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12:00 AM
There are 1415 unanswered questions
 
12:31 AM
@QPaysTaxes Maybe someone got a little too excited about the " RELOAD! "
2
I think that the excessive star-er is @EthanBierlein.
 
Shhh.... I still have votes
 
@nhgrif How's the whole overseas hiring of interns process?
 
I don't have any clue. I've been here one week.
Are you cool with writing Swift/Objective-C/Java/Ruby-on-Rails (one/two of the above)
 
Yeah of course. I'm not stuck to a language (I mean it)
Though I will pursue this Microsoft lead first
 
I could probably do Java if my life depended on it
 
12:39 AM
Today I had an urge to write PHP
2
 
In central Arkansas, there are a handful of .NET devs, but only because Metova took over a company here and they're finishing up the project they were working on.
Anyone know how to query multiple sites on SEDE?
 
It lasted a minute, but I'm still weirded out by it
 
@JeroenVannevel cured yet? lol
 
@JeroenVannevel Star-wall knows no context.
 
@JeroenVannevel Rid your body of that evil desire before it consumes your soul...
 
12:40 AM
Earlier this evening I also had an urge to learn C. I guess I'm all over the masochism scale today
 
C would actually be useful to learn.
 
@nhgrif Does the star-wall ever have context?
 
What languages have you tried out anyway?
 
Yeah, I'm probably pursuing that (or C++) later this summer. I want to get deeper into that memcpy stuff
C#, Java, Javascript, COBOL, Go and some PHP
 
0
Q: Efficient implementation of some R functionality in Python

ConstantineI'm not very skilled in Python. However, I'm pretty handy with R. Yet, I do have to use Python since it has an up-to-date interface with Cplex. I'm also trying to avoid all the extra coding I would have to do in C/C++. That being said, I have issues with speed and efficiency on large lists/array...

 
12:42 AM
C, C++, or Objective-C would be good in that mix.
Also SQL.
 
Oh right
SQL, PL/SQL, T-SQL, you name it
 
@CaptainObvious aw there I was expecting a timely question
 
What's so bad about MySQL?
 
But yes, I want one of those C's in there
though I would pick swift over Obj-C
That syntax is just too offputting
 
@SirPython ugh
 
12:45 AM
@Mat'sMug Was it something I said?
 
@JeroenVannevel The thing is, @JeroenVannevel, you're already familiar with most of the Swift-esque syntax. And Swift eliminates some of the hard stuff you might need to know for Objective-C. Swift is too similar to C# or other modern languages. Plus, learn Objective-C and its libraries, and being already comfortable with languages with syntax so similar to Swift, and you've 90% learned Swift basically.
 
Fair enough
 
For someone who only knew C++/C and was venturing into Objective-C/Swift, I'd recommend Swift. For someone who knows stuff like C#/Java, I'd recommend Objective-C over Swift.
Because either way, if you're capable of learning more than one language, then learning either pretty much gets you both except for a few little tricks and cheats here and there.
 
Still, that's a long-term plan. I'm not going to have any time in the next.. 4 months. And then it's time for my internship so depending on what I'll do there, not even then.
 
@SirPython I had to work with mysql early into my job. First thing I did was download sql express and set up a real database to work with...
Does anyone do data warehousing and BI off a mysql db?
 
12:50 AM
@SirPython To start… MySQL gotchas
 
> The first person to spot a NULL value in the result set will receive a stuffed toy dolphin from the author.
 
Nearly everything in MySQL is inferior to PostgreSQL. The weird behavior, the less-powerful query language, the query optimizer, transactional capability, …
 
I'm working on a SEDE query for myself and all of my coworkers reputation on Stack Overflow..... friendly little competition...
 
Read the MySQL change log. They make compatibility-breaking changes in x.y.z releases, then sometimes they will change their mind and revert to the old behavior.
Then there is the fact that they are now owned by Oracle.
 
MySQL and the Canadian weather ... about equally hard to predict
5
 
12:54 AM
Vancouver weather is quite nice, though.
 
Unless you want to host the olympics.....
 
Too nice, sometimes.
 
Well, I personally can't come up with a better title. Seeing as how you already edited other parts of my post, feel free to make the change if you have some other title in mind. — Constantine 4 mins ago
I really need to acquire some random title generator and use it on questions. Quality will surely increase sharply.
user image
2
Meme Generator is the best.
 
