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Groups > comp.lang.python > #58077 > unrolled thread
| Started by | jonas.thornvall@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| First post | 2013-10-30 11:21 -0700 |
| Last post | 2013-11-03 04:50 -0500 |
| Articles | 20 on this page of 72 — 22 participants |
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Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-10-30 11:21 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> - 2013-10-30 18:53 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-10-30 12:01 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> - 2013-10-30 19:18 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-10-30 12:22 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> - 2013-10-30 19:31 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-10-30 12:23 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> - 2013-10-30 19:35 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Ethan Furman <ethan@stoneleaf.us> - 2013-11-02 21:26 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Antoon Pardon <antoon.pardon@rece.vub.ac.be> - 2013-10-30 20:28 +0100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Joshua Landau <joshua@landau.ws> - 2013-10-30 21:30 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> - 2013-10-31 05:54 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> - 2013-10-30 21:52 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Tim Chase <python.list@tim.thechases.com> - 2013-10-30 18:01 -0500
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-10-31 10:41 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Dan Stromberg <drsalists@gmail.com> - 2013-10-30 12:29 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Tim Delaney <timothy.c.delaney@gmail.com> - 2013-10-31 06:35 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-10-30 12:47 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Modulok <modulok@gmail.com> - 2013-10-30 13:46 -0600
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-10-30 12:47 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Gene Heskett <gheskett@wdtv.com> - 2013-10-30 16:32 -0400
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Tim Roberts <timr@probo.com> - 2013-11-02 14:31 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com> - 2013-11-02 14:37 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2013-11-03 03:17 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-03 15:10 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Joshua Landau <joshua@landau.ws> - 2013-11-03 15:34 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Joshua Landau <joshua@landau.ws> - 2013-11-03 15:51 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com> - 2013-11-03 19:40 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Tim Chase <python.list@tim.thechases.com> - 2013-11-04 07:08 -0600
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-11-04 05:53 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-11-04 06:00 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused
data. Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-11-04 08:27 -0600
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> - 2013-11-04 06:46 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-11-04 14:34 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused
data. Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-11-04 19:29 -0600
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2013-11-05 04:33 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2013-11-05 04:36 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Tim Roberts <timr@probo.com> - 2013-11-07 00:05 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com> - 2013-11-07 10:59 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Tim Roberts <timr@probo.com> - 2013-11-07 11:22 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 09:26 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-11-07 18:05 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 13:17 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-11-07 18:25 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> - 2013-11-07 18:36 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 13:36 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com> - 2013-11-07 18:43 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2013-11-08 04:47 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Gregory Ewing <greg.ewing@canterbury.ac.nz> - 2013-11-08 20:09 +1300
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 18:21 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-11-08 07:48 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 07:57 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 11:48 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. "R. Michael Weylandt <michael.weylandt@gmail.com>" <michael.weylandt@gmail.com> - 2013-11-07 21:43 -0500
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 14:05 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Roy Smith <roy@panix.com> - 2013-11-07 22:08 -0500
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 14:24 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. "R. Michael Weylandt <michael.weylandt@gmail.com>" <michael.weylandt@gmail.com> - 2013-11-07 23:05 -0500
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 15:06 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused
data. Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-11-07 22:12 -0600
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2013-11-08 05:32 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com> - 2013-11-07 18:24 -0800
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Gregory Ewing <greg.ewing@canterbury.ac.nz> - 2013-11-08 20:16 +1300
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2013-11-08 13:27 +1100
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Ethan Furman <ethan@stoneleaf.us> - 2013-11-02 21:26 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com> - 2013-11-02 23:09 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Michael Torrie <torriem@gmail.com> - 2013-11-03 08:14 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. jonas.thornvall@gmail.com - 2013-10-30 12:49 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Grant Edwards <invalid@invalid.invalid> - 2013-10-30 21:18 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com> - 2013-10-30 14:26 -0700
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-10-31 03:22 +0000
Re: Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. Gene Heskett <gheskett@wdtv.com> - 2013-11-03 04:50 -0500
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| From | jonas.thornvall@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 11:21 -0700 |
| Subject | Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data. |
| Message-ID | <205bfa4f-29de-43de-be5a-72a12d77d0c9@googlegroups.com> |
I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art compression is. I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such question i was thinking to start here. It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of.
