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12:13 AM
cbg
mashed potatoes is also called "potato butter" in Finland...
... because of dubious amounts of butter added to make it better...
 
there was someone famous for saying that here....
 
12:54 AM
butter makes everything taste better
 
1:12 AM
mmm mashed potatos! Our culinary finest example!
 
mashed potatoes are awesome
 
Stamppot (English: Mash pot) is a traditional Dutch dish made from a combination of potatoes mashed with one or several other vegetables or fruits. These vegetable pairings traditionally include sauerkraut, endive, kale, spinach, turnip greens, or carrot and onion (the combination of the latter two is known as hutspot in the Netherlands and as wortelstoemp in Belgium). Leafy greens such as endive may be left raw and added to the potatoes only at the mashing stage. Some regional varieties of stamppot are made with fruit and potatoes, such as blauwe bliksem (blue lightning), made with pears, and...
Fun fact, did you know carrots used to be not of an orange colour?
During the 16th centory to create more patriotic feelings against the Spanish oppression farmers started cultivating carrots in memory of William of Orange. These became so popular that it is now the commonly accepted colour for them.
 
 
2 hours later…
3:42 AM
cabbage
 
4:05 AM
Cabbage :-)
 
4:20 AM
o/
 
 
2 hours later…
6:05 AM
> The use of the same name for plants of a different genus or species is one of the lasting ambiguities inherited from the ancients, who were more apt to lump vegetables together according to how they were used, as in the case of the Roman propensity for treating carrots, parsnips, and parsley root as "pastinaca".
 
6:21 AM
cbg
 
6:33 AM
cabbage babbage
 
 
1 hour later…
7:41 AM
cg
cbg
 
cb
cbg
 
Nicolas Cage caged in a Nicolas Cage cage https://t.co/Az6C0ZDmcP
rbrb
 
7:56 AM
@davidism: thanks for cleaning up stackoverflow.com/questions/42294321/… a little. I do note that in pure SQLAlchemy the OP would have gotten an exception when they tried to use func.count() on a table object; I suspect that the Flask-SQLAlchemy wrapper there caused different behaviour.
 
@MartijnPieters thinking of messaging the editor of the second revision, for "minimal edits" and not editing the backticks in the title.
 
So the Flask-SQLAlchemy tag may have been relevant there.
@BhargavRao be my guest.
I'll happily ignore you ;-)
 
> Moderator messages must not be taken lightly.
:|
 
@MartijnPieters I get an error with db.func.count(User) in Flask-SQLAlchemy, not sure how they didn't get it. The thing they're counting is a model, not a table, which behaves the same in both.
 
@davidism yes, my terminology mistake; a model.
 
8:07 AM
db = SQLAlchemy(app)

class User(db.Model):
    id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)

f = db.func.count(User)
# sqlalchemy.exc.ArgumentError: Object <class '__main__.User'> is not legal as a SQL literal value
 
I was wondering as well; if a Flask-SQLAlchemy model has the same issue, then pox on them.
 
Yeah, I don't know why their code made it to the second line instead of erroring on the first. Guess it's not an MCVE.
Also, their code indicates they're using plain SQLAlchemy, no db. prefix.
Just tested it in plain SQLAlchemy, same error at func.count.
 
@davidism yes, which is what I did.
Couldn't be bothered looking up the Flask version.
 
:-) That's what I do for most "Flask-SQLAlchemy" questions too.
 
Hello people. I would like to ask an off-topic question (if I may): when you read a non-technical book (let us say Do Not Make Me Think). Do you read an other book in parallel or do you wait until finish that book first then start a new one? (I know it is personal question, but I just want to see how other developers behave). Thank you and have a nice day (I will read your answers if any, but I will not comment you back)
 
8:16 AM
@BillalBEGUERADJ I don't read non-technical books
 
@BillalBEGUERADJ The only non tech books I read were when I was in my school, so can't help there. :/
 
I am using spring boot to create restful api for our java project. But there is a little bit of python code too which I need to expose via an API. Any suggestions?? It needs to be simple as there will be only a couple of functionalites that I need to expose and the python code isn't more than a few lines so I don't want to spend lot of time with this
 
@RegisteredUser which what where python code?
how does it relate to the spring code? jython, py4j or what was it?
 
