pydf displays the amount of used and available space on your
filesystems, just like df, but in colours. The output format is
completely customizable.
Pydf was written and works on Linux, but should work also on other
modern UNIX systems (including MacOSX).
URL:
Announcing the release of greenlet 0.3.1:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/greenlet/0.3.1
0.3.1 is a bugfix release that fixes a critical reference leak bug. The 0.3
release introduced support for passing keyword arguments to the switch method.
There was an edge case where an empty keyword argument
Grease is a pluggable and highly extensible 2D game engine and framework for
Python.
The intent of this project is to provide a fresh approach to Python game
development. The component-based architecture allows games to be constructed
bit by bit with built-in separation of concerns. The engine
What is virtualenvwrapper
=
virtualenvwrapper_ is a set of extensions to Ian Bicking's virtualenv_
tool. The extensions include wrappers for creating and deleting
virtual environments and otherwise managing your development workflow,
making it easier to work on more than
WxPython's Py Suite (PyCrust, etc.) updated with new magic features and new
notebook interface shell, PySlices.
WxPython has, for a long time, included PyCrust, one of the most popular
Python shells. PyCrust has found uses in a number of projects, including
Stani's Python Editor and some
I'm happy to announce a new release of OE jskit 0.8.8 available on PyPI.
Main points of interest:
* the code to check for the presence of browsers locally has been
improved, browser specifications can now with much more confidence list
absent browsers and the respective runs/tests will be
Hi everyone,
I'm happy to announce that on the 26th and 27th of June we are running PyCon
Australia in Sydney!
http://pycon-au.org/
We are looking for proposals for Talks on all aspects of Python programming
from novice to advanced levels; applications and frameworks, or how you
have been
The german python usergroup pyCologne announces a barcamp at 17.4 in
cologne.
For further details see http://python-barcamp.de (Sorry, this page is
in German only)
An unconference is a facilitated, participant-driven conference
centered on a theme or purpose (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message
ec6d247c-a6b0-4f33-a36b-1d33eace6...@k19g2000yqn.googlegroups.com, Booter
wrote:
I am new to python ans was wondering if there was a way to get the mac
address from the local NIC?
What if you have more than one?
you can try with netifaces :
Steven D'Aprano ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Tue, 06 Apr 2010 16:54:18 +, Duncan Booth wrote:
Albert van der Horst alb...@spenarnc.xs4all.nl wrote:
Old hands would have ...
stamp =( weight=1000 and 120 or
weight=500 and 100 or
Lie Ryan a écrit :
(snip)
Since in function in python is a first-class object, you can instead do
something like:
def process(document):
# note: document should encapsulate its own logic
document.do_one_thing()
Obvious case of encapsulation abuse here. Should a file object
Hello,
i want to parse this String:
version 3.5.1 {
$pid_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/var/locks/
$bin_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/bin/
service smbd {
bin = ${bin_dir}smbd -D
pid = ${pid_dir}smbd.pid
}
service nmbd {
On Apr 6, 11:52 pm, Rolf Camps rolf_ca...@fsfe.org wrote:
Op dinsdag 06-04-2010 om 14:55 uur [tijdzone -0500], schreef Christopher
Choi:
It was after the homework I asked my question. All plot solutions i
found where for python2.x. gnuplot_py states on its homepage you need a
'working copy
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 1:37 AM, Richard Lamboj richard.lam...@bilcom.at wrote:
i want to parse this String:
version 3.5.1 {
$pid_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/var/locks/
$bin_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/bin/
service smbd {
bin = ${bin_dir}smbd -D
Hi Chris,
Chris Rebert wrote:
from calendar import timegm
def timestamp(dttm):
return timegm(dttm.utctimetuple())
#the *utc*timetuple change is just for extra consistency
#it shouldn't actually make a difference here
And problem solved. As for what the problem was:
Paraphrasing the table
Richard Lamboj a écrit :
Hello,
i want to parse this String:
version 3.5.1 {
$pid_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/var/locks/
$bin_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/bin/
service smbd {
bin = ${bin_dir}smbd -D
pid = ${pid_dir}smbd.pid
}
Am Wednesday 07 April 2010 10:52:14 schrieb Chris Rebert:
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 1:37 AM, Richard Lamboj richard.lam...@bilcom.at
wrote:
i want to parse this String:
version 3.5.1 {
$pid_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/var/locks/
$bin_dir = /opt/samba-3.5.1/bin/
Thanks to all for the informative answers.