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| From | Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 18:53 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1825.1383159257.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58077 |
On 30/10/2013 18:21, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art compression is. > > I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such question i was thinking to start here. > > It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of. > I can't help with compression but I can help with a marvellous source of the opposite, expansion, it's google groups. -- Python is the second best programming language in the world. But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer Mark Lawrence
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| From | jonas.thornvall@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 12:01 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <0f857f7f-5947-4b3a-805d-0e9b888dfd48@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #58083 |
Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 19:53:59 UTC+1 skrev Mark Lawrence: > On 30/10/2013 18:21, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > > > I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art compression is. > > > > > > I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such question i was thinking to start here. > > > > > > It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of. > > > > > > > I can't help with compression but I can help with a marvellous source of > > the opposite, expansion, it's google groups. > > > > -- > > Python is the second best programming language in the world. > > But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer > > > > Mark Lawrence And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ.
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| From | Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 19:18 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1829.1383160726.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58086 |
On 30/10/2013 19:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > > And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. > It's you're as in you are and not your as in belongs to me. I have no intention of getting my IQ tested, but I do know that it's a minimum of 120 as that was required for me to pass the old UK 11+ examination. Given that I spent my time at a grammar school in the top stream I'd guess that my IQ is actually higher, but there you go. Not that that really matters. What does is that I'm smart enough to be able to follow a set of instructions when requested to do so, for example I could probably follow these https://wiki.python.org/moin/GoogleGroupsPython if I needed to. I'm therefore assuming that you're not bright enough to follow these instructions and so have annoyed thousands of people with your double spaced crap, which I've again snipped. -- Python is the second best programming language in the world. But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer Mark Lawrence
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| From | jonas.thornvall@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 12:22 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <299c1ff4-2467-45b2-a67a-b8898027d5b1@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #58091 |
Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 20:18:30 UTC+1 skrev Mark Lawrence: > On 30/10/2013 19:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > > > > > > And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. > > > > > > > It's you're as in you are and not your as in belongs to me. > > > > I have no intention of getting my IQ tested, but I do know that it's a > > minimum of 120 as that was required for me to pass the old UK 11+ > > examination. Given that I spent my time at a grammar school in the top > > stream I'd guess that my IQ is actually higher, but there you go. > > > > Not that that really matters. What does is that I'm smart enough to be > > able to follow a set of instructions when requested to do so, for > > example I could probably follow these > > https://wiki.python.org/moin/GoogleGroupsPython if I needed to. I'm > > therefore assuming that you're not bright enough to follow these > > instructions and so have annoyed thousands of people with your double > > spaced crap, which I've again snipped. > > > > -- > > Python is the second best programming language in the world. > > But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer > > > > Mark Lawrence I do not follow instructions, i make them accesible to anyone. And you just following them is a clear example to your lack of IQ.
