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1:09 AM
Could someone tell me what the difference between file = open('somefile.txt', 'r') and with open('result-1.txt', 'w') as file: is?
 
the latter involves the use of a context manager
you'll want to use that
 
1:25 AM
Ok thanks.
 
@Simon Also, the 1st opens the file for reading, the 2nd for writing. ;)
 
Simple mistake. Both were supposed to be write.
@piRSquared Not quite sure how that helps.
 
1:45 AM
It explains what a context manager is to some extent. A context manager implements the methods __enter__ and __exit__. So in your example with open('result-1.txt', 'w') as file: The open implements __enter__ and __exit__. The __enter__ method gets called when entering the scope of the with and __exit__ gets called when exiting the scope of the with. open's methods do stuff to ensure the file handle is closed when __exit__ gets called.
It becomes a safe way to use open because we always know the file handle will be closed afterwards and we don't have to remember to close it.
 
So does that mean it is best to use when handling multiple files (ie 100 at a time)?
 
totally yes. that's a huge safety net.
 
A while back I did a web-scraping with bs4 and it had file problems
I did not use that method so it may be worth going back to it implementing my new found knowledge.
How about looping replacing the for statement for example?
 
wim
>>> reversed([1,2,3]) == reversed([1,2,3])
False
reversed iterators memory locations comparison I guess
 
2:01 AM
Yes
list(reversed([1,2,3])) == list(reversed([1,2,3]))
True
 
Tim Peters just answered a language design question: stackoverflow.com/questions/47585367/…
 
@PM2Ring how did you get the information so quickly? Oh, I guess just watch the python tag /facepalm. yeah, i'm tired.
 
@PM2Ring awesome (also his comment)
 
I'm still waiting for Ray Hettinger to reply to my comment on his recent answer where he used os.system instead of subprocess. chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/40168892#40168892
 
2:27 AM
Rhubarb all.
 
CABBAGE
Git repo all ready to go for AoC tonight: github.com/codeguru42/aoc2017
 
3:16 AM
Yet another "variable variables" question. I'm getting sick of seeing bad advice from Ajax1234 stackoverflow.com/questions/47585899/…
 
3:27 AM
hello guys i'm looking for UTM (Unierstal Turing Machine) binary adittion substration and multiplicacion
 
 
2 hours later…
5:11 AM
@eduardo2207fromPanama did you try google?
 
wim
5:48 AM
@PM2Ring I find Tim's answer quite unconvincing. This should still be implemented via __len__, and just mentioned that it may not be accurate in the Queue docs.
 
whew! Finally got it. Definitely need to rethink my approach if I am going to be competitive for the top 100.
To start with, I need a test bed that I can drop the examples into to run my solution against.
 
6:11 AM
@wim Is there a Room 6 leaderboard?
oh...starboard...
 
If anyone feels like debugging a regex and RFC 5987 while I'm asleep, that would be really helpful to Werkzeug. github.com/pallets/werkzeug/issues/1091#issuecomment-321394123
 
very unclear, no desire to clarify. stackoverflow.com/questions/47586825/…
 
wim
7:12 AM
@Code-Apprentice yeah but haskell guys aren't allowed in
 
 
1 hour later…
8:31 AM
no effort, repost already closed question stackoverflow.com/questions/47589189/…
 
8:43 AM
is it a bad design to call one api several times with different set of parameters to get data or should i merge all that data into another api and let the server do all the processing and return me that huge data in for python
 
9:25 AM
cbg-ning
 
9:41 AM
cbg
 
9:51 AM
cabbage
 
cabage
 
Cabbage!
 
10:20 AM
cbg
 
10:32 AM
Cbg
 
 
2 hours later…
12:15 PM
cgb
why is my VGG19 model overfitting so much?
 
12:32 PM
Probably because your hyperparameters are off. Can you retrain it with a gridsearch?
 
hm...
I'm not doing any hyperparameter tunning right now
so yes, maybe I should take a look
by the way, isn't gridsearch slow AF?
 
Yes, absolutely. especially if you test multiple combinations of parameters at once
But it is still faster than trying hyperparameters by hand, since it runs just fine during nightime, on multiple cores, etc.
 
12:48 PM
well I'm using my GPU
but yes I get the point
 
Today's Advent of Code puzzle seems a little disappointing compared to last year's
Doesn't even require any nested loops I could screw up
 
there's still a whole month
 
1:16 PM
Enough chances left for you to screw up.
 
