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00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

00:10
@wim I have quasi-hacked this in pyparsing, so that exception chaining works in Py3 but at least doesn't break under Py2. care to look?
wim
wim
Hmm, yes - did you have a way that doesn't use exec?
in pytest-raisin is where it got me
00:50
idea: would be cool to make a small tool to anonymize a pandas dataframe, so that it is easy to show the dataframe in Pandas questions on SO, or otherwise copy it locally or something without the sensitive data
wim
wim
02:40
Setting __cause__ attr? Is that really all there is to it?
So setting err.__cause__ = None would suppress it?
Hey, it seems to work! Great, thanks!
WTF, default value of __cause__ is Ellipsis, lol. Seems hackish.
03:07
cbg
wim
wim
After more digging, it seems setting __cause__ to None works by side-effect (the action of doing that also sets __suppress_exception__ to True)
Hey Good morning People.. This is Geekdroid...
Anyone have some experience of sqlmap here?
wim
wim
>>> e = Exception()
>>> e.__cause__ is None
True
>>> e.__suppress_context__
False
>>> e.__cause__ = None
>>> e.__suppress_context__
True
@PaulMcG That's all really interesting, I learned something here - thanks for the tip
04:06
@wim That's strange:
>>> e = Exception()
>>> e2 = Exception()
>>> e.__cause__ = None
>>> e.__suppress_context__
True
>>> e2.__suppress_context__
False
>>> e == e2
False
>>> e
Exception()
>>> e2
Exception()
>>> e is e2
False
>>> e.__cause__ == e2.__cause__
True
>>> e.__cause__ is e2.__cause__
True
>>>
wim
wim
04:19
yep. spooky action at a distance.
Lol, exactly
04:32
This is strange, this guy, asked this question (now deleted):
He deleted it because he got down-voted i think
And he re-asked it here:
0
Q: Removing duplicate python 2D list values based on ranges

Arbazz Hussainwoot = [[2367, 2380],[2369, 2380],[2381,2390] woot[0] ==> [2367, 2380] woot[1] ==> [2369, 2380] woot[2] ==> [2381,2390] I Want to remove the duplicates based on the ranges, the first index that is woot[0] has range from 2367 to 2380 and woot[1] is from 2369 to 2380 & woot[2] has range from 23...

05:01
@U9-Forward mod flagged
wim
wim
05:42
@AndrasDeak since we were talking about it recently, there are important differences between pytest and python -m pytest (by design).
Thanks, will check it out
wim
wim
whether or not the project directory is prepended to sys.path happens to be a very important detail in testing, because it affects whether you're testing against the state of the cwd or the package as installed to the site.
05:59
cbg
06:12
The compiler now produces a SyntaxWarning when identity checks (is and is not) are used with certain types of literals (e.g. strings, ints). These can often work by accident in CPython, but are not guaranteed by the language spec. The warning advises users to use equality tests (== and !=) instead. (Contributed by Serhiy Storchaka in bpo-34850.)
Can someone explain to me what this actually means?
All I can graps from that is I should use if x == y: instead of if x is y:
wim
wim
good, because that's exactly what you should grasp from it :)
Should I see is and is not as deprecated now then?
wim
wim
06:22
No
Or better put, not to be used in any circumstances.
If not I'm not sure what the case is that I shouldnt be using them.
wim
wim
they are still used for some checks, most notably this one -> if thing is None:
read what you posted
06:22
Okay so for equality checks?
> with certain types of literals (e.g. strings, ints)
I'll read it and try and grasp it.
Then ^ never is
is is for checking if you have the same object. You almost never need it beyond None
So its telling us to use == and != because is is expensive?
wim
wim
actually is is cheaper
06:25
@misidentified nobody said that anywhere
wim
wim
all this confusion make me wonder whether is was really worth having in the language at all. it could be kicked out to a function like inspect.is(obj1, obj2) and people could just use == for comparisons with None too.
Could be.
From what I've just read by wim I'm guessing is is similar to === in other languages.
I blame other languages
wim
wim
it's actually a bit stronger than ===
=== is type + value equality
06:28
Or maybe lack of tutorials
Where as is checks if it refers to the same object in memory?
wim
wim
is means literally same object (same memory location)
strictly speaking, same id - which in theory doesn't have to be a memory location, can just be some unique "serial number"
My friend wrote some code to try and explain it to me, is he correct?
>>> for i in range(250, 290):
...     a = i
...     b = a + 1
...     b = b - 1
...     print(a is b)
...
True
True
True
True
True
True
True
False
False
False
False
...
wim
wim
if he's trying to explain that is is not reliable for integers then it's correct I guess
the new warning won't catch that, because it doesn't use literals
I like the idea, I usually do == anyway because of other languages.
Just need to remember is is still valid for things like None
with certain types of literals it doesn't even specify which types is what confuses me I think.
06:41
It lists a few...do you know what literals are?
I didn't actually check the change log myself, my friend pasted just that sentence.
And literals are something you don't always know the value of?
There's your problem
Is my definition of literals correct?
Getting on a bus, can't explain. It's completely wrong. Google it.
I just googled it, seems like they have the same definition as "hard coded" as in you can see them? They aren't represented by a variable.
06:55
cbg
@tripleee Thanks for commenting on the post, and thanks Bhargav for undeleting old one, and closing the new one as a dupe to the old one
@U9-Forward thank you for the original report and for following up here
@tripleee Lol, your welcome, :-)
@misidentified that seems like a reasonably accurate paraphrase
Is there a better way to express this code?
    if option == "add":
        lib.add(arguments, getcwd())
    elif option == "remove":
        lib.remove(arguments, getcwd())
    elif option == "install":
        lib.install(arguments, getcwd())
    elif option == "update":
        lib.update(arguments, getcwd())
@tripleee I am not sure should i use my hammer to close that...
@RichieBendall You maybe should first look at this:
You can probably use a dictionary, with add, remove, etc as keys.
you can use a dict to map strings to methods
07:20
@RichieBendall Thanks, you can delete the old one
@RichieBendall Try using:
d = {'add': lib.add, 'remove': lib.remove, 'install': lib.install, 'update': lib.update}
d.get('option')(arguments, getcwd())
Thanks! That's just what I needed.
@RichieBendall Good that it works, i am delighted to help :-)
07:56
rbrb
 