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| From | Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 19:31 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1832.1383161528.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58092 |
On 30/10/2013 19:22, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 20:18:30 UTC+1 skrev Mark Lawrence: >> On 30/10/2013 19:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: >> >>> >> >>> And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. >> >>> >> >> >> >> It's you're as in you are and not your as in belongs to me. >> >> >> >> I have no intention of getting my IQ tested, but I do know that it's a >> >> minimum of 120 as that was required for me to pass the old UK 11+ >> >> examination. Given that I spent my time at a grammar school in the top >> >> stream I'd guess that my IQ is actually higher, but there you go. >> >> >> >> Not that that really matters. What does is that I'm smart enough to be >> >> able to follow a set of instructions when requested to do so, for >> >> example I could probably follow these >> >> https://wiki.python.org/moin/GoogleGroupsPython if I needed to. I'm >> >> therefore assuming that you're not bright enough to follow these >> >> instructions and so have annoyed thousands of people with your double >> >> spaced crap, which I've again snipped. >> >> >> >> -- >> >> Python is the second best programming language in the world. >> >> But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer >> >> >> >> Mark Lawrence > > I do not follow instructions, i make them accesible to anyone. And you just following them is a clear example to your lack of IQ. > I suggest that you reread what I wrote above, assuming that you can find it amongst the double spaced crap. I said I would follow the instructions if I needed to. So clearly I'm not just following them, as I've no need to, as I'm smart enough to use a vastly superior tool. -- Python is the second best programming language in the world. But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer Mark Lawrence
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| From | jonas.thornvall@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 12:23 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <d1aef452-50fb-4ca5-b392-7a2545fbfb25@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #58091 |
Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 20:18:30 UTC+1 skrev Mark Lawrence: > On 30/10/2013 19:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > > > > > > And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. > > > > > > > It's you're as in you are and not your as in belongs to me. > > > > I have no intention of getting my IQ tested, but I do know that it's a > > minimum of 120 as that was required for me to pass the old UK 11+ > > examination. Given that I spent my time at a grammar school in the top > > stream I'd guess that my IQ is actually higher, but there you go. > > > > Not that that really matters. What does is that I'm smart enough to be > > able to follow a set of instructions when requested to do so, for > > example I could probably follow these > > https://wiki.python.org/moin/GoogleGroupsPython if I needed to. I'm > > therefore assuming that you're not bright enough to follow these > > instructions and so have annoyed thousands of people with your double > > spaced crap, which I've again snipped. > > > > -- > > Python is the second best programming language in the world. > > But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer > > > > Mark Lawrence What i actually saying is that you are indeed... an anal code monkey that never ever had a selfsustained thought of your own. Think about it.
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| From | Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 19:35 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1834.1383162004.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58093 |
On 30/10/2013 19:23, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 20:18:30 UTC+1 skrev Mark Lawrence: >> On 30/10/2013 19:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: >> >>> >> >>> And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. >> >>> >> >> >> >> It's you're as in you are and not your as in belongs to me. >> >> >> >> I have no intention of getting my IQ tested, but I do know that it's a >> >> minimum of 120 as that was required for me to pass the old UK 11+ >> >> examination. Given that I spent my time at a grammar school in the top >> >> stream I'd guess that my IQ is actually higher, but there you go. >> >> >> >> Not that that really matters. What does is that I'm smart enough to be >> >> able to follow a set of instructions when requested to do so, for >> >> example I could probably follow these >> >> https://wiki.python.org/moin/GoogleGroupsPython if I needed to. I'm >> >> therefore assuming that you're not bright enough to follow these >> >> instructions and so have annoyed thousands of people with your double >> >> spaced crap, which I've again snipped. >> >> >> >> -- >> >> Python is the second best programming language in the world. >> >> But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer >> >> >> >> Mark Lawrence > > What i actually saying is that you are indeed... an anal code monkey that never ever had a selfsustained thought of your own. > > Think about it. > I just have to bow down to your vast superiority over me. How is your job with your country's diplomatic corp going by the way? -- Python is the second best programming language in the world. But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer Mark Lawrence
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| From | Ethan Furman <ethan@stoneleaf.us> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-11-02 21:26 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1968.1383454272.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58093 |
On 10/30/2013 12:23 PM, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: > > What i actually saying is that you are indeed... [insult snipped] *plonk*
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| From | Antoon Pardon <antoon.pardon@rece.vub.ac.be> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 20:28 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1836.1383163117.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58086 |
Op 30-10-13 20:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com schreef: > Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 19:53:59 UTC+1 skrev Mark Lawrence: >> On 30/10/2013 18:21, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: >> >>> I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art compression is. >> >>> >> >>> I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such question i was thinking to start here. >> >>> >> >>> It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of. >> >>> >> >> >> >> I can't help with compression but I can help with a marvellous source of >> >> the opposite, expansion, it's google groups. >> >> >> >> -- >> >> Python is the second best programming language in the world. >> >> But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer >> >> >> >> Mark Lawrence > > And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. > Are you sure it is this game you want to play? Please consider carefully: For what purpose did you come to this group? Is your behaviour accomplishing that purpose? You were asked to take responsibility for the detrimental effect your choice of news reader software has on this newsgroup. Your answer boiled down to a very clear "I don't care about the detrimental effect I cause" Well until you start caring and adapt your behaviour, people will tend not to care about your questions/problems and the most likely responses you will get is people pointing to your anti-social behaviour. You may feel very righteous in your response to Mark but you will just further alienate the regulars. If that is your goal you can continue as you did before and soon you will be in a lot of kill file or if you hope for some cooperation from the regulars, you'd better show you can be cooperative too. -- Antoon Pardon
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| From | Joshua Landau <joshua@landau.ws> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 21:30 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1850.1383168672.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58086 |
On 30 October 2013 19:18, Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> wrote: > On 30/10/2013 19:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: >> >> And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. > > It's you're as in you are and not your as in belongs to me. > > I have no intention of getting my IQ tested, but I do know that it's a > minimum of 120 as that was required for me to pass the old UK 11+ > examination. Given that I spent my time at a grammar school in the top > stream I'd guess that my IQ is actually higher, but there you go. What I'm confounded about is this list's inability to recognise a troll when it slaps it vocally in the face. This isn't like Nikos. There's no "troll vs. incompetent" debate to be had. This guy started talking about compressing *random data* and immediately descended into insults. Your IQ, whatever it may be, is going to waste ;).