I've already screwed up :p
 
1:34 PM
My first submission on AoC 01 was wrong. Good start for the month.
 
Good job Kevin.
 
It's because I... Hmm, my "add spoiler" button is missing. I think Greasemonkey borked it when it updated without my permission.
The script name is greyed out in the list of scripts. That's about as helpful as a "check engine" light.
 
greyed out is disabled
click it
 
Ok, I have done so. It's working now.
Curious that this only happened for one out of my ~ten scripts.
My AoC 1.1 implementation failed because I view spoiler
 
6 mins ago, by poke
Good job Kevin.
 
1:48 PM
In my defense, view spoiler
 
To be fair, view spoiler
 
That standard is less well-known in Windows land, I expect, since there's less of a culture of piping together text commands in a way that makes it awkward if two lines merge into one thanks to concatenation of multiple outputs
Obviously Santa's workshop uses Linux exclusively because they make everything in-house and it would be impossible* to use a proprietary OS such as windows
(*even more impossible than crafting a modern CPU using only a wooden mallet)
 
2:25 PM
hello
 
Greetings
 
inb4 package error
 
2:43 PM
hello i have a question
I want to count the number of all the rows (lines) of my csv file
i wrote this code but it gives the number of values in every row

with open(filename, newline='') as csvfile:
reader = csv.reader(csvfile, delimiter= ',')
for row in reader:
print(','.join(row))
print(len(row), row)
how can i count the stored lines in my csv file
 
I guess my pre-AoC: Python Edition is finally getting around to fixing the mess IT has made of my Windows Python installation
They installed 32-bit instead of 64-bit like I asked for, and they apparently managed to set the permissions so that administrators can't uninstall software, and I don't have permissions to change my path
tears all around
 
@AhmyOhlin I'm thinking something like number_of_rows = sum(1 for row in reader)
 
@excaza you just need to turn it off and on again
 
@Kevin Thank you
It works
 
2:56 PM
Possibly you could do the same by iterating over csvfile directly, and save yourself a line of code. Assuming that the number of lines in a csv file is the same as the number of rows in a csv file. I'm not 100% confident that there isn't some corner case where a newline inside a string can make them different, or something.
 
You could count the new lines
open('test.txt').read().count('\n') + 1
 
If I knew the file was small enough that memory wasn't an issue, I might do len(file.readlines())
 
@Kevin there might be header lines
I don't know if csv.reader handles that and how
 
3:12 PM
docs.python.org/2/library/csv.html#csv.Sniffer.has_header tries to detect the presence of a header, but I don't know if the reader object invokes this behavior by default, and I don't know how the detection would work
The truth is out there. Specifically, in the source code.
 
This should iterate one line at a time. However, is there a better way to create a quick file line generator?
def rdln():
    with open('test.txt') as f:
        flag = True
        while flag:
            line = f.readline()
            if line:
                yield line
            else:
                flag = False

sum(1 for _ in rdln())
 
for line in f: yield line?
 
Yeah! Much better!
def rdln():
    with open('test.txt') as f:
        for line in f:
            yield line

sum(1 for _ in rdln())
 
with open('test.txt') as f: yield from f
 
oh is this a competition?
 
3:18 PM
It's never a competition... yet it's always a competition
 
DSM
Morning cabbage for all.
 
I'm not sure I see the utility in defining a function here when the alternative is 66% shorter
with open("test.txt") as f:
    result = sum(1 for line in f)
 
We're solving Advent of Code. Join our leaderboard: 188337-fb9fe7a1
18
 
I notice that the leaderboard from last year is still there
 
I’m also confused by the list of two leaderboards and I have no actual idea what the current one is
 
3:21 PM
you should add +1 otherwise you get the wrong value
¨ with open("test.txt") as f:
result = sum(1 for line in f) + 1
 
Marcus made a new one because he has a new account.
 
recbg
 
cbg
breakfast rbrb
 
the lbbeet one is the new one, right?
 