2 hours later…
09:49
@Aran-Fey just noticed - congrats on 20k! :)
Haha thanks, but I've been at 20k for a couple months already :P You'll see me hover around 20k a lot, because I give away all my excess rep :)
ahh... I was having a sense of deja vu... but thought I'd say it - if I hadn't already just in case :p
10:45
@RichieBendall You can simplify that by using getattr
Only as long as option names match attrs
Might be coincidence
good morning fellas
I hope we're fantastico today
@AndrasDeak True, and depending on where the option names come from, you may need to validate them before passing them to getattr.
11:57
@PM2Ring getattr might be a convenience, but already "whitelists" the acceptable stuff...
but if the names match etc.., then something like:
if op in {'add', 'remove', 'install', 'update'}:
    return getattr(lib, op)(arguments, getcwd())
wouldn't be an entirely bad idea
one could also argue that depending that what lib is - is that perhaps it should be a callable object itself that does validation and then you put that inside a __call__ method kind of thing.
m8_
m8_
Morning!
Any idea how I can have the lambda skip blank cells in the following:
`data = {'a':[10,20,30, 'four', 50]}
df = pd.DataFrame(data)

df.loc[:, 'data'] = df.loc[:, 'a'].apply(lambda x: x/100 if isinstance(x, int) else x)`
@JonClements It does, but if option is a string from untrusted user input, you do need to validate it. You may not want the user to select any method of lib. And of course if they select a non-callable attribute, an exception will be raised. BTW, the square brackets in your example probably should be parentheses. ;)
m8_
m8_
12:12
nvm
@PM2Ring indeed... and they are parentheses... you must have been looking at it wrong coughs
@m8_ Is pd.to_numeric(data['a'], errors='na') / 100 what you're after ?
Answering 2 HNQs on Physics (before they went hot) has done nice things for my rep this week. stackexchange.com/leagues/151/week/physics/2019-03-31/…
Starting to think you're our own local Hawking @PM2 :p
12:18
Not quite. But I'm a little more mobile than Hawking was. ;)
You need to put the voice on though to be credible :)
I could do that with my old Amiga 2000. AFAIK, it still works, I just need to get a monitor for it.
@PM2Ring That takes me back. I remember doing silly things with Amiga500s.
@toonarmycaptain you didn't have the 600 with the added memory thingy? Sheesh :p
@JonClements Hey, I was lucky to be able to scrounge cables and splitters to network a classroom to a single printer, so I wasn't complaining. SimCity worked...that was (mostly) what my primary school self cared about ;)
12:28
In that era - I also had an Atari ST 5200 (was it?) - it was vouched to be the best for interfacing with MIDI devices or something...
@JonClements My Dad had an AtariST (no idea which) that I remember playing Tetris on. And some MSX contraption that we used with an audio cassette player.
lol
I'm wanting to dig up my old ZX Spectrum now - not sure how I'd plug it into anything these days
I imagine that RF to HDMI cables exist?
@JonClements Yep, you can get VGA to HDMI adapters.
Was the speccy even VGA though?
@JonClements Y'all don't have TVs that still take RF? I assume (naiively?) that my TV that has a cable/antenna input would accept an RF signal? Or at least one modulated through those RF-RCA cables that video game consoles had?
12:36
@toonarmycaptain fairly sure if one could find a CRT or something it'd have that... but these days... nope... I haven't seen a TV set that accepts that natively - they'll have 3/4 hdmi ports and that's about it
I bought a 32" HD wide screen TV ~2002 for about £800... that one I think had things like multiple SCART cables (is that even a thing now) as well as video/audio things... (the one where video is green (I think?) and then you've got the left/right audio as white and red!?)
@JonClements Our year-old 40in has an RCA and a cable/antenna in...but we're in the US, so some of that might be region-specific.
Mind you - that thing was a heavy jobby... took me and two friends to just get it on the stand from the floor.
@toonarmycaptain it might be that the UK moved to digital stuff a little bit back... so it's redundant now
think the UK's even planning to stop all analogue radio transmissions or something as well - so you'll need a digital radio to receive it
@JonClements No more 007 N64 - truly an end of an era.
haha
I stopped buying games consoles after the SNES
oh no - wait, I did buy a PS2
didn't even time to play it though... probably got about 10 hours of GTA3 out of it... but it just sat there
Hello from Germany!
I am programming a lot of tools for myself in python for stock trading.
Therefore I want to ask if here's anyone programming stock analysis, backtests, scanners and more and likes to talk about experiences and solutions. Just private.
12:52
Hello. Stack Overflow is fully public.
Okay, I didn't mean a private chat, I meant that the programming is private and not for commercial stuff.
 