@AnttiHaapala Not that it relates, I just mean that java is where we are coding the most. This python code is only a minor part of the project
 
8:26 AM
flask, pyramid, whatever :D
 
that's why I dont want to spend lot of time trying to learn the framework :P
flask seems good
 
well, flask is more copypaste
 
@davidism thanks
 
pyramid has got depth
 
The python code is probably gonna be less than 10 lines so hopefully I won't need depth :)
 
 
1 hour later…
9:46 AM
@BillalBEGUERADJ one at time
 
10:11 AM
Morning cabbage
 
@RomanLuštrik you there?
@IntrepidBrit cbg
 
@AnttiHaapala \o
 
so obviously not :P
 
@AnttiHaapala thank you very much for thinking of me over the weekend. :)
 
@AnttiHaapala it would be a bit an overkill for me to buy for the last three years. It's less than 2000 tweets. I ended up entering the search term and hold down PgDown until it reached the first post. It produced a 13 MB html file which I could scrape in R and produce a small report.
 
yea :D
 
Oh, here's a picture (and number of tweets per day) of my contraption holding down PgDown: biolitika.si/nivedela
The idea was that there would be a surge of tweets now and then, but this doesn't appear to be the case.
In any case, the search may not be exhaustive and we missed the locked accounts' posts. God knows how many we missed...
 
10:55 AM
The search isn't exhaustive at the best of times. Even if you're analysing live from the streaming API it's still only a sample (method of sampling unclear) from the whole firehose. It's mega dollar to get access to the full firehose.
 
@Withnail That's what I figured, thanks.
 
You can use the search API to trawl backwards in time for whatever it is you're looking for, subject to the above, and subject to the rate limits.
twitter.com/… (web interface version).
it's pretty tedious and slow though.
I suppose, if you're pullling a week at a time and only expecting a few thousand tweets then 180 requests every 15 minutes might be fine, though - I was dealing with millions when i did my PhD so trying to thread tweets from a while ago was exceedingly slow...
 
11:18 AM
cbg
 
11:39 AM
@Withnail the live api provides for a full tweet sample, which is known, it is milliseconds 657 - 666 of each second of tweets; and the full firehose is expensive but one can have a contract for cheaper (still expensive) with gnip to get filtered view on live streams...
 
Oh, thanks for that, i didn't know that about where the tweets were taken from, that's actually v helpful for something else... :D ta!
 
so that gives a 1 % sample
 
Isn't twitter dead yet?
 
Oh, nice.
 
11:58 AM
Good stuff about twitter, guys. I'm learning a lot. Keep it coming. :)
 
 
1 hour later…
1:22 PM
guys does anyone know how you extract data inbetween <item></item> tags in python
i do the followoing:
http = urllib3.PoolManager()
r = http.request('GET', 'http://feeds.bbci.co.uk/news/rss.xml')
xml_news = r.data
once i get the r.data i need to try extract the data in this object which are found in <item></item> tags
 
cbg
 
Cabbage!
 
@RhysCopperthwaite I believe there's an xml parsing library you can use.
 
is there a way of doing it without the birary?
 
Might make your life easier in the long run than trying to summon zalgo
Why would you want to?
 
1:25 PM
because im not meant to use any external library
 
cbg("sohaib")
Then I recommend writing code in assembly for extra wheel reinvention :)
 
its a small excersise for one of my lessons in uni and it says i cant use external libraries -_-
it has to be python
but thank you for your help !
 
Define external libraries?
 
DSM
Morning cabbage for all!
 