1:11 AM
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the answer (use the bytes property) is in the question. This question isn't a question at all, but merely a discussion trying to explain to the asker the difference between decimal and hexidecimal notation... — nhgrif 18 secs ago
Not really.
 
0
Q: Get the HTML Table element from clicking a table cell

Sandy GoodI can already get the table element object, but not sure if there is a better way. JavaScript: window.sort_table = function(argThisCell) { var thisRow = argThisCell.parentNode; var thisTableHeader = thisRow.parentNode; var tblElement = thisTableHeader.parentNode;//Get reference to the tab...

 
@QPaysTaxes Your comment on that question was a little too condescending, so I've removed it. I understand that it's quite commonplace on SO, but it doesn't need to be done here as well. He gets the idea already.
I know, but adding fuel to the fire won't help. Trust me, I wish I could lash out every time someone posted a non-answer, thinking we're a forum. The best you can do most of the time is comment once (more if needed) and downvote.
 
1:31 AM
0
Q: Better Algorithm for Log and and AspectJ - Automatic Logging Through Annotations

Filipe Gonzaga MirandaI am working with a little project intended to allow applications to benefit from Aspect Oriented Programming. The First Aspect is Logging, which is already working, however I wanna have this code to be more performatic and Clean. The whole project is right here: https://github.com/FilipeGMirand...

 
1:44 AM
Hello all. We'd love support for Cactus. We just hit 20 unique visitors, and we're working really hard on it. We have a website, subreddit, and a chat room. Thank you for the support!
 
Huh...
 
Ah, that's better.
 
By the way, @JeroenVannevel, do you use SourceTree? It can make managing your Git repo a lot easier.
 
Yeah I do
I don't quite feel like dealing with git commands unless I have to
 
Totally Agree ^^
 
1:54 AM
The Git Flow is pretty awesome.
 
2:27 AM
Shhhhhhhh......
It's only 9:30 here man.
That's not "late"
 
2:50 AM
I use the Team Explorer in VS.
 
0
Q: Selecting CPUs and memory in Vagrant

dankohnI generally like to be Rubocop-clean, but it seems like breaking up the first case statement will only make things harder to read. Any suggestions? Vagrant.configure(VAGRANTFILE_API_VERSION) do |config| config.vm.provider 'virtualbox' do |vb| vb.customize ['modifyvm', :id, '--memory', host...

 
3:16 AM
0
A: Interactive Rock Paper Scissors

Ethan BierleinThis is pretty good, but there are a few things that needed to be improved. Here are a few of those things, specifically regarding your, odd, design. Using % for string formatting is deprecated. To format strings, you should use str.format. For example, you'd do this: print 'Best out of {0}'.fo...

Killed another zombie ^^
Wow. Nobody is clearly awake in here.
 
hi
 
Hi.
 
Hello
 
Bye Bye
 
Bye Bye Bye
 
3:27 AM
Anyone want to critique a UI?
Just for looks.
 
Sure
GIMMEH-TEH-SCREENSHOTZ
 
Imagine that populated with data, like this, except for that bottom search box:
 
boolean algebra people:
2
Q: Why does ReSharper tell me this expression is always true?

Jeroen VannevelI have the following code which will tell me whether or not a certain property is used elsewhere in the code. The idea behind this is to verify whether a property with a private setter can be made readonly. There are multiple gotchas here but the major ones are that an assignment to the property...

Am I going crazy?
Do I need to catch up on sleep?
 
@Hosch250 Pretty. I think I'd move the search bar to the top though.
 
OK.
@JeroenVannevel I'll take a look, if that answer doesn't solve it.
@JeroenVannevel Probably.
 
3:32 AM
You might want to put it on UX.SE though, just so some professionals can look at it.
You know your life is partially useless when you're sitting on your ass drinking lemonade, watching south park, and chatting online.
 
Another thunderstorm moving in.
 
The last one was awesome. It overflowed my pool.
 
Catching up on sleep it was
arrividerci
 
@JeroenVannevel One more thing - you never actually assign isStaticProperty outside the initialization..
I figured the problem out, but by that time, you had 4 answers.
 
yeah, that's intended
 
3:40 AM
OK.
 
my tired brain just didn't realize it
 
Go to bed.
That is an order ;)
 
Jesus. I just drank a gallon of lemonade over the course of 45 minutes. I really regret it.
 
Serves you right, lol, why'd you do that?
I don't even know if I drink a gallon in one day.
 
