Here's an opportunity to act upon the thing we discussed during the room meeting. MalikBrahimi, what gives you the impression that you can't ask Python questions in the Python room? We want to encourage an open and friendly environme-- oh, it's not a Python question. Never mind.
I am trying to accept input from Python, am using Sublime Text 3. I am following stackoverflow.com/questions/70797/… but after pressing Enter it inserts new line instead of executing the program. What could be the problem
This is definitely not the place to explain the sort of thing covered in junior-high Sunday school classes, so I'll resist the temptation.. morning cabbage for all!
What happened to the good old days of just smashing the keyboard until the computer did what you wanted? Oh no wait... I think that's still a technique in use...
Devs kept doing it so eventually they decided just to make golfing languages out of keyboard-smash syntax. I mean, have you seen the shortest codes on golf these days?
@DSM I was looking at some Jelly code the other day... At least - the author said it was code... I thought Tony the Pony was coming for me after referring to that html regex post so much...
@DSM "I've managed to get this Javascript/Python/C/whatever code down to 90bytes!" is more impressive than "Hey look 7 bytes of characters you'd never normally find/use on a keyboard - here's an essay explaining what that 7 bytes does!" :)
@DSM I should just create a language called "golfer" and it takes a code golf question number and nicks any working answers already present and runs those in the language given :)
Ahhh... but - by then KevinScript (tm) shall be here to rule them all... so not worth it...
It is annoying for sure but I think that is a good example to the harsh environment chat/the main site has sometimes. "down vote due to lack of effort"
Very true. Its more just the way it can be read. Its not too bad, just saw it as a good example of the tone discussion we had yesterday during the meeting.
@davidism Thank you for the link to my question, but still unsure about it, but as you mentioned it was a recently asked question and I would not be following the chat room rules. Should I ask you on my original question or the post you linked to as I am still getting confused with the matter?
Posting a new question with "I asked a question about this code previously, and the answers fixed problem X, but now I'm getting problem Y" is fine. And in fact it's far better than the usual alternative of "ask the answerer follow-up questions, stringing them along and never giving them an accept". I guess it's a little skeezy if you copy-paste the code that fixes X without mentioning your old post in your new post.
I'll take a little skeeze over thirty minutes of "one more thing..." though
@mp252 You just have to give it some time on the main site to get as many eyes on the question in a space where they can get credit for answering the question. All about that rep life.
And if I had marked it as a duplicate, it would be closed, I just left a comment because I don't really have time to dig through your post and figure out if it really is a duplicate.
Progress meeting. Boss' boss' boss doesn't seem very interested in the 300 hour task I'm working on, but is very pleased about the fifteen minute task I completed last week.
Lesson: end users don't give a dang about how many man-hours a feature required; they care about how it improves their experience.
The 300 hour task only improves user experience in the sense that it reduces the likelihood that the whole site permanently 404s because the regulatory standards committee crushed our server into a cube and threw it into the ocean
Our server is already a cube, but they'll crush it anyway on the principle of the thing.
When question askers give woefully incomplete code with no justification, you have to ask yourself how much begging will be required to get something useful out of them. At least with "I am legally not allowed to give you an MCVE" you know where you stand: no amount of begging will work.
Save for begging in the form of lobbying congress to repeal all NDA laws
@toonarmycaptain I assume you are asking this because you're in UTC+7, planning on having a 1:30 AM snack, and decided this would be an excellent time to coordinate an Earth sandwich with a UTC - 5 conspirator.
But that also says “I cannot give you more information, and I don’t want to bother trying to reproduce the problem in a MCVE, so help me anyway”
(The question was basically about “If I do X, Y should happen but that doesn’t work. Why?” and then I said that that’s exactly what happens, asking for more information about the specific problem that could cause this)
As someone who has trouble letting go of bad questions, I appreciate a nice objective indicator that it's time to abandon ship, such as "I can't give you more information than I already have"
NDA-bound askers drag down the average quality of questions, but drag up the average quality of my daily experience.
The usual response to "I can't share, there's an NDA" is "get a consultant" and as a consultant, that worries me because there's some times where I'd definitely need SO's help.
Unless there's any potential clients in here, in which case, I'm an expert. Ignore the above message.
I want to listen to the call to the DMV. "Hi I want to deregister my car." "Has it been sold, stolen, written off?" "No, I launched it near Mars." "I don't have a procedure for that. Please hold for my supervisor."
Alternatively: "No, I launched it near Mars." [completely unimpressed] "Fill out this form and turn it in down the hall in the space travel sub-department"
What if the car he is sending is an autobot who got lost on Earth and is now being reunited with his family on Mars, the exact location of which the rover found out!?
This isnt a python question but Im pretty sure this is a question straight from a homework assignment asking how to do questions 0 to 17.... stackoverflow.com/questions/48649794/…
If OP is not a troll, they seem to be operating under the assumption that we all know exactly what labs they're talking about. Theory: the assignment instructions say "if you have trouble, ask on StackOverflow" without explaining that SO is not the dedicated website for that textbook
A simple example:
popen = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=True, shell=True)
for stdout_line in iter(popen.stdout.readline, ""): # how to add popen.stderr.readline check?
yield stdout_line
We read from popen.stdout, yet we also wan...
Just was trying to think of a way of just adding a column, sorting on that, then dropping it again... but that may well be better overall because of how things work anyway
@DSM took me a bit to work it out - but they should be together based on the ordering of the key's appearance in the frame - not the value of the key itself...
@Code-Apprentice I interpret this as "given two objects that both implement a blocking read method, how can I read both at the same time and yield whichever one stops blocking first?"