You could try docs.python.org/3/library/xml.etree.elementtree.html which is part of the standard library
 
DSM
1:28 PM
Isn't urllib3 an external library already?
 
cbg
 
am i the only python developer that sucks on excel and google sheets
 
urllib3 is the only one we are allowed to use
 
DSM
This is a weird request. "Don't use any external libraries, except for this one which does something that built-in Python libraries can do just fine."
 
use beautiful soup or lxml
 
1:30 PM
this is the problem im having, my lecturer says we cannot use external libraries for this but can use urllib3 for the request message
im gana question him in my next lab
 
then get the html
and make a recursive function
or make function
that matches the item tag
and extract it
 
DSM
As IB says, if "external" allows the built-in elementtree, then use it.
 
tree = ElementTree.fromstring(page)
mydiv = tree.find('.//div[@class="something"]')
can somone help me how to insert blank columns in csv
 
okay thanks guys !
 
i want to insert data in C column leave A and B blank
but when i save it
it returns to A column
hate doing QA work
 
DSM
1:36 PM
What does "returns to A column" mean?
 
it means data is shifted to A column instead of C
 
cbg("DSM", belated=True)
 
spamwriter = csv.writer(csvfile, delimiter=' ',
                        quotechar='|', quoting=csv.QUOTE_MINIMAL)
spamwriter.writerow(["", "", "Stuffhere",])
Are you looking for something more complicated than that?
 
yeah
i can write the code
but
when you do QA work
 
DSM
@SohaibAsif: that's strange. Unfortunately I'm on 'nix and so can't verify the behaviour of Excel, but that's not one I've encountered before.
 
1:41 PM
how can i do this in excel
yeah that sucks
 
Hi! Are django developers here?
 
Do you mean how can you do it in excel via python?
 
@SohaibAsif Why don't you use xlwt and xlrd?
 
DSM
@QueueOverflow: welcome to the room! Please read the room rules linked in the top right, particularly the section on asking questions. (As always, you'll probably have better luck on the main site -- more eyes.)
 
nm
 
1:44 PM
not using python
 
.. Kevin'd by DSM
 
just in excel
 
... why can't you use python?
 
Coz boss don't understand python
-_-
 
DSM
Excel doesn't usually move data from column to column for no reason. It has its quirks, but basic functionality is usually sane.
 
1:45 PM
One sec. I'll see if I can reproduce
Cannot reproduce
colA,colB,colC
1,2,3
,,cabbages!!!!!!eleventyOne
Seems to work as expected?
 
DSM
Does it work even if colA and colB have no data?
 
,,I like turtles.
Works as expected too
 
DSM
Then I suspect PEBKAC. :-)
 
Hello, pythons!
 
Hey JRS
 
DSM
1:50 PM
Cabbage for JRS! Been a while.
 
cbg("JRS")
 
cabbage to all
It has been a while. I have been busily drilling calculus into resistant material.
I think it's working - it required a sharper drill bit ;)
 
DSM
Vector, at least?
 
@BhargavRao You around?
 
1:52 PM
Vector calc is some way away.
Although on a related note, I did have some fun trying to convince a colleague of the sense of his coriolis vector from different frames of reference.
 
cbg Professor Severus Snape
 
cbg @sohaib
I like vector calculus though. The answer is always zero :)
 
>>> chr(887)
'\u0377'
>>> chr(888)
'\u0378'
>>> repr(chr(887))
"'\u0377'"
>>> repr(chr(888))
"'\\u0378'"
>>> "u" in repr(chr(887))
False
>>> "u" in repr(chr(888))
True
 
DSM
I always liked Green's theorem -- you can trade off a degree between the function and the volume..
 
@Kevin hehe
nice
 
1:57 PM
I feel like there's a good reason for this but I don't know what it is
 
DSM
@Kevin: hi! But isn't today Presidents' Day? Almost never see you on a holiday!
 
That reminds me. I need to buy wotsits to celebrate
 
Yes, I've got the day off today. I came in here to share the curiosity I discovered.
 
@DSM Nice - also a personal fave of mine
Kevin's curiosity - turns out President's day is fake news. Sad!
 