3:44 AM
I drink a shitload of water. I drink about 4-5 gallons of water a day. It's sort of an obsessive habit.
 
Don't drink yourself to death. You can do that you know.
Something about unbalancing your body's PH.
 
Yes. I know that.
 
Fits in with the rest of my app's theme a little better.
Second is the search box button pressed.
Now all I have to do is re-implement the actual search functionality.
I have a bit of research to do here, though, because I can't just send the data from the search box into the VM through binding (AFAIK), it makes me go through code-behind, which doesn't have any idea about the VM.
Going to bed early tonight.
See you.
 
4:03 AM
night @Hosch250
 
1
Q: Keyboard music maker

Motoko KusanagiI have a debilitating mental disorder; but I do enjoy making silly programs every once in a while. This is one of them. It makes nice sounding notes that vary slightly depending on the key being entered into a TextArea. When you press enter, it plays back all the notes you have entered. That's pr...

 
4:22 AM
.-- .... -.-- - .... . .... . -.-. -.- .... .- ... .. - -... . . -. ... --- --.- ..- .. . - - .... . .--. .- ... - ..-. . .-- -.. .- -.-- ... .. -. - .... . ... . -.-. --- -. -.. -- --- -. .. - --- .-. ..--..
 
4:41 AM
0
Q: Three buttons with click listeners that pop up a quick toast

Kala JI currently have three buttons, perhaps more to come. When I click on a button, I want a toast notification or message (popup message) to show up with some text. What I have works perfectly but it is very redundant. How I refactor what I have below to prevent redundant code? @Override ...

 
Monking @all
 
5:46 AM
0
Q: A better way to multiply and add bit numbers represented with strings

Rishat MuhametshinI got a very unusual problem of adding and multiplying very big numbers (≥1e+100). So I've written simple functions that would operate on string representations of numbers, both as an input and an output. Here multiplication: function multiply(a, b) { if ((a | 0) == 0 || (b | 0) == 0) { ...

 
6:32 AM
0
Q: EF lookups and enums

MeNoTalkI have a lookup table "RequestTypes", it has the following data: ID Type ---- ----- 1 Leave 2 Loan 3 BlahBlah Using EF, and whenever the need arise to check the type of the request, I used to do something like: if (row.RequestType.ID == 1) { // request is leave } e...

 
mooring
 
7:28 AM
0
Q: Java NIO Server Scaling

cruxion effuxI wrote a Java NIO EchoServer . I want to maximize the number of connections to the server. The problem is when I try to connect more than 10 k clients the clients get refused for connections. They get error Connection Refused : no further information available. The client program that I use ...

 
Monking
 
hey @skiwi
 
7:51 AM
Monking
 
8:02 AM
hey @Vogel612
 
Monking @all
 
hey @Mast
 
This might be totally unrelated to anything, but does anyone know what rules VS checks for when analyzing C++ code?
I got a warning on a project for something I didn't know was evil.
 
No idea
 
warning C6293: Ill-defined for-loop: counts down from minimum.
It's nice to be warned for stupidities, but I didn't know this particular case was a stupidity.
 
8:24 AM
@Mast What's the related code then?
 
@skiwi An old project I'm scavenging:
for (unsigned i = vPlanet.size(); i < vPlanet.size() - amount; i--)
Where amount is unsigned.
vPlanet is a vector<Planet>, Planet is a struct
 
@Mast Probably afraid of interger underflow?
 
If that for is working as intended, it can't underflow.
That's why unsigned is used, in this project there's no such thing as negative values.
 
8:41 AM
But doesn't i = 0 -> i-- go to i = maxint ?
 
Good point.
@skiwi I really should learn (how) to write test cases for C++.
--i should solve the immediate threat, but I'll think of something.
 
@skiwi Thanks for catching that.
 
@Mast Gotta Catch'Em All!
The moment when code you wrote gives you so many headaches that it's better to rewrite that part from scratch
Ugh, is there no way to take an XML document as input and parse it to an object according to some specification? That also raises errors if tags are not matching or if superfluous tags are present
 
9:07 AM
@skiwi I'm tempted to suggest RegEx, but I know better.
 
@skiwi use a proper grammar...
 