1 hour later…
14:02
Feel free to share your secret algorithm sauce for Pythonically wringing euros/dollars out of the global financial system
Good morning.
@PaulMcG Yes, it's possible here? Hehe ... hard work, even with lots of tools.
if low: buy()
if high: sell()
@QuestionC hahah
Hey, I have found one!
You're the master of trading algorithms!
14:50
Every time I click away from my IDE and come back, all the files in my project vanish until I restart.
Ooh now I'm getting "Error: Unspecified error"
Clearly a user error. What are you doing, interacting with your IDE? Just leave it alone and there will be no errors
I'm firing my cosmic ray gun (which emits cosmic rays) at my hard drive but I can't imagine that has anything to do with anything
I got it cheap at the estate sale of a daring space adventurer who didn't know that cosmic rays are an ineffective defense against moon monsters
15:09
Hello...really stuck here on a question I asked about unittesting a console app. Any one here to help?
@Aran-Fey You mean there will be no new errors
@NieSelam If you are referring to stackoverflow.com/questions/55501722/…, I don't think you can specify multiple return values like that.
I don't know much about unittesting, but I see there is a side_effect parameter that takes an iterable and causes the Mock object to return a different value each time it's called. Since you want input to return a different value each time, this seems like it would be useful.
However, I don't exactly know how you would specify this parameter from the patch decorator.
15:25
typing source code be like...
class _SpecialForm(_Final, _Immutable, _root=True):
    def __getitem__(self, parameters):
        if self._name == 'ClassVar':
            # do thing 1
        if self._name == 'Union':
            # do thing 2
        if self._name == 'Optional':
            # do thing 3
I wanna kms
@Kevin thanks. I did try side_effect but I just couldn't get it to work since it gives on value out of a list each time it is called on a test. The hard thing for me was to ask once then ask again then pass those values to the function to be tested.
I have something that I think is working. I will compose an answer shortly.
I'm not sure I understand what you mean by "pass those values to the function to be tested". add takes no arguments, so strictly speaking you are not passing it anything. Your test function should not take any arguments other than self and any mock objects given to it by the patch decorator.
That's why in my answer I deleted the parameters a and b from the testing method.
can you reply my question with what you have. I am curious. It might help
Ok, I have replied.
Anyone have experience with installing multiple python versions on Windows? Can I just download and install older python versions and they'll work, or am I gonna break something?
15:40
Kevin, you are a life saver!
i totally misunderstood side_effects until now.
@Aran-Fey I have both 2.7 and 3.something installed on Windows and they both work properly
Alright, that's reassuring
The only real frustration I've experienced is constantly forgetting which pip is in my PATH. Like a USB plug, I always guess wrong.
ya, tell me about it.
Just gotta be careful not to mess up my 3.4 install, which inexplicably is located at C:\Python27
15:43
I heard dockers are cool for version control / multie projects
I might have had to do something special to get C:\windows\py.exe to notice that I have both 2 and 3 available. Maybe it was a checkbox in the installer.
I honestly don't wanna learn a new technology (docker) for this... I've got half a mind to drop the project anyway, because typing is a train wreck
m8_
m8_
any suggestions for a good beginners tutorial for NLP?
Every time I see "NLP" my brain autocompletes it to "Ny Little Pony"
m8_
m8_
lmao
I needed that laugh today...
15:51