Yeah
 
3:23 PM
@AhmyOhlin Strange, I get the correct value without the +1.
#create a file with three lines
with open("test.txt", "w") as file:
    file.write("a \n b \n c")

#read file
with open("test.txt") as f:
    result = sum(1 for line in f)
    print(result)
Result: 3
 
tech lead in my company tried to merge one branch into another.. some tests were failing so what he did? he fixed the issue? no. he marked them with:

@unittest.skip('Might be redundant')
 
that's duck tape right there
 
so annoying
 
why there's people with 100+ points in AoC?
today's the first day, and maximum reward is 100 per day
 
x2 stars
 
3:33 PM
i tested too but i replace test.text with test.csv and i got wrong result. i fixed it with +1
@Kevin
 
@AndrasDeak then how can someone have 197 stars
 
That is highly concerning to me.
 
@Neoares 197 points?
 
A fix that fixes a problem, without understanding why, is just a bug waiting to happen in a different set of circumstances
 
DSM
@Kevin: don't be concerned. Other people can have stars too. :-P
 
3:34 PM
suppose they got their first star fastest and their second star 4th fastest
that's 100+97 which is approx. 197
 
@AndrasDeak yes, points
but I thought only 1 puzzle was released
oh wait
> Two puzzles will be made available on each day in the advent calendar; the second puzzle is unlocked when you complete the first.
 
perhaps you were wrong, and also I said "x2 stars" to which message you replied directly
 
DSM
@AhmyOhlin: if Python thinks your file has N lines according to its definition, and you think it has a different number, it's not Python who is wrong.
 
I blame a header line ^
 
But a header line would make Python think the file had N rows when really it had N-1 rows. Adding a +1 to the script would make it even wronger.
 
3:36 PM
add the human component
 
wrongest
wrongier
 
DSM
I have to admit I enjoy the chasm between the kind of problems I need to address professionally and the kind of "what beginner error is being made?" questions that sometimes come up here.
 
My professional duties have a flagrant lack of tidy self-enclosed puzzles with precise objective solutions
 
sounds like finding that one weak solder in the LHC vs "you have your sandals swapped on your feet"
 
@AndrasDeak is that where you work? Cern? How Long?
 
3:41 PM
never
 
that's a very short time
 
that's how we roll at the LHC
 
laurel
 
import csv

#create a file with one row across three lines
with open("test.csv", "w") as file:
    file.write('a,"b\nc\nd",e')

with open("test.csv") as file:
    print(sum(1 for line in file))
#result: 3

with open("test.csv") as file:
    reader = csv.reader(file)
    print(sum(1 for line in reader))
#result: 1
 
(I'm a condensed matter physicist at not CERN)
 
3:42 PM
Conclusion: if you want row count and not line count, don't try to count rows using the file object directly
 
DSM
IIRC ThiefMaster works at CERN, or did, anyhow.
 
neat
 
There's only two kinds of physicists in the world... those who work at CERN and those who work at not CERN
The Physicist Tautology
 
perhaps I should start calling my workplace notCERN
 
All I can think of right now is SERN, the shadowy group of physicists that serve as the principal antagonists in Steins;Gate
I imagine they meet up once a month with CERN to exchange improperly addressed mail
 
3:47 PM
i think the problem is the header line
 
@AhmyOhlin that was strangely appropriate for both streams of conversation.
 
DSM
@piRSquared: huh, good catch.
 
@Kevin So if you were hiring and had to choose between a master googler/copier/paster versus someone who has good common sense, disciplined, can solve challenging puzzles but has never heard of Stackoverflow, who would you choose?
 
Depends on the project and the team ...
 
disciplined?
oh, "never heard of SO", OK
 
3:57 PM
I have hired 0 people ever so I have no practical experience in the field, but I imagine it depends on what their duties are. Fixing bugs in the legacy CRUD app requires different skills than contributing to the design of a new system, for instance
Nobody wants to admit it, but there are positions that are best filled out by anybody other than the mythical 10x programmer that came out of the womb writing log(log(N)) sorting algorithms
 
I'm trying to ask questions that lead to the contradiction of an assumption that search skills are most important... however, I'm finding that difficult
 
DSM
Being able to do good research is such an OP bonus skill that it can compensate for a substantial difference in creativity.
 
Here is the most effective takedown of my statement: "Kevin, you have had exactly one job since graduating college, so your opinion on how things exist in the industry in general should be taken with a grain of salt"
 
Your statement has merit regardless of you. I'm attempting to think through a take down and it's difficult regardless of you.
 
It's not my code but someone I know, who wrote it
Before I would say wow
but now, I'm saying errh...
 