@Vogel612 huh?
 
heard of Grappa?
I bet you can write a grammar that takes your DTD and warns or errors on violations..
while still parsing arbitrary XML
 
9:29 AM
@Vogel612 Nope haven't heard of it
 
yo yo yo
monking
 
Grappa is een Italiaanse gedistilleerde alcoholische drank, die vervaardigd wordt uit distillatie van de restanten van de druiven na de wijnbereiding, dat wil zeggen de vellen en de zaden. Oorspronkelijk was het een manier om de overtollige trosdruiven niet te hoeven weggooien aan het einde van het seizoen. De smaak van een grappa, net zoals bij wijn, hangt af van het type druif, de kwaliteit ervan en de vaten waarin ze gerijpt wordt en het productieproces (continu of discontinu). Grappa heeft een alcoholpercentage tussen de 37,5% en 60%. De wet geeft hier enkel een vast minimumgehalte alcohol...
That was my first hit lol @Vogel612, I was confused for a bit
 
understandably...
@skiwi use that instead
 
Managed to find it now :)
 
@skiwi That is what I drunk the last 2 weeks while on vacation in italy ;-)
 
9:35 AM
This sounds like something fit for a Groovy DSL
 
0
Q: Rewrite method to decide the ShowLevel based on roles

PatanI have different roles in my system. 1. HOD 2. Staff 3. Non staff I am having a form at the froent end and fields shall be visisble to only users with specific roles. The ShowInGui levels are like this. 0 or less Do not show 1 Show to All 2 Show to staff/HOD 3 Show to HOD I am planning ...

 
9:58 AM
My question went hot..
Why..
That's not the kind of question I want to see viral
 
@JeroenVannevel I know how it feels.
I got a silver badge for views on a question about having ants in my keyboard.
5
 
10:24 AM
Wow
20
Q: How many types of programming languages are there?

sovaBasically, I want to learn lots of programming languages to become a great programmer. I know only a handful to depth and I was hoping someone could elaborate on how many classes or types of programming languages there are. Like how you would lump them together if you had to learn them in group...

How is even this off-topic for Programmers?
 
@skiwi There's no such thing as types.
The top answer is pretty good, but there are many ways to group them.
 
You know Python, right? Is it me or does dictionary equality testing take into account ordering? As in {"a": 1, "b": 2} != {"b": 2, "a": 1}?
 
You may be stating the wrong question there.
Why would you test equality of an entire dictionary?
 
Because you have functions that parse stuff into a dictionary?
 
Iterate over the dictionary and check if the value is already present.
Or sort the dictionary first and check for equality if you have to.
 
10:30 AM
No no no! I'm writing a test case, I'm not going to do any manual work
 
Well, I've never had the need to check for equality of entire dictionaries, but if you're not interested in the order they're in you'd have to sort them first. So they'll all be in the same order.
 
Oh god... I'm hating Python with so much fierce right now, but thanks for a way to do it at least
Now seeing if I can override an assertEquals with dictionaries inside dictionaries could work
 
I think Python assumes equality as total equality. Perfect equality.
 
But the concept of a dictionary is that it's unordered, hence equality would imply unordered equality
 
It's possible it's not even checking anything different than the resulting list of bytes.
@skiwi You have a source for that?
 
10:44 AM
> It is best to think of a dictionary as an unordered set of key: value pairs, with the requirement that the keys are unique (within one dictionary). A pair of braces creates an empty dictionary: {}. Placing a comma-separated list of key:value pairs within the braces adds initial key:value pairs to the dictionary; this is also the way dictionaries are written on output.
unordered set of key: value pairs
 
Two dictionaries a and b in Python compare equal if they have the same number of keys, and for each key k in a, we have a[k] == b[k].
See the function dict_equal in dictobject.c
 
Doesn't dict_equal iterate under the hood?
 
@Mast If only there were some way to find out
The behaviour doesn't seem to be documented — it might be worth submitting a bug report and a patch
 
Patching Python is like brining water to the sea, patch one thing, another bug appears and ultimately when all is fixed, Python 4.0 has emerged which appears to be not backwards-compatible, and you can repeat
 
I don't like patching a language. Breaks stuff.
 
10:48 AM
I mean, patching the documentation
To document the behaviour of equality on dictionaries
What did you think I meant?
 
@GarethRees That's good.
@GarethRees Patching the language itself in the new version.
 
@Mast Patching it to do what, though?
 
@GarethRees Yea, that's the missing documentation part.
 
You know. patching.
 