I think Martijn has gone on record as saying that he doesn't have a worldwide exclusive license to use the small ninja avatar, and so we should not accost other small ninjas and accuse them of being big phonies when we see them on the street. Paraphrasing.
Yours is better than Justin's but worse than marmeladze's. Yours returns a concatenation of exactly two words, when OP wants the potential for far more, such as "howwhywhatwho". They probably also want to ensure that there aren't any duplicates, such as "whowho". Marmeladze's avoids duplicates and yours doesn't.
Before I knew sample existed I would get N non-duplicate items randomly from a list with random.shuffle(seq); print(seq[:n]). But I suspect that's inefficient
random.sample should be asymptotically linear to the sample size (in worst case, the random algorithm could repeatedly choose already choosen elements from the population but that won’t weigh too much)
The other branch copies the population in a list and then basically probes one item from it which is then swapped to the end to avoid duplicates. I guess this is a micro optimization which uses knowledge about how sets and lists are implemented..
I would assume that creating a list out of a sequence is actually better than O(len(sequence)). Sequences are likely arrays with consecutive memory anyway, so that can be copied as a block.
Yeah, using shuffling for sampling is perfectly fine. I’d say that’s the usual approach in more native languages (at least that’s how I do it and how I’ve seen it being done in C all the time)
memcpy will be a lot faster than iterating a sequence of the same list doing whatever :P
But we’re micro optimizing here anyway. None of that matters :D
alriiight. I'm going to try to put together an MCVE for something I'm not convinced is the only way to do this, and we're going to constructively criticize my MCVE and hopefully help me in my dilemma
Now. Because I'm using requests.Session, I believe my mocking has to be done within the session adapter. So far, I've managed to get it working like this:
Among these, the efficiencies from best to worst are: constant, logarithmic, linear, quadratic. But towards the left of the graph we can see that quadratic beats the other three for small Ns, and linear beats logarithmic and constant for small Ns, and logarithmic beats constant for small Ns.
In other words, the less efficient algorithms can be faster than the more efficient ones.
My issue is that it seems like I have to hook everything using mock:// so it uses that particular mock adapter? I've tried with the context manager in my fixture, and I can't get it to hook in to mocking the request inside session
Yeah all of these lines might intersect at totally different points depending on the constant coefficients which are traditionally ignored during complexity analysis
They might even intersect to the left of the Y axis, which would mean e.g. that there are quadratic algorithms that are always slower than their linear counterparts
Also, there are other factors which are important when saying whether something is efficient or not. You likely wouldn’t use a super fast algorithm, if it wasted hundreds of gigabytes of memory every minute. So memory efficiency is important, and I/O efficiency, network, … you get the idea
@ZackTarr Consider two algorithms: a constant one that takes ten seconds, and a linear one that takes 12 + N seconds. If you graph both of these, the lines intersect at N = -2.
@Aran-Fey I think then we'd have to call them rays instead of lines. But yeah, it's valid to say "it's meaningless to consider behavior to the left of the y axis so we'll just not draw anything there"
@poke no need to apologize. Threw it up to the room to see if anyone found a nice way to do it that maybe did not require that mock:// hook. It's not horrible and seems like I'm only doing it in one place when I'm crafting my mock...
@AndrasDeak Flat is actually such a terrible word for it because it’s absolutely not flat. Do people never try to drive around on their bike? There are hills everywhere.
@ZackTarr I know....They need to fund this person to launch the rocket, and provide the video equipment to film the entire thing, so that he and the rest of the flat earthers can finally see that the world is in fact....not flat.
If atoms are points, then the Earth still isn't flat because you need an infinite amount of points to make a flat line and we only have 10**50 atoms, which is well short of infinity
@poke Because for any points A and B on a line, then (A+B)/2 must also be on the line, and therefore... Hang on, I used to know the rest of this proof. Has anybody got a high school geometry textbook I can leaf through?
it means I wrote the bug down before having dinner so that if zzzeek happens to be not so busy he can test it on some code that he's having or then frown, shake head and groan... which is ok
> When geometry was first formalised by Euclid in the Elements, he defined a general line (straight or curved) to be "breadthless length" with a straight line being a line "which lies evenly with the points on itself".[5] These definitions serve little purpose since they use terms which are not, themselves, defined. In fact, Euclid did not use these definitions in this work and probably included them just to make it clear to the reader what was being discussed.
> In modern geometry, a line is simply taken as an undefined object with properties given by axioms,[6] but is sometimes defined as a set of points obeying a linear relationship when some other fundamental concept is left undefined.
In the stream, you can see the clouds streaming out of the vessel. This confuses the sky into thinking that the ship belongs there, preventing gravity from yanking it back down.
Holy shit… is there anything useful in there for when there’s actual stuff going to happen on Mars, or is this just Elon’s way of sticking a flag pole into the ground?
This was great. Thanks to my general lack of interest I had no idea about the mission details. "Oh, so it's a test flight, neat. Oh, they're cheering a lot, must be the first test of the missile. Oh, they've got one of those cars aboard, to test what it'll be like to take to Mars? Oh yam, they're taking it to Mars"
> the general consensus is that the payload won't be in orbit around Mars, it will be in an eliptical orbit around the sun and 'touch' the area of space that Mars orbits within. Reaching an orbit around Mars requires much more fuel
@poke It would be pretty neat if they had some experimental Xenon ion thrusters hidden aboard, so they could eventually put it into Mars orbit, or something. Or return to earth, this proving superior mileage.