4:05 PM
Ok, rephrased: "Kevin, your observation generalizes from the single point of sample data available to you. i.e. the one job you've had, and this is a fallacy"
Hmm, but this assumes that my job is the only data point I used
Where in reality I could also be using data from the many programmers I know online, and the comments I read on tech sites, etc. Weaker than direct sampling of workplaces, but they're not nothing
 
DSM
@AndyK: that's.. something.
 
@DSM I did not write it but I said to the person who did it, that it can be improved
and reduced
 
DSM
And fixed.
 
@DSM it is
@DSM too.
@DSM another friend who came it, tried to run it and ... it did not work
 
It doesn't help that there are a million different metrics that could define "importance", and a million different ways to define the set of "developer skills"
Maybe breathing is the #1 most important skill, because without it you can only do about thirty seconds of productive work before dying
The most thorough takedown would require an enumeration of all one trillion possible interpretations of my statement
I bet there are several dupe targets for Python: Shortest possible string-representation of set of integers but my search of "python integer runs" returns a hopelessly large number of irrelevant results because "run" has a more common programming-and/or-math-related definition than "consecutive sequence of related values"
this exact question comes up like once a month so I'm really rustled that I can't find one
 
4:23 PM
run-length encoding?
 
Mmm, that's conventionally used for consecutive-exactly-equal values, when we're more interested in identifying consecutive values that differ by 1
 
ah, sorry, I didn't read the link
 
@davidism how can I join your leaderboard?
 
Little does OP know that finding the shortest string that unambiguously identifies a number or set of numbers is unsolvable in general, since "the first set that cannot be identified by a string that is 78 characters long" is a paradox
 
@Neoares Go to adventofcode.com/2017/leaderboard/private and paste in the leaderboard code
 
4:31 PM
Uh, assuming that sets are orderable. Not completely sure about that.
 
@Rawing ok thanks
and why I have 8 stars
 
Finite sets are orderable, I suppose, since you can turn them into tuples, and tuples are orderable.
 
if I only have 2 :/
 
Perhaps you have eight points. You can get more than one point for getting a star.
 
oh, I think the 8 means another thing
oh I see!!!!
it's like global points but for the private leaderboard
so we're competing between us
 
4:34 PM
rb folks
 
rbrb, Andy
@Neoares if you click on the links on the leaderboard page you might be enlightened
for instance the "ordering" link explains the kind of scores you can use
reading everything on the site might prove fruitful going forward
 
@AndrasDeak I did
after asking here
 
:-|
 
5:02 PM
When I ask you something that I could Google it's because I like you and want to hear how you explain it
Granted this is a less satisfying explanation when the question is asked to the room in general and not a specific person
 
5:13 PM
group hug?
 
DSM
This was kind of interesting.
def fstring(s):
    scope = inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_locals
    return ''.join([
        text + format(eval(field, scope), format_spec)
        for text, field, format_spec, _ in string.Formatter().parse(s)])
Maybe something like ^ that?
(I haven't considered corner cases or anything, just wanted to get the eval-like behaviour.)
 
eval-like behaviour? You nailed it with eval ;)
 
DSM
:-P
 
I feel like that eval answer (not DSM's) could be exploited similar to SQL injection, but I'm too busy wrangling this regex to check right now.
11 hours ago, by davidism
If anyone feels like debugging a regex and RFC 5987 while I'm asleep, that would be really helpful to Werkzeug. https://github.com/pallets/werkzeug/issues/1091#issuecomment-321394123
 
I'm not sure anybody else is interested in it, though...
 
DSM
5:20 PM
@davidism: who you gonna call ;-)
 
hehe :)
 
@AndrasDeak feels empty
 
no I don't
 
:D
@AndrasDeak oh sry, they've found one fsh
 
if you mean the live stream, the diversity varies from site to site (i.e. day to day). Sometimes it's all full of corals, other times sponges, sometimes it's all barren with minimal fauna to see
 
DSM
5:28 PM
What should empty and all-NA series sum to? Opinions are being solicited.
 
that suggests that 0 and nan, respectively, are not a straightforward choice
s/straightforward/only straightforward/
I believe that's what numpy does
 
DSM
Nope, np.nansum([np.nan]) = 0.
 
but...isn't that the sum of an empty array?
also nansum says it treats nans as zeros, so that's explicitly supposed to be 0
my point is that I'd expect np.sum([]) to be 0 and np.sum([np.nan]) to be nan which seems to be the case
i.e. point 3, apparently
I don't see why they say this choice is "But somewhat inconsistent and unique to pandas ?"
 