22 mins ago, by skiwi
You know Python, right? Is it me or does dictionary equality testing take into account ordering? As in {"a": 1, "b": 2} != {"b": 2, "a": 1}?
As skiwi stated, dictionaries are unordered lists of pairs.
So the ordering shouldn't be relevant for equality.
I thought you were talking about patching such.
 
10:52 AM
Did you check to see if skiwi was right?
 
No, I don't have his version of Python running on this box.
 
Do you have any version of Python?
 
2.7
 
Does dictionary equality take into account ordering in Python 2.7?
 
Never used it. Trying it now, but it's stating dict_equal is undefined. Haven't found it in the docs so far.
However, if I print both dictionaries, print sorts them
So I assume dict_equal would do the same.
 
11:00 AM
Use the == operator to compare two objects for equality
For example, {1:2, 3:4} == {3:4, 1:2} evaluates to True if the two dictionaries are equal, or False if they are different
 
States True for me.
 
0
Q: Data Binding SQLIte to Listbox(containing three controls) Windows phone 8

KartiikeyaIam new to implementing SQLITE DB & windows phone 8 app development... Implemeted following startegy to retreive data to listbox which contains three other controls.. here is my XAML code.. <ListBox Height="Auto" Name="TaskListBox" Margin="5,61,-1,298"> <...

 
The function dict_equal that I linked to is is the underlying implementation of the == operator for dictionary objects
 
Ah, figures.
 
So skiwi was wrong (at least in Python 2.7): two dictionaries compare equal without regard to ordering
 
11:02 AM
@skiwi I think it is you. It auto sorts when printing for me and they appear equal (in 2.7). You're using 3.4 right?
 
@Mast On small test dictornies it seems to wokr
Still I'm having issues with my big test case
And I see this in the testcase documentation: assertEqual(a, b) a == b
 
You're saying the behaviour changes if the dictionary grows larger?
 
Aha, found the documentation, it's under Comparisons in the Language Reference:
> Mappings (dictionaries) compare equal if and only if they have the same (key, value) pairs.
 
So order should be irrelevant.
 
Using Python 3.4 I'm still having issues with it
The assert equals is failing, and also every time it gives a different output, because there's no ordering
 
11:11 AM
@skiwi If you have two dictionaries that are not equal, then there is a key for which the two dictionaries have different values
(Or a key which is in one dictionary but not the other.)
So if you have two dictionaries a and b then you can easily find the keys for which they have different values, like this: [k for k in a if a[k] != b[k]]
And the keys that are in one dictionary but not the other, like this: set(a) ^ set(b)
Do this for the test case that fails and you'll find out why it failed
 
0
Q: how can i make this code more reusable?

Rutger Scholsfunction queryUsers($sql) { $result = mysqli_query($this->con,$sql); while($array = mysqli_fetch_array($result)) { $rows = $array['Username'] . " " . $array['Password']. ""; } $count = $result->num_rows;; return $rows; } }

0
Q: Canvas in Tkinter app updates so slowly

amazingbasilThis is conway's life written on python and using Tkinter for GUI. Problems are: "Play" button works so slowly. I can see how canvas is redrawing from top to bottom. But when I fastly clicking "step" button - I see result that I want to get from "play" button: I don't see redrawing process. How...

 
Them being big is not exactly helping, but I'm trying
But if that thing that's different is also a dict, then I guess I need to check for it again
 
11:31 AM
0
Q: Bouncing balls in HTML

Shubham SinglaI want to create multiple balls bouncing at random velocity random initaliation point without canvas. Code for single ball var x, y, vx, vy; var SCREENHEIGHT, SCREENWIDTH; //this function runs on the initialization of the page function init() { ...

 
@CaptainObvious Burn.
 
I submitted a patch: bugs.python.org/issue24406
 
@GarethRees Nice one.
 
Documentation patches are easy
 
11:48 AM
0
Q: Switch statement in lambda

user1180020Why this function call var v = function(t) { switch(t) { case 1: return "test"; .... } }(t); better than this: var v = null; switch(t) { case 1: v = "test"; .... }

0
Q: Pattern to organize references to repetitive text

hasanghaforianSome times I have text that appears in different places,like comments, messages, ... .For example if I have a custom Exception, probably class doc,messages that passes as parameter to it's constructor and documents of each method that throw exception will have the same phrases and terms.If I copy...

