which end you're experiencing it from :-)
@kevin -- yeah, I've certainly experienced that as I've climbed to higher rep
I still have 83 rep =D
It's also a matter of being associated with a particular tag/tags
I've seen some pretty high rep users give mediocre answers on python tags -- But I usually don't recognize them right away meaning that they're not regulars with python.
Whereas Martijn's answers are nearly always correct
(Although, It always makes me happy when I find one of his that is wrong ;-)
13:31
Of course they are "correcT"
but are they the "best?" or even "that much better/more correct" than other answers?
Not always.
I have a few answers that are voted higher than Martijns (or, they were when I last checked)
Not always the "best", but often they are. He elaborates on most of them pretty completely.
Of course, on the answer in question, the whole bit on printing is a bit superfluous. The point was already made and I preferred the answer before he added that bit in there.
But, that's a minor nitpick. It's a good answer and worth an upvote. FWIW, it's the only answer that explains to OP what is actually going on and elucidates the confusion.
indeed.
I am always inspired by Martijn's answers.
The level of insight is remarkable.
It's also about something fundamental in python (using the interpreter). questions about the core language always get more traffic and therefore more upvotes
...and I am always in need of sleep
Me too.
13:35
GOODNIGHT! :)
The level of tiredness is remarkable
rhubarb.
Rhubarb ;)
Does anybody else see three scroll bars on the code block in this question?
I see none.
What browser/resolution ?
13:39
I do, it has two bottom scroll bars
@Kevin -- Not any more ;-)
Very unusual. What could have caused such a thing?
Evil forces, bound for our utter destruction?
There was some strange markup and indentation errors
Damn, wrong again.
:)
13:40
the closing { wasn't indented enough and for some reason there was a </pre> in there.
I was on Firefox 1680x1050, FWIW
1680x1050 strange resolution.
I'm a hardware pleb and just use whatever default is given to me.
Today I am writing Python code to generate C# code that interfaces with a SQL database.
Code writing code, next stop Skynet! All aboard!
Ah, InvalidCastException! Skynet is foiled for another day.
Maybe we should write a FailSafeSkynetException just in case ...
We could even have it inherit from BaseException to make it a little harder to catch.
On what grounds?
13:50
Of course, we all know what happens. Skynet comes online because some bozo uses a bare except statement.
Not following PEP8 = Skynet?
Skynet is a family of military satellites, now operated by Astrium Services on behalf of the UK Ministry of Defence, which provide strategic communication services to the three branches of the British Armed Forces and to NATO forces engaged on coalition tasks. The satellites were operated by Paradigm Secure Communications until October 2012 when the organisation was rebranded to Astrium Services. Models Skynet 1 There were two Skynet 1 satellites (A and B); Skynet 1A was launched on a Delta M on November 22, 1969, but the satellite failed after less than a year of operation. Skynet 1B ...
...
"Nuclear hardening, anti-jamming countermeasures and laser protection "
... great... :)
14:09
Hey, I have this code block. My questions is there a way to minimize this or make it more python like. What you think?
count = request.GET.get("count", count)
if count > max_count:
count = max_count
Sure.
count = max_count if count > max_count else count
But your way is actually better.
How about, count = max(max_count, request.GET.get("count", count))
Hmmm
Kevin wins.
Yup - that would be how to do it.
Or just
count = request.GET.get("count", count)
count = max(count, max_count)
That's a lot of counts.
@mgilson :) ISWYDT
14:13
Wow, thanks. Sometimes it can be nice :)
I have to use more built-in things
I haven't used a variable whose name begins with the word max in a very long time, and it feels fantastic.
With any luck I'll never have to type for foo in bar: if maxfoo < foo: maxfoo = foo for the rest of my life.
hmmm
actually
@Azd325 .. request.GET.get("count", count)
Has me thinking, you default the value to "count" meaning it exists before?
Ype this true
So please show the rest of the code, I have a feeling the whole thing can be improved drastically.
def func((request, count=10, max_count=20):)
I already change the variant of kevin to mine kind of use
min(max_count, int(request.GET.get("count", count)))
14:18
Just copy the whole method here please.
Or put it in pastebin.com
def simple_pagination(request, count=10, start=0, max_count=20):
start = request.GET.get("start", start)
count = min(max_count, int(request.GET.get("count", count)))
return start, count
start should be also convert to an int
why min?
Should it not be max?
Oh, yes, you want min.
Correct, because I was checking if the count is bigger then my max count if this the case then I want to use the max_count
where is requests from?
It comes from a simple django view
14:23
Okay.
I am concerned that maybe request.GET.get() is a bit overkill
to do twice.
Maybe requests.GET does some behind the scene stuff
So you should make a local reference.
def simple_pagination(request, count=10, start=0, max_count=20):
d = request.GET() # I assume it returns a dict
start = int(d.get("start", start))
count = min(max_count, int(d.get("count", count)))
return start, count
Good idea but request.GET is not callable so it will be looks like this
def simple_pagination(request, count=10, start=0, max_count=20):
d = request.GET
start = int(d.get("start", start))
count = min(max_count, int(d.get("count", count)))
return start, count
@InbarRose What you think is the best idea to check if it really an integer what was passed?
That is not the python way :)
Use it as an integer and catch the exception
You mean I should check for the ValueError in a try catch block
Cabbage again..
def simple_pagination(request, count=10, start=0, max_count=20):
d = request.GET
try:
start = int(d.get("start", start))
count = min(max_count, int(d.get("count", count)))
except ValueError:
pass
return start, count

So for the moment I do this like this. I pass the error because I have already a fallback define in the arguments
14:34
And Broccoli to you @JonClements
cabbage
Wow... think wim and pnuts are shooting across my answer now...
which answer?
Check the one and only one true value one - repeat of the other one I tried...
That any(I) and not any (I) thingy
that works
>>> single_true([1,0,1,0,1,0])
False
>>> single_true([1,0,0,0,0,0])
True
>>>
14:46
Yeah - I know it works :-)
What yout think about this now without try block
def simple_pagination(request, count=10, start=0, max_count=20):
d = request.GET
tmp_start = d.get("start", start)
tmp_count = d.get("count", count)
if tmp_start.isdigit():
start = int(tmp_start)
if tmp_count.isdigit():
count = min(max_count, int(tmp_count))
return start, count
what if tmp_start and tmp_count aren't digits ?
... waiting for that accepted answer to get two more upvotes...
@rxdazn If the not it has the function arguments as fallback
ah yes I didn't pay attention to that, sorry
14:53
No problem for this reason. I ask the chat what the think :)
@azd that is bad - not all objects have "isdigit()"
It would be just like using it as an int without checking.
@InbarRose Normally I get only string objects from the request obj
That makes sense, since it is dealing with web - things are simply all "strings"
or I can't remember that I got something else
You should do something like you did before...
14:56
with the try catch block ?
yes, but no.
Not inside the function.
def simple_pagination(request, count=10, start=0, max_count=20):
d = request.GET
start = int(d.get("start", start))
count = min(max_count, int(d.get("count", count)))
return start, count
try:
simple_pagination(...)
except ValueError:
# log? print? make user aware.
The function should just do its job. But where you call the function should handle if there is a ValueError.
or any other kind of exception.
I want to have this validation inside the function because I repeat the code serval times. So that I think is the best if I check it in the function to stay DRY
I can't ever get the code to format.

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