If things like typing.List and typing.Callable are called "generics", then what would you call typing.List[int] and typing.Callable[[], bool] (i.e. generics that already received their type arguments)?
16:04
Well, they're not generic any more, since you specified the contained types... Hmm.
"specifics"
16:22
I didn't miss anything, did I? There's no way a Student object contained in the list Class.students can know which instance of Class it is a member of, unless I store a variable therein, can it?
Pretty much
If you need this behavior, you might add a class attribute to each student object. Well, you can't call it "class" because that's a reserved word, but you know what I mean.
klass.
Qualified generics?
Sounds good
I was thinking of suggesting something like that, but it struck me as a bit circumlocutious. Like calling an object an "instantiated type".
16:42
Well, if there's no better word for it...
Well class_name will work here.
They only reason I want this is to incorporate functionality to take an image for said student and copy it to the Class' data folder with an appropriate name. It seems more sensible to have such a method be Student.add_avatar rather than Class.give_student_avatar, or an external function manipulate Student.avatar_path directly.
Incidentally, apparently 'abc∂éåß®∆˚˙©¬ñ√ƒµ©∆∫ø.txt' is a valid filename on Windows and Linux. I am pretty surprised.
17:10
...
Hi, I want to add dots before each character, how do I do that in python? I am a beginner programmer. For example 'tr' input should give '.t.r' as output.
>>> s = "Hello, world!"
>>> [c for c in s]
['H', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', ',', ' ', 'w', 'o', 'r', 'l', 'd', '!']
>>> ["." + c for c in s]
['.H', '.e', '.l', '.l', '.o', '.,', '. ', '.w', '.o', '.r', '.l', '.d', '.!']
>>> "".join("." + c for c in s)
'.H.e.l.l.o.,. .w.o.r.l.d.!'
Cool, thanks a lot Kevin!
>>> '.' + '.'.join('tr')
'.t.r'
Your solution is pretty cool too @Ara
*Aran
Thanks both of you!
17:31
Funny how duckduckgo gave me pictures of birds, while google knew exactly what I was looking for
"funny" :P
I would have made that reference myself but I'm trying to hide my power level
apparently i am missing an ident with the add function. I dont think I am?
SO has no answer
You can't have a function with no body, like that __init__
that's why we have pass
def __init__(self, real, imaginary):
    self.real = real
    self.imaginary = imaginary
17:36
merci beaucoup
Incidentally Python already has a complex number class
its hackerrank!
>>> type(1j)
<class 'complex'>
@Kevin I thought that was your CircleOfFriends class
A fine comparison. I have friends both imaginary and real.
17:51
print (*sorted(input(), key=comparer), sep="")
what is *sorted?
google it
i have
or you mean the * specifically?
theres a sorted function
It's a function that takes a sequence of comparable objects and returns a list of those objects in sorted order.
17:52
it's iterable unpacking
@AndrasDeak yes
* is a syntactical element in function calls that signals that each item in the sequence that follows it should be considered its own separate argument
>>> def f(a,b,c):
...     return a + b + c
...
>>> seq = [1,2,3]
>>> f(seq)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: f() missing 2 required positional arguments: 'b' and 'c'
>>> f(*seq)
6
ah ok
ive never seen it before
print(*thing) is a somewhat obscure way of saying "print each element of thing, separated by spaces"
@Kevin thanks
17:54
>>> print(seq)
[1, 2, 3]
>>> print(*seq)
1 2 3
I guess whoever wrote that code doesn't like square brackets and commas.
Oh, I missed that they specified sep="" too. So the output would be each element of the thing, separated by nothing.
>>> print(*seq, sep="")
123
I usually use "".join(thing) for that kind of thing, but that requires each element of the thing to be a string
kyl
kyl
anyone here?
I have one question
dont worry about asking about asking, just ask. :P
kyl
kyl
18:14
I want to define one to many relationship in flask/sqlalchemy