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| From | rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-31 05:54 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <70e151fe-4499-4d57-9e1a-5b85f113e0e8@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #58127 |
On Thursday, October 31, 2013 3:00:24 AM UTC+5:30, Joshua Landau wrote: > What I'm confounded about is this list's inability to recognise a > troll when it slaps it vocally in the face. > This isn't like Nikos. There's no "troll vs. incompetent" debate to be > had. Its usually called "entertainment". Something related: http://onceuponatimeinindia.blogspot.in/2009/07/hard-drive-weight-increasing.html
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| From | Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 21:52 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1857.1383169937.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58086 |
On 30/10/2013 21:30, Joshua Landau wrote: > On 30 October 2013 19:18, Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> wrote: >> On 30/10/2013 19:01, jonas.thornvall@gmail.com wrote: >>> >>> And your still a stupid monkey i dare you to go test your IQ. >> >> It's you're as in you are and not your as in belongs to me. >> >> I have no intention of getting my IQ tested, but I do know that it's a >> minimum of 120 as that was required for me to pass the old UK 11+ >> examination. Given that I spent my time at a grammar school in the top >> stream I'd guess that my IQ is actually higher, but there you go. > > What I'm confounded about is this list's inability to recognise a > troll when it slaps it vocally in the face. > > This isn't like Nikos. There's no "troll vs. incompetent" debate to be > had. This guy started talking about compressing *random data* and > immediately descended into insults. Your IQ, whatever it may be, is > going to waste ;). > In my defence I did say this earlier in the exchange "I can't help with compression but I can help with a marvellous source of the opposite, expansion, it's google groups." Definitely a troll though, to go in my dream team with Xah Lee and Ilias Lazaridis amongst others and good old rr on the subs bench :) -- Python is the second best programming language in the world. But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer Mark Lawrence
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| From | Tim Chase <python.list@tim.thechases.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 18:01 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1861.1383174007.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58086 |
On 2013-10-30 21:30, Joshua Landau wrote:
> started talking about compressing *random data*
If it's truly random bytes, as long as you don't need *the same*
random data, you can compress it quite easily. Lossy compression is
acceptable for images, so why not random files? :-)
import os
inname = "random.txt"
namez = inname + '.rnz'
# compress the file
with open(outnamez, 'w') as f:
f.write(os.stat(inname).st_size)
# uncompress the file
with open(namez) as f:
size = int(f.read())
with open('/dev/random', 'rb') as rnd, open(inname, 'wb') as out:
for i in range(size):
out.write(rnd.read(1))
There are optimizations that can be made, and I didn't make it run
on Win32, but I leave those as exercises for the reader. That
said, this compresses *remarkably* well for large files ;-)
-tkc
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| From | Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-31 10:41 +1100 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1862.1383176481.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58086 |
On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 10:01 AM, Tim Chase
<python.list@tim.thechases.com> wrote:
> On 2013-10-30 21:30, Joshua Landau wrote:
>> started talking about compressing *random data*
>
> If it's truly random bytes, as long as you don't need *the same*
> random data, you can compress it quite easily. Lossy compression is
> acceptable for images, so why not random files? :-)
Maybe. But what if it's not truly random, but only pseudo-random?