DSM
Hmm. I get
>>> chr(887)
'Í·'
>>> chr(888)
'\u0378'
 
2:00 PM
try repr(chr(888))
 
>>> print(chr(887))
Í·
>>> print(chr(888))
͸
>>> import unicodedata
>>> unicodedata.name(chr(887))
'GREEK SMALL LETTER PAMPHYLIAN DIGAMMA'
>>> unicodedata.name(chr(888))
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: no such name
 
I'm surprised, Kevin. I thought you were a Windows aficionado. Shouldn't it cry and say 887 > 256?
 
I used the magic chcp 65001 command beforehand, which is why I'm not getting UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode character '\u0377' in position 1: character maps to <undefined>
 
im wondering how you came around this bug
 
2:03 PM
 
thats a nice way to spend free day: chr(1), Enter
chr(2), Enter
 
Still renders weirdly though. I'm surprised it looked nicer when I copied it into chat
 
looks ugly anyway :D
 
@marxin I was trying to find the lowest character whose string representation required a "\u" escape sequence. So I did:
>>> for i in itertools.count(10):
...     if r"\u" in repr(chr(i)):
...             print(i)
...             break
...
888
 
DSM
Hmm.
 
2:05 PM
Then I checked chr(887) just to make sure, and was surprised to see this result.
Hmm, now that I've switched code pages, my reprs have changed.
>>> repr(chr(887))
"'Í·'"
>>> repr(chr(888))
"'\\u0378'"
 
;)
In [1]: repr(chr(888))
Out[1]: "'\\u0378'"

In [2]: repr(chr(887))
Out[2]: "'Í·'"
 
DSM
Is it just that it happens to be the first character without a unicode name which is also high enough to have a u instead of just an x in its repr?
 
That's what I'm starting to wonder.
I couldn't see any standard definition of what 888 was meant to represent
 
@poke yep, on phone atm.
 
Was perusing code point tables to see if I could spot it
 
2:10 PM
@Bhargav nvm, wanted to ask you to undelete some comments but I just readded a new comment summing it up. But thanks anyway
 
np, good to know that it's resolved. :)
 
DSM
@IntrepidBrit: definitely seems unused
 
Let's see... Everything from 160 to 887 has a name.
 
DSM
Aw, I was about to post this :-(
Kevin'd on a day I'm not even working so I don't have that as an excuse. OTOH even though it's cooled down a lot it's still warm enough to justify doing a bunch of errands so I should probably face the world at some point today..
 
From marxin's output, I assume that repr(chr(887)) really doesn't have a "\u" escape code, on sane OSes with good Unicode support.
On Windows, it's another matter. I try to do >>> chr(887) and Python says "Ok, I'll go and fetch a "Í·" for you... Oops, you haven't got one. \u0377 will just have to do."
 
2:24 PM
what gives you ord('Í·') ?
 
DSM
Do you see the same transition between 895 and 896?
 
Then when I do x = repr(chr(887)), Python says "Ok, I'll take a "Í·" and put it inside some tick marks." And only afterwards, when I do print(x), does Python say "oops, you haven't got that character. '\u0377' will just have to do"
 
I was wondering that its probably your rubbish terminal :p
 
@DSM I do.
>>> "u" in repr(chr(895))
False
>>> "u" in repr(chr(896))
True
 
DSM
So that much is consistent between us, at least.
 
2:27 PM
I feel like this gives an interesting peek into the system Python uses to send characters to stdout. In particular, the character sequence generated by repr isn't necessarily identical to the characters finally sent to your console. There must be at least some intermediary processing going on.
It's only thanks to this pants-on-head OS that we were able to move aside the curtain to glimpse the man pulling the levers.
 
DSM
All hail the great and powerful Windows!
 