You made me realize this is a wxPython issue. I have to say, wxPython
seems useful, and I'm glad it is available - but it doesn't have the
gentlest of learning curves.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi everyone,
I'm happy to announce that on the 26th and 27th of June we are running PyCon
Australia in Sydney!
http://pycon-au.org/
We are looking for proposals for Talks on all aspects of Python programming
from novice to advanced levels; applications and frameworks, or how you
have been
Having an odd problem that I solved, but wondering if its the best
solution (seems like a bit of a hack).
First off, I'm using an external DLL that requires static callbacks,
but because of this, I'm losing instance info. It could be import
related? It will make more sense after I diagram
On Apr 7, 9:57 am, Chris Withers ch...@simplistix.co.uk wrote:
Chris Rebert wrote:
To convert from struct_time in ***UTC***
to seconds since the epoch
use calendar.timegm()
...and really, wtf is timegm doing in calendar rather than in time? ;-)
You're not alone in finding this strange:
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On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 4:11 PM, Tim Golden m...@timgolden.me.uk wrote:
On 06/04/2010 20:26, Kevin Holleran wrote:
Hello,
I am sweeping some of our networks to find devices. When I find a
device I try to connect to the registry using _winreg and then query a
specific key that I am
[ Please keep me cc'ed, I'm not subscribed ]
Hi all
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my company, and they
all use two space indents, and I'd like to be more consistent and
conform to PEP-8 as much as I can.
My problem is I would like to be certain that any changes do not alter
the
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Tom Evans tevans...@googlemail.com wrote:
[ Please keep me cc'ed, I'm not subscribed ]
Hi all
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my company, and they
all use two space indents, and I'd like to be more consistent and
conform to PEP-8 as much as I
En Tue, 06 Apr 2010 14:25:38 -0300, Alex Hall mehg...@gmail.com escribió:
Sorry this is a forward (long story involving a braille notetaker's
bad copy/paste and GMail's annoying mobile site). Basically, I am
getting errors when I run the project at
http://www.gateway2somewhere.com/sw.zip
On 07/04/2010 14:57, Kevin Holleran wrote:
Thanks, I was able to connect to the remote machine. However, how do
I query for a very specific key value? I have to scan hundreds of
machines and need want to reduce what I am querying. I would like to
be able to scan a very specific key and report
On 2010-04-07, Tom Evans tevans...@googlemail.com wrote:
[ Please keep me cc'ed, I'm not subscribed ]
Sorry. I post via gmane.org, so cc'ing you would require some extra
work, and I'm too lazy.
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my company, and they
all use two space indents, and
On 6 Apr, 20:04, ja1lbr3ak superheroco...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm trying to teach myself Python, and so have been simplifying a
calculator program that I wrote. The original was 77 lines for the
same functionality. Problem is, I've hit a wall. Can anyone help?
loop = input(Enter 1 for the
En Wed, 07 Apr 2010 11:53:58 -0300, Tom Evans tevans...@googlemail.com
escribió:
[ Please keep me cc'ed, I'm not subscribed ]
Sorry; you may read this at
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my company, and they
all use two
En Wed, 07 Apr 2010 11:53:58 -0300, Tom Evans tevans...@googlemail.com
escribió:
[ Please keep me cc'ed, I'm not subscribed ]
Sorry; you may read this at
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my company, and they
all use two
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 4:10 PM, geremy condra debat...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Tom Evans tevans...@googlemail.com wrote:
[ Please keep me cc'ed, I'm not subscribed ]
Hi all
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my company, and they
all use two space
On 2010-04-07 11:06 AM, Tom Evans wrote:
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 4:10 PM, geremy condradebat...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Tom Evanstevans...@googlemail.com wrote:
[ Please keep me cc'ed, I'm not subscribed ]
Hi all
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my
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On 4/6/2010 9:20 PM Steven D'Aprano said...