class SubAccount(db.Model):
__tablename__='sub_accounts'
user_id = db.Column(db.Integer, db.ForeignKey('users.id'))
owner_id = db.Column(db.Integer, db.ForeignKey('users.id'))

class User(db.Model):
__tablename__='users'
sub_accounts = db.relationship('SubAccount', backref='????', lazy=False) # this needs to be connected to the owner_id of SubAccount not user_id

my question is what I need to write into ???? in above code
If you're trying to get the indentation to look right, consult sopython.com/wiki/…. Remember that you can't mix code and plaintext in one multiline message.
they (also?) added a class attribute
Not that indentation is what's stopping me from answering the question. My complete ignorance of sqlalchemy is what's stopping me.
kyl
kyl
@Kevin thanks for your suggestion. I've missed the indentation.
I tried to leave code with ``` ``` but that was not working.
18:24
That's right. Backticks don't work.
TFW - you kick off a test that takes 15 minutes to create its test data set, so you get coffee, talk to some devs, amble back, and your screen prompt is "Ready to create files, press RETURN to continue"
User error -- hit any user to continue.
Todo: add an additional section to the guide demonstrating that triple backticks are just as nonfunctional as single backticks
NAA queue is on point today: flagged an answer and it got deleted before I finished my comment to the poster.
mod or users?
18:34
I assume a mod, since it was deleted less than 30 seconds after I flagged it.
Probably
Then it's the mod queue ;)
It was a late NAA from a low rep user, so it could also be I happened to hit it while it was already in one or more queues.
Could be. Many eyes on late NAAs
19:01
Anyone know how to adjust subplots top position programatically
19:37
is there any way within a python script to prevent a computer from sleeping while running?
@AlexanderReynolds this looks promising. link says windows though
On mac os here....yea, that doesn't seem ideal.
Way more complex than I'd hope to do so. There's a macos utility for it, caffeinate but I always forget to run it.
either dupe of Pandas Merging 101 or else unclear/(just don't f@#$ng do this) this
link maybe
i botched that. :P
Yeah, I could just run it as a subprocess but was hoping there was something simple that isn't platform specific. meh.
I guess I'll just have to remember to caffeinate when I run the script.
19:44
makes me wonder how other apps do it
i suppose they all roll with the os specific versions too
Do they?
I mean my computer sleeps regardless of what programs are running, generally.
no clue, but ive seen apps capable of blocking programs
@ParitoshSingh I don't know any apps that do it
er, blocking systems from sleeping
Maybe like rendering software or something
Some application that has specific very long running processes. Otherwise I think most just gracefully recover from sleep.
19:46
let me see if i can find it. it was one of our server maintenance things
windows though.
Oh right, I suppose server software. Then again aren't most servers just set up to never sleep anyways?
oh, i think you're right
it was a cron job that disabled sleeping while the script was running now that i think about it
@Kevin Because the default behavior of print is print(value, ..., sep=' '). Equally you could use whatever custom separator or endline chars: print(*thing, sep='⇒') Anyway that's very cryptic.
What is the best practice when new contributors ask a question which is a duplicate? Should you answer it, flag it as duplicate or answer it AND flag it? Because I feel like when you only flag it, you kind of "scare" them off.
@Erfan ignore the user, moderate the content
you can put whipped cream on your close vote if you want to
19:55
dont answer dupes.
I'd add: Don't. Answer. Dupes.
i opt to sometimes comment if i feel the OP needs some extra pointers for his use case alongwith the dupe link, but otherwise just mark as dupe and move on.
"you can put whipped cream on your close vote if you want to", what do you mean exactly?
yup
@Erfan meaning after you're done moderating content based on content you can shed a drop of tear for the poor asker :P
Lol
Just trying to put myself in their situation. When I just started coding, I wasnt very good at looking things up either. But I think the answer to my question is clear. Thanks.
19:57
We were never told to moderate new users or minorities or idiots or ... differently, and the only employee who hinted at something like that no longer works for the company. So don't try to bring social fluff into hard moderation.
For what it's worth dupes aren't inherently bad. (Crap dupes are.) But they still need to be closed as dupes.
cbg. I dug into the bowels of Django code today and survived.
cbg, Rambo
I see, thanks @AndrasDeak
00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

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