The mystery is solved (kinda) but I am troubled. I used to think that repr could infallibly escape all escape sequences back into ordinary slashes and letters, but this is a clear counterexample (albeit one that's environment-dependent)
 
DSM
By "ordinary slashes and letters" you mean something like "containing no character that isn't in string.printable"?
[Ehh, that doesn't quite work because of \t, maybe repr(string.printable) :-P]
 
I'm trying to come up with a formal definition of what I mean, but they all end up depending circularly on repr again
"repr(s) should contain a literal slash character iff repr(s) contains a literal slash character" doesn't quite capture the issue
 
DSM
Over the last few days I've been listening to a lot of oboe music.
6
And yes, that was really apropos of nothing.
 
2:40 PM
Occasional wild topic changes are ultimately good for the health of the room, I think.
 
Did someone mention hippos?
 
Exercise: use Fermi estimation to determine how often hippos are mentioned anywhere in the world. Give your answer in terms of hippos per second.
 
DSM
You almost succeeded in sniping me there.
 
In an Abstract Base Class, is defining __init__ with the @abstractmethod decorator an anit-pattern? I have often seen IDEs complaining if I do not call super inside the __init__ method of a derived class. I want to know if these two things go well together, and if it is okay to omit the call to super in derived class, while keeping the abstractmethod in the base class.
 
> I mean, I am looking for more lateral changes in a fast moving cloud connected social media agile web 2.0 company.
niiiiice
5
Q: Derivative of natural logarithm

JeffI need to differentiate $$f(x)=e^7+\ln(4).$$ I know that $\dfrac d{dx}e^x = e^x$ and $\dfrac d{dx}\ln(x) = \dfrac {1}{x}$. I recently learned this, but I get stuck when it comes to solving this problem using real numbers. Can someone guide me with an example?

why is this in "Hot Network Questions"?
 
Also this
🎵 no, I don't want no scrum / a scrum is a way of papering over systemic communication failures with process theater 🎵
 
@KevinMGranger thats a good one :p
 
3:30 PM
I just want a well known rugby player to post something like that :)
 
@ani.bose it doesn't make sense to mark __init__ abstract.
 
@davidism I wanted to enforce all subclasses to initialize using a fixed signature. Isn't this why abstract methods are used?
 
3:46 PM
@ani.bose abstract methods don't enforce anything regarding the method signatures... it just prevents a class being init'd that doesn't implement all of them...
 
TFW they try to quote documentation at you that you wrote: :-|
 
@davidism never had that... I normally get asked something and point them to the documentation they requested that they haven't bothered reading :(
 
@JonClements but it gives a lot of satisfaction ;p
 
Quick EZ question is there a simpler way to write this? if board[x][y] != "2" or board[x][y] !="1"
Seems redundant.
 
Every now and then I really want to break out the "I'm going to stop you there, I'm actually the maintainer." But this unimpressed face hides a lot of restraint.
@Tokencodingnewbie thing not in '12'
 
3:52 PM
thing not in 12?
 
No, thing not any of the characters in the string 12.
Iterating a string gives characters.
 
True is probably the shortest way of writing that
 
DSM
Ehh, the few characters saved don't justify the bad practice (subtle change in semantics).
 
More generally: thing not in {a, b, c, ...}
 
@Tokencodingnewbie board[x][y] not in {'1' , '2'}
 
DSM
3:54 PM
@KevinMGranger: I wondered if anyone was going to mention that. ;-)
 
Wont it always return true because the board is filled with "O"
So it always has a value in it.
 
But really, the only way that expression will every be false is if something is somehow equal to both 1 and 2. You could write a custom class that could do that, but... don't
 
Or heaven forbid... not in {*'12'} ...
 
DSM
Bad ninja puppy!
 
3:55 PM
1 and 2 are like placeholders? They represent a ship on the grid.
It's not really doing any math
it's just to check if the grid has a ship there before trying to place a new one
 
Obligatory recommendation to always remember De Morgan's Law when inverting boolean logic expressions
In propositional logic and boolean algebra, De Morgan's laws are a pair of transformation rules that are both valid rules of inference. They are named after Augustus De Morgan, a 19th-century British mathematician. The rules allow the expression of conjunctions and disjunctions purely in terms of each other via negation. The rules can be expressed in English as: the negation of a conjunction is the disjunction of the negations; and the negation of a disjunction is the conjunction of the negations; or the complement of the union of two sets is the same as the intersection of their complements...
 
thing != value1 or thing != value2 will always be true, though. That's a logic error, not a problem with the placeholders.
 