DSM
Look at it this way: pd.Series([stuff]).sum() is neither np.sum nor np.nansum.
 
otherwise if you slice an empty subframe and sum it, you'd get nans out of nowhere (as noted on the link too of course), which I don't like
@DSM yeah, I'm aware of that
 
DSM
5:36 PM
Some people really don't like that.
 
ooh, you mean that's what the inconsistency is referring to
>>> np.sum([])
0.0
>>> np.sum([np.nan])
nan
wouldn't it^ be np.sum?
I'm probably missing your point
 
DSM
In [79]: np.sum([np.nan, 0])
Out[79]: nan
 
ah, whereas pd.Series.sum returns 0
now that is silly :P
 
DSM
If we'd used a non-nan value for missing data in the first place this wouldn't be such an issue (and pandas2 will use bitmasking, IIRC.)
 
would there be a semantic difference if nan was a different kind of nan?
 
DSM
5:41 PM
We wouldn't escape the semantic question about the sum of missing data, but we wouldn't have a direct collision.
 
OK, that's what I thought
I'm already unhappy with what pd.Series.sum does, so it's unsurprising that I prefer #3 :)
 
wim
bikeshedding alert
 
this might be a bit more than that: do we want your harley to fit in the shed or not?
 
wim
The empty sum is 0, the empty product is 1. As soon as people start arguing over edge cases with nan, it's time to #unsubscribe and get some real work done
 
The operation should print "please don't try this again" the first time, and raise an Exception every time after that.
 
5:44 PM
isn't one of the many points of pandas to handle missing data conveniently?
 
wim
missing data should be handled with masks, not nan
 
We've coddled our data scientists for too long
 
wim
The whole concept of nan is a mistake in IEEE 754 and we would be better off without it in the first place
 
we'd have to trash inf for that too
 
wim
good
inf is also "not a number".
 
5:46 PM
yup
 
Summing up NaNs will now delete a random file from your system
 
wim
zero division and overflow should raise exceptions
 
DSM
Unfortunately I do real work on datasets with lots of missing values, wim, so the decisions taken here actually affect my codes.
 
time to flip the tables until they stop giving you missing data ;)
 
ast.parse('[1]') returns an ast node... what do I do with it after that? Assuming I assigned this to a name, is there a way to evaluate it to get the list [1]?
 
5:49 PM
If data is missing, how can you stop getting it? [philosoraptor.png]
@piRSquared Perhaps you could use literal_eval instead.
 
Air
 
This is coming from an answer @unutbu left on a question of mine stackoverflow.com/a/47479458/2336654
 
Air
Excuse Me Sirs I Am MAkeing WEB APP and I Require Gear Helps
 
It looks like it ought to be the right answer but I can't complete what's necessary to make it work
 
Good pic.
 
5:51 PM
The vaporwave aesthetic is the only good thing that has come out of our industry in the last thirty years
 
Air
this is more security training by the way
I am trying to figure out what's in the head
I think it may be a bomb
 
DSM
Someone set him up, I guess.
 
I get that reference.
 
Air
haha yes we aged masters of the tubes can comprehend all references
> The best approach (of those listed below) toward ongoing maintenance when using third party applications is to:
> ...
> B) Inform management that the application is completely secure.
idk why it's telling me this is the wrong answer
 
5:59 PM
There's no way that's not vaporwave. Whoever made your security training was listening to vaporwave.
 
@piRSquared: compile and eval, but it's not going to be much better than just eval-ing the input directly.
 
Air
 
6:15 PM
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAooooooooooooooooooCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC‌​CCCCCC
 
[passes you a lozenge]
Advent of Code is going to contribute to my bad sleep cycle, I just know it. "stay up until midnight so you can get a higher score for tomorrow's challenge", says Kevin-in-a-sith-robe
 
If I get through it up to Christmas this year, I'll consider that a win. Last year, I think I dropped out in the second week because I was behind from the start.
 
I'm hoping to match my previous performance of "only got really really stuck on like one or two of them"
 
wait... I didn't read the rules. You get scored based on how soon after question release you answer the question? Bah... that's going to kill me. I can't help but be suckered into the gamesmanship
I'm going to try an unread that
I'd rather not have that knowledge
 
There are other scoring methods, it can be set from the leaderboard.
 