On Tue, 06 Apr 2010 16:54:18 +, Duncan Booth wrote:
Most old hands would (IMHO) write the if statements out in full,
though some might remember that Python comes 'batteries included':
from bisect import bisect
WEIGHTS = [100, 250, 500, 1000]
On Apr 6, 11:19 am, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
Tim Arnold wrote:
Hi,
I have a few classes that manipulate documents. One is really a
process that I use a class for just to bundle a bunch of functions
together (and to keep my call signatures the same for each of my
Hello
I'm using ActivePython 2.5.1 and the cookielib package to retrieve web
pages.
I'd like to display a given cookie from the cookiejar instead of the
whole thing:
#OK
for index, cookie in enumerate(cj):
print index, ' : ', cookie
#How to display just
On Tue, 06 Apr 2010 23:16:18 -0400, monkeys paw mon...@joemoney.net wrote:
I have the following acre meter which works for integers,
how do i convert this to float? I tried
return float ((208.0 * 208.0) * n)
def s(n):
... return lambda x: (208 * 208) * n
...
f = s(1)
f(1)
43264
Hello Johan,
thanks to you (and everyone else who answered) for your effort.
Johan Grönqvist johan.gronqv...@gmail.com writes:
Manuel Graune skrev:
Manuel Graune manuel.gra...@koeln.de writes:
Just as an additional example, let's assume I'd want to add the area of
to circles.
[...]
which
[Gustavo Nare]
In other words: The more different elements two collections have, the
faster it is to compare them as sets. And as a consequence, the more
equivalent elements two collections have, the faster it is to compare
them as lists.
Is this correct?
If two collections are equal, then
Hello Johan,
thanks to you (and everyone else who answered) for your effort.
Johan Grönqvist johan.gronqv...@gmail.com writes:
Manuel Graune skrev:
Manuel Graune manuel.gra...@koeln.de writes:
Just as an additional example, let's assume I'd want to add the area of
to circles.
[...]
which
http://sites.google.com/site/fgu45ythjg/rfea8i
--
Matt
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi all,
Is it possible to raise exception with custom traceback to specify
file and line?
Situation
=
I'm creating a certain parser.
I want to report syntax error with the same format as other exception.
Example
===
parser.py:
-
1: def parse(filename):
2:
Hello to all out there,
I'm trying to figure out how to parse the responses from fcntl.ioctl()
calls that modify the serial lines in a way that asserts that the line
is now changed. For example I may want to drop RTS explicitly, and
assert that the line has been dropped before returning.
Here
AlienBaby matt.j.war...@gmail.com writes:
I'd be grateful for any suggestions / pointers to something useful,
Ignoring the commercial vs. open source discussion, although it was a
few years ago, I found Chart Director (http://www.advsofteng.com/) to
work very well, with plenty of platform and
Kevin Holleran kdaw...@gmail.com writes:
Thanks, I was able to connect to the remote machine. However, how do
I query for a very specific key value? I have to scan hundreds of
machines and need want to reduce what I am querying. I would like to
be able to scan a very specific key and
Should be a simple question, but I can't seem to make it work from my
understanding of the docs.
I want to use the multiprocessing module with remote clients, accessing
shared lists. I gather one is supposed to use register(), but I don't
see exactly how. I'd like to have the clients read and
Can someone make me un-crazy?
I have a bit of code that right now, looks like this:
status = getoutput('smartctl -l selftest /dev/sda').splitlines()[6]
status = re.sub(' (?= )(?=([^]*[^]*)*[^]*$)', :,status)
print status
Basically, it pulls the first actual line of data from the
On 2010-04-07, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone make me un-crazy?
Definitely. Regex is driving you crazy, so don't use a regex.
inputString = # 1 Short offline Completed without error 00%
679 -
print ' '.join(inputString.split()[4:-3])
So any
On 04/06/2010 12:40 PM, Manuel Graune wrote:
Hello everyone,
I am looking for ways to use a python file as a substitute for simple
pen and paper calculations. At the moment I mainly use a combination
of triple-quoted strings, exec and print (Yes, I know it's not exactly
elegant).