# create a file full of random data
import random
seed = random.getrandbits(32)
length = random.getrandbits(16) # in four-byte units
random.seed(seed)
inname = "random.txt"
namez = inname + '.rnz'
with open(inname, "wb") as bigfile:
for _ in range(length):
bigfile.write(random.getrandbits(32).to_bytes(4,"big"))
# compress that file
with open(namez, "wb") as smallfile:
smallfile.write(seed.to_bytes(4,"big"))
smallfile.write(length.to_bytes(4,"big"))
# uncompress it
with open(namez, "rb") as f:
seed = int.from_bytes(f.read(4),"big")
length = int.from_bytes(f.read(4),"big")
random.seed(seed)
with open("out_" + inname, "wb") as bigfile:
for _ in range(length):
bigfile.write(random.getrandbits(32).to_bytes(4,"big"))
Voila! Very impressive compression ratio, and exploits the very
randomness of the data!
ChrisA
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| From | Dan Stromberg <drsalists@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 12:29 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1831.1383161383.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58077 |
[Multipart message — attachments visible in raw view] — view raw
xz compression is pretty hard, if a little bit slow. Also, if you want really stellar compression ratios and you don't care about time to compress, you might check out one of the many paq implementations. I have a module that does xz compression in 4 different ways: http://stromberg.dnsalias.org/svn/backshift/tags/1.20/xz_mod.py It's only for smallish chunks in the ctypes version, because that was all I needed. The others should be able to handle relatively large inputs. On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 11:21 AM, <jonas.thornvall@gmail.com> wrote: > I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible > of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art > compression is. > > I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an > algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for > such question i was thinking to start here. > > It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of. > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >
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| From | Tim Delaney <timothy.c.delaney@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-31 06:35 +1100 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1833.1383161768.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58077 |
[Multipart message — attachments visible in raw view] — view raw
On 31 October 2013 05:21, <jonas.thornvall@gmail.com> wrote:
> I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible
> of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art
> compression is.
>
> I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an
> algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for
> such question i was thinking to start here.
>
> It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of.
>
This is not an appropriate forum for this question. If you know it's an
inappropriate forum (as you stated) then do not post the question here. Do
a search with your preferred search engine and look up compression on
lossless Wikipedia. And read and understand the following link:
http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
paying special attention to the following parts:
http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#forum
http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#prune
http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#courtesy
http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#keepcool
http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#classic
If you have *python* code implementing this algorithm and want help, post
the parts you want help with (and preferably post the entire algorithm in a
repository).
However, having just seen the following from you in a reply to Mark ("I do
not follow instructions, i make them accesible to anyone"), I am not not
going to give a second chance - fail to learn from the above advice and
you'll meet my spam filter.
If the data is truly completely random noise, then there is very little
that lossless compression can do. On any individual truly random data set
you might get a lot of compression, a small amount of compression, or even
expansion, depending on what patterns have randomly occurred in the data
set. But there is no current lossless compression algorithm that can take
truly random data and systematically compress it to be smaller than the
original.
If you think you have an algorithm that can do this on truly random data,
you're probably wrong - either your data is has patterns the algorithm can
exploit, or you've simply been lucky with the randomness of your data so
far.
Tim Delaney
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| From | jonas.thornvall@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 12:47 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <2147d528-2c7c-495e-9d32-bb061919b3b1@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #58097 |
Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 20:35:59 UTC+1 skrev Tim Delaney:
> On 31 October 2013 05:21, <jonas.t...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art compression is.
>
>
>
>
> I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such question i was thinking to start here.
>
>
>
> It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of.
>
>
>
> This is not an appropriate forum for this question. If you know it's an inappropriate forum (as you stated) then do not post the question here. Do a search with your preferred search engine and look up compression on lossless Wikipedia. And read and understand the following link:
>
>
>
> http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
>
>
>
> paying special attention to the following parts:
>
>
>
> http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#forum
> http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#prune
>
>
> http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#courtesy
>
> http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#keepcool
>
>
> http://www.catb.org/esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#classic
>
>
>
> If you have *python* code implementing this algorithm and want help, post the parts you want help with (and preferably post the entire algorithm in a repository).