The opposite of "a == 1 or a == 2" is not "a != 1 or a != 2"
 
DSM
@Kevin: don't interrupt when I'm trying to ^^ the other Kevin!!
 
3:56 PM
Hrm now I feel more lost than when I came in here lol
 
:-P
 
Yes, we shouldn't have thrown 12 different solutions at you. But before worrying about making something "clean", worry about making it correct!
 
So it's wrong? it checks to see if the value in that element is 1 or 2, if it isn't then it fills it?
 
That's not what it does. It checks to see if it's not 1 or not 2. It's impossible to be both 1 and 2 so it's always true
 
DSM
Reread KMG's last few comments where he's explained the problem.
 
3:58 PM
the thing is, if board[x][y] != "2" or board[x][y] !="1" is fine ;)
 
@davidism have messaged you in slack btw...
 
 elif direction == "S" and x - 1 >= 0 and y + 1 < 5:
                if board[x][y] != "2" or board[x][y] !="1" :  # check if the spot is empty for a ship
                    board[x][y] = "2"
                if board[x][y + 1] != "2":
                    board[x][y + 1] = "2"
                    twoship = 2
                    playershiplist.append([x, y + 1])
                    break
is the whole thing btw
ill reread it
 
>>> a = "0"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
>>> a = "1"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
>>> a = "2"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
>>> a = "3"
>>> a != "2" or a !="1"
True
 
oh wait
I meant to say it checks if the element is NOT 1 or 2
not that it is.
So is it right now? lol
 
Short answer: change "or" to "and"
+---+--------+--------+------------------+-------------------+
| a | a != 1 | a != 2 | a != 1 or a != 2 | a != 1 and a != 2 |
+---+--------+--------+------------------+-------------------+
| 0 | True   | True   | True             | True              |
| 1 | False  | True   | True             | False             |
| 2 | True   | False  | True             | False             |
| 3 | True   | True   | True             | True              |
+---+--------+--------+------------------+-------------------+
 
4:03 PM
@Tokencodingnewbie Kevin is too nerdy to understand common human language :p
 
DSM
I approve of grids.
 
you want to check if element is NOT1 and NOT 2
 
Nice griddy data makes everything more understandable.
 
In this case, the English isn't the same as the logic :)
 
Why from "or" to "and"? Doesn't that mean that both conditions have to be true, which in this case isn't possible?
Sorry if these are dumb obvious questions
I'm really trying hard to learn here.
 
4:07 PM
What does 'Why from "or" to "and"?' mean?
 
It's possible for both conditions to be true. For example, when a is 3, then both "a != 1" and "a != 2" are true.
 
He said change "or" to "and"
 
My chart gives two examples of this, in fact.
 
@Kevin -1 as grid doesn't include freehand ascii circles (unless they're in transparent ink of course... in which case +inf)
 
I circled them in marker on my screen, if that helps.
 
DSM
4:09 PM
Permanent?
 
I mean I thought about "and", and "or" I guess I don't
 
All chemical bonds eventually separate, but permanent enough for our purposes, sure.
 
@Kevin Bah... I demand a screenshot as evidence! :p
 
but on the chart under 1 and 2, if I use "and" then if the element has 1 or 2 it returns false when I wanted it to be true, if that makes sense.
 
I think you just want a == 1 or a == 2, then.
 
4:12 PM
but if they are equal to either those numbers, nothing should happen.
 
+---+--------+--------+------------------+
| a | a == 1 | a == 2 | a == 1 or a == 2 |
+---+--------+--------+------------------+
| 0 | False  | False  | False            |
| 1 | True   | False  | True             |
| 2 | False  | True   | True             |
| 3 | False  | False  | False            |
+---+--------+--------+------------------+
 
@Kevin Thank you for the charts and help.
@marxin Thank you this line worked well and looks way cleaner.
 