This
I'm used to C++ where destrcutors get called in reverse order of construction
like this:
{
Foo foo;
Bar bar;
// calls Bar::~Bar()
// calls Foo::~Foo()
}
I'm writing a ctypes wrapper for some native code, and I need to manage some
memory. I'm wrapping the memory in a python class
On 2010-04-07 15:08:14 -0700, Brendan Miller said:
When doing this, I noticed some odd behaviour. I had code like this:
def delete_my_resource(res):
# deletes res
class MyClass(object):
def __del__(self):
delete_my_resource(self.res)
o = MyClass()
What happens is that as the
Hello,
Consider the following function:
def check_s3_refcounts():
Check s3 object reference counts
global found_errors
log.info('Checking S3 object reference counts...')
for (key, refcount) in conn.query(SELECT id, refcount FROM s3_objects):
refcount2 =
On 04/07/10 18:34, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Lie Ryan a écrit :
(snip)
Since in function in python is a first-class object, you can instead do
something like:
def process(document):
# note: document should encapsulate its own logic
document.do_one_thing()
Obvious case of
Hi,I am using ununtu 9.10. I want to install a version of Python that was
compiled with debug symbols.But if I delete python from ubuntu it would
definitely stop working . And python comes preintalled in ubuntu without
debugging symbols.How can i install python with debugging symbols
Hi,
I'm Py newbie and I have some beginners problems with ftp handling.
What would be the easiest way to copy files from one ftp folder to another
without downloading them to local system?
Are there any snippets for this task (I couldnt find example like this)
Thx
In message mailman.1599.1270652040.23598.python-l...@python.org, Tom Evans
wrote:
I've written a bunch of internal libraries for my company, and they
all use two space indents, and I'd like to be more consistent and
conform to PEP-8 as much as I can.
“A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin
In message mailman.1610.1270655932.23598.python-l...@python.org, Gabriel
Genellina wrote:
If you only reindent the code (without adding/removing lines) then you can
compare the compiled .pyc files (excluding the first 8 bytes that contain
a magic number and the source file timestamp).
On Apr 7, 4:40 pm, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone make me un-crazy?
I have a bit of code that right now, looks like this:
status = getoutput('smartctl -l selftest /dev/sda').splitlines()[6]
status = re.sub(' (?= )(?=([^]*[^]*)*[^]*$)', :,status)
print status
On Apr 7, 4:47 pm, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
On 2010-04-07, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone make me un-crazy?
Definitely. Regex is driving you crazy, so don't use a regex.
inputString = # 1 Short offline Completed without error 00%
Install python in a different directory, use $prefix for that. Change PATH
value accordingly
2010/4/5 sanam singh sanamsi...@hotmail.com
Hi,
I am using ununtu 9.10. I want to install a version of Python that was
compiled with debug symbols.
But if I delete python from ubuntu it would
On Apr 7, 7:49 pm, Patrick Maupin pmau...@gmail.com wrote:
On Apr 7, 4:40 pm, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone make me un-crazy?
I have a bit of code that right now, looks like this:
status = getoutput('smartctl -l selftest /dev/sda').splitlines()[6]
status =
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 5:35 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro @ wrote:
In message mailman.1610.1270655932.23598.python-l...@python.org, Gabriel
Genellina wrote:
If you only reindent the code (without adding/removing lines) then you can
compare the compiled .pyc files (excluding the first 8 bytes that
Matjaz Pfefferer wrote:
What would be the easiest way to copy files from one ftp
folder to another without downloading them to local system?
As best I can tell, this isn't well-supported by FTP[1] which
doesn't seem to have a native copy this file from
server-location to server-location
On Apr 7, 3:52 am, Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com wrote:
Regular expressions != Parsers
True, but lots of parsers *use* regular expressions in their
tokenizers. In fact, if you have a pure Python parser, you can often
get huge performance gains by rearranging your code slightly so that
you can
On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 10:55:10 -0700, Raymond Hettinger wrote:
[Gustavo Nare]
In other words: The more different elements two collections have, the
faster it is to compare them as sets. And as a consequence, the more
equivalent elements two collections have, the faster it is to compare
them as
On Apr 7, 8:41 pm, Steven D'Aprano
ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 10:55:10 -0700, Raymond Hettinger wrote:
[Gustavo Nare]
In other words: The more different elements two collections have, the
faster it is to compare them as sets. And as a consequence, the
Patrick Maupin wrote:
BTW, although I find it annoying when people say don't do that when
that is a perfectly good thing to do, and although I also find it
annoying when people tell you what not to do without telling you what
*to* do, and although I find the regex solution to this problem to be
On Apr 7, 9:02 pm, James Stroud nospamjstroudmap...@mbi.ucla.edu
wrote:
Patrick Maupin wrote:
BTW, although I find it annoying when people say don't do that when
that is a perfectly good thing to do, and although I also find it
annoying when people tell you what not to do without telling
On 2010-04-08, Patrick Maupin pmau...@gmail.com wrote:
On Apr 7, 4:47?pm, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
On 2010-04-07, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone make me un-crazy?
