Alexis' loghttp://blog.notmyidea.org2011-10-15T00:00:00+02:00How are you handling your shared expenses?2011-10-15T00:00:00+02:00Alexis Métaireautag:blog.notmyidea.org,2011-10-15:/how-are-you-handling-your-shared-expenses.html/<p><strong>TL;DR:</strong> We're kick-starting a new application to manage your shared expenses. Have a look at <a class="reference external" href="http://ihatemoney.notmyidea.org">http://ihatemoney.notmyidea.org</a></p> <p>As a student, I lived in a lot of different locations, and the majority of them had something in common: I lived with others. It usually was a great experience (and I think I will continue to live with others). Most of the time, we had to spend some time each month to compute who had to pay what to the others.</p> <p>I wanted to create a pet project using flask, so I wrote a little (~150 lines) flask application to handle this. It worked out pretty well for my housemates and me, and as we had to move into different locations, one of them asked me if he could continue to use it for the year to come.</p> <p>I said yes and gave it some more thoughts: We probably aren't the only ones interested by such kind of software. I decided to extend a bit more the software to have a concept of projects and persons (the list of persons was hard-coded in the first time, boooh!).</p> <p>I then discussed with a friend of mine, who was excited about it and wanted to learn python. Great! That's a really nice way to get started. Some more friends were also interested in it and contributed some features and provided feedback (thanks <a class="reference external" href="http://www.sneakernet.fr/">Arnaud</a> and Quentin!)</p> <p>Since that, the project now support multiple languages and provides a REST API (android and iphone apps in the tubes!), into other things. There is no need to register for an account or whatnot, just enter a project name, a secret code and a contact email, invite friends and that's it (this was inspired by doodle)!</p> <img alt="images/ihatemoney.png" src="images/ihatemoney.png" /> <p>You can try the project at <a class="reference external" href="http://ihatemoney.notmyidea.org">http://ihatemoney.notmyidea.org</a> for now, and the code lives at <a class="reference external" href="https://github.com/spiral-project/ihatemoney/">https://github.com/spiral-project/ihatemoney/</a>.</p> <div class="section" id="features"> <h2>Features</h2> <p>In the wild, currently, there already are some implementations of this shared budget manager thing. The fact is that most of them are either hard to use, with a too much fancy design or simply trying to do too much things at once.</p> <p>No, I don't want my budget manager to make my shopping list, or to run a blog for me, thanks. I want it to let me focus on something else. Keep out of my way.</p> <div class="section" id="no-user-registration"> <h3>No user registration</h3> <p>You don't need to register an account on the website to start using it. You just have to create a project, set a secret code for it, and give both the url and the code to the people you want to share it with (or the website can poke them for you).</p> </div> <div class="section" id="keeping-things-simple"> <h3>Keeping things simple</h3> <p>&quot;Keep It Simple, Stupid&quot; really matches our philosophy here: you want to add a bill? Okay. Just do it. You just have to enter who paid, for who, how much, and a description, like you would have done when you're back from the farmer's market on raw paper.</p> </div> <div class="section" id="no-categories"> <h3>No categories</h3> <p>Some people like to organise their stuff into different &quot;categories&quot;: leisure, work, eating, etc. That's not something I want (at least to begin with).</p> <p>I want things to be simple. Got that? Great. Just add your bills!</p> </div> <div class="section" id="balance"> <h3>Balance</h3> <p>One of the most useful thing is to know what's your &quot;balance&quot; compared to others. In other words, if you're negative, you owe money, if you're positive, you have to receive money. This allows you to dispatch who has to pay for the next thing, in order to re-equilibrate the balance.</p> <p>Additionally, the system is able to compute for you who has to give how much to who, in order to reduce the number of transactions needed to restore the balance.</p> </div> <div class="section" id="api"> <h3>API</h3> <p>All of what's possible to do with the standard web interface is also available through a REST API. I developed a simple REST toolkit for flask for this (and I should release it!).</p> </div> </div> <div class="section" id="interested"> <h2>Interested?</h2> <p>This project is open source. All of us like to share what we are doing and would be happy to work with new people and implement new ideas. If you have a nice idea about this, if you want to tweak it or to fill bugs. Don't hesitate a second! The project lives at <a class="reference external" href="http://github.com/spiral-project/ihatemoney/">http://github.com/spiral-project/ihatemoney/</a></p> </div> Using dbpedia to get languages influences2011-08-16T00:00:00+02:00Alexis Métaireautag:blog.notmyidea.org,2011-08-16:/using-dbpedia-to-get-languages-influences.html/<p>While browsing the Python's wikipedia page, I found information about the languages influenced by python, and the languages that influenced python itself.</p> <p>Well, that's kind of interesting to know which languages influenced others, it could even be more interesting to have an overview of the connexion between them, keeping python as the main focus.</p> <p>This information is available on the wikipedia page, but not in a really exploitable format. Hopefully, this information is provided into the information box present on the majority of wikipedia pages. And… guess what? there is project with the goal to scrap and index all this information in a more queriable way, using the semantic web technologies.</p> <p>Well, you may have guessed it, the project in question in dbpedia, and exposes information in the form of RDF triples, which are way more easy to work with than simple HTML.</p> <p>For instance, let's take the page about python: <a class="reference external" href="http://dbpedia.org/page/Python_%28programming_language%29">http://dbpedia.org/page/Python_%28programming_language%29</a></p> <p>The interesting properties here are &quot;Influenced&quot; and &quot;InfluencedBy&quot;, which allows us to get a list of languages. Unfortunately, they are not really using all the power of the Semantic Web here, and the list is actually a string with coma separated values in it.</p> <p>Anyway, we can use a simple rule: All wikipedia pages of programming languages are either named after the name of the language itself, or suffixed with &quot;( programming language)&quot;, which is the case for python.</p> <p>So I've built <a class="reference external" href="https://github.com/ametaireau/experiments/blob/master/influences/get_influences.py">a tiny script to extract the information from dbpedia</a> and transform them into a shiny graph using graphviz.</p> <p>After a nice:</p> <pre class="literal-block"> $ python get_influences.py python dot | dot -Tpng &gt; influences.png </pre> <p>The result is the following graph (<a class="reference external" href="http://files.lolnet.org/alexis/influences.png">see it directly here</a>)</p> <img alt="http://files.lolnet.org/alexis/influences.png" src="http://files.lolnet.org/alexis/influences.png" style="width: 800px;" /> <p>While reading this diagram, keep in mind that it is a) not listing all the languages and b) keeping a python perspective.</p> <p>This means that you can trust the scheme by following the arrows from python to something and from something to python, it is not trying to get the matching between all the languages at the same time to keep stuff readable.</p> <p>It would certainly be possible to have all the connections between all languages (and the resulting script would be easier) to do so, but the resulting graph would probably be way less readable.</p> <p>You can find the script <a class="reference external" href="https://github.com/ametaireau/experiments">on my github account</a>. Feel free to adapt it for whatever you want if you feel hackish.</p>