Dec 29, 2017 16:33
If your goal is to _improve_ the pool of knowledge on photo.SE in that area, it would be better if you chose to either:

1. Stick to providing information second-hand from reputable sources. On optics, you will find little online and should stick to textbooks.
2. Not answer at all.
Dec 29, 2017 16:31
I'll leave you with this:
I don't answer artistic questions, or ones on monitors, or printers, or shoes, or earplugs, or indeed most topics on photo.SE. That is not where I can best contribute. I answer the ones that are related to optics or lens design, and do my best to provide answers of high technical quality without being too difficult to understand for a layperson. That is not a particularly easy line to walk, and I welcome comments or edits that improve the readability of my answers without introducing technical inaccuracies.
Dec 29, 2017 16:28
this entire conversation has been you going off-topic
Dec 29, 2017 16:28
Nowhere in what you pasted did I explicitly claim you said such a thing, but this is off-topic.
Dec 29, 2017 16:25
Please copy paste where I explicitly wrote that you said that.
Dec 29, 2017 16:25
I did not.
Dec 29, 2017 16:22
When I copy paste your comment with a quote, I am quite sure you said it.
Dec 29, 2017 16:20
this is really quite the whirlwind of strawmen
Dec 29, 2017 16:20
first it was that my answer was confusing, then my photos weren't good enough, now the LR blog is in play
Dec 29, 2017 16:19
I don't know what these "frequent" reactions you're talking about are, but you should stay on topic
Dec 29, 2017 16:13
My only concern is the quality and correctness of the answers on the site, not who wrote them. If you want to be an armchair commentor on the process of lens design, by all means go for it. If I come across something stupid that you've said, I will point it out as so.
Dec 29, 2017 16:12
On multiple occasions you have reacted in a way that is adversarial and childish when I do this, leaving mimick comments on my answers. The tone and timing of those comments makes it clear that you are not commenting from genuine concern about the answer, but because I bruised your ego.
Dec 29, 2017 16:10
I do believe that as an optical designer, some variety of question on photo.SE or any similar platform, should be something I could hide without discussion for being blatantly wrong. I understand that is not the idea behind SE, I even made a meta.photo.SE thread about it. Instead, I do what SE encourages, which is to leave a comment on answers I think are wrong, and provide an alternative answer.
Dec 29, 2017 16:09
You are a moderator of photo.SE, no?
Dec 29, 2017 16:08
I stopped using flickr or 500px or whatever 2-3 years ago, so anything newer than that is not "available."
Dec 29, 2017 16:08
Regardless, I'll humor you. Here are two photos I have taken and posted publicly online - https://www.flickr.com/photos/123272345@N07/14451027569/in/photostream/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/123272345@N07/14614657746/
Dec 29, 2017 16:07
Comments like that are extremely childish - the technical merit of one's answers on a site like photo.SE and the artistic merit of their photos are entirely separate. Comments like that are usually made when someone loses some debate or what-have-you and decides to attack some unrelated aspect of the person they "lost" to to either make themselves feel better, or endear any audience to their lost case.
Dec 29, 2017 16:05
Now, to answer your question about where are my photos or whatever.
Dec 29, 2017 16:05
The 24-70 is a constant aperture zoom, which means all zoom motion must happen in front of the aperture stop. The 18-55 is not. That specification of f/3.5-5.6 was chosen because they allowed the lens to be a variable aperture zoom in design (easier), and the lens is of reasonable brightness (f/3.5-5.6) without having its complexity substantially raised by a larger maximum aperture on the wide-angle end.
Dec 29, 2017 16:04
Let me finish or I walk away from your community.
Dec 29, 2017 16:03
I think your attitude sucks and you do not have sufficient strength of character to moderate photo.se
Dec 29, 2017 16:03
I will be very frank with you.
Dec 29, 2017 16:02
Please let me finish.
Dec 29, 2017 16:01
A 24-70mm f/2.8 has its entrance pupil become roughly half the diameter of the flange throat. An 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 has an entrance pupil that is at largest a bit smaller than half that of the 24-70.
Dec 29, 2017 16:00
But these are telephoto examples, which you may object to. So let's address the "standard range" zoom lens.
Dec 29, 2017 16:00
Or, take for another example, the Leica 135mm f/3.4 Apo-Telyt. It's only 4 elements and has an entrance pupil that is, I think, similar in size to the throat of M mount. Again, no issue or special requirements imposed by the mount.
Dec 29, 2017 15:59
Many designs have entrance pupils far larger than the mount, and still function. Take, for example, the Canon 400mm f/5.6L. It has pretty decent image quality, is extremely simple, and has an entrance pupil about 50% bigger than the throat of its mount. No issue, rise in cost, or loss of any desirable traits for the lens to work.
Dec 29, 2017 15:58
From an optical design perspective, the flange is a so-called dummy surface that will be a fixed distance from the image plane, and fixed diameter. It imposes a constraint that you cannot crash into it, and that you rays must pass through it. There is no inherent relationship between the entrance pupil and the flange. More specifically, there are no requirements between the two. The exit pupil must not be occluded by the flange, that is all.
Dec 29, 2017 15:55
Let's start with the other thread, photo.stackexchange.com/a/42986/40937
 

Python

Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom Code formatting guide: tinyu...
Nov 3, 2017 06:02
the GIL makes it +- useless
Nov 3, 2017 06:02
why does cPython even have a threading module?
Nov 3, 2017 05:59
I still wonder if I could do a bit better by caching the args of a partial object since they can be quite heavy, but it isn't worth the instability and development time. RIP magicmp
Nov 3, 2017 05:59
@AnttiHaapala win64/py3.6.3 -- I iterate these things in Jupyter, which handles main a bit differently when you use the autoreload extension. That was making anything with multiprocessing.Pool require the imports to be in the body, since when the process was spawned it would miss the imports in the spin up. Making it a script makes mp.Pool work beautifully.
Nov 3, 2017 03:26
there is a way to use functions that depend on imports with process pools using multiprocessing.Pool
Nov 3, 2017 03:26
I just realized that I've wasted...a long time on this
Nov 3, 2017 03:26
oh.
Nov 3, 2017 03:25
test post pls ignore
Nov 3, 2017 03:23
does chat have code formatting for a MWE?
Nov 3, 2017 03:22
if you want to look at the larger body of code, this is the module I've been working on -- github.com/brandondube/magicmp/tree/master/magicmp
Nov 3, 2017 03:15
hmm ok -- gimmie a min to cook one up, I made everything into a library with more than the bare necessities
Nov 3, 2017 03:11
@JGrindal MWE, or bigger pile of code?
Nov 3, 2017 03:09
it's a push/pull architecure, so there are a min. of 3 processes involved. If I run each of the ends in separate shells and spin up any number of workers in between, everything works fine. If I spawn them all from a master process, the import magic blows up for reasons beyond my feeble brain's comprehension
Nov 3, 2017 03:08
so based on ZMQ I made a parallel processing library that uses some of the nuclear warheads in py stdlib to identify imports for functions and send some preflight stuff to the worker processes to make them import the right stuff. It's based on (ab)use of eval, exec, and globals()
Nov 3, 2017 03:07
tl;dr, I want to parallelize some code that depends on imports and putting the import statements in the function body offends my sense of aesthetics
Nov 3, 2017 02:49
can I get an idea/problem of mine sniff tested?
Nov 2, 2017 15:16
@DSM do you mean to hide abc.client and abc.common from the top-level module namespace?