Definitely. ?Regex is driving you crazy, so don't use a regex.
? inputString = # 1 ?Short
On 2010-04-08, James Stroud nospamjstroudmap...@mbi.ucla.edu wrote:
Patrick Maupin wrote:
BTW, although I find it annoying when people say don't do that when
that is a perfectly good thing to do, and although I also find it
annoying when people tell you what not to do without telling you what
On Apr 7, 9:36 pm, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
On 2010-04-08, Patrick Maupin pmau...@gmail.com wrote: On Apr 7, 4:47?pm,
Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
On 2010-04-07, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone make me un-crazy?
Definitely. ?Regex is
On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 18:03:47 -0700, Patrick Maupin wrote:
BTW, although I find it annoying when people say don't do that when
that is a perfectly good thing to do, and although I also find it
annoying when people tell you what not to do without telling you what
*to* do,
Grant did give a
On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 22:45, Patrick Maupin pmau...@gmail.com wrote:
When I saw And I am interested in the string that appears in the
third column, which changes as the test runs and then completes I
assumed that, not only could that string change, but so could the one
before it.
I guess
On Apr 7, 9:51 pm, Steven D'Aprano
ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 18:03:47 -0700, Patrick Maupin wrote:
BTW, although I find it annoying when people say don't do that when
that is a perfectly good thing to do, and although I also find it
annoying when
On 5 avr, 22:32, Lie Ryan lie.1...@gmail.com wrote:
On 04/06/10 02:38, ejetzer wrote:
On 5 avr, 12:36, ejetzer ejet...@gmail.com wrote:
For a school project, I'm trying to make a minimalist web browser, and
I chose to use Tk as the rendering toolkit. I made my parser classes
into
On 2010-04-08, Patrick Maupin pmau...@gmail.com wrote:
Sorry, my eyes completely missed your one-liner, so my criticism about
not posting a solution was unwarranted. I don't think you and I read
the problem the same way (which is probably why I didn't notice your
solution -- because it
[Raymond Hettinger]
If the two collections have unequal sizes, then both ways immediately
return unequal.
[Steven D'Aprano]
Perhaps I'm misinterpreting what you are saying, but I can't confirm that
behaviour, at least not for subclasses of list:
For doubters, see list_richcompare() in
On Apr 7, 9:51 pm, Steven D'Aprano
ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
This is one of the reasons we're so often suspicious of re solutions:
s = '# 1 Short offline Completed without error 00%'
tre = Timer(re.split(' {2,}', s),
... import re; from __main__ import s)
En Wed, 07 Apr 2010 17:23:22 -0300, kwatch kwa...@gmail.com escribió:
Is it possible to raise exception with custom traceback to specify
file and line?
I'm creating a certain parser.
I want to report syntax error with the same format as other exception.
-
1: def
En Wed, 07 Apr 2010 18:44:39 -0300, Nikolaus Rath nikol...@rath.org
escribió:
def check_s3_refcounts():
Check s3 object reference counts
global found_errors
log.info('Checking S3 object reference counts...')
for (key, refcount) in conn.query(SELECT id, refcount FROM
En Wed, 07 Apr 2010 18:44:39 -0300, Nikolaus Rath nikol...@rath.org
escribió:
def check_s3_refcounts():
Check s3 object reference counts
global found_errors
log.info('Checking S3 object reference counts...')
for (key, refcount) in conn.query(SELECT id, refcount FROM
On 04/08/10 12:45, Patrick Maupin wrote:
(And I got testy because of seeing other IMO unwarranted denigration
of re on the list lately.)
Why am I seeing a lot of this pattern lately:
OP: Got problem with string
+- A: Suggested a regex-based solution
+- B: Quoted Some people ...