0
Q: Algorithm for detecting keyboard slips

SuperBiasedManI decided to make a script that will evaluate a user input and attempt to figure out what keyword they meant to type, by checking what characters are next to the ones they entered. ie. On a QWERTY keyboard, d is surrounded by e,r,s,f,x and c, so if you wrote selete, this script would be able to...

 
12:31 PM
> Generators are iterators, but you can only iterate over them once. It's because they do not store all the values in memory, they generate the values on the fly:
Makes me wonder why Java 8 has streams and not generators
 
0
Q: PHPunit test a config file reader

user3886650I have a class which reads a config file (array). Here's a basic example: class ConfigReader { function __construct($configFileUrl) { $this->configFile = $this->load($configFileUrl); } private function load() { //load config file } public functi...

 
0
A: What would you say is the biggest problem Code Review is facing as a site as of June 2015?

RubberDuckMeta Meta Meta I'm not sure if I'd say it's our biggest problem, but I do feel it's A problem that there's a lack of activity here on meta. Oh sure, the "regulars" from the chat room are mostly here, but rarely does "the silent majority" share their thoughts and opinions about the site here. I...

 
An improvement on the code I gave above: if you have two Python dictionaries a and b and want to know where they differ, evaluate a.items() ^ b.items()
This works because the objects returned from dict.items() support the set interface. New to me!
 
> Wim is engineer, Master in applied sciences, Physics, Electronics, Information & Communication Technology by the University of Gent
Talk about credentials
My school started hunting for me for my foreign internship today
they even called my mom, for some reason
I told them I was going to get the process of working at Microsoft started the next few days
 
@staticmethod
def __generate_adjacent_pairs(values: list):
    i = 0
    while i < len(values) - 1:
        yield (values[i], values[i + 1])
        i += 1
I'm sure this can be doen more Pythonic ;)
 
12:39 PM
10 minutes later I receive an email from someone else at the departement of international relations, proposing a US-based company he works as an advisor for with the CEO in CC
I feel wanted
What to choose..
 
@JeroenVannevel All I got yesterday was a message from StackOverflow Careers saying that I hadn't updated my profile in a while
4
 
Elementary mistake
 
@skiwi Look at pairwise under Itertools Recipes
Also, staticmethod is an anti-pattern.
And so are private method names
And so is looping with while when you could use for
 
I recently done practise task for wikia and as respond they say that code quality is not as they want to be. I would like to upload my project/code at code review. Is it ok?
 
@GarethRees I know that piece of code looks very ugly, but well... it works
 
12:48 PM
@Dudi Sure, that's what the site is for.
 
@rolfl
 
If the code is too big to fit in one question, then I recommend finding the most critical part, and posting that.
 
damn enter..
 
So... Python describes a bunch of handy functions in their documentation, but they don't actually implement them?
 
I also recommend you read this question and answers:
30
Q: How to get the best value out of Code Review - Asking Questions

rolfl I have a project I am working on, and I would like some, or all of it reviewed, how can I ask for this review on Code Review in a way that produces the best possible value? This is not about a question being on-topic, or off topic. Rather, this is about making on-topic questions great qu...

 
12:50 PM
@rolfl it's 5 classes in project. Can I upload whole project as zip or I should paste only classes in code brackets ?
 
@Dudi No zip files. Have a look at an example question, like..... (give me a second):
20
Q: A Scoring approach to Computer Opponents

Simon André ForsbergThis code is starting to be used within several of my projects, and therefore I thought it's time to get it reviewed. Description The most common application for this code is that there is a computer opponent in a game which needs to make a decision based on some parameters. A list of all possi...

A question formatted like that is great ^^^
 
@skiwi This is Code Review, right?
3
 
Oh I was worry about too much scrolling but I guess it is not a issue here :)
 
@GarethRees Yes, but technically this is the chat ;) I do really appreciate your feedback, but there's no time to refactor existing code for this project right now
 
@rolfl thanks a lot, it's posting time now :)
 
12:55 PM
@Dudi No problem, and good luck ;-)
@RubberDuck - FYI - I re-built my site-badge-rankings for meta sites: data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/323583/…
 
Closest double ping as it'll ever be
 
But in other hand, wikia may have objection about posting code of their practice job?
 
@skiwi Nick Coghlan explains why these functions are "recipes" rather than included in the Python stdlib
 
@Dudi Did you write the code?
 
@rolfl yes
 
12:57 PM
Did you sign a contract saying you could not share your code?
 
well, no
 
So, I am not sure what wikia can complain about, but, it's your call.
 

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