6:25 PM
Well you get scored based on how many people answered before you. So we could all agree to wait twelve hours before starting, and the outcome would be same except we'd all be more well-rested.
AoC day 0: use game theory to explain why this is not likely to happen
 
And day 0 I'm stuck (-:
 
Short answer: because backstabbing is so dang profitable.
 
Does it turn over based on UTC?
 
I'm in EST and the countdown is counting down to local midnight. So it either turns over based on local midnight, or based on EST
 
I'm pacific and will turn over at 9 pm
so yeah, EST
 
6:29 PM
Spoilering my probably dumb question since it's related to today's AoC
 
I'm on an airplane at that time. I'll have to pay for internet now.
 
I considered doing it like this but ultimately did some modulus trickery
 
Did you get more points awarded due to the cleverness of using modulus trickery?
 
If anything, modulus is less Pythonic* than some cool functional approach that uses itertools or something, and barely any arithmetic
(*In the sense of the popular conception of Pythonicness that loads on gobs of list comprehensions and such, rather than anything related to actual good design principles)
 
@Kevin I'd love that (6 AM here at posting time...)
 
6:35 PM
Pointer arithmetic is only laudable if you're working in C
 
Whoops, just realized part 1 didn't need groupby. Oh well.
 
I should github mine too I guess
 
I guess my groupby solution isn't too bad.
 
@Kevin interesting, thanks! Does zip just stop once it runs out of objects it can zip together?
 
Yeah.
 
6:37 PM
oh, duh, it's the first line in the doc
:|
 
If you want to zip objects of unequal length, there's a function for that too. I want to say... itertools.izip_longest? Something like that.
 
Add your AoC solution repo to the wiki.
12
 
@Kevin zip_longest
izip might be python 2?
(python3 zips are i to begin with)
 
Yeah could be
Hmm, the "create new file" button in github doesn't appear if your repository doesn't have any files yet. Paradoxical.
 
cabbage o/
 
6:41 PM
I know, I'll just manually navigate to https://github.com/kms70847/Advent-of-Code-2017/new/master via the url bar. Heh heh heh.
 
What a hacker.
 
 
ohno
I have a question I posted about a month ago, but it didn't get many views =/ is it ok to ask about it here?
 
Yeah
 
It's this one: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46964733/how-to-use-pythons-type-hints-with-decorated-functions-and-generators

basically, I'm confused about the interaction between decorated functions and PEP484 type hints
when the decorator changes the type of the function
(I'm confused because the PEP itself doesn't say anything on the matter, and IDEs don't seem to react to the typing =/)
 
6:50 PM
I'm leaning towards "return value of the decorated function" because when the user calls the function, that's what they'll get.
 
If the decorator changes the signature, it should change the annotations.
 
Air
ahhhh I offset part 1 using next() but that is cumbersome for part 2 ahhhhh
 
AoC Day 1 done
 
Maybe I'll actually have free time to do AoC in Rust this year. ... No I won't. ;_;
 
There's no shame in rewriting your AoC part one code so that it plays nicely with AoC part two :-)
 
6:52 PM
Nah. Overwrite and forget.
 
That's what I did. Originally hardcoded the offset at 1, then had to go back and change it to a variable.
 
Air
the shame is if I just loop next() len/2 times
 
I had a nice tee'd solution at first
 
Air
I REFUSE
 
hmm, that makes sense, thanks! =)
 
6:52 PM
Nice thing about the modulus approach is that it only required me to change that one token, and the function argument list
 
Air
ok ok islice
guys it has been literally over a year since I used itertools this is so great I am so hyped but I have to get back to my security training that was due yesterday D:
 
Pfft
Only yesterday? Amateur.
My security training was due 7 months ago.
 
@Ffisegydd join the new leaderboard.
 
Air
damn that must be why you make the big bucks
 
The gov security training site I have to use is still really easy to cheat directly to the certificate.
 
DSM
6:59 PM
I'm off today, so I can do what I almost never get a chance to do and go to the gym in the midafternoon. Exercise-so-I-can-eat-non-rhubarb-based-foods rhubarb for all!
 
The only security training I need is "how to avoid the security guards that have been trying to escort me off the premises since I'm six months late on my security training"
brb hiding under desk
 
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