On Apr 7, 9:51 pm, Steven D'Aprano
ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
BTW, I don't know how you got 'True' here.
re.split(' {2,}', s) == [x for x in s.split(' ') if x.strip()]
True
You must not have s set up to be the string given by the OP. I just
realized there was an error in
En Wed, 07 Apr 2010 19:08:14 -0300, Brendan Miller catph...@catphive.net
escribió:
I'm used to C++ where destrcutors get called in reverse order of
construction
like this:
{
Foo foo;
Bar bar;
// calls Bar::~Bar()
// calls Foo::~Foo()
}
That behavior is explicitly
Hi I have a simple Python program that assigns a cookie to a web user
when they open the script the 1st time(in an internet browser). If
they open the script a second time the script should display the line
You have been here 2 times. , if they open the script agai it
should show on the webpage
Tim Chase wrote:
Matjaz Pfefferer wrote:
What would be the easiest way to copy files from one ftp
folder to another without downloading them to local system?
As best I can tell, this isn't well-supported by FTP[1] which doesn't
seem to have a native copy this file from server-location to
On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 3:04 AM, Norm Matloff matl...@doe.com wrote:
Should be a simple question, but I can't seem to make it work from my
understanding of the docs.
I want to use the multiprocessing module with remote clients, accessing
shared lists. I gather one is supposed to use
On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 3:10 AM, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone make me un-crazy?
I have a bit of code that right now, looks like this:
status = getoutput('smartctl -l selftest /dev/sda').splitlines()[6]
status = re.sub(' (?= )(?=([^]*[^]*)*[^]*$)', :,status)
Changes by Kelda kel...@gmail.com:
Removed file: http://bugs.python.org/file16790/datastructures.diff
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue4570
___
Chris Jerdonek chris.jerdo...@gmail.com added the comment:
Rietveld link: http://codereview.appspot.com/810044/show
This patch changes unittest.TestLoader.loadTestsFromName() so that ImportErrors
will bubble up when importing from a module with a bad import statement.
Before the method
Philip Jenvey pjen...@underboss.org added the comment:
I committed a somewhat different version of this patch to py3k to handle the
warn options now calling for wchars, but this needs more work. Some of the
buildbots are unhappy
Seems like the py3k version either needs to fully decode the env
Pascal Chambon chambon.pas...@gmail.com added the comment:
Thanks for the doc patch, if you don't mind I'd just add the paragraph below
too, to clarify the fact that logger levels are only entry points levels,
ignored he rest of the time. There might be slight redundancies with the rest
of
Marc-Andre Lemburg m...@egenix.com added the comment:
STINNER Victor wrote:
STINNER Victor victor.stin...@haypocalc.com added the comment:
I also found out that, according to RFC 3629, surrogates
are considered invalid and they can't be encoded/decoded,
but the UTF-8 codec actually
STINNER Victor victor.stin...@haypocalc.com added the comment:
I also found out that, according to RFC 3629, surrogates
are considered invalid and they can't be encoded/decoded,
but the UTF-8 codec actually does it.
Python2 does, but Python3 raises an error.
(...)
I wonder how
New submission from anatoly techtonik techto...@gmail.com:
It would be convenient for debug to execute single test_method or TestClass.
Running all tests in file can take a long time.
--
components: Tests
messages: 102524
nosy: techtonik
severity: normal
status: open
title: regrtest
anatoly techtonik techto...@gmail.com added the comment:
regrtest [options] test_file.TestClass
regrtest [options] test_file.test_method
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8332
Michael Haubenwallner michael.haubenwall...@salomon.at added the comment:
This very same problem happens (with Python-2.6.2) on AIX5.3 now too, after
upgrading to:
$ oslevel -s
5300-08-09-1013
Unlike before (comparing with old build logs), this AIX5.3 now provides flock()
in sys/file.h and
Vinay Sajip vinay_sa...@yahoo.co.uk added the comment:
Fix checked into trunk (r79888).
--
resolution: accepted - fixed
status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8331
Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com added the comment:
It's surprising that test_ulonglong fails, while test_longlong passes: can the
Linux Sparc ABI really be treating these two types differently?
Maybe more information could be gained by supplying a more interesting test
value than 42---some
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