>
>
>
>
> However, having just seen the following from you in a reply to Mark ("I do not follow instructions, i make them accesible to anyone"), I am not not going to give a second chance - fail to learn from the above advice and you'll meet my spam filter.
>
>
>
> If the data is truly completely random noise, then there is very little that lossless compression can do. On any individual truly random data set you might get a lot of compression, a small amount of compression, or even expansion, depending on what patterns have randomly occurred in the data set. But there is no current lossless compression algorithm that can take truly random data and systematically compress it to be smaller than the original.
>
>
>
> If you think you have an algorithm that can do this on truly random data, you're probably wrong - either your data is has patterns the algorithm can exploit, or you've simply been lucky with the randomness of your data so far.
>
>
>
> Tim Delaney
No i am not wrong.
End of story
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| From | Modulok <modulok@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 13:46 -0600 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1835.1383162420.18130.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #58077 |
[Multipart message — attachments visible in raw view] — view raw
On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 12:21 PM, <jonas.thornvall@gmail.com> wrote: > I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible > of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art > compression is. > > I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an > algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for > such question i was thinking to start here. > > It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of. > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >> I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of >> completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art >> compression is. None. If the data to be compressed is truly homogeneous, random noise as you describe (for example a 100mb file read from cryptographically secure random bit generator such as /dev/random on *nix systems), the state-of-the-art lossless compression is zero and will remain that way for the foreseeable future. There is no lossless algorithm that will reduce truly random (high entropy) data by any significant margin. In classical information theory, such an algorithm can never be invented. See: Kolmogorov complexity Real world data is rarely completely random. You would have to test various algorithms on the data set in question. Small things such as non-obvious statistical clumping can make a big difference in the compression ratio from one algorithm to another. Data that might look "random", might not actually be random in the entropy sense of the word. >> I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an >> algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such >> question i was thinking to start here. Not to sound like a downer, but I would wager that the data you're testing your algorithm on is not as truly random as you imply or is not a large enough body of test data to draw such conclusions from. It's akin to inventing a perpetual motion machine or an inertial propulsion engine or any other classically impossible solutions. (This only applies to truly random data.) -Modulok-
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| From | jonas.thornvall@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-10-30 12:47 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <c73c8aa6-cac4-4f02-ae83-31cea167c172@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #58101 |
Den onsdagen den 30:e oktober 2013 kl. 20:46:57 UTC+1 skrev Modulok: > On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 12:21 PM, <jonas.t...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art compression is. > > > > > I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such question i was thinking to start here. > > > > It is of course lossless compression i am speaking of. > > -- > > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > > > > > >> I am searching for the program or algorithm that makes the best possible of > >> completly (diffused data/random noise) and wonder what the state of art > > >> compression is. > > > None. If the data to be compressed is truly homogeneous, random noise as you > describe (for example a 100mb file read from cryptographically secure random > > bit generator such as /dev/random on *nix systems), the state-of-the-art > lossless compression is zero and will remain that way for the foreseeable > > future. > > > There is no lossless algorithm that will reduce truly random (high entropy) > data by any significant margin. In classical information theory, such an > > algorithm can never be invented. See: Kolmogorov complexity > > > Real world data is rarely completely random. You would have to test various > > algorithms on the data set in question. Small things such as non-obvious > statistical clumping can make a big difference in the compression ratio from > > one algorithm to another. Data that might look "random", might not actually be > random in the entropy sense of the word. > > > > >> I understand this is not the correct forum but since i think i have an > >> algorithm that can do this very good, and do not know where to turn for such > > >> question i was thinking to start here. > > > Not to sound like a downer, but I would wager that the data you're testing your > > algorithm on is not as truly random as you imply or is not a large enough body > of test data to draw such conclusions from. It's akin to inventing a perpetual > > motion machine or an inertial propulsion engine or any other classically > impossible solutions. (This only applies to truly random data.) > > > > -Modulok- Well then i have news for you.
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