4:32 PM
In the end, the best way to ensure one's complicated boolean expressions are valid is to replace them entirely with something simpler
 
And that's the truth.
Or is it "or that's the truth"?
 
DSM
X or "or that's the truth" is always True, though..
 
regarding translating human language to programming, i've seen in our repo smth like that : if host == ('youtube.com' or 'www.youtube.com'):
:D
 
DSM
Jan 7 '15 at 16:24, by user559633
while bar is open:
 
4:49 PM
try:
    drink()
except FooBar:
    stop()
finally:
    taxi.call()
    break
Probably a horrible mess of program flow there, but you know what I mean :)
 
I just can't look away from the indentation error
 
Ach, off by one!!
And you tell me after the edit window expired? What kind of monster are you?
;)
This is the kind of thing that needs moderator intervention.
 
DSM
Unfortunately it's not yet noon here and I haven't had breakfast yet, so I can't justify drinking anything alcoholic..
 
It's ok, it's still syntactically valid. It just goes against all our norms and beliefs, that's all.
>>> if True:
...     pass
... else:
...             pass
...
>>>
 
rb folks
 
4:55 PM
Runs like a dream.
 
<shudders>
 
DSM
Rhubarb for AndyK.
 
cbg
 
@JRichardSnape There there... all better :)
 
DSM
(whoosh) (or whatever sound a ninja puppy makes when he acts)
 
5:05 PM
@JonClements Ahh, that's better <feels soothed>
 
@DSM don't know... I feel like I should have a kaboom or a kaplow... or something like that...
although Batman may not like that...
 
rhubarb, ya bunch of cabbages
 
@IntrepidBrit said in a Scottish accent I imagine that sounds quite aggressive!
 
5:13 PM
cbg
 
(I think if you ever heard me over voice chat, you'd be woefully disappointed)
 
Umm... I'm sure you could fake it just for old time's sake? :p
 
This is the only way I can imagine scottish accents:
 
DSM
I've always been disappointed that my family's Scottish accent didn't make it to my generation. My attempts to live in other countries where my accent would be the exotic one didn't turn out the way I was hoping.
 
I like the way how they pronounce "r"
remember from trainspotting
 
5:29 PM
I'm secretly ashamed that I can't produce even a poor quality South Jersey accent. I can't get properly immersed because my town is so close to the state line.
 
I've been told I have an accent (ever since moving east) but I don't hear it at all and don't really know what a "western" accent sounds like
 
DSM
Midwest? West west?
 
OR (west-west)
 
DSM
I don't have a strong accent association with OR. MT was to the south of me growing up so I know more about them and WA. Do you distinguish between "cot" and "caught"? "Wash" or "warsh"? "toe-tally" or "tyoetally"?
 
5:44 PM
Sorry if that's too many memes for one day
 
DSM
Props for one I haven't seen before!
 
@DSM caught sounds same as cot, wash, toe-tally
 
DSM
Do you distinguish between "do" and "due" and "dew"?
 
nope
 
DSM
6:00 PM
Sounds like I wouldn't think you sound that unusual but others might. Didn't know how much OR picked up from CA..
 
any Descent fans out there excited for Overload?
 
6:53 PM
(?==)[a-zA-Z0-9.-]+$
text: 'asdfjhsakldfjh=ahsfdasd0flH=hjasfsd0o)hjasdf=dfjka2387ujkds'
Shouldn't it capture: "dfjka2387ujkds"
since it should capture at the end of the text, anything after a "="
It won't work on regexr.com/v1
without capturing the "=", since it's a positive look ahead
 
Let's see if I understand. (?==) matches, but does not consume, an equals sign. Then [a-zA-Z0-9.-]+ matches one or more letters/digits/dots/hyphens. But isn't this a contradiction? Those two together would only match a character that is both an equals sign and a letter/digit/dot/hyphen at